Gold Bugs and Anti-Gold Bugs
by
Gary North
Recently
by Gary North: Lost
Law Licenses: Presidents Obama, Clinton, and Nixon
A recent
article by David Weiner on the MarketWatch site reminded
me of just how weak the economic arguments against the gold standard
are. Its title: "A Fool's Gold Standard." I examined this article
here.
The arguments
by American critics of a gold standard all rest on this unstated
presumption.
The
economic outcomes of policy decisions made by a committee of 12
salaried bureaucrats, seven of whom were appointed by the President
of the United States, and five of whom were appointed by the largest
regional banks that own a majority of shares of the 12 regional
Federal Reserve banks, are better for the nation than the decisions
of millions of owners of gold coins, who seek their own interests.
This is the
argument in favor of a salaried bureaucracy in place of the free
market. It assumes the superior wisdom and superior public interest
of a committee of academics (Board of Governors) and commercial
banking agents (regional FED bank presidents). The mainstream opponents
of a gold standard never put it this way, but this is the inescapable
implication of their opposition.
The only exceptions
within the anti-gold special-interest group are the Greenbackers.
They assume the following, and are willing to say so.
The
economic outcomes of policy decisions made by a Congressional committee
are superior for the nation to the decisions of millions of owners
of gold coins, who seek their own interests.
But the Greenbackers
refuse to admit that there is a second presumption.
The
decisions of this committee will be faithfully implemented under
the authority of the Department of the Treasury, which is under
the authority of the President, and whose employees are protected
by Civil Service rules against being fired.
Ultimately,
this debate is between the logic of the free market as a social
organization vs. the logic of central planning. The battlefield
is monetary theory and monetary policy.
FAITH
IN THE FEDERAL RESERVE
There is one
overwhelming reason why the mainstream media ridicule gold as an
investment and also gold as a monetary standard. To buy gold is
to vote against the Federal Reserve System.
These days,
we read that "gold is too high, so don't buy it." Did even one of
these supposed investment experts on gold publicly tell people to
buy gold when it was under $300? Of course not. Bill Bonner of Agora
Publishing did in 2000. I did in October of 2001, immediately after
9-11.
The mainstream
media experts are experts on when not to own gold: now. It is always
now.
They complain
that gold bugs are members of a religion. I accept this. Anti-gold
bugs are members of a rival religion.
Gold bugs
favor the religion of the free market. Anti-gold bugs favor the
religion of central planning by means of central banking. The two
camps have been at each other's throats for two centuries.
The anti-gold
bugs have been dominant in academia for at least a century.
DR.
ROOSEVELT, ECONOMIST
The anti-gold
bugs have been dominant in financial journalism ever since 1933,
when President Franklin Roosevelt unilaterally made gold illegal
for Americans to own. He issued an executive order on April 5, 1933.
He gave Americans until May 1 to turn in their gold at $20 an ounce.
Anyone who refused and got caught risked a $10,000 fine (at least
$170,000 in today's money) and a decade in jail. The
text is here.
Then, to complete
the heist, the government hiked the price of gold to $35: the Gold
Reserve Act of January 30, 1934. The government pocketed the difference:
an increase of 75%. "Tough luck, suckers!"
Only one man
was prosecuted under the executive order. If he had not contested
the EO in court, no one would ever have known. So, the fearful and/or
trusting citizens who obeyed the EO lost. Everyone who ignored it
made 75% on his investment. This was consistent with the first law
of federal politics: "You play ball with us, and we'll smash you
in the teeth with the bat."
That was the
end of the gold coin standard in the world. It had ended for Europe
in the weeks after the outbreak of World War I in 1914. Commercial
banks began to experience runs by depositors on the gold coins stored
in their vaults on behalf of depositors. So, the banks defaulted.
The governments allowed this, just as Washington had allowed it
in 1861. The central banks then confiscated the commercial banks'
gold. Only England restored the gold coin standard after the War
in 1925. Then it reneged again in 1931. That left only the USA.
FDR ended that loophole in 1933.
The financial
world today regards FDR's action in 1933 as irrelevant, but legitimate.
It was neither. It was a violation of contract. It was a concentration
of wealth. It was confiscatory. Above all, it was undemocratic in
the most fundamental way. His action removed from the general population
the authority to impose negative sanctions gold runs
on the fractional reserve banking system and the federal government.
DILUTED
DEMOCRACY
In political
democracy, your party can get its way if it gets 50% plus one vote,
and the counting is not rigged. You get one vote, but it is diluted.
In gold coin
currency democracy, where the government is not in the money business,
you get as many votes as you have gold coins on deposit at a commercial
bank. You can withdraw your coins or deposit new ones. Your vote
counts for you 100%. There is no dilution of your vote.
If 10% of
the depositors vote "no" by withdrawing gold coins, the bank must
change its lending policies. It must reduce lending and build up
coins in the vault. The process of withdrawing gold coins does not
take 50% plus one for concerned depositors to get their way. The
more fractionally reserved the bank, the fewer withdrawals that
it takes to effect a change of lending policy: higher reserves,
fewer loans.
The defenders
of the Federal Reserve System want highly concentrated voting: a
majority on the Federal Open Market Committee. This is 12 people.
Seven are appointed by the President and must be confirmed by the
Senate. After this, he has no authority over them. Five are members
of the 12 regional, privately owned Federal Reserve Banks. One of
the five is the president of the New York FED, whose membership
does not rotate.
Compare this
arrangement with the U.S. Supreme Court, which has 9 members.
In theory,
seven FOMC members and five justices run the United States of America.
