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The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS:
Given
the lack of control over how much fiat money is placed in circulation -
after all, it is based on nothing - we can only expect that the currency
will continue to lose value over time. Addison Wigging shares the grim
truth about the U.S. dollar...
The
Great Dollar Standard Era is a direct result of the removal of gold as
the underpinning of the world's currencies. The vast overprinting of
currency will inevitably debase the value of the U.S. dollar and,
because so many foreign currencies are pegged to the dollar, the
currency of those nations as well. Fiat money, simply put, is created
out of nothing. A future promise to pay has never supported monetary
value for long and the United States is so overextended today that it is
doubtful it could ever honor its overall real debts.
Counting
obligations under Medicare and Social Security, the real debt of the
United States is more than 10 times the reported national debt:
"Taking
present values as of fiscal year end 2002 and interpreting the policies
in the federal budget for fiscal year 2004 as current policies, the
federal government's total fiscal imbalance is equal to $44.2
trillion."
The
argument favoring the current fiat system is that the demand for it grew
out of barter, the need to facilitate ever-higher volumes of trade. If
this were true, there would be a reasonable expectation that a system of
paper drafts would make sense. But the reality is that fiat money has
not grown out of barter, but from the previous gold standard. Given the
lack of control over how much fiat money is placed in circulation -
after all, it is based on nothing - we can only expect that the currency
will continue to lose value over time. The model of fiat money is
supported and defended with arguments that consumption is good for the
economy, even with the use of vacant monetary systems. But there is a
problem:
"The
predictions of these models are at odds with the historical evidence.
Fiat money did not in fact evolve . . . by means of a great leap forward
from barter. Nor did fiat monies ever emerge out of thin air. Instead,
fiat monies have always developed out of some previously existing
money."
Can
we equate the problems inherent in fiat money with the effects of
inflation? We have all heard that saving for retirement today is
problematical because, by the time we retire, we will need more dollars
to pay for the things we will need. By definition, this sounds like the
consequences of inflation. But inflation is not simply higher prices; it
has another aspect, which is devalued currency. We have to pay higher
prices in the future because the currency is worth less relative to
other currencies. That is the real inflation. Higher prices are only
symptoms following the debasement of currency. If we examine why those
prices go up, we discover that the reason is not necessarily corporate
greed, inefficiency, or foreign price gouging. At the end of the day, it
is the gradual loss of purchasing power, the need for more dollars to
buy the same things. That's inflation. And fiat money is at the root of
the problem.
The
intrinsic problem with fiat money systems is how it unravels the basic
economic reality. We know that it requires work to create real wealth.
We labor and we are paid. We save and we earn interest. Government,
however, produces nothing to create wealth so it does so out of an
arbitrary system: fiat money. The problem is described well in the
following passage:
"It
takes work to create wealth. 'Dollars' are created without any work -how
much more work is involved in printing a $100 bill as compared to a $1
bill? Not only are ordinary people at home being deceived, but
foreigners who accept and save our "dollars" in exchange for
their goods and services are also being cheated."
So
are we "cheated" by the fiat money system? Under one
interpretation, we have to contend with the reality that the dollar is
not backed by anything of value. But as long as we all agree to assign
value to the dollar, and as long as foreign central banks do the same,
isn't it okay to use a fiat money system?
The
problem becomes severe when, unavoidably, the system finally collapses.
At some point, the Federal Reserve - with blessings of the Congress and
the administration - prints and places so much money into circulation
that its perceived value just evaporates. Can this happen? It has always
happened in the past when fiat money systems were put into use. We have
to wonder whether FDR was sincere when, in 1933, he declared that the
currency had adequate backing. It wasn't until the following year that
the president raised the ounce value of gold from $20.67 to $35. He
explained his own monetary policy in 1933 after declaring the
government's sole right to possess gold:
"More
liberal provision has been made for banks to borrow on these assets at
the Reserve Banks and more liberal provision has also been made for
issuing currency on the security of those good assets. This currency is
not fiat currency. It is issued on adequate security, and every good
bank has an abundance of such security."
It
was the plan of the day. First, the law required that all citizens turn
over their gold to the government. Second, the value of that gold was
raised nearly 70 percent to $35 per ounce (after collecting it from the
people, of course). Third, the president declared that currency printing
was being liberalized - but it is backed by gold, so it's not a fiat
system. This may have been true in 1933, but since then - having removed
ourselves from the gold standard - the presses are printing money late
into the night. The gold standard has been long forgotten in Congress,
the Federal Reserve, and the executive branch.
