2011-11-19 05:48:26
18 November 2011 Last updated at 13:41 GMT
The Bank of Canada began circulating $100 polymer banknotes this week in an
effort to combat counterfeiting and reduce costs. So why don't more countries
use plastic cash?
On the face of it, plastic banknotes have many advantages.
They last a long time, and they don't get dirty so quickly - a great advantage
in countries with hot climates, and sweaty pockets.
"The tropical climate is a challenging environment for banknotes, especially
because of high humidity and high temperatures," says polymer researcher Stane
Straus.
"This causes paper notes to absorb moisture, thus becoming dirty and limp
quickly. Polymer notes, on the other hand, do not absorb moisture.
The answer
Polymer notes last more than twice as long as paper notes, and cost less to
produce over their lifetime, but they also have some disadvantages
They used to be harder to counterfeit than paper notes, though paper notes have
now caught up
Disadvantages include being unfoldable and more slippery
Central bankers are conservative and risk averse - and are waiting to see
whether their counterparts in other countries embrace plastic first
"You could say that polymer notes beat paper notes in terms of cleanliness and
durability in all climates, but this particular advantage of polymer notes
stands out even more in tropical climates."
Canada had security, cost and also the environment in mind, when it took the
decision to go plastic.
When counterfeiting hit a peak in the country from 2001 to 2004, the blame was
put on the $10 and $5 printed in 2001 and 2002, which were deemed to have too
few security features.
By this stage, the polymer technology first introduced in Australia in 1988 was
already well established, and security features such as transparent windows and
microprinted watermarks looked like a solution to the problem.
Canada now claims to have the world's most advanced banknote, including a
hologram within the transparent window. It also shows a circle of numbers that
match the value of the denomination when held up to a light.
A $50 polymer denomination will follow in March and a $20 bill in late 2012.
Denominations of $10 and $5 will mean all Canadian money will be printed on the
material by 2013.
Recycling
The new notes, says Bank of Canada senior analyst Julie Girard, will also last
2.5 times longer than paper bills. That will put the life span of a $20 bill -
Canada's most widely circulated denomination - to at least seven years.
Countries that are purely polymer
Australia
Brunei
Papua New Guinea
New Zealand
Romania
Vietnam
That will save production costs because fewer bills will need to made, and the
plastic is also recyclable at the end of its lifetime.
"It's possible that someone could be sitting on a lawn chair some day whose
parts are made of currency," Girard says.
Stane Straus also sings the praises of polymer, from an environmental point of
view, compared with traditional "paper" banknotes.
Many of these are actually made of cotton - US paper bills cotton are 75%
cotton - which, he points out, takes large amounts of pesticides and water to
produce.
So why don't more countries benefit from this technology?
Today, 23 countries use polymer banknotes, but only six have converted all
denominations into plastic.
A history of plastic notes
Haiti and Cost Rica were the first to trial polymer banknotes in the 1980s,
using American technology - but the ink smudged
A plastic note was introduced in the Isle of Man in 1983, using British
technology, but withdrawn in 1988 - again because of problems with the ink
Australia, the first country to go purely plastic, is now the world's sole
polymer banknote producer
Tom Hockenhull, curator of the Modern Money exhibition at the British Museum,
says one reason is that the security gap between paper and plastic notes is
closing.
It is now possible to make "hybrid notes" - paper notes with a transparent
polymer window - he points out.
"Paper is much more secure than it used to be and the new 50 note, for
example, has features that are extremely hard to counterfeit," he adds.
Meanwhile counterfeiters are making progress with polymer. "Polymer is very
hard to counterfeit, but it hasn't stopped people trying: good imitations do
appear from time to time," Mr Hockenhull says.
Risk
He also points to some other disadvantages of polymer banknotes:
They are harder to fold
They are more slippery, which makes them harder to count by hand
Some less developed countries may not have the facilities to recycle them - and
when they burn they pollute the air
In addition, polymer notes cost more to produce in the short-term, which could
be a drawback for developing countries. The payback from their extra durability
only comes over time.
Another factor could the conservatism of central bankers.
"Central banks are very conservative institutions," Straus says. "People making
the decision to convert to polymer - partially or fully - are taking a personal
risk.
"Many central banks are simply waiting until others convert and then they will
follow."