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Banknote

A banknote—also called a bill (North American English), paper money, or simply a note—is a type of negotiable promissory note, made by a bank or other licensed authority, payable to the bearer on demand. Banknotes were originally issued by commercial banks, which were legally required to redeem the notes for legal tender (usually gold or silver coin) when presented to the chief cashier of the originating bank. These commercial banknotes only traded at face value in the market served by the issuing bank.[1] Commercial banknotes have primarily been replaced by national banknotes issued by central banks or monetary authorities.

Banknotes with a face value of ten in the United States dollar, pound sterling as issued by the Bank of England, and euro.

National banknotes are often – but not always – legal tender, meaning that courts of law are required to recognize them as satisfactory payment of money debts.[2] Historically, banks sought to ensure that they could always pay customers in coins when they presented banknotes for payment. This practice of "backing" notes with something of substance is the basis for the history of central banks backing their currencies in gold or silver. Today, most national currencies have no backing in precious metals or commodities and have value only by fiat. With the exception of non-circulating high-value or precious metal issues, coins are used for lower valued monetary units, while banknotes are used for higher values.

Code of Hammurabi Law 100 (c. 1755–1750 BC) stipulated repayment of a loan by a debtor to a creditor on a schedule with a maturity date specified in written contractual terms.[3][4][5] Law 122 stipulated that a depositor of gold, silver, or other chattel/movable property for safekeeping must present all articles and a signed contract of bailment to a notary before depositing the articles with a banker, and Law 123 stipulated that a banker was discharged of any liability from a contract of bailment if the notary denied the existence of the contract. Law 124 stipulated that a depositor with a notarized contract of bailment was entitled to redeem the entire value of their deposit, and Law 125 stipulated that a banker was liable for replacement of deposits stolen while in their possession.[6][7][5]

In China during the Han dynasty, promissory notes appeared in 118 BC and were made of leather.[8] Rome may have used a durable lightweight substance as promissory notes in 57 AD which have been found in London.[9] However, Carthage was purported to have issued bank notes on parchment or leather before 146 BC. Hence Carthage may be the oldest user of lightweight promissory notes.[10][11][12] The first known banknote was first developed in China during the Tang and Song dynasties, starting in the 7th century. Its roots were in merchant receipts of deposit during the Tang dynasty (618–907), as merchants and wholesalers desired to avoid the heavy bulk of copper coinage in large commercial transactions.[13][14][15] During the Yuan dynasty (1271–1368), banknotes were adopted by the Mongol Empire. In Europe, the concept of banknotes was first introduced during the 13th century by travelers such as Marco Polo,[16][17] with European banknotes appearing in 1661 in Sweden.

Counterfeiting, the forgery of banknotes, is an inherent challenge in issuing currency. It is countered by anticounterfeiting measures in the printing of banknotes. Fighting the counterfeiting of banknotes and cheques has been a principal driver of security printing methods development in recent centuries.

History edit

Paper currency first developed in Tang dynasty China during the 7th century, where it was called "'flying money'",[18] although true paper money did not appear until the 11th century, during the Song dynasty. The use of paper currency later spread throughout the Mongol Empire or Yuan dynasty China. European explorers like Marco Polo introduced the concept in Europe during the 13th century.[16][17] Napoleon issued paper banknotes in the early 1800s.[19] Cash paper money originated as receipts for value held on account "value received", and should not be conflated with promissory "sight bills" which were issued with a promise to convert at a later date.

The perception of banknotes as money has evolved over time. Originally, money was based on precious metals. Banknotes were seen by some as an I.O.U. or promissory note: a promise to pay someone in precious metal on presentation (see representative money). But they were readily accepted – for convenience and security – in London, for example, from the late 1600s onwards. With the removal of precious metals from the monetary system, banknotes evolved into pure fiat money.

Early Chinese paper money edit

 
Song dynasty Jiaozi, the world's earliest paper money.
 
A Yuan dynasty printing plate and banknote with Chinese words.

The first banknote-type instrument was used in China in the 7th century, during the Tang dynasty (618–907). Merchants would issue what are today called promissory notes in the form of receipts of deposit to wholesalers to avoid using the heavy bulk of copper coinage in large commercial transactions.[13][14][15] Before the use of these notes, the Chinese used coins that were circular, with a rectangular hole in the middle. Coins could be strung together on a rope. Merchants, if they were rich enough, found that the strings were too heavy to carry around easily, especially for large transactions. To solve this problem, coins could be left with a trusted person, with the merchant being given a slip of paper (the receipt) recording how much money they had deposited with that person. When they returned with the paper to that person, their coins would be returned.

True paper money, called "jiaozi", developed from these promissory notes by the 11th century, during the Song dynasty.[20][21] By 960, the Song government was short of copper for striking coins, and issued the first generally circulating notes. These notes were a promise by the ruler to redeem them later for some other object of value, usually specie. The issue of credit notes was often for a limited duration, and at some discount to the promised amount later. The jiaozi did not replace coins but was used alongside them.

The central government soon observed the economic advantages of printing paper money, issuing a monopoly for the issue of these certificates of deposit to several deposit shops.[13] By the early 12th century, the amount of banknotes issued in a single year amounted to an annual rate of 26 million strings of cash coins.[15] By the 1120s the central government started to produce its own state-issued paper money (using woodblock printing).[13]

Even before this point, the Song government was amassing large amounts of paper tribute. It was recorded that each year before 1101, the prefecture of Xin'an (modern Shexian, Anhui) alone would send 1,500,000 sheets of paper in seven different varieties to the capital at Kaifeng.[22] In 1101, the Emperor Huizong of Song decided to lessen the amount of paper taken in the tribute quota, because it was causing detrimental effects and creating heavy burdens on the people of the region.[23] However, the government still needed masses of paper product for the exchange certificates and the state's new issuing of paper money. For the printing of paper money alone, the Song government established several government-run factories in the cities of Huizhou,[which?] Chengdu, Hangzhou, and Anqi.[23]

The workforce employed in these paper money factories was quite large; it was recorded in 1175 that the factory at Hangzhou alone employed more than a thousand workers a day.[23] However, the government issues of paper money were not yet nationwide standards of currency at that point; issues of banknotes were limited to regional areas of the empire, and were valid for use only in a designated and temporary limit of three years.[15]

The geographic limitation changed between 1265 and 1274, when the late southern Song government issued a nationwide paper currency standard, which was backed by gold or silver.[15] The range of varying values for these banknotes was perhaps from one string of cash to one hundred at the most.[15] Ever after 1107, the government printed money in no less than six ink colors and printed notes with intricate designs and sometimes even with mixture of a unique fiber in the paper to combat counterfeiting.

The founder of the Yuan dynasty, Kublai Khan, issued paper money known as Jiaochao. The original notes were restricted by area and duration, as in the Song dynasty, but in the later years, facing massive shortages of specie to fund their rule, the paper money began to be issued without restrictions on duration. Venetian merchants were impressed by the fact that the Chinese paper money was guaranteed by the State.

European explorers and merchants edit

According to a travelogue of a visit to Prague in 960 by Ibrahim ibn Yaqub, small pieces of cloth were used as a means of trade, with these cloths having a set exchange rate versus silver.[24]

Around 1150, the Knights Templar would issue notes to pilgrims. Pilgrims would deposit valuables with a local Templar preceptory before embarking for the Holy Land and receive a document indicating the value of their deposit. They would then use that document upon arrival in the Holy Land to receive funds from the treasury of equal value.[25][26]

 
Marco Polo described the use of early banknotes in China to Medieval Europe in his book, The Travels of Marco Polo.

In the 13th century, Chinese paper money of Mongol Yuan became known in Europe through the accounts of travelers, such as Marco Polo and William of Rubruck.[16][27] Marco Polo's account of paper money during the Yuan dynasty is the subject of a chapter of his book, The Travels of Marco Polo, titled "How the Great Kaan Causeth the Bark of Trees, Made into Something Like Paper, to Pass for Money All Over his Country".[17]

All these pieces of paper are, issued with as much solemnity and authority as if they were of pure gold or silver... with these pieces of paper, made as I have described, Kublai Khan causes all payments on his own account to be made; and he makes them to pass current universally over all his kingdoms and provinces and territories, and whithersoever his power and sovereignty extends... and indeed everybody takes them readily, for wheresoever a person may go throughout the Great Kaan's dominions he shall find these pieces of paper current, and shall be able to transact all sales and purchases of goods by means of them just as well as if they were coins of pure gold

In medieval Italy and Flanders, because of the insecurity and impracticality of transporting large sums of cash over long distances, money traders started using promissory notes. In the beginning these were personally registered, but they soon became a written order to pay the amount to whoever had it in their possession. These notes are seen as a predecessor to regular banknotes by some but are mainly thought of as proto bills of exchange and cheques.[28] The term "bank note" comes from the notes of the bank ("nota di banco") and dates from the 14th century; it originally recognized the right of the holder of the note to collect the precious metal (usually gold or silver) deposited with a banker (via a currency account). In the 14th century, it was used in every part of Europe and in Italian city-state merchants colonies outside of Europe. For international payments, the more efficient and sophisticated bill of exchange ("lettera di cambio"), that is, a promissory note based on a virtual currency account (usually a coin no longer physically existing), was used more often. All physical currencies were physically related to this virtual currency; this instrument also served as credit.

Birth of European banknotes edit

 
The first paper money in Europe, issued by the Stockholms Banco in 1666.[29]

The shift toward the use of these receipts as a means of payment took place in the mid-17th century, as the price revolution, when relatively rapid gold inflation was causing a re-assessment of how money worked. The goldsmith bankers of London began to give out the receipts as payable to the bearer of the document rather than the original depositor. This meant that the note could be used as currency based on the security of the goldsmith, not the account holder of the goldsmith-banker.[30] The bankers also began issuing a greater value of notes than the total value of their physical reserves in the form of loans, on the assumption that they would not have to redeem all of their issued banknotes at the same time. This was a natural extension of debt-based issuance of split tally sticks used for centuries in places like St. Giles Fair,[31] however done in this way it was able to directly expand the expansion of the supply of circulating money. As these receipts were increasingly used in the money circulation system, depositors began to ask for multiple receipts to be made out in smaller, fixed denominations for use as money. The receipts soon became a written order to pay the amount to whoever had possession of the note. These notes are credited as the first modern banknotes.[28][32]

The first short-lived attempt at issuing banknotes by a central bank was in 1661 by Stockholms Banco, a predecessor of Sweden's central bank Sveriges Riksbank.[33] These replaced the copper-plates being used instead as a means of payment.[34] This banknote issue was brought about by the peculiar circumstances of the Swedish coin supply. Cheap foreign imports of copper had forced the Crown to steadily increase the size of the copper coinage to maintain its value relative to silver. The heavy weight of the new coins encouraged merchants to deposit it in exchange for receipts. These became banknotes when the manager of the bank decoupled the rate of note issue from the bank currency reserves. Three years later, the bank went bankrupt, after rapidly increasing the artificial money supply through the large-scale printing of paper money. A new bank, the Riksens Ständers Bank was established in 1668, but did not issue banknotes until the 19th century.[35]

Permanent issue of banknotes edit

 
The sealing of the Bank of England Charter (1694). The bank began the first permanent issue of banknotes a year later.

