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Gulliver
in the land of the mad scientists
Jonathan
Swift described the strange island of Balnibarbi and its capital
city Lagado, governed by a committee of mad scientists, in his
satire Gulliver’s Travels. The Grand Academy of Lagado,
the citadel of arts and sciences, was more advanced than
anything Gulliver had ever seen. Thousands of scientists were
engaged in hundreds of research projects believed to bring great
benefits to the island nation. In one studio a painter employed
blind helpers for the task of blending paints by smelling and
tasting them. In this manner the olfactory and gustatory
faculties could take their proper place in defining the spectrum
of colors, a place long usurped by the faculty of vision. There
was a studio where an ingenious architect was perfecting a new
method to build human abodes from top to bottom. This was said
to be justified by the kindred practice of those prudent
insects, the bees and spiders.
What
puzzled Gulliver most was an invention that the Balnibarbians
hailed as the “floating system of timekeeping”. The
inventor, the island’s greatest astronomer, replaced the rigid
hand of the sundial by a flexible one, and attached it to the
Great Weather Cock of Lagado’s town hall. In this manner the
annual and diurnial movements of the Sun could be properly
modulated by local conditions such as the twists and turns of
the wind. The government was so impressed with the new
timepiece, and still more with the fine research behind it, that
it made the use of floating mandatory throughout the land.
Reactionaries opposed the measure calling the new timepiece
capricious and misleading. They argued that you cannot keep
regular time by an irregular timepiece. But these people were
roundly denounced as conservative belly-achers with a visceral
contempt for progress. The great astronomer took pains to
convince the incredulous Gulliver that floating was light-years
ahead of that “barbarous relic”, the rigidly fixed standard
of time‑keeping.
“The
main excellence of floating is in its ready adaptability to
changing conditions”, he said. “The importance of this
innovation is not to be seen in the role it assigns to the wind
in time-keeping, but in the newly-found freedom of mankind in
guiding its own destiny”, he added. “We can now appoint
competent managers who will direct an array of fans towards the
weather-cock whenever stretching or shrinking time is deemed to
be in the national interest by the government”.
He
also explained that workers would strenuously object to
lengthening the working day from 8 to 9 hours. “Naturally, we
want to please them, so we shall shorten their working day from
8 to 7 hours. Their unions are too dumb to realize that each
work‑hour has been stretched by one-quarter through
floating.”
The
great man concluded: “There is nothing more absurd than trying
to make local time synchronous with global time. We have
learned, at great cost to us, that our complex world can brook
neither simplistic explanations nor rigid standards.”
The
integrity of standards
Absurd
though the idea of throwing the unit of time-keeping to the
winds might be, something equally absurd did indeed happen to
the unit measuring values. In 1971 the government of the United
States threw the international monetary unit to the winds, and
embraced the regime of floating exchange rates. It solemnly
declared that the old unit was obsolete, rigid, as well as
reactionary. Above all, it was irrational as it denied the
advantages of rational management of the dollar. At the long
last, the government was now in a position to assume full power
in the discharge of its sacred duty unfettered by petty
superstition, namely, managing the currency in the national
interest.
Please
note that this is not fantasy taken from Gulliver’s Travels;
this is history. The essence of floating is the denial of
standards. The folly of the exercise can be seen in its true
colors if we consider that Western Civilization was built upon
the foundation of integrity of standards. By the same token,
civilization is endangered if that foundation is allowed to
decay. In an earlier less enlightened age the unit of linear
measure, the foot, was adjusted every time the king died, in
order to match its length to the foot of the newly anointed
king. If he happened to be an infant, woe to the consumers and
cheers to the producers of lace and fabric. The former just had
to absorb the losses concomitant with the shrinkage of the foot,
while the latter enjoyed an undeserved windfall. Later more
enlightened monarchs stabilized the length of the foot thereby
promoting trade and strengthening contract law. Modern
technology is unthinkable without a rigidly fixed standard of
weights and measures. What would happen to safety of travel on
land, sea, and air, if tolerance standards could be compromised
in response to political pressures? Efficiency of production is
unthinkable without rigidly fixed standards. What would happen
to industry and agriculture if the length of the meter and the
weight of the gram were made subject to manipulation by the
government? What would the effect on world trade be if the
bushel and the barrel, units of measurement whereby grain and
crude oil are bought and sold, were made subject to floating?
Fixity
is the most basic characteristic of any good standard. We pride
ourselves on being more scientific in defining units of
measurement than were our predecessors. We have refined the
definition of the meter several times. Originally intended to be
one ten-millionth of the length of a meridian from the pole to
the equator, the meter was later redefined as the distance
between two marks on a platinum-iridium bar kept in Paris. The
reason for the change was that the original definition proved to
be too imprecise for measurements calling for greater accuracy.
The choice of the material of the bar was guided by
considerations that the alloy used was less prone to changes in
response to heat influencing length than other substances known
to man, and therefore less open to manipulation. The length of
the meter was redefined again in terms of the wave-length in
vacuo of the orange radiation of the krypton 86 atom. The
purpose of this change was to make the unit more accurate, not
less. Since 1983 the meter is defined in yet another way. The
International Bureau of Weights and Measures in Sèvres, France,
keeper by treaty of the world’s standard units of measurement,
has decreed that the meter is the distance that light travels
through vacuum in 1/299,792,458 of a second. The increased
degree of precision matters. If astronomers treated a meter as
most Americans do (“y’ know, ‘bout a yard”), the
resulting inaccuracy would be prodigious. Just between Earth and
Mars you would get an error in measurement four million miles
long.
