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The Great Gold Robbery of 1933
Thomas E. Woods, Jr,
www.mises.com 08/13/08
It's been 75 years since the federal
government, on the spurious grounds of
fighting the Great Depression, ordered
the confiscation of all monetary gold
from Americans, permitting trivial
amounts for ornamental or industrial
use. This happens to be one of the
episodes Kevin Gutzman and I describe
in detail in our new
book,
Who Killed the Constitution? The Fate
of American Liberty from World War I
to George W. Bush. From
the point of view of the typical
American classroom, on the other hand,
the incident may as well not have
occurred.
A key piece of legislation in this
story is the Emergency Banking Act
of 1933, which Congress passed on
March 9 without having read it and
after only the most trivial debate.
House Minority Leader Bertrand H.
Snell (R-NY) generously conceded that
it was "entirely out of the
ordinary" to pass legislation that "is
not even in print at the time it is
offered." He urged his colleagues
to pass it all the same: "The house is
burning down, and the President of the
United States says this is the way to
put out the fire. [Applause.] And to
me at this time there is only one
answer to this question, and that is
to give the President what he demands
and says is necessary to meet the
situation."
Among other things, the act
retroactively approved the president's
closing of private banks throughout
the country for several days the
previous week, an act for which he had
not bothered to provide a legal
justification. It gave the
secretary of the Treasury the power to
require all individuals and
corporations to hand over all their
gold coin, gold bullion, or gold
certificates if in his judgment "such
action is necessary to protect the
currency system of the
United States."
The Emergency Banking Act reached back
in time to amend the Trading with
the Enemy Act of 1917, which had
originally been intended to
criminalize economic intercourse
between American citizens and declared
enemies of the United States. One
provision of the act granted the
president the power to regulate and
even prohibit "under such rules and
regulations as he may prescribe … any
transactions in foreign exchange,
export or earmarkings of gold or
silver coin or bullion or currency …
by any person within the United
States." In 1918, the act was amended
to extend its provisions two years
beyond the conclusion of hostilities,
and to allow the president to
"investigate, regulate, or prohibit"
even the "hoarding" of gold by an
American.
After those two years elapsed, people
generally assumed that the Trading
with the Enemy Act had passed into
desuetude. But the Supreme Court later
explained that the act's provisions
were not limited merely to World War I
and the two years that followed — it
"stood ready to meet additional wars
and additional enemies" and could be
called into service once again under
those circumstances. (Little did
anyone suspect in 1917 that these
"additional enemies" would turn out to
be the American people themselves.)
As amended by the Emergency Banking
Act of 1933, the Trading with the
Enemy Act no longer said that simply
"during time of war" could the
president prohibit the export of gold
or take action against "hoarding"
(i.e., holding on to one's money). Now
these actions could be taken during
time of war or "during any
other period of national emergency
declared by the President."
A month later, claiming authority from
the Emergency Banking Act and its
amendment to the Trading with the
Enemy Act, the president ordered all
individuals and corporations in
America to hand over their gold
holdings to the federal government in
exchange for an equivalent amount of
paper currency. The paper currency
they were receiving in exchange for
the gold had always been redeemable in
gold in the past, so few saw anything
amiss in this coerced transaction, and
most trusted the government's
assurances that this was somehow
necessary in order to combat the
Depression. Only later would they
discover that they weren't getting
that gold back, and that the paper
dollars they were being given in
exchange would be devalued. Soon only
foreign governments and central banks
would be able to convert dollars into
gold — and even that link to gold
would be severed in 1971.
On June 5, 1933, at the behest of the
president, Congress took the next
step, passing a joint resolution
making it illegal to "require payment
in gold or a particular kind of coin
or currency, or in an amount in money
of the United States measured
thereby." Any provision in a
private or public contract promising
payment in gold was thereby nullified.
Payment could be made in whatever the
government declared to be legal
tender, and gold could not be used
even as a yardstick for determining
how much paper money would be owed.
