The New Zealand Herald

Plenty of life in banknotes as latest version kicks in: Orr

- — Grant Bradley — BusinessDe­sk

Fake New Zealand currency pops up regularly but the head of the Reserve Bank said some attempts look as if a person had got themselves a clingfilm roll and some colouring pens after having a beer in a nightclub in the early hours.

“You think: Would someone really accept that as a note? I lose no sleep on that,” said Adrian Orr, adding that New Zealand has a very low counterfei­t rate by global standards.

New Zealand’s newest banknotes, known as the Series 7, are taking longer to fully replace the earlier Series 6 notes because the national currency is staying in circulatio­n for more time than anticipate­d.

The Series 7 $5 and $10 notes started circulatin­g in October 2015, with the $20, $50 and $100 notes released the following year in May 2016. They were designed to replace the sixth series of banknotes, issued in 1999, and both remain legal tender.

Like other countries, New Zealand regularly replaces banknotes with new designs to hinder counterfei­ting, adding more complex security features such as a colour hologram, raised ink, and other innovation­s which are difficult to replicate. When the older notes are returned to the Reserve Bank, they are taken out of circulatio­n, and the new notes are distribute­d instead.

Orr, the newly minted Reserve Bank governor, said the changeover to the new notes is progressin­g more slowly than expected.

“Six is being destroyed at a slower rate than perhaps what we thought so seven is being circulated at a slower rate,” he said. “I think a lot of currency goes out and stays out.”

The central bank has just completed a research programme looking at the wider currency cycle and has found that while the majority of New Zealand’s cash stays in the country, about a third is held outside of the country.

“A lot of the cash that exists doesn’t necessaril­y come back so it’s being used as a store of wealth and a means of exchange in other countries.” While this was a sign of confidence in our currency, it left open the question of what it was being used for, Orr said.

While the Series 6 is easier to counterfei­t than Series 7, that doesn’t mean it is actually easy, he said. Series 6 was state-of-the-art, the first of New Zealand’s notes to be printed on polymer,

hamish.fletcher@nzherald.co.nz liam.dann@nzherald.co.nz owen.hembry@nzherald.co.nz jamie.gray@nzherald.co.nz aimee.shaw@nzherald.co.nz tamsyn.parker@nzherald.co.nz holly.ryan@nzherald.co.nz improving durability and enabling windows to be included as an enhanced security feature.

Part of the Reserve Bank’s research was looking at how to forecast future demand for cash.

Despite the increased use of electronic payments, the amount of physical currency in circulatio­n continues to grow every year as the economy expands and people still like to hold something tactile, particular­ly after events such as earthquake­s.

“The death of the currency is much exaggerate­d at the moment, and likewise the life of a lot of these cryptocurr­encies,” Orr said.

Cryptocurr­ency doesn’t tick the boxes requiring it to be a means of exchange, a store of value, and a unit of account. So while the Reserve Bank is open-minded about the future, it wouldn’t rush to be a leader in adopting a central bank cryptocurr­ency, he said. grant.bradley@nzherald.co.nz anne.gibson@nzherald.co.nz damien.venuto@nzherald.co.nz Phone: 373-6400 business@nzherald.co.nz

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Governor Adrian Orr says the death of currency is much exaggerate­d.
Photo / Getty Images Governor Adrian Orr says the death of currency is much exaggerate­d.
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