The US Government's Trillion Dollar Coin - YouTube

Channel: Half as Interesting

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Hello and welcome to another episode of, “Kinda Clickbaity Titles to Get You To Watch Something
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Vaguely Educational.”
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Today, we are going to talk about trillion-dollar coins—but first, in order to understand
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why the US government would ever even consider making a coin that’s worth more than a gold-plated
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Jeff Bezos, we have to talk a little bit about the debt ceiling crisis of 2013.
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Now that half the audience is gone, the year was 2013, the month was January.
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The number one YouTube channel was Smosh, Macklemore’s, “Thrift Shop,” was rising
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up the charts, and President Barack Obama had a problem: the US was about to hit the
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debt ceiling.
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Of course, “what’s the debt ceiling,” says someone, so here’s how the debt ceiling
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works.
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Each year, Congress passes, and the President signs, a budget that says how much it’s
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going to spend on different things.
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So maybe it says the government will spend $10 billion on Big Macs, $20 billion on Doritos
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Locos Tacos, and $30 billion on Pepto Bismol.
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It's then up to the US Treasury to buy all those things.
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The Treasury gets the money to do that from two main sources.
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The first is taxes, which are collected from the American people and American businesses,
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unless you’re Amazon, of course.
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The US, you see, goes for the rare graduated bell curve tax bracket system.
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Typically, though, that tax money isn’t enough, so the Treasury will make up the difference
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by borrowing money, which is done by issuing something called a treasury bond.
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Basically what happens is the Federal Reserve, which is the central bank of the United States,
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says to everybody, “hey kids, if you give me $100 right now, I’ll give you this super
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cool piece of paper, which is called a treasury bond,” and what this piece of paper says
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is, “In exchange for your $100, a year from now, I’ll give you back your $100 plus a
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little bit extra.
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Or, if you want to wait longer, like 3 or 5 or 30 years, I’ll toss in a bit extra
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for your trouble.”
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So, people buy these bonds, the Fed takes their $100, puts it into the bank account
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of the Treasury, and now, just like magic, the government has a brand new $100 that they
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didn’t have before.
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As time has gone on, the US government has issued more and more treasury bonds, and thus
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taken on more and more and more and more and more debt—seriously, like a lot of debt.
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The debt ceiling is an arbitrary number that Congress sets as the maximum amount of debt
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the US is allowed to take on.
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In 2013, the number was $16.394 trillion.
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So if the debt were to pass $16.394 trillion, then the Fed wouldn’t be allowed to borrow
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any more money, which means the Treasury wouldn’t be able to buy all those crucial things in
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the budget.
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Normally, when the debt approaches that number, Congress just raises the debt ceiling, which
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means they just set a new, higher number as the limit, and historically, this was a pretty
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uncontroversial, bipartisan process.
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But in 2013, the Republican-led Congress refused to raise the debt ceiling unless Obama agreed
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to get rid of Obamacare.
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Unsurprisingly, Obama said no to this deal because, you know, it turns out that Obama
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kinda liked Obamacare—that would be like asking me to stop mispronouncing obscure words
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like buffet; it was kinda Obama’s thing.
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And so, Obama began looking for ways around the debt ceiling.
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That’s where the trillion-dollar coin came into play.
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The idea was, if the government can’t borrow more money, what if they just made more money?
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While that may sound like the type of idea only a drunken second grader would suggest,
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bizarrely, in this case, it actually made sense.
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See normally, only the Federal Reserve can create new money, and it has to be backed
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by bonds.
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In other words, if the Fed wants to create 100 new dollars, they have to sell a $100
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treasury bond.
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This helps keep the US economy from imploding in case some maniac ever gets at the controls.
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They can’t just print as much money as they want, except, thanks to a loophole in a 1996
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bill about commemorative coins, the Treasury actually can.
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The law, 31 U.S.C 5112(k), reads, "the Secretary may mint and issue platinum bullion coins
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and proof platinum coins in accordance with such specifications, designs, varieties, quantities,
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denominations, and inscriptions as the Secretary, in the Secretary's discretion, may prescribe
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from time to time.”
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The intent of this law was to let the federal government create commemorative platinum coins
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for special occasions, but technically, because of the bill’s unclear language, it meant
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that the Treasury Secretary could make a coin, so long as it was made of platinum, and then
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declare that it was worth any amount of money they wanted.
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So the plan was for the Treasury to mint a coin, declare that the coin was worth 1 trillion
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dollars, then deposit that coin into their bank account at the Fed, which would make
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the debt, instead of being $16.394 trillion, only $15.394 trillion—below the ceiling.
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Eventually, once Congress raised the debt ceiling, the Treasury would just buy the coin
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back or melt it down, and in theory, it would be like it never existed, and thus it wouldn’t
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cause inflation.
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Now I’m going to tell you something that might disappoint you: although the trillion-dollar
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coin was genuinely considered by the White House, they never went through with the plan,
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so no trillion-dollar coin was ever actually minted.
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I know, I know—the title of the video kinda made it seem like they actually made the coins,
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but you know what, the Greeks made it seem like they were just gifting Troy a cool wooden
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horse.
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Not everything is as it seems.
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On the bright side, now you know a bunch about treasury bonds and debt ceilings, which will
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come in handy the next time you’re on a date and modern US monetary policy comes up,
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which I have to imagine happens all the time.
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