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Currency
In
economics, the term currency can refer either
to a particular currency, for example the US dollar,
or to the coins and banknotes of a particular
currency, which comprise the physical aspects
of a nation's money supply. The other part of
a nation's money supply consists of money deposited
in banks (sometimes called deposit money), ownership
of which can be transferred by means of cheques
or other forms of money transfer such as credit
and debit cards. Deposit money and currency are
money in the sense that both are acceptable as
a means of exchange, but money need not necessarily
be currency.
Historically, money in the form of currency has
predominated. Usually (gold or silver) coins of
intrinsic value commensurate with the monetary
unit (commodity money), have been the norm. By
contrast, modern currency, as fiat money, is intrinsically
worthless. The prevalence of one type of currency
over another in commodity money systems has arisen,
usually when a government designates through decrees,
that only particular monetary units shall be accepted
in payment for taxes.
Control
and production
In
most cases, each private central bank has monopoly
control over the supply and production of its
own currency. To facilitate trade between these
currency zones, there are exchange rates, which
are the prices at which currencies (and the goods
and services of individual currency zones) can
be exchanged against each other. Currencies can
be classified as either floating currencies or
fixed currencies based on their exchange rate
regime.
In cases where a country does have control of
its own currency, that control is exercised either
by a central bank or by a Ministry of Finance.
In either case, the institution that has control
of monetary policy is referred to as the monetary
authority. Monetary authorities have varying degrees
of autonomy from the governments that create them.
In the United States, the Federal Reserve System
operates without direct oversight by the legislative
or executive branches. It is important to note
that a monetary authority is created and supported
by its sponsoring government, so independence
can be reduced or revoked by the legislative or
executive authority that creates it. However,
in practical terms, the revocation of authority
is not likely. In almost all Western countries,
the monetary authority is largely independent
from the government.
Several
countries can use the same name for their own
distinct currencies (e.g., dollar in Canada and
the United States). By contrast, several countries
can also use the same currency (e.g., the euro),
or one country can declare the currency of another
country to be legal tender. For example, Panama
and El Salvador have declared U.S. currency to
be legal tender, and from 1791–1857, Spanish
silver coins were legal tender in the United States.
At various times countries have either re-stamped
foreign coins, or used currency board issuing
one note of currency for each note of a foreign
government held, as Ecuador currently does.
Each currency typically has a main currency unit
(the U.S. dollar, for example, or the euro) and
a fractional currency, often valued at 1/100 of
the main currency: 100 cents = 1 dollar, 100 centimes
= 1 franc, 100 pence = 1 pound, although units
of 1/10 or 1/1000 are also common. Some currencies
do not have any smaller units at all, such as
the Icelandic króna.
Mauritania and Madagascar are the only remaining
countries that do not use the decimal system;
instead, the Mauritanian ouguiya is divided into
5 khoums, while the Malagasy ariary is divided
into 5 iraimbilanja. In these countries, words
like dollar or pound "were simply names for
given weights of gold." Due to inflation
khoums and iraimbilanja have in practice fallen
into disuse. (See non-decimal currencies for other
historic currencies with non-decimal divisions.)
[edit]History
Early
currency
The origin of currency is the creation of a circulating
medium of exchange based on a unit of account
which quickly becomes a store of value. Currency
evolved from two basic innovations: the use of
counters to assure that shipments arrived with
the same goods that were shipped, and later with
the use of silver ingots to represent stored value
in the form of grain.[citation needed] Both of
these developments had occurred by 2000 BC. Originally
money was a form of receipting grain stored in
temple granaries in Sumer in ancient Mesopotamia,
then Ancient Egypt.
This first stage of currency, where metals were
used to represent stored value, and symbols to
represent commodities, formed the basis of trade
in the Fertile Crescent for over 1500 years. However,
the collapse of the Near Eastern trading system
pointed to a flaw: in an era where there was no
place that was safe to store value, the value
of a circulating medium could only be as sound
as the forces that defended that store. Trade
could only reach as far as the credibility of
that military. By the late Bronze Age, however,
a series of international treaties had established
safe passage for merchants around the Eastern
Mediterranean, spreading from Minoan Crete and
Mycenae in the northwest to Elam and Bahrein in
the southeast. Although it is not known what functioned
as a currency to facilitate these exchanges, it
is thought that ox-hide shaped ingots of copper,
produced in Cyprus may have functioned as a currency.