If
draught depleted the water reservoir of Madrid by one half, the
quickest way of restoring volume would be to cut the size of the
unit of cubic measure by one half. Demagogues would advocate
this course of action arguing that in this way anxiety of
city-dwellers about water shortages would be assuaged. Yet we
would resist the temptation to follow their advice as it would
do nothing to restore water level in the reservoir. Worse still,
it might encourage further waste in the use of water just at the
time when greater economy would be the wisest course of action.
Exactly
the same logic dictates that the government should ignore
demagogues and refrain from tampering with the monetary standard
in cutting the size of the unit of value at a time when wealth
is being dissipated as a result of waste and collapse of
savings. Such a foolish course of action would encourage further
waste and profligacy just at the time when greater economy and
higher rate of savings is called for. Here, however, demagogy
gains the upper hand. As profligacy depletes the reservoir of
wealth in the country, guardians of the Treasury and the central
bank find it expedient to reduce the unit of value in an effort
to conceal the disappearance of wealth and the drying up of
savings, while masking the dire consequences of extravagance.
The amazing thing is that we meekly accept such official
tampering with the monetary unit, even though we would reject
similar tampering with linear and cubic measures. The
explanation of this peculiar inconsistency cannot be compressed
sufficiently for presentation here. As if struck with some sort
of mass madness, academia and the media are parroting the
official propaganda line to the effect that a country with
falling value of the monetary unit is better off than the
country with a stable one. Consequently the worst currency is
the best, and the best currency is the worst. Should this
perversity lead to even greater imbalances, waste, and
destruction of wealth, then remedy is sought in more of the
same: further devaluation of the monetary unit, never in its
stabilization. The profligate country is digging itself ever
deeper in the hole. Governments in their wild intoxication with
this idiocy have never settled down to face the logical
consequences of their position. If a debased currency is better
for the nation than one based on a fixed monetary standard, then
the best currency of all would be the one having no value at
all, and that country would gain most in trade which simply gave
away its goods and services in exchange for nothing.
A
milestone in the history of money
1971
was a milestone in the history of money. Previously in the
world’s most advanced countries money and credit had been tied
to a positive value, that of a well-defined quantity of a good
of well-defined quality. In 1971 this tie was severed, the fixed
unit of value discarded and replaced by a variable one. Today
the value of currencies is no longer tied to a positive value;
it is now defined in terms of negative values, the value of debt
instruments. Through this stratagem governments have quietly
seized the most pervasive power over the lives of their
citizens: the power of disposal over their savings, and the
right of first refusal to the fruits of their labor.
The
innovation of linking the currency to negative rather than
positive values had one immediate consequence, seldom recognized
and studiously ignored in the technical and scholarly literature
on the subject. The power to reduce total debt in the world
through the process of orderly retirement has been lost.
Henceforth total indebtedness could only be reduced either
through default or through monetary debasement. As the tide of
unpaid and unpayable debt grows, so ebbs the value of the
monetary unit. This must ultimately spell disaster: the collapse
in the value of the monetary unit, inflicting great economic
pain and distress on the people.
That
we have lost the facility of reducing total indebtedness short
of default or monetary debasement can be demonstrated with
absolute clarity through the example of the dollar. A debt of
one dollar can no longer be extinguished. If it is paid by a
check (or a Federal Reserve note) drawn on a (Federal Reserve)
bank, the debt is merely transferred from one debtor to another:
the liability of the bank has been increased by one dollar. The
situation is no better if the debt is paid in coin. The coins of
the United States have no intrinsic value. They are mere tokens
and as such they, too, represent debt. When paid in coin, a debt
of one dollar becomes the liability of the U. S. Treasury
itself. It should be clear that substituting one debtor for
another is not the same as extinguishing debt.
What
we are facing here is an elaborate scheme to cover up default
and making mockery of the full faith and credit of the United
States. Since the 1971 repudiation the Treasury has not paid any
part of its debt in any meaningful sense of the word. Instead it
keeps piling new debt upon unpaid debt by juggling
interest-paying and non-interest-paying debt instruments. When
old debt matures, the Treasury simply replaces it with new,
usually on inferior terms. Interest-paying debt is replaced by
non-interest-paying debt. In particular, for the first time in
history, the U.S. Treasury arrogates itself the power to sell
debt to foreign creditors without assuming any responsibility
for its redemption. It is issuing liabilities to foreigners
which it has neither the intention nor the means to honor. This
is a particularly dangerous confidence game, since foreigners
are not subject to the jurisdiction of the United States and
cannot be taxed as residents can. Foreign creditors are in
better position to refuse to be victimized by the
prestidigitation that consists in debt-retirement by paying out
certificates of “IOU nothing”. If and when they stop buying
U.S. government debt, as at one point they most assuredly will,
the Ponzi-scheme will come to a halt and a world crisis will
ensue. “Dollarization” of the world economy is the next
step. Treasury officials aim at promoting the dollar abroad as
the ultimate extinguisher of debt. However, this is no more
possible than turning stone into bread. In the absence of
coercive legal tender provisions foreign creditors cannot be
forced to accept the irredeemable dollar in repayment of debt.
Ever
since the make-believe arrangement for retiring debt by paying
irredeemable dollars to foreigners was introduced in 1971, the
United States has been running persistent trade deficits with
the rest of the world. This is entirely natural and there is no
need to look further for causes and explanations. It is a safe
bet that these deficits will continue unabated and the foreign
indebtedness of the United States will increase exponentially.
