New Money design announced
I think this came from a Fidonet channel. an interesting topic: how will this affect the value of US cash? i.e. will it affect the value of the dollar worldwide? often when countries are facing economic trouble they change their currency. **** Conf. : 0008 - FINANCIAL WASHINGTON (AP) -- Move over Ben Franklin, tell Andrew Jackson the news: The portraits on the nation's paper money likely will be enlarged and moved off-center as part of the first major makeover in 65 years. ``Our plan ... is a pre-emptive step to protect U.S. currency from high-tech counterfeiting,'' Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen said in announcing the redesign Wednesday. His department plans to have a final design ready sometime in 1995 and begin circulating new bills about a year later, starting with the most popular target for counterfeiters, $100 notes. Nothing has been decided for certain, but Treasury officials gave the House Banking Committee a rundown Wednesday of what was likely. The enlarged portraits -- Franklin on the $100, Ulysses Grant on the $50, Jackson on the $20, Alexander Hamilton on the $10, Abraham Lincoln on the $5 and George Washington on the $1 -- will allow for more detailed engraving of what is the most recognizable feature on a bill. The $2 bill, with Thomas Jefferson, is not being redesigned. And, moving the portraits will make room for a watermark in the form of a smaller version of the portrait, visible only when a bill is held to the light. Other likely changes include: -- Color-shifting ink that may, for instance, appear green when viewed straight on and gold from an angle. -- Computer-designed ``interactive'' patterns that turn wavy when illicitly copied. -- Iridescent planchettes in bills' paper. These are colored discs only a few millimeters wide that reflect light. -- Micro-printing and machine-detectable threads or fibers in the paper. The last major change in U.S. currency came in 1929, when bills were reduced in size and given a uniform look. Congress added the words ``In God We Trust'' in 1957. In 1990, several small changes made it more difficult to counterfeit with modern color photocopiers. They included adding a microscopic line of type and a polyester thread visible only when a bill is held to a light. Most lawmakers applauded the latest modifications, saying they were long overdue. ``We must protect the dollar's standing as the world's foremost currency. Our financial future depends upon it,'' said the committee chairman, Rep. Henry B. Gonzalez, D-Texas. But others warned against too radical a redesign, saying it would send a message of instability at a time when the value of the dollar is being battered on world currency markets. Peter H. Daly, director of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, said the bills' traditional look will be maintained as much as possible. The paper will feel the same and the size of notes won't change. And the same engraving style will be used for portraits, borders, numbers and the historic scenes on bills' back. Bentsen stressed that old money will continue as legal tender. ``The redesigned currency will be introduced over a period of years and no U.S. currency will be demonetized, devalued or recalled,'' he said. And U.S. Treasurer Mary Ellen Withrow promised a worldwide educational campaign to encourage public acceptance of the new design. About $357 billion of U.S. paper currency is in circulation, more than 60 percent of it abroad. In fact, in some countries with troubled economies it serves as the principal medium of exchange. According to the Secret Service, counterfeiting abroad now far outweighs domestic counterfeiting. Last year, $120 million in phony bills were seized overseas, compared with $44 million domestically, said Secret Service Deputy Director Guy P. Caputo. Republican Reps. Jim Leach of Iowa and Bill McCollum of Florida suggested the administration may be minimizing the severity of the problem. Leach said a Middle Eastern country, which he did not name, reportedly has developed the capacity to counterfeit large quantities of $100 notes. He was apparently referring to trade press reports that Iran was distributing counterfeit bills through Lebanon. But Bentsen stressed that the changes were being made in anticipation of future problems and not in response to any current counterfeiting crisis.
C'punks, HOW TO READ NEWSPEAK On Sun, 17 Jul 1994, Sue D. Nym forwarded an AP story:
``Our plan ... is a pre-emptive step to protect U.S. currency from high-tech counterfeiting,'' Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen said in announcing the redesign Wednesday. His department plans to have a final design ready sometime in 1995 and begin circulating new bills about a year later, starting with the most popular target for counterfeiters, $100 notes. . . .
Nope, it's the $20 note. However, "money launders" prefer the more compact C-note. And anyone leaving the country with much cash is presumptively a money launder, nowadays.
. . . Other likely changes include: . . . -- Micro-printing and machine-detectable threads or fibers in the paper. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ . . .
Read, "computer readable."
. . . Bentsen stressed that old money will continue as legal tender. ``The redesigned currency will be introduced over a period of years and no U.S. currency will be demonetized, devalued or recalled,'' he said.
Read, "At some unspecified date, old U.S. currency will be demonetized, devalued or recalled. Those holding old currency will be given a short grace period to exchange old cash for new. When making the exchange, they will be required to present ID and, explain why they have cash and where they got it. Improperly explained cash will be confiscated and the holder my be charged as appropriate." Don't believe it? What did Johnson say just before silver was removed from US coinage? For bonus points, what did Nixon say two weeks before he closed the gold window to foreigners and devalued the dollar? If you know the correct way to read government pronouncements, you will rarely be caught off guard. S a n d y
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Sandy Sandfort