The Big Unknown
by
Paul Hein
by Paul Hein
DIGG THIS
Wherever you
are, it’s safe to assume that within a few miles, salary negotiations
are taking place between workers and management. Contracts are always
expiring and being renewed. Sometimes, when the negotiators are
representatives of the Big Three automakers, and the United Auto
Workers, as in September of 2003, the negotiations warrant mention
in the newspapers and on the evening news.
It’s safe to
say, however, whether the negotiations involve billions or mere
thousands, that some things are taken for granted. For example,
no one at the bargaining table is going to interrupt proceedings
to ascertain what, precisely, is meant by "hour." The
discussions will not hang on what is meant by "week,"
or "year." Common sense dictates you don’t quibble over
words that have a universally understood meaning. Sadly, that also
seems to include the word "dollar," although no one sitting
around the negotiating table could define it.
It’s not that
the negotiations exclude precision. It will be set forth quite clearly
what is expected from the workers. It’s not enough, obviously, that
they simply show up and remain on the premises for a full shift.
Their duties will be specified. But should the workers’ representative
dare suggest that a similar specificity be applied to what the worker
will receive, as opposed to provide, he will be laughed to scorn.
"Why, dollars, of course!"
Ah, yes, but
what does that mean? Will the "dollar" be a dollar of
bank credit, transferred by check? Probably. But even a cursory
investigation will yield the information that there is no particular
value attached to the "dollar" of credit. It’s worth what
you can get for it, which changes for the worse with each passing
month. Thus, an income of five thousand dollars per month will be
more valuable in January, than in December of the same year. Yet
it’s considered the same income in both months.
The same can
be said for the paper currency. There’s no more paper in a HUNDRED
than in a ONE, so the "value" of such devices is impossible
to stipulate. Like the checkbook money, it’s worth what it’ll buy.
(And what it’ll buy is worth the paper that will buy it!)
There are coins,
of course, and here we see the entrance of something tangible into
the monetary system. But what?
The "dollar"
coins available today present a confusing mishmash. One might occasionally
see one of the old dollars of silver, 90% pure, weighing 412.5 grains,
on average. These were the last examples of constitutional money
widely used by Americans. There are also tokens marked "dollar"
both silver colored, and gold colored, although the "golden
dollar" contains no gold, but only about 1% more copper than
the silvery dollar. Both are "legal tender" United States
coins; neither contains gold or silver. The same can be said of
the "Eisenhower dollar," minted from 1971 to 1978; also
a legal tender.
But so are
coins of platinum, gold, and silver, currently being produced at
the U.S. Mint. A coin of pure platinum, stamped "100 Dollars"
weighs an ounce. This $100 coin costs $1390. A one-ounce coin of
gold, stamped "50 Dollars" costs $720, while the lowly
one ounce silver coin, stamped "One Dollar" will set you
back $19.95. So what’s a dollar? Is it unreasonable, or silly, to
ask? Is a dollar different amounts of different materials, costing
much more than a dollar per dollar? In that case, the dollar of
silver (19.95) is more "valuable" than the dollar of platinum
(13.90). That makes a lot of sense, doesn’t it? If every "quart"
of milk in the diary case were a slightly different size, wouldn’t
you think that peculiar, at the very least?
What is unreasonable,
or silly, about knowing exactly and precisely what you are to receive,
in return for doing exactly and precisely what you are hired to
do? Simple logic would make it absolutely proper for a worker to
inquire about the nature of the payment he is to receive.
And simple
curiosity would prompt one to ask why this inability to define one
of the most basic units in society should exist. Why cannot "dollar"
be defined with as much precision as "quart" or "pound?"
The only conceivable answer, I think, is that "quart"
and "pound" measure something. No one goes to the store
to buy a quart, or a pound, but only a quart of milk, or a pound
of potatoes. But "dollar?" Of what is the dollar a unit?
In general, of course, the answer is money. And what is that? Once,
it was silver, and for a while, gold. Today it is nothing.
The advantages
of imaginary money, to government and banker, are obvious. If money
were a commodity, bankers could only earn interest by lending that
commodity, and there might not be enough of it at any given time
to satisfy the demand for loans. Imaginary money, on the other hand,
is never in short supply, so bankers can earn interest on "funds"
that do not exist except as account entries in the bank’s books;
and those entries were created by the bank itself.
A big borrower,
of course, is Uncle Sam. With unlimited "amounts" of modern
money available to him, he has little need to control his impulses
to expand and enlarge his spheres of influence. No program is too
expensive. Why, he can fly to the moon. In fact, he has! He can
station his soldiers in virtually every country in the world, to
make sure everyone can enjoy the benefits of democracy and freedom.
He can educate children, provide medical care to the sick, house
the homeless, and feed the hungry.
The only drawback
is that productive citizens see the buying power of their paychecks
diminish from month to month, businesses move abroad, retirement
funds shrink in value, and foreigners devise new currencies with,
hopefully (in their eyes) better staying-power than the dollar.
In other words, economic catastrophe, inch by inch.
And all of
it possible because nobody knows, or seems to care, that the "dollar"
is the great unknown!
March
17, 2007
Dr.
Hein [send
him mail] is a retired ophthalmologist in St. Louis,
and the author of All
Work & No Pay.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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