The modern banknote rests on the assumption that money is determined by a social and legal consensus. A gold coin's value is simply a reflection of the supply and demand mechanism of a society exchanging goods in a free market, as opposed to stemming from any intrinsic property of the metal. By the late 17th century, this new conceptual outlook helped to stimulate the issue of banknotes. The economist Nicholas Barbon wrote that money "was an imaginary value made by a law for the convenience of exchange".[36]

A temporary experiment of banknote issue was carried out by Sir William Phips as the governor of the Province of Massachusetts Bay in 1690 to help fund the war effort against France.[37] The other Thirteen Colonies followed in Massachusetts' wake and began issuing bills of credit, an early form of paper currency distinct from banknotes, to fund military expenditures and for use as a common medium of exchange.[38] By the 1760s, these bills of credit were used in the majority of transactions in the Thirteen Colonies.[39]

 
Fifty-five-dollar bill in Continental currency; leaf design by Benjamin Franklin, 1779

The first bank to initiate the permanent issue of banknotes was the Bank of England. Established in 1694 to raise money for the funding of the war against France, the bank began issuing notes in 1695 with the promise to pay the bearer the value of the note on demand. They were initially handwritten to a precise amount and issued on deposit or as a loan. There was a gradual move toward the issuance of fixed denomination notes, and by 1745, standardized printed notes ranging from £20 to £1,000 were being printed. Fully printed notes that did not require the name of the payee and the cashier's signature first appeared in 1855.[40]

The Scottish economist John Law helped establish banknotes as a formal currency in France, after the wars waged by Louis XIV left the country with a shortage of precious metals for coinage.

In the United States there were early attempts at establishing a central bank in 1791 and 1816, but it was only in 1862 that the federal government of the United States began to print banknotes.

Central bank issuance of legal tender edit

 
The Bank of England gained a monopoly over the issue of banknotes with the Bank Charter Act of 1844.

Originally, the banknote was simply a promise to the bearer that they could redeem it for its value in specie, but in 1833 the second in a series of Bank Charter Acts established that banknotes would be considered as legal tender during peacetime.[41]

Until the mid-nineteenth century, commercial banks were able to issue their own banknotes, and notes issued by provincial banking companies were the common form of currency throughout England, outside London.[42] The Bank Charter Act of 1844, which established the modern central bank,[43] restricted authorisation to issue new banknotes to the Bank of England, which would henceforth have sole control of the money supply in 1921. At the same time, the Bank of England was restricted to issue new banknotes only if they were 100% backed by gold or up to £14 million in government debt. The Act gave the Bank of England an effective monopoly over the note issue from 1928.[44][45]

Issue of banknotes edit

 
Collage for banknote design with annotations and additions to show proposed changes (figure rather higher so as to allow room for the No.), Bank of Manchester, UK, 1833. On display at the British Museum in London

Today, a central bank or treasury is generally solely responsible within a state or currency union for the issue of banknotes. However, this is not always the case, and historically the paper currency of countries was often handled entirely by private banks. Thus, many different banks or institutions may have issued banknotes in a given country. Commercial banks in the United States had legally issued banknotes before there was a national currency; however, these became subject to government authorization from 1863 to 1932. In the last of these series, the issuing bank would stamp its name and promise to pay, along with the signatures of its president and cashier on a preprinted note. By this time, the notes were standardized in appearance and not too different from Federal Reserve Notes.

 
A $5 note issued by Citizens Bank of Louisiana in the 1850s.

In a small number of countries, private banknote issue continues to this day. For example, by virtue of the complex constitutional setup in the United Kingdom, certain commercial banks in two of the state's four constituent countries (Scotland and Northern Ireland) continue to print their own banknotes for domestic circulation, even though they are not fiat money or declared in law as legal tender anywhere. The UK's central bank, the Bank of England, prints notes which are legal tender in England and Wales; these notes are also usable as money (but not legal tender) in the rest of the UK (see Banknotes of the pound sterling).

In the two Special Administrative Regions of the People's Republic of China, arrangements are similar to those in the UK; in Hong Kong, three commercial banks are licensed to issue Hong Kong dollar notes,[46] and in Macau, banknotes of the Macanese pataca are issued by two different commercial banks. In Luxembourg, the Banque Internationale à Luxembourg was entitled to issue its own Luxembourgish franc notes until the introduction of the Euro in 1999.[47]

As well as commercial issuers, other organizations may have note-issuing powers; for example, until 2002 the Singapore dollar was issued by the Board of Commissioners of Currency, Singapore, a government agency which was later taken over by the Monetary Authority of Singapore.[46]

As with any printing, there is also a chance for banknotes to have printing errors. For U.S. banknotes, these errors can include board break errors, butterfly fold errors, cutting errors, dual denomination errors, fold over errors, and misalignment errors.[48]

Advantages and disadvantages edit

 
When Brazil changed currencies in 1989, the 1000, 5000, and 10,000 cruzados banknotes were overstamped and issued as 1, 5, and 10 cruzados novos banknotes for several months before cruzado novo banknotes were printed and issued. Banknotes can be overstamped with new denominations, typically when a country converts to a new currency at an even, fixed exchange rate (in this case, 1000:1).

Prior to the introduction of banknotes, precious or semiprecious metals minted into coins to certify their substance were widely used as a medium of exchange. The value that people attributed to coins was originally based upon the value of the metal unless they were token issues or had been debased. Banknotes were originally a claim for the coins held by the bank, but due to the ease with which they could be transferred and the confidence that people had in the capacity of the bank to settle the notes in coin if presented, they became a popular means of exchange in their own right. They now make up a very small proportion of the "money" that people think that they have, as demand deposit bank accounts and electronic payments have negated much of the need to carry notes and coins.

Banknotes have a natural advantage over coins in that they are lighter to carry; but they are also less durable than coins. Banknotes issued by commercial banks had counterparty risk, meaning that the bank may not be able to make payment when the note was presented. Notes issued by central banks had a theoretical risk when they were backed by gold and silver. Both banknotes and coins are subject to inflation. The durability of coins means that even if metal coins melt in a fire or are submerged under the sea for hundreds of years they still have some value when they are recovered. Gold coins salvaged from shipwrecks retain almost all of their original appearance, but silver coins slowly corrode.[49][50]

Other costs of using bearer money include:

  1. Discounting to face value: Before national currencies and efficient clearing houses, banknotes were only redeemable at face value at the issuing bank. Even a branch bank could discount notes of other branches of the same bank. The discounts usually increased with distance from the issuing bank. The discount also depended on the perceived safety of the bank. When banks failed, the notes were usually partly redeemed out of reserves, but they sometimes became worthless.[51][52] The problem of discounting within a country does not exist with national currencies.
  2. Counterfeiting paper notes has always been a problem, especially since the introduction of color photocopiers and computer image scanners. Numerous banks and nations have incorporated many types of countermeasures in order to keep the money secure. However, extremely sophisticated counterfeit notes known as superdollars have been detected in recent years.
  3. Manufacturing or issue costs. Coins are produced by industrial manufacturing methods that process the precious, semi-precious, or other metals, and require additions of alloy for hardness and wear resistance. By contrast, bank notes are printed paper (or polymer), and typically have a higher cost of issue, especially in larger denominations, compared with coins of the same value.[dubious ]
  4. Wear costs. Banknotes do not lose economic value by wear, since, even if they are in poor condition, they are still a legally valid claim on the issuing bank. However, banks of issue do have to pay the cost of replacing banknotes in poor condition, and paper and even polymer notes wear out much faster than coins.
  5. Cost of transport. Coins can be expensive to transport for high value transactions, but banknotes can be issued in large denominations that are much lighter than the equivalent value in coins.
  6. Cost of acceptance. Coins can be checked for authenticity by weighing and other forms of examination and testing. These costs can be significant, but good quality coin design and manufacturing can help reduce these costs. Banknotes also have an acceptance cost – the expense of checking the banknote's security features and confirming acceptability of the issuing bank.

The different advantages and disadvantages of coins and banknotes imply that there may be an ongoing role for both forms of bearer money, each being used where its advantages outweigh its disadvantages.

Materials used for banknotes edit

Paper banknotes edit

 
Obverse and reverse of an old American $100 note (1928)

Until recently, most banknotes were made from cotton paper with a weight of 80 to 90 grams per square meter. The cotton is sometimes mixed with linen, abaca, or other textile fibres. Generally, the paper used is different from ordinary paper: it is much more resilient, resists wear and tear (the average life of a paper banknote is two years),[53] and also does not contain the usual agents that make ordinary paper glow slightly under ultraviolet light. Unlike most printing and writing paper, banknote paper is infused with polyvinyl alcohol or gelatin, instead of water, to give it extra strength. Early Chinese banknotes were printed on paper made of mulberry bark. Mitsumata (Edgeworthia chrysantha) and other fibers are used in Japanese banknote paper[54] (a kind of Washi).

Most banknotes are made using the mould made process in which a watermark and thread is incorporated during the paper forming process. The thread is a simple-looking security component found in most banknotes. It is however often rather complex in construction, comprising fluorescent, magnetic, metallic and micro print elements. By combining it with watermarking technology the thread can be made to surface periodically on one side only. This is known as windowed thread and further increases the counterfeit resistance of the banknote paper. This process was invented by Portals, part of the De La Rue group in the UK. Other related methods include watermarking to reduce the number of corner folds by strengthening this part of the note. Varnishing and coatings reduce the accumulation of dirt on the note for longer durability in circulation.

 
Many currencies, such as the Indonesian rupiah, vary the sizes of their banknotes by denomination. This is done so that they may be told apart through touch alone.[citation needed]

Another security feature is based on windows in the paper which are covered by holographic foils to make it very hard to copy. Such technology is applied as a portrait window for the higher denominations of the Europa series (ES2) of the euro banknotes.[55] Windows are also used with the Hybrid substrate from Giesecke+Devrient which is composed of an inner layer of paper substrate with thin outer layers of plastic film for high durability.[56]

History of counterfeiting and security measures edit

When paper bank notes were first introduced in England, they resulted in a dramatic rise in counterfeiting.[citation needed] The attempts by the Bank of England and the Royal Mint to stamp out currency crime led to new policing strategies, including the increased use of entrapment.[57]

The characteristics of banknotes, their materials and production techniques (as well as their development over history) are topics that are not usually thoroughly examined by historians, even though there are now a number of works detailing how bank notes were actually constructed. This is mostly because historians tend to be more interested in a theoretical understanding of how money worked rather than how it was produced.[58] The first great deterrent against counterfeiting was the death penalty for forgers, but this was not enough to stop the rise of counterfeiting. Over the 18th century, far fewer banknotes were circulating in England compared to the boom of bank notes in the 19th century; because of this, improved note-making techniques were not considered a compelling issue.

In the 18th century, banknotes were produced mainly by copper-plate engraving and printing, and they were single-sided. Note-making technologies remained largely unchanged during the 18th century.[59] The first banknotes were produced by intaglio printing: this involved engraving a copper plate by hand and then covering it in ink to print the bank notes. Only with this technique, at that time, could one force the paper into the lines of the engraving to make suitable banknotes. Another difficulty in counterfeiting banknotes was the paper, as the type of paper used for banknotes was rather different from the paper commercially available at that time. Despite this, some forgers successfully forged notes by dealing with and consulting paper makers, in order to make a similar kind of paper themselves.[60] Furthermore, watermarked paper has also been used since banknotes first appeared; it involved the sewing of a thin wire frame into paper mould. Watermarks for notes were first used in 1697, by Rice Watkins, a Berkshire paper maker.[60] Watermarks and special paper made it harder and more expensive to forge banknotes, since more complex and expensive paper-making machines were needed.

