Financial
Services Committee
Subcommittee
on Domestic and International Monetary Policy, Trade, and Technology
Hearing
on HR 5512
Opening
Statement
March
11, 2008
Mr.
Chairman,
Oversight
by members of Congress, who have an incentive to listen to their constituents,
ensures openness and transparency. This
bill would eliminate that process and delegate it to unelected bureaucrats.
The Secretary of the Treasury would be given sole discretion to alter the
metal content of coins, or even to create non-metal coins.
Given the history of Congressional delegation and subsequent lax
oversight on issues as important as the conflict in Iraq, it would be naïve to
believe that Congress would exercise any more oversight over an issue as
unimportant to most members as the composition of coins.
While
I sympathize with the aim of Section 4 of this bill to save taxpayer dollars by
minting steel pennies, it is disappointing that our currency has been so greatly
devalued as to make this step necessary. At
the time of the penny's introduction, it actually had some purchasing power.
Based on the price of gold, what one penny would have purchased in 1909
requires 47 cents today. It is no
wonder then that few people nowadays would stoop to pick up any coin smaller
than a quarter.
Congress'
unconstitutional delegation of monetary policy to the Federal Reserve and its
reluctance to exercise oversight in that arena have led to a massive devaluation
of the dollar. If we fail to end
this devaluation, we will undoubtedly hold future hearings as the metal value of
our coins continues to outstrip the face value.
HR
5512 is a sad commentary on how far we have fallen, not just since the days of
the Founders, but only in the last 75 to 100 years.
We could not maintain the gold standard nor the silver standard.
We could not maintain the copper standard, and now we cannot even
maintain the zinc standard. Paper
money inevitably breeds inflation and destroys the value of the currency.
That is the reason that this proposal is before us today.