Kuwait's fils denominations were originally introduced at independence in 1961, replacing the Gulf rupee at par with the Indian currency system already in use across the region. The silver gilt version of this long-running type is a proof-issue variant rather than a circulation strike — Kuwait's small, oil-wealthy population meant the Central Bank had little practical need for bullion-content fractional coinage in everyday commerce. These were produced for collector sets during a period when Gulf states were aggressively marketing commemorative and specimen issues to a growing international numismatic audience.
Kuwait's fils denominations were originally introduced at independence in 1961, replacing the Gulf rupee at par with the Indian currency system already in use across the region. The silver gilt version of this long-running type is a proof-issue variant rather than a circulation strike — Kuwait's small, oil-wealthy population meant the Central Bank had little practical need for bullion-content fractional coinage in everyday commerce. These were produced for collector sets during a period when Gulf states were aggressively marketing commemorative and specimen issues to a growing international numismatic audience.