Government's monetary powers and differs from receipts coming from the public, since there is no corresponding payment on the part of another party. Therefore, seigniorage is excluded from receipts and treated as a means of financing a budget deficit,... The Budget of the United States Government - Page 253by United States, United States. Office of Management and Budget - 1978Full view - About this book
 | United States, United States. Office of Management and Budget - Budget - 1974
...power. — Seigniorage is the profit from coining money; it is the difference between the value of coins as money and their cost, including the cost of manufacturing....the public, since there is no corresponding payment on the part of another party. Therefore, seigniorage is excluded from receipts and treated as a means... | |
 | United States. Office of Management and Budget - Budget
...— Seigniorage is the profit from coining money ; it is the difference between the value of coins as money and their cost, including the cost of manufacturing....the public, since there is no corresponding payment on the part of another party. Therefore, seigniorage is excluded from receipts and treated as a means... | |
 | United States. Office of Management and Budget - Budget
...manufacturing expense. The seigniorage on coins, arising from the exercise of the Government's monetary powers, differs from receipts coming from the public, since there is no corresponding payment on the part of another party. Therefore, seigniorage is excluded from receipts and treated, like borrowing,... | |
 | United States. Office of Management and Budget - Budget - 1973
...manufacturing expense. The seigniorage on coins, arising from the exercise of the Government's monetary powers, differs from receipts coming from the public, since there is no corresponding payment on the part of another party. Therefore, seigniorage is excluded from receipts and treated, like borrowing,... | |
 | United States, United States. Office of Management and Budget - Budget - 1978
...power. — Seigniorage is the profit from coining money; it is the difference between the value of coins as money and their cost, including the cost of manufacturing. Seigniorage on corns arises from the exercise of the Government's monetary powers and differs from receipts coming... | |
 | Budget - 1981 - 145 pages
...The difference between the face value of minted coins and the cost of their production. Seigniorage arises from the exercise of the Government's monetary...another party. Therefore, seigniorage is excluded from budget receipts and treated as a means of financing a budget deficit, or as a supplementary amount... | |
 | Budget - 1981 - 136 pages
...The difference between the face value of minted coins and the cost of their production. Seigniorage arises from the exercise of the Government's monetary...another party. Therefore, seigniorage is excluded from budget receipts and treated as a means of financing a budget deficit, or as a supplementary amount... | |
 | DIANE Publishing Company - 1995 - 17 pages
...coining money. It is the difference between the value of coins as money and their cost of production. Seigniorage on coins arises from the exercise of the Government's monetary powers but differs from receipts coming from the public, since there is no corresponding payment by another... | |
 | Robert T. Golembiewski - Political Science - 1997 - 1024 pages
...coining money. It is the difference between the value of coins as money and their cost of production. Seigniorage on coins arises from the exercise of the...from receipts and treated as a means of financing the deficit other than borrowing from the public. The increment (profit) resulting from the sale of... | |
 | United States. Bureau of the Budget - Budget - 1971
...seigniorage. — The seigniorage on coins, arising from the exercise of the Government's monetary powers, differs from receipts coming from the public, since there is no corresponding payment on the part of another party. Therefore seigniorage is excluded from receipts, and treated, like borrowing,... | |
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