In the early 19th century (the so-called Bank Restriction Period, 1797–1821), the dramatically increased demand for bank notes slowly forced the banks to refine the technologies employed.[60] In 1801, watermarks, which previously were straight lines, became wavy: an idea of William Brewer, a watermark mould maker. This made counterfeiting bank notes harder still, at least in the short term, and in 1803 the number of forged bank notes fell to just 3000, compared to 5000 the previous year.[61] In the same period, bank notes also started to be double-sided and have more complex patterns, and banks asked skilled engravers and artists to help them make their notes harder to counterfeit (an episode labelled by historians as "the search for the inimitable banknote").[62]

The ease with which paper money can be created, by both legitimate authorities and counterfeiters, has led to a temptation in times of crisis such as war or revolution, or merely a spendthrift government, to produce paper money which was not supported by precious metal or other goods; this often led to hyperinflation and a loss of faith in the value of paper money, e.g. the Continental Currency produced by the Continental Congress during the American Revolution, the Assignats produced during the French Revolution, the paper currency produced by the Confederate States of America and the individual states of the Confederate States of America, the financing of World War I by the Central Powers (by 1922 1 gold Austro-Hungarian krone of 1914 was worth 14,400 paper Kronen), the devaluation of the Yugoslav dinar in the 1990s, etc. Banknotes may also be overprinted to reflect political or economic changes that occur faster than new currency can be printed.

In 1988, Austria produced the 5000 Schilling banknote (Mozart), which is the first foil application (Kinegram) to a paper banknote in the history of banknote printing. The application of optical features is now common throughout the world. Many countries' banknotes now have embedded holograms.

Polymer banknotes edit

 
A 2000 Romanian lei polymer banknote

In 1983, Costa Rica and Haiti issued the first Tyvek and the Isle of Man issued the first Bradvek polymer (or plastic) banknotes; these were printed by the American Banknote Company and developed by DuPont. These early plastic notes were plagued with issues such as ink wearing off, and they were discontinued. In 1988, after significant research and development in Australia by the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) and the Reserve Bank of Australia, Australia produced the first polymer banknote made from biaxially-oriented polypropylene (plastic), and in 1996, Australia became the first country to have a full set of circulating polymer banknotes of all denominations, completely replacing its paper banknotes. Since then, many other countries have adopted circulating polymer banknotes, including Bangladesh, Brazil, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Guatemala, Dominican Republic, Hong Kong SAR (China), Indonesia, Israel, Malaysia, Mexico, Nepal, New Zealand, Nigeria, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, the Philippines, Romania, Samoa, Singapore, the Solomon Islands, Thailand, Trinidad and Tobago, the United Kingdom, Uruguay, Vietnam, and Zambia. Other countries have issued commemorative polymer notes, including China, Kuwait, the Northern Bank of Northern Ireland, Taiwan.[63] In 2005, Bulgaria issued the world's first hybrid paper-polymer banknote.

Polymer banknotes were developed to improve durability and prevent counterfeiting through incorporated security features, such as optically variable devices that are extremely difficult to reproduce.

Other materials edit

 
Bielefeld Germany 25 Mark 1921. Silk Banknote.[64]

Over the years, a number of materials other than paper have been used to print banknotes. This includes various textiles, including silk, and materials such as leather.[65]

 
Russian American Company-issued Alaskan parchment scrip (c. 1852)

Silk and other fibers have been commonly used in the manufacture of various banknote papers, intended to provide both additional durability and security. Crane and Company patented banknote paper with embedded silk threads in 1844 and has supplied paper to the United States Treasury since 1879. Banknotes printed on pure silk "paper" include "emergency money" Notgeld issues from a number of German towns in 1923 during a period of fiscal crisis and hyperinflation. Most notoriously, Bielefeld produced a number of silk, leather, velvet, linen and wood issues. These issues were produced primarily for collectors, rather than for circulation. They are in demand by collectors. Banknotes printed on cloth include a number of Communist Revolutionary issues in China from areas such as Xinjiang, or Sinkiang, in the United Islamic Republic of East Turkestan in 1933. Emergency money was also printed in 1902 on khaki shirt fabric during the Boer War.

Cotton fibers together with 25% linen is the material of the banknotes in the United States. Leather banknotes (or coins) were issued in a number of sieges, as well as in other times of emergency. During the Russian administration of Alaska, banknotes were printed on sealskin. A number of 19th century issues are known in Germanic and Estonia, including the places of Dorpat, Pernau, Reval, Werro and Woiseck. In addition to the Bielefeld issues, other German leather Notgeld from 1923 is known from Borna, Osterwieck, Paderborn and Pößneck.

Other issues from 1923 were printed on wood, which was also used in Canada in 1763–1764 during Pontiac's Rebellion, and by the Hudson's Bay Company. In 1848, in Bohemia, wooden checkerboard pieces were used as money.

Even playing cards were used for currency in France in the early 19th century, and in French Canada from 1685 until 1757, the Colony of Louisiana, Dutch Guiana, and in the Isle of Man in the beginning of the 19th century, and again in Germany after World War I.

Most recently, Bisphenol S (BPS), has been frequently used in the production of banknotes worldwide. BPS is an endocrine disruptor that is subject to human dermal absorption through handling banknotes.[66]

Vertical orientation edit

Vertical currency is a type of currency in which the orientation has been changed from the conventional horizontal orientation to a vertical orientation. Dowling Duncan, a self-touted multidisciplinary design studio, conducted a study in which they determined people tend to handle and deal with money vertically rather than horizontally, especially when the currency is processed through ATM and other money machines. They also note how money transactions are conducted vertically not horizontally.[67] Bermuda, Cape Verde, Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States, Switzerland, and Venezuela have adopted vertically oriented currency, though Cape Verde has now reverted to horizontal orientation.

Since 1979, Sri Lanka has printed the reverse of its banknotes vertically. Between 1993 and 2013, Brazil has printed banknotes of 5000 and 50000 cruzeiros reais and the first Brazilian real series of banknotes has the obverse in traditional horizontal layout, while the reverse is in vertical format. The 2018 Hong Kong dollar banknotes series too has the obverse in traditional horizontal layout, while the reverse is in vertical format.[68]

Early Chinese banknotes were also vertical, due to the direction of Chinese writing.

The 2018 Canadian $10 bill featuring a portrait of Canadian civil rights pioneer Viola Desmond is presented in a vertical format.[69][70] The Northern Irish £5 and £10 notes issued by Ulster Bank for 2019 were also presented in this way.[71]

Vending machines and banknotes edit

In the late 20th century, vending machines were designed to recognize banknotes of the smaller values long after they were designed to recognize coins distinct from slugs.[where?] This capability has become inescapable in economies where inflation has not been followed by introduction of progressively larger coin denominations (such as the United States, where several attempts to make dollar coins popular in general circulation have largely failed). The existing infrastructure of such machines presents one of the difficulties in changing the design of these banknotes to make them less counterfeitable, that is, by adding additional features so easily discernible by people that they would immediately reject banknotes of inferior quality, for every machine in the country would have to be updated.[citation needed]

Destruction edit

 
A 5 euro note so badly damaged it has been torn in half. The note has later been repaired with tape.

A banknote is removed from circulation because of everyday wear and tear from its handling. Banknotes are passed through a banknote sorting machine to assess their authenticity and fitness for circulation, or may be classified unfit for circulation if they are worn, dirty, soiled, damaged, mutilated or torn. Unfit notes are returned to the central bank for secure online destruction by high-speed banknote sorting machines using a cross-cut shredder device similar to a paper shredder with security level P-5 (pieces smaller than 30 mm2) according to the standard DIN 66399–2. This small size decomposes a banknote into typically more than 500 tiny pieces and rules out reconstruction like a jigsaw puzzle because the shreds from many banknotes are commingled.

A subsequent briquettor compresses shredded paper material into a small cylindrical or rectangular form for disposal (e.g. landfill or burning).[72] Before the 1990s, unfit banknotes were destroyed by incineration, with a higher risk of manipulations.

When a Federal Reserve Bank of the United States receives a cash deposit from a commercial bank or another financial institution, it checks the individual notes to determine whether they are fit for future circulation.[73] About one-third of the notes that the Fed receives are unfit, and the Fed destroys them. US dollar banknotes last an average of more than five years.[74]

Contaminated banknotes are also decommissioned and removed from circulation, primarily to prevent the spread of diseases. A Canadian government report indicates:

Types of contaminants include: notes found on a corpse, stagnant water, contaminated by human or animal body fluids such as urine, feces, vomit, infectious blood, fine hazardous powders from detonated explosives, dye pack and/or drugs...[75]

In the US, the nickname "Fed Shreds" refers to paper money which has been shredded after becoming unfit for circulation. Although these shredded banknotes are generally landfilled, they are sometimes sold or given away in small bags as souvenirs or as briquettes.[76]

Polymer banknotes may be shredded and then melted down and recycled to form plastic products like building components, plumbing fittings, or compost bins.[77]

Intelligent banknote neutralisation systems edit

Intelligent banknote neutralisation systems (IBNS) are security systems which render banknotes unusable by marking them permanently as stolen with a degradation agent. Marked (stained) banknotes cannot be brought back into circulation easily and can be linked to the crime scene. Today's most used degradation agent is a special security ink which cannot be removed from the banknote easily and not without destroying the banknote itself, but other agents also exist. Today IBNSs are used to protect banknotes in automated teller machines, retail machines, and during cash-in-transit operations.

Dynamic Intelligent Currency Encryption edit

Dynamic Intelligent Currency Encryption (DICE) is a security technology introduced in 2014 by British company EDAQS, which devaluates banknotes remotely that are illegal or have been stolen. The technology is based on identifiable banknotes – that could be an RFID chip or a barcode – and connects to a digital security system to verify the validity of the banknote. The company claims that the banknotes are unforgeable and contribute to solve cash-related problems as well as fight crime and terrorism. In another note, the DICE benefits cover and solve almost all cash-related issues that are seen by governments to be a motivation for the progressive abolition of cash.[78]

Confiscation and asset forfeiture edit

In the United States there are many laws that allow the confiscation of cash and other assets from the bearer if there is suspicion that the money came from an illegal activity.[79] Because a significant amount of U.S. currency contains traces of cocaine and other illegal drugs, it is not uncommon for innocent people searched at airports or stopped for traffic violations to have cash in their possession sniffed by dogs for drugs and then have the cash seized because the dog smelled drugs on the money. It is then up to the owner of the money to prove where the cash came from at his own expense. Many people simply forfeit the money.[80] In 1994, the United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit, held in the case of United States of America v. U.S. Currency, $30,060.00 (39 F.3d 1039 63 USLW 2351, No. 92-55919) that the widespread presence of illegal substances on paper currency in the Los Angeles area created a situation where the reaction of a drug-sniffing dog would not create probable cause for civil forfeiture.[81]

Paper money collecting as a hobby edit

Banknote collecting, or notaphily, is a slowly growing area of numismatics. Although generally not as widespread as coin and stamp collecting, the hobby is slowly expanding. Prior to the 1990s, currency collecting was a relatively small adjunct to coin collecting, but currency auctions and greater public awareness of paper money have caused more interest in rare banknotes and consequently their increased value.[citation needed] The most valuable banknote is the $1000 bill issued in 1890 that was sold at an auction for $2,255,000.

Trades edit

For years, the mode of collecting banknotes was through a handful of mail order dealers who issued price lists and catalogs. In the early 1990s, it became more common for rare notes to be sold at various coin and currency shows via auction. The illustrated catalogs and "event nature" of the auction practice seemed to fuel a sharp rise in overall awareness of paper money in the numismatic community. The emergence of currency third party grading services (similar to services that grade and "slab", or encapsulate, coins) also may have increased collector and investor interest in notes. Entire advanced collections are often sold at one time, and to this day single auctions can generate millions in gross sales. Today, eBay has surpassed auctions in terms of highest volume of sales of banknotes.[82][83][84] However, rare banknotes still sell for much less than comparable rare coins. This disparity is diminishing as paper money prices continue to rise. A few rare and historical banknotes have sold for more than a million dollars.[85]

There are many different organizations and societies around the world for the hobby, including the International Bank Note Society (IBNS), which currently assert to have around 2,000 members in 90 countries.[86]

Novelty edit

The universal appeal and instant recognition of bank notes has resulted in a plethora of novelty merchandise that is designed to have the appearance of paper currency. These items cover nearly every class of product. Cloth material printed with bank note patterns is used for clothing, bed linens, curtains, upholstery and more. Acrylic paperweights and even toilet seats with bank notes embedded inside are also common. Items that resemble stacks of bank notes and can be used as a seat or ottoman are also available.

