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I
suspect that 98% of investors – and maybe more -- have little to no
understanding of monetary history. Yet, failing to understand the past,
in this case, leaves a black hole in your ability to understand the
implications of the current tenuous condition of the U.S. dollar.
While
no one can easily imagine all the many ways the end of U.S. dollar
hegemony might affect complex and deeply intertwined global financial
markets, you can, however, better prepare for what’s coming by looking
back at just one of the many examples of a fiat currency on its way into
the trash bin of history.
The
following article by Shannara Johnson, an editor for the International
Speculator, examines the monetary roots of the French
Revolution and, in the process, provides a compelling parallel to the
current state of the U.S. dollar. Read it and pass it along.
Doug
Casey
For
years now, the editors at Casey Research have been warning—nay,
shouting from the rooftop—about the danger inherent in any fiat
currency, and especially in the modern U.S. dollar, a currency some
skeptics have called “funny money.”
There
is nothing funny, though, about the potential for trouble as today’s
purely paper dollar declines. It is trouble that has happened before,
and history is, or should be, our best teacher. But as we’ll see,
mankind seldom learns and rarely remembers enough from its mistakes.
One
of the most riveting accounts of the catastrophic effects of replacing a
gold-based or silver-based currency with paper money comes from Andrew
Dickson White (1832 – 1918), the diplomat, author and educator who
co-founded Cornell University.
In
the mid-1800s, White started to collect and analyze newspaper articles
and documents that had appeared during the French Revolution, especially
those pertaining to the Revolutionary issues of paper money. In 1912, he
published Fiat Money Inflation in France, an essay that these days, once more,
has gained a striking timeliness.
In
1789, on the eve of the French Revolution, the French government found
itself in deep trouble with heavy debt loads and chronic deficits. A
general lack of confidence in the business world had led to the decline
of investment, and the economy was stagnating.
“Statesmanlike
measures, careful watching and wise management would, doubtless, have
ere long led to a return of confidence,” writes White, “a
reappearance of money and a resumption of business; but these involved
patience and self-denial, and, thus far in human history, these are the
rarest products of political wisdom. Few nations have ever been able to
exercise these virtues; and France was not then one of these few.”
Instead,
as politicians tend to do, France’s National Assembly looked for a
shortcut to prosperity, and soon calls for the introduction of paper
money were heard. Some prudent individuals, such as then-Minister of
Finance Jacques Necker, urgently warned against it. After all, only 70
years earlier, the country had learned a tough lesson when Scottish
economist John Law had presided over a system of fiat money with ruinous
consequences.
But
Necker and his supporters were shouted down as “the pressure toward a
popular currency for universal use grew stronger and stronger.” The
plan sounded sensible: the government would confiscate the lands of the
French Church—which then owned between one-fourth and one-third of all
French real estate—and issue a total of no more than 400 million
livres in large notes of 1,000, 300 and 200 livres, called assignats,
that would be backed by a piece of land. Moreover, every note would bear
3% interest, to encourage holders to hoard them.
The
influx of fresh money would give the French treasury “something to pay
out immediately. . . relieve the national necessities. . . stimulate
business. . . [and] give to all capitalists, large or small, the means
for buying from the nation the ecclesiastical real estate.” From the
proceeds, the nation would pay its debts and obtain new funds for new
necessities—a bullet-proof proposal, or so it seemed.
At
first, the results of issuing the assignats
appeared to be a dream come true, says White: “the treasury was at
once greatly relieved; a portion of the public debt was paid; creditors
were encouraged; credit revived; ordinary expenses were met. . . trade
increased and all difficulties seemed to vanish.”
Had
the authorities stopped there, White suggests, the effects might
actually have been beneficial. Regretfully, though, “within five
months after the issue of the four hundred million in assignats,
the government had spent them and was again in distress.”
Immediately
people throughout the country started to cry for another issue of notes.
Paper critics cautioned that there’d be no stopping once the nation
had stepped onto the slippery slope of inflation, but others dismissed
the warning, saying “the people were now in control and that they
could and would check these issues whenever they desired.”
Here’s
where the disturbing parallels to modern-day America begin.
By
1790, the paper-pushers had persuaded themselves that specie [precious
metals, coins] was an outmoded form of currency… after all, what could
be better than money backed by land that would only appreciate in value?
It eerily reminds us of the U.S. housing boom and the easy,
no-holds-barred mortgage deals that have been sold to sub-prime
borrowers.
Or
take the Comte de Mirabeau, one of the greatest paper advocates and
demagogues, who at that time gave his powerful “Stay the Course”
speech, concluding “We must accomplish that which we have begun.”
