The Indicator from Planet Money - Why the $250 bill would be good … For criminals!
Episode Date: June 23, 2026A plan to create a new $250—with President Donald Trump’s face on it—has created a lot of pushback. Who probably won’t be pushing back, though? Criminals. On today’s show, we explain why. Fa...ct checking by Sierra Juarez.Your Next Listen — Trump crypto, Trump ballroom and Trump dronesConnect with The Indicator — Sign up for The Indicator’s brand new newsletter— Buy the Planet Money book— Find our socials, YouTube and more!— For sponsor-free episodes, subscribe to NPR+ See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
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NPR.
This is the indicator from Planet Money. I'm Waylon Wong.
And I'm Patty Hirsch. A plan to create a new $250 note adorned with the visage of President Donald Trump has attracted a lot of criticism and opposition.
And it's complicated. The Federal Reserve, the Treasury, and the Secret Service would need to agree for it to happen.
And then there's the idea that the note would depict the president.
This would contravene a law that prohibits the likeness of any living person from appearing on U.S. currency.
bonds or securities.
So Congress would need to approve too.
But there's one area of opposition that hasn't received much attention.
The idea that a $250 note would be a gift to criminals.
Drug dealers, arms smugglers, people traffickers, money launderers,
they all love to use large denomination notes.
On today's show, we'll look at how they use them
and how minting a $250 note could really, really help one type of criminal in particular.
Spoiler alert, tax dodgers.
Damn tax dodgers.
To be clear, the idea of creating a $250 note is not President Trump's, at least not officially.
He has been notably silent on the matter.
Yeah, the public face of the plan is Representative Joe Wilson of South Carolina.
He's given three reasons.
First, to celebrate 250 years of American independence.
Second, to lionize Mr. Trump.
Yeah, didn't he say something like the most valuable bill for the most valuable president?
Yes, he did.
And the third reason he gave for the new note,
is to compensate for the erosion of value of the $100 bill,
the largest bill that we print in America today.
And he's not wrong about that last part.
Ken Rogauff is a professor of economics at Harvard University
and former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund.
He also just wrote a book called Our Dollar Your Problem.
100 is not worth what it used to be.
What was $100 bills, probably worth closer to $80 now compared to just six or seven years ago.
but nevertheless, they're not something most people use every day.
Certainly not in the U.S.
Americans use cash in only about 14% of financial transactions these days.
And yet, there are more physical dollars in circulation than ever.
That's according to Oliver Bolo.
He writes about financial crimes.
He's the author of the book's Moneyland and Everybody Loves Our Dollars.
If you look at the value of U.S. dollars in circulation,
it doubled every decade as long as I've been alive,
almost entirety of that doubling has been made up by $100 bills.
There were 20 years ago, just over 5 billion of them.
Now there's almost 20 billion of it.
The Federal Reserve estimates that the majority of those hundreds are held outside of the US.
So if Americans aren't using them, who is?
Why is there so much demand for cash money,
despite the fact that ordinary people aren't using it,
is something that I think is explainable essentially entirely by its use by criminals.
The only real, useful purpose for a high-denomination bill is if you want to move a lot of value in a small space at one time.
And the only people that want to do that really are criminals.
Well, the Fed might not agree with him entirely about that.
Back in 2017, a Fed economist called Ruth Judson looked at the high number of $100 notes held by foreigners.
She said it's hard to assess how much U.S. currency is used exclusively for criminal transactions.
I mean, dollars are popular with ordinary people all around the world.
world, you know, people who can't trust their governments or banks. And, you know, U.S.
hundreds are a bit like gold. People buy them believing they'll hold their value.
But Ken Rugoff says, criminals do love big notes. So people, they hide it in safes, they hide
it in their walls. I'm not making this up. There's tons of police evidence on this.
You know, the $100 bills, you can fit conveniently in a little corner, depending on how many of them
you have. And you have $20 bills even. You need five times as much space.
They're five times as happy.
I mean, that may sound, that's ridiculous.
