Gold is fiat money
Bradley in DC, I want to continue to argue that gold is a type of fiat money, fiat meaning we put "faith" in that it will be accepted as a unit of stored value in exchange for actual commodities that we consume while having little consumption value itself, other than as jewelry. It's scarcity and present impossibility to "counterfeit" makes it an excellent fiat currency. However:
1. The "Gold Supply" constantly grows through mining by the tens or hundreds of tons per year. New gold enters in private hands so its entry into the marketplace is already inherantly unfair to the general public. In effect, wealth was created without having to produce value to the community, in a similar way as printing paper money on a machine, though more labor intensive.
2. By its nature, using gold and silver as money has produced a long history of slavery, war, theft and other atrocities as there is tremendous incentive by those who are prone to violence to go straight for the gold & silver as opposed to producing goods and services that have tangible value to the community.
3. The fair distribution of gold, or money backed by gold, is rarely talked about by gold money advocates. It's an easy system for Americans to promote as they have (once had?) enormous gold stores, not all of it acquired ethically. What about countries that have no gold? Most of the above ground gold is in the hands of elite private citizens or heavily armed 1st world nations.
4. Gold does not fairly represent the goods and services exchanged for it, because gold lasts forever and food, consumer goods, etc. last for days, weeks and/or decades. I believe it was Silvio Gessell who points out that true neutral money must fall in value to best mimic the underlying goods and services.
5. Gold money does not address the problem caused by the growing gap between national production and national income due to automation. We don't earn enough to pay for the goods and services that we've produced. This falls into the realm of National Dividend, Basic Income Guarantees and, I believe, the work of Henry George.
Sorry to go on at length. I'm not trying to be a know-it-all, as I am just learning all this in the past year and think that all ideas should be on the table and that we should equally discuss the flaws of using gold as money as we do its strengths.