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THE GOLDEN THORN IN THE FLESH
PART 2 OF 2
by Antal E.
Fekete,
Professor Emeritus,
Memorial University of Newfoundland
May 17, 2007
The
topsy-turvy world of central bank gold sales
Here
is a passage from my 1998 book entitled Gold
and Interest that will soon be released as an e-book.
As
these pages are written (late 1997), chrysophobes make much of the weak
dollar-price of gold and of the fact that more central banks, including
the Swiss, join the company of those that have been dumping gold on the
market. In addition, self-styled experts on deflation submit that, while
under an inflationary spiral gold hoards may have been a reasonable
investment, gold is the worst possible place to be under a deflationary
spiral.
It is undeniable that the gold market has been highly charged
psychologically for the past thirty years. This will likely continue
into the 21st century. It is also true that the great bull market in
bonds that started in 1980 has so far coincided with the great bear
market in gold. From a high of $850 in 1980 gold went to a low of $ 285
in 1985 and is trading near the low end of that range at the time of
writing. However, it does not follow from this that the gold bear must
march hand-in-hand with the bond bull, or that they must expire
together. There are reasons to believe that the gold dumping is
orchestrated and is meant as a scarecrow tactic. A central bank
advertising its future gold sales stinks: it cannot be sincere about its
real intentions. As every student of the market well knows, selling
at low and falling prices is a sign of weakness ─ never a sign of
strength. Central bank selling of gold is no exception.
Hecatomb
of currencies
At
this juncture the gold market is a mere side-show. The main show is the
foreign exchange market where a clandestine trade war is being waged.
Presumably there will be a lot of casualties in the form of fallen
currencies before it is all over. The dollar, for the time being, is the
obvious refuge for the victims of the hecatomb
of currencies. This makes it appear strong. But the dollar has its own
problems. First, it suffers
from exactly the same ills that are plaguing all falling currencies.
Second, the American political establishment has a very low tolerance
for a strong dollar. Recall that in 1985, under a conservative
President, the dollar was diagnosed ’too strong’ and was
subsequently scuttled ─ making the price of gold rise from its
lows. Rumors of the demise of gold are grossly exaggerated. At the risk
of belaboring the obvious I would like to make the following points.
The
only financial asset that is nobody’s liability
The
volatility of the dollar-price of gold is not a reflection of the
uncertainty in the value of gold. It is in fact a reflection of the
uncertainty in the value of the dollar in which the gold price is
quoted. A lower gold price shows a momentary strength of the dollar; not
a reluctance on the part of people to hold gold. Nobody is suggesting
that the world no longer needs a financial asset that is nobody’s
liability.
A
currency immune to debasement, default, and devaluation
The
lower gold price also reflects the reluctance of the people to put the
central bankers out of their misery. After all, they could call the
bluffing of central bankers at any time if they wanted to. For the time
being they don’t. Central bank gold dumping may or may not be good
politics, but it is certainly poor economics. Gold is the only sound
asset in the balance sheet. It is the only
asset in the balance sheet that is not at the same time a liability
in the balance sheet of someone else. For this reason, gold is immune to
deliberate debasement, defaults or devaluations. By contrast, dollars in
the balance sheet represent irredeemable promises to pay, with the
obligor having a history of deliberate debasement, defaults and
devaluations. When a central bank discards a sound asset from its
balance sheet at a low price, and replaces it with a dubious one at a
high price, it makes its own currency weaker, not stronger. It is
especially foolish to do this at a time when the world is entering
shark-infested waters where the sharks are preying on paper currencies.
Central
bankers making themselves the laughing stock of the world
We
must distinguish between gold sales by a weak central bank from that by
a strong one. A weak central bank prefers to conduct its gold sales in
perfect secrecy. It does not want the world to know about the timing and
the extent of its selling program lest the market’s unfavorable
reaction cause the proceeds from the sale to suffer. Even so, the market
has an uncanny way of bringing down the gold price ahead of the sale
just long enough to accommodate the central bank eager to unload its
gold, only to put the price back up once the sale is completed. By
contrast, a strong central bank wants to show off that its gold is
’surplus’. All the same, the central banks has to proceed carefully
lest it become the laughing stock of the world in selling its patrimony
for a pittance. Embarrassing questions might be asked such as this:
„why is it that central bankers always sell at the bottom, and never
at the top?”
Hidden
agenda?