It is thought that the increase in piracy and
raiding associated with the Bronze Age collapse,
possibly produced by the Peoples of the Sea, brought
this trading system to an end. It was only with
the recovery of Phoenician trade in the ninth
and tenth centuries BC that saw a return to prosperity,
and the appearance of real coinage, possibly first
in Anatolia with Croesus of Lydia and subsequently
with the Greeks and Persians. In Africa many forms
of value store have been used including beads,
ingots, ivory, various forms of weapons, livestock,
the manilla currency, ochre and other earth oxides,
and so on. The manilla rings of West Africa were
one of the currencies used from the 15th century
onwards to buy and sell slaves. African currency
is still notable for its variety, and in many
places various forms of barter still apply.
Coinage
These factors led to the shift of the store of
value being the metal itself: at first silver,
then both silver and gold. Metals were mined,
weighed, and stamped into coins. This was to assure
the individual taking the coin that he was getting
a certain known weight of precious metal. Coins
could be counterfeited, but they also created
a new unit of account, which helped lead to banking.
Archimedes' principle was that the next link in
currency occurred: coins could now be easily tested
for their fine weight of metal, and thus the value
of a coin could be determined, even if it had
been shaved, debased or otherwise tampered with
(see Numismatics).
In most major economies using coinage, copper,
silver and gold formed three tiers of coins. Gold
coins were used for large purchases, payment of
the military and backing of state activities.
Silver coins were used for large, but common,
transactions, and as a unit of account for taxes,
dues, contracts and fealty, while copper coins
represented the coinage of common transaction.
This system had been used in ancient India since
the time of the Mahajanapadas. In Europe, this
system worked through the medieval period because
there was virtually no new gold, silver or copper
introduced through mining or conquest. Thus the
overall ratios of the three coinages remained
roughly equivalent.
Era of hard and credit money
In premodern China, the need for credit and for
circulating a medium that was less of a burden
than exchanging thousands of copper coins led
to the introduction of paper money, commonly known
today as banknotes. This economic phenomenon was
a slow and gradual process that took place from
the late Tang Dynasty (618–907) into the
Song Dynasty (960–1279). It began as a means
for merchants to exchange heavy coinage for receipts
of deposit issued as promissory notes from shops
of wholesalers, notes that were valid for temporary
use in a small regional territory. In the 10th
century, the Song Dynasty government began circulating
these notes amongst the traders in their monopolized
salt industry. The Song government granted several
shops the sole right to issue banknotes, and in
the early 12th century the government finally
took over these shops to produce state-issued
currency. Yet the banknotes issued were still
regionally-valid and temporary; it was not until
the mid 13th century that a standard and uniform
government issue of paper money was made into
an acceptable nationwide currency. The already
widespread methods of woodblock printing and then
Bi Sheng's movable type printing by the 11th century
was the impetus for the massive production of
paper money in premodern China.
At around the same time in the medieval Islamic
world, a vigorous monetary economy was created
during the 7th–12th centuries on the basis
of the expanding levels of circulation of a stable
high-value currency (the dinar). Innovations introduced
by Muslim economists, traders and merchants include
the earliest uses of credit, cheques, promissory
notes, savings accounts, transactional accounts,
loaning, trusts, exchange rates, the transfer
of credit and debt, and banking institutions for
loans and deposits.
In Europe paper money was first introduced in
Sweden in 1661. Sweden was rich in copper, thus,
because of copper's low value, extraordinarily
big coins (often weighing several kilograms) had
to be made. Because the coin was so big, it was
probably more convenient to carry a note stating
your possession of such a coin than to carry the
coin itself.
The advantages of paper currency were numerous:
it reduced transport of gold and silver, and thus
lowered the risks; it made loaning gold or silver
at interest easier, since the specie (gold or
silver) never left the possession of the lender
until someone else redeemed the note; and it allowed
for a division of currency into credit and specie
backed forms. It enabled the sale of stock in
joint stock companies, and the redemption of those
shares in paper.
However, these advantages held within them disadvantages.
First, since a note has no intrinsic value, there
was nothing to stop issuing authorities from printing
more of it than they had specie to back it with.
Second, because it created money that did not
exist, it increased inflationary pressures, a
fact observed by David Hume in the 18th century.
The result is that paper money would often lead
to an inflationary bubble, which could collapse
if people began demanding hard money, causing
the demand for paper notes to fall to zero. The
printing of paper money was also associated with
wars, and financing of wars, and therefore regarded
as part of maintaining a standing army.
For these reasons, paper currency was held in
suspicion and hostility in Europe and America.
It was also addictive, since the speculative profits
of trade and capital creation were quite large.
Major nations established mints to print money
and mint coins, and branches of their treasury
to collect taxes and hold gold and silver stock.
