WHAT GOES AROUND COMES AROUND Público Deposited

COOK ISLAND

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 9, Number 16, April 16, 2006, Article 34

    COOK ISLAND: WHAT GOES AROUND COMES AROUND

    Regarding the attempt to cash in the Cook Islands $50 "coins",
    Martin Purdy writes: "Isn't it interesting that selling these
    things originally - for presumably much more than $50 - is
    apparently considered OK, but trying to redeem them for only
    their face value is considered "ripping us off"? Wonderful
    example of a double standard!"

    [My thoughts exactly, though it's unclear what portion of
    the original profits went to the Cook Islands, and what portion
    went to the Franklin Mint. Who was scamming who? -Editor]

    Martin add: "It sounds odd when they claim that "millions"
    are involved, if the coin denominations are only in the order
    of $50. What were the mintages of these pieces again? You'd
    need 20,000 $50 coins to claim back a single million."

    [Well, the piece WAS dated April 1st, but it had the ring of
    truth to me. I also wasn't sure whether the Cook Island dollar
    is linked to the U.S. dollar or a separate currency at some
    exchange rate. Ralf Böpple informs us that Cook Islands dollars
    are linked to the New Zealand Dollar. -Editor]

    Ralf Böpple of Stuttgart writes: "No, I am not one of the
    Germans who presented Cook Islands money for redemption, but
    the story does not really sound that new to me. A similar thing
    happened on another Pacific archipelago a few years ago - I
    think it was Micronesia.

    The official currency of Cook Islands is the New Zealand Dollar.
    A 50-dollar-coin of Cook Islands could thus be cashed in for 50
    NZ-dollars, which is 30 US-dollars. The “coins” have approximately
    the size of a silver crown. Hundreds, if not thousands of these
    sets were marketed in Germany, and who knows how many sets never
    got sold and just sat in the vaults of some wholesale company.
    A quick look into eBay reveals that, quite unsurprisingly, these
    disks can today be bought at close to their bullion value, which
    is much less than 30 US-dollars.

    It seems to me that this is not really a scam to “rip of a
    developing country”, as the Cook Islands officials claim, but
    simply a case of a government being too greedy and keen on the
    proceeds of these pseudo-coins to do their homework in economics.
    Or maybe they were just too self-conscious to think that somebody
    would actually show up at their forlorn shores with the money
    that has their name on it!"

    Mike Marotta writes: "Cook Island's monetary crisis is its own
    doing. They thought that they could scam tourists with their
    non-circulating non-legal non-tender. The government of Cook
    Islands found themselves obligated to a group of Germans who
    apparently knew their folktales: you have to pay the piper.
    Rather than allowing the Cook Islands legislative junto to get
    away with denigrating merchants who deal in money, we should be
    boycotting the Cook Islands as a thug state where tourists are
    victimized by the authorities for the profit of the ruling clique.

    Closer to home, the Liberty Dollar silver warehouse notes are
    an interesting example of the kinds of alternatives that people
    create to facilitate trade and commerce. All through history,
    merchants of all commodities whether "farmers" or "craftsmen"
    or "clerks" have solved problems in currency. To denigrate the
    Liberty Dollar is to make fun of coins for not being cows or
    to laugh at "pounds-shillings-pence" because they were only
    "money of account" and not "real" money.

    You have to ask who is laughing at whom. In ancient times,
    merchants supplanted farmers when democracies replaced monarchies
    and philosophies replaced superstitions. In the middle ages, a
    vibrant patchwork society with thousands of polities striking
    hundreds of currencies was united by traders who threw wide the
    cathedral doors to allow new arithmetics and (not surprisingly)
    new philosophies. In our time, we know that fiat currencies
    are doomed. This is not some unfortunate accident of history,
    but an economic law as immutable as gravity. People who choose
    silver over fiat and whose silver is tallied with attractive
    promissory notes are applying the truths of numismatics to the
    solution of practical problems."

URL da fonte Data de publicação
  • 2006-04-16
Volume
  • 9

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