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- <text id=94TT1580>
- <title>
- Nov. 14, 1994: Crime:Some Like Them Hot
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 14, 1994 How Could She Do It?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CRIME, Page 76
- Some Like Them Hot
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A global lust for dollars and advanced imaging techniques have
- produced a wave of counterfeiting
- </p>
- <p>By Barbara Rudolph--Reported by Tom Curry/New York, Sally B. Donnelly/Moscow and
- Elaine Shannon/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Currency traders were shedding dollars last week like bad scrip,
- driving its value to a postwar low against the Japanese yen
- and forcing the U.S. Federal Reserve to prop it up with two
- days and $2 billion of aggressive buying. Yet even as it is
- unloaded by speculators, the dollar has become so common across
- the vast old communist territories that an estimated 50% of
- the populace in the former Soviet Union, for instance, keeps
- most of its meager savings in U.S. currency.
- </p>
- <p> Throughout China, Cuba, Russia and much of Eastern Europe, people
- from shopkeepers to schoolteachers stash greenbacks as a shield
- against hyperinflation and the sudden devaluation of their own
- currencies. In some cases, it is also the only way to do business.
- Taxi drivers in Almaty, the capital of Kazakhstan, prefer their
- fares in dollars, as do some restaurants in Kiev and St. Petersburg.
- Says a Russian importer of IBM computers, pulling a thick wad
- of $50 bills from his pocket: "What do I need rubles for? I
- want real money."
- </p>
- <p> But, as if this surreal saturation of dollars were not a generous
- enough compliment to the American coin, here comes another one:
- the American bill is being illegally reproduced around the globe
- and in greater quantity than ever. "The U.S. currency," says
- Secret Service spokesman Carl Meyer, "is not only the most desirable
- currency in the world. It is also the most easily counterfeited."
- Of the $350 billion worth of U.S currency in circulation today,
- anywhere from 50% to 65% is held overseas. In 1980, estimates
- University of Wisconsin economist Edgar Feige, just 30% of all
- dollars could be found offshore. No one knows how many fake
- dollars are traded, but there is no question that powerful new
- optical scanners and imaging software have generated a substantial
- amount. In 1992, $30 million worth of counterfeit dollars was
- seized overseas; last year the total hit $120 million, and it
- is expected to break that record in 1994. Many times that amount
- circulates without being traced. Belatedly, perhaps, the U.S.
- Treasury is fighting back, coming up with new technologies and
- precautions to protect the dollar. "The integrity of the nation's
- currency is at stake," Meyer notes.
- </p>
- <p> In a microeconomic sense, that was also the case recently on
- Moscow's busy Old Arbat, where currency-exchange dealer Ilya
- was inspecting what appeared to be a legitimate $100 note. "It's
- a fake," he said. Turning the bill over, he pointed to the o
- in United States of America: it was too close to the f. At Kredobank,
- a privately held Russian bank, a Moscow casino operator recently
- tried to deposit $10,000 in cash. It wasn't worth the paper
- it was printed on. Kredobank, like most Russian banks, confiscates
- forged currency but usually does not report the incident to
- the police. For that reason, says a Western analyst with experience
- in the region, "we hear rumors of how many fake dollars are
- around, but there's little way to track it."
- </p>
- <p> In much of China's explosive economy, phony $100 bills are as
- ubiquitous as construction cranes on the streets of Shanghai.
- Even in boomtowns, checks and credit cards are in limited use,
- and cash careens through the system at an alarming rate. Tracking
- down the counterfeiters is not easy, says Dai Weiwen, head of
- the exchange section of the Bank of China, because "our methods
- of detecting fakes are primitive." In recent months, however,
- banks have begun to install equipment such as money scanners
- to ferret out forgeries. The Industrial and Commerical Bank
- of China even fines employees who fail to detect fake currency.
- </p>
- <p> In the U.S., government officials are studying the consequences
- of the newly pervasive greenback and the concomitant rise in
- counterfeiting. The currency outflow produces one sweet side
- effect: the Treasury saves an estimated $15 billion a year since
- it pays nothing on the dollars held overseas that don't make
- their way into American interest-bearing accounts. At the same
- time, since the flow of funds abroad cannot be precisely quantified,
- it makes it almost impossible for the Fed to gauge the domestic
- money supply and thus know with certainty how to manipulate
- it. "Estimates of currency held abroad are subject to considerable
- error," Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan testified before Congress
- last August. "We are looking at this issue in considerable detail."
- </p>
- <p> In the corridors of the Treasury Department, meanwhile, counter-counterfeiting
- teams are testing new dollar designs. The portraits of historical
- figures might be slightly enlarged and moved off center; watermarks
- might be added. Since 1990, polyester fibers have been imbedded
- in dollar bills so that when a bill is copied by a forger, the
- note's image is slightly marred. Now the Treasury plans to place
- those threads in one spot on all dollar bills to make it more
- easily detected. With counterfeiting a cottage industry around
- the globe, the American currency is likely to require a growing
- staff of tinkerers.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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