The very notion of “debt maturity” has lost all reasonable
meaning previously attached to it. At maturity, creditors are
coerced into extending their original credit plus accrued
interest, in the form of new credits (possibly to another
debtor).
Disenfranchisement
and exploitation
It
is true that, for the time being, the creditor has the
option to consume his savings at the time the debt matures. But
is it not a strange monetary system, to say the least, which
forces savers to consume their savings whenever they are not
satisfied with the quality of available debt instruments, or
with the terms on which they are offered? More to the point:
what is the guarantee that creditors will always have that
option? Of course, there is no such guarantee. The option is
available as long as only a handful of the creditors exercise
it. Should their number increase, the option will fast lose its
value, and if the rest of creditors get scared and try to
exercise their option simultaneously, the music stops and
the game of musical chairs will come to a screechy halt.
Creditors of the United States will be holding the bag.
To
put it differently, creditors and savers are presently being
lulled into believing that their savings exists somewhere, in
one form or another, and will be available when they need it. In
truth, these savings exist only as the irredeemable promise of a
government that has defaulted on its promises to pay as
contracted twice in a generation. For the time being, doubting
savers are allowed to cash in and consume their savings. But
when a sufficiently large number of claimants try to assert
their claims simultaneously, the ugly truth will dawn upon the
world. The drying up of savings in the United States is a
natural phenomenon. It means that savers are not as stupid as
the government would like them to be.
The
international monetary system has been turned into a system of
massive disenfranchisement, exploiting the world’s saving
public, the ultimate providers of credit. The power of control
over savings is being usurped by the U.S. Treasury. This is also
a system of depriving the world’s producers of the uninhibited
right of disposal of their products. As they are forced to grant
first refusal to the issuer of irredeemable promises to pay,
producers are disabled in the exercise of the right of free
disposal of the fruits of their labor. The two pillars of world
prosperity, savers and producers, are thus placed under
permanent duress.
It
is not possible to defend these arrangements as a paternalistic
system benevolently guiding the destiny of the world in the best
interest of the people. It is these same arrangements that
expose the people to the threat of untold sufferings at the end
of the road. The coercive nature of the regime of irredeemable
currency is fully commensurate with the coerciveness of similar
systems, long since discarded by history: slavery and serfdom.
To the extent that coercion and bondage today is covert,
whereas they were overtly admitted and practiced under
slavery and serfdom, the present regime is even more odious than
its historic forerunners. The consensus it represents is akin to
that of the drug addict and his pusher. By playing off
people’s propensity to consume against their propensity to
save, and by promoting instant gratification, the regime of
irredeemable currency makes people addicted to compulsive
consumption in exchange for their acquiescence in coercion and
pilferage.
Sweet
dreams, rude awakening
Dire
predictions were made in 1971 about the future of the
irredeemable dollar. It was predicted by many that its value
would collapse and all paper currencies would become worthless
in a matter of a few years. Events unfolded differently. After
the international monetary system adopted dollar-debt as the
standard of value, quite predictably, a fast-breeder of debt
started operating in earnest. Theoretically, total dollar-debt
must increase at least at the same rate as the dollar rate of
interest, in order to make debt service possible. In practice,
total debt has been increasing much faster than that. Rising
commodity prices forced an increase in the stock of money, and
the increase in the stock of money gave occasion to further
price increases. A vicious circle has been engaged which is
reflected in the increase of total dollar-debt. The propaganda
machinery of the government, the media, and academia shifted
responsibility for the price-explosion to the oil-sheiks and to
the “gnomes of Zurich”. It was considered impolite to
suggest that the cause could, perhaps, be found in the flooding
of the world with unwanted dollars. It was considered a sign of
paranoia if anyone questioned the wisdom or legitimacy of tying
money to negative values, the value of debt.
There
were other consequences, too. The interest-rate structure in the
world was destabilized, reflecting unprecedented volatility in
the bond market. This was also explained away using ad hoc
arguments such as crop failure and other natural disasters. Once
more, the international monetary system escaped scrutiny, and
the dollarization of the world economy could continue apace,
putting ever more creditors as vassals into permanent bondage to
the United States.
By
1981 it was the turn of other currencies to decline in value.
Thereby the dollar regained a semblance of stability. An optical
illusion was created that the dollar was “strong” again,
even though it continued losing value in absolute terms. But a
dollar appreciating in relative terms was poison in the
international monetary system. It made the servicing and the
repayment of the dollar-debt well-nigh impossible for
foreigners. A debt-crisis engulfed the world. In 1985
governments declared that a “strong” dollar was against
public policy. The value of the dollar had to be clubbed down.
Thus, then, a monetary cycle has evolved: the dollar went from
weak to strong, and from strong to weak again. It appeared that
the value of the dollar was subject to a cyclical pattern, ergo,
its fall meant no threat as it was bound to be followed by a
rise soon enough to correct it. In reality, however, all
currencies were falling in absolute terms, albeit at a variable
rate.
The
crisis of the international monetary system is concealed under a
thin veneer of prosperity. The world is consuming more. A wealth
of new products is brought to the market year after year. The
world’s stock markets have, after being overrun by the tide of
newly created dollars, soared to unprecedented heights. People
are lulled into a false sense of security. They don’t
understand or care what is happening to the value of their
currency and savings. They act as if they have arrived to the
land of Cockaigne where more consumption and less saving combine
to bring greater prosperity.
The
rude awakening in Japan did not disturb sweet dreams elsewhere.
