it is the US currency and is signed by the Treasurer and Secretary of Treasury in Washington D. C.
Yes and it was once used for money in order to back up paper money.
im not sure what gives our money value. Do you?
Wisconsin makes money by farming, yes, but it also makes money by selling automobiles, machinery, furniture, paper, paper products, beer, processed foods, copper, iron ore, lead, zinc, and its top product, cheese.
Wisconsin makes money by farming, yes, but it also makes money by selling automobiles, machinery, furniture, paper, paper products, beer, processed foods, copper, iron ore, lead, zinc, and its top product, cheese.
Okay, money is not, in any real sense, "made of paper". Sure, it's printed on paper (though calling the substance money is printed on "paper" is a bit misleading, because there's actually a large amount of cotton present in that "paper". But, what makes money money is the fact that the government proclaims it to be "legal tender". So, in the only sense that matters, money is made out of government proclamation, not paper. Moreover, trees do not produce paper directly. They produce wood. Humans produce paper by processing the wood (and, in the case of the paper used to print money, cotton as well). And humans make money by printing numbers, words, and the pictures of dead Presidents on the paper. The biological processes going on inside a tree, complex as they are, cannot duplicate these human processes. So, "money", even if it was nothing more than the paper and ink that went into physically producing the bills, still could not grow on trees.
Sure, they're valuable. Money is money, regardless the form: paper note or coins.
Crane Paper in Massachusetts.
Yes and it was once used for money in order to back up paper money.
im not sure what gives our money value. Do you?
Yes - consecutive serial numbers make them more valuable, when sold.
credit cards debit cards cheques paper money gold valuable stones coins
Wood makes paper. Wood makes money. Wood makes houses and stores.
Wood makes paper. Wood makes money. Wood makes houses and stores.
Wisconsin makes money by farming, yes, but it also makes money by selling automobiles, machinery, furniture, paper, paper products, beer, processed foods, copper, iron ore, lead, zinc, and its top product, cheese.
Wisconsin makes money by farming, yes, but it also makes money by selling automobiles, machinery, furniture, paper, paper products, beer, processed foods, copper, iron ore, lead, zinc, and its top product, cheese.
If your asking the name of the company that makes and prints the paper for U.S. currency, it's Crane & Co. in Mass. this is the only place that manufactures and prints U.S. paper money. They make the paper, print the images and put the security fibers ect. in the paper. The only thing they don't do is ink (color green) the money. I hope this was the answer you were looking for.
Money is coined by the US mint. The mint makes coined and paper money. The government regulates how much money is made and when.