The Dollar Congress adopted the dollar as the money unit of the United States in 1785.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 16 Section 2 Functions of the Federal Reserve.
Advertisements

Money & Banking Chapter 10 Section 1 Money.
Chapter Nineteen The American Economy Personal Finances ~~~~~ Money and Credit.
OUR MONEY You may see it every day, but what do you know about…
Money What is money? A medium of exchange
The most widely used currency in the world are: Gold Dollars European dollars called “Euros”
Our Money Supply Money consist of coins, paper money, demand (or checking) deposits, and checklike deposits (commonly called NOW – or negotiable order.
1 Chapter 18 Practice Quiz Tutorial Money and The Federal Reserve ©2004 South-Western.
Counterfeiting of American Currency
Chapter 10 Handwriting Analysis, Forgery, and Counterfeiting By the end of this chapter you will be able to: Describe 12 types of handwriting characteristics.
CHAPTER - MONEY AND THE BANKING SYSTEM Characteristics of Money Money and Banking in History Deregulation Click to play.
US Money $ How to detect counterfeit bills?. Money Has been around for thousands of years. The first government to create currency was the Roman Empire.
Anti- Counterfeiting. July 5, the Secret Service was created to deter counterfeiting Including: U.S. currency and coins, U.S. Treasury checks and.
Counterfeiting EHS Forensic Science. Counterfeit Millionaire vwKo 10 min
Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop
Discuss:  Any previous experience with Economics Discuss and then turn in if appropriate:  Any specific questions you would like addressed in the course.
1 Money and the Banking System. 2 Do you know anyone with a lot of money? What does that mean? Some people make a great income each year. So they probably.
1 Identifying Counterfeit US Currency. 2 Using telltale signs the learner will be able to identify counterfeit U.S. currency 50% of the time. Objective.
Unit 7 Macroeconomics: Taxes, Fiscal, and Monetary Policies Chapters 16.2 Economics Mr. Biggs.
Money & Banking. Functions of money Medium of exchange- use money in exchange for goods and services Unit of accounting- yardstick that allows us to compare.
Money & Banking. Functions of money Medium of exchange- use money in exchange for goods and services Unit of accounting- yardstick that allows us to compare.
Unit 5: Lesson 1: Managing the Money Supply
Currency and the FED Currency features and history
Chapter 10 Money and Banking Fun Facts DID YOU KNOW? The Bureau of Engraving and Printing produces 35 million notes a day with a face value of approximately.
What is Money? Federal Reserve System How Banks Operate.
Morning Work – RELA December 1 st – December 5 th.
Unit 2, Lesson 4 The Origins of Money
Fed Services to Banks 14.2 Clearing Checks—Is a method of crediting and debiting banks reserve accounts.  Americans write 40 billion checks/year  Dallas.
Money History of Money Lydian Coin B.C. Chinese Note Reserve Note 1968 Greek Coin B.C. New York Note 1776 Silver Certificate.
The New Twenty Dollar Bill Presented By: Lauren Firmin.
CoinsBillsMoney Trivia Money Math.
Currency Counterfeiting Documents 3. History of Counterfeiting One of the oldest crimes known During US Civil War, 1/3 to 1/2 of all US currency was counterfeit.
Money Do you ever wonder where your money comes from? Or what happens to it after you spend it? Lets find out.
7- appt 14 yrs Board of Governors Chairman Ben Bernanke 12 Federal Reserve Banks 12 FOMC 12 Bankers Federal.
Section 1 The Origins of Money. Barter Economy An economy with no money. An economy with no money. Based on trading one item for another. Based on trading.
The Circulation of Currency. Fun Facts There is about $820 billion dollars of US currency in circulation. The majority of money held is OUTSIDE the US.
COLORADO TREASURERS ASSOCIATION Westminster, CO October 13, 2010 Presented by Michael Caldwell, CFE, CPP Caldwell & Co., Inc.
Created by Damon Jefferson 1). Where is the Bureau of Engraving and Printing located? A. Washington, D.C. and Texas B. New York and Georgia C. Texas.
Money and Financial Institutions. Make a list of the things you have bought in the last week. If money didn’t exist, how would you pay for them?
Banking and Financial Services Cash Management & Security 1.
CH. 24 MONEY & BANKING Standard EE 2.3, 3.3, PFL 1.5, 1.6.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2002 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved Chapter Twenty One Understanding Money and Financial Institutions.
Money and Banking Chapter 10.
The Anatomy of a Dollar Bill
Characteristics & Functions of Money
Money and Banking The Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy.
Chapter 13 Money. A. Bartering vs. Money 1. Bartering = a trade of goods / services for other goods / services 2. Problem 1 - people need to want what.
Counterfeiting Aim: How are counterfeit bills detected? Do Now: Name any ways you know of to tell if a bill is real or fake.
Monetary Policy. Key Terms monetary policy open-market operations gross domestic product (GDP) fiscal policy Federal Reserve Federal Reserve System discount.
Show Me the Money! Powerpoint Presentation By: Mrs. Robinson.
“The Federal Reserve System and Monetary Policy”.
Chapter 14 Money and Banking.
Federal Reserve Chapter 16 Section 2 Federal Reserve Functions.
Counterfeit Currency Detective AnDrea Scott City of LaGrange Police Department.
MODULE 4 CASH HANDLING. Section 1 U.S. Currency  Although the look of the bills has been changing since 1990, the same basic features remain.  Review.
Chapter 10 Handwriting Analysis, Forgery, and Counterfeiting By the end of this chapter you will be able to: Describe 12 types of handwriting characteristics.
The history of US currency
Chapter 16: The Federal Reserve & Monetary Policy Section 2: Functions of the Federal Reserve pgs
Arizona State Savings & Credit Union Learning & Development
Paper Currency By: Maya Johnson.
The Federal Reserve System
Economic Systems in the United States
Chapter 10 Handwriting Analysis, Forgery, and Counterfeiting By the end of this chapter you will be able to: Describe 12 types of handwriting characteristics.
The Federal Reserve.
Intro to Document Analysis
Counterfeiting EHS Forensic Science.
Counterfeiting Forensic Science.
Chapter 10 Handwriting Analysis, Forgery, and Counterfeiting By the end of this chapter you will be able to: Describe 12 types of handwriting characteristics.
Money and Banking Chapter 14.
Presentation transcript:

The Dollar Congress adopted the dollar as the money unit of the United States in 1785.

Fun Fact: If you had 10 billion $1 bills and spent one every second of every day, it would take you 317 years to go broke.

The BEP All U.S. currency is produced by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, which also designs, engraves, and prints items such as postage stamps.

Producing U.S. Currency All U.S. currency had been printed in Washington, D.C. since 1862 To help meet increasing demand, a second printing facility was opened in Fort Worth, Texas, in Fort Worth now produces about half the nation's currency.

Bureau of Engraving & Printing DC Facility (DCF) Washington, DC Bureau of Engraving & Printing Western Currency Facility (WCF) Fort Worth, TX

Fun Fact: If you laid out all of the currency notes printed since 1929, they would stretch around the equator approximately 24 times.

The Federal Reserve Indicator Federal Reserve Banks release money to commercial banks as needed. The amount varies from season to season and week to week. The Federal Reserve System, established by Congress in 1913, issues Federal Reserve notes (bills) through its 12 Federal Reserve Districts. Every district has its main office in a major city. Each district is designated by a number and the corresponding letter of the alphabet, as shown on the next slide.

Currency Denominations Currently, Federal Reserve notes are printed and issued in denominations of $1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50, and $100.

Fun Fact: Average Life Span of $ $ months $ months $ months $ months $ months $ months

Currency Denominations The $500, $1,000, $5,000, and $10,000 denominations have not been printed since 1946.

The largest denomination ever created was the $100,000 note.

How money circulates: 1.The Treasury Department ships new paper money and coins to the Federal Reserve Banks; 2.The Reserve Banks pay it out to commercial banks, savings and loan associations, and other depository institutions. 3.Customers of these institutions withdraw cash as they need it. Once people spend their cash at department stores, grocery stores, and so on, most of this money is eventually redeposited in depository institutions. 4.As notes wear out or become dirty or damaged, depository institutions redeposit them at the Reserve Banks..

When money wears out: Banks send old, worn, torn, or soiled notes to a Federal Reserve Bank to be exchanged for new bills. They then shred the old money.

Security Measures Because U.S. currency is universally accepted and trusted, it is widely counterfeited. The U.S. Secret Service was created in 1865 to curtail counterfeiting.

Counterfeiting Manufacturing counterfeit United States currency or altering genuine currency to increase its value is a violation of Title 18, Section 471 of the United States Code and is punishable by a fine of up to $5,000, or 15 years imprisonment, or both.

U.S. currency has traditionally had a number of features that deter counterfeiters. One is the cotton and linen rag paper, which has a distinctive, pliable feel and has tiny red and blue fibers embedded in it. Though a commercial company produces the paper, it is illegal for anyone to manufacture or use a similar type except by special authority. Inks manufactured according to secret formulas by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing also help prevent counterfeiting.

To stay ahead of counterfeiters, the Treasury plans to introduce new designs every seven to ten years. Redesigned and existing notes will circulate at the same time, with the new notes replacing the older ones as they wear out.

For security reasons each feature of a note—the portrait, vignette, ornaments, lettering, script, and scrollwork—is the work of a separate, specially trained engraver.

20th & 21st Century Security Measures Security Thread

Watermark

Color Shifting Ink

Symbols of Freedom

Updated Portrait & Vignette

Microprinting

Low-Vision Feature

Color

Student Examples