Legal tender era
The
examples and perspective in this section may not
represent a worldwide view of the subject. Please
improve this article and discuss the issue on
the talk page. (October 2009)
With the creation of central banks, currency underwent
several significant changes. During both the coinage
and credit money eras the number of entities which
had the ability to coin or print money was quite
large. One could, literally, have "a license
to print money"; many nobles had the right
of coinage. Royal colonial companies, such as
the Massachusetts Bay Company or the British East
India Company could issue notes of credit—money
backed by the promise to pay later, or exchangeable
for payments owed to the company itself. This
led to continual instability of the value of money.
The exposure of coins to debasement and shaving,
however, presented the same problem in another
form: with each pair of hands a coin passed through,
its value grew less.
The solution which evolved beginning in the late
18th century and through the 19th century was
the creation of a central monetary authority which
had a virtual monopoly on issuing currency, and
whose notes had to be accepted for "all debts
public and private". The creation of a truly
national currency, backed by the government's
store of precious metals, and enforced by their
military and governmental control over an area
was, in its time, extremely controversial. Advocates
of the old system of Free Banking repealed central
banking laws, or slowed down the adoption of restrictions
on local currency.
At this time both silver and gold were considered
legal tender, and accepted by governments for
taxes. However, the instability in the ratio between
the two grew over the course of the 19th century,
with the increase both in supply of these metals,
particularly silver, and of trade. This is called
bimetallism and the attempt to create a bimetallic
standard where both gold and silver backed currency
remained in circulation occupied the efforts of
inflationists. Governments at this point could
use currency as an instrument of policy, printing
paper currency such as the United States Greenback,
to pay for military expenditures. They could also
set the terms at which they would redeem notes
for specie, by limiting the amount of purchase,
or the minimum amount that could be redeemed.
By 1900, most of the industrializing nations were
on some form of gold standard, with paper notes
and silver coins constituting the circulating
medium. Private banks and governments across the
world followed Gresham's Law: keeping gold and
silver paid, but paying out in notes. This did
not happen all around the world at the same time,
but occurred sporadically, generally in times
of war or financial crisis, beginning in the early
part of the 20th century and continuing across
the world until the late 20th century, when the
regime of floating fiat currencies came into force.
One of the last countries to break away from the
gold standard was the United States in 1971. Prior
to this final, President Franklin D. Roosevelt
authorized the confiscation of all private holdings
of gold, and permitted the private banks to confiscate
gold deposits pursuant to Presidential Executive
Order number 6102, which effectively confiscated
all privately held gold in the United States on
April 5, 1933.
No country anywhere in the world today has an
enforceable gold standard or silver standard currency
system.
Banknote era
Banknote and Fiat currency
A banknote (more commonly known as a bill in the
United States and Canada) is a type of currency,
and commonly used as legal tender in many jurisdictions.
With coins, banknotes make up the cash form of
all money. Mostly paper, Australia's Commonwealth
Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
developed the world's first polymer or plastic
currency in the 1980s that went into circulation
on the nation's bicentennary in 1988. Now used
in some 22 countries, polymer currency dramatically
improves the life span of banknotes and prevents
counterfeiting.
Modern currencies
To
find out which currency is used in a particular
country, check list of circulating currencies.
Currently, the International Organization for
Standardization has introduced a three-letter
system of codes (ISO 4217) to define currency
(as opposed to simple names or currency signs),
in order to remove the confusion that there are
dozens of currencies called the dollar and many
called the franc. Even the pound is used in nearly
a dozen different countries, all, of course, with
wildly differing values. In general, the three-letter
code uses the ISO 3166-1 country code for the
first two letters and the first letter of the
name of the currency (D for dollar, for instance)
as the third letter. United States currency, for
instance is globally referred to as USD.
The International Monetary Fund uses a variant
system when referring to national currencies.
For exchange rates, see exchange rate and tables
of historical exchange rates.
Local currencies
Local currency
In economics, a local currency is a currency not
backed by a national government, and intended
to trade only in a small area. Advocates such
as Jane Jacobs argue that this enables an economically
depressed region to pull itself up, by giving
the people living there a medium of exchange that
they can use to exchange services and locally-produced
goods (In a broader sense, this is the original
purpose of all money.) Opponents of this concept
argue that local currency creates a barrier which
can interfere with economies of scale and comparative
advantage, and that in some cases they can serve
as a means of tax evasion.
Local currencies can also come into being when
there is economic turmoil involving the national
currency. An example of this is the Argentinian
economic crisis of 2002 in which IOUs issued by
local governments quickly took on some of the
characteristics of local currencies. (Credit:
Wikipedia)
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