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Subject:                [Mises Daily] Sacagawea: What Happened?
Date sent:              Fri, 25 May 2001 13:11:54 -0500

http://www.mises.org/fullstory.asp?control=687

Sacagawea: What Happened?

Interview with Burton Blumert

[Posted May 25, 2001]

[The following is an interview with Burton Blumert, CEO of Camino Coins in
Burlingame, California. He is chairman of the Mises Institute and president of the
Center for Libertarian Studies.]

Mises.org: What happened to the government's ballyhooed Sacagawea $1 coin? It seems
to have disappeared.

Blumert: They called it the "golden dollar." What an outrage! It is made of scrap
metal, not gold. The year 2000 issue oxidizes very quickly to become a muddy brown,
so that it doesn't even look like gold. You can actually press your thumb on it and
see the process begin. Now, this flaw is supposedly fixed in the 2001 issue, but who
knows?

The government issued this fool's-gold coin in hopes that it would gain stature as
though it were a genuine gold coin. If a private mint did this, the FBI would
probably send in armed agents. But the U.S. Mint can get away with things private
parties can't.

I confess some degree of delight that the coin has not entered into circulation.
Another central plan is foiled, so to speak.

Mises.org: So it was the last thing its backers expected.

Blumert: Hillary Clinton announced the new dollar coin with a great deal of fanfare
in April 1999. She loved it for its political message. It supposedly brought new
attention to the contribution of native peoples. But this was silly: Indians have
long been featured on U.S. coins, because they were a symbol of courage and
independence. Politicians, who embody the opposite qualities, weren't honored on
coins until the twentieth century.

The government was going to ensure that they entered into circulation right away, so
they distributed them through Wal-Marts, and in cereal boxes, and at the
International House of Pancakes.

It is all quite hilarious, when you think about it. I imagine bureaucrats in
Washington in a board meeting: "How can we get the stupid American people to go along
with this new coin? Hey, let's get them into the hands of the working class! Let's
get them out at this place called Wal-Mart, where many people are said to shop!"

The Mint initially said that the coin was a "grand-slam home run." It even dragged
out poor George Washington in modern garb to promote it. None of it worked. Given the
choice, people like the paper dollar better. The Sacagawea dollar is not a
circulating coin. It is just a curiosity or a collectable, and a failed collectible
at that.

Mises.org: Are you saying that the government has given up?

Blumert: The jig is indeed up for the coin. If you go to the government's website,
you will see that the coins are selling at a premium. You can buy a roll of
twenty-five coins for $35. That's odd, if you think about it. What if you found that
the government was selling dollar bills for $1.40?

You have to ask the question: Is this a real coin, or is it a collectible? The answer
is clear from the premium alone. Also, the government has turned the coin into money
clips, necklaces, and key chains. That's the one way the bureaucrats have dreamed up
to get rid of the millions of these Sacagawea's that they have sitting around.

Mises.org: What mistake did the government make?

Blumert: In Europe and Canada, when new denomination coins are introduced, they cease
production of the paper currency at the same time. That way people have no choice.
They have to accept the coin.

But because the U.S. Treasury is constantly worried about the stability of the
dollar, it is reluctant to take such extreme steps. They worry it will spur rumors of
broader call-ins and even lead to runs.

They don't understand that so long as the paper is around, people will prefer it.
Everyone can intuitively understand this. What do you do with change these days? You
put it in a can, or, if you spot an unusual coin, you put it in your dresser drawer.

But because the coinage has been so debased over the years and now buy so little,
people tend not to carry them around. They carry cash, which is also what ATMs give
you. Vending machines now accept bills as well, so there is not much use for a coin.

There are additional interesting elements. The folks in Las Vegas didn't like the $1
coin because it doesn't make the right sound when it hits the tray of the slot
machine. So gambling was another potential market that dried up very quickly.

Mises.org: What are the mechanics of how a new coin could be introduced?

Blumert: Despite the trick with Wal-Mart and cereal boxes, the only way to get a coin
in circulation is through the banking system. People have to actually request the
thing from the bank. That's how the public determines what circulates and what
doesn't. If people were demanding Sacagaweas, the order would go through the Fed to
the Treasury, which would tell the U.S. Mint, which then would produce the coin.

But the orders are not coming in. The government could keep minting them, but there
is no one who seems to want them for circulation.

Mises.org: What is the difference between the failure of the Sacagawea and the
failure of the Susan B. Anthony dollar?

Blumert: You'll noticed that the U.S. Mint is still trying to fob that slug off on
people, too. In the industry, we call it the Susan B. Agony. And you talk about
premiums: The government is trying to sell a proof edition of this one-dollar coin
for nine bucks.

The mechanics of the failure are very similar. In 1979, the Mint made one billion of
them. In 1980, they made fewer than one hundred million. In 1981, they made fewer
than ten million. Again, people just didn't like the thing.

It was said that the problem was that it looked too much like the quarter. The
government swore it wouldn't make that mistake again, and thus the Sacagawea was
given a gold color. They didn't count on the fact that it would tarnish so quickly or
that people just wouldn't use it.

The story is that people love the Sacagawea. But it's not true. The tooth fairy may
love to put coins under kids' pillows, but the whole point of money is to carry it
and spend it. It is the money aspect of a coin that determines its success or
failure. By that measure, the coin has failed.

Mises.org: While we are on the subject, whatever happened to the $500 and $1,000
bills?

Blumert: If you go to the bank and deposit a $1,000 bill, and then later ask for it
back, you will not get it. The policy is to withdraw these bills from circulation.
Those things haven't been printed since 1934, one year after FDR confiscated the
people's gold. Back then, that bill would allow you to make a substantial down
payment on a house! The government just doesn't want people dealing with those
amounts in cash. It makes tax evasion too easy. Also, these days, the absence of
large denominations is justified in the name of the war on drugs.

Mises.org: Just from an artistic point of view, it seems like our money becomes ever
uglier.

Blumert: Yes, the coins of our grandparents carried beautiful symbols: Indian Head
cent, Buffalo nickel, Mercury Head dime, Standing Liberty quarter, Walking Liberty
half-dollar, and, of course, the magnificent Liberty Morgan dollar and the Peace
dollar. Today, our pocket change has no silver, and it bear portraits of dead
politicians-some okay, but most horrible. When countries honor men rather than
symbols, they are headed downhill. When a country's coinage honors living men, it is
time to run for the hills.

Mises.org: What are the lessons of the Sacagawea failure?

Blumert: It should remind us again that the government can't do anything right. It
also shows that the public can wreck the government's most elaborate plans fairly
easily. Money can sometimes be so mysterious that even the government is afraid. It
will be a long time before we witness another attempt to introduce a new phony coin.
The money system cannot afford too many humiliations on this scale.

* * * * *

Burton Blumert is CEO of Camino Coins in Burlingame, California. Send him mail.

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