speeches · June 30, 1964
Speech
William McChesney Martin, Jr. · Chair
Statement of
Wm. McC, Martin, Jr., Chairman,
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
Concerning the Coin Shortage
before the
Legal and Monetary Affairs Subcommittee of the
Committee on Government Operations of the
House of Representatives
sP- 1. 1964
We are experiencing a critical coin shortage that can be
overcome only by a rapid and substantial increase in production. Nor-
mally, coins flow into circulation and back into the Federal Reserve
Banks in much the same manner as currency does. But in recent years
demand for coin has grown in unprecedented fashion. As commercial
banks have found themselves with less and less excess coin, the return
flow to the Reserve Banks has dwindled. Deliveries of new coin from
the Mint have risen, but this added supply has been more than offset
by the drying up of return flows of coin from circulation. Today, as
shown in the attached chart, the return flow has shrunk to the point
where it is now less than the amount of new coin received from the
Mint; in more normal times, the return flow was nine times as great
as receipts from the Mint. In consequence, inventories have fallen
to the point where the Reserve Banks have been unable to deliver coins
on request, but instead have been forced to ration coins in order to
distribute the limited supply on a fair basis.
As the shortage has become more critical, we have considered
various methods of dealing with it. To meet the heavy seasonal demand
for coins in late 1963, we tried to induce larger return flows of coin
i
transportation charges on shipments from nonmember banks, but we
achieved only limited success. We have previously recommended that
the Treasury be authorized to discontinue changing the mintage date
on coins each year, and we now support the Secretary's proposal for
legislation to this effect. Keeping the 1964 date, particularly on
Kennedy half dollars, should lessen the extent to which coins are
withdrawn from circulation by collectors and speculators.
So far as distribution is concerned, the Federal Reserve
Banks are endeavoring to use all practical means to assure that the
supply of coins available to them is distributed fairly and effi-
ciently among the commercial banks. But, in our considered judgment,
the only real solution to the present coin shortage problem lies in a
substantial increase in the production of coin.
We are gratified that the Senate has completed action on
H. R. 10532, the Treasury-Post Office appropriations bill, which
would provide the funds needed for construction of the new Mint in
Philadelphia, as well as for full time operations at the existing
Mints, and we hope that agreement will soon be reached between the
two Houses so that the bill may be speedily signed into law.
But we cannot wait for the new Mint to solve our problem.
Production must be increased substantially this year and next, and the
new Mint will not be in operation soon enough for that. Estimates by
the Federal Reserve Banks of their coin requirements for fiscal year
1965 indicate a need for 6.8 billion pieces, considerably more than
the 4,970 million pieces (excluding silver dollars) contemplated by
H. R. 10532. The need for increased production is heightened by the
-3-
fact that demand for coins can be expected to rise seasonally later this
year. The attached table shox^s the estimates of the Reserve Banks as to
their needs for coin in fiscal 1965 and 1966.
Needs of this kind are extremely difficult to predict with
accuracy, and these estimates could be substantially above or below
the mark. But we in the Federal Reserve System are convinced that the
only safe course at this point is to flood the market with coins in
order to remove the incentive to hold on to excess coin, and that normal
considerations of cost and efficiency in production are of secondary
importance at this time. We have urged the Secretary of the Treasury
to take steps to increase production, and we welcome the recent announce-
ment of proposals to accomplish substantial increases in fiscal year 1965.
Increases are sorely needed, particularly before the seasonal increase
in demand that may be expected this fall, and we urge the Congress to
provide x-jhatever funds and authority may be required for this purpose.
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK COIN* RECEIPTS, PAYMENTS, AND INVENTORY
DURING PERIOD JANUARY 1, 1963 - MAY 31, 1964
* - „ _ . _ 1 963 1 964
Exclude* silver dollars
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Cite this document
APA
William McChesney Martin, Jr. (1964, June 30). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19640701_jr.
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19640701_jr.,
author = {William McChesney Martin, Jr.},
title = {Speech},
year = {1964},
month = {Jun},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19640701_jr.},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}