Especially
suspicious is a central bank drumming up its proposed sales. It is the
height of incompetence and ineptitude to proceed this way ─ unless
the central bank has a hidden agenda. It may want to camouflage its
intention to buy, so it is
bringing down the price to facilitate its purchasing program.
External
demand for dollars
The
strength of the dollar, such as it is, is entirely due to external
demand. This demand is, as it has been since 1971, subject to withdrawal
without notice. Internally, there is nothing to justify the strength of
the dollar. There is no end in sight to U.S. trade deficits. All the
optimistic predictions about eliminating the U.S. budget deficit that
have been made in the past turned out to be ill-founded. It remains to
be seen whether the latest optimistic prediction is better founded. If
the deflationary cancer metastasizes across the Pacific, as appears
likely, then the present falling trend in the U.S. budget deficit could
make a nasty U-turn. The U.S. is still the greatest debtor in the world
and in history. And it is still true that nothing comes from nothing.
Misunderstanding
economics and mismanaging public resources
The
current rush of central banks to sell their shrinking gold assets in the
face of their burgeoning liabilities is just another case of
misunderstanding economics and mismanaging public resources as
completely as only government bureaucrats can misunderstand and
mismanage them.
35
years of Keynesian and Friedmanite agitation for confetti money
The
folly of central bankers and Treasury officials managing the patrimony
of their countries in the face of gathering storm is unprecedented. This
is the result of 35 years of Keynesian and Friedmanite agitation in
favor of irredeemable currency, and the systematic badmouthing of sound
economics, finance, and debt-management. I am grateful to Dr. Theo
Megalli of Germany for translating into English a paper of the late
Hungarian monetary economist Melchior Palyi with the title Gold
Standard and Economic Order that appeared in the book Geld,
Kapital und Kredit ─ Festschrift
for the seventieth birthday of Heinrich Rittershausen (Stuttgart, 1968)
from which the following quotations are taken.
The
Gold Standard and economic order
The
gold standard was sacrosanct to generations brought up on Adam Smith’s
ideal of the free market, free, that is, from arbitrary and
discriminatory intervention by the powers that be. Indeed, it was an
essential instrument of economic freedom. It protected the individual
against arbitrary government measures by offering a convenient hedge
against confiscatory taxation as well as against currency depreciation
and devaluation. Gold provided essential mobility of funds beyond
national boundaries. Above all it raised a mighty barrier to
authoritarian interference with the economic process. In the words of
Adam Smith: ”That insidious and crafty animal calling himself
’statesman’ whose councils are guided by the momentary fluctuations
of affairs” was forced to
keep the national budget in good order. Authoritarians of all
denominations had to control their inflationary propensities and to
refrain from excessive taxation in order to forestall the loss of
confidence in the currency on the part of the people. The public purse
had to be held tight. The business community had to learn to live with
the salutary threat that illiquidity caused by short-sighted
over-investment and irrational speculation could be penalized by loss of
gold and an automatic tightening of the money-supply.
The gold standard in the classical sense was part and parcel of
an economic order. It was the corner-stone of the system of public law,
social customs and institutions that Marx pejoratively called
”capitalism” ─ a system that rested on nearly unlimited
freedom of consumer choice, of enterprise, and of markets…
Unity
of the economic world
The
meaning of the gold standard ─ with unrestrained and uncontrolled
private ownership of gold ─ cannot be appreciated in isolation
from the institutional and psychological background that characterized
the civilized world in the decades before 1914. The outstanding feature
of that period was the unity of the economic world as it has not been
achieved before or thereafter.
Quoting from Oscar Morgenstern’s International
Financial Transactions and Business Cycles, New York,1957, pp 17-19:
”There was freedom of travel without passports, freedom of migration,
no exchange controls or other monetary restrictions. Citizenship was
freely granted to immigrants… capital could move unsupervised in any
direction, and these movements could take any form… International
trade had to overcome tariffs, yes, but… tariffs were exceedingly low.
There were hardly any qualitative restrictions on international trade
(quotas, import prohibitions, etc.)… It was a world of which recently
many… would have been inclined to assert that it could not be created
because it would never work…”
It was a world of low wages and lower still prices. Taxes were
almost nominal. It was a world in which virtual freedom of enterprise,
’workable’ competition and highly flexible wage-price structures
prevailed in which private property and contracts were held inviolable.
Defaulting governments had to face boycott or worse.
It was a world, by and large, of balanced national budgets.
