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The central banking
systems of the world are in their death throes. In the next two decades,
there will take place a total discrediting of these monstrous blights on
the economic stability and prosperity of our civilization.
For
the past 90 years in America (and for many decades longer in England and
Europe), the concept of "centralized political banking" has
ruled the monetary systems that have prevailed. Central banking's
advocates have done this by dominating the stage of world opinion and
the academic field that lies behind such opinion. They began their quest
for monetary hegemony in America as far back as Alexander Hamilton's day
and finally achieved their goal when the Morgan-Warburg-Jekyll Island
conspiracy successfully smuggled America into the fold through the
establishment of our Federal Reserve in 1913. Banking was cartelized
by government law in the land of liberty itself. Collectivism with
its regimented dream for mankind now had its Trojan Horse effectively
established throughout all the important nations of the world. Marx's
dictum that capitalism would fall through corruption of the language and
the money was proving to be horrifyingly prophetic. The rest was
only a matter of time. With the power of paper money as their tool of
exploitation, government mega-bankers swept to dominance over the 20th
century like Mafia Godfathers carving up a great city.
From
this dominance have come all the terrible tragedies of the past century
-- the devastating wars and depressions, the ravaging inflations and
stultifications, the relentless erosion of our rights and our freedom.
The pundits of our time do not as yet realize the horrific meltdown that
awaits us as a result of our prodigal experiment in fiat money. But they
will come to grasp, in the next two decades, that something has gone
hideously wrong with the godfather design of centralized political
banking they have championed so proudly and persistently.
Our
great dilemma as a society now lies in what
kind of reform will take place as a result of the discrediting of
central banking and fiat money that is now beginning to unfold. Will we,
as a people, come to our senses and restore the only REAL money there
is? Will our pundits, as blind as poor Pew, be able to grasp the
requisites of genuine reform? Will we rebuild upon the rock of true
wealth -- GOLD? Or will we succumb to the sirens of one-world banking
(such as Richard Duncan) and reinstate the errors of the past in a
grotesque attempt to extend the evil lure of fiat money via
pseudo-reform?
If
a restructured world monetary system is to avoid the profligate sins of
this past century, then it must be oriented upon a commodity based
medium of exchange. This is axiomatic to all champions of freedom and
the unfettered market. How to get this truth across to the world in
time, however, is our problem. How to convince the governments of
mankind and the Keynesian progeny guiding them that without gold as the
fulcrum of the system, all attempts at reform will fail?
If
gold is to regain its place in the future monetary systems of all
nations, there is a major misconception held by today's pundits and
academics that must be cleared up. It is the belief that gold can never
provide the necessary liquidity to function adequately as money in a
modern economy. According to Keynesian doctrine there is not enough physical gold in the world to act as a medium of
exchange for the billions of sophisticated economic interactions that
take place. This, Keynesians assert, is why government must always
control money. It is why government must establish a centralized system
of banks to provide a generous and continuous supply of paper notes and
credit. It is why the free marketplace and its choice of gold can never
work in a modern world.
Several
powerful thinkers over the past century, however, have contested this
claim. Ludwig von Mises and Murray N. Rothbard of the Austrian School
have been the leading examples. Their scholarly works have insisted that
a commodity-based money is the only viable money that can protect us
from the dangers of price inflation and economic instability that always
accompany fiat paper systems. Gold and silver are the commodities of
choice, and contrary to prevailing doctrine, such a gold/silver monetary
system is quite workable. Government control and fiat money are not
necessary in order to produce "enough credit" and
"sufficient purchasing power."
The
Classical 19th Century Monetary System
As
any student of monetary history knows, gold and silver were used as
money throughout the world until the 20th century fiat systems replaced
them. Our own Constitution mandated that only gold and silver be used as
money. But the use of gold and silver throughout our history was far
from perfect, starting with the flawed Coinage Act of 1792 which
attempted to establish a fixed ratio between gold and silver, which
brought Gresham's law into play to drive coins struck from the higher
valued monetary metal into hiding. The development of banks throughout
the 1800's was equally a checkered affair with the perversion of notes
and credit issuance creating the boom/bust cycle that has plagued our
economy up to the present day at an ever accelerating rate since the
creation of the Federal Reserve in 1913.
