Yes, it is. In the US Constitution, the power to raise money is an expressed power as stated in Article I, Section 8, Clause 1 (power to lay and collect taxes) and Clause 2 (power to borrow money on the credit of the United States. The power to lay and collect taxes was supplemented by the Sixteenth Amendment which gave Congress the power to impose an income tax.
In the US government, the power of coining money is delegated or expressed.
The US Congress. The President can make recommendations, but the final decision is up to Congress.
The ability to coin money
The power to coin money is an expressed power. This is a power that is provided to Congress in Article 1, Section 8 of the US Constitution.
coining money
These powers are enumerated by Article 1, Section 8 of the United Constitution. It grants Congress the ability to declare war, and the coining and regulation money
Congress!!!! ....there is a provision in the constitution called the "necessary and proper clause," which gives Congress the power to tax, print money, declare war, etc.
The U.S. Constitution only gives Congress the power to coin money and regulate its value.
enumerated power :)
Congress has several expressed powers. Some of these powers are the power to declare war, the power to naturalize citizens and the power to raise an army.
Among the explicit powers granted to the Congress by the United States Constitution is taxation. Congress has the power to assess and collect taxes/duties as enumerated by Article I Section 8.
The power of congress to declare war and raise an army or navy is an expressed power.