The Fate of Paper Money
|
| Currency | Inception | Years of Circulation | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pound Sterling (GBP) | 1694 | 315 | In circulation |
| Scotland Pound (SSP) | 1727 | 282 | In circulation* |
| US Dollar (USD) | 1792 | 217 | In circulation |
| Netherlands Guilder (NLG) | 1814 | 188 | EURO (2002) |
| Swiss Franc (CHF) | 1825 | 184 | In circulation |
| Guernsey Pound Sterling (GGP) | 1827 | 182 | In circulation* |
| Mexico Silver Peso (MXP) | 1822 | 170 | Destroyed by hyperinflation in 1992 |
| Canadian Dollar (CAD) | 1841 | 168 | In circulation |
| Belgian Franc (BEF) | 1835 | 167 | EURO (2002) |
| Cuban Peso (CUP) | 1857 | 150 | In circulation* |
| India Rupee (INR) | 1861 | 148 | In circulation |
| Manx Pound (IMP) | 1865 | 144 | In circulation* |
| Austrian Paper Gulden (ATP) | 1753 | 139 | Replaced for 1:2 Austria-Hungarian Kronen in 1892 |
| Japanese Yen (JPY) | 1871 | 138 | In circulation |
| Haiti Gourde (HTG) | 1872 | 137 | In circulation |
| Swedish Krona (SEK) | 1874 | 135 | In circulation |
| Danish Krone (DKK) | 1875 | 134 | In circulation |
| Spanish Peseta (ESP) | 1874 | 128 | EURO (2002) |
| Peru Sol (PEH) | 1864 | 121 | Destroyed by hyperinflation in 1985 |
| Italian Lira (ITL) | 1882 | 120 | EURO (2002) |
Below are charts showing the declining value of the two longest running currencies - the British pound sterling and the United States dollar, considered to be the most successful paper currencies of all time.

The British Pound originally represented one troy pound of sterling silver back in 1560. Sterling silver is 92.5% pure silver and there are 12 troy ounces in a troy pound. Elizabeth I and her advisor Sir Thomas Gresham (of Gresham's Law fame) established the new currency to bring about order created by the "Great Debasement" of 1543-51 when Henry VIII sought to finance his costly wars with both France and Scotland.
Paper banknotes were issued shortly after the establishment of the Bank of England in 1694.
As of Feb 23, 2007 it now takes 86.2 GBP to purchase that same troy pound of sterling silver - a loss of 98.8%!

Under the US Mint Act of 1792, the dollar was pegged at 24.75 grains of gold. There are 480 grains in a troy ounce. Thus it took 19.4 US dollars to purchase a single troy ounce of gold. As of Feb 23, 2007 it takes nearly 863 US dollar to purchase that same troy ounce of gold, representing a 97.8% drop in value!
This analysis includes 599 currencies that are no longer in circulation. The median age for these currencies is only fifteen years![2]
The following table below groups the fates of these currencies.
| Currency was... | No. Of Currencies | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Ended through monetary unions, dissolution or other reforms | 184 | Voluntary monetary unions such as the Euro in 1999, or creation of the US dollar in 1792. |
| Ended through acts of independence | 94 | Acts of former colonial entities renaming or reforming their currency |
| Destroyed by hyperinflation | 156 | Currency destroyed through over-issuance by the government. |
| Destroyed by acts of war | 165 | Currency deemed no longer valid through military occupation or liberation. |

The Second World War saw at least 95 currencies vanish as nations were conquered and liberated.
Hyperinflation is one of the greatest calamities to strike a nation.[3] This devastating process has destroyed currencies in the United States, France, Germany, and many other countries.

The monetary base comprises of currency in circulation (banknotes and coins) and the commercial banks' reserves with the central bank. Recently, there have been unprecedented increases to the bank reserve portion of the US monetary base.
Up until August 2009, the portion of the monetary base that consisted of bank reserves was between 8 - 12%. In December 2009, that proportion had risen to 47%! This drastic increase was due largely in part by the unwillingness of the banks to lend recent 'liquidity injections' from the Federal Reserve.
The following table shows the increases to the monetary base, as measured in US$ billions for the last six months of 2009. These actions by the Fed are responsible for the large spike on the right side of the above chart.
| Date | Currency in Circulation (M0) | Cash Held as Bank Reserves | Total Monetary Base |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jul-08 | 774.8 | 71.7 | 846.5 |
| Aug-08 | 775.4 | 71.9 | 847.3 |
| Sep-08 | 776.8 | 131.2 | 908.0 |
| Oct-08 | 793.8 | 338.7 | 1132.5 |
| Nov-08 | 806.5 | 634.6 | 1441.1 |
| Dec-08 | 882.0 | 782.3 | 1664.3 |
These massive expansions to the US monetary base increase the probability of a complete collapse in the confidence of the value of the US dollar. This shift in sentiment would spark a hyperinflationary fate to the world's de facto reserve currency.
Notes
1 The very first historical use of paper money is believed to have occurred in 140 A.D., shortly after the Chinese discovery of paper in 105 A.D. How this money came to an end is not known.
2 Many of the early paper currencies (likely to number in the many hundreds) of medieval Asia (China, India, Japan, Korea and Persia) as well as the majority of paper currencies that existed in China until 1935 are not included due to lack of historical information.
3 It should be noted that many of the curencies listed as being destroyed by war in this article also underwent hyperinflation.
Published on DollarDaze.org - Jan 7, 2009.
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