The
early banking history of America, however, was primarily free of central
government control. Though its paper note and credit issuances were
based upon fractional reserves, they were always "redeemable"
in gold or silver upon demand, and thus the system functioned, albeit
not perfectly. It allowed for elasticity of credit to enhance the use of
gold and silver, without which society's division of labor and
specialization would have been severely limited.
Contrary
to popular opinion among hard money thinkers, the evils of the system
were not brought about by the policy of "fractional reserve
banking" per se, but by the intervention of government authorities to convey
special legal privileges to bankers that violated the basic laws of
fraud. Such privileges took the form of allowing banks to suspend specie
redemptions in the face of runs. They created a double standard in
contract law whereby the bank cannot be sued for non-performance if it
fails to pay gold on its sight liabilities. They permitted banks to
illicitly loan out demand deposits rather than requiring them to
warehouse such monies. They relaxed accounting standards for banks that
allowed them to overstate their assets and understate their liabilities
with impunity. These and other illicit practices were the problem.
As
we will soon see if fractional reserve banking is restricted to
short-term, self-liquidating credit -- specifically, bills of exchange
payable in gold coin in 91 days or less, drawn on marketable consumer
goods that move sufficiently fast from producer to consumer -- such
credit is not inflationary and
thus not dangerous.
It
is government conveyed privileges (that allow banks to operate beyond
this restriction and indulge in inflationary loan practices) that are
fraudulent and dangerous. It is this conveyance
of special privileges that set the stage for the exploitation and
boom/bust instability that pockmarked the 19th century. The resultant
exploitation and instability then led to public opinion being stampeded
into accepting the centralization of banking under the Federal Reserve
in 1913 as a "solution." But this was an attempt to fight pus
with poison. As we now know, the cure was much worse than the disease.
The boom/bust instability has not been diminished; it has been horribly
exacerbated.
What
most of today's pundits miss is that there are two forms of
"fractional reserve banking." There is a benign
form that springs up naturally in a free-market to extend
short-term, self-liquidating credit. And there is a fraudulent
form that is spawned by government intervention into the free-market to
exempt bankers from the contractual laws of fraud, which allows them to
"borrow short to loan long." This gives banks the ability to
loan recklessly with impunity from bankruptcy. It is this latter form
that needs to be outlawed.
Too
many hard money advocates today fail to make this distinction. For
example, Austrian School economists agree with outlawing the fraudulent
form, but unfortunately they are also antagonistic toward the benign
form. They maintain that the only way to establish a stable banking
system is with a 100 percent gold dollar that prohibits "all bank
lending in excess of capital accounts and vault cash." 1
According
to Austrian economist, Murray Rothbard, the only permissible credit
instruments would be those where "every dollar made available as
purchasing power to the borrower would be the result of abstinence from
the exercise of purchasing power on the part of the lender." 2
This
would prohibit any form of credit that adds to the aggregate of
purchasing media as represented by gold reserves -- even if the credit
is short-term and self-liquidating, i.e., benign.
While
Austrian economists are not of one mind on all issues, it appears that
they are solidly in favor of a 100 percent gold reserve system. In other
words, no credit should be allowed that increases the pool of purchasing
power in excess of gold reserves, even temporarily. Only credit that
"would be the transfer of purchasing power" should be allowed. 3
Austrian
theorists thus advocate a very rigid
form of credit issuance, which many thinkers sympathetic to gold
denounce as unworkable if vibrant economic expansion is our goal. So the
great question we face today is how do we establish a
"workable" gold oriented monetary system that will provide for
sufficient "elasticity of credit" to create vibrant growth,
but not plunge our economy into the nightmare of irredeemable paper
currency and credit lunacy that now plagues us. Is our choice either-or,
either the rigidity of pure gold as the Austrians maintain, or the
profligacy of unbridled credit with which the Keynesians have cursed us?
Are
these our only alternatives? Or is there a way to structure a gold
system (other than the Austrian School's 100 percent gold dollar) that
provides elasticity of credit but avoids the abuse of fractional reserve
banking that created the instability of the 19th century economies, and
which has led to the monster in Washington that we call the Federal
Reserve?
A
Gold-Coin Standard for the 21st Century
Yes,
there is such a system providing the necessary elasticity with
self-liquidating credit. It was first recommended by American economists
James Washington Bell and Walter E. Spahr, along with the Hungarian
Melchoir Palyi, among others, in their book entitled, A
Proper Monetary and Banking System for the United States, containing
all the basic principles involved. 4
Dr.
