Monetary sovereignty

Main article: History of money

Monetary sovereignty is the power of the state to exercise exclusive legal control over its currency, broadly defined, by exercise of the following powers:[1]

Powers and evidence of monetary sovereignty

Legal tender

The state alone is empowered to specify the media, called legal tender, which may be offered and must be accepted for the discharge of any debt.

Issuance and retirement

The state alone is empowered to control, either directly or through institutional and regulatory mechanisms, the issuance and retirement of the legal tender.

Incidence of monetary sovereignty

Currently, nations such as the USA and Japan, which have autonomous central banks and borrow in their own currencies are said to exercise a high degree of monetary sovereignty. On the other hand, the European Union nations, have ceded much of their monetary sovereignty to the European Central Bank.[2]

See also

References

  1. "The Legal Aspect of Money" by F.A. Mann, 5th edition, Oxford, 1992, pp. 460-78
  2. Cohen, Benjamin J. (2000). The Geography of Money. Cornell University Press. pp. 47ff. ISBN 978-0801485138.
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