Would you object to the legislation?
So I'll ask you. in Simple terms, what do you beleive
I don't think I know enough about what the legislation is trying to accomplish to give a reasoned answer to the question. My instinct is to say yes, I would oppose it, but inevitably I'll be told all of the things that are accomplished via this proposal and how dumb I am for rejecting something so obvious, which I am, as of yet, unaware of. As such, I'd like to withhold my answer until I feel I have a better understanding of what a policy like this would accomplish and if they would be worth the inevitable tradeoffs.
In your comments, you provide a lot of conjecture and I think you need to check some of your assumptions
Could I trouble you for examples?
For my part, should the legislation pass, I forsee the development of modernized payment systems based upon competing currencies (both commodities like precious metals as well as foreign specie). It's the absence of a legal tender monopoly which makes the legislation interesting. It gives people freedom and choice and the market forces from that choice become a powerful force constraining malfeasance in central bank monetary policy *and* govco expenditures.
I would counter by saying there is also a lot of conjecture in that paragraph. However, since money systems are social systems, I'd need to understand more about what kinds of social goals, if any, you think are worthwhile and how money might play a role in achieving those goals (again, if at all).
For instance, are there any "societal problems" in your opinion? For example;
Is the level of unemployment an individual problem, or a societal problem?
Is the level of education achieved by students simply an individual problem or a societal.
Is the state of the environment (including natural disasters) an individual or societal problem?
Is infrastructure (creation and maintenance) an individual or societal problem?
These are just a few examples in an honest effort to understand your point of view (which clearly I do not).
Your question presupposes that merchants are offering you a choice.
Sure, based on human behavior, yes, I presuppose that because when people earn FRN's they will seek, as they do today to spend them quickly because their value over time will decrease. Conversely, people will be less likely to want to part with commodities is their future exchange value increases.
People will hoard gold and spend FRN's
There is nothing that prevents a store from opening RIGHT NOW and accepting only gold in exchange for it's goods. The reason it doesn't happen is because gold is an investment and investments make terrible money.
Case in point, I was in line at the grocery store about 30 years ago. As the woman was making change for me she pulled out an old-timey coin wrapper (you know the old paper wrappers). She cracked it on the till to make change for me in quarters. As soon as I heard the quarters fall into the till, I knew they were silver. I looked at my change and sure enough, three quarters ranging from the 40's to the 60's. I pulled out a $20 FRN and asked if I could "get change" (buy them). Turns out there were 4 rolls in her drawer that day, all of which I bought.
You know where all of those quarters are today? They are
all still in my possession.
If a store opened that required me to spend my silver quarters and another store accepted non-silver quarters, which store do you think would earn my business?
Thus, it is my assumption that businesses that accept FRN's will have more business than those who do not.
Are you aware of what is happening in Venezuela right now? When the local currency is worth less than toilet paper (or worth less than other options - even illegal ones), merchants with real goods don't want to take it in trade.
Sure, but I suspect we could start a whole new thread about
why their currency is worthless and I'd argue that the causes of what's happened there are not going to happen here.
So, the real question is (IMO), if you have faith that the FRN could stand shoulder to shoulder against sound money. That is an interesting question in it's own right. If you think it would, why would you object to the legislation? If you think it would not, why would you object to the legislation?
Because I think the strength of the nation matters. I think that removing the government's monopoly on currency creation creates the incentive for people to work towards common goals that cannot be achieved via Ron Paul's legislation.
Now I have been honest and frank with you. I'm not "pushing an agenda" and I'm genuinely interested in considering your point-of-view (even if you don't convince me you are right). Furthermore, I want to make it clear (again) that people here in RPF have a lot of problems with the way the banking system works. I also take issue with the way the system works and would advocate change. I know that most here in RPF would throw the whole system overboard, and that's fine, but I think there are problems that, not only can the "free market" not solve but become much worse under a
pure free market system.