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Cotton prices drive up cost of dollar bills. Life imitates LEGO! BWAH!

Please remember - according to "The Bernank" there is NO inflation or dollar debasement! He is NOT printing money. This: http://finviz.com/futures_performance.ashx?v=16 must be entirely caused by the "evil speculators". Bwah ha ha ha haw.




Original Article:
http://chicagobreakingbusiness.com/2011/03/cotton-prices-drive-up-cost-of-dollar-bills.html

Sure, packs of T-shirts and socks are getting expensive because of skyrocketing cotton prices. Guess what else is made of cotton? The dollar bill in your wallet. In 2010, the cost of making one note jumped 50 percent from what it cost the government in 2008.

The government produced 6.4 billion new currency notes last year. Each one cost 9.6 cents to produce, including the cost of paper and printing.

In 2008, it only cost 6.4 cents a note, a tiny bit more than it did in 2007, according to the U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing.

With the price of raw cotton at a 140-year high, things could get worse.

It’s unclear for now how much more it might cost the U.S. to make dollar bills. However the U.S. Government Accountability Office said paper costs “are a significant portion of the cost of producing $1 notes, but less than half the total cost.“

Ordinary paper used in newspapers, books and cereal boxes is primarily made of wood pulp. But the paper on which the greenback is printed is composed of 75 percent cotton and 25 percent linen, according to the U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing.

The U.S. buys its currency paper from Massachusetts-based Crane & Company. Crane declined to comment on the story, citing the paper product as “strategic material.“

Just last week, the GAO called for replacing the $1 paper bill with a $1 coin, saying that the coins are more durable and do not need to be replaced as often.

The GAO said the switcharoo could potentially save the government approximately $5.5 billion over 30 years, but didn’t provide a breakdown of the cost of paper money.