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Can
the U.S. Return To A Gold Standard?
by Alan
Greenspan
Wall
Street Journal
September 1, 1981
The growing disillusionment with politically controlled monetary
policies has produced an increasing number of advocates for a
return to the gold standard - including at times president
Reagan.
In
years past the desire to return to a monetary system based on
gold was perceived as nostalgia for an era when times were
simpler, problems less complex and, the world not threatened
with nuclear annihilation. But after a decade of destabilizing
inflation and economic stagnation, the restoration of a gold
standard has become an issue that ls clearly rising on the
economic policy agenda. A commission to study the issue, with
strong support from President Reagan, is in place.
The
increasingly numerous proponents of a gold standard persuasively
argue that large budget deficits and large federal borrowing
requirements would be difficult to finance under such a
standard. Heavy claims against paper dollars, for the Treasury
can legally borrow as many dollars as Congress authorizes.
But
with unlimited dollar conversion into gold, the ability to issue
dollar claims would be severely limited. Obviously if you cannot
finance federal deficits, you cannot create them. Either taxes
would then have to be raised or expenditures lowered. The
restrictions of gold convertibility would therefore profoundly
alter the politics of fiscal policy that have prevailed for half
a century.
Disturbed
by Alternatives
Even
some of those who conclude a return to gold is infeasible remain
deeply disturbed by the current alternatives. For example,
William Fellner of the American Enterprise Institute in a
forthcoming publication remarks "...I find it difficult not
to be greatly impressed by the very large damage done to the
economies of the industrialized world...by the monetary
management that has followed the era of (gold)
convertibility...It has placed the Western economies in acute
danger."
Yet
even those of us who are attracted to the prospect of gold
convertibility are confronted with a seemingly impossible
obstacle: the latest claims to gold represented by the huge
world overhang of fiat currency, mainly dollars.
The
immediate problem of restoring a gold standard is fixing a gold
price that is consistent with market forces. Obviously if the
offering price by the Treasury is too low, or subsequently
proves to be too low, heavy demand at the offering price could
quickly deplete the total US government stock of gold, as well
as any gold borrowed to thwart the assault. At that point, with
no additional gold available, the US would be off the gold
standard and likely to remain off for decades.
Alternatively
if the the bid price is initially set too high or subsequently
becomes too high the Treasury would be inundated with gold
offerings. The payments for the gold drawn on the Treasury's
account at the Federal Reserve would add substantially to
commercial bank reserves and probably act, at least temporarily,
to expand the money supply with all the inflationary
implications thereof.
Monetary
offsets to neutralize or "earmark" gold are, of
course, possible in the short run. But as the West German
monetary authorities soon learned from their past endeavors to
support the dollar, there are limits to monetary
countermeasures.
The
only seeming solution is for the US to create a fiscal and
monetary environment which in effect makes the dollar as good as
gold, i.e. stabilizes the general price level and by inference
the dollar price of bullion gold itself. Then a modest reserve
of bullion coin could reduce the remaining narrow gold price
fluctuations effectively to zero, allowing any changes in gold
supply and demand to be absorbed in fluctuations in the
Treasury's inventory.
What
the above suggests is that a necessary condition of returning to
a gold standard is the financial environment which the gold
standard itself is presumed to create. But, if we restore
financial stability, what purpose is then served by a return to
a gold standard?
Certainly
a gold-based monetary system will not necessarily prevent fiscal
imprudence, as 20th Century history clearly demonstrates. Nonetheless,
once achieved, the discipline of the gold standard would surely
reinforce anti-inflation policies, and make it far more
difficult to resume financial profligacy. The redemption of
dollars for gold in response to excess federal
government-induced credit creation would be a strong political
signal. Even after inflation is brought under control the
extraordinary current political sensitivity to inflation will
surely remain.
Concrete
actions to install a gold standard are premature. Nonetheless,
there are certain preparatory policy action that could test the
eventual feasibility of returning to a gold standard, that would
have positive short term anti-inflation benefits and little cost
if they fail.
The
major roadblock to restoring the gold standard is the problem of
re-entry. With the vast quantity of dollars worldwide laying
claim to the US Treasury’s 264 million ounces of gold, an
overnight transition to gold convertibility would create a major
discontinuity for the US financial system. But there is no need
for the whole block of current dollar obligations to become an
immediate claim.
Convertibility
can be instituted gradually by, in effect, creating a dual
currency with a limited issue of dollars convertible into gold.
Initially they could be deferred claims to gold, for example,
five year Treasury notes with interest and principle in grams or
ounces of gold.
With
the passage of time and several issues of these notes we would
soon have series of “near monies” in terms of gold and
eventually, demand in claims of gold. The degree of success in
restoring long term fiscal confidence will show up clearly in
the yield spreads between gold and fiat dollar obligations of
the same maturities. Full convertibility would require that the
yield spreads for all maturities virtually disappear. If they do
not, convertibility will be very difficult, probably impossible,
to implement.
A
second advantage of gold notes is that they are likely to reduce
current budget deficits. Treasury gold notes in today’s
markets could be sold at interest rates approximating 2% or
less. In fact from today’s markets one can construct the
equivalent of a 22-month Treasury gold note yielding 1% by
arbitraging regular Treasury note yields fro June 1983
maturities (17%) and the forward delivery premiums of gold (16%
annual rate) inferred from June 1983 futures contracts.
Presumably five-year notes would reflect a similar relationship.
A
Risk Of Exchange Loss
The
exchange risk of the Treasury gold notes, of course, is the same
as that associated with our foreign currency Treasury note
series. The US Treasury has, over the years, sold significant
quantities of both German mark- and Swiss franc-denominated
issues, and both made and lost money in terms of dollars as
exchange rates have fluctuated. And indeed there is a risk of
exchange loss with gold notes.
However,
unless the price of gold doubles over a five-year period (16%
compounded annually), interest payments on gold notes in terms
of dollars will be less than conventional financing requires.
The run-up to $875 per ounce in early 1980 was surely an
aberration, reflecting special circumstances in the Middle East
which are unlikely to be repeated in the near future. Hence,
anything close to a doubling of gold prices in the next five
years appears improbable. On the other hand, if gold prices
remain stable or rise moderately, the savings could be large:
Each $10 billion in equivalent gold notes outstanding would,
under stable gold prices, save $1.5 billion in interest outlays.
A
possible further side benefit of the existence of gold notes is
that they could set a standard in terms of prices and interest
rates that could put additional political pressure on the
administration and Congress to move expeditiously toward
non-inflationary policies. Gold notes could be a case of
reversing Gresham's law. Good money would drive out bad.
Those
who advocate a return to a gold standard should be aware that
returning our monetary system to gold convertibility is no mere
technical, financial restructuring. It is a basic change in our
economic processes. However, considering where the policies of
the last 50 years eventually led us, perhaps there are the
lessons to be learned from our more distant golden past. |