Antal Fekete, who is a Hungarian born economist, and Hugo Salinas, who
is an ardent proselytizer for silver remonetization in Mexico, have now
revived and extended the work of Bell, Spahr and Palyi. Dr. Fekete, who
taught for many years in Canada, is presently consulting professor at
Sapientia University in Cluj-Napoca, Romania. Hugo Salinas is a director
and honorary president of Mexico's Grupo Elektra from which he retired
as CEO in 1987.
During
the nineties, Fekete and Salinas (who are close friends) collaborated to
brainstorm many issues regarding gold and silver and how precisely to
restore them monetarily to the economies of Mexico and America. It was
Hugo Salinas who first suggested to Fekete that a parallel monetary
system was the answer, and together in Acapulco in 1995 they hammered
out how to bring silver back into the system. Salinas subsequently
published his views on a parallel silver plan for Mexico in 1999. And he
has just this past year formally presented a modified version of the
plan [see
it here] via
Asociacion Civica Mexicana Pro Plata A.C., an organization he founded to
promote silver remonetization. The plan is being widely publicized and
is creating considerable excitement throughout Mexico. Building upon the
parallel concept worked out in their collaboration, Professor Fekete is
also presenting such a plan for America, which is the subject of this
essay.
Thus,
these two esteemed gentlemen have thrown down the gauntlet to the
centralized political establishments of Mexico and America. They offer
two brilliantly conceived plans to restore sound money to our economies
and our lives. The Salinas plan entails the remonetization of silver for
Mexico because of the unique position of his country as the silver
superpower of the world. The Fekete plan for America entails
remonetizing both gold and silver and incorporates his groundbreaking
theoretical work on Adam Smith's Real Bills Doctrine, refined by Bell,
Spahr and Palyi, into the mix.
The
Fekete plan gives to America a solid gold/silver-oriented
monetary system that will avoid the flaws of the 19th century and purge
the evils of the 20th century. It can be phased in gradually, which will
give Americans time to acclimatize themselves to the use of gold and
silver as money again. And in addition, it solves the flaw of a pure
gold standard advocated by the Austrians, for it provides the economy
with elasticity of credit that is non-inflationary.
The
Fekete plan is not a pure 100 percent gold standard that would restrict
credit issuance to a banker's capital accounts and cash. Yet neither is
it a return to the 19th century "fractional reserve" approach
in which banks were allowed special privileges such as loaning out
demand deposits and suspension of specie redemption, which led to the
cardinal sin of borrowing short to loan long. The Fekete plan employs
none of the fraudulent credit instruments and practices that plague us
in America today. But it emphasizes that a growing economy based upon
gold would need extensive credit, and that there is a natural, benign
means to provide for such credit. It is a means that would spring up
spontaneously if the economy is left free. Such necessary credit
provision would come from what is called market-generated "bills of
exchange" between producers and distributors. And it would be non-inflationary.
Bills
of exchange as a means of credit spontaneously evolved in Renaissance
Italy of the 14th century and became quite prevalent by Adam Smith's
day. They lasted until World War I and then were discarded with the
creation of 20th century political banking. Dr. Fekete's stand is that
they need to be revived in order to provide the necessary elasticity of
credit in any future gold oriented monetary system. Here is how he
explains them in his Monetary
Economics 101:
The
Real Bills Doctrine
"Although
it may sound preposterous to 21st century ears, according to [Adam
Smith] you don't need banks to
extend short-term credit to finance the production and distribution of
consumer goods; real bills will do It. Adam Smith elevated the Real
Bills Doctrine to scientific status in the Wealth
of Nations in 1776. The market economy comes equipped with a
natural, built-in clearing system that will generate all the credit
needed to move goods from producers to retail outlets, provided only
that the consumer wants the goods urgently enough. This credit is
embodied by the real bill.
"A
real bill is a bill of exchange drawn by the producer (the drawer
of the bill) on the distributor (the acceptor
of the bill) specifying the kind, quality and quantity of merchandise
shipped by the former to the latter, and specifying the sum (the face value of the bill) and the date on which the bill is payable
(the maturity date of the
bill, in any event, not more than 91 days after the date of billing). In
order to be valid, the bill has to be accepted by the acceptor, by
writing across its face and over his signature "I accept".