Manufacturers of these items must take into consideration when creating these products whether the product could be construed as counterfeiting. Overlapping note images and/or changing the dimensions of the reproduction to be at least 50% smaller or 50% larger than the original are some ways to avoid the risk of being considered a counterfeit. But in cases where realism is the goal, other steps may be necessary. For example, in the stack of bank notes seat mentioned earlier, the decal used to create the product would be considered counterfeit. However, once the decal has been affixed to the resin stack shell and cannot be peeled off, the final product is no longer at risk of being classified as counterfeit, even though the resulting appearance is realistic.

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ Atack & Passell (1994), p. 469.
  2. ^ . British Royal Mint. Archived from the original on 17 December 2008. Retrieved 2 September 2007.
  3. ^ Hammurabi (1903). Translated by Sommer, Otto. "Code of Hammurabi, King of Babylon". Records of the Past. Washington, DC: Records of the Past Exploration Society. 2 (3): 75. Retrieved 20 June 2021. 100. Anyone borrowing money shall ... his contract [for payment].
  4. ^ Hammurabi (1904). "Code of Hammurabi, King of Babylon" (PDF). Liberty Fund. Translated by Harper, Robert Francis (2nd ed.). Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 35. (PDF) from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 20 June 2021. §100. ...he shall write down ... returns to his merchant.
  5. ^ a b Hammurabi (1910). "Code of Hammurabi, King of Babylon". Avalon Project. Translated by King, Leonard William. New Haven, CT: Yale Law School. from the original on 10 May 2021. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  6. ^ Hammurabi (1903). Translated by Sommer, Otto. "Code of Hammurabi, King of Babylon". Records of the Past. Washington, DC: Records of the Past Exploration Society. 2 (3): 77. Retrieved 20 June 2021. 122. If anyone entrusts to ... have committed an offence.
  7. ^ Hammurabi (1904). "Code of Hammurabi, King of Babylon" (PDF). Liberty Fund. Translated by Harper, Robert Francis (2nd ed.). Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 43. (PDF) from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 20 June 2021. §122. If a man give ... it from the thief.
  8. ^ "The History of Money". pbs.org – Nova. 26 October 1996. from the original on 25 August 2017. Retrieved 24 August 2017.
  9. ^ . 1 June 2016. Archived from the original on 10 April 2019. Retrieved 9 June 2018.
  10. ^ Jones, John Percival (1890). Speeches of J.P. Jones: Money and Tariff, 1890–93. from the original on 1 July 2023. Retrieved 24 August 2017.
  11. ^ Moulton, Luther Vanhorn (1880). The Science of Money and American Finances. Co-operative Press. p. 134.
  12. ^ Wells, H. G. (1921). The outline of history, being a plain history of life and mankind. New York: The Macmillan Company.
  13. ^ a b c d Ebrey, Walthall & Palais (2006), p. 156.
  14. ^ a b Bowman (2000), p. 105.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Gernet (1962), p. 80.
  16. ^ a b c William N. Goetzmann; K. Geert Rouwenhorst (2005). The Origins of Value: The Financial Innovations that Created Modern Capital Markets. Oxford University Press. p. 94. ISBN 978-0-19-517571-4. The Mongols adopted the Jin and Song practice of issuing paper money, and the earliest European account of paper money is the detailed description given by Marco Polo, who claimed to have served at the court of the Yuan dynasty rulers.
  17. ^ a b c Marco Polo (1818). The Travels of Marco Polo, a Venetian, in the Thirteenth Century: Being a Description, by that Early Traveller, of Remarkable Places and Things, in the Eastern Parts of the World. pp. 353–355. from the original on 1 July 2023. Retrieved 19 September 2012.
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  19. ^ "Chapter 12: Security Printing and Seals" (PDF). Security Engineering: A Guide to Building Dependable Distributed Systems. p. 245. (PDF) from the original on 11 December 2013. Retrieved 26 May 2014. The introduction of paper money into Europe by Napoleon in the early 1800s, and of other valuable documents such as bearer securities and passports, kicked off a battle between security printers and counterfeiters
  20. ^ Peter Bernholz (2003). Monetary Regimes and Inflation: History, Economic and Political Relationships. Edward Elgar Publishing. p. 53. ISBN 978-1-84376-155-6.
  21. ^ Daniel R. Headrick (2009). Technology: A World History. Oxford University Press. p. 85. ISBN 978-0-19-988759-0.
  22. ^ Needham (1986), p. 47.
  23. ^ a b c Needham (1986), p. 48.
  24. ^ Jankowiak, Marek. Dirhams for slaves. Medieval Seminar, All Souls, 2012, p. 8
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  27. ^ Moshenskyi, Sergii (2008). History of the weksel: Bill of exchange and promissory note. p. 55. ISBN 978-1-4363-0694-2.
  28. ^ a b De Geschiedenis van het Geld (the History of Money), 1992, Teleac, p. 96
  29. ^ "Sverige, Palmstruchska banken, Kreditsedel 10 daler silvermynt, 17 april 1666" [Europe's first banknotes]. Alvin (in Swedish).
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  31. ^ Tymoigne, Eric; Wray, L. Randall (July 2005). "Money: An Alternative Story". doi:10.2139/ssrn.1009611. S2CID 2254888. SSRN 1009611. from the original on 20 September 2022. Retrieved 1 September 2022. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  32. ^ Vincent Lannoye (2011). The History of Money for Understanding Economics. Vincent Lannoye. p. 132. ISBN 978-1-4802-0066-1. from the original on 1 July 2023. Retrieved 2 July 2018.
  33. ^ Geisst, Charles R. (2005). Encyclopedia of American business history. New York. p. 39. ISBN 978-0-8160-4350-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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  36. ^ Nicholas Barbon, Discourse on Trade, 1690. p. 37
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  44. ^ Jeffrey A. Tucker (16 September 2010). . Mises Wire. Mises Institute. Archived from the original on 18 September 2010. Retrieved 17 September 2010.
  45. ^ Horsefield, J. K. (November 1944). "The Origins of the Bank Charter Act, 1844". Economica. New. 11 (44): 180–189. doi:10.2307/2549352. JSTOR 2549352.
  46. ^ a b Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems (August 2003). "The Role of Central Bank Money in Payment Systems" (PDF). Bank for International Settlements. p. 96. (PDF) from the original on 9 September 2008. Retrieved 14 August 2008. Although historically not the case, these days banknotes are usually issued only by the central bank. This is broadly the case in all CPSS economies, except Hong Kong SAR, where banknotes are issued by three commercial banks. Singapore and the United Kingdom are more limited exceptions. Singapore dollar banknotes have been issued by the Board of Commissioners of Currency, a government agency, although following the merger of the Board into the MAS in October 2002 this is no longer the case. In the United Kingdom, Scottish banks retain the right to issue banknotes alongside those of the Bank of England and three banks currently still do so.
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  49. ^ Famous shipwrecks from which valuable precious metals and coins were recovered in recent years include the Atocha and the SS Central America. Shipwreck coins are highly collectible, and dealers sometimes post photos on the internet.
  50. ^ "Virtual Shipwreck and Hoard Map by Daniel Frank Sedwick, LLC". sedwickcoins.com. from the original on 23 June 2012. Retrieved 3 June 2012.
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  58. ^ Mockford, 2014; pp. 118–119 quote="Detailed discussion of the material characteristics of Bank Notes, as well as the methods used in their construction, have therefore tended to constitute merely a footnote in historical works that have often prioritised both contemporary and modern theoretical understandings of money and exchange."
  59. ^ Mockford, 2014; p. 121 quote="The technologies employed by the Bank in the making of its notes were ones that altered very little throughout the course of the long eighteenth century, with major changes not occurring until well after the close of this period."
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  61. ^ Mockford, 2014; p. 126
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Bibliography edit

  • Atack, Jeremy; Passell, Peter (1994). A New Economic View of American History. New York: W.W. Norton and Co. ISBN 978-0-393-96315-1.
  • Bowman, John S. (2000). Columbia Chronologies of Asian History and Culture. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-2311-1004-4.
  • Ebrey; Walthall; Palais (2006). East Asia: A Cultural, Social, and Political History. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company. ISBN 978-0-6181-3384-0.
  • Gernet, Jacques (1962). Daily Life in China on the Eve of the Mongol Invasion, 1250–1276. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-0720-6.
  • Needham, Joseph (1986). Science and Civilisation in China: Volume 5, Part 1. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-5218-7566-0.
  • Mockford, Jack (2014). "They are Exactly as Banknotes are": Perceptions and Technologies of Bank Note Forgery During the Bank Restriction Period, 1797–1821 (PDF) (PhD). University of Hertfordshire.

External links edit

  • Counterfeit money was a major problem in the 1850s – Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois newspaper)