Yet it should be clear that the world economy is a big life-boat
which, if leaking water in one corner, will endanger the lives
of all occupants regardless where they may be seated. The
original doomsday scenario of a dollar losing its purchasing
power in one fell swoop has not materialized. The world goes on
merrily constructing the Debt Tower of Babel, unmindful of the
consequences. But the wise should guard themselves against
concluding that the narrow escape of disaster has brought
security. The debt crisis is far from over; in fact, it is more
threatening than ever. Once the dollar has been destabilized,
the path of least resistance is downhill. The roller-coaster
ride should not conceal the fact that, when it comes to a stop,
it will be at the bottom, rather than the top. All in all, the
wild and mindless experimentation with debt money has been an
unmitigated disaster, the full extent of which remains to be
seen.
The
wisdom of redeemability
Throughout
the long and sometimes painful evolution of civilization, coined
money has always been linked to a metallic monetary standard,
and paper currency has always been made redeemable in coin made
of the standard metal. To be sure, sporadic experiments with
irredeemable currency have occurred but, in every instance
without exception, these experiments ended in a humiliating
fiasco. Ultimately, sanity and monetary rectitude always
prevailed as the deviant currency was made redeemable. Self-styled
experts ridicule the requirement that debt be made redeemable in
the monetary metal as hopelessly antediluvian. But the
requirement to make currency and debt redeemable was not the
outcome of backwardness, ignorance, or superstition on the part
of our grandfathers. On the contrary, it reflected great
practical wisdom as well as the spirit of freedom. It showed a
deep understanding that debt was an indispensable pillar of
civilization which, if abused, could cause its collapse.
The
great creative role of debt is found in the fact it makes human
enterprise possible, irrespective of the accident of birth. In
this sense, debt is an agent of freedom. But it must also
be well-understood that debt is a double-edged sword. If used
improperly, it could do more harm than good. When allowed to
accumulate, debt could become an instrument of enslavement. In
this sense, debt is also an agent of bondage. For this
reason debt ought to be handled with utmost circumspection, and
its orderly retirement ought to be promoted by every available
means. Only if extinguishing debt was within the power of every
individual of character and industry could debt bring its great
blessings to mankind. Conversely, if extinguishing it proved to
be difficult or impossible, then debt would become a great curse
to society. Inevitably, debt would become an enemy of freedom
and an instrument of bondage.
I
have already discussed why irredeemable currency makes the
reduction of total debt impossible, and how it leads to the
snow-balling of debt, a process that is bound to end in a
disaster. By contrast, under the regime of a gold standard, debt
is reined back and men of character and industry may greatly
benefit from it without facing the danger of permanent bondage.
It is not surprising that enemies of freedom are inevitably
enemies of redeemable currency. It was not an accident of
history that the very first act of both the Soviet Bolshevik and
the Nazi Socialist governments was the abolition of redeemable
currency and the imposition of the most severe foreign exchange
controls.
“Take
the current when it serves, or lose our ventures”
In
1971 the largest holders of dollar balances abroad were the
members of the European Economic Community (EEC). A large part
of the savings of the prosperous burghers in Europe was invested
in dollar‑denominated debt. When the U.S. government
refused to honor its promise to pay its debt in gold as
contracted and in doing so it defaulted on its obligations to
overseas creditors, the central banks of the EEC countries were
hit with huge losses, the size of which was unprecedented in the
annals of international finance.
Determined
that they will not be victimized again in this fashion, the EEC
countries decided to create a new international currency of
their own, the euro. On January 1, 1999, outstanding debt in
most of the EEC countries was converted at a fixed rate into
euro-debt. It was hoped that the new currency would be based on
a thorough and careful analysis of the dollar-debâcle. Indeed,
there was much to be learned from the ill-starred experiment
with the fast-breeder of dollar-debt which has saddled the world
with mountains of unpaid and unpayable debt.
As
reflected by the volatility of the interest-rate structure, the
value of debt has been destabilized and was subject to
unprecedented fluctuations. In consequence, the seeds of
deflation have been spread in the world. It is already consuming
the economic vitality of Japan, and sapping the energy of other
countries in Asia and Latin America. A low and falling
interest-rate structure is no less dangerous than a high and
rising one. One sucks businesses into bankruptcy just as readily
as the other. There is no way to assert with any degree of
certainty whether the deflationary or the inflationary danger is
greater, as the pendulum is swinging from extreme high to
extreme low interest rates. In spite of the deflationary threat,
the specter of an inflationary collapse has not disappeared. It
is still very much alive. The world’s hunger for dollar-debt
could reach the saturation point at any time without prior
notice (those old enough may recall that this saturation point
was once reached in 1974 already). If and when the demand for
dollars dries up, the debt-markets will be thrown into a
tailspin. This explains why the Year of the Euro has been hailed
as a great historical opportunity:
There is a tide in the affairs of men
Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune;
Omitted, all the voyage of their life
Is bound in shallows and in miseries.
On such a full sea are we now afloat,
And we must take the current when it serves,
Or lose our ventures.
(Shakespeare, Julius Caesar, 4-iii-217.)
Have
the EEC countries taken the current when it serves? If they
have, they could rid the world of the servitude of bad debt.
They could disengage the fast breeder of debt sprung upon the
world by the United States in 1971. They could enable people of
character and industry to free themselves of bondage. In order
to bring these great benefits the euro, unlike the dollar, is
supposed to be defined in terms of positive rather than negative
values.
