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Re: Steel Pennies
Originally posted by bart View PostPlease provide a few recommended links.
Let me check what's online and on english. SAM (Sistema Alimentario Mexicano) ran from 1980 to 1983, and Conasupo was liquidated in 1999. What survives of both of these are the Liconsa network and Gruma. Will report back in an addition to this message.
* Edition *
So far, only extended text I've found is in spanish, and quite short. As part of an extended documents that cover both histories, I found a series of books "Historia de la cuestión agraria Mexicana", will be checking them and include, time permitting, some translations.sigpic
Attention: Electronics Engineer Learning Economics.
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Re: A doomed currency
Somewhat related and a possible motivation (amongst others) for eventually moving away from printed / minted currency. As the article below indicates, I wouldn't expect this to be a sudden change.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S. discriminates against blind people by printing paper money that makes it impossible for them to distinguish among the bills' varying values, a federal appeals court ruled Tuesday.
The ruling upholds a decision by a lower court in 2006. It could force the Treasury Department to redesign its money. Suggested changes have ranged from making bills different sizes to printing them with raised markings.
The American Council for the Blind sued for such changes but the Treasury Department has been fighting the case for about six years.
"I don't think we should have to rely on people to tell us what our money is," said Mitch Pomerantz, the council's president.
The U.S. acknowledges the design hinders blind people but it argued that blind people have adapted. Some relied on store clerks to help them, some used credit cards and others folded certain corners to help distinguish between bills.
The court ruled 2-1 that such adaptations were insufficient. The government might as well argue that, since handicapped people can crawl on all fours or ask for help from strangers, there's no need to make buildings wheelchair accessible, the court said.
Courts can't decide how to design the currency, since that's up to the Treasury Department. But the ruling forces the department to address what the court called a discriminatory problem.
Pomerantz says it could take years to change the look of money and until then, he expects that similar-looking money will continue to get printed and spent. But since blindness becomes more common with age, people in the 30s and 40s should know that, when they get older, "they will be able to identify their $1 bills from their fives, tens and twenties," he said.
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Re: A doomed currency
???
why did they appeal the earlier decision?
????
Why did it even go to court in the first place?
Originally posted by zoog View PostSomewhat related and a possible motivation (amongst others) for eventually moving away from printed / minted currency. As the article below indicates, I wouldn't expect this to be a sudden change.
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Re: Steel Pennies
Originally posted by ocelotl View PostLet me check what's online and on english. SAM (Sistema Alimentario Mexicano) ran from 1980 to 1983, and Conasupo was liquidated in 1999. What survives of both of these are the Liconsa network and Gruma. Will report back in an addition to this message.
* Edition *
So far, only extended text I've found is in spanish, and quite short. As part of an extended documents that cover both histories, I found a series of books "Historia de la cuestión agraria Mexicana", will be checking them and include, time permitting, some translations.What about this?
Antonio Yunez-Naude, El Colegio de México, Mexico
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Re: Steel Pennies
Originally posted by babbittd View PostWhat about this?
Antonio Yunez-Naude, El Colegio de México, Mexicosigpic
Attention: Electronics Engineer Learning Economics.
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