Posted on 01/04/2013 12:51:00 PM PST by SeekAndFind
What if the threat of a voluntary default by the United States could be erased by simply turning one tiny scrap of platinum into a coin?
That's right. No debt ceiling problem. No bickering in Congress. No market jitters. The only thing needed is for the Treasury Department to mint a platinum coin with a face value of $1 trillion.
Of course, this is not going to happen. Creating money out of thin air is hardly a solution. It could lead to even more concerns from those worried about inflation. Critics of the Federal Reserve's monetary easing programs would likely be apoplectic if the Treasury Department trumped Ben Bernanke's "helicopter drop" by minting a trillion more new dollars.
The influential New York Times columnist Paul Krugman has already dubbed the talk a "gimmick." But here is why some people think this bizarre strategy could work.
Last week, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner made it official: Federal borrowing has reached the $16.394 trillion debt ceiling.
Treasury, which runs the government's debt-issuance operation, is busy creating about $200 billion of headroom by employing what it calls "extraordinary measures." That should cover about two months' worth of borrowing.
When the two months expire, Treasury will no longer be able to pay the country's bills -- that is, it won't be able to borrow more money to pay for spending already authorized by Congress.
If Congress does not act to raise the debt ceiling, the U.S. will default on its debts. Not good. But this is where the platinum coin comes in. Normally, the Federal Reserve is charged with issuing currency. But U.S. law, specifically 31 USC § 5112, also grants Treasury permission to "mint and issue platinum bullion coins and proof platinum coins."
(Excerpt) Read more at finance.yahoo.com ...
Can Uncle Joe throw a football over that mountain?
With a trillion-dollar coin in your pocket, you could drink for free the rest of your life*. “Sorry, all I’ve got is this trillion-dollar coin. Can you break a trillion?”
*Or until Zimbabwe-style inflation takes hold.
at current prices of 1550/oz. the coin would weigh 322 tons.
Problem is there is no where near that amount in the entire world.
How about a Powerball Jackpot worth $1,000,000,000,000? Sell 2,000 tickets for a billion bucks a ticket. Makes as much sense.
It’s a coin made of platinum with the words “one trillion dollars” on it. Not a coin made from $1 million worth of platinum.
Precisely. A $1 Sacajawea coin has nowhere near a dollar’s worth of copper and nickel in it.
Its a coin made of platinum with the words one trillion dollars on it. Not a coin made from $1 million worth of platinum.
Then why not mint a one million dollar coin out of copper?
It would be cheaper...
Treasury, which runs the government’s debt-issuance operation, is busy creating about $200 billion of headroom by employing what it calls “extraordinary measures.” That should cover about two months’ worth of borrowing.
“Fire up the ovens, boys, we got some cookin’ to do!!”
They fact some people are seriously contemplating this “option” scares the living crap outta me...
Excuse me, but what is the difference between a one trillion dollar coin and a trillion one dollar bills?
debt is debt.
Only if it's the size of a Yap coin......................
Exactly! Geeze... just make it a bazillion dollar coin and do away with taxes for eternity. I mean, we’ll all be trillionaires!
Glad we had a chance to point this out. What a bunch of dummies.
Seriously, what is declaring this thing as being worth this or that supposed to do? Are we going to borrow against pretend equity to create pretend money now?
What?
How many $ Trillions have we already ‘minted’ through QE and other means?
What the author suggests in jest is our current fiscal policy.
I also bought Saddam money on Ebay.
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