Robin
Hood money in the reverse
That
did not happen. The tide was missed, and a great historic
opportunity to deliver the world from evil has been lost. The
voyage of people’s life is now bound in shallows and in
miseries. The euro that has been introduced is just another
irredeemable currency, designed to entrench the Moloch of debt.
It contributes nothing to the stability of the international
monetary system. It merely replaces one kind of bondage with
another. Authors of the euro expect that the new currency will
be as strong as the German mark used to be. They forget that no
chain is ever stronger than its weakest link. They hope that
people will be more confident to lend and borrow euros than
dollars. Given the fact that the euro is not tainted with
repudiation, defaults, broken promises, bad faith, monetary
mischief and duplicity as is the dollar, they are confident that
they are making a positive contribution to the world economy.
Regrettably,
this is not so. “The mountain has gone into labor and gave
birth to a mouse”. The euro, another “Esperanto” currency,
was conceived in sin. It is grounded in the belief that it is
possible to fool all the people all of the time. It is trying to
perpetuate the myth that a durable international monetary system
can be constructed on the foundation of irredeemable promises.
The euro, in competition with the dollar, may succeed in
plundering the savers and pilfering the producers. It is not
Robin Hood money. It is Robin Hood money in the reverse.
Previous
historical experiments with irredeemable promises to pay had
been local and temporary. It was the refuge of weak governments
living in monetary backwater. Whenever they exhausted their
credit lines, they defaulted on their promises to pay and
declared their dishonored paper “money”. These episodes,
designed to cover up the fact of repudiation, were ephemeral.
Other countries with self-respecting governments refused to
listen to the siren-song. They continued to deal with their
creditors honorably. They paid their debt according to the terms
of contract, that is, surrendering positive values at maturity.
Wayward countries would feel obliged to return to the fold
sooner or later, resuming redemption of their outstanding debt.
The
euro represents a new adventure in bad faith. Its authors were
promising emancipation from dollar-slavery. What they gave the
citizens of EEC and the world instead is a choice between
euro-debt slavery and dollar-debt slavery. We are treated to the
spectacle of some of the richest countries offering competition
to the United States in flooding the world with make-believe
currency. They issue obligations that they have neither the
intention nor the resources to pay. They cover up the deceit by
maintaining that their irredeemable promise to pay is
“money”, the ultimate means of payment. They are coercing
their domestic and foreign creditors, producers and savers, into
accepting the irredeemable euro in final payment of debt.
The
extent of corruption is clearly shown by the fact that there is
not one court of law in Euroland with sufficient wisdom and
moral fiber to challenge this fraud making mockery of
debt-retirement. Nor is there a university in Euroland with
sufficient courage to establish the fact that the practice of
issuing irredeemable promises to pay fully exhausts the
definition of the crime commonly called fraud, regardless
whether it is committed by an individual, by a government, or by
a group of governments. Even those members of the EEC that
declined to join the euro-scheme, namely the United Kingdom,
Sweden, and Denmark, are guilty of deceit. They have failed to
criticize the euro on grounds that its issuance violates the
principles of common decency. They have failed to point out that
the euro is a prescription for the pauperization of people at
home and abroad through deliberate currency debasement.
Authorship
of the policy of deliberate currency debasement
The
three decades since 1971 is not a great length of time when
measured in historical terms. But it is sufficiently long to
warrant an examination of the deliberate policy of
disenfranchisement and exploitation, the experiment with
irredeemable currency in the light of its practical
consequences. Has this policy served the people well? Or,
perhaps, the negative results of the experiment justify a more
careful examination of the principles involved than hitherto
carried out? The question is not raised, and the euro-scheme is
launched without the slightest attempt at soul-searching in this
regard. A great deal of obfuscation surrounds the issue.
Officialdom has declared the topic off limits to scholarship and
research. Anyone who dares to question the legitimacy of
irredeemable currency, anyone who dares to challenge the
official tenet that the paper monetary standard represents
“progress” over “obsolete” metallic standards, is
browbeaten and subjected to ostracism. Professional standing in
the monetary field is reserved for those sycophants who pay lip
service to official propaganda, to the dogma that metallic
monetary standards “have been swept away by the progressive
forces of history” and any effort to restore them is
tantamount to trying to turn the clock back.
Let
us bypass the question whether standards of honesty and upright
dealing can ever become “obsolete”. Let us refrain from
asking why the surrender of positive rather than negative values
in discharge of obligations has become antediluvian just at the
time when the United States was ready to default on its debt.
Let us disregard the question what is the justification for
double standards of justice allowing the United States and the
EEC to issue promises to pay that they have neither the
intention nor the means to honor, while the same conduct would
constitute criminal fraud if committed by private parties.
Instead, let us examine who the original authors and apostles of
the “progressive” monetary system involving irredeemable
currency were, and what their original intention was in
proposing the disenfranchisement of the saving and producing
public.
The
euro is a leap towards the realization of the aims of The
Communist Manifesto. In 1848 Marx and Engels published this
document describing their design for a step-by-step
transformation of the system of production based on free and
voluntary cooperation into a command economy. The proletarians
should “win the battle of democracy” and thus raise
themselves to the position of ruling class. Then they should use
their supremacy to wrest, by degrees, all capital from the
bourgeoisie. Marx and Engels gave detailed instructions for the
measures to be adopted, including the centralization of credit
and the issuance of legal tender banknotes. They were fully
aware that the measures recommended were destructive to social
cooperation in the extreme. They meant, in their own words,
“despotic inroads on property-rights and on the conditions of
capitalistic production”, moreover, they were “measures
economically insufficient and untenable but which, in the course
of the movement would outstrip themselves, necessitating further
inroads upon the old social order, and are unavoidable as a
means of entirely revolutionizing the mode of production”.
