Mises Wire

How US States Can Pave the Way for Greater Use of Sound Money

Recognizing that the departure from gold and silver backing to our money has led to crushing debt and great financial instability, a few freedom-minded state legislatures have begun to consider how to defend themselves and their citizens. In particular, Utah has charted a path towards a widespread acceptance of gold and silver, declaring any gold and silver coins issued by the US government as legal tender in the state — and free from any taxation.

Even though laws such as Utah’s are just a small step in the right direction, they serve an important purpose because they encourage greater use of gold and silver as circulating media of exchange.  And such measures start a conversation with the public about the useful role that gold and silver can play in protecting one’s purchasing power, while hedging against the abuses of Washington politicians and Wall Street bankers.

Utah has a modest population of almost 3 million. However, Oklahoma followed with its own legal tender law, bringing the total people impacted to almost 7 million. The more people are exposed to gold and silver, the more they are likely to recognize their superiority as media of exchange and stores of value.

Gold & Silver Are Money

Another benefit of passage of laws like those in Utah and Oklahoma is that they dispense with the notion that gold and silver are merely investments or speculations.

Gains on investments, more times than not, are taxed in one way or another. But gold and silver are indeed money and imposing a tax on the exchanging of one form of money for another is both ludicrous and unjust.

People should be encouraged to save in real money. The inflation tax on every person holding fiat money whittles away at their savings and purchasing power.  While the Federal Reserve Note “dollar” has lost more than 97% of its purchasing power since the Federal Reserve System was created in 1913, gold and silver is a much better store of value, having risen 60 and 20-fold, respectively, in their dollar-denominated price.

Devaluation of “fiat money” is no accident. Even John Maynard Keynes, the socialist who developed today’s economic playbook for central planning through monetary policy, confessed: “By a continuing process of inflation, government can confiscate, secretly and unobserved, an important part of the wealth of their citizens.”

Repeal Crippling Burdens on Dealers Who Buy Precious Metals from Members of the Public

Key to precious metals’ use as legal tender and a form of payment is elimination of regulations that decrease its liquidity — and therefore its usefulness.  Many state and local jurisdictions impose draconian rules on dealers who buy gold and silver from the public, reducing options, raising transaction costs, and endangering financial privacy.

Dealers are often required to collect personal information from sellers, including names, addresses, social security numbers, voter identification cards, and copies of driver’s licenses.  Furthermore, dealers have been forced to upload all this personal information daily into law enforcement databases, along with pictures of the metals purchased.  And finally, some jurisdictions bar dealers from re-selling the gold and silver to anyone for as long as seven days, forcing them to tie up and large amounts of capital and absorb market risk.

It is unimaginable to consider the government forcing a merchant or buyer of lima beans, for example, to disclose or collect personal information. These discriminatory requirements — which don’t apply to redeeming paper money, only redeeming gold and silver — violate basic privacy rights of individuals and substantially burden those who provide important liquidity to gold and silver transactions.

Jp Cortez is the assistant director of the Sound Money Defense League, an organization which is working to bring back gold and silver as America's constitutional money. Stefan Gleason also contributed to this report. Reprinted with permission of the author. 

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