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Are We Being Conned About Gold Confiscation? |
By Doug Hornig, Editor,
Casey’s Gold & Resource Report
There’s a lot of Internet
chatter these days about the possibility of the U.S. government
seizing its citizens’ private gold holdings.
What are the chances?
Well, it’s always good to bear
in mind that there is no telling what the government might do. It’s
already doing things that were unthinkable just a few years ago. If
President Obama believes there is political hay to be made from
seizing your gold – or even if he sincerely thinks such a move would
be “good for the country” – we’re sure he won’t hesitate to make the
grab. After all, his favorite predecessor, Franklin Roosevelt, set the
precedent.
Many Americans don’t even
realize that private gold ownership was forbidden for forty years, but
it was. The relevant edict is Presidential Executive Order 6102 of
April 5, 1933, which begins:
Forbidding the Hoarding of Gold Coin, Gold
Bullion and Gold Certificates By virtue of the authority vested in me
by Section 5(b) of the Act of October 6, 1917, as amended by Section 2
of the Act of March 9, 1933, entitled
An Act to provide relief in the existing
national emergency in banking, and for other purposes, in which amendatory Act Congress declared
that a serious emergency exists,
I, Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the
United States of America, do declare that said national emergency
still continues to exist and pursuant to said section to do hereby
prohibit the hoarding of gold coin, gold bullion, and gold
certificates within the continental United States by individuals,
partnerships, associations and corporations …
There was, of course, no
constitutional peg on which to hang such an outrageous crime against
the people, so FDR decided to fall back on the 1917 Trading with the
Enemy Act, which he claimed gave him the authority to do this in order
to prevent gold from falling into the “wrong” hands. If that seems a
flimsy argument, it is.
But it echoes eerily today.
How much of our personal freedom have we already been asked to
sacrifice to the Forever War on Terrorism? And note also the reference
to an “existing national emergency in banking” that requires extreme
measures. Sound familiar?
So, no question that Obama
could follow in the footsteps of his mentor, if he wanted to. That
said, though, the likelihood of a new gold confiscation is remote, for
a number of reasons.
2009 is not 1933. Back then,
the money supply was constrained by the gold standard. As Roosevelt
concocted the New Deal, he ran smack up against that wall. He needed
more money than he had, couldn’t raise taxes in a depression, and
couldn’t print dollars that weren’t gold-backed.
His solution may have been
reprehensible, but it was elegant. First, make the private possession
of gold illegal, paying those who surrender their metal the official
price, $20.67 per ounce. Then revalue gold to $35 per ounce. Voilà:
Instant inflation, lots of new money, problem solved. And the New Deal
was off and running.
But we have long since
abandoned the gold standard, and Obama doesn’t face FDR’s constraints
on monetary inflation. However much money is needed to finance his
New Deal Redux, he can have it. All he has to do is rev up the
printing press or turn an unlimited number of bits and bytes into
electronic cash.
Given this kind of clout, what
does he need gold for?
An argument can be made that
the yellow metal is still useful. It runs like this: Creating money
out of thin air is inflationary, and a large stash of gold, even if it
doesn’t officially back anything, serves as a sort of counterweight.
People around the world will have greater confidence in your currency
knowing that, as a last resort, you can pay your bills in gold. And
the more gold you have, the better.
Furthermore, confiscating gold
and assigning it a fixed dollar value would also prevent the kind of
runaway gold price that the coming massive inflation is bound to
trigger. As those who argue that the gold price is already suppressed
correctly point out, the government has decided to sacrifice the
dollar in order to avert deflation. Thus a lower-than-free-market gold
price helps obscure the damage that’s been done to the currency.
People feel richer with more, albeit inflated, dollars in their
pockets; a rapidly escalating gold price shows them that they’re not.
These two arguments aren’t
empty, but they’re not convincing. Most folks in government subscribe
to the “barbarous relic” school of thought about gold. Precious metals
probably cross the minds of Obama’s economists only when they’re out
buying jewelry.
And most American citizens
have never even seen a physical gold coin, much less own one. Reeling
in all the bullion out there will, in reality, do the government
little if any good.
One final point. In the 1930s,
when people were asked to turn in their gold, compliance was quite
high. Americans believed their government when told that it was for
the greater good. Imagine.
Today, that attitude seems
laughably naïve. Those who have gold know that it is an unequaled
storehouse of value. That they would meekly part with it at the
government’s behest requires a belief that naïveté still rules the
land.
Far more likely is that gold
owners would resist. And since they also tend to be gun owners, there
could be serious confrontations. The government doesn’t want mass
resistance to one of its orders, nor an escalation of the domestic
violence it will probably get anyway, when unemployment rises to
Depression-era levels. It’s simply not worth it.
Never say never where
government stupidity is involved. But all things considered, a
modern-day gold confiscation is not high on our list of financial
worries.
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