No, it's a big deal.
It's why they are so popular.
And they're popular despite the rise of cryptocurrency.
That's because there's no blockchain attached to a $100 bill,
which makes cash even more anonymous than crypto.
Oliver Bullo says criminals are using them both in tandem.
It's not an either-all.
You have a great synergy between the users of cash to commit criminality and users of crypto.
though, they just swapped one for the other.
So you have a real useful degree of acceptance on the street level
and convenience on the international level.
Governments have cottoned on to the fact that big notes can help criminals.
And with one or two notable exceptions,
most are steering clear of size these days.
The Europeans stopped printing their 500 euro note,
the famous Bin Laden, by 2019.
Singapore quit printing its 10,000 Singapore dollar note,
that's more than 7,000 US, by the way, in 2014.
Here in the US, we consider getting rid of the $100 note back in the 70s,
but Oliver says there's one big reason we didn't.
The $2.4, slightly more than $2.4 trillion outstanding of U.S. dollar banknotes
is a $2.4 trillion interest-free loans in the United States.
If you take that away, then they're going to have to find that money from somewhere else
and they're going to have to pay interest on it.
So let me explain how this works.
Do you have a $100 bill on you, Whelan?
Of course you don't.
It's not a problem. All U.S. dollar bills have this written on them.
Written on the top there. Federal Reserve note.
This means that it is a promissory note, an IOU issued by the central bank of the United States.
You give the government a hundred dollars worth of stuff or work, and in return, the government gives you this note.
The government holds your $100 worth of whatever and pays no interest on it, while you use the paper as a currency, which is pretty nifty, right?
Yes, it's no wonder, as Ken Rogoff says, that printing $100 notes is an irresistible business for the U.S.
government. They're good for the Treasury because they don't pay interest, whereas if they
borrow on the market, you know, right now the 10-year interest rates, it's 4.5%. They're not
paying any interest. They like that. But Ken says it's penny wise and pine foolish for the government
to keep issuing these large denomination notes. A lot of the people who are using the $100 bills
aren't paying any taxes or as much taxes, and that's a much bigger number.
That's right. It's not just drug dealers and money launderers who like big notes. Tax Dodgers love them too.
Damn, tax dodgers. Tax evasions very large in the United States. The IRS estimated it was around a trillion dollars a year. The tax evasion swamps what they're getting from printing the notes.
In other words, we lose way more money from tax evasion each year than we make from printing new currency. As a result, if they could, both Ken and Oliver would stop the government printing $100 bills tomorrow.
They say it would be the single most effective thing the U.S. government could do to fight financial crime.
And Ken says it wouldn't make that much difference to most Americans.
The average person, many, many surveys show, doesn't use them that much.
And, yeah, sometimes somebody says to me, oh, I pay my caretaker in $100 bills,
or I pay my trainer with $100 bills.
But, you know, okay, I'm not trying to be judgy about it.
But obviously the point of it is they're not reporting it in taxes.
If we took them away, tax collections would go up.
Enforcement would be easier.
It's not just doing the deal.
It's hiding the money, putting it into circulation, I mean, all of these things.
The creation of a $250 note would be a big mistake, Ken says.
I mean, sure, it would certainly beat out those Europeans with their 200-Euro note,
and it might net the U.S. government more money on the front end.
Yeah, but it would make in full.
enforcement of financial and other crimes, much more difficult. And tax crimes in particular.
A $250 note would make it easier to dodge tax simply because cash transactions are easy to make
anonymous. And it's a lot easier to transact in cash if you're using large notes.
Like Ken doesn't believe this note will come to pass for a variety of reasons. But if it did,
he says, the government would end up losing a whole lot of tax money on the deal. And that
would be really bad for America. America 250. I've just a lot of tax money. I've just
been yelling that indiscriminately at every mention of America.
This episode is produced by Angel Carreras with engineering by Cuisi Lee.
It was fact-checked by Sierra Juarez.
Kicking Cannon is our editor and The Indicator is a production of NPR.