banknote, banknote, also, called, bill, north, american, english, paper, money, simply, note, type, negotiable, promissory, note, made, bank, other, licensed, authority, payable, bearer, demand, were, originally, issued, commercial, banks, which, were, legally. A banknote also called a bill North American English paper money or simply a note is a type of negotiable promissory note made by a bank or other licensed authority payable to the bearer on demand Banknotes were originally issued by commercial banks which were legally required to redeem the notes for legal tender usually gold or silver coin when presented to the chief cashier of the originating bank These commercial banknotes only traded at face value in the market served by the issuing bank 1 Commercial banknotes have primarily been replaced by national banknotes issued by central banks or monetary authorities Banknotes with a face value of ten in the United States dollar pound sterling as issued by the Bank of England and euro National banknotes are often but not always legal tender meaning that courts of law are required to recognize them as satisfactory payment of money debts 2 Historically banks sought to ensure that they could always pay customers in coins when they presented banknotes for payment This practice of backing notes with something of substance is the basis for the history of central banks backing their currencies in gold or silver Today most national currencies have no backing in precious metals or commodities and have value only by fiat With the exception of non circulating high value or precious metal issues coins are used for lower valued monetary units while banknotes are used for higher values Code of Hammurabi Law 100 c 1755 1750 BC stipulated repayment of a loan by a debtor to a creditor on a schedule with a maturity date specified in written contractual terms 3 4 5 Law 122 stipulated that a depositor of gold silver or other chattel movable property for safekeeping must present all articles and a signed contract of bailment to a notary before depositing the articles with a banker and Law 123 stipulated that a banker was discharged of any liability from a contract of bailment if the notary denied the existence of the contract Law 124 stipulated that a depositor with a notarized contract of bailment was entitled to redeem the entire value of their deposit and Law 125 stipulated that a banker was liable for replacement of deposits stolen while in their possession 6 7 5 In China during the Han dynasty promissory notes appeared in 118 BC and were made of leather 8 Rome may have used a durable lightweight substance as promissory notes in 57 AD which have been found in London 9 However Carthage was purported to have issued bank notes on parchment or leather before 146 BC Hence Carthage may be the oldest user of lightweight promissory notes 10 11 12 The first known banknote was first developed in China during the Tang and Song dynasties starting in the 7th century Its roots were in merchant receipts of deposit during the Tang dynasty 618 907 as merchants and wholesalers desired to avoid the heavy bulk of copper coinage in large commercial transactions 13 14 15 During the Yuan dynasty 1271 1368 banknotes were adopted by the Mongol Empire In Europe the concept of banknotes was first introduced during the 13th century by travelers such as Marco Polo 16 17 with European banknotes appearing in 1661 in Sweden Counterfeiting the forgery of banknotes is an inherent challenge in issuing currency It is countered by anticounterfeiting measures in the printing of banknotes Fighting the counterfeiting of banknotes and cheques has been a principal driver of security printing methods development in recent centuries Contents 1 History 1 1 Early Chinese paper money 1 2 European explorers and merchants 1 3 Birth of European banknotes 1 4 Permanent issue of banknotes 1 5 Central bank issuance of legal tender 2 Issue of banknotes 3 Advantages and disadvantages 4 Materials used for banknotes 4 1 Paper banknotes 4 2 History of counterfeiting and security measures 4 3 Polymer banknotes 4 4 Other materials 4 5 Vertical orientation 5 Vending machines and banknotes 6 Destruction 7 Intelligent banknote neutralisation systems 8 Dynamic Intelligent Currency Encryption 9 Confiscation and asset forfeiture 10 Paper money collecting as a hobby 10 1 Trades 10 2 Novelty 11 See also 12 Notes and references 13 Bibliography 14 External linksHistory editMain article History of money Paper currency first developed in Tang dynasty China during the 7th century where it was called flying money 18 although true paper money did not appear until the 11th century during the Song dynasty The use of paper currency later spread throughout the Mongol Empire or Yuan dynasty China European explorers like Marco Polo introduced the concept in Europe during the 13th century 16 17 Napoleon issued paper banknotes in the early 1800s 19 Cash paper money originated as receipts for value held on account value received and should not be conflated with promissory sight bills which were issued with a promise to convert at a later date The perception of banknotes as money has evolved over time Originally money was based on precious metals Banknotes were seen by some as an I O U or promissory note a promise to pay someone in precious metal on presentation see representative money But they were readily accepted for convenience and security in London for example from the late 1600s onwards With the removal of precious metals from the monetary system banknotes evolved into pure fiat money Early Chinese paper money edit See also List of Chinese inventions Economy of the Song dynasty and Jiaozi currency nbsp Song dynasty Jiaozi the world s earliest paper money nbsp A Yuan dynasty printing plate and banknote with Chinese words The first banknote type instrument was used in China in the 7th century during the Tang dynasty 618 907 Merchants would issue what are today called promissory notes in the form of receipts of deposit to wholesalers to avoid using the heavy bulk of copper coinage in large commercial transactions 13 14 15 Before the use of these notes the Chinese used coins that were circular with a rectangular hole in the middle Coins could be strung together on a rope Merchants if they were rich enough found that the strings were too heavy to carry around easily especially for large transactions To solve this problem coins could be left with a trusted person with the merchant being given a slip of paper the receipt recording how much money they had deposited with that person When they returned with the paper to that person their coins would be returned True paper money called jiaozi developed from these promissory notes by the 11th century during the Song dynasty 20 21 By 960 the Song government was short of copper for striking coins and issued the first generally circulating notes These notes were a promise by the ruler to redeem them later for some other object of value usually specie The issue of credit notes was often for a limited duration and at some discount to the promised amount later The jiaozi did not replace coins but was used alongside them The central government soon observed the economic advantages of printing paper money issuing a monopoly for the issue of these certificates of deposit to several deposit shops 13 By the early 12th century the amount of banknotes issued in a single year amounted to an annual rate of 26 million strings of cash coins 15 By the 1120s the central government started to produce its own state issued paper money using woodblock printing 13 Even before this point the Song government was amassing large amounts of paper tribute It was recorded that each year before 1101 the prefecture of Xin an modern Shexian Anhui alone would send 1 500 000 sheets of paper in seven different varieties to the capital at Kaifeng 22 In 1101 the Emperor Huizong of Song decided to lessen the amount of paper taken in the tribute quota because it was causing detrimental effects and creating heavy burdens on the people of the region 23 However the government still needed masses of paper product for the exchange certificates and the state s new issuing of paper money For the printing of paper money alone the Song government established several government run factories in the cities of Huizhou which Chengdu Hangzhou and Anqi 23 The workforce employed in these paper money factories was quite large it was recorded in 1175 that the factory at Hangzhou alone employed more than a thousand workers a day 23 However the government issues of paper money were not yet nationwide standards of currency at that point issues of banknotes were limited to regional areas of the empire and were valid for use only in a designated and temporary limit of three years 15 The geographic limitation changed between 1265 and 1274 when the late southern Song government issued a nationwide paper currency standard which was backed by gold or silver 15 The range of varying values for these banknotes was perhaps from one string of cash to one hundred at the most 15 Ever after 1107 the government printed money in no less than six ink colors and printed notes with intricate designs and sometimes even with mixture of a unique fiber in the paper to combat counterfeiting The founder of the Yuan dynasty Kublai Khan issued paper money known as Jiaochao The original notes were restricted by area and duration as in the Song dynasty but in the later years facing massive shortages of specie to fund their rule the paper money began to be issued without restrictions on duration Venetian merchants were impressed by the fact that the Chinese paper money was guaranteed by the State European explorers and merchants edit According to a travelogue of a visit to Prague in 960 by Ibrahim ibn Yaqub small pieces of cloth were used as a means of trade with these cloths having a set exchange rate versus silver 24 Around 1150 the Knights Templar would issue notes to pilgrims Pilgrims would deposit valuables with a local Templar preceptory before embarking for the Holy Land and receive a document indicating the value of their deposit They would then use that document upon arrival in the Holy Land to receive funds from the treasury of equal value 25 26 nbsp Marco Polo described the use of early banknotes in China to Medieval Europe in his book The Travels of Marco Polo In the 13th century Chinese paper money of Mongol Yuan became known in Europe through the accounts of travelers such as Marco Polo and William of Rubruck 16 27 Marco Polo s account of paper money during the Yuan dynasty is the subject of a chapter of his book The Travels of Marco Polo titled How the Great Kaan Causeth the Bark of Trees Made into Something Like Paper to Pass for Money All Over his Country 17 All these pieces of paper are issued with as much solemnity and authority as if they were of pure gold or silver with these pieces of paper made as I have described Kublai Khan causes all payments on his own account to be made and he makes them to pass current universally over all his kingdoms and provinces and territories and whithersoever his power and sovereignty extends and indeed everybody takes them readily for wheresoever a person may go throughout the Great Kaan s dominions he shall find these pieces of paper current and shall be able to transact all sales and purchases of goods by means of them just as well as if they were coins of pure gold Marco Polo The Travels of Marco Polo In medieval Italy and Flanders because of the insecurity and impracticality of transporting large sums of cash over long distances money traders started using promissory notes In the beginning these were personally registered but they soon became a written order to pay the amount to whoever had it in their possession These notes are seen as a predecessor to regular banknotes by some but are mainly thought of as proto bills of exchange and cheques 28 The term bank note comes from the notes of the bank nota di banco and dates from the 14th century it originally recognized the right of the holder of the note to collect the precious metal usually gold or silver deposited with a banker via a currency account In the 14th century it was used in every part of Europe and in Italian city state merchants colonies outside of Europe For international payments the more efficient and sophisticated bill of exchange lettera di cambio that is a promissory note based on a virtual currency account usually a coin no longer physically existing was used more often All physical currencies were physically related to this virtual currency this instrument also served as credit Birth of European banknotes edit nbsp The first paper money in Europe issued by the Stockholms Banco in 1666 29 The shift toward the use of these receipts as a means of payment took place in the mid 17th century as the price revolution when relatively rapid gold inflation was causing a re assessment of how money worked The goldsmith bankers of London began to give out the receipts as payable to the bearer of the document rather than the original depositor This meant that the note could be used as currency based on the security of the goldsmith not the account holder of the goldsmith banker 30 The bankers also began issuing a greater value of notes than the total value of their physical reserves in the form of loans on the assumption that they would not have to redeem all of their issued banknotes at the same time This was a natural extension of debt based issuance of split tally sticks used for centuries in places like St Giles Fair 31 however done in this way it was able to directly expand the expansion of the supply of circulating money As these receipts were increasingly used in the money circulation system depositors began to ask for multiple receipts to be made out in smaller fixed denominations for use as money The receipts soon became a written order to pay the amount to whoever had possession of the note These notes are credited as the first modern banknotes 28 32 The first short lived attempt at issuing banknotes by a central bank was in 1661 by Stockholms Banco a predecessor of Sweden s central bank Sveriges Riksbank 33 These replaced the copper plates being used instead as a means of payment 34 This banknote issue was brought about by the peculiar circumstances of the Swedish coin supply Cheap foreign imports of copper had forced the Crown to steadily increase the size of the copper coinage to maintain its value relative to silver The heavy weight of the new coins encouraged merchants to deposit it in exchange for receipts These became banknotes when the manager of the bank decoupled the rate of note issue from the bank currency reserves Three years later the bank went bankrupt after rapidly increasing the artificial money supply through the large scale printing of paper money A new bank the Riksens Standers Bank was established in 1668 but did not issue banknotes until the 19th century 35 Permanent issue of banknotes edit nbsp The sealing of the Bank of England Charter 1694 The bank began the first permanent issue of banknotes a year later The modern banknote rests on the assumption that money is determined by a social and legal consensus A gold coin s value is simply