Centenial Celebration

Transaction Search Form: please type in any of the fields below.

Date: April 18, 2024 Thu

Time: 9:21 pm

Results for counterfeit

1 results found

Author: Viles, Nathan

Title: The Social Costs of Currency Counterfeiting

Summary: Currency counterfeiting is costly for society. Law enforcement agencies allocate substantial resources to deter, detect and prosecute counterfeiting operations, households and businesses suffer a direct loss to counterfeiters and undertake costly prevention measures, and central banks spend considerable resources upgrading and improving the security of banknotes. Without these prevention efforts, there is a risk that the public could lose confidence in the currency and reduce its use relative to more costly payment alternatives. This paper examines the social costs of counterfeiting in Australia. First, we provide some statistics on counterfeiting domestically and compare Australia's experience with some other economies internationally. We find that the direct costs of counterfeiting in Australia are relatively low when compared with other economies, but that there can be substantial deadweight costs associated with prevention efforts and losses of confidence in the currency. Second, we focus on quantifying the effect of a loss of confidence in the currency. To do this, we estimate a structural vector auto-regression using the Australian data. In response to a positive one standard deviation counterfeiting shock, the demand for banknotes declines and the use of credit cards and bank deposits increase. These results are consistent with the presence of substitution effects. Using a scenario to quantify the real resource costs associated with these substitution effects, our estimates suggest that an increase in counterfeiting of around A$140 000, spread over ten years, leads to a total increase in social costs of A$7.0 million. Although the statistical uncertainty implied in the model and scenario estimates is large, the results suggest that there are significant pay-offs from efforts to prevent and deter counterfeiting activity in Australia.

Details: Sydney: Reserve Bank of Australia, 2015. 40p.

Source: Internet Resource: Research Discussion Paper 2015-05: Accessed May 27, 2015 at: http://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2015/pdf/rdp2015-05.pdf

Year: 2015

Country: Australia

URL: http://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2015/pdf/rdp2015-05.pdf

Shelf Number: 135790

Keywords:
Counterfeit
Counterfeiting