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Fiat Money in Death
Throes
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By Antal
Fekete
Jul 6 2009 3:05PM
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"Banking was conceived in iniquity and
born in sin. The Bankers own the earth. Take it away from them, but leave
them the power to create deposits, and with the flick of the pen they will
create enough deposits to buy it back again. However, take away that power,
and all the great fortunes like mine will disappear — as they ought
to in order to make this a happier and better world to live in. But, if you
wish to remain the slaves of Bankers and pay the cost of your own slavery,
then let them continue to create deposits.”
Sir Josiah Stamp (1880-1941), one time governor
of the Bank of England, in his
&nb
sp; Commencement Address at the University of Texas in 1927. Reportedly he
was the second wealthiest individual in
Britain.
Make no mistake about it: in this credit collapse we are
witnessing the death throes of irredeemable currency. In vain have
governments and their client banks tried, for hundreds of years, to graft
this repulsive and degenerate bastard on the living organism of society.
The result was always the same: the healthy organism rejected the unnatural
implant in its own good time. The present episode is no different from
earlier ones except, perhaps, in the degree of the conceitedness of the
perpetrators, and in their contempt for the native intelligence of man.
When on August 15, 1971, Richard Nixon
defaulted on the gold obligations of the United States and declared the
irredeemable dollar the “ultimate” means of payments and
liquidator of debt, he was relying on the expert advice of Chicago
economist Milton Friedman. Five years later the world’s oldest
central bank, the Swedish Riksbank would bestow upon Friedman the prize it
established in memory of Alfred Nobel. The reward would be in recognition
of the brilliance of Friedman’s idea that if a central bank robs the
people piecemeal (read: it dilutes the currency at a fixed rate of, say, 3
percent per annum) then the victims would not cry “we wuz
robbed!” They would never notice the robbery.
In all previous episodes shame and disgrace were part and
parcel of the government’s default on its promises to pay. Not so in
1971. In this latest experiment with irredeemable currency there was a new
feature: far from being a disgrace, the default was presented as a
scientific breakthrough; conquering “monetary superstition”
epitomized by gold; a triumph of progress. Sycophant governments and
central banks overseas that were victimized by it and had to swallow
unprecedented losses due to the devaluation of the dollar were not even
allowed to say “ouch!” They were forced to celebrate their own
undoing and hail the advent of the New Age of synthetic credit,
irredeemable currencies and irredeemable debts.
The regime of the irredeemable dollar was put to the test soon
enough. In 1979 the genie escaped from the bottle. The price of oil,
silver, and gold were quoted at twenty times that prior to 1971; in the
case of sugar the rate of increase was more like forty times, so much so
that the Coca Cola Company found it too expensive to put into coke and
started using corn syrup instead. Interest rates were quoted in double
digits well past the teens. There was panic across the land and around the
globe. Hoarding of goods became a way of life. Everybody was expecting the
worst.
It was at this time that the notion
of “targeting inflation” was invented. Previously the claims of
central bank power were rather modest. Central banks were supposed to
target short-term interest rates. Later they graduated to targeting the
money supply. Now they were claiming supernatural powers of micromanaging
price increases. It was apparently working, and the genie was put back in
the bottle.
In the intervening three
decades policymakers and mainstream economists became ever more confident
that in inflation-targeting they have found the holy grail of irredeemable
currency. Professor Frederic Mishkin of Columbia University, a former
governor of the Federal Reserve, published the gospel of inflation
targeting with the title Monetary Policy Strategy in 2007. In his
book he calls inflation targeting “an information-inclusive strategy
for the conduct of monetary policy.” Martin Wolf, the chief economic
columnist of the Financial Times of London explains: inflation targeting
makes allowance for all relevant variables — exchange rates, stock
prices, housing prices and long-term bond prices — via their impact
on activity and prospective inflation. This, then, is the new modified holy
grail. Cast your net wide enough to catch all that you want to control. If
you do it boldly, you will make people believe that the government can
control everything it wants to control. It is amazing how much can be
accomplished by piling prestidigitation upon prestidigitation.