"The
Real Bills Doctrine of Adam Smith states that a bill of exchange can,
before its maturity date, go into spontaneous circulation as the drawer
will use it to pay his own suppliers by endorsing the bill on the back.
Everybody who receives the bill in payment thereafter can use it in a
similar fashion. Endorsement signifies that the owner of the bill has
assigned the proceeds to the next one. At maturity, the last owner will
mark the bill "paid" and present it to the acceptor against
the payment of the face value in gold coins. Alternatively, anyone who
accepts the real bill in payment for goods and services, can discount it
at the Discount House at any time. Discounting means selling the bill
for cash at a discount, which depends on the discount rate and the
number of days the bill has to run to maturity. The Discount House makes
a market in real bills and acts as the residual buyer. Indeed, real
bills are the most liquid earning asset that a financial institution can
have. At maturity the Discount House will collect the face value of the
bill from the acceptor.
"The
point is that as goods in urgent demand emerge in production, the credit
needed to finance their move to the consumer also emerges in the form of
real bills drawn by the producer on the distributor. The real bill is a non-inflationary
purchasing medium which the market has endowed with limited monetary privileges. Non-inflationary because the face value
of the bill is matched by the value of the emerging merchandise. Limited
because upon maturity the purchasing medium expires as the underlying
merchandise is sold to the ultimate cash-paying consumer.
"In
many ways the circulation of real bills is a miraculous process. Nobody
designed the system of credit and clearing that makes goods in demand
move along from the producer to the consumer without outside financing.
Yet there it is: the real bill will do the miracle of financing
production and distribution spontaneously, without
taking one penny out of the piggy-banks of the savers, and without legal
tender coercion.
"I
hasten to add that the circulation of real bills assumes the underlying
circulation of gold coins. To understand the concept a little better, I
want you to look at a simple essential consumer good, bread, and assume
that its production/distribution involves three stages: from wheat to
flour to bread; handled by four tradesmen: the grain farmer, the miller,
the baker, and the grocer. In the absence of clearing, the pool of
circulating gold coins would have to be invaded four
times to finance the production and distribution of bread as the
grain farmer, the miller, the baker, and the grocer, all four of them,
would be trying to raise credit to finance their operations. But as it
is, the pool of circulating gold coins need not be invaded even once.
The consumer's single gold coin suffices to finance efficiently the
journey of bread from the corn-fields to the dinner-table, even
in the complete absence of banks. The movement of the "maturing
bread" from the grain farmer to the grocer is matched by the
parallel but opposite movement of the real bill from the grocer to the
grain farmer. The three payments are made, not with gold coins, but with
real bills. When finally the grocer gets paid, the single gold coin of
the consumer will liquidate all four credits to which the journey of the
bread has given occasion.
Self-Liquidating
Credit
"For
this reason, the real bill is said to be 'self-liquidating'. The
ultimate sale of the underlying merchandise in exchange for the gold
coin of the consumer liquidates all the credit that was needed to move
it forward to the consumer, whether there were four, fourteen, or forty
merchants along the pipeline to handle the maturing good. We might say
that as wheat "matures into" bread, so the real bill
"matures into" the gold coin for which bread is ultimately
exchanged. There is no need to divert gold coins to move the wheat or
the flour. They will move under the steam that moves the bread,
generated by the single gold coin of the consumer. Real bills are
flying, as it were, on their own wings and under their own steam. That
is, provided that you do have a gold coin standard. If you don't, then
forget it. Irredeemable paper currency in the hands of the consumer has
no steam-generating power, nor can it lend wings to real bills
representing maturing merchandise. Bills will no longer fly. They no
longer mature into gold coins. There are simply no real bills under a
regime of irredeemable currency. They have been replaced by a bloated
money supply. The nature-ordained dynamics of monetary circulation has
been destroyed. Now paper is shuffled against paper, and you need an
army of parasitic bankers to do the shuffling. Credit is no longer
self-liquidating.
