USA TODAY US Edition

Feds say coins, paper money still needed

Cash is king despite the rise of electronic money

- Bill Theobald

WASHINGTON – Don’t count coins and paper money out just yet.

While the advent of cryptocurr­encies and other forms of electronic money – on top of the pervasiven­ess of credit card swiping and electronic bill pay – coins and bills may seem anti- quated.

But the heads of the two agencies who create coins and print paper money told Congress on Wednesday that both are alive and well ... and necessary.

Forty-two billion notes with a value of $1.7 trillion – the most in history – are in circulatio­n, and that total grows almost 5 percent a year, Leonard Olijar, director of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, told a House committee. The volume of currency has increased 43

percent from 2008 to 2016.

U.S. dollars remain the world’s currency, Olijar said, and that can be seen in the rush on U.S. currency whenever there is a natural disaster or political turmoil.

And the frequency of cash use has remained unchanged in recent years, he said, about one-third of all transactio­ns and more than half of those under $25.

While the situation with coins is a bit more complex, “the use of coinage is not in immediate danger of being usurped,” said David Ryder, director of the U.S. Mint.

Ryder said there has been focus on efficiency at the Mint and adjusting to consumer needs. For example, the number of coin collectors identified by the Mint has declined from 1.2 million in 2007 to 500,000 today. Also, the market for gold and silver coins fluctuates with the economy, and the use of alternativ­e metals to save on the cost of minting coins is being explored.

Olijar said poorer people have the greatest need for physical currency. Seven percent of U.S. households have no bank, and about 20 percent don’t have full access to bank services, meaning 45 million Americans don’t have access to payment systems other than cash.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Some 42 billion paper notes are in circulatio­n, the most in history.
GETTY IMAGES Some 42 billion paper notes are in circulatio­n, the most in history.

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