a reflection of the supply and demand mechanism of a society exchanging goods in a free market as opposed to stemming from any intrinsic property of the metal By the late 17th century this new conceptual outlook helped to stimulate the issue of banknotes The economist Nicholas Barbon wrote that money was an imaginary value made by a law for the convenience of exchange 36 A temporary experiment of banknote issue was carried out by Sir William Phips as the governor of the Province of Massachusetts Bay in 1690 to help fund the war effort against France 37 The other Thirteen Colonies followed in Massachusetts wake and began issuing bills of credit an early form of paper currency distinct from banknotes to fund military expenditures and for use as a common medium of exchange 38 By the 1760s these bills of credit were used in the majority of transactions in the Thirteen Colonies 39 nbsp Fifty five dollar bill in Continental currency leaf design by Benjamin Franklin 1779The first bank to initiate the permanent issue of banknotes was the Bank of England Established in 1694 to raise money for the funding of the war against France the bank began issuing notes in 1695 with the promise to pay the bearer the value of the note on demand They were initially handwritten to a precise amount and issued on deposit or as a loan There was a gradual move toward the issuance of fixed denomination notes and by 1745 standardized printed notes ranging from 20 to 1 000 were being printed Fully printed notes that did not require the name of the payee and the cashier s signature first appeared in 1855 40 The Scottish economist John Law helped establish banknotes as a formal currency in France after the wars waged by Louis XIV left the country with a shortage of precious metals for coinage In the United States there were early attempts at establishing a central bank in 1791 and 1816 but it was only in 1862 that the federal government of the United States began to print banknotes Central bank issuance of legal tender edit nbsp The Bank of England gained a monopoly over the issue of banknotes with the Bank Charter Act of 1844 Originally the banknote was simply a promise to the bearer that they could redeem it for its value in specie but in 1833 the second in a series of Bank Charter Acts established that banknotes would be considered as legal tender during peacetime 41 Until the mid nineteenth century commercial banks were able to issue their own banknotes and notes issued by provincial banking companies were the common form of currency throughout England outside London 42 The Bank Charter Act of 1844 which established the modern central bank 43 restricted authorisation to issue new banknotes to the Bank of England which would henceforth have sole control of the money supply in 1921 At the same time the Bank of England was restricted to issue new banknotes only if they were 100 backed by gold or up to 14 million in government debt The Act gave the Bank of England an effective monopoly over the note issue from 1928 44 45 Issue of banknotes edit nbsp Collage for banknote design with annotations and additions to show proposed changes figure rather higher so as to allow room for the No Bank of Manchester UK 1833 On display at the British Museum in LondonToday a central bank or treasury is generally solely responsible within a state or currency union for the issue of banknotes However this is not always the case and historically the paper currency of countries was often handled entirely by private banks Thus many different banks or institutions may have issued banknotes in a given country Commercial banks in the United States had legally issued banknotes before there was a national currency however these became subject to government authorization from 1863 to 1932 In the last of these series the issuing bank would stamp its name and promise to pay along with the signatures of its president and cashier on a preprinted note By this time the notes were standardized in appearance and not too different from Federal Reserve Notes nbsp A 5 note issued by Citizens Bank of Louisiana in the 1850s In a small number of countries private banknote issue continues to this day For example by virtue of the complex constitutional setup in the United Kingdom certain commercial banks in two of the state s four constituent countries Scotland and Northern Ireland continue to print their own banknotes for domestic circulation even though they are not fiat money or declared in law as legal tender anywhere The UK s central bank the Bank of England prints notes which are legal tender in England and Wales these notes are also usable as money but not legal tender in the rest of the UK see Banknotes of the pound sterling In the two Special Administrative Regions of the People s Republic of China arrangements are similar to those in the UK in Hong Kong three commercial banks are licensed to issue Hong Kong dollar notes 46 and in Macau banknotes of the Macanese pataca are issued by two different commercial banks In Luxembourg the Banque Internationale a Luxembourg was entitled to issue its own Luxembourgish franc notes until the introduction of the Euro in 1999 47 As well as commercial issuers other organizations may have note issuing powers for example until 2002 the Singapore dollar was issued by the Board of Commissioners of Currency Singapore a government agency which was later taken over by the Monetary Authority of Singapore 46 As with any printing there is also a chance for banknotes to have printing errors For U S banknotes these errors can include board break errors butterfly fold errors cutting errors dual denomination errors fold over errors and misalignment errors 48 Advantages and disadvantages edit nbsp When Brazil changed currencies in 1989 the 1000 5000 and 10 000 cruzados banknotes were overstamped and issued as 1 5 and 10 cruzados novos banknotes for several months before cruzado novo banknotes were printed and issued Banknotes can be overstamped with new denominations typically when a country converts to a new currency at an even fixed exchange rate in this case 1000 1 Prior to the introduction of banknotes precious or semiprecious metals minted into coins to certify their substance were widely used as a medium of exchange The value that people attributed to coins was originally based upon the value of the metal unless they were token issues or had been debased Banknotes were originally a claim for the coins held by the bank but due to the ease with which they could be transferred and the confidence that people had in the capacity of the bank to settle the notes in coin if presented they became a popular means of exchange in their own right They now make up a very small proportion of the money that people think that they have as demand deposit bank accounts and electronic payments have negated much of the need to carry notes and coins Banknotes have a natural advantage over coins in that they are lighter to carry but they are also less durable than coins Banknotes issued by commercial banks had counterparty risk meaning that the bank may not be able to make payment when the note was presented Notes issued by central banks had a theoretical risk when they were backed by gold and silver Both banknotes and coins are subject to inflation The durability of coins means that even if metal coins melt in a fire or are submerged under the sea for hundreds of years they still have some value when they are recovered Gold coins salvaged from shipwrecks retain almost all of their original appearance but silver coins slowly corrode 49 50 Other costs of using bearer money include Discounting to face value Before national currencies and efficient clearing houses banknotes were only redeemable at face value at the issuing bank Even a branch bank could discount notes of other branches of the same bank The discounts usually increased with distance from the issuing bank The discount also depended on the perceived safety of the bank When banks failed the notes were usually partly redeemed out of reserves but they sometimes became worthless 51 52 The problem of discounting within a country does not exist with national currencies Counterfeiting paper notes has always been a problem especially since the introduction of color photocopiers and computer image scanners Numerous banks and nations have incorporated many types of countermeasures in order to keep the money secure However extremely sophisticated counterfeit notes known as superdollars have been detected in recent years Manufacturing or issue costs Coins are produced by industrial manufacturing methods that process the precious semi precious or other metals and require additions of alloy for hardness and wear resistance By contrast bank notes are printed paper or polymer and typically have a higher cost of issue especially in larger denominations compared with coins of the same value dubious discuss Wear costs Banknotes do not lose economic value by wear since even if they are in poor condition they are still a legally valid claim on the issuing bank However banks of issue do have to pay the cost of replacing banknotes in poor condition and paper and even polymer notes wear out much faster than coins Cost of transport Coins can be expensive to transport for high value transactions but banknotes can be issued in large denominations that are much lighter than the equivalent value in coins Cost of acceptance Coins can be checked for authenticity by weighing and other forms of examination and testing These costs can be significant but good quality coin design and manufacturing can help reduce these costs Banknotes also have an acceptance cost the expense of checking the banknote s security features and confirming acceptability of the issuing bank The different advantages and disadvantages of coins and banknotes imply that there may be an ongoing role for both forms of bearer money each being used where its advantages outweigh its disadvantages Materials used for banknotes editPaper banknotes edit nbsp Obverse and reverse of an old American 100 note 1928 Until recently most banknotes were made from cotton paper with a weight of 80 to 90 grams per square meter The cotton is sometimes mixed with linen abaca or other textile fibres Generally the paper used is different from ordinary paper it is much more resilient resists wear and tear the average life of a paper banknote is two years 53 and also does not contain the usual agents that make ordinary paper glow slightly under ultraviolet light Unlike most printing and writing paper banknote paper is infused with polyvinyl alcohol or gelatin instead of water to give it extra strength Early Chinese banknotes were printed on paper made of mulberry bark Mitsumata Edgeworthia chrysantha and other fibers are used in Japanese banknote paper 54 a kind of Washi Most banknotes are made using the mould made process in which a watermark and thread is incorporated during the paper forming process The thread is a simple looking security component found in most banknotes It is however often rather complex in construction comprising fluorescent magnetic metallic and micro print elements By combining it with watermarking technology the thread can be made to surface periodically on one side only This is known as windowed thread and further increases the counterfeit resistance of the banknote paper This process was invented by Portals part of the De La Rue group in the UK Other related methods include watermarking to reduce the number of corner folds by strengthening this part of the note Varnishing and coatings reduce the accumulation of dirt on the note for longer durability in circulation nbsp Many currencies such as the Indonesian rupiah vary the sizes of their banknotes by denomination This is done so that they may be told apart through touch alone citation needed Another security feature is based on windows in the paper which are covered by holographic foils to make it very hard to copy Such technology is applied as a portrait window for the higher denominations of the Europa series ES2 of the euro banknotes 55 Windows are also used with the Hybrid substrate from Giesecke Devrient which is composed of an inner layer of paper substrate with thin outer layers of plastic film for high durability 56 History of counterfeiting and security measures edit When paper bank notes were first introduced in England they resulted in a dramatic rise in counterfeiting citation needed The attempts by the Bank of England and the Royal Mint to stamp out currency crime led to new policing strategies including the increased use of entrapment 57 The characteristics of banknotes their materials and production techniques as well as their development over history are topics that are not usually thoroughly examined by historians even though there are now a number of works detailing how bank notes were actually constructed This is mostly because historians tend to be more interested in a theoretical understanding of how money worked rather than how it was produced 58 The first great deterrent against counterfeiting was the death penalty for forgers but this was not enough to stop the rise of counterfeiting Over the 18th century far fewer banknotes were circulating in England compared to the boom of bank notes in the 19th century because of this improved note making techniques were not considered a compelling issue In the 18th century banknotes were produced mainly by copper plate engraving and printing and they were single sided Note making technologies remained largely unchanged during the 18th century 59 The first banknotes were produced by intaglio printing this involved engraving a copper plate by hand and then covering it in ink to print the bank notes Only with this technique at that time could one force the paper into the lines of the engraving to make suitable banknotes Another difficulty in counterfeiting banknotes was the paper as the type of paper used for banknotes was rather different from the paper commercially available at that time Despite this some forgers successfully forged notes by dealing with and consulting paper makers in order to make a similar kind of paper themselves 60 Furthermore watermarked paper has also been used since banknotes first appeared it involved the sewing of a thin wire frame into paper mould Watermarks for notes were first used in 1697 by Rice Watkins a Berkshire paper maker 60 Watermarks and special paper made it harder and more expensive to forge banknotes since more complex and expensive paper making machines were needed In the early 19th century the so called Bank Restriction Period 1797 1821 the dramatically increased demand for bank notes slowly forced the banks to refine the technologies employed 60 In 1801 watermarks which previously were straight lines became wavy an idea of William Brewer a watermark mould maker This made counterfeiting bank notes harder still at least in the short term and in 1803 the number of forged bank notes fell to just 3000 compared to 5000 the previous year 61 In the same period bank notes also started to be double sided and have more complex patterns and banks asked skilled engravers and artists to help them make their notes harder to counterfeit an episode labelled by historians