Algeria's 1983 dinar coinage was issued well into the single-party socialist administration of the FLN, a period when the government was doubling down on state-controlled industry and increasingly reliant on hydrocarbon revenues to paper over structural economic problems. The "Independence" designation in the coin's name refers to the broader series identity rather than a specific anniversary issue — Algeria had gained independence from France in July 1962 after a war that killed an estimated 300,000 to 1.5 million people, depending on whose figures you accept.
Copper-nickel became the standard for Algerian circulating coinage of this denomination by the early 1980s, replacing earlier aluminum issues that had proven impractical under heavy use.
Algeria's 1983 dinar coinage was issued well into the single-party socialist administration of the FLN, a period when the government was doubling down on state-controlled industry and increasingly reliant on hydrocarbon revenues to paper over structural economic problems. The "Independence" designation in the coin's name refers to the broader series identity rather than a specific anniversary issue — Algeria had gained independence from France in July 1962 after a war that killed an estimated 300,000 to 1.5 million people, depending on whose figures you accept.
Copper-nickel became the standard for Algerian circulating coinage of this denomination by the early 1980s, replacing earlier aluminum issues that had proven impractical under heavy use.