The P#54 series was part of Zambia's 2012 rebasing exercise, which lopped three zeros off all denominations — meaning this 100 Kwacha replaced the old 100,000 Kwacha note. The psychological and practical motivation was straightforward: by 2012, the previous kwacha had depreciated so severely since its 1968 introduction that everyday transactions required notes in six-figure denominations.
Giesecke & Devrient have printed Zambian currency across multiple series, giving the notes a consistent technical baseline, though the security package here — thread and watermark only — is relatively spare for a high-denomination note of this period.
The P#54 series was part of Zambia's 2012 rebasing exercise, which lopped three zeros off all denominations — meaning this 100 Kwacha replaced the old 100,000 Kwacha note. The psychological and practical motivation was straightforward: by 2012, the previous kwacha had depreciated so severely since its 1968 introduction that everyday transactions required notes in six-figure denominations.
Giesecke & Devrient have printed Zambian currency across multiple series, giving the notes a consistent technical baseline, though the security package here — thread and watermark only — is relatively spare for a high-denomination note of this period.