"Real
bills do work. Prior to the outbreak of World War I in 1914 world trade
was financed through real bill circulation with London acting as
the discount house on a remarkably small gold base. The system worked
smoothly and efficiently, showing that there is no limit on the amount
of credit that could be built on a given gold basis. World trade was
completely self-financing, and
producers as well as consumers prospered. The volume of world trade
before 1914 was so great that it took more than 75 years before
it was surpassed in the 1990's, in spite of a much faster
population-growth. We may conjecture that if the international gold
standard and the trading system of the world financed by real bills had
not been destroyed by World War I, then the volume of world trade would
have increased to a level several times higher than what it is today,
and the resulting prosperity would have by and large eliminated poverty
from the face of the earth." 5
Elasticity
of Credit
Thus
the wonderful aspect of these bills of exchange is that as they become
extensively used, they don't just sit in a desk drawer or remain locked
in a safe waiting to be paid off. They circulate as actual short-term
money to be used by their holders. They are given "temporary
monetary privileges." They are endorsed over to another merchant
for purchases, and then by that merchant to other merchants for more
purchases. They act as money until they come due, at which point they
are paid off in gold. It is this means that allows the gold supply to
expand and contract to provide the conveyance of goods from farmers and
manufacturers, to processors and wholesalers, to retailers and
consumers.
However,
as Fekete points out, "real bills are also the most liquid earning
assets of the commercial bank. They can be kept in the portfolio as an
earning asset, or they can be liquidated (rediscounted) on the shortest
notice without any loss of value." 6
What
too many hard money advocates overlook is that the reason why the gold
standard worked for over two hundred years (1700-1913) was because
"bills of exchange" were prevalent throughout the economies of
the era.
This
then is a crucial feature that must accompany any attempt to revive a
gold monetary system. Without also a revival of Adam Smith's Real Bills
Doctrine, to provide self-liquidating
credit, a healthy expanding economy will not develop.
This
is a most important point to grasp. As Fekete tells us, "The new
gold coin standard can succeed only if it is implemented in conjunction
with real bill circulation. Only in this way can we ensure the needed
elasticity of purchasing media to follow the seasonal and secular
fluctuations in the demand for it. It is unrealistic to expect that the
gold coin standard, unaided by real bills circulation, can meet these
fluctuations. Indeed, the payments system would seize up during every
Christmas shopping season, or whenever division of labor is refined by
implementing new inventions, for reasons of dearth in the supply of
purchasing media. We should remember that the supply of gold is highly
inelastic (which is, paradoxically, the main reason for gold to have
become the monetary metal par excellence). So the choice is between (1) retaining the banking
system which is liable to issue unsound credit thereby undermining the
monetary system as it has done in the past, or (2) replacing the banking
system by real bills circulation, which will not only provide the needed
purchasing media, but will do it with transparency, satisfying the
requirement of full disclosure." 7
Outline
of the Fekete Plan
What
follows is a brief outline of the proposed Gold-Coin Standard that
Professor Fekete has published. I have
paraphrased the basics of the plan from the complete version that
appears in my book, Breaking
the Demopublican Monopoly.
8
The
plan's most important purpose is to eliminate the monopoly that the
Federal Government and its central bank have over what constitutes money
in our economy. It will do this by repealing the "legal tender
laws" that mandate our acceptance of Federal Reserve paper dollars
for business transactions and purchases. The plan establishes a parallel monetary system to operate alongside our present Federal
Reserve System, and thus it allows the people to reject the Fed's paper
money if they wish. It does this by:
1.
Opening the U.S. Mint to all citizens, miners, jewelers, processors,
etc. to bring whatever gold and silver they wish to be minted into
standardized gold and silver coins to circulate as money.
2.
Putting all the gold that the Federal Government and its various
agencies presently possess (gold that they stole from the American
people in 1933) into a Rehabilitation Fund that will then be minted into
gold eagle coins and apportioned out to state chartered Credit Unions
according to the capital of their various subscribers.
3.
The gold coins will then form the basis of the new parallel monetary
system. With this gold as their reserves, the Credit Unions will then
issue paper certificates to be used as money in society by their
subscribers. The certificates will be REDEEMABLE at any time in gold
and/or silver to whoever presents them to the Credit Union.
4.
The Credit Unions shall have reserves of gold for no less than forty
percent of their note and deposit liabilities. The remainder shall be
covered by reserves in the form of gold-based short-term commercial
credit, i.e., self-liquidating bills of exchange that mature in 91 days or less.
Paper instruments such as Treasury bonds, notes and bills will not be
eligible.
5.