as the search for the inimitable banknote 62 The ease with which paper money can be created by both legitimate authorities and counterfeiters has led to a temptation in times of crisis such as war or revolution or merely a spendthrift government to produce paper money which was not supported by precious metal or other goods this often led to hyperinflation and a loss of faith in the value of paper money e g the Continental Currency produced by the Continental Congress during the American Revolution the Assignats produced during the French Revolution the paper currency produced by the Confederate States of America and the individual states of the Confederate States of America the financing of World War I by the Central Powers by 1922 1 gold Austro Hungarian krone of 1914 was worth 14 400 paper Kronen the devaluation of the Yugoslav dinar in the 1990s etc Banknotes may also be overprinted to reflect political or economic changes that occur faster than new currency can be printed In 1988 Austria produced the 5000 Schilling banknote Mozart which is the first foil application Kinegram to a paper banknote in the history of banknote printing The application of optical features is now common throughout the world Many countries banknotes now have embedded holograms Polymer banknotes edit Main article Polymer banknote nbsp A 2000 Romanian lei polymer banknoteIn 1983 Costa Rica and Haiti issued the first Tyvek and the Isle of Man issued the first Bradvek polymer or plastic banknotes these were printed by the American Banknote Company and developed by DuPont These early plastic notes were plagued with issues such as ink wearing off and they were discontinued In 1988 after significant research and development in Australia by the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation CSIRO and the Reserve Bank of Australia Australia produced the first polymer banknote made from biaxially oriented polypropylene plastic and in 1996 Australia became the first country to have a full set of circulating polymer banknotes of all denominations completely replacing its paper banknotes Since then many other countries have adopted circulating polymer banknotes including Bangladesh Brazil Brunei Canada Chile Guatemala Dominican Republic Hong Kong SAR China Indonesia Israel Malaysia Mexico Nepal New Zealand Nigeria Papua New Guinea Paraguay the Philippines Romania Samoa Singapore the Solomon Islands Thailand Trinidad and Tobago the United Kingdom Uruguay Vietnam and Zambia Other countries have issued commemorative polymer notes including China Kuwait the Northern Bank of Northern Ireland Taiwan 63 In 2005 Bulgaria issued the world s first hybrid paper polymer banknote Polymer banknotes were developed to improve durability and prevent counterfeiting through incorporated security features such as optically variable devices that are extremely difficult to reproduce Other materials edit nbsp Bielefeld Germany 25 Mark 1921 Silk Banknote 64 Over the years a number of materials other than paper have been used to print banknotes This includes various textiles including silk and materials such as leather 65 nbsp Russian American Company issued Alaskan parchment scrip c 1852 Silk and other fibers have been commonly used in the manufacture of various banknote papers intended to provide both additional durability and security Crane and Company patented banknote paper with embedded silk threads in 1844 and has supplied paper to the United States Treasury since 1879 Banknotes printed on pure silk paper include emergency money Notgeld issues from a number of German towns in 1923 during a period of fiscal crisis and hyperinflation Most notoriously Bielefeld produced a number of silk leather velvet linen and wood issues These issues were produced primarily for collectors rather than for circulation They are in demand by collectors Banknotes printed on cloth include a number of Communist Revolutionary issues in China from areas such as Xinjiang or Sinkiang in the United Islamic Republic of East Turkestan in 1933 Emergency money was also printed in 1902 on khaki shirt fabric during the Boer War Cotton fibers together with 25 linen is the material of the banknotes in the United States Leather banknotes or coins were issued in a number of sieges as well as in other times of emergency During the Russian administration of Alaska banknotes were printed on sealskin A number of 19th century issues are known in Germanic and Estonia including the places of Dorpat Pernau Reval Werro and Woiseck In addition to the Bielefeld issues other German leather Notgeld from 1923 is known from Borna Osterwieck Paderborn and Possneck Other issues from 1923 were printed on wood which was also used in Canada in 1763 1764 during Pontiac s Rebellion and by the Hudson s Bay Company In 1848 in Bohemia wooden checkerboard pieces were used as money Even playing cards were used for currency in France in the early 19th century and in French Canada from 1685 until 1757 the Colony of Louisiana Dutch Guiana and in the Isle of Man in the beginning of the 19th century and again in Germany after World War I Most recently Bisphenol S BPS has been frequently used in the production of banknotes worldwide BPS is an endocrine disruptor that is subject to human dermal absorption through handling banknotes 66 Vertical orientation edit Vertical currency is a type of currency in which the orientation has been changed from the conventional horizontal orientation to a vertical orientation Dowling Duncan a self touted multidisciplinary design studio conducted a study in which they determined people tend to handle and deal with money vertically rather than horizontally especially when the currency is processed through ATM and other money machines They also note how money transactions are conducted vertically not horizontally 67 Bermuda Cape Verde Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States Switzerland and Venezuela have adopted vertically oriented currency though Cape Verde has now reverted to horizontal orientation Since 1979 Sri Lanka has printed the reverse of its banknotes vertically Between 1993 and 2013 Brazil has printed banknotes of 5000 and 50000 cruzeiros reais and the first Brazilian real series of banknotes has the obverse in traditional horizontal layout while the reverse is in vertical format The 2018 Hong Kong dollar banknotes series too has the obverse in traditional horizontal layout while the reverse is in vertical format 68 Early Chinese banknotes were also vertical due to the direction of Chinese writing The 2018 Canadian 10 bill featuring a portrait of Canadian civil rights pioneer Viola Desmond is presented in a vertical format 69 70 The Northern Irish 5 and 10 notes issued by Ulster Bank for 2019 were also presented in this way 71 Vending machines and banknotes editIn the late 20th century vending machines were designed to recognize banknotes of the smaller values long after they were designed to recognize coins distinct from slugs where This capability has become inescapable in economies where inflation has not been followed by introduction of progressively larger coin denominations such as the United States where several attempts to make dollar coins popular in general circulation have largely failed The existing infrastructure of such machines presents one of the difficulties in changing the design of these banknotes to make them less counterfeitable that is by adding additional features so easily discernible by people that they would immediately reject banknotes of inferior quality for every machine in the country would have to be updated citation needed Destruction edit nbsp A 5 euro note so badly damaged it has been torn in half The note has later been repaired with tape A banknote is removed from circulation because of everyday wear and tear from its handling Banknotes are passed through a banknote sorting machine to assess their authenticity and fitness for circulation or may be classified unfit for circulation if they are worn dirty soiled damaged mutilated or torn Unfit notes are returned to the central bank for secure online destruction by high speed banknote sorting machines using a cross cut shredder device similar to a paper shredder with security level P 5 pieces smaller than 30 mm2 according to the standard DIN 66399 2 This small size decomposes a banknote into typically more than 500 tiny pieces and rules out reconstruction like a jigsaw puzzle because the shreds from many banknotes are commingled A subsequent briquettor compresses shredded paper material into a small cylindrical or rectangular form for disposal e g landfill or burning 72 Before the 1990s unfit banknotes were destroyed by incineration with a higher risk of manipulations When a Federal Reserve Bank of the United States receives a cash deposit from a commercial bank or another financial institution it checks the individual notes to determine whether they are fit for future circulation 73 About one third of the notes that the Fed receives are unfit and the Fed destroys them US dollar banknotes last an average of more than five years 74 Contaminated banknotes are also decommissioned and removed from circulation primarily to prevent the spread of diseases A Canadian government report indicates Types of contaminants include notes found on a corpse stagnant water contaminated by human or animal body fluids such as urine feces vomit infectious blood fine hazardous powders from detonated explosives dye pack and or drugs 75 In the US the nickname Fed Shreds refers to paper money which has been shredded after becoming unfit for circulation Although these shredded banknotes are generally landfilled they are sometimes sold or given away in small bags as souvenirs or as briquettes 76 Polymer banknotes may be shredded and then melted down and recycled to form plastic products like building components plumbing fittings or compost bins 77 Shredded Banknotes nbsp Fed Shreds as souvenir from the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco nbsp Shreds of unfit US dollar notes with a typical size of less than 1 5 mm 16 mm nbsp Shredded and briquetted US dollar notes from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York approx 1000 pieces 1 kg nbsp Shredded and briquetted US dollar notes from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York approx 1000 pieces 1 kg nbsp Shredded and briquetted euro banknotes from the Deutsche Bundesbank Germany approx 1 kg Intelligent banknote neutralisation systems editIntelligent banknote neutralisation systems IBNS are security systems which render banknotes unusable by marking them permanently as stolen with a degradation agent Marked stained banknotes cannot be brought back into circulation easily and can be linked to the crime scene Today s most used degradation agent is a special security ink which cannot be removed from the banknote easily and not without destroying the banknote itself but other agents also exist Today IBNSs are used to protect banknotes in automated teller machines retail machines and during cash in transit operations Dynamic Intelligent Currency Encryption editDynamic Intelligent Currency Encryption DICE is a security technology introduced in 2014 by British company EDAQS which devaluates banknotes remotely that are illegal or have been stolen The technology is based on identifiable banknotes that could be an RFID chip or a barcode and connects to a digital security system to verify the validity of the banknote The company claims that the banknotes are unforgeable and contribute to solve cash related problems as well as fight crime and terrorism In another note the DICE benefits cover and solve almost all cash related issues that are seen by governments to be a motivation for the progressive abolition of cash 78 Confiscation and asset forfeiture editIn the United States there are many laws that allow the confiscation of cash and other assets from the bearer if there is suspicion that the money came from an illegal activity 79 Because a significant amount of U S currency contains traces of cocaine and other illegal drugs it is not uncommon for innocent people searched at airports or stopped for traffic violations to have cash in their possession sniffed by dogs for drugs and then have the cash seized because the dog smelled drugs on the money It is then up to the owner of the money to prove where the cash came from at his own expense Many people simply forfeit the money 80 In 1994 the United States Court of Appeals Ninth Circuit held in the case of United States of America v U S Currency 30 060 00 39 F 3d 1039 63 USLW 2351 No 92 55919 that the widespread presence of illegal substances on paper currency in the Los Angeles area created a situation where the reaction of a drug sniffing dog would not create probable cause for civil forfeiture 81 Paper money collecting as a hobby editMain article Notaphily Banknote collecting or notaphily is a slowly growing area of numismatics Although generally not as widespread as coin and stamp collecting the hobby is slowly expanding Prior to the 1990s currency collecting was a relatively small adjunct to coin collecting but currency auctions and greater public awareness of paper money have caused more interest in rare banknotes and consequently their increased value citation needed The most valuable banknote is the 1000 bill issued in 1890 that was sold at an auction for 2 255 000 Trades edit For years the mode of collecting banknotes was through a handful of mail order dealers who issued price lists and catalogs In the early 1990s it became more common for rare notes to be sold at various coin and currency shows via auction The illustrated catalogs and event nature of the auction practice seemed to fuel a sharp rise in overall awareness of paper money in the numismatic community The emergence of currency third party grading services similar to services that grade and slab or encapsulate coins also may have increased collector and investor interest in notes Entire advanced collections are often sold at one time and to this day single auctions can generate millions in gross sales Today eBay has surpassed auctions in terms of highest volume of sales of banknotes 82 83 84 However rare banknotes still sell for much less than comparable rare coins This disparity is diminishing as paper money prices continue to rise A few rare and historical banknotes have sold for more than a million dollars 85 There are many different organizations and societies around the world for the hobby including the International Bank Note Society IBNS which currently assert to have around 2 000 members in 90 countries 86 Novelty edit The universal appeal and instant recognition of bank notes has resulted in a plethora of novelty merchandise that is designed to have the appearance of paper currency These items cover nearly every class of product Cloth material printed with bank note patterns is used for clothing bed linens curtains upholstery and more Acrylic paperweights and even toilet seats with bank notes embedded inside are also common Items that resemble stacks of bank notes and can be used as a seat or ottoman are also available Manufacturers of these items must take into consideration when creating these products whether the product