It
may be the view of some people that a perfect monetary system may
include changes in value based on purchasing power and on the demand for
money itself. Thus, rich nations would become richer and control the
cost of goods, while poor nations would remain poor. In spite of the
best efforts under the Bretton Woods Agreement, it has proven impossible
to simply let money find its own level of value. Unlike stocks and real
estate, the free market does not work well with monetary value because
each country has its own selfinterests. Furthermore, today's post-Bretton
Woods monetary system has no method available to prevent or mitigate
trade imbalances. Thus, trade surplus versus deficit continues to expand
out of control. The United States ended up accumulating current account
deficits totaling more than $3 trillion between 1980 and 2000.This
perverse twist on world money has had a strange effect:
"These
deficits have acted as an economic subsidy to the rest of the world, but
they have also flooded the world with dollars, which have replaced gold
as the new international reserve asset. These deficits have, in effect,
become the font of a new global money supply."
This
is what occurs when international money supplies become unregulated. We
need a firmly controlled world banking system if only to stop the
unending printing of money. If, indeed, U.S. deficits continue as a form
of subsidy to the rest of the world, that can only lead to a worldwide
economic collapse like the one seen in the 1920s and 1930s.
If
it were possible to create a controlled international monetary unit, its
effectiveness would demand ongoing regulation to prevent the disparities
between nations with varying resources and reserves. Ludwig von Mises
wrote that:
"The
idea of a money with an exchange value that is not subject to variations
due to changes in the ratio between the supply of money and the need for
it . . . demands the intervention of a regulatory authority in the
determination of the value of money; and its continued
intervention."
Mises
concluded that this need for intervention was itself a problem. It is
unlikely that any government would be trustworthy enough to property
ensure a fair valuation of money, were it left up to them; instead,
governments are more likely than not to fall into the common fiat trap.
Without limitations on how much money can be printed, it is human and
governmental nature to print as much as possible. Mises observed that
fiat money leads to monetary policy designed to achieve political aims.
Mises:
"The
state should at least refrain from exerting any sort of influence on the
value of money. A metallic money, the augmentation or diminution of the
quantity of metal available which is independent of deliberate human
intervention, is becoming the modern monetary ideal."
To
an extent, the enactment of a fiat money system is likely either to be
politically motivated or to soon become a political tool in the hands of
government. We have to see how government attempts to influence economic
health through a variety of means and in tandem with Federal Reserve
policy: raising and lowering interest rates, enacting tax incentives for
certain groups, legislating tax cuts or tax increases, and imposing or
reducing trade restrictions or tariffs. All of these moves invariably
have a pro and con argued politically rather than economically. The
argument in modern-day U.S. politics is between Republican desires to
reduce taxes as a means of stimulating growth versus Democratic views
that we cannot afford tax cuts and such cuts are given to favored
upper-income taxpayers. The arguments are complex and endless, but they
are not just political tools; they are part of overall monetary and
economic policy trends as well.
This
has become our modern entry in the history of money. The belief on the
part of government, rooted in an arrogant thinking that power extends
even to the valuation of goods and services and monetary exchange, has
led to a monetary policy that makes utterly no sense in historical
perspective. Having gone over entirely to a fiat standard, government
has chosen to ignore history and those market forces that ultimately
decide the question of valuation, in spite of anything government does.
This has always been true, as Jeffrey M. Herbener observed:
"The
use of the precious metals was historically the choice of the market.
Without interference from governments, traders adopted the parallel
standard using gold and silver as money."
If
monetary policy were left alone and allowed to function in the free
market, what would happen? Perhaps governments ultimately do follow the
market by adopting the gold standard, as we have seen repeatedly in
history: going on the gold standard, moving to fiat money, experiencing
a debasement, and then returning to the gold standard. Herbener
continued by observing,
"The
fly in the ointment of the classical gold standard was precisely that
since it was created and maintained by governments, it could be
abandoned and destroyed by them. As the ideological tide turned against
laissez-faire in favor of statism, governments intent upon expanding the
scope of their interference in and control of the market economy found
it necessary to eliminate the gold standard."
Today,
we live with that legacy. While historians marvel at the "end of
history" and the triumph of free market economics, the Fed
maintains "price controls" on the very symbol of economic
freedom - the U.S. dollar itself.
Regards,
Addison
Wiggin
The Daily Reckoning

© 2005 Addison Wiggin
The
Daily Reckoning Archives
www.dailyreckoning.com
Editor's
Note: Addison Wiggin is the editorial director and publisher of The
Daily Reckoning.
Mr. Wiggin is also the author, with Bill Bonner, of the international
bestseller "Financial Reckoning Day" and the upcoming thriller
"Empire of Debt." Mr. Wiggin is frequent guest on national
radio and television programs. The above essay was taken from Mr.
Wiggin's newly-released book, The
Demise of the Dollar...and Why It's Great for Your Investments.
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