Mexico to introduce plastic bills
MEXICO CITY, Mexico (AP) --When Mexicans have to pay a taxi driver or
buy
some tacos, they will likely start pulling out the plastic.
The country isn't going credit-card crazy. It's just changing its 20
peso bill, worth
about $2, from paper to a form of plastic.
Bank of Mexico Governor Guillermo Ortiz announced the change during
a news
conference Monday, holding up a sample of the shiny blue bill that
looks similar to
the paper version but comes with a clear window that makes it difficult
to
counterfeit.
There are 130 million 20 peso bills in circulation, and they will slowly
be replaced
starting September 30. Officials estimate it will take a year before
the majority of
paper bills are removed from Mexico's streets.
Besides being difficult to counterfeit, the plastic bills last up to
four times longer
than those of paper -- although they cost 50 percent more to produce.
Mexico decided to start with the 20 peso note -- its smallest denominated
bill --
because it gets the most use in Mexico. Ortiz said that if the plastic
bill is
successful, officials may convert the 50, 100, 200 and 500 peso bills,
all of which
are more likely to be counterfeited.
Australia began using plastic money in 1988. Some 20 countries -- including
New
Zealand, Brazil, Thailand and Northern Ireland -- have followed its
lead.
Officials said the new plastic bills -- which are paper-thin and the
same size as their
paper counterparts -- have been tested successfully in automatic teller
machines.
Also Monday, Ortiz said that Mexico's annualized inflation fell to around
5.3 percent
in August from 5.5 percent in July. He added that inflation is expected
to continue
declining for the rest of the year, and that the central bank hopes
to close December
at its target of 4.5 percent.
Copyright 2002 The Associated Press.