*With apologies in advance to Congressman Ron Paul*
Theorists and pundits have been harking on and on about how Fort Knox (more formally, 'The United States Bullion Depository') is empty or does not contain the stated amount of gold.
Lets contemplate something a bit drastic - what if the US Bullion Depository was assayed from end-to-end and was found to contain almost exactly (plus or minus 10 kilograms) the stated gold content?
No tungsten, no wolfram, some 0.900 gold-copper bars from melted coins but otherwise honest 99.99 pure gold.
Does this gold actually give the U.S Government any additional options in dealing with its monetary policy?
Selling it at today's open market rate would make no sense whatsoever. Best-estimates the US Gold Reserve contains 8,133.5 metric tonnes of gold (According to IMF and World Gold Council). Thats only about $421 billion US dollars.
Theorists and pundits have been harking on and on about how Fort Knox (more formally, 'The United States Bullion Depository') is empty or does not contain the stated amount of gold.
Lets contemplate something a bit drastic - what if the US Bullion Depository was assayed from end-to-end and was found to contain almost exactly (plus or minus 10 kilograms) the stated gold content?
No tungsten, no wolfram, some 0.900 gold-copper bars from melted coins but otherwise honest 99.99 pure gold.
Does this gold actually give the U.S Government any additional options in dealing with its monetary policy?
Selling it at today's open market rate would make no sense whatsoever. Best-estimates the US Gold Reserve contains 8,133.5 metric tonnes of gold (According to IMF and World Gold Council). Thats only about $421 billion US dollars.