The Solomon Islands adopted a modified note format in 2005 partly in response to regional counterfeiting pressure — De La Rue's contract for this series included upgraded intaglio printing on the face, though the security architecture remained relatively modest by contemporary Pacific regional standards. The watermark is the primary anti-counterfeiting measure, which by 2005 was considered a minimum rather than a strong deterrent.
P#27 spans an unusually long print window for a small-economy note. Extended runs like this typically indicate low replacement demand — the Islands' limited formal retail economy meant individual notes cycled slowly.
The Solomon Islands adopted a modified note format in 2005 partly in response to regional counterfeiting pressure — De La Rue's contract for this series included upgraded intaglio printing on the face, though the security architecture remained relatively modest by contemporary Pacific regional standards. The watermark is the primary anti-counterfeiting measure, which by 2005 was considered a minimum rather than a strong deterrent.
P#27 spans an unusually long print window for a small-economy note. Extended runs like this typically indicate low replacement demand — the Islands' limited formal retail economy meant individual notes cycled slowly.