The Credit Unions' primary function will be to supply gold and silver redeemable
currency for the payment of salaries and wages to employees and workers
who choose (through collective bargaining agreements) to be paid in gold
backed currency instead of irredeemable
Federal Reserve notes.
6.
These three factors (opening the U.S. Mint for all gold and silver to be
minted into standardized coins, the chartering of Credit Unions to issue
currency redeemable in gold and silver, and the revival of "bills
of exchange" to provide the necessary elasticity of credit) will
effectively establish a parallel monetary system to the present one we have now. No longer
will the Federal Government and its central bank cartel be able to
dictate that we only deal in its paper money that is relentlessly being
debased every year by inflation.
7.
The Federal Reserve's fiat paper money will now have to compete with
legitimate redeemable gold and silver backed currency of the Credit
Unions. Gradually over the years, gold and silver as money will become
used more and more, and the various Federal Reserve banks will either
have to convert to its usage or go out of business.
8.
The greatest beneficiaries of the plan will be those workers and
employees who opt to be paid in Credit Union currency rather than
Federal Reserve notes. This can be done through union-negotiated
contracts. Their wages and salaries will then hold their value. One's
savings will not be worth 25% less ten years down the road, and then 50%
less ten years later.
9.
The plan is meant to get American citizens acclimated to using and
saving gold and silver as money again. It will start out small, but
should grow into a viable circulating money throughout society. But even
if it remains small in its use, it will be immense in its effect because it will act as a competing
form of money to the Federal Reserve's money. This will break the
government's mega-bank monopoly, which will force the Federal Reserve to
stop debasing the dollar.
As
the country's libertarian, conservative, and independent academics
become more acquainted with the plan, some will no doubt offer
refinements along the way. Once sufficient support among academics and
pundits has been achieved, there will come a day in the future when the
plan will be presented to Congress. The plan can be implemented right
now. Yet it is not set in stone; it can be altered if needed. We should
think of it as a grand prototype, an ideal blueprint of what needs to be
done.
The
Choices We Have
These
then are the basic choices we have for monetary reform in the upcoming
years:
1)
We can retain our present paper money system by pasting over its evils
with sophistry and pseudo-reform along the lines of what Richard Duncan
and other statists espouse, which would plague us with the continuation
of monetary/price inflation and ultimately a world central bank.
2)
We can put into place Murray Rothbard's 100 percent gold dollar that
would end the scourge of inflation, but with its rigid credit
prescriptions surely hamper economic growth and expansion.
3)
We can revive the flawed 19th century gold standard that gave us the
needed elasticity of credit, but did so in an
inflationary form that employed illicit lending policies.
4)
We can adopt the parallel Gold-Coin Standard of Antal Fekete that will
give us the needed elasticity of credit in a non-inflationary
form that does not engage in illicit lending.
It
should be clear that the Fekete plan is the most desirable of the four
because it solves the problem of credit in a non-inflationary way, and
it comports with the requisites of a free and just society. The 19th
century gold/silver monetary system created sufficient credit, but it
did so with fraudulent policies derived from privileges conveyed by
government to the bankers. It was based upon arbitrary law, it was
inflationary, and it was unstable.
Retaining
the centralized banking systems that prevail worldwide today with their
monstrously prodigal paper instruments is no answer. Such illicit
systems have merely compounded the sins of the 19th century. They are
the source of our monetary
evils, not their solution.
Richard Duncan's analysis of why our situation is so dire in his book The
Dollar Crisis is brilliantly formulated, but his answer to how to
solve the crisis is disastrously conceived. It lays the groundwork for a
massive neo-Keynesian assault on free enterprise and American
sovereignty.
We
need a gold dollar as the Austrian School economists have long
advocated, which is the only way to eliminate the horrible evils of our
present system. But we must avoid throwing the baby (elasticity of
credit) out with the bathwater (illicit loan procedures and privileges).
This, the Fekete plan will accomplish.
The
Austrian School's 100 percent gold dollar would restrict the pool of
purchasing media too rigidly because it would sanction only credit
originating in savings, that is, abstinence from spending on
consumption. This would deny the vital use of non-inflationary bills of exchange, i.e., Adam Smith's Real Bills.