Or
Pierre Paul Royer-Collard, who sounded disturbingly like Ben
“Helicopter” Bernanke when he told the National Assembly, “If it
is necessary to create five thousand millions, and more, of the paper,
decree such a creation gladly.”
It
was a done deal, and France began its slide into inflation. Soon calls
for small-denomination notes grew louder. “The cheaper currency had
largely driven out the dearer,” writes White,” paper had caused
small silver and copper money mainly to disappear; all sorts of notes of
hand, circulating under the name of ‘confidence bills,’ flooded
France—sixty-three kinds in Paris alone.”
Everything
was tried to supply small-denomination silver and copper coins and hold
them in circulation. Laws were passed that forced citizens to send their
silverware and jewels to the mint. Churches and convents had to give up
most of their silver and gold vessels, and church bells were melted down
to supply the mint with copper. Still, silver and copper grew scarcer
and scarcer—and eventually the government gave in and printed smaller
notes, starting out with five francs and finally going down to one
single sou.
When
inflationary pressure grew, says White, “there cropped up a doctrine
old and ominous. . . that all currency, whether gold, paper, leather or
any other material, derives its efficiency from the official stamp it
bears, and that, this being the case, a government may relieve itself of
its debts and make itself rich and prosperous simply by means of a
printing press: fundamentally the theory which underlay the later
American doctrine of ‘fiat money.’”
And
just like today’s Americans, who happily spend money they haven’t
yet earned, “Frenchmen now became desperate optimists, declaring that
inflation is prosperity. . . The nation was becoming inebriated with
paper money. The good feeling was that of a drunkard just after his
draught; and. . . as draughts of paper money came faster, the successive
periods of good feeling grew shorter.”
Yet
more and more signs of the coming cataclysm started to appear. Even
though the amount of paper money had increased, prosperity had faded.
Business became stagnant, and manufacturers starting laying off workers.
In one town, 5,000 workmen were discharged from the cloth factories, but
people still didn’t recognize the real cause. Exports were too cheap,
they claimed, and heavy tariffs were placed on foreign goods.
A
collapse in manufacturing and commerce was inevitable, says White,
“just as it came at various periods in [France], Austria, Russia,
America, and in all countries where men have tried to build up
prosperity on irredeemable paper.”
Faced
with the prospect of a continuing devaluation of paper money, the public
began to see saving and caution as foolish, and the naturally thrifty
French turned into a nation of gluttons and gamblers. People started to
throw their money haphazardly at the stock market and “in the country
at large there grew a dislike of steady labor and a contempt for
moderate gains and simple living.”
The
tumor, as White calls it, spread to business circles, journalism and
politics; indulgence was followed by corruption growing “as naturally
as a fungus on a muck heap.”
One
economic perversion bred the next. The Comte de Mirabeau’s previous
claims that patriotism and enlightened self-interest of the people would
maintain the value of the paper money couldn’t have been more wrong.
In fact, a vast debtor class, consisting mainly of those who had
purchased the church lands from the government, proved to have a vested
interest in the depreciation of the currency. Since only small down
payments had been required, with the balance to be paid in deferred
installments, land buyers were hoping for a devalued currency to
diminish their debt.
“Before
long, the debtor class became a powerful body extending through all
ranks of society. . . all pressed vigorously for new issues of paper. .
. apparently able to demonstrate to the people that in new issues of
paper lay the only chance for national prosperity. . . [While] every
issue of paper money made matters worse, a superstition gained ground
among the people at large that, if only enough
paper money were issued and were more cunningly handled, the poor would
be made rich. Henceforth, all opposition was futile.”
In
December of 1791, a new issue was ordered that diluted the value of the
100-livres note (whose value had already fallen to 80 livres) to 68
livres. As values fell, official rhetoric became even more adamantly
optimistic and upbeat. Newspapers, political speeches and pamphlets
proclaimed that “a depreciated currency is a blessing; that gold and
silver form an unsatisfactory standard for measuring values. . . that
commerce with other nations may be a curse, and hindrance thereto may be
a blessing. . . that the laws of political economy, however applicable
in other times, are not now so in France; that the ordinary rules of
political economy are perhaps suited to the minions of despotism but not
to the free and enlightened inhabitants of France at the close of the
eighteenth century,” and so on.
