So long, Ben Franklin. Politicians want to coerce you to
spend. 2/17/16, WSJ
These are strange monetary times, with negative interest
rates and central bankers deemed to be masters of the universe. So maybe we
shouldn’t be surprised that politicians and central bankers are now waging a
war on cash. That’s right, policy makers in Europe and the U.S. want to make it
harder for the hoi polloi to hold actual currency.
Mario Draghi fired the latest salvo on Monday when he said the
European Central Bank would like to ban €500 notes. A day later Harvard
economist and Democratic Party favorite Larry Summers declared that it’s time
to kill the $100 bill, which would mean goodbye to Ben Franklin. Alexander
Hamilton may soon—and shamefully—be replaced on the $10 bill, but at least the
10-spots would exist for a while longer. Ol’ Ben would be banished from the
currency the way dead white males like him are banned from the history books.
Limits on cash transactions have been spreading in Europe
since the 2008 financial panic, ostensibly to crack down on crime and tax
avoidance. Italy has made it illegal to pay cash for anything worth more than
€1,000 ($1,116), while France cut its limit to €1,000 from €3,000 last year.
British merchants accepting more than €15,000 in cash per transaction must
first register with the tax authorities. Fines for violators can run into the
thousands of euros. Germany’s Deputy Finance Minister Michael Meister recently
proposed a €5,000 cap on cash transactions. Deutsche Bank CEO John Cryan
predicted last month that cash won’t survive another decade.
The enemies of cash claim that only crooks and cranks need
large-denomination bills. They want large transactions to be made
electronically so government can follow them. Yet these are some of the same
European politicians who blew a gasket when they learned that U.S.
counterterrorist officials were monitoring money through the Swift global
system. Criminals will find a way, large bills or not.
The real reason the war on cash is gearing up now is
political: Politicians and central bankers fear that holders of currency could
undermine their brave new monetary world of negative interest rates. Japan and
Europe are already deep into negative territory, and U.S. Federal Reserve Chair
Janet Yellen said last week the U.S. should be prepared for the possibility.
Translation: That’s where the Fed is going in the next recession.
Negative rates are a tax on deposits with banks, with the
goal of prodding depositors to remove their cash and spend it to increase
economic demand. But that goal will be undermined if citizens hoard cash. And
hoarding cash is easier if you can take your deposits out in large-denomination
bills you can stick in a safe. It’s harder to keep cash if you can only hold
small bills.
So, presto, ban cash. This theme has been pushed by the
likes of Bank of England chief economist
Andrew Haldane and Harvard’s
Kenneth Rogoff, who wrote in the Financial Times that eliminating paper
currency would be “by far the simplest” way to “get around” the zero
interest-rate bound “that has handcuffed central banks since the financial
crisis.” If the benighted peasants won’t spend on their own, well, make it that
much harder for them to save money even in their own mattresses.
All of which ignores the virtues of cash for law-abiding
citizens. Cash allows legitimate transactions to be executed quickly, without
either party paying fees to a bank or credit-card processor. Cash also lets
millions of low-income people participate in the economy without maintaining a
bank account, the costs of which are mounting as post-2008 regulations drop the
ax on fee-free retail banking. While there’s always a risk of being mugged on
the way to the store, digital transactions are subject to hacking and computer
theft.
Cash is also the currency of gray markets—amounting to 20%
or more of gross domestic product in some European countries—that governments
would love to tax. But the reason gray markets exist is because high taxes and
regulatory costs drive otherwise honest businesses off the books. Politicians
may want to think twice about cracking down on the cash economy in a way that
might destroy businesses and add millions to the jobless rolls. The Italian
economy might shut down without cash.
By all means people should be able to go cashless if they
like. But it’s hard to avoid the conclusion that the politicians want to bar
cash as one more infringement on economic liberty. They may go after the big
bills now, but does anyone think they’d stop there? Why wouldn’t they
eventually ban all cash transactions much as they banned gold and silver as
mediums of exchange?
Beware politicians trying to limit the ways you can conduct
private economic business. It never turns out well.
Editorial in The Wall Street Journal. The Political War on
Cash
Comments
We need to tell our elected representatives to leave cash alone and not change a thing. Low interest rates and troubled investment markets are enough to make cash hoarding popular.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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