Discover Magazine runs a monthly back-page feature called "20 Things You
Didn't Know About..." that usually lives up to its title. In a recent
issue the subject was money, and some of the factoids are worth noting. See
6, 7, and 8.
20 Things You Didn't Know About... Money
1. No escape: As you file your taxes this month, you can take
solace in knowing that the ritual dates back almost 5,000 years, to a time
when Egyptians started paying taxes in goods and labor.
2. Collecting taxes became a lot easier after Egypt and Mesopotamia
began using silver and gold bars as currency, around 2500 B.C.
3. Unfortunately, the invention of money also made theft a lot
easier. Consequently, temples became the first banks because they were
sturdy, frequently visited, and intimidating to would-be thieves.
4. But did they offer subprime mortgages? By 1750 B.C., Babylonian
temple priests had branched out into issuing loans to locals.
5. Back then they didn't need bailouts. Founded in Italy as a
pawnshop in 1472, the Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena is the world's oldest
surviving bank.
6. Paper money originated in China in the year 910 and amazed Marco
Polo when he visited three centuries later. He also noted that the emperor,
Kublai Khan, seemed to be printing an awful lot of notes...
7. ...which ultimately wrecked the economy. Due to skyrocketing
inflation caused by churning out so much money, paper bills had to be
abolished in China in the 15th century.
8. Return of the funny money: The expense of the U.S. Civil War
inspired the government to introduce paper "greenbacks" in July
1861.
9. All the U.S. coins and bills in general circulation today have a
total worth of about $829 billion.
10. Two-thirds of that cash is held overseas.
11. Filthy lucre: In a study last year, researchers found more
cocaine residue on U.S. bills than on any other currency. Also found on
money: staphylococcus bacteria and fecal matter.
12. That may explain why, for a period around 1916, you could carry
your cash to Washington, D.C., to have it washed, ironed, and reissued.
13. The paper used for U.S. bills isn't made from trees. Rather, it
contains 75 percent cotton and 25 percent linen.
14. To foil counterfeiters, the latest $5 bill design has an
embedded security thread that contains more than 650,000 tiny glass domes.
They create an optical illusion that the Mint hopes is almost impossible to
duplicate.
15. He left home without it: In 1949 Frank X. McNamara took friends
to dinner in New York City but forgot to bring his cash. He vowed never again
to be so embarrassed and so created the Diners Club Card, the first credit
card.
16. The Diners Club Card was initially made of cardboard. It listed
the 14 participating restaurants on the back and had an annual fee of $3.
17. Scottish inventor John Shepherd-Barron built the world's first
true ATM for a Barclay's Bank in North London in 1967.
18. The machine was based on the concept of a chocolate bar
dispenser.
19. Plastic cards did not yet exist, so Shepherd-Barron's ATM
accepted only checks laced with identifying traces of radioactive carbon-14.
20. Once a distinctively radioactive check was detected, customers
entered their four-digit PINs. Shepherd-Barron claimed users "would have
to eat 136,000 checks" for the radioactivity to have any dangerous
effects.
John
Rubino
DollarCollapse.com
John
Rubino is co-author, with GoldMoneys James Turk, of The Coming Collapse of
the Dollar and How to Profit From It (Doubleday, December 2004), and author
of How to Profit from the Coming Real Estate Bust (Rodale, 2003) and Main
Street, Not Wall Street (Morrow, 1998). After earning a Finance MBA from New
York University, he spent the 1980s on Wall Street, as a Eurodollar trader,
equity analyst and junk bond analyst. During the 1990s he was a featured
columnist with TheStreet.com and a frequent contributor to Individual
Investor, Online Investor, and Consumers Digest, among many other
publications. He now writes for Fidelity Magazine, CFA, and Proto.
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