i posted this link
http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/hodges/2006/0106.html
He responded
Your graphs are fundamentally incorrect--the world was on a modified gold standard until the early 1970's through the "Bretton Woods" system.
It wasn't working because (a) the gold standard requires unsustainable transfers of gold between nations to correct trade imbalances to promote unncessary currency stability, and (b) the gold standard destroys the ability of a government to control fiscal policy. The gold standard is widely believed to be a cause of the Great Depression by most prominent economic historians--from Keynesians to people like Milton Friedman.
Using a gold standard limits the ability of a government to increase the money supply in downturns and reduces its ability to limit the money supply during economic booms. These are two undesirable outcomes from a Keynesian perspective that result in booms turning into bubbles (like the 1920's) and recessions turning into depressions because the budget must be balanced and the money supply must be restricted. Of course, you could argue we have always done a bad job managing the booms, but our ability to manage a bust requires more robust economic policy.
Gold convertibility also destroys the money supply during recessions as individuals trade their dollars for gold. It is an amplifier of economy decay and not a preventor of downturns. This is the real weakness of the gold standard.
http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/hodges/2006/0106.html
He responded
Your graphs are fundamentally incorrect--the world was on a modified gold standard until the early 1970's through the "Bretton Woods" system.
It wasn't working because (a) the gold standard requires unsustainable transfers of gold between nations to correct trade imbalances to promote unncessary currency stability, and (b) the gold standard destroys the ability of a government to control fiscal policy. The gold standard is widely believed to be a cause of the Great Depression by most prominent economic historians--from Keynesians to people like Milton Friedman.
Using a gold standard limits the ability of a government to increase the money supply in downturns and reduces its ability to limit the money supply during economic booms. These are two undesirable outcomes from a Keynesian perspective that result in booms turning into bubbles (like the 1920's) and recessions turning into depressions because the budget must be balanced and the money supply must be restricted. Of course, you could argue we have always done a bad job managing the booms, but our ability to manage a bust requires more robust economic policy.
Gold convertibility also destroys the money supply during recessions as individuals trade their dollars for gold. It is an amplifier of economy decay and not a preventor of downturns. This is the real weakness of the gold standard.