[20
MONEY
always deceived most foreign observers. The Act
further provided that any surplus left in the Currency
Note Account after these transfers to the Bank was to
zo to the Exchequer, thus winding up the whole account.
This scheme of course involved the disappearance of
the ‘‘ Cunliffe limit,” so far as its curious use of the
maximum fiduciary issue of the previous year was con-
cerned. But the limit arrived at for 1928 is, so to speak,
embalmed in the provision that the ‘ fiduciary issue ”
(as the amount of Bank Notes of all denominations
which need not be covered by gold is now officially as
well as commonly called) shall be £260,000,000, since
this sum was arrived at by adding the £245,000,000
permissible for 1928 under the Cunliffe limit to the old
twenty million fiduciaryissue of the Bank under the Act
of 1844, and deducting five millions for notes expected
to be thrown out of Ireland by the Free State’s decision
to have a paper currency of its own. This £260,000,000
may be varied by the Treasury on the request of the
Bank, but a variation so made, if in the upward direc-
tion, will not continue in force for more than two vears
without parliamentary sanction.
The profits of the whole of the issue (notes for £5 and
upwards, as well as for £1 and 10s) have to be accounted
for by the Bank and paid to the Exchequer.
& -—
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50
$d
: 2A
Crp
Abteilung
Diunotiel
1H
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