Ironically, disaster struck just at the time when
the prophets of inflation-targeting became cocky beyond any measure of
modesty. They actually had a whole debate going on in American journals,
but also English ones. Ben Bernanke, who in the meantime was made the
chairman of the Federal Reserve, contributed the keynote address and the
title to the debate: “The Great Moderation”. Their
description, up to and including the beginning of 2007 of what was
happening in the macro economy, was a reduction in the volatility in the
trade cycle: more consistent growth, less bouts of inflation, more
stability. The London Times published a jubilant piece as recently as early
2007 with the title “The Great Moderation” which began with the
line: “History will marvel at the stability of our era.” It was
not meant to be a joke. It was meant to be believed. Complacency about the
almighty nature of monetary policy reached its peak. They celebrated the
success of inflation targeting just when it started to unravel.
Policymakers, central bankers, and their lackeys in academia and
journalism, felt inordinately proud of themselves. They thought they held
the whole world in their hands.
The
celebration and self-congratulation was premature. Bernanke & Co. did
not know that they were about to be humbled by the markets. Blinded by the
glare of their own glory, none of them foresaw the coming disaster.
Martin Wolf in his column on May 7 talks about
“this unforeseen crisis” as an unmitigated disaster for
monetary policy. It leaves fiat money with just one last chance to put its
act together and save its hide. He says: “The holy grail turned out
to be a mirage. If fiat money is not made to work better than it has, who
knows what our children might decide to do in desperation. They might even
decide to bring back and embrace gold”. Oh horror of horrors! Wolf
still considers the gold standard an absurdity.
It’s kind of strange. It is not the regime of
irredeemable currency, whereby governments are supposed to create wealth by
sprinkling some ink on little scraps of paper, that is considered an
absurdity. Of course, Mr. Wolf has the right of wanting to be pilfered and
plundered. But he has no right to advocate that the rest of us be cheated
through this crudest form of plunder forever and ever.
He is also mistaken when he assumes that Bernanke & Co. still
has one more chance. The chance they just blew was the last. We
are witnessing the closing of the regime of irredeemable currency and
irredeemable debt. We may not know how long its death throes will take, but
there will be no other chance. Financial journalists and mainstream
economists, in their blind stupor acting as cheerleaders for the disastrous
monetary policy of the government and the insane credit policy of the
banks, have exhausted and destroyed their own credibility for once and all.
&nb
sp;
&nb
sp;
*
* *
Martin Wolf, like most of his colleagues, is a victim of
brainwashing inspired by Keynes that has been going on to discredit the
gold standard for some 75 years, but which got a new lift after Friedman
inspired Nixon to default. Here are the facts about the gold dollar that
should be made available to the world through the opening of the Mint to
gold, as demanded by the U.S. Constitution.
The gold standard is an indispensable prerequisite of freedom.
Without it individuals are helpless in facing the constant and ongoing
encroachment of their property rights by the government and the banks. The
right to demand gold in exchange for bank notes and bank deposits far
transcends the mere technicality of exchange of one form of money for
another. It is the only way to check the unlimited power of the government
manifested by the unlimited creation of bank deposits. The combination of
governmental power and the power of the banks to create deposits is
especially dangerous for the freedom of the individual, because of the
double standard involved. The government exempts banks from the effects of
contract law in exchange for the banks’ special treatment accorded to
government debt.
Gold hoarding is not a
blemish on the gold standard; it is its main excellence. When a sufficient
number of individuals are disturbed by the encroachment of this combination
of powers, or disapprove the monetary policy of the government and the
credit policy of the banks, they are not helpless under a gold standard.
They can withdraw bank reserves, namely gold, from the system, thereby
putting the government and the banks on notice that unless they mend their
ways, and stop their adventures in debt creation, they will find themselves
insolvent and out of power. The gold standard gives people the upper
hand.
It is no accident that all
dictatorships set out by limiting the people’s access to gold. It
makes no difference whether they march under the banner of national or
international socialism. All totalitarian regimes inflict irredeemable
currency on the people as an instrument of servitude and bondage. Martin
Wolf should know this. The ideal of limited government is meaningless
unless reinforced by a gold standard denying to the government the power of
issuing unlimited amounts of currency. There is no other way of doing this
than making the promises of the government redeemable in something other
than more promises of the same shabby kind.
Once the government makes the currency irredeemable, it puts
itself in the position to curtail the rights and freedoms of the people as
it sees fit. Constitutional government is effectively overthrown. Once the
government usurps the public purse, its power becomes uncontrollable.
