Commemorative Currency?

Discussion in 'Paper Money' started by MoneyHungry, Jan 12, 2008.

  1. MoneyHungry

    MoneyHungry angel in a earth suit

    Why doesn't the BPE have commemorative currency like the U.S. Mint has commemorative coins?
     
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  3. Daggarjon

    Daggarjon Supporter**

    do they 'need' another excuse to print another source of revenue sucking the hobby dry?

    on the other hand.. that is a good question.
     
  4. clembo

    clembo A closed mind is no mind

    Man you read my mind before I even read the thread!
     
  5. Hobo

    Hobo Squirrel Hater

    The US Postal Service has cornered the market in paper commemoratives.
     
  6. RickieB

    RickieB Expert Plunger Sniper

    The Mint has issued in the past coin and currency sets. The commems on the currency are stamped "Specimen"

    RickieB
     
  7. ambro

    ambro www.lincolncentennial.com

    ...Imagine trying to explain to the 18 year old chick at the register that the brand new "Korean War 54th Annv." $10 bill is indeed real????
     
  8. clembo

    clembo A closed mind is no mind

    You nailed that one!
     
  9. ambro

    ambro www.lincolncentennial.com

    Heck I had one call the (19year old) manager because she didnt think the 1 dollar washington dollar coin was real.
     
  10. gatzdon

    gatzdon Numismatist

    All proceeds from the sale of coins are deposited in the US Treasury.

    All proceeds from the sale of US Paper Money are deposited in the Federal Reserve Bank and the US only gets reimbursed for the cost of printing them.

    Not sure how they are handling things like the uncut currency sheets, but imagine that above 2 sentences play a key role why we don't see much in the way of commemorative currency.

    PS. Technically, the Series 1976 $2 bill was a commemorative issued for circulation.

    PSS I imagine the BEP could issue Legal Tender Notes (the laws still exist on the books permitting those), but I don't know what kind of politics get in the way of that.
     
  11. Daggarjon

    Daggarjon Supporter**

    i could be mistaken, but from what i read on the LTN's, the law states they MUST keep a certain amount in circulation, and that the law is satisfied with circulating LTN 100's
     
  12. gatzdon

    gatzdon Numismatist

    That law is why I often wonder if the feds will reissue $100 Red seals that are still in good condition. I guess I should send them an e-mail one day asking.
     
  13. Daggarjon

    Daggarjon Supporter**

    ZThe thing i think of about those $100 LTN's is this - the feds must have printed a ton of them years ago, and as notes come in that are pulled for shredding, they just release a new batch of the older notes. Just a thought, but who knows.

    Eventually, though, if the above thought is true, they will STILL need to print more - IF they intend on satisfying that law.
     
  14. Numbers

    Numbers Senior Member

    This was true until 1994, when Congress finally got around to repealing that provision. The remaining vaultful of red-seal $100's were all shredded in 1996. Collectors had asked for them to be auctioned off in some way, a la the GSA sales of silver dollars, but Congress hadn't thought that far ahead: in the absence of any law authorising USNs, the Treasury couldn't legally release them.

    That also shoots down the idea of red-seal commemoratives, I'm afraid.

    More to the point, though, is that it's much more time- and labor-intensive to create a new banknote design than a new coin design. It seems unlikely that the BEP would be able to turn a profit (or even break even) on limited-edition commem currency, simply due to the overhead involved in the intaglio engraving and printing. Witness the intaglio-printed Declaration of Independence currently available from the BEP's online store...for $200. :eek: (And that didn't even involve any portrait/vignette engraving!)
     
  15. gatzdon

    gatzdon Numismatist

    I think I totally missed the repeal of that law. That really sucks!!!
     
  16. Daggarjon

    Daggarjon Supporter**

    oops .. let go some notes that should have been kept gatzdon? that would really suck!!!

    Also, i never really thought about the work (ie cost) that goes into engraving the dies for those notes. When i look at the $2 note, i do not see engraving, i see art!!! it was a very well done vingette!
     
  17. SCNuss

    SCNuss Senior Member

    "More to the point, though, is that it's much more time- and labor-intensive to create a new banknote design than a new coin design."

    It isn't necessary to create new plates for a commemorative bill. Just change the seal/serial number's color and/or overprint them, as was done for the Hawaii notes.
     
  18. gatzdon

    gatzdon Numismatist

    Ever since I was a kid, I never passed on a single NON-FRN.
     
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