could be construed as counterfeiting Overlapping note images and or changing the dimensions of the reproduction to be at least 50 smaller or 50 larger than the original are some ways to avoid the risk of being considered a counterfeit But in cases where realism is the goal other steps may be necessary For example in the stack of bank notes seat mentioned earlier the decal used to create the product would be considered counterfeit However once the decal has been affixed to the resin stack shell and cannot be peeled off the final product is no longer at risk of being classified as counterfeit even though the resulting appearance is realistic See also edit nbsp Numismatics portal nbsp Money portalBanknote counter J S G Boggs Contaminated currency Hell money Hybrid paper polymer banknote Intaglio List of motifs on banknotes List of people on banknotes Money creation Postal currency Seigniorage Trevett v Weeden United States Note Used noteNotes and references edit Atack amp Passell 1994 p 469 Legal Tender Guidelines British Royal Mint Archived from the original on 17 December 2008 Retrieved 2 September 2007 Hammurabi 1903 Translated by Sommer Otto Code of Hammurabi King of Babylon Records of the Past Washington DC Records of the Past Exploration Society 2 3 75 Retrieved 20 June 2021 100 Anyone borrowing money shall his contract for payment Hammurabi 1904 Code of Hammurabi King of Babylon PDF Liberty Fund Translated by Harper Robert Francis 2nd ed Chicago University of Chicago Press p 35 Archived PDF from the original on 13 June 2021 Retrieved 20 June 2021 100 he shall write down returns to his merchant a b Hammurabi 1910 Code of Hammurabi King of Babylon Avalon Project Translated by King Leonard William New Haven CT Yale Law School Archived from the original on 10 May 2021 Retrieved 20 June 2021 Hammurabi 1903 Translated by Sommer Otto Code of Hammurabi King of Babylon Records of the Past Washington DC Records of the Past Exploration Society 2 3 77 Retrieved 20 June 2021 122 If anyone entrusts to have committed an offence Hammurabi 1904 Code of Hammurabi King of Babylon PDF Liberty Fund Translated by Harper Robert Francis 2nd ed Chicago University of Chicago Press p 43 Archived PDF from the original on 13 June 2021 Retrieved 20 June 2021 122 If a man give it from the thief The History of Money pbs org Nova 26 October 1996 Archived from the original on 25 August 2017 Retrieved 24 August 2017 Ancient Roman IOUs Found Beneath Bloomberg s New London HQ 1 June 2016 Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Retrieved 9 June 2018 Jones John Percival 1890 Speeches of J P Jones Money and Tariff 1890 93 Archived from the original on 1 July 2023 Retrieved 24 August 2017 Moulton Luther Vanhorn 1880 The Science of Money and American Finances Co operative Press p 134 Wells H G 1921 The outline of history being a plain history of life and mankind New York The Macmillan Company a b c d Ebrey Walthall amp Palais 2006 p 156 a b Bowman 2000 p 105 a b c d e f Gernet 1962 p 80 a b c William N Goetzmann K Geert Rouwenhorst 2005 The Origins of Value The Financial Innovations that Created Modern Capital Markets Oxford University Press p 94 ISBN 978 0 19 517571 4 The Mongols adopted the Jin and Song practice of issuing paper money and the earliest European account of paper money is the detailed description given by Marco Polo who claimed to have served at the court of the Yuan dynasty rulers a b c Marco Polo 1818 The Travels of Marco Polo a Venetian in the Thirteenth Century Being a Description by that Early Traveller of Remarkable Places and Things in the Eastern Parts of the World pp 353 355 Archived from the original on 1 July 2023 Retrieved 19 September 2012 Allen Tony Grant R G Parker Philip Celtel Kay Kramer Ann Weeks Marcus 2022 Timelines of World History New York DK p 82 ISBN 978 0 7440 5627 3 Chapter 12 Security Printing and Seals PDF Security Engineering A Guide to Building Dependable Distributed Systems p 245 Archived PDF from the original on 11 December 2013 Retrieved 26 May 2014 The introduction of paper money into Europe by Napoleon in the early 1800s and of other valuable documents such as bearer securities and passports kicked off a battle between security printers and counterfeiters Peter Bernholz 2003 Monetary Regimes and Inflation History Economic and Political Relationships Edward Elgar Publishing p 53 ISBN 978 1 84376 155 6 Daniel R Headrick 2009 Technology A World History Oxford University Press p 85 ISBN 978 0 19 988759 0 Needham 1986 p 47 a b c Needham 1986 p 48 Jankowiak Marek Dirhams for slaves Medieval Seminar All Souls 2012 p 8 Sarnowsky Jurgen 2011 Templar Order doi 10 1163 1877 5888 rpp com 125078 ISBN 978 9 0041 4666 2 Martin Sean 2004 The Knights Templar The History and Myths of the Legendary Military Order New York Thunder s Mouth Press ISBN 978 1560256458 OCLC 57175151 Moshenskyi Sergii 2008 History of the weksel Bill of exchange and promissory note p 55 ISBN 978 1 4363 0694 2 a b De Geschiedenis van het Geld the History of Money 1992 Teleac p 96 Sverige Palmstruchska banken Kreditsedel 10 daler silvermynt 17 april 1666 Europe s first banknotes Alvin in Swedish Faure AP 6 April 2013 Money Creation Genesis 2 Goldsmith Bankers and Bank Notes Social Science Research Network SSRN 2244977 Tymoigne Eric Wray L Randall July 2005 Money An Alternative Story doi 10 2139 ssrn 1009611 S2CID 2254888 SSRN 1009611 Archived from the original on 20 September 2022 Retrieved 1 September 2022 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Vincent Lannoye 2011 The History of Money for Understanding Economics Vincent Lannoye p 132 ISBN 978 1 4802 0066 1 Archived from the original on 1 July 2023 Retrieved 2 July 2018 Geisst Charles R 2005 Encyclopedia of American business history New York p 39 ISBN 978 0 8160 4350 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Karl Gunnar Persson 2010 An Economic History of Europe Knowledge Institutions and Growth 600 to the Present Cambridge University Press p 137 ISBN 978 0521549400 Archived from the original on 1 July 2023 Retrieved 3 June 2012 The first European banknote Cite de l economie et de la monnaie Archived from the original on 3 January 2014 Retrieved 26 February 2014 Nicholas Barbon Discourse on Trade 1690 p 37 Patrick Dillon 2007 The Last Revolution 1688 and the Creation of the Modern World Random House pp 344 346 ISBN 978 1844134083 Newman Eric P 1990 The Early Paper Money of America 3rd ed Krause Publications ISBN 0 87341 120 X Bouton Terry 2007 Taming Democracy The People the Founders and the Troubled Ending of the American Revolution Oxford University Press p 17 ISBN 978 0195378566 Archived from the original on 1 July 2023 Retrieved 13 November 2021 A brief history of banknotes Bank of England Archived from the original on 29 September 2013 Retrieved 17 December 2013 Currency and Bank Notes Act 1928 PDF www legislation gov uk Archived PDF from the original on 15 January 2013 Retrieved 17 December 2012 2 note issued by Evans Jones Davies amp Co British Museum Archived from the original on 18 January 2012 Retrieved 31 October 2011 Capie Forrest Fischer Stanley Goodhart Charles Schnadt Norbert 1994 The development of central banking The future of central banking the tercentenary symposium of the Bank of England Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 5214 9634 6 Retrieved 17 December 2012 via LSE Research Online Jeffrey A Tucker 16 September 2010 Yesterday was a Historic Day Mises Wire Mises Institute Archived from the original on 18 September 2010 Retrieved 17 September 2010 Horsefield J K November 1944 The Origins of the Bank Charter Act 1844 Economica New 11 44 180 189 doi 10 2307 2549352 JSTOR 2549352 a b Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems August 2003 The Role of Central Bank Money in Payment Systems PDF Bank for International Settlements p 96 Archived PDF from the original on 9 September 2008 Retrieved 14 August 2008 Although historically not the case these days banknotes are usually issued only by the central bank This is broadly the case in all CPSS economies except Hong Kong SAR where banknotes are issued by three commercial banks Singapore and the United Kingdom are more limited exceptions Singapore dollar banknotes have been issued by the Board of Commissioners of Currency a government agency although following the merger of the Board into the MAS in October 2002 this is no longer the case In the United Kingdom Scottish banks retain the right to issue banknotes alongside those of the Bank of England and three banks currently still do so BIL s history Banque Internationale a Luxembourg Archived from the original on 27 April 2015 Retrieved 13 December 2013 Error Is Human Part I PMG www pmgnotes com Archived from the original on 9 May 2018 Retrieved 16 April 2018 Famous shipwrecks from which valuable precious metals and coins were recovered in recent years include the Atocha and the SS Central America Shipwreck coins are highly collectible and dealers sometimes post photos on the internet Virtual Shipwreck and Hoard Map by Daniel Frank Sedwick LLC sedwickcoins com Archived from the original on 23 June 2012 Retrieved 3 June 2012 Atack amp Passell 1994 pp 84 86 Taylor George Rogers 1951 The Transportation Revolution 1815 1860 New York Toronto Rinehart amp Co ISBN 978 0 87332 101 3 The Banknote Lifecycle from Design to Destruction De La Rue Archived from the original on 13 May 2012 Banknote Production Process www npb go jp Japanese National Printing Bureau Archived from the original on 17 April 2018 Retrieved 16 April 2018 Security features Europa series 100 banknote European Central Bank 2019 Archived from the original on 12 November 2018 Retrieved 11 July 2019 Hybrid Banknote Substrate Papierfabrik Louisenthal Archived from the original on 13 April 2019 Retrieved 11 July 2019 Crymble Adam 2018 How Criminal were the Irish Bias in the Detection of London Currency Crime 1797 1821 The London Journal 43 1 36 52 doi 10 1080 03058034 2016 1270876 hdl 2299 19710 Mockford 2014 pp 118 119 quote Detailed discussion of the material characteristics of Bank Notes as well as the methods used in their construction have therefore tended to constitute merely a footnote in historical works that have often prioritised both contemporary and modern theoretical understandings of money and exchange Mockford 2014 p 121 quote The technologies employed by the Bank in the making of its notes were ones that altered very little throughout the course of the long eighteenth century with major changes not occurring until well after the close of this period a b c Mockford 2014 pp 122 123 Mockford 2014 p 126 Mockford 2014 p 127 Our Currency About Australia Australian Government Archived from the original on 7 June 2011 Retrieved 19 July 2011 Walter Grasser Albert Pick Das Bielefelder Stoffgeld 1917 1923 Berlin 1972 German S K Singh Bank Regulation Discovery Publishing House New Delhi 2009 pp 26 27 Liao C Liu F Kannan K 2012 Bisphenol S a New Bisphenol Analogue in Paper Products and Currency Bills and Its Association with Bisphenol A Residues Environmental Science amp Technology 46 12 6515 6522 Bibcode 2012EnST 46 6515L doi 10 1021 es300876n PMID 22591511 Dowling Duncan redesign the US banknotes Dowling Duncan 14 August 2010 Archived from the original on 23 April 2011 Retrieved 15 August 2012 2018 New Series Hong Kong Banknotes Press release Hong Kong Monetary Authority 24 July 2018 Retrieved 24 July 2018 Brett Bundale 8 March 2018 Canada unveils 10 bill featuring civil rights icon Viola Desmond The Star Toronto Star Newspapers Archived from the original on 8 March 2018 Retrieved 16 April 2018 New 10 bank note featuring Viola Desmond unveiled on International Women s Day Press release Bank of Canada 8 March 2018 Retrieved 16 April 2018 Ulster Bank reveals vertical banknotes The Irish News 24 May 2018 Archived from the original on 25 May 2018 Retrieved 25 May 2018 Hungarians burn shredded money to stay warm Motion picture Agence France Presse 2012 Archived from the original on 2 November 2021 Fitness Guidelines for Federal Reserve Notes PDF Federal Reserve System Cash Product Office CPO 7 February 2019 Archived PDF from the original on 9 July 2019 Retrieved 10 July 2019 How Currency Gets into Circulation Federal Reserve Bank of New York 2013 Archived from the original on 17 July 2019 Retrieved 9 July 2019 Trichur Rita 28 September 2007 Bankers wipe out dirty money Toronto Star Archived from the original on 16 October 2007 Retrieved 28 September 2007 Currency Processing and Destruction Federal Reserve Bank of New York 2014 Archived from the original on 6 July 2019 Retrieved 9 July 2019 Recycling Reserve Bank of Australia Archived from the original on 9 July 2019 Retrieved 9 July 2019 The Future of Banknotes amp How One Company Is Working To Prevent A Cashless Economy LinkedIn Pulse 18 May 2015 Archived from the original on 8 November 2020 Retrieved 18 May 2015 International Society for Individual Liberty Archived from the original on 9 June 2012 Drug Dog s Alert to Cash Not Grounds for Forfeiture When Up to 75 percent of Currency Tainted With Drugs ndsn org Archived from the original on 11 October 2012 Retrieved 5 June 2012 Resource org Archived from the original on 3 June 2013 Retrieved 16 April 2018 You Won a Lottery Got an Award or a Mystery Shopper Job and They Sent You a Check Counterfeit Cashiers Checks Consumer Fraud Report Archived from the original on 13 August 2011 Retrieved 27 August 2011 Forged German Treasure Banknotes mebanknotes 28 May 2008 Archived from the original on 26 August 2011 Retrieved 27 August 2011 Cyndy Aleo Carreira 25 March 2009 2 Million Counterfeit Items Removed From EBay PC World Archived from the original on 4 November 2011 Retrieved 27 August 2011 Bank Note 23 August 2011 Long Beach Sale Set World Record Academy Archived from the original on 8 September 2011 Retrieved 27 August 2011 Introducing the IBNS IBNS Archived from the original on 28 September 2012 Retrieved 6 October 2012 Bibliography editAtack Jeremy Passell Peter 1994 A New Economic View of American History New York W W Norton and Co ISBN 978 0 393 96315 1 Bowman John S 2000 Columbia Chronologies of Asian History and Culture New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 2311 1004 4 Ebrey Walthall Palais 2006 East Asia A Cultural Social and Political History Boston Houghton Mifflin Company ISBN 978 0 6181 3384 0 Gernet Jacques 1962 Daily Life in China on the Eve of the Mongol Invasion 1250 1276 Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 0720 6 Needham Joseph 1986 Science and Civilisation in China Volume 5 Part 1 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 5218 7566 0 Mockford Jack 2014 They are Exactly as Banknotes are Perceptions and Technologies of Bank Note Forgery During the Bank Restriction Period 1797 1821 PDF PhD University of Hertfordshire External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Banknotes nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Bank Notes Counterfeit money was a major problem in the 1850s Pantagraph Bloomington Illinois newspaper Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Banknote amp oldid 1193656817, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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