Budget debate in Parliament or in Congress becomes an annual farce. Nothing
stands in the way of unscrupulous politicians to undermine constitutional
government. The purchasing power of the currency is constantly undermined
year in, year out. The banks are freed from constraints on them exercised
by the people under the gold standard. Pandora’s box of corruption is
opened and its contents contaminate the nation’s economic, political,
and social system.
Governments which employ
irredeemable currency grab unconditional control over foreign trade,
exchange rates, foreign investments and travel, even the amount of currency
an individual can take in or out of the country. The more powerful
governments will buy the allegiance of the less powerful. Out of this
feudalistic web of allegiances financed by irredeemable currency come
various adventures in fomenting and waging wars in far-away lands, spilling
the blood of the young people of the nation for causes alien to them.
Under a gold standard prolonged budget deficits
and prolonged unfavorable balance of payments cannot occur. There are
forces limiting persistent losses of gold which tend to correct the
underlying distortion. By contrast, under the regime of irredeemable
currency economic distortions can persist indefinitely. They ultimately
become destructive. This is so because government bureaucrats cannot
possibly provide the same level of wisdom that a people free to act in
their own interest can.
As problems in
foreign trade mount, governments will find ever more excuses for ever more
controls. There is no end to the expansion of government power over the
individual until the nation regains the benefits of a gold standard,
requiring that the government retire to its proper role of umpire and
relinquish its role as dominant partner and dictator.
A government can take total control of the people either by
the use of military force, or by the use of irredeemable currency. The
former is readily understood, while the latter is a subtle national drug
that is not generally recognized as such. Rather, it is readily embraced by
its victims. For these and similar reasons irredeemable currency is the
favorite device of modern governments that want to bring people under total
control. Indeed, it enables the government to succeed in controlling the
masses while, at the same time, earning their approval and even their
enthusiastic support. Irredeemable currency must be seen as the
habit-forming drug that the government uses to intoxicate people. Under
this intoxication people will want more and more national spending, more
and more government control, and more and more debt.
This intoxication obscures the sad end that arrives when the
merry-go-round is coming to a jerky halt, when credit is exhausted or
withdrawn, and the kitty is found empty. The nation is facing a most
serious economic disaster followed by prolonged economic pain.
Unfortunately, government economists, university professors, and financial
journalists have taken their share of the fun and they failed miserably in
their duty to forewarn people of the coming disaster.
It is useless to expect a mass movement on behalf of a sound
currency. The daily experiences of people provide them with a warped
outlook. They confirm in their minds the alleged virtues and benefits of an
infinitely inflatable currency. People lack sufficient understanding of
monetary science to see that no currency can be made infinitely inflatable
without inviting disaster. Like a drug addict, people exposed to
irredeemable currency do not regard it as a dangerous and undermining
narcotic agent. Even the loss of purchasing power does not disturb them to
any great extent. Their response is to demand more money, and they take
pride in the fact that the government listens sympathetically to their
demand. They welcome the soaring stock indexes and real estate prices, and
put great stores on them. Heavy taxes and burgeoning debt are not regarded
with anxiety. A frequent and common agitation is for ever more government
spending.
*
* *
If we are to be saved from the ultimate
evil consequences of the regime of irredeemable currency, needed action
must come from the leadership of the opposition party when it is its turn
to take over government. The new President and his Secretary of the
Treasury, or the new Prime Minister and his Secretary of the Exchequer must
be statesmen. They must act as informed and tough monetary surgeons, men
who can and will persuade Congress or Parliament to reinstate redeemable
currency.
Once that step is taken, the
people should experience a breath of fresh air. Government would once more
be subordinated to the Constitution, bringing greater freedom to the
people. Optimism should be wide-spread, because the currency of the people
would once more had integrity. Business should prosper, domestic and
foreign trade expand. Imbalances in foreign trade should rectify
themselves. Gold should start to circulate and flow in from abroad. The
control of the public purse would be returned to the people where it
belongs if human freedom is to be preserved and responsible government is
to be obtained.
