Ghana's "Asian Tiger" issues belong to a broader wave of large-format novelty coins produced under licensing arrangements between African central banks and European private mints — primarily in Germany and Austria — aimed squarely at the collector market rather than any monetary function. The Bank of Ghana has issued dozens of such pieces since the 2010s, with the legal tender status technically valid but the face value economically meaningless against the actual production cost.
Gold-plated zinc at this scale is a deliberate cost structure: the substrate is cheap, the plating provides visual appeal, and the oversized format justifies a retail premium.
Ghana's "Asian Tiger" issues belong to a broader wave of large-format novelty coins produced under licensing arrangements between African central banks and European private mints — primarily in Germany and Austria — aimed squarely at the collector market rather than any monetary function. The Bank of Ghana has issued dozens of such pieces since the 2010s, with the legal tender status technically valid but the face value economically meaningless against the actual production cost.
Gold-plated zinc at this scale is a deliberate cost structure: the substrate is cheap, the plating provides visual appeal, and the oversized format justifies a retail premium.