Jul 27 2009 2:24PM
In Economics 101 college professors teach that prices are
determined by supply and demand. Not usually taught, however, is that the
‘price’ – i.e., the purchasing power – of money is
also established by these same two economic determinants.
Economists focus quite extensively on the supply of money,
which in the US is the total quantity of dollars in circulation. The demand
for money, however, is largely ignored.
Most economic theory is built upon the supposition that the
demand for money grows consistently by about 1.5% per annum. This
growth rate is purposefully chosen because it approximately equals world
population growth, so it is assumed that if population grows by that rate,
the demand for money in commerce will also approximate that same growth
rate. It is an imprecise assumption, but the underlying problem is
that the demand for money cannot be quantified, in contrast to the supply
of money.
The quantity of dollars in circulation is reported by the
Federal Reserve. These are the mix of so-called Ms, with M1 being a
compilation of cash currency and dollars in checking accounts at banks. M2
adds to that definition all of the dollars in savings accounts and certain
money-market accounts.
The Federal Reserve measures the total quantity of dollars
in circulation, and regularly reports their estimate. The following table
presents M1 and M2 as of July 22nd.
Date |
Seasonally adjusted
(billions of dollars)
|
|
M1
|
M2
|
|
23 Jul 2007
|
1370.0
|
7253.1
|
Source: http://www.
federalreserve.gov/releases/h6/current/h6.htm
An even broader measure of the total quantity
of dollars in circulation is M3, which includes, among other things, time
deposits at banks. M3 is no longer reported by the Federal Reserve,
but is estimated by private economists. For example, John Williams of
http://www.shadowstats.com
estimates that M3 presently totals about $14.8 trillion dollars.
Given the US population of 304 million, there is approximately $49,000 in
circulation for every American man, woman and child.
In 1913, the year the Federal Reserve was
established, the American population was 97 million. M3 that year was
approximately $20 billion, so on average there was $210 in circulation for
every American man, woman and child, or just 0.4% of the current
average. Are there more dollars in circulation per person because
Americans are so much wealthier today than they were in 1913 or is
something else at work here?
First, a point of clarification is necessary.
Money is not wealth, at least as far as I define these two
terms. Wealth is real things that satisfy one’s needs and wants.
Money is the means to buying those needs and wants, but is not wealth
itself. And there is no doubt that the US has become wealthier in terms of
the vast array of goods and services that have raised living standards
considerably since 1913. But is more money needed today to avail
oneself of those goods and services?
While the American population has grown by
1.2% per annum on average since 1913, the growth in M3 has been much
greater at 7.1% per annum. Logically we need less money today than
1913 because the efficiency of currency has improved. Methods of payment
not even available in 1913, like electronic fund transfers and plastic
cards, now move dollars in an instant. So less currency today should
satisfy one’s needs.
There is of course another factor to consider.
The dollar was not the world’s major currency in 1913, so the demand
to hold dollars for this reason is greater today than it was back then.
Nevertheless, it would be hard to argue that so many extra dollars per
American exist today for that reason.
In fact, there is a pernicious factor at work
here. Namely, the Federal Reserve and US banking system are creating too
many dollars. Because the quantity of dollars is growing more rapidly than
demand, the dollar’s purchasing power is being eroded in a process we
call inflation. Going back to Economics 101, if supply grows more rapidly
than demand, price falls, and purchasing power is the ‘price’
of a dollar.
The following table from the Federal Reserve
presents the current annual growth rates in M1 and M2. Both are far above
the population growth rate in the US and even the whole world.
Percent change at seasonally adjusted annual rate |
M1
|
M2
|
|
12 Months from June 2008 TO June
2009
|
18.4
|
9.0
|
These growth rates have increased the quantity of new
currency over the past year far beyond the demand for new currency needed
in commerce, and are therefore inflationary. The dollar is being
debased. The Federal Reserve is allowing the dollar’s purchasing
power to be inflated away. Own gold and/or silver to protect yourself and
your family from this ongoing erosion of what a dollar buys.
*****
James Turk is the Founder & Chairman of
GoldMoney.com <http://goldmoney.com/>. He is the
co-author of The Coming Collapse of the Dollar, which has been
updated for a newly released paperback version, now entitled The
Collapse of the Dollar <www.dollarcollapse.com>.
Copyright © 2009 by James Turk. All rights
reserved.