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How Obama Could Beat the Debt Ceiling and Go Out a
Hero
By
Ellen Brown
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, November 2, 2015
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Until the control of the issue of currency and credit is restored
to government and recognized as its most conspicuous and sacred
responsibility, all talk of the sovereignty of Parliament and of democracy
is idle and futile. -- Canadian Prime Minister William Lyon
Mackenzie King, 1935 On November 3rd, the US government will
again run out of money due to a debt ceiling artificially imposed by
Congress. This is
the
third time in four years that a radical faction has taken the country
to the brink of default to extort concessions that are at best only
marginally related to the budget. The debt ceiling is an
unconstitutional gimmick that violates the 14th amendment, which says the
validity of the government’s debt shall not be questioned. The debt was
incurred by Congress when it passed the budget, and the money has been
borrowed and spent. Congress cannot now refuse to pay. One good
gimmick deserves another. The debt ceiling could be eliminated for good,
by restoring to the government its constitutional authority to create
money. Article 1, Section 8, provides: “The Congress shall have the power
to coin money [and] regulate the value thereof . . . .” The president
could pay the government’s bills by issuing some large denomination coins
by executive order. When the Constitution was ratified, coins
were
the only officially recognized legal tender. By 1850,
coins made
up only about half the currency. Today, they make up less than
one-half of one percent of the money supply –
about 50
billion out of a
$12 trillion
circulating money supply (M2). These coins, along with about $25
billion in US Notes or Greenbacks originally issued during the Civil War,
are all that is left of the Treasury’s money-creating power. As
the Bank of England recently acknowledged, the vast majority of the money
supply is now
created privately by banks as deposits when they make loans. The power
to issue the national money supply needs to be returned to the people from
whom it has been deceptively usurped.
As Thomas Edison observed in the 1920s: It is absurd to say
our Country can issue bonds and cannot issue currency. Both are promises
to pay, but one fattens the usurer and the other helps the People.
In Lincoln’s Footsteps In the early days of his
presidency, Barack
Obama claimed Abraham Lincoln as his role model. One of Lincoln’s less
well known achievements was to avoid a massive debt to private banks at
usurious interest rates by restoring an earlier form of government-issued
money, the paper scrip of the American colonists. In the 1860s, these US
Notes or Greenbacks constituted
40% of the national currency. Today, 40% of the circulating money
supply would be $5 trillion. This massive money-printing during
the Civil War did not lead to hyperinflation. US Notes suffered a drop in
value as against gold, but according to Milton Friedman and Anna Schwarz
in A Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1960, this was not due to
"just printing money" but was caused by trade imbalances with foreign
trading partners on the gold standard. The Greenbacks aided the
Union not only in winning the war but in funding a period of unprecedented
economic expansion. Lincoln’s government created the greatest industrial
giant the world had yet seen. The steel industry was launched, a
continental railroad system was created, a new era of farm machinery and
cheap tools was promoted, free higher education was established,
government support was provided to all branches of science, the Bureau of
Mines was organized, and labor productivity was increased by 50 to 75
percent. President Obama could follow the lead of his
mentor and beat the debt ceiling by calling for a new issue of debt-free
US Notes. The problem with that alternative is that it would require
legislation, an impossibility before the looming November 3rd debt ceiling
deadline.
Another way to solve the crisis with government-issued money was
proposed by Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul and endorsed by
Democratic Representative Alan Grayson during the last debt ceiling
crisis: the Federal Reserve could be ordered to transfer to the Treasury
the federal securities it has purchased with accounting entries through
“quantitative easing.” The Treasury could then just void out this part of
the debt, which currently tallies in at $2.7 trillion. That alternative
too would be legal, but it would require persuading the Federal Reserve to
act. A third alternative, which could be done very quickly by
executive order, would be for the federal government to exercise its
constitutional power to “coin money and regulate the value thereof” by
minting one or more trillion dollar platinum coins. A Treasury
Issue of Special Coins
The idea of minting large denomination coins to solve economic
problems was first suggested in the early 1980s by a chairman of the
Coinage Subcommittee of the House of Representatives. He observed that the
Constitution gives Congress the power to coin money and regulate its
value, and that no limit is put on the value of the coins it creates. He
said the government could pay off its entire debt with some billion dollar
coins. I wrote about this in
Web of Debt in 2007 and said it would have to be a trillion dollar
coin today. In 1982, however, Congress chose to choke off this
remaining vestige of its money-creating power by imposing limits on the
amounts and denominations of most coins. The one exception was the
platinum coin, which a special provision allows to be minted in any amount
for commemorative purposes. (31 U.S. Code § 5112.) In 2013,
Carlos Mucha, an attorney blogging under the pseudonym Beowulf,
proposed issuing a platinum coin to capitalize on this loophole. With
the endless gridlock in Congress over the debt ceiling, the proposal got
picked up by Paul Krugman and some other economists as a way to move
forward.
