Recently
I introduced the Monetary Freedom and Accountability Act. This
simple bill takes a step toward restoring Congress' constitutional
authority over U.S. monetary policy by requiring congressional
approval before the President or the Treasury secretary buys or
sells gold.
Federal dealings
in the gold market have the potential to seriously disrupt the
free market by either artificially inflating or deflating the
price of gold. Given gold's importance to America's (and the world's)
monetary system, any federal interference in the gold market will
have ripple effects through the entire economy. For example, if
the government were to intervene to artificially lower the price
of gold, the result would be to hide the true effects of an inflationary
policy until the damage was too severe to remain out of the public
eye.
By artificially
deflating the price of gold, federal intervention in the gold
market can reduce the values of private gold holdings, adversely
affecting millions of investors. These investors rely on their
gold holdings to protect them from the effects of our misguided
fiat currency system. Federal dealings in gold can also adversely
affect those countries with large gold mines, many of which are
currently ravished by extreme poverty. Restoring a vibrant gold
market could do more than any foreign aid program to restore economic
growth to those areas.
While the
Treasury denies it is dealing in gold, the Gold Anti-Trust Action
Committee (GATA) has uncovered evidence suggesting that the Federal
Reserve and the Treasury, operating through the Exchange-Stabilization
Fund and in cooperation with major banks and the International
Monetary Fund, have been interfering in the gold market with the
goal of lowering the price of gold. The purpose of this policy
has been to disguise the true effects of the monetary bubble responsible
for the artificial prosperity of the 1990s, and to protect the
politically-powerful banks that are heavy invested in gold derivatives.
GATA believes
federal actions to drive down the price of gold help protect the
profits of these banks at the expense of investors, consumers,
and taxpayers around the world.
GATA has
also produced evidence that American officials are involved in
gold transactions. Alan Greenspan himself referred to the federal
government's power to manipulate the price of gold at hearings
before the House Banking Committee and the Senate Agricultural
Committee in July, 1998: "Nor can private counterparts restrict
supplies of gold, another commodity whose derivatives are often
traded over-the-counter, where central banks stand ready to lease
gold in increasing quantities should the price rise."
While
I certainly share GATA's concerns over the effects of federal
dealings in the gold market, my bill in no way interferes with
the ability of the federal government to buy or sell gold. It
simply requires that before the executive branch engages in such
transactions, Congress has the chance to review it, debate it,
and approve it. Given the tremendous effects on the American economy
from federal dealings in the gold market, it certainly is reasonable
that the people's representatives have a role in approving these
transactions, especially since Congress has a neglected but vital
constitutional role in overseeing monetary policy.