Some commentators have argued that although the concept may be strictly legal, it would weaken the
checks and balances system of U.S. government, even if the spending that the coin would allow was already authorized by Congress. Opinion columnist
Megan McArdle wrote that "minting a $1 trillion coin neatly end-runs GOP obstructionists, but only by proving that the president himself has little respect for the institutional restraints on his office."
Felix Salmon, another journalist, wrote that the concept "would effectively mark the demise of the three-branch system of government, by allowing the executive branch to simply steamroller the rights and privileges of the legislative branch." Salmon said that he does not agree with what Congressional Republicans are doing, but that they have a right to do that, and that the president should not use the trillion-dollar coin option to circumvent them. He said, "Yes, the legislature is behaving like a bunch of utter morons if they think that driving the US government into default is a good idea. But it's their
right to behave like a bunch of utter morons." On the other hand, many economists and business analysts endorsed the coin as a way to counter threats by congressional Republicans to force the country into default by refusing to raise the
debt limit.
Paul Krugman said (in 2013), "So minting the coin would be undignified, but so what? At the same time, it would be economically harmless – and would both avoid catastrophic economic developments and help head off government by blackmail." He also declared the trillion-dollar coin debate to be "the most important fiscal policy debate of our lifetimes". Michael Steel, spokesperson of House Speaker
John Boehner, dismissed the concept by comparing it to a
Simpsons episode called "
The Trouble with Trillions", which aired 13 years before the
United States debt-ceiling crisis, in which
Homer Simpson is on a mission in search of a missing trillion-dollar bill. On January 7, 2013, Republican congressman
Greg Walden announced he would introduce a bill to close the platinum coin loophole. Rep. Walden said that the intention is to "take the proposal off the table." New York representative
Jerry Nadler opposed the bill and said that the idea remains a valid option. On January 12, 2013, the
Treasury and
Federal Reserve announced they would not mint a platinum coin, and five days later, Senate Minority Whip
John Cornyn (R-Texas) announced that Senate Republicans would end their threat to block an increase in the debt ceiling. In January 2023, Treasury Secretary
Janet Yellen said that minting a trillion dollar coin was not on the table as a solution to the
2023 United States debt-ceiling crisis and possible U.S. default on its debt, because the Federal Reserve would be unlikely to accept it, calling it "a gimmick". In May 2023, Paul Krugman commented: "As for claims that [Fed Chair Jerome] Powell would refuse to accept the coin, or the Supremes would block premium bonds — well, nobody knows. But my guess is that nobody wants to be the guy who destroys the world economy." Premium bonds have been touted as a possible alternative to the trillion dollar coin, and an alternative to congressional action raising the debt limit. In April 2023, Bloomberg News reported that a poll of 1,212 people was conducted in March 2023 to gauge the support for the U.S. Treasury minting the $1 trillion platinum coin to pay off the country's debt obligations. The poll results showed that 14% supported the coin's minting, 37% opposed it, while 49% have no opinion or were undecided. ==Inflation risks==