The 1998 dating places this coin at the height of Zambia's economic turbulence — the kwacha had been decimated by copper price collapses and IMF-mandated structural adjustments throughout the 1990s, and a 100-kwacha face value that once carried real purchasing power had become largely symbolic. The wildlife series to which this piece belongs was issued partly to attract collector revenue from abroad, a foreign exchange strategy the Bank of Zambia pursued aggressively during this period.
KM#57 is catalogued as a circulation issue, though surviving examples in worn grades are scarce — demand was predominantly numismatic from the outset.
The 1998 dating places this coin at the height of Zambia's economic turbulence — the kwacha had been decimated by copper price collapses and IMF-mandated structural adjustments throughout the 1990s, and a 100-kwacha face value that once carried real purchasing power had become largely symbolic. The wildlife series to which this piece belongs was issued partly to attract collector revenue from abroad, a foreign exchange strategy the Bank of Zambia pursued aggressively during this period.
KM#57 is catalogued as a circulation issue, though surviving examples in worn grades are scarce — demand was predominantly numismatic from the outset.