For the next six months President
Roosevelt pursued an erratic monetary
course. Every day a new gold price was
declared, on a basis no one could
figure out. Private lending in effect
came to a halt, with the value of the
dollar in constant flux amid the
prospect of ongoing devaluation. As
Senator Carter Glass (D-VA) put it,
"No man outside of a lunatic asylum
will loan his money today on a farm
mortgage." And thus the government
could triumphantly announce that since
the private sector was cruelly
depriving Americans of credit, it
would have to step in and provide
relief.
Meanwhile, Senator William Borah
was assuring his countrymen that when
it came to the nation's monetary
system, "there is no limitation upon
the power of Congress. It is not
circumscribed in any respect whatever.
It is given full and plenary power to
deal with that subject; and therefore
it is the same as if there were no
Constitution whatever." Borah also
tried to argue that "when an
individual takes an obligation payable
in gold" he does so "with the full
understanding that the Government may
change its monetary policy at any time
and that he must accept whatever the
Congress says at a particular time
shall constitute money."
The general rule (to which there are
occasional exceptions) that no senator
should ever be listened to on anything
holds here: the power of
Congress over money is in fact very
limited. It has the power to
"coin Money, regulate the Value
thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix
the Standard of Weights and Measures."
Coining money simply refers to the
process of taking a precious metal,
converting it into coins, and stamping
those coins with an indication of
their metal content. The power to
regulate the value of money does not
involve a power to dilute the value of
money by inflation, an absurd and
self-serving rendering. Regulation of
the value of money is a power of
declaration and comparison, whereby
some monetary standard is compared to
other coins in circulation and an
exchange rate for these various kinds
of currency established according to
the amounts of precious metals (with
due allowance for the distinct values
of different precious metals) in each.
In other words, if Congress were to
declare by statute what the prevailing
market exchange rate between gold and
silver was, and thus to "regulate"
gold and silver coins vis-à-vis one
another — or, more precisely,
vis-à-vis the Spanish silver dollar
that constituted the American monetary
standard — then it would be properly
exercising its constitutional power,
which consists of nothing more than
this.
That is why this power appears in the
same clause with the power to "fix the
Standard of Weights and Measures,"
which involves the measurement of
fixed standards in order to assure
uniformity throughout the nation. That
power does not give Congress the power
to declare that one-tenth of a pound
shall now be declared a pound, but to
take an already-existing standard and
codify it. Every single monetary
statute enacted from the ratification
of the Constitution until the 1930s
understood the congressional power to
regulate the "value" of money not in
the sense of declaring money to
possess some arbitrary value that
suits the whims of politicians or
central bankers, but in the sense of
establishing the relative values of
gold and silver coins in terms of the
ever-shifting relative values of those
metals on the free market.
(Needless to say, the market is
perfectly capable of doing this on its
own.)
Moreover, the "dollar" was not an
arbitrary term at the time the
Constitution was drafted. In the late
18th century, everyone knew what the
"dollar" referred to: the silver
Spanish milled dollar, which was in
widespread use in the United States.
The Constitution twice refers to the
dollar — in Article I, Section 9,
Clause 1 (a clause that everyone
understood to involve a tax on the
import of slaves), and in the Seventh
Amendment (which protected the right
to a jury trial in civil cases
involving at least twenty dollars). If
the dollar had been something that
Congress could manipulate at will, or
if "dollar" had been merely a generic
term to refer to whatever
Congress should arbitrarily choose to
recognize as currency, the South would
never have accepted that clause — or
the Constitution itself. Congress
might have manipulated the dollar so
as to make the tax on slave imports
prohibitively expensive. It could also
have effectively abolished trial by
jury in civil cases by making twenty
"dollars" an astronomically high
amount of money.
The Court never pronounced upon the
constitutionality of the gold seizure
(for reasons we speculate on in our
book), the legality of which it simply
took for granted. The cases it chose
to hear involved the cancellation of
gold clauses in public and private
contracts. Known as the Gold Clause
Cases, Norman v. Baltimore & Ohio
Railroad Co., Nortz v. United
States, and Perry v. United
States were argued in January 1935
and decided the following month. In
each case Chief Justice Charles Evans
Hughes wrote the opinion for the
Court; Justice McReynolds composed a
single dissent that he applied to all
three.