As
Fekete tells us, Rothbard's "100 percent gold banking....would
never work. It would be unable to supply the elastic currency that the
economy needs. It would open the gold standard to even more violent
attacks for being 'contractionist' and anti-labor." 9
Rothbardians,
of course, disagree with this assessment. In
The
Case for a 100 Percent
Gold Dollar, Murray Rothbard contends
that a pure gold monetary system would be quite adequate to finance a
growing economy in a stable manner. In answer to those who claim the
contrary, Rothbard writes:
"These
economists have not fully absorbed the great monetary lesson of
classical economics: that the supply of money essentially does not
matter. Money performs its function by using a medium of exchange; any
change in its supply, therefore, will simply adjust
itself in the purchasing power of the money unit, that is, in the
amount of other goods that money will be able to buy. An increase in the
supply of money means merely that more units of money are doing the
social work of exchange and therefore that the purchasing power of each
unit will decline. Because of this adjustment, money, in contrast to all
other useful commodities employed in production or consumption, does not
confer a social benefit when its supply increases....
"There
is therefore never any need for a
larger supply of money....An increased supply of money can only
benefit one set of people at the expense of another set..." 10
But
is this true? If there is "never any need for a larger supply of
money," why does the marketplace (when left free) naturally expand
the purchasing power via bills of exchange and extend temporary monetary
privileges to them? This "larger supply of money" is not the
result of government manipulation of interest rates, nor the conveyance
of special privileges to banks, nor winking at the laws of fraud, nor
any other of today's illicit government-supported banking policies. It
is, as Fekete shows us, simply the free-market at work clearing
the goods that are being produced. And it is doing so in a non-inflationary
manner.
So
is it rational to maintain, as Rothbard does, that there is "never
any need for a larger supply of money?" The marketplace itself is
telling us just the opposite -- that there is often a definite need for
a larger supply of money! If there was no need for a larger supply, why
did demand for it spring up so abundantly to create the miracle of bills
of exchange from the Renaissance era to the end of the 19th century?
According
to Rothbard, a 100 percent gold dollar would "simply adjust itself
in the purchasing power of the money unit." Gold (and silver) would
become elastic and would suffice to clear the market of goods being
produced. But if this is true, why didn't they? History shows us no
proof of gold and silver on their own making such an adjustment easily
and prosperously. In fact history shows us proof of just the opposite.
Gold
and silver alone can clear goods, yes, but they do so in a primitive
manner, which is what they did from ancient times up until the flowering
of the Renaissance in the 14th century. But gold/silver money systems
throughout the West began circa 1400 to make use of bills of exchange,
and they did so up until 1913. Why? Precisely because there was a need
for credit elasticity to complement the use of gold and silver. Such
bills created a "larger supply of money" because it was
necessary to move goods from production to consumption more abundantly
and sophisticatedly. This was one of the important reasons for the
explosion of commerce during the Renaissance, which paved the way for
our modern day economies.
So
would a 100 percent gold dollar work? A reading of history demonstrates
rather conclusively that any gold monetary system requires wiggle room
to handle the fluctuations and innovations of an expanding economy. Here
is an example from Fekete to demonstrate why Rothbard's 100 percent gold
dollar would be unworkable, in other words why gold and silver could not
make the adjustment in the purchasing power of money adequately enough
to clear goods along the complex production-distribution line:
"To
throw the adjustment mechanism squarely on the value (or the purchasing
power) of gold and silver is....an invitation to disaster. Rothbard is
forgetting completely about speculation. How would speculators act when
anticipating a rise in the value of gold, for example, after the
adoption of a new technological procedure that would lengthen the
production of computer chips from fourteen to forty stages along the
pipeline? Such a development, in the 'roundabout' nature of production
(to use Böhm-Bawerk terminology), would cause a near-revolution in the
division of labor, requiring massive new investments in production
facilities, which would have to be financed. That part is the job of
savers, which is all right. But once the new production line is in
place, the actual movement from the producers to the consumers of chips will
have to be financed by
short-term credit. That part creates a problem that must not be
ignored. Since the job of moving the maturing computer chip from the
producer to the consumer calls for the invasion of the pool of
circulating gold coins forty times (instead of fourteen times, as
previously) speculators would correctly anticipate a rise in the value
of gold and they would start hoarding gold coins. This would make the
rise in the value of gold much greater than need be, and speculators would be rewarded for their greed where they did not
perform any useful service to society. A vicious anti-gold
agitation would result, and it may wreck the fledgling gold
standard." 11
This
is just one of many examples of why, in a highly sophisticated
innovative economy, gold alone could not, as Rothbard maintains,
"adjust itself in the purchasing power of the money unit" so
as to adequately clear goods in a stable manner.
