India's ₹10 bimetallic coin has had a troubled public life — widespread rumors circulating from around 2016 onward convinced large segments of the population that many varieties were fake, leading shopkeepers across multiple states to refuse the coins outright. The Reserve Bank of India issued repeated clarifications, but the rejections persisted for years. Experimental copper-nickel strikes like this piece were almost certainly produced to evaluate alloy alternatives amid ongoing concerns about production costs and the public confusion surrounding the bimetallic series.
India's ₹10 bimetallic coin has had a troubled public life — widespread rumors circulating from around 2016 onward convinced large segments of the population that many varieties were fake, leading shopkeepers across multiple states to refuse the coins outright. The Reserve Bank of India issued repeated clarifications, but the rejections persisted for years. Experimental copper-nickel strikes like this piece were almost certainly produced to evaluate alloy alternatives amid ongoing concerns about production costs and the public confusion surrounding the bimetallic series.