Public debt had to be amortized as a matter of course, just as private
debts had to be repaid. Fiat money was anathema. Emergency public
expenditures were financed by long-term bonds. There was no monetization
of public debt.
A world of
steady real growth
Above
all, it was a world of steady real
growth ─ at an average annual rate of 5 percent during the six
decades before 1914 ─ of steadily rising living standards for the
masses, with ’social security’ provided by the automatic protection
of savings…
The role of the gold standard in unifying the civilized world can
scarcely be overestimated. It was the sine
qua non opening up the world for economic progress, for the
diffusion of modern civilisation. Capital flows that were instrumental
could allow the gold standard to operate with a minimum of actual gold
transfer and with relatively modest gold reserves. The gold standard
presupposed a high degree of freedom in foreign trade helping the debtor
nations in liquidating their debt through exports to the creditor…
Throughout the 19th century most major central banks remained
privately owned commercial institutions and were supposed to conduct
themselves as financial enterprises ─ to earn profits. They were
to ”suffer” the impact of gold flows, rather than influencing
them…
Real
Bills ─ the safest earning asset
In
Britain, the Banking School argued that no authoritarian control or
discretionary power was needed to sustain the balance between the
production of marketable goods and the creation of currency.
Enlightened self-interest would compel the central bank to
maintain the liquidity of its earning assets that were to consist of
”real bills”, that is, short-term self-liquidating commercial paper
growing out of the actual sale of goods.
The Currency School on the other hand doubted that stability
could be guaranteed by asset liquidity rules which, notoriously, could
be violated when most needed ─ at times of business upturn and
rising prices. Adherents of this school believed that the money-creating
power of the central bank was the crux of the situation and insisted on
curtailing this power by requiring 100 percent gold reserve for the note
issue. The idea was that the automatism of the gold standard was to be
preserved by putting the central bank into a strait-jacket. The volume
of the outstanding note issue was to expand and contract in exact
proportion with the inflow and outflow of gold.
The Currency School won a Pyrrhic victory in 1844. By the Peel
Act the Bank of England was obliged at all times to maintain 100 percent
gold reserve behind its note issue beyond a modest amount… But the
necessity to suspend limitation on the note issue in the monetary panics
of 1846, 1858 and 1867 taught that tying the Bank of England to a
formula was a senseless undertaking. Not only did the Peel Act fail to
extend the 100 percent reserve requirement to the central bank’s
deposit liabilities, which grew faster than the note liability, but the
tying of the bank’s hands behind its back, as it were, left the
problems of monetary policy unresolved.
The
flame of liberty
Before
World War I economic considerations dominated political agenda, not the
other way around. Wars could not be waged to the bitter end, bankrupting
vanquished and victors alike. Peace following war was genuine, rather
than a continuation of hostilities through other, economic means. The
vanquished were allowed to recover through hard work and hard saving,
thanks to the operation of the gold standard.
All this was to change with the outbreak of World War I. Economic
considerations were sacrificed on the altar of political expediency. A
new regime, one of prepetual and total war was inaugurated. When the
gold standard refused to play along, it was given a bad name, and a
dishonorable discharge. People were not consulted. Through a series of
confidence tricks they had been weaned from the gold coin. The Warfare
State went all out to bribe the electorate with the newly-invented
Welfare State. The golden thorn in the flesh of the establishment
remains. The Constitution of the United States of America, primarily
because of its monetary provisions, was thrown to the winds. The powers
that be wanted to unshackle themselves in preparation of enslaving the
American people. Confiscation of the gold coin of the people was the
necessary first step. Trying to bribe people with an avalanche of
confetti money was the second.
If the flame of liberty is to flare up again from the ember
barely glowing underneath layers of ashes left behind by a century of
total war, it will be thanks to the indelible mark that the gold
standard, once the epitomy of unity of the entire civilized world, has
left on human affairs as no religion, ideology, literary or scientific
movement ever did.
Gold
Standard University
Session
Two is scheduled for August 15-29, 2007, in Szombathely, Hungary. It
will include a blue-ribbon panel discussion under the title The Last Contango: the First Sign of Disintegration of the International
Monetary System, on the gold/silver basis as a most sensitive market
indicator that is being developed by a team of researchers. For further
information please contact: GSUL@t-online.hu.

© 2007 Antal E. Fekete
Professor Emeritus,
Memorial University of Newfoundland
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