Undoubtedly, the blueprint for the irredeemable dollar and euro
were copied straight out of the Communist Manifesto.
It
is noteworthy that the adoption of the monetary provisions of
the Communist Manifesto in 1971 and 1999 was not received by
public outcry and protest, nor was it resisted in any
significant way by the people as, for example, the abolition of
the freedom of press and assembly could have been. This lack of
interest finds its explanation in the simple fact that the
public still does not understand, even after the miserable
record of the dollar during the past thirty years in losing
nine-tenth of its purchasing power, that we are facing a
gigantic scheme of embezzlement of savings. It also shows the
extent of decay and corruption in the media and academia. Those
not in thrall to the Communist Manifesto have been muzzled
through bribes, blackmail, and other administrative measures.
Their voices are not heard, so their arguments can safely be
ignored. In the words of John Maynard Keynes (written before he
joined the forces of destruction):
Lenin
is said to have declared that the best way to destroy the
capitalist system was to debauch the currency. By a continuing
process of inflation governments can confiscate, secretly and
unobserved, an important part of the wealth of their citizens.
By this method they not only confiscate, but they confiscate arbitrarily
and, while the process impoverishes many, it enriches some. The
sight of this arbitrary arrangement of riches strikes not only
at security, but at confidence in the equity of distribution of
wealth.
Lenin was certainly right. There is no subtler, no surer
means of overthrowing the existing order of society than
debauching the currency. The process engages all the hidden
forces of economic law on the side of destruction, and does it
in a manner which not one man in a million is able to diagnose. (Economic
Consequences of the Peace, New York, 1920, pp 235.)
“Timeo
Danaos et dona ferentes”
The
introduction of the euro must be considered as a victory for
communism. It is an intriguing question to contemplate whether,
in the final analysis, the 1991 defeat of communism will
turn out to be less important than its 1999 victory. More
intriguing still is the question whether or not both events are
an organic part of the same grand strategy. Communism had only
defeats to chalk up in every open contest. Its successes were
confined exclusively to the field of clandestine operations and
conspiracy. A hopeless bungler of construction, communism
is a brilliant master of destruction. We may safely
assume that this verdict of history was not entirely lost upon
the the communist leadership that by 1991 was ready to cut its
losses. If it felt forced to abandon enterprises where
constructive skills were indispensable, by the same token, it
must have felt encouraged to retain or even expand projects in
the execution of which its expertise was unsurpassed. The
Bolshevik leadership may have been eager to imitate deceit
employed by the ancient Greeks. After laying siege to the city
of Troy for ten years in vain, the Greeks decided that where
brute force fails, cunning may go a long way. They pretended to
give up their plan to destroy Troy and sailed away in their
ships. But they left behind what has come to be known the Trojan
Horse, with Greeks in its belly armed to the teeth. In vain did
the high priest of Troy, Laocoon, warn his compatriots: “timeo
Danaos et dona ferentes” (I still fear the Greeks, the more so
as they are bringing gifts). The jubilant people of Troy dragged
the horse inside of the walls of their city to celebrate what
they thought was their victory. But after nightfall the armed
Greek soldiers climbed out of the Trojan Horse and murdered the
city-dwellers, tired of celebration, in their sleep.
The
Bolsheviks ended the siege of Western Europe in 1991, pretending
to give up their almost 75-year experimentation with command
economy. However, they left behind the Trojan Horse in the form
of Lenin’s monetary legacy. By 1999 the Trojan Horse was
firmly implanted in the inner sanctum of the citadel of Western
Europe, in the form of the newly created euro.
It
is naive to suppose that the Bolshevik leadership accepted
defeat and gave up their consummate passion of world-domination
without a fight in 1991. It is more likely that they considered
that Western Europe was fully capable of destroying the basis of
its own prosperity. In discarding the principle of pacta sunt
servanda (contracts are made to be honored), it would let
the constitutional order be subverted. All the Bolshevik leaders
would have to do now is to sit back and watch the drama as it
unfolds. In the fullness of time the Trojan Horse will
regurgitate the contents of its entrails. In fulfillment of
Lenin’s prophecy the debauchery of the currency will
eventually overturn the existing basis of society. Western
Europe, softened up by currency debasement would fall, like a
ripe apple, into the lap of Communism, just as Germany did fall
into the lap of Nazi Socialism, after it had similarly been
softened by currency debasement. The Bolsheviks must be superbly
confident that, with the economic resources of Western Europe at
their disposal, they will succeed where their predecessors have
failed.
It
is a cruel joke to suggest that “Capitalism is burying
Communism”, and that “the philosophical tenor of our time is
democracy and the free market, to the exclusion of
totalitarianism and the command economy”, unless the world is
willing to dump not just Lenin’s statues, but Lenin’s
monetary legacy as well, in order to emancipate the savers and
the producers of the world from their present servitude.
Double-entry
book-keeping and the euro
In
order to assess the future prospects of the euro we have to
reach back to basic principles. It is not good enough to present
ad hominem arguments to the effect that the world is
facing a monetary collapse as politicians and bankers, freed
from the fetters of the gold standard, could not resist the
temptation and would enrich themselves through monetary
manipulation. We must have a scientific argument that would
apply even if politicians and bankers were saints imbued with
altruism.
