Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Ron Paul’s Message: Hoard Coins

In a statement to the subcommittee on Domestic Monetary Policy Hearing on "The Future of Money: Coin Production," April 17, 2012, Congressman Ron Paul writes, (lewrockwell.com) [bold highlights mine]

There is an old German saying that goes, "whoever does not respect the penny is not worthy of the dollar." It expresses the sense that those who neglect or ignore the small things cannot be trusted with larger things, and fittingly describes the problems facing both the dollar and our nation today. For nearly a century monetary policy has been delegated to the Federal Reserve System. Congress has ignored the importance of monetary policy and relegated monetary oversight to the sidelines, considering it less important than such matters as welfare spending, warfare spending, and who to tax and how much they should be taxed. While Congress has dithered, the Federal Reserve has destroyed the value of the dollar, so much so that the metal value of our already much-debased token coinage now exceeds its face value

The cost to mint pennies and nickels is alleged to be more than double their face value, so that the Mint loses tens of millions of dollars every year by placing them into circulation. Inflation continues to erode the purchasing power of the penny and nickel, so that many consumers find it aggravating and time-consuming to fish around for small change. But changing the composition of the penny and nickel to steel fails to address the root cause behind currency debasement. It also fails to provide a viable solution both for the devalued dollar and for our circulating coinage.

If Congress were truly interested in the cost of coinage, it would begin by reining in and eventually abolishing the Federal Reserve System. The Fed alone is responsible for the devaluation of the dollar. The problem with the penny and nickel is not that the price of copper and nickel are rising, but that the purchasing power of the dollar is declining due to the Fed's currency debasement. The same pattern has been seen throughout history, as debased currency results in the value of the metal content of coins outstripping their face value. Coins disappear from circulation and only paper money circulates. Finally, the currency collapses. Coins will begin to reappear once the monetary unit is restabilized, usually with the introduction of an entirely new currency and after much economic hardship for the people.

Read the rest here.

The bottom line is that governments around the world will continue with rampant policies of inflationism through their respective central banks. And given the metallic content of coins in circulation, coins will serve as insurance against devalued money and will be hoarded by the public as the symptoms of inflationism deepens.

I have noted of this Gresham’s Law on my earlier post.

Nevertheless here is the breakdown of the metallic content of Philippine coins in circulation.

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From Wikipedia.org

Perhaps we should start to hoard coins too. Thanks for the reminder, Congressman Paul.

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