But as the last
presidential election in the United States has shown, the needed leadership
is lacking. The party of the opposition is just as much in thrall to the
same toxic ideology as the governing party. The last change of guards took
place in the middle of a financial and economic crisis involving the
destruction of quantities of wealth unprecedented in all history, with more
destruction coming. Yet when the new president appointed officials at the
Treasury, confirmed others at the Federal Reserve, and named economic
advisors, they turned out to be the same men who were responsible for the
credit collapse in the first place. Not only do these officials continue
the dangerous course of the previous administration; they increase the
stakes by several orders of magnitude in announcing more bailouts, more
stimulus packages, hence more government spending, more government debt,
and more fiat money creation.
The situation
is no better in the United Kingdom, another important country expecting a
change of guards, which could take the initiative to put a peaceful end to
the regime of irredeemable currency now in its death throes. Rather than
initiating a national debate on the utter failure of the present financial
system which was supposed to end bank runs, deflations and depressions,
serial bankruptcies and unemployment for once and all, and on the return to
sound money and sound book-keeping, Her Majesty’s Loyal Opposition is
plotting a course how to cure the collapse of bad debt with the injection
of more bad debt.
What this means is that
there is no hope for change through peaceful means. When change finally
does come, it will be through violence. When the economic pain inflicted on
the people reaches unbearable heights, law and order will break down,
anarchy and chaos will ensue.
Looking
at the ruins of our civilization will be a bitter reminder of what the
great monetary tradition of the English-speaking countries, in ruling out
irredeemable currency and mandating a metallic monetary standard, was
designed to prevent.
June 28, 2009.
Acknowledgement
The author has drawn heavily on Walter E. Spahr’s
article in the quarterly Modern Age, Summer, 1960, under the title
“The Significance of the Gold Standard”, see also www.professorfekete.com, April
17.
Calendar of Events
San Francisco School of Economics, San Francisco,
California, July 25, August 1 & August 8, 2009
&nb
sp; Investment Seminars: Trading Gold, Wealth
Management
&nb
sp; The Gold and Silver Basis; Backwardation; Trading Gold
in the Present Environment; Wealth Management under the Regime
of Irredeemable Currency. Given by Professor
Fekete
and Mr. Sandeep Jaitly of Soditic Ltd., London, U.K. Enrolment
is limited, first come first served. For details, check: www.sfschoolofeconomics.com,
contact: ibischoff@sfschoolofeconomi
cs.com
San Francisco School of Economics, San Francisco,
California, July 27-August 7, 2009
&nb
sp; Two-week academic course: Money and
Banking, taught in person by Professor Fekete
Enrolment is limited;
first come, first served. TheSyllabus for this course can be seen on the
website: www.professorfekete.com,
&nb
sp; For further details, check: www.sfschoolofeconomics.com<
br />
&nb
sp; For enrolment contact: ibischoff@sfschoolofeconomi
cs.com
San Francisco School of Economics, San Francisco,
California, July 23-August 9, 2009
&nb
sp; Private consultation with Professor Fekete
available
&nb
sp; contact: ibischoff@sfschoolofeconomi
cs.com
University House, Australian National University,
Canberra: first week of November, 2009
&nb
sp; Peace and Progress through Prosperity: Gold
Standard in the 21st Century
This is the
first conference organized by the newly formed Gold Standard Institute.
&nb
sp; For further information, e-mail: feketeaustralia@gmail.com ,
On
the Gold Standard Institute, e-mail philipbarton@goldstand
ardinstitute.com
Professor Fekete on DVD: Professionally produced DVD
recording of the address before the Economic Club of San Francisco on
November 4, 2008, entitled The Revisionist History of the Great
Depression: Can It Happen Again? plus an interview with Professor
Fekete. It is available from www.Amazon.com and from the Club www.economicclubsf.com at $14.95
each.
DVD’s of the Gold Standard University, Session
3 (Adam Smith’s Real Bills Doctrine and Its Relevance Today); Session
4 (The Bond Market and the Markey Process Determining the Rate of
Interest); Session 5 (A Primer ont he Gold and Silver Basis) are
now available. For details, see the announcement on the website
www.professorfekete.com .
DVD’s of the other Sessions will also be available soon.
Antal E. Fekete
Gold Standard University
December 5, 2008.
****
These and other articles of the author can be accessed at
the website www.professorfekete.com
Note: the author is coming out with a
follow-up piece: Has the Curtain Fallen on the Last Contango in
Washington?