I
shall argue that the euro does indeed face an eventual collapse
because its authors have recklessly ignored the basic principles
of double-entry book-keeping. The euro is designed to confuse
the concepts of liability and asset. It is true that the dollar
also operates the same way, however, it was not so designed at
inception. The collapse of the euro may take the form of an
implosion of debt through default (deflationary scenario) or
through depreciation (inflationary scenario) or, possibly,
through a mixture of both. Since the value of the monetary unit
is defined in terms of debt, and debt is bound to implode after
reaching a certain threshold, the world is inexorably driven
towards monetary collapse.
Double-entry
book-keeping is one of the main pillars of society. Without it
progress, indeed, production and distribution of the means of
preserving human lives at present levels of security, health,
and comfort, would be unthinkable. Double-entry book-keeping is
based on the clearest possible distinction between an asset and
a liability. It is true that a particular item may be a
liability in the balance sheet of one while serving as an asset
in the balance sheet of another. What monetary cranks are
advocating is an arrangement whereby governments are enabled to
shift items freely from the liability to the asset column of the
same balance sheet. Like alchemists of old, they could
create wealth out of nothing (better still, out of less than
nothing).
The
job of the illusionists and the conjurer is to deceive the
audience into believing that something contrary to the laws of
reality has been accomplished before their very eyes. The
essence of irredeemable currency is the same. The monetary unit
is defined in terms of government debt. What has been a
liability, through monetary prestidigitation and machination, is
turned into an asset. The illusionist has succeeded in deceiving
the public. Pretence can be maintained for varying lengths of
time. People are lulled into a false sense of security. They are
made to believe that their savings are there, and could be drawn
upon any time when needed. From time to time they may even test
this assumption and withdraw larger or smaller amounts. When
they do, they are happy to conclude that their savings are safe.
But
are they really? The harsh reality is that the government has
long since spent their savings and would have to tax people to
get it back if a sufficiently large number of savers tried to
withdraw it simultaneously. This number may not be
reached for a year, for a decade, or even for a generation. The
supply of fools in the world is very great indeed. But it is not
inexhaustible. Eventually, after many false starts, the truth
will dawn upon everyone. But then it will be too late to
withdraw the savings that were never there in the first place,
except as an irredeemable promise.
Inflationary
and deflationary phases
While
the ultimate outcome may not be in doubt, the course of history
is impossible to predict. The inflationary phase of currency
depreciation is well-understood. Less well understood is that it
alternates with a deflationary phase. This will reinforce the
illusion that the purchasing power of the currency, while it
obviously fluctuates, is not really in danger of collapsing.
Indeed, the government will be quick to take credit for the feat
of “controlling inflation” every time another deflationary
phase starts and, likewise, of “controlling deflation” when
a new inflationary phase sets in. Needless to say, the
government performed no feat of any sort. The only way to
control the real value of the currency is to tie it to positive
values. It may take a long time to find out this elementary
truth, but the value of a promise promising nothing is exactly
that, nothing. As long as the currency is tied to negative
values, depreciation will be the inevitable outcome.
It
is only to be expected that the process of depreciation will be
opaque. It is hardly ever a one-way street. Currency debasement
moves by fits and starts. It is never clear-cut nor easily
understandable. It is always confusing. If it wasn’t, the
party would be over before it got started. Producers would
refuse to exchange real goods and services for irredeemable
promises to pay. Savers would refuse to allow their savings to
be denominated in a depreciating currency. But precisely because
the process of currency depreciation is opaque, and because it
moves by fits and starts, it will be prolonged and agonizing.
We
can make another broad-brush picture of the shape of things to
come. Apart from minor leads and lags, the price level and the
rate of interest are going to move in tandem. A rise in the
price level (hinting at currency depreciation) will be
accompanied by a tendency of the rate of interest to rise as
well. Likewise, a fall (hinting at a remission of currency
depreciation) will be accompanied by a tendency of the rate of
interest to fall. There is a simple explanation for this
puzzling phenomenon called “linkage”. The process of
currency depreciation can be pictured as an oscillating
money-flow to-and-fro between the bond market and the commodity
market. When fearful of the safety of their savings invested in
debt, people move it en masse from the bond to the
commodity market. This move makes the interest rate and the
commodity price level rise together (inflationary phase). When
stockpiles become so large that salability at exaggerated prices
becomes problematic, people grow fearful of the safety of their
savings invested in commodities. There follows a reversal of the
tide: exodus of money from the commodity market and into the
bond market. This makes the rate of interest fall together with
the price level (deflationary phase). This is known as the
Kondratiev long-wave cycle, that may take 60 to 70 years to
repeat itself. The last inflationary phase started in 1947 and
ended in 1980; we are apparently still in the deflationary phase
that started in the early 1980's.
The
oscillating money-flow between the commodity and bond markets,
caused by the savers making the tide flow in one and ebb in the
other before changing roles, is further aggravated by
speculators who understand the dynamics of the Kondratiev cycle.
They go long in commodities and sell bonds short during the
inflationary phase. Just before the tide turns, they take profit
by selling commodities and by covering their short positions in
bonds, and get ready for the deflationary phase in going long in
bonds and selling commodities short. Of course, speculators know
full-well that the onset of the deflationary phase does not mean
the end of currency depreciation. The wild roller-coaster ride
is going to continue and get even wilder. Just as a coin has two
sides: heads and tails, currency depreciation has two phases:
the inflationary and deflationary phase. Neither phase can be
understood without understanding the other. A one-phase currency
depreciation (inflation without deflation) is just as
unthinkable as a coin missing one side.
