jon_perez
Member
- Joined
- May 17, 2007
- Messages
- 1,135
I have been analyzing this issue of fiat money vs. gold standard and I believe there are reasons for NOT wanting to go back to the latter. E.g. that there is justification for Keynes to have said that gold was a barbarous relic.
What is a fiat dollar worth? What it is worth is not nothing but rather all the goods and services that can be bought with it. The value of the dollar is backed up by the productivity of the american economy. Even if the amount of dollars were to stay constant but US productivity plummets, the value of a dollar relative to other currencies would also go down. The converse applies, if the money supply grows slowly, and productivity goes up substantially, the currency will appreciate.
Consider the case of a simple economy with houses (assumed uniform) as goods and gold as the assumed-to-be-intrinsically-worthless-but-hard-to-manufacture money:
Year 1: 10 houses, 100 ounces of gold
price of 1 house = 10 ounces of gold
Year 2: 15 houses, 100 ounces of gold
price of 1 house = 6.7 ounces of gold
Year 3: 5 houses, 100 ounces of gold
price of 1 house = 20 ounces of gold
We see that in Year 2, gold appreciates, but that in Year 3 even gold can depreciate! Now you might say that Year 2 is a good thing because a house 'becomes cheaper'. However, you can bet that the same conspiracy theorists now whining about cabals being behind the Fed will find a new scapegoat under a gold standard. When the supply of gold money is not able to match the increased number of things there are available to buy, it is the people who hoard gold that will be accused of being the new cabal and in the same position as the Fed is of being able to "confiscate the people's wealth" through control of the money supply. The accusation of the conspiracy theorists is that in a fiat standard, wealth is stolen by those who print the money, but in a gold standard, wealth can also be stolen by the clever manipulation of the supply (e.g. hoarding) of the tokens of wealth (gold).
In a sense, gold does not have that much intrinsic value either compared to all the things it is able to buy. Its one real advantage over paper is mainly the difficulty of conjuring it out of thin air. Since virtually all central bankers are familiar with the fact that hyperinflation is caused by expansion of the money supply, the question here really is which of the two is more preferable:
1) putting trust in central bankers and expecting them to responsibly discharge their explicit duty of maintaining the stability of a fiat money supply.
2) the danger of private interests being able to hoard gold and control/manipulate the money supply
What is a fiat dollar worth? What it is worth is not nothing but rather all the goods and services that can be bought with it. The value of the dollar is backed up by the productivity of the american economy. Even if the amount of dollars were to stay constant but US productivity plummets, the value of a dollar relative to other currencies would also go down. The converse applies, if the money supply grows slowly, and productivity goes up substantially, the currency will appreciate.
Consider the case of a simple economy with houses (assumed uniform) as goods and gold as the assumed-to-be-intrinsically-worthless-but-hard-to-manufacture money:
Year 1: 10 houses, 100 ounces of gold
price of 1 house = 10 ounces of gold
Year 2: 15 houses, 100 ounces of gold
price of 1 house = 6.7 ounces of gold
Year 3: 5 houses, 100 ounces of gold
price of 1 house = 20 ounces of gold
We see that in Year 2, gold appreciates, but that in Year 3 even gold can depreciate! Now you might say that Year 2 is a good thing because a house 'becomes cheaper'. However, you can bet that the same conspiracy theorists now whining about cabals being behind the Fed will find a new scapegoat under a gold standard. When the supply of gold money is not able to match the increased number of things there are available to buy, it is the people who hoard gold that will be accused of being the new cabal and in the same position as the Fed is of being able to "confiscate the people's wealth" through control of the money supply. The accusation of the conspiracy theorists is that in a fiat standard, wealth is stolen by those who print the money, but in a gold standard, wealth can also be stolen by the clever manipulation of the supply (e.g. hoarding) of the tokens of wealth (gold).
In a sense, gold does not have that much intrinsic value either compared to all the things it is able to buy. Its one real advantage over paper is mainly the difficulty of conjuring it out of thin air. Since virtually all central bankers are familiar with the fact that hyperinflation is caused by expansion of the money supply, the question here really is which of the two is more preferable:
1) putting trust in central bankers and expecting them to responsibly discharge their explicit duty of maintaining the stability of a fiat money supply.
2) the danger of private interests being able to hoard gold and control/manipulate the money supply