Congress Proposal to Give Everyone $2000/mo 'Strengthens Case for Bitcoin'

Published at: March 19, 2020

Democrat congresswoman Maxine Waters has proposed giving $2000 a month to every adult, and $1000 a month to every child in America, to help see them through the COVID-19 financial crisis.

Waters — the Chair of the U.S. House Financial Services Committee — made a series of other extraordinary legislative proposals to help the economy in a memorandum dated March 18.

The proposals also include a suspension of all consumer and small business credit payments, including mortgages, car payments, student loans, small business loans and personal loans.

It's a sign of just how desperate the financial situation is, that economic proposals that are more far reaching than anything since the Great Depression are even on the table. They go much further than presidential-hopeful Bernie Sanders’ recent call for a one-off $2000 emergency payment.

Announcing the proposed measures, Waters said that media reports indicated the Trump Administration would give $850 billion in aid to impacted industries:

“If true, it is apparent that this Administration is missing the point – families must come first. That is why I am proposing a bold fiscal stimulus package and public policy response that will benefit hardworking and vulnerable Americans who may face financial hardship or even eviction or foreclosure as a result of the coronavirus crisis.” 

Proposal would cause massive inflation

Founder of Quantum Economics Mati Greenspan said he was taken aback by the $2000 a month proposal.

"Basically it would cause massive inflation because you get more money competing for the same amount of goods," he told Cointelegraph.

Greenspan said it appeared to be a Universal Basic Income in disguise and that he didn't believe President Donald Trump would ever sign it into law. However that could change if the Democrats win the November election. If so:

"In the long term Bitcoin could certainly benefit, I don't know about the rest of the crypto market. Basically anything that would hold its value in the face of a depreciating currency —  especially if the reason is poor judgement by the government and banks — that certainly strengthens the case for Bitcoin."

The free money proposal appears to have doubled since yesterday, when Waters told SiriusXM's The Joe Madison Show that every adult should be given $1000 a month.

Consumer and small business debt holiday

Waters is also proposing that negative consumer credit reporting, debt collection and repossessions should be suspended for the duration, and that after the crisis has passed, borrowers would be provided with "affordable opportunities to repay arrears over time without late fees or back interest".

Evictions and foreclosures would be banned and rental and utility payments suspended for assisted renters. Non assisted renters would be given payment assistance.

Greenspan said some of the measures could be appropriate if they were temporary and strictly time limited, but the danger is that “once those tools are used for the first time they're very difficult not to use again”.

“We saw that with quantitative easing,” he said. “It's Pandora's Box, and you can put Pandora back into the box.”

Other legislative proposals

The suspension of commercial rental payments for businesses and non-profits 

$50 billion in grants to small businesses

100% payroll tax rebate, and a 200% rebate in 'hot spots'

New rules to require public companies to disclose supply chain risks and ramifications

A ban on the creation of new financial rules not directly related to the crisis

Bans on stock buybacks and dividends

Doubling the US commitment to the International Monetary Fund's emergency backstop facility

$5 billion to help the homeless — ho are at greater risk of catching the disease

Forgiving $10,000 of student loan debt after the crisis has passed

Tags
Related Posts
Crypto, Congress and the Commission: What’s next for the ‘Wild West’?
The entire cryptocurrency industry is waking up to a new reality. Politicians and regulators have decided to wade into the space, which had flown mainly under their radar until now. A House committee chair is launching a working group; the Securities and Exchange Commission is seeking new authorities to regulate digital assets as securities; and the Senate-passed infrastructure bill includes $28 billion in tax revenues from crypto transactions. This last handful of weeks has arguably seen more regulatory activity around digital currencies since the name Satoshi Nakamoto first entered the popular lexicon. Anyone whose business deals in this asset class …
Bitcoin / Aug. 28, 2021
Banks cautious about crypto ahead of COVID-19 testimony before US Senate
Major Wall Street bank executives will appear before the United States Senate Banking Committee on Wednesday to discuss the role of their financial institutions in the recovery of the American economy. Democratic lawmakers plan to grill a number of major bank execs, whose firms saw record profits during the COVID-19 pandemic while average Americans struggled to make ends meet. In prepared testimonies posted on Tuesday, CEOs at the Bank of America, Citigroup and Wells Fargo described their respective banks' responses to major challenges such as inequality, diversity, climate change, taxes, as well as how their banks handle cryptocurrencies. This year …
Bitcoin / May 26, 2021
Bitcoin-Friendly US Senate Candidate Defeated in Republican Primary Elections
U.S. Senate candidate Austin Petersen, who is known for his Bitcoin (BTC) advocacy, lost the Republican primary election Aug. 7. According to unofficial results published by the Missouri Secretary of State, Petersen lost the battle to Attorney General Josh Hawley, who received 58.6 percent of the 663,553 votes. Hawley will go on to face to Democratic Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill in the general election. Petersen tweeted: “Sorry I couldn't pull out a win for us, friends. My faults as a candidate are my own, and not the fault of our activists. I am not a perfect messenger. One day soon …
Bitcoin / Aug. 9, 2018
US Congress Hearing: Central Bank Digital Currency ‘One of the Worst Financial Ideas’
The U.S. Congressional Subcommittee on Monetary Policy and Trade discussed major questions around digital currencies in a hearing today, July 18. The hearing, entitled “The Future of Money: Digital Currency,” considered potential domestic and global implementations of cryptocurrencies. At the hearing, the Subcommittee discussed the deployment of cryptocurrency and its underlying technology, blockchain, by central banks, arguing whether central banks should introduce a central bank digital currency (CBDC). Addressing this point, Rodney Garratt, a professor of economics at the University of California, Santa Barbara, claimed that the banks have to decide whether they want “to withdraw completely from providing a …
Bitcoin / July 19, 2018
US lawmaker purchases exposure to Bitcoin through Grayscale shares
Illinois Representative Marie Newman has disclosed she purchased up to $50,000 in exposure to crypto through shares of Grayscale Bitcoin Trust. According to a financial disclosure report filed with the U.S. House of Representatives on Dec. 8, Congressperson Newman bought between $15,001 and $50,000 of GBTC between Nov. 9 and Dec. 4. In addition, she conducted four separate purchases of shares of Coinbase Global’s Class A stock between November and December, up to $215,000. Members of the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate are permitted to buy, sell and trade stocks and other investments while in office but required to …
Bitcoin / Dec. 9, 2021