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Government can t print money properly

As a metaphor for our troubled economic and financial era -- and the

government's stumbling response -- this one's hard to beat. You can't stimulate

the economy via the money supply, after all, if you can't print the money

correctly.

Because of a problem with the presses, the federal government has shut down

production of its flashy new $100 bills, and has quarantined more than 1

billion of them -- more than 10 percent of all existing U.S. cash -- in a vault

in Fort Worth, Texas, reports CNBC.

"There is something drastically wrong here," one source told CNBC. "The

frustration level is off the charts."

Officials with the Treasury and the Federal Reserve had touted the new bills'

sophisticated security features that were 10 years in the making, including a

3-D security strip and a color-shifting image of a bell, designed to foil

counterfeiters. But it turns out the bills are so high-tech that the presses

can't handle the printing job.

More than 1 billion unusable bills have been printed. Some of the bills creased

during production, creating a blank space on the paper, one official told CNBC.

Because correctly printed bills are mixed in with the flawed ones, even the

ones printed to the correct design specs can't be used until they 're sorted.

It would take an estimated 20 to 30 years to weed out the defective bills by

hand, but a mechanized system is expected to get the job done in about a year.

Combined, the quarantined bills add up to $110 billion -- more than 10 percent

of the entire U.S. cash supply, which now stands at around $930 billion.

The flawed bills, which cost around $120 million to print, will have to be

burned.

The new bills are the first to include Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner's

signature. In order to prevent a shortfall,the government has ordered

production of the old design, which includes the signature of Bush

administration Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson. That, surely, is not the only

respect in which the nation's lead economic officials would like to turn back

the clock to sometime before the 2008 financial crisis.

(AP photo of older $100 bills rolling off the presses: Doug Mills)