Barbados adopted the decimal dollar in 1973, replacing the Eastern Caribbean dollar at par and tying the new currency to the US dollar at a fixed rate of 2:1 — a peg that has held without interruption for over fifty years. The Central Bank has used the bullion commemorative program primarily as a foreign exchange and collector revenue vehicle rather than any domestic circulation purpose.
KM#181 is a modern silver bullion issue with no particular rarity distinction beyond its mintage figure.
Barbados adopted the decimal dollar in 1973, replacing the Eastern Caribbean dollar at par and tying the new currency to the US dollar at a fixed rate of 2:1 — a peg that has held without interruption for over fifty years. The Central Bank has used the bullion commemorative program primarily as a foreign exchange and collector revenue vehicle rather than any domestic circulation purpose.
KM#181 is a modern silver bullion issue with no particular rarity distinction beyond its mintage figure.