Philip Diehl, former head of the US Mint and co-author of the platinum
coin law, confirmed that the coin would be legal tender. He said:
In minting the $1 trillion platinum coin, the Treasury Secretary would be
exercising authority which Congress has granted routinely for more than
220 years . . . under power expressly granted to Congress in the
Constitution (Article 1, Section 8).
Prof. Randall Wray explained that the coin would not circulate but
would be deposited in the government’s account at the Fed, so it would not
inflate the circulating money supply. The budget would still need
Congressional approval. To keep a lid on spending, Congress would just
need to abide by some basic rules of economics. It could spend on goods
and services up to full employment without creating price inflation (since
supply and demand would rise together). After that, it would need to tax —
not to fund the budget, but to shrink the circulating money supply and
avoid driving up prices with excess demand. Why Not Pay Off the
Whole Federal Debt? As the chairman of the Coinage Subcommittee
observed in the 1980s, the entire federal debt could actually be paid in
this way. The Federal Reserve has already established that it can issue
$4.5 trillion in accounting-entry QE
without triggering hyperinflation. In fact, it has not succeeded in
triggering the modest inflation the exercise was designed for. As with QE,
paying the federal debt in this way would just be an asset swap, replacing
an interest-bearing obligation with a non-interest-bearing one. The market
for goods and services would not be flooded with “new” money that would
inflate the prices of consumer goods, because the bond holders would not
consider themselves any richer than before. They presumably had their
money in bonds in the first place because they wanted to save it rather
than spend it. They would no doubt continue to save it, either as cash or
by investing it in some other interest-generating securities.
The ease with which the government’s debt could be paid in this way was
demonstrated in January 2004, when the
US Treasury called a 30-year bond issue before its due date. The bonds
were redeemed “at par” to avoid a 9-1/8% interest rate, which was then
well above market rates.
The Treasury’s January 15, 2004 announcement said that payment would
be made “in book entry form,” meaning numbers were simply entered into the
Treasury’s online money market fund (Treasury Direct). In effect, the
money just moved from an online savings account to an online depository
account, converting interest-bearing bonds into non-interest-bearing cash.
Where did the Treasury get the money to refinance this $3 billion
bond issue at a lower interest rate? Whether it came from the private
banking system or from the Federal Reserve, it was no doubt created out of
thin air. As Federal Reserve Board Chairman Marriner Eccles
testified before the House Banking and Currency Committee in 1935:
When the banks buy a billion dollars of
Government bonds as they are offered . . . they actually create, by a
bookkeeping entry, a billion dollars.
The US government can just as easily create this
money by a bookkeeping entry itself. It can and it should, to avoid the
interest charges that compound the national debt and make it unrepayable.
Quoting Thomas Edison again: If the
Nation can issue a dollar bond it can issue a dollar bill. The element
that makes the bond good makes the bill good also. The difference between
the bond and the bill is that the bond lets the money broker collect twice
the amount of the bond and an additional 20%. Whereas the currency, the
honest sort provided by the Constitution pays nobody but those who
contribute in some useful way. _____________ Ellen
Brown is an attorney, founder of the Public
Banking Institute, and author of twelve books including the
best-selling Web of Debt. Her latest
book, The Public Bank Solution,
explores successful public banking models historically and globally. Her
300+ blog articles are at EllenBrown.com.
Listen to “It’s Our Money with
Ellen Brown” on PRN.FM.
***
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