An administrative method to debase currency is for the
mint to start issuing coins of a certain face value, but with less metal content than previous issues. There will be an incentive to bring the old coins to the mint for re-minting – see
Gresham's law. A revenue, called
seigniorage, is made on this minting process. of coin clippings discovered in Derbyshire and recorded in the
Portable Antiquities Scheme. When done by an individual, precious metal was physically removed from the coin, which could then be passed on at the original face value, leaving the debaser with a profit. This physical debasement was effected by several methods, including clipping (shaving metal from the coin's circumference) and sweating (shaking the coins in a bag and collecting the dust worn off). Until the mid-20th century, coins were often made of
silver or (rarely)
gold, which were quite soft and prone to wear. This meant coins naturally got lighter (and thus less valuable) as they aged, so coins that had lost a small amount of
bullion would go unnoticed. Modern coins used as currency are made of hard, cheap metals such as
steel,
copper, or a
copper-nickel alloy, reducing wear and making it difficult and unprofitable to debase them.
Coin clipping Clipping is the act of shaving off a small portion of a precious metal coin for profit. Over time, the precious metal clippings could be saved up and melted into bullion or used to make new coins. Coin clipping was usually considered by the law to be of a similar magnitude to
counterfeiting, and was occasionally punished by
death, a fate which befell English counterfeiters Thomas Rogers and Anne Rogers in 1690. Even among
pirates, clipping coins was considered a serious breach of trust.
Henry Avery's pirate fleet attacked the treasure ship
Gunsway in 1695 and netted one of the largest pirate captures in history. When fellow pirate
William May's crew were found to have traded clipped coins to Avery's crew, Avery took back nearly all the treasure he had shared with May and his men and sent them away. Coin clipping is why many coins have the rim of the coin
marked with stripes (
milling or
reeding), text (
engraving) or some other pattern that would be destroyed if the coin were clipped. This practice is attributed to
Isaac Newton, who was appointed
Master of the
Royal Mint 1699. Although most modern
fiat coins are unprofitable to clip, modern milling can be a deterrent to counterfeiting, an aid to the blind to distinguish different denominations, or purely decorative.
Sweating In the process of sweating, coins were placed in a bag and shaken. The bits of metal that had worn off the coins were recovered from the bottom of the bag. Sweating tended to wear the coin in a more natural way than clipping, and so was harder to detect.
Plugging If the coin was large, a hole could be punched out of the middle, and the face of the coin hammered to close up the hole. Or the coin could be sawn in half, and a plug of metal extracted from the interior. After filling the hole with a cheaper metal, the two halves would be welded back together again. Verbal references to plugged quarters and plugged dimes eventually yielded the common phrase "not worth a plugged nickel" (or 'plug nickel', or even a plugged cent), emphasizing the worthlessness of such a tampered coin. ==Related uses==