A Goldbug’s Life
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
Mr.
James Surowiecki wrote a wise and moronic piece on gold in the New
Yorker. His wisdom is centered on the insight that neither gold,
nor paper money are true wealth, but only relative measures, subject
to adjustment.
"Gold
or not, we're always just running on air," he wrote. "You can't
be rich unless everyone agrees you're rich."
In
other words, there is no law that guarantees gold at $450 an ounce.
It might just as well be priced at $266 an ounce, as it was when
George W. Bush took office for the first time. That was just four
years ago. Since then, a man who counted his wealth in Krugerrands
has become 70% richer.
But
gold wasn't born yesterday...or four years ago. Mr. Surowiecki noticed
that the metal has a past, just as it has a present. He turned his
head around and looked back a quarter of a century. The yellow metal
was not a great way to preserve wealth during that period, he notes.
As a result, he sees no difference between a paper dollar and a
gold doubloon, or between a bull market in gold and a bubble in
technology shares.
"In
the end, our trust in gold is no different from our trust in a piece
of paper with ‘one dollar’ written on it," he believes. And when
you buy gold, "you're buying into a collective hallucination exactly
what those dot-com investors did in the late nineties."
Pity
he did not bother to look back a little further. This is, of course,
the moronic part. While Mr. Surowiecki has looked at a bit of gold's
past, he has not seen enough of it. Both gold and paper dollars
have history, but gold has far more of it. Both gold and dollars
have a future too. But, and this is the important part, gold is
likely to have more of that, too.
The
expression, "as rich as Croesus," is of ancient origin.
The king of historic Lydia is remembered, even today, for his great
wealth. Croesus was not rich because he had stacks of dollar bills.
Instead, he measured his richness in gold. No one says "as
poor as Croesus," do they? We have also heard the expression,
"not worth a continental," referring to America's Revolutionary-era
paper money. We have never heard the expression, "not worth
a Krugerrand."
Likewise,
when Jesus said, "Render unto Caesar that which is Caesar’s," he
referred to a denarius, a coin of gold or silver, not a paper currency.
The coin had Caesar’s image on it, just as today's American money
has pictures of Lincoln, Washington or Jackson on them. Dead presidents
were golden back then. Even today, a gold denarius is still about
at least as valuable as it was then. America's dead presidents,
whose images on printed in green ink on special paper, lose 2% to
5% of their purchasing power every year. What do you think they
will be worth 2,000 years from now?
A
few years before Jesus, Crassus, who had made his fortune on real
estate speculation in Rome, decided to put together an army to hustle
the east. Alas, such projects almost always meet with disaster;
Crassus's was no exception. He was captured by the Parthians and
was put to death in an unusually cruel and costly way. But he did
not end his days with paper money stuffed down his throat...and
certainly not dollar bills. No, they poured molten gold down his
gullet or so the story has it.
Gold
has a long history. And during its history, many was the time that
humans were tempted to replace it with other forms of money which
they believed would be more convenient, more modern, and most importantly,
more accommodating. After all, gold is hard to find and hard to
bring up out of the earth. As a result, its quantity is always limited
by nature herself. Paper money, by contrast, offered irresistible
possibilities. The list of bright paper rivals is long and colorful.
You will find hundreds of examples, from assignats to zlotys. But
the story of paper money is short and always sad. Since the invention
of the printing press, a new paper dollar or franc can be brought
out at negligible cost. Nor does it cost much to increase the money
supply by a factor of 10 or 100 simply add zeros. It may seem
obvious, but adding zeros does not add value.
Still,
the attraction of being able to get something for nothing has been
too great to resist. That is what makes goldbugs so irritating:
They are always pointing it out. Even worse, they seem to enjoy
saying that "there ain't no such thing as a free lunch,"
which comes as a big disappointment to most people.
Once
people were able to create "money" at virtually no expense,
no one ever resisted doing it to excess. No paper currency has ever
held its value for very long. Most are ruined within a few years.
Some take longer. Even the world's two most successful paper currencies
the American dollar and the British pound have each lost more
than 95% of their value in the last century, with is especially
remarkable since both were linked by law and custom to gold for
most of those years. For the dollar, the final link to real money
was not cut until August 15, 1971. That was when the world found
out what the greenback was really worth nothing much.
Whatever
promises the Feds made with regard to the dollar, they could unmake
whenever they wanted.
Some
paper currencies are destroyed almost absent-mindedly. Others are
ruined intentionally.
But
all go away eventually. By contrast, every gold coin (and silver,
for that matter) that was ever struck is still valuable today
and the coins almost always have more value than when they first
came out of the mint.
December
11, 2004
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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