speeches · March 11, 1963
Speech
William McChesney Martin, Jr. · Chair
Statement of
Wm. McC. Martin, Jr., Chairman,
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
before the
House Committee on Banking and Currency,
on H. R. 4413
March 12, 1963
I appear today in response to your invitation to present
the views of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
with respect to H. R. 4413, which would repeal the silver purchase
laws and provide for replacement of silver certificates with Federal
Reserve notes.
The Board believes that it is unnecessary to utilize sil¬
ver as part of the United States monetary system, other than as a
material for coinage. There is no need, therefore, to retain the
silver purchase provisions that would be repealed by H. R. 4413. As
a practical matter, these provisions are inoperative today, because
of the rise in the market price of silver.
The Board favors the proposed amendment in section 3 of the
bill, which would authorize issuance of Federal Reserve notes in $1
denomination in addition to the denominations of $5, $10, $20, $50,
$100, $500, $1,000, $5,000, and $10,000 now authorized. Since the
bill as introduced would authorize the Federal Reserve System to
issue notes in all present denominations of currency except for $2
bills, we recommend broadening the bill to cover $2 notes as well.
Although the Board is not in a position to comment on the
technicalities of the bill's tax provisions, we perceive no objec¬
tion in principle to repealing the tax on transfers of silver bullion.
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If this bill is enacted, it is important that the resulting
shift from silver certificates to Federal Reserve notes take place
gradually. Roughly $2 billion in silver certificates are outstanding.
A complete shift of this amount to Federal Reserve notes would reduce
the Treasury's free gold stock by $500 million, because of the 25 per
cent gold certificate reserve requirement on Federal Reserve notes.
I am pleased, therefore, to note Secretary Dillon's statement yesterday
that the increase in the required gold certificate reserve resulting
from the retirement of silver certificates and their subsequent replace¬
ment with Federal Reserve notes should not exceed $35 million a year.
Although some concern has been expressed that removing the
silver "backing" from part of our currency might lower its value, I
would not agree. The fact is that the stability or instability of
prices in our economy does not depend on the amount of silver in the
Treasury, The relatively small part of our total money supply repre¬
sented by silver certificates does not derive its value from the silver
the Treasury must hold as ''backing" for the certificates. Throughout
the history of the silver purchase laws that this bill would repeal, the
dollar has been worth more than the silver in it. This is still true
today, even after the recent steady rise in the market price of silver.
So it would seem that public acceptance of silver certificates must
rest on their appraisal of factors apart from the silver "backing".
This is further demonstrated by the fact that the public accepts Federal
Reserve notes as readily as silver certificates. About $30 billion of
Federal Reserve notes are in circulation--fifteen times the amount of
silver certificates circulating.
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It is possible, of course, that the market price of silver could
rise above its monetary value if the Treasury's supply of free silver should
ever be exhausted. H. R. 4413 is designed in part to avoid the problems
that could arise in that eventuality. If this bill is not enacted, the
Treasury must continue to issue silver certificates to meet the public's
need for $1 bills. Under those circumstances, if the market price of silver
went high enough to encourage the public to turn in silver certificates for
silver dollars, to be melted down for metal, the Treasury would be faced
with the impossible task of trying to meet the public's need for $1 bills
by issuing a certificate that would be exchangeable for dollar coins con¬
taining more than a dollar's worth of silver. Consequently, silver certif¬
icates would soon be returned from circulation. This would not only add
significantly to the operating costs of the mints and the Federal Reserve
Banks, but would also thwart, rather than serve, the public's need for a
stable medium of exchange.
Unlike gold, the Treasury's stock of silver cannot be used to
maintain the role of the dollar as a key international currency, because
silver is not a readily acceptable means of settling our accounts with
other countries. Offhand, one might suppose it would bolster the value of
our currency to keep a valuable commodity such as silver in the stockpile
of Government assets. But without this bill, the Treasury sooner or later
will be forced to buy more silver for silver certificates, in competition
with other buyers who seek it for other uses. It can hardly be supposed that
the Government will find itself in a sounder financial position for having
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been forced to acquire an asset by simultaneously adding an equal amount
to its debt, as would occur under these circumstances.
There is no point now in renewing the historic controversy over
the desirability of the silver purchase program as a means of assuring
a favorable price to producers of silver. Today, because our economy has
many other uses for this metal, its market price is well above that
guaranteed by the silver purchase laws. The time seems ripe to take this
step toward a free market in silver.
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Cite this document
APA
William McChesney Martin, Jr. (1963, March 11). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19630312_jr.
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19630312_jr.,
author = {William McChesney Martin, Jr.},
title = {Speech},
year = {1963},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19630312_jr.},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}