A cash processing room at the Federal
Reserve (Discovery)Have you ever wondered what happens to
all of the damaged dollar bills floating around the economy? How long
does paper money actually last before it disintegrates into torn shreds
or a pulpy mass that is indistinguishable from regular old paper? And at
what point is paper money just too damaged to be used as legal tender?
On March 30 9 p.m. ET/PT, the Discovery Channel will give viewers an
inside look at “The
Secret Life of Money,” which seeks to answer these questions along
with offering many other insights into the world of money, including the
history of how gold became a standard form of currency around the
world.
David Kestenbaum and Jacob Goldstein from NPR’s
"Planet Money" contributed to the special and chatted with Yahoo
News about some of the stranger things they’ve learned about cash.
“To me, what’s most interesting is that there is a bigger idea at
work here: Money is this thing that we take for granted,” Goldstein
said. “When you stop and think about money, it gets really weird, really
fast.”
For example, if your money is damaged, you can legally exchange it
with the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. But only to a point. The
bureau says it receives upwards of 300 envelopes per day, containing
“torn, blackened, blood-soaked, shrunken or otherwise maimed money.”
However, so long as 51 percent of that blood-soaked bill remains intact,
you can get a freshly issued replacement bill.
“It’s not paper the way we normally think of paper. It’s 75 percent
cotton and 25 percent linen. It’s like a T-shirt,” Kestenbaum says,
explaining why money is actually more physically durable than some might
think.
Still, that hasn’t stopped thousands of people each year from testing
its limits in strange ways.
For example, one Florida man attempted to dry his money after it
became wet by putting
it in the microwave. But instead of returning to its crisp, clean
form, the money was crisped and burst into flames.
These sort of incidents resulted in the bureau exchanging $28 million
worth of paper money in 2011 alone.
Of course, Goldstein and Kestenbaum note that similar incidents are
on the decline as money moves toward becoming a predominantly electronic
transaction between buyer and seller.
“There is no truck full of dollar bills going from my employer’s bank
to my bank,” Goldstein says, noting that the very basic idea of money
is really more about trust than physical value. “The U.S. dollar is
already basically an electronic currency.”
And with the advent of independent currency providers such as Bitcoin,
some people are trying to establish that trust without relying on a
government.
Still, Kestenbaum says that for all its shortcomings, paper money is
likely to stay with us for years to come. “I am more bearish on the
future of physical money,” he said. “At some point, we won’t be using
cash at all. Not in the next year, but in 50 years? Probably.”
Ironically, one of the reasons Goldstein and Kestenbaum say the U.S.
dollar has a future in its physical form is its popularity outside of
America. They note that there are currently more $100 bills outside the
U.S. than within the borders of the country that printed them.
If you add up all of the cash, "there’s a lot missing because of how
much is used overseas,” Kestenbaum said.
Jumat, 29 Maret 2013
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