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Re: e$ Signorage
Perry is closest to Webster's Third New International
Dictionary:
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seigniorage or seignorage also seigneurage
[ME seigneurage, fr. MF, right of the lord, esp. to coin
money, fr. seigneur + age]
1: a government revenue derived from the manufacture of
coins that is calculated in the U.S. as the difference
between the monetary and the bullion value of the silver
contained in silver coins disregarding any alloy metal,
all the metals contained in minor coins (as teh nickel
and the cent), or the silver bullion that is held as
backing for silver certificates -- compare brassage.
2 archaic: Dominion, Power.
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brassage
1: a charge made to an individual under a system of free
coinage for the minting of any gold or silver he may
bring to the mint and usu. calculated to cover various
costs -- compare seigniorage.
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Still, Jim Gleick seems to be citing a special extension of
this general definition, wherein government capitalizes on
its money-coining power to reap any ancillary benefit, such
as the float on money transactions. Is it not likely that
there are other seigniorages of running the public till, as
Kawika Gaguio suggests, or even such as pleasurably
performed a la droit du seigneur cited by Simon?
Another definition of seigniorage is that of any means to
generate benefits for the lord. Along that line, I wonder if
governments might not apply brassage to E-money.