They determine policies. The FOMC determines monetary policy. It
has a veto over the US government. The Supreme Court determines
politics, justice, and almost everything else. It has a veto over
Congress and the President.
The Court
operates through the various executive bureaucracies. Its decisions
can be resisted, but not overcome in the long run. The Court possesses
legitimacy in the eyes of the voters. It will get its way.
The FOMC operates
through commercial banks. But, when push comes to shove, seven people
set policy. In theory, Congress or the President can tell the FOMC
what to do. In practice, neither ever does this.
The independence
of the Federal Reserve from the political system is hailed by defenders
of democracy as necessary to reliable money. The independence of
the Supreme Court from the political system is hailed by defenders
of democracy as necessary to reliable laws.
In short,
democracy is window dressing for elite control over the United States.
This is why
control over the curriculum materials and methodology of a dozen
law schools and a dozen business schools is the heart of rule by
oligarchy.
In terms of
the 6,000 people who shape policies internationally, control over
two dozen universities in the world, most of which are in the United
States, is basic to shaping the outlook of this elite. Read David
Rothkopf's book, Superclass.
About one-third of the 6,000 people who run the institutions that
run the world attended one of these two dozen universities. If we
take the top 40, about 50% of the elite attended.
I used Google
to search for "independence" and "Federal Reserve System." The
first page, which few people ever go beyond, are self-serving puff
pieces by Federal Reserve Banks.
The bankers
have been successful in persuading the people who discuss the issues
of the day to defend the autonomy of the FED from political interference.
Typical is this
article from CBS News (2009).
The
hope is that an independent Fed can overcome the temptation to use
monetary policy to influence elections, and also overcome the temptation
to monetize the debt, and that it will do what's best for the economy
in the long-run rather than adopting the policy that maximizes the
chances of politicians being reelected.
Another
example comes from Forbes, a major business magazine.
So
before we rush to tampering with the Fed's independence, let's review
why it is important. The answer is fairly simple. An independent
central bank can focus on monetary policies for the long term; that
is, policies targeting low and stable inflation and a monetary climate
that promotes long-term economic growth. Political cycles, alas,
are considerably shorter. Without independence from the political
cycle the central bank would be subject to political pressures,
which in turn would impart an inflationary bias to monetary policy.
In this area politicians in a democratic society are shortsighted
because they are driven by the need to win their next election.
This is supported by empirical evidence. A politically insulated
central bank is more likely to be concerned with long-run objectives.
A variant
of the argument for central bank independence is that control
of monetary policy is far too important to be put in the hands
of politicians. As a group they have repeatedly demonstrated the
lack of political will to make difficult economic decisions. But
now they want to assert control over the Fed.
If you were
to substitute almost any other special-interest group, conventional
opinion would be outraged. Add the group to this sentence: "A variant
of the argument for central bank independence is that control of
[military, health, business, etc.] policy is far too important to
be put in the hands of politicians." The main exceptions: law and
education, where the elite control certification.
GOLD
COINS CONVEY INDEPENDENCE
When the public
had access to gold coins prior to 1914, individuals controlled banking
policy. They also controlled government fiscal policy. They could
take their coins out of commercial banks if they did not approve
of government policy. This is why national governments annul or
restrict gold coin redeemability whenever a major war breaks out.
They do not want to face the citizens' veto.
With the repudiation
of any gold coin standard since 1914, citizens no longer understand
the case for a gold coin currency. They do not understand that widespread
gold ownership was the #1 restraining factor on the expansion of
state power in the economy. The uncoordinated individual decisions
of millions of people could overturn any government policy that
required central bank inflation to fund it. The politicians resented
this. So did the central bankers.
The politicians
were under restraints: golden handcuffs. They decided that it was
better to turn the money-creation power over to the bankers. The
central bankers promised to buy government bonds at low rates: lender
of last resort. This made the central bank the counterfeiter of
last resort.
Politicians
do not take the step of putting money-creation under the federal
government. They could, but they don't. This is the Greenbackers'
solution. They have failed to persuade the Congress ever since 1863,
when Lincoln allowed the issuing of fiat money by the Treasury,
but promised to veto any further rounds of monetary inflation.
Who will hold
the hammer? Who will veto decisions by the federal government? The
answer used to be twofold: the gold coin standard and the jury system.
The intelligentsia has been successful in undermining the first.
It has tried to do the second, with judges instructing juries that
they can decide only the violation of a law, not the lawfulness
of the law itself. It has been less successful in this than in its
war on gold.
CONCLUSION
The
issue that divides the anti-gold bugs from the gold bugs is simple
to state. The gold coin standard places monetary authority in the
hands of millions of economic participants who own gold. The gold
bugs favor this. The anti-gold bugs oppose it.
The rival
camps are divided by rival systems of economic sovereignty. The
gold bugs favor the sovereignty of the free market. The anti-gold
bugs favor the sovereignty of the banking cartel, which is the joint
creation of the federal government (Federal Reserve) and the states
(state bank licensing).
This is a
replay of the arguments of Adam Smith against the arguments of the
mercantilists. It is the logic of widespread, decentralized private
ownership and voluntary contract vs. the logic of government licensing,
barriers to entry, and the legal right to counterfeit money.
The anti-gold
bugs do not want to put it this way. This is why gold bugs should
always put it this way.
September
10, 2012
Gary
North [send him mail]
is the author of Mises
on Money. Visit http://www.garynorth.com.
He is also the author of a free 31-volume series, An
Economic Commentary on the Bible.
Copyright ©
2012 Gary North
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