The
hot-money cycle
We
have seen how people try to protect their savings and in doing
so they induce an oscillating money-flow to-and-fro between the
bond and commodity markets. This pendulum-like swing conceals
the underlying phenomenon of currency depreciation. But there is
also a second pendulum: that of hot money jumping from one
currency depreciating relatively faster to another that, for the
moment, is considered safer as it is depreciating more slowly.
I
do not hesitate to predict that the hot-money pendulum will
focus on two currencies: the dollar and the euro. To begin with,
the dollar will be preferred while the euro is considered an
unknown entity. As the dollar-debasement will continue unabated,
hot money is going to jump from dollars into euros, making the
former fall and the latter rise. Then the pendulum turns, and
hot money will jump back from the euro to the dollar. When it
does, the illusion is created that the dollar is strong. In
truth both the dollar and the euro are falling in absolute
terms, albeit at different rates. Since the “rise” is
measured in terms of a falling standard, it is not a rise at
all. The hot-money cycle, of course, has a different frequency
from that of the Kondratiev long-wave cycle. I predict that it
will be shorter, but we have to wait and see how events unfold
before we can say more. Foreign exchange speculators aggravate
the hot-money cycle just as bond speculators aggravate the
Kondratiev cycle. It goes without saying that both cycles
aggravate the process of monetary destruction.
The
metamorphosis of speculation
It
is important to note how the nature of speculation has changed
since 1971. Beforehand bond values and the rate of interest were
stable, along with foreign exchange rates, precluding
speculative activity in the bond and foreign exchange markets.
Speculation was confined to agricultural commodities where it
had a stabilizing effect. All the risks were nature-given, none
were man-made. Speculators were forced by the “invisible
hand” to resist the formation of price-trends.
Bull-speculators had to sell as prices rose; bear speculators
had to cover their short positions as prices fell.
The
nature of speculation changed dramatically when the monetary
unit was redefined in terms of negative values. Bond prices and
foreign exchange rates were destabilized. In response, for the
first time, speculation emerged as a permanent feature of the
bond and foreign exchange markets. However, significantly,
speculation never had a stabilizing effect in the bond and
foreign exchange markets. The reason for this is simple enough.
The risks are not nature-given. They are man-made. Speculation
in these markets has the character of a wager. One set of
gamblers (the speculators) is setting their wits against those
of another (the central bankers and treasury officials).
Speculators are freed from their obligation to resist the
formation of price trends. They are now inclined to ride price
trends rather than oppose them. They jump on the bandwagon,
thereby making volatility soar. Their job is no longer to
compensate for nature’s fickleness, but to outwit central bank
and treasury officials. And they usually do.
Central
bank officials as a rule are very smart people. But they are
civil servants on fixed salary. Their personal stake in the
outcome of the wager is limited. This is in contrast with that
of the speculators, who risk their own wealth. Also, central
bank officials were trained in a different school. Their mindset
is different. They don’t risk their own money. They have
virtually unlimited access to the public purse to cover their
losses. Speculators must quit playing when they have exhausted
their capital. Ever since currency devaluation was made
“respectable” by the governments in the 1930's, a staggering
amount of public money has been lost to speculators in the
foreign exchange markets. After 1971 bond speculation made its
debut and the losing streak of central bankers has continued.
It
is not possible to understand the dynamics of currency
depreciation without understanding the metamorphosis of
speculation, from benign to malignant. It is noteworthy that
this topic is off limits as far as subsidized economic research
is concerned. The metamorphosis has been made “taboo” in the
media and academia by the powers that be. Financial writers and
researchers must parrot the official propaganda line that
interest-rate speculation that drives the derivatives markets,
and foreign exchange speculation that determines the relative
values of the dollar and the euro, are a stabilizing factor in
the economy, the same way as speculation in agricultural
commodities, which is an absurd lie. The derivatives markets are
programmed to self-destruct through explosive growth.
The
rubble of the ruble
The
ruble is a reminder what is happening to all currencies based on
debt. The savings of the Russian people has been wiped out. Job
opportunities in the country, one of the richest in natural
resources, are disappearing. Private foreign investments are
going up in smoke choking off the flow of new capital. Russia is
drowning in debt. Great economic hardship is visited upon
hundreds of million innocent people. Life expectancy is on the
decrease, infant mortality is on the rise. A similar scenario is
unfolding in other parts of the third world. The self-immolation
is due to a single cause: the mindless experimentation with
currency tied to negative values. Opinion-makers blame the
disaster on a plethora of loosely related ad hoc causes.
However, they all have a hidden agenda: that of propping up the
regime of irredeemable currencies, the most pervasive single
corrupting factor of our times.
Exactly
the same forces that devastated the Russian ruble will
ultimately threaten the dollar and the euro. It is not
inconceivable that the dollar may at one point lose half of its
purchasing power within a month, as did the ruble. Self-styled
experts dismiss this saying “it can never happen here”. But
it could and did. America in the 1770's and 1860's, France in
the 1720's ands 1790's, Germany in the 1920's and 1940's had
gone through the same harrowing experience. More recently the
currencies of these and other countries lost up to nine-tenth of
their purchasing power during the 1970's. We may say
categorically that the cure of cancer has not been discovered in
the intervening years. Our money-managers have not acquired the
know-how, if such exists, to avert similar disasters in the
future.
Millennia
come and go, but man still gains his bread by the sweat of his
brow, and not by clever tricks in trying to shift entries from
the liability to the asset column in the balance sheet of the
government.

© 2005 Antal E. Fekete
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