Banks distribute redesigned $50 note.Newly redesigned $50 notes arrived at banks beginning September 28, 2004, ready to make their way into circulation and consumer wallets. On that day, the Federal Reserve System distributed the new note to banks and thus into the public's hands. To mark the occasion, officials from the U.S. Department of the Treasury, the Federal Reserve Board, and the U.S. Secret Service were on hand for the first transaction using the newly redesigned $50 note. Paying homage homage: see feudalism. to the symbol of freedom featured in the note's new design, the U.S. flag, the officials used one of the first new $50 notes to buy an American flag from the Alamo Alamo Eighteenth-century mission in San Antonio, Texas, site of a historic siege of a small group of Texans by a Mexican army (1836) during the Texas war for independence from Mexico. Flag shop in Washington, D.C.'s Union Station. The $50 note includes enhanced security features, subtle background colors of blue and red, images of a waving American flag, and a small metallic silver-blue star. The new design is part of the U.S. government's ongoing efforts to stay ahead of counterfeiting counterfeiting, manufacturing spurious coins, paper money, or evidences of governmental obligation (e.g., bonds) in the semblance of the true. There must be sufficient resemblance to the genuine article to deceive a person using ordinary caution. and protect the integrity of U.S. currency. "The stability and integrity of U.S. paper currency is something the U.S. government takes very seriously," said Brian Roseboro, Under Secretary for Domestic Finance at the Department of the Treasury. "We believe that redesigning the currency regularly and enhancing security features is the way to keep U.S. currency safe and secure from would-be counterfeiters." "A combination of factors keep currency counterfeiting at low levels," said Paul Johnson Paul Johnson may refer to:
v. cir·cu·lat·ed, cir·cu·lat·ing, cir·cu·lates v.intr. 1. To move in or flow through a circle or circuit: blood circulating through the body. 2. today, and a better-informed public all contribute to our success in the fight against counterfeiting." The government is supporting the new currency's issue with a public education program designed to inform people in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. and in other countries about updated security features and ensure a smooth introduction of each newly designed note into circulation. "As we introduce these beautiful new notes, we want to emphasize that the older design $50 notes will remain in circulation for some time to come and will remain legal tender," said Louise Roseman, the Federal Reserve Board's director of Federal Reserve Bank Operations and Payment Systems. The new $50 note is the second denomination Denomination The stated value found on financial instruments. Notes: This term applies to most financial instruments with monetary values. The denomination for bonds and securities would be face value or par value. in the Series 2004 currency, the most secure series of notes in U.S. history. The first denomination in the series to be redesigned was the $20 note, which began circulating in October 2003. "The next denomination in the series will be a new $10 note," said Roger W. Ferguson, Jr., Vice Chairman of the Board of Governors. "We are currently working on the design and expect to unveil it in the spring of 2005." The $100 note is also slated to be redesigned, but a timetable for its introduction is not yet set. No decision has been reached on any potential design changes to the $5 note, but the $1 and $2 notes will not be redesigned. Public Education Because the improved security features are more effective if the public knows about them, the U.S. government is undertaking a broad, worldwide public education program. This program will ensure that people all over the world know the new currency is coming, and help them recognize and use the security features. The outreach includes cash handlers handlers persons involved in the handling of, for example, circus animals. Includes grooms, milkers, herdsmen, strappers. Used mostly in referring to persons handling animals for show or auction. , merchants, business and industry associations, and the media. Nearly $700 billion is in circulation worldwide, and as much as two-thirds of U.S. currency is held outside the United States. A variety of training materials--such as posters, training videos, and brochures--is available in twenty-four languages. The materials can be downloaded or ordered through www.moneyfactory.com/ newmoney. Since the Treasury's Bureau of Engraving and Printing Noun 1. Bureau of Engraving and Printing - the agency of the Treasury Department that produces currency Department of the Treasury, Treasury Department, United States Treasury, Treasury - the federal department that collects revenue and administers federal began taking orders in May 2003, more than 52 million pieces of training materials have been ordered by businesses and other organizations to help them train their cash-handling employees about the notes' enhanced security features. The New Color of Money Although consumers should not use color to check the authenticity of their currency (relying instead on user-friendly security features), color does add complexity to the note, making counterfeiting more difficult. Different colors are being used for different denominations, which will help everyone--particularly those who are visually impaired--to tell denominations apart. Security Features The new $50 design retains three important security features that were first introduced in the 1990s and are easy for consumers and merchants alike to check: * watermark--a faint image, similar to the portrait, which is part of the paper itself and is visible from both sides when held up to the light. * security thread--also visible from both sides when held up to the light, this vertical strip of plastic is embedded Inserted into. See embedded system. in the paper and spells out the denomination in tiny print. * color-shifting ink--the numeral numeral, symbol denoting anumber. The symbol is a member of a family of marks, such as letters, figures, or words, which alone or in a group represent the members of a numeration system. in the lower right corner on the face of the note, indicating its denomination, changes color from copper to green when the note is tilted tilt 1 v. tilt·ed, tilt·ing, tilts v.tr. 1. To cause to slope, as by raising one end; incline: tilt a soup bowl; tilt a chair backward. 2. . Counterfeiting: Increasingly Digital Counterfeiting has been kept at low levels through a combination of improvements in security features, aggressive law enforcement, and education efforts to inform the public about how to check their currency. About 1 in 25,000 $50 notes is a counterfeit To falsify, deceive, or defraud. A copy or imitation of something that is intended to be taken as authentic and genuine in order to deceive another. A counterfeit coin is one that may pass for a genuine coin and may include a lower denomination coin altered so that it may , according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the Federal Reserve. However, since 1995, digitally produced counterfeit notes have increased from 1 percent of all counterfeits detected in the United States to 40 percent. To stay ahead of counterfeiters as advances in technology make digital counterfeiting of currency easier and cheaper, the government expects to redesign re·de·sign tr.v. re·de·signed, re·de·sign·ing, re·de·signs To make a revision in the appearance or function of. re the currency about every seven to ten years. |
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