In
March 1792, after the fifth, 300-million-livre issue of paper money, the
government decided that payment to all public creditors for any amount
over 10,000 francs would be suspended. This was hailed as a boon for the
poorer classes, but the result was just the opposite. Capitalists began
to quietly withdraw their money from labor and locked it up “in all
the ways financial ingenuity could devise. All that saved thousands of
laborers. . . from starvation was that they were drafted off into the
army and sent to be killed on foreign battlefields.”
We
know from contemporary accounts that flour rose from 2 francs in 1790 to
225 francs in 1795, a pair of shoes from 5 francs to 200.
While
the prices of all products had increased enormously, wages for the
laboring classes stagnated. Paper issue followed paper issue, until the
money in circulation reached 3 billion francs in 1793… and there was
still no end in sight. Unrest in the general population grew, and more
and more working-class people called for capital punishment for price
gauging and a 400-million-franc tax on bread for the rich.
On
February 28, 1793, a mob of men and women in disguise began looting 200
stores in Paris, seizing everything they could get their hands on. Order
could only be restored by buying off the mob with a 7-million-franc
grant.
Shocked
out of their complacence, the French government implemented new measures
to raise money. One was the Forced Loan, a tax on anyone with an income
over 1,000 francs. For lower-income earners, the tax was fixed at 10%,
for everyone over 9,000 francs of income at 50%.
Another
panic measure was the Law of Maximum, consisting of four rules which,
again, supposedly served to help the working class. “First, the price
of each article of necessity was to be fixed at one and one-third its
price in 1790. Secondly, all transportation was to be added at a fixed
rate per league. Thirdly, five per cent was to be added for the profit
of the wholesaler. Fourthly, ten per cent was added for the profit of
the retailer.”
The
first result of the Maximum law was that sellers did everything to evade
the fixed price—farmers, for example, would sell as little as
possible, and so supplies became scarce, so urban citizens were put on
an allowance and could only buy limited quantities of goods. Foreign
goods, whose prices were much higher than the fixed upper limit,
couldn’t be legally sold by merchants, many of whom went out of
business. Others ended up on the guillotine for violations of the
Maximum law.
“To
detect goods concealed by farmers and shopkeepers, a spy system was
established with a reward to the informer of one-third of the value of
the goods discovered. To spread terror, the Criminal Tribunal at
Strassburg was ordered to destroy the dwelling of anyone found guilty of
selling goods above the price set by law. . . [If a farmer] tried to
hold back his crops or cattle, alleging that he could not afford to sell
them at the prices fixed by law, they were frequently taken from him by
force and he was fortunate if paid even in the depreciated fiat
money—fortunate, indeed, if he finally escaped with his life.”
Discriminating
between paper and specie in any transaction became a felony punishable
with death, as did selling gold or silver coins. At the height of this
insanity, in 1794, the Convention decreed that “the death penalty
should be inflicted on any person convicted of ‘having asked, before a
bargain was concluded, in what money payment was to be made.’” All
commerce in the precious metals was suppressed, until the “Maximum”
was abolished one year later.
The
currency nightmare ended on February 18, 1796, when under a new
government the machinery, plates and paper for printing assignats
were ceremonially broken and burned on the Place Vendome in Paris. Final
calculations determined that the overall amount of paper money in
existence was 40 billion francs. In comparison, a gold louis d’or had
climbed from a value of 920 paper francs in August 1795 to 15,000 francs
less than one year later. One franc in gold was worth 600 francs in
paper.
While
the assignats had hurt the
rich, they had absolutely devastated the working class. According to
historian Heinrich von Sybel, “Financiers and men of large means were
shrewd enough to put as much of their property as possible into objects
of permanent value. The working classes had no such foresight or skill
or means. After the first collapse came up the cries of the starving.
Roads and bridges were neglected; many manufactures were given up in
utter helplessness.”
Unbelievable…
and a great lesson for us. Interpreting and comparing the signs—the
stagnation in real wages, the public’s unfettered euphoria about the
already faltering economy, the nearly word-for-word pep talk spanning
centuries--we may be closer to the point of no return than we think.
And
don’t make the mistake to think those French politicians were morons,
warns Andrew Dickson White. “[The] men who had charge of French
finance during the Reign of Terror and who made these experiments, which
seem to us so monstrous. . . were universally recognized as among the
most skillful and honest financiers in Europe. . . [which shows] how
powerless are the most skillful masters of finance to stem the tide of
fiat money calamity when once it is fairly under headway; and how
useless are all enactments which they can devise against the underlying
laws of nature.”

© 2006 Shannara Johnson
Editor, International Speculator
Editorial Archive

www.caseyresearch.com
and www.kitcocasey.com
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