Fiji's post-2009 coinage series was introduced following the military government's decision to abandon the Queen's portrait from circulating currency after the coup led by Frank Bainimarama. The 50-cent piece was part of a broader redesign that replaced royal imagery with indigenous Fijian cultural motifs — a deliberate shift in national symbolism that went largely uncommented upon internationally but was locally significant.
Nickel-plated steel replaced the earlier cupro-nickel composition as a cost-reduction measure common across Pacific island nations during this period, when rising metal prices made traditional alloys increasingly uneconomical for small-denomination circulation coinage.
Fiji's post-2009 coinage series was introduced following the military government's decision to abandon the Queen's portrait from circulating currency after the coup led by Frank Bainimarama. The 50-cent piece was part of a broader redesign that replaced royal imagery with indigenous Fijian cultural motifs — a deliberate shift in national symbolism that went largely uncommented upon internationally but was locally significant.
Nickel-plated steel replaced the earlier cupro-nickel composition as a cost-reduction measure common across Pacific island nations during this period, when rising metal prices made traditional alloys increasingly uneconomical for small-denomination circulation coinage.