The P#63 series was part of Malawi's broader push in the early 2010s to modernize its note architecture following years of severe inflationary pressure — the kwacha was rebased in 2012 at a ratio of 1:1 after the Reserve Bank finally floated the currency, ending a prolonged period of managed exchange rates that had made the official rate nearly fictional against the parallel market.
Cotton substrate with watermark and thread places this squarely in the lower-security tier of the post-rebase series. No metallised foil, no color-shifting ink — a cost-conscious specification for a denomination that circulates hard.
The P#63 series was part of Malawi's broader push in the early 2010s to modernize its note architecture following years of severe inflationary pressure — the kwacha was rebased in 2012 at a ratio of 1:1 after the Reserve Bank finally floated the currency, ending a prolonged period of managed exchange rates that had made the official rate nearly fictional against the parallel market.
Cotton substrate with watermark and thread places this squarely in the lower-security tier of the post-rebase series. No metallised foil, no color-shifting ink — a cost-conscious specification for a denomination that circulates hard.