A
highly sophisticated, innovative economy needs a gold monetary system
with short-term, self-limiting
elasticity. It needs room to breathe, so to speak, to expand and
contract in response to the contingencies of growth, which is what bills
of exchange provide for it. What such an economy does not need is the
"fraudulent, unlimited elasticity" that Keynesian fiat money
has given us. And as the reader should now realize, neither does it need
the "rigid inelasticity" that a Rothbardian 100 percent gold
dollar would give us.
In
conclusion, the revival of Adam Smith's Real Bills Doctrine is the
answer to how to make a gold monetary system workable and acceptable as
the world's fiat systems collapse in the upcoming years. I urge all
truth-seeking men and women in the freedom movement to put aside their
egos and thoroughly investigate Antal Fekete's proposed Parallel
Gold-Coin Standard. He explains his plan clearly and concisely in my
recent book, Breaking
the Demopublican
Monopoly.
Once
you have perused the Fekete plan, then all who wish to get a deeper
understanding of how "bills of exchange" fit into it, can do
so by taking Professor Fekete's Monetary
Economics 101 course.
It is comprised of 13 lectures that will astound you with their
prescient insights and wise portrayal of fundamental truths.
What
would be of great benefit at this time to the future of freedom is a
healthy debate on the Real Bills Doctrine. All pundits and scholars at
Cato Institute, Mises Institute, FEE, AIER, FAME, Heritage Foundation,
The Independent Institute, Reason Foundation, etc. are invited to weigh
in on this great issue. Professor Fekete will be glad to answer any and
all disputes, refutations and questions regarding the necessity to
include a revival of Adam Smith's Real Bills Doctrine in laying the
groundwork for a gold monetary system in the upcoming years. Send any
responses to info@afr.org
and they will be forwarded to him. Or post your views of rebuttal or
agreement wherever your work is carried and send a notice of such to info@afr.org.
An open forum on all questions is the lifeblood of freedom and
civilization. To ignore or suppress these two issues of "real
bills" and gold money cannot help the cause of mankind; it can only
further the forces of despotism.
We
have a chance to take the freedom movement into the mainstream of America in the next two decades. We have a chance to
break the public's perception of constitutionalists and libertarians as
hopeless reactionaries not living in the real world. But to do so, we
must offer the world a rational and workable proposal to replace the
monster of central banking.
If
a free society is to be restored to America, then gold and silver must
become the fulcrum of our monetary reform. Dr. Antal Fekete has given us
a brilliant means to achieve such a monetary system with his new theory
of the gold standard incorporated with the Real Bills Doctrine. It is
incumbent upon each and every one of us to objectively
investigate his plan and his marvelous works. If Jefferson and Jackson
were alive today, they would be seeking this man's counsel. All
contemporary patriots, pundits, and freedom advocates should do
likewise.
Notes
1.
Antal Fekete, Monetary Economics
101, Lecture 12.
2.
Elgin Groseclose, Money: The Human
Conflict, 1934, cited by Murray Rothbard, The Case for a 100 Percent Gold Dollar, (Meriden, CT: Cobden Press,
1984), p. 37.
3.
Ibid, p. 37. Emphasis added.
4.
James Washington Bell and Walter Earl Spahr (eds.), A
Proper Monetary and Banking System for the United States, New York:
The Ronald Press Co., 1960.
5.
Monetary Economics 101,
Lecture 2.
6.
Antal Fekete, email to this writer, January 21, 2005.
7.
Monetary Economics 101,
Lecture 2.
8.
Nelson Hultberg, Breaking the
Demopublican Monopoly, (Dallas, TX: Americans for a Free Republic,
2004), Appendix A, pp. 81-90.
9.
Monetary Economics 101,
Lecture 6.
10.
Rothbard, op. cit., p. 28. Emphasis added.
11.
Antal Fekete, email to this writer, January 25, 2005.
Nelson
Hultberg
Americans for a Free Republic
January 31, 2005
www.afr.org

© 2005 Nelson Hultberg
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