Fundamental
differences between Dhana and the other currencies
|
FEATURES |
OTHER CURRENCIES |
DHANA |
|
Issuer |
Central banks |
DHURA (effort) |
|
Issuing value |
No real value |
Value capital par to 1 gram of platinum (999/1000)
per 1 Dhana |
|
outstanding monetary mass |
Constantly increasing due to the effect of
the increase of the public debts and of the interests loans bear |
100 Dhana for each person aged at least 16
plus the 5% for humanitarian initiatives |
|
Purchase power |
Diminishing constantly due to the effect of
the outstanding monetary mass increase |
Increasing constantly due to the maximum
issue limit of 100 Dhana each plus the 5% |
|
Acceptance as payment |
Compulsory due to legal tender (forced
circulation) |
Free |
|
Diffusion and owning |
Concentrated in Banks and a few others (the
1% of us owns more than the 50% of the total) |
Originally in equal parts, then depending on
the effectively spent work |
|
Guarantee |
Banknotes are guaranteed from the 3 to 15% by
gold and other real valuables, bank money only by the credits its issued for |
The 100% by the nominal value of capitals
with a real value higher than the nominal one |
|
Interests |
On deposits and loans: the difference between
the interests bared by the loans and the interests on the deposits is the
banks yield |
No interests on deposits and loans:
availabilities in ready money can be converted in dividend–bearing bonds |
|
Employment |
Less than 5% in real economy, the rest in virtual
finance |
100% in real economy |