Unresolved Issues Concerning the Disposal of Stockpile Silver
RCED-83-7
Published: Feb 18, 1983. Publicly Released: Feb 18, 1983.
Skip to Highlights
Highlights
Comments by the Department of Defense (DOD) and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) on an earlier GAO report have raised new issues concerning the disposal of stockpile silver. GAO evaluated the DOD and FEMA positions to determine whether they warranted revising any of the conclusions and recommendations of the earlier report and identified new issues that must be addressed and resolved in reevaluating the need for the stockpile silver.
Recommendations
Recommendations for Executive Action
Agency Affected Sort descending | Recommendation | Status |
---|---|---|
Department of the Interior | The Secretary of the Interior should require the Interagency Silver Commodity Committee in its report to Congress to consider, as required by law: (1) the estimated cost of silver from recycling, domestic stocks, and foreign suppliers during a national emergency; and (2) the impact that any proposed disposal method may have on relations between the United States and its major foreign suppliers. |
Interior has never released the study on the need for stockpile silver. In now appears that the report has been permanently shelved. As of October 1985, there were no proposals for a massive disposal of stockpile silver. If such a proposal resurfaces, GAO may wish to challenge it on the basis of a failure to adequately respond to this recommendation.
|
Department of the Interior | The Secretary of the Interior should require the Interagency Silver Commodity Committee in its report to Congress to provide a benefit-cost analysis of the various alternatives to disposing of the stockpile silver, including bullion coins and convertible bonds backed by silver, in support of a recommended disposal method. |
Interior has never released the study on stockpile silver. It now appears that the report has been permanently shelved. As of October 1985, there were no proposals for a massive disposal of stockpile silver. If such a proposal resurfaces, GAO may will to challenge it on the basis of a failure to adequatley respond to this recommendation.
|
Department of the Interior | The Secretary of the Interior should require the Interagency Silver Commodity Committee in its report to Congress to make clear the demand factors considered in redetermining the need for the stockpile silver and provide justification for excluding any of the defense-related monetary uses required by the fiscal year 1982 Defense Appropriations Act. |
Interior has never released the study on the need for stockpile silver. It now appears that the report has been permanently shelved. As of October 1985, there were no proposals for a massive disposal of stockpile silver. If such a proposal resurfaces, GAO may wish to challenge it on the basis of a failure to adequately respond to this recommendation.
|
Department of the Interior | The Secretary of the Interior should require the Interagency Silver Commodity Committee in its report to Congress to appropriately qualify those legislatively mandated supply factors that are based on incomplete data. |
Interior has never released the study on the need for stockpile silver. In now appears that the report has been permanently shelved. As of October 1985, there were no proposals for a massive disposal of stockpile silver. If such a proposal resurfaces, GAO may wish to challenge it on the basis of a failure to adequately respond to this recommendation.
|
Full Report
Office of Public Affairs
Topics
Evaluation methodsMilitary inventoriesProgram evaluationProperty and supply managementStrategic materialsPrecious metalsCurrency and coinageStocksRecyclingInternational relations