Debate Club

Was the Treasury and the Fed Right to Take the $1 Trillion Coin Off the Table? >

A Trillion Dollar Coin Would Compromise the Federal Reserve

Even the proposition of the $1 trillion coin can encourage Republican brinkmanship on the debt ceiling

January 14, 2013

About Ted Gayer:

Ted Gayer is codirector and senior fellow of economic studies at the Brookings Institution.

Perhaps nothing reflects the absurdity of the current state of governance than the seriousness accorded to the idea of the Treasury issuing a $1 trillion platinum coin. The idea is for Treasury to mint the coin, ship it to the Federal Reserve, which then pays for it by crediting $1 trillion into the Treasury's deposit account at the Fed, which is then available to finance our government obligations. As the Treasury spends the money, bank reserves rise, but that's not inflationary now with the economy still weak. Ultimately, as explained by Greg Ip of the Economist, the Fed can stem inflation by raising the interest rate it pays on bank reserves. The end result is that we would no longer need to raise the debt ceiling (since we don't need to borrow this $1 trillion), and thus a government default is averted. When (if?) the ceiling is raised, the process is reversed and the coin is melted.

The sole virtue of the platinum coin idea is that it is better than hitting the debt ceiling, which could happen as soon as mid-February and would leave the government unable to fund about 40 percent of its obligations. As Chairman Ben Bernanke said, this "would no doubt have a very adverse effect very quickly on the recovery. I'm quite certain of that."

[See a collection of political cartoons on the budget and deficit.]

But this was still a very bad idea, and Treasury was right to rule it out as an option. It would have involved the Fed in direct, off-market, financing of the government, compromising its independence. It would have relied on a loophole in a law designed to allow Treasury to issue coins of any denomination for commemorative purposes. It may or may not have held up in court, but it likely would have been challenged, creating legal uncertainty and perhaps even a Constitutional crisis if Congress challenged what would have been, in effect, the President’s usurping control of monetary policy. The result would have been market turmoil, broad economic harm, and evidence to the world of our inability to govern ourselves.

I also agree with Tyler Cowen and Scott Sumner that the more this idea is put on the table, the more likely the Republicans are to not vote to raise the debt ceiling. If the choice is between raising the debt ceiling and economic calamity, public opinion and its effect on political self-preservation will lead Congress to choose the former (albeit, only after a period of brinksmanship). If, on the other hand, the president embraces a bizarre idea of dubious legality, it makes political sense for the Republicans to not raise the debt ceiling and let the president pay the political consequences of the resulting legal and economic market turmoil.

 

Tags:
Federal Reserve,
money,
federal budget,
deficit and national debt,
Treasury Department
Other Arguments
#1

No — The United States can always issue more currency

STEPHANIE KELTON, Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Missouri-Kansas City

#2

Yes — The trillion dollar coin won't stop us from spending ourselves into insolvency

DAVID JOHN, Senior Research Fellow at the Heritage Foundation

#3
#4
#5

Reader Comments ()

About Debate Club

A meeting of the sharpest minds on the day's most important topics, Debate Club brings in the best arguments and lets readers decide which is the most persuasive. Read the arguments, then vote. And be sure to check back often to see who has gotten the most support—and also to see what's being discussed now in the Debate Club.

Have ideas about what the Club should be debating? E-mail it to dclub@usnews.com.

You can also join the debate on Facebook or follow Debate Club on Twitter.

Advertisement
Cartoons
Thomas Jefferson Street Blog
Tea Party IRS Rally Should Wait Until After Moore Tornado Recovery

Tea party rallies against the IRS should wait until the tornado victims are taken care of.

God Bless America and the Boy Scouts

The Fund does the right thing by pushing the Boy Scouts to lift its ban on gay members.

IRS, AP and Benghazi Show the Failure of Obama's Big Government

Giving an inefficient organization like the IRS more responsibility makes it more likely to screw up, not better able to solve this nation’s problems.

Coburn Wants Oklahoma Tornado Aid Offset With Budget Cuts

Oklahoma Senator Tom Coburn wants spending cuts before aid is sent to tornado victims in his own state.

Crowdfunding Zack Braff's Film And Robert Griffin's Gifts Is a Mistake

Rich people don't need donations from the public.

Poll Shows Americans Find Obama's IRS Story Barely Believable

There is still something fishy about the scandal at the IRS.

Do Benghazi, AP and IRS Scandals Reflect Obama’s Leadership Style?

It may be that a flawed leadership style is filtering down to the rest of the government.

In Marine Umbrella Incident, Republicans Still Deny Obama Is President

Umbrellagate is more proof that Obama's critics cannot acknowledge that he is, indeed, president.

Advertisement