United States Military Payment Certificate Five Cents-1965-1969

Name/Title

United States Military Payment Certificate Five Cents-1965-1969

Entry/Object ID

2004.004.134

Description

United States Military Payment Certificate Five Cents-1965-1969. Accession number written on reverse in bottom right corner

Context

Military payment certificates, or MPC, were a form of currency used to pay U.S. military personnel in certain foreign countries. They were used in one area or another from a few months after the end of World War II until a few months after the end of U.S. participation in the Vietnam War – from 1946 until 1973. MPCs evolved from Allied Military Currency as a response to the large amounts of US Dollars circulated by American servicemen in post-World War II Europe. The local citizens might not trust local currencies, as the future of their governments was unclear. Preferring a stable currency like U.S. dollars, local civilians often accepted payment in dollars for less than the accepted conversion rates. Dollars became more favorable to hold, inflating the local currencies and thwarting plans to stabilize local economies. Contributing to this problem was the fact that troops were being paid in dollars, which they could convert in unlimited amounts to the local currency with merchants at the floating (black market) conversion rate, which was much more favorable to the GIs than the government fixed conversion rate. To reduce profiteering from currency arbitrage, the U.S. military devised the MPC program. MPC were paper money initially denominated in amounts of 5¢, 10¢, 25¢, 50¢, $1, $5, and $10; a $20 note was added in 1968. Unlike US currency, these certificates were issued under the authority of the Department of War (later Department of Defense) rather than the Department of the Treasury. Consequently, they do not bear the US Treasury seal found on virtually every example of US civilian currency. MPCs were fully convertible to U.S. dollars upon leaving a designated MPC zone, and convertible to local currencies when going on leave (but not vice versa). It was illegal for unauthorized personnel to possess MPC, and that policy, in theory, eliminated U.S. dollars from local economies

Collection

Banknotes

Made/Created

Date made

1946 - 1973

Time Period

20th Century

Place of Origin

Country

United States of America

Continent

North America

Manufacture Method

Lithography

Banknote Details

Banknote Type

Military Payment

Currency

United States Dollar

Denomination

5 Cents

Issuing Authority

Department of War

Production Dates

Aug 31, 1965 - Oct 21, 1968

Serial Number

01035880

Obverse

Description

Woman on the left

Transcription

MILITARY PAYMENT CERTIFICATE FIVE SERIES 641 CENTS FOR USE ONLY IN UNITED STATES MILITARY ESTABLISHMENTS-BY UNITED STATES AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL IN ACCORDANCE WITH APPLICABLE RULES AND REGULATIONS

Reverse

Description

Eagle with fasces in claws

Transcription

CENTS FIVE CENTS MILITARY PAYMENT CERTIFICATE FOR USE ONLY IN UNITED STATES MILITARY ESTABLISHMENTS-BY UNITED STATES AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL IN ACCORDANCE WITH APPLICABLE RULES AND REGULATIONS

Lexicon

Nomenclature 4.0

Nomenclature Secondary Object Term

Money, Paper

Nomenclature Primary Object Term

Money

Nomenclature Class

Exchange Media

Nomenclature Category

Category 08: Communication Objects

Other Names and Numbers

Other Numbers

Number Type

Pick Number

Other Number

M57

Dimensions

Dimension Description

Overall

Width

2-3/16 in

Length

4-5/16 in

Composition

Material

Paper