The Court declared in the first two
cases that the federal government had
been entitled to cancel all private
contracts in gold. The perpetuation of
gold clauses would have amounted to
the "attempted frustration" of "the
constitutional power of the Congress
over the monetary system of the
country…. [T]hese clauses interfere
with the exertion of the power granted
to the Congress." Not a stitch of
evidence existed for any aspect of
this argument.
Perry,
the third case, involved a man who had
purchased in gold a US bond that was
payable in gold, and was seeking
payment either in gold or in the
equivalent in paper currency. Since
the government intended to pay in
depreciated dollars, he believed he
was receiving far less than he was
entitled to under the terms of the
bond. The bond's face value was
$10,000 in gold. In the inflated
dollars of post-gold-standard America,
it would have taken nearly $17,000 in
paper currency in order to satisfy
what the government had contracted to
pay him.
The Court declared that the plaintiff
was indeed entitled to his gold, since
the government had an obligation to
live up to its promises. But in not
paying him his gold, the government
wasn't really wronging him, since gold
was now illegal to hold. In other
words, if the government paid him in
gold, it would then have to confiscate
that gold from him anyway since
holding gold was against the law.
Speaking for the minority, Justice
McReynolds declared:
Just men regard repudiation
and spoliation of citizens by their
sovereign with abhorrence; but we are
asked to affirm that the
Constitution has granted power to
accomplish both. No definite
delegation of such a power exists; and
we cannot believe that the farseeing
framers, who labored with hope of
establishing justice and securing the
blessings of liberty, intended that
the expected government should have
authority to annihilate its own
obligations and destroy the very
rights which they were endeavoring to
protect. Not only is there no
permission for such actions; they are
inhibited. And no plenitude of words
can conform them to our charter.
To the argument that the bondholder
had suffered no damage in being denied
payment in gold since it was now
illegal for people to own gold, the
dissent replied: "Obligations cannot
be legally avoided by prohibiting the
creditor from receiving the thing
promised…. There would be no serious
difficulty in estimating the value of
25.8 grains of gold in the currency
now in circulation." The contract
to pay in gold having been broken, the
holder was at least morally entitled
to receive in currency not just the
nominal amount of the bond but an
amount in paper dollars equivalent to
what he would have earned if the
payment could have been made in gold.
"For the government to say, we have
violated our contract but have escaped
the consequences through our own
statute, would be monstrous. In
matters of contractual obligation the
government cannot legislate so as to
excuse itself." Suppose a private
individual tried to do the same thing,
"secreting or manipulating his assets
with the intent to place them beyond
the reach of creditors." Any such
attempt "would be denounced as
fraudulent, wholly ineffective."
"Loss of reputation for honorable
dealing," the dissent concluded, "will
bring us unending humiliation; the
impending legal and moral chaos is
appalling."
By the 1970s the federal government
had once again permitted Americans to
hold gold coins. But when it came time
to actually mint them again, it made
sure that gold coins could never
circulate and displace the constantly
depreciating paper currency printed by
the US government: the law required
that such coins could circulate with a
face value only a tiny fraction of
their market value.
The full story of the gold
confiscation is actually much worse
than this, and we tell it in Who
Killed the Constitution? What this
episode teaches us is not so much that
we need to "return to the
Constitution," though that would be an
improvement over what we have now, but
rather that pieces of paper that
governments themselves interpret
cannot be expected to prevent
governments from doing what they think
they can get away with.
Lysander Spooner once said that he
believed "that by false
interpretations, and naked
usurpations, the government has been
made in practice a very widely, and
almost wholly, different thing from
what the Constitution itself purports
to authorize." At the same time, he
could not exonerate the Constitution,
for it "has either authorized such a
government as we have had, or has been
powerless to prevent it. In either
case, it is unfit to exist." It is
hard to argue with that.
Thomas E. Woods, Jr., is a
resident
scholar at the Mises
Institute. He is the author, most
recently, of
Who Killed the Constitution? The Fate
of American Liberty from World War I
to George W. Bush His
other recent books include
33 Questions About American History
You're Not Supposed to Ask,
The Church and the Market: A Catholic
Defense of the Free Economy,
and
The Politically Incorrect Guide to
American History (a
New York Times bestseller).
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