Ammo for Barter – Ammo vs. Money
by Terence Gillespie
by Terence Gillespie
Recently by Terence Gillespie: The
Best Gun in the World
The belief
that everything is available for the right price is a Hollywood
myth that really must go. The Beatles sang better with, Money
Cant Buy Me Love.
For some reason,
our fiat tokens are still being mistaken for real money. And yet,
I havent seen .357 Magnum on the shelves in the last 12 months.
Maybe thats why its already happening: Ammunition is
being used for barter.
Blame who you
will. The green shoots of barter have appeared in anticipation of
nobody knows what. Ivory tower questions of if and should
(ammunition be used in barter) have been answered by the not so
invisible hand of the market. That leaves questions
of efficiency, demand, supply, resource allocation, liquidity and
legality. In particular:
- How does
ammo compare with money?
- How does
ammo compare with other barter items?
- What supply
and demand Factors are unique to ammunition?
- Which cartridges
are best?
- How much
is enough?
- What about
reloading?
- Is it legal?
For all its
flaws, hassles and lack of precision, barter is a wonderful thing.
It gets people talking, needs are fulfilled, the exchange is personal
and everyone leaves the table with real goods.
Lately, it
appears the real good people want to leave the table with is ammunition.
Ammo vs.
Money
We barter when
money is not available, money is worthless or when goods are not
available regardless of money. Ammo is currently being used in barter
because its not available regardless of money. However, it's
not hard to foresee a time when all three conditions would exist.
Gold and silver
are the best money on earth for reasons listed in, Why
is Gold Money? They have all the key attributes
of money and they have them in spades: They score excellent
within each category. For instance, gold and silver are not only
transportable, they are very transportable. They are not only storable,
they are very storable. . .and on down the line with each attribute.
Going one by one comparing the attributes of money with ammunition,
ammo is:
Transportable:
Yes, if kept away from water and shipped within legal restrictions.
Divisible:
Only within the same cartridge. Safety would dictate that divisibility
be further limited to manufactured lots. Mixing different size
cartridges is possible, but seldom done.
Storable:
Yes, for about 50 years though with much less tolerances than
gold or silver. Ammo can be destroyed or unpredictable if wet.
Performance can also vary with ambient humidity. Storability is
on a par with wheat.
Fungible:
No. It has divisibility by cartridge but no fungibility.
Resilient:
Yes, though with much less tolerances than gold or silver. Ammo
in water can not be trusted: Brass rusts while primers decay unpredictably.
Ammo is about as resilient as a large can of beans: Once
its dented, less people trust it.
Measurable:
Yes, within the same cartridge where components are consistent.
High Unit
Value: Yes, with values just above copper and lead though
far below silver and gold.
Desirable:
Yes, but not universally. Desirability is limited to those in
charge of security, hunting or those aware of a guns wide
range of utility. If the need for security grows the desire for
each family to have some amount of ammunition will increase.
Rare:
More and more each day.
Hard to
Counterfeit: No. But non-functional copies that pass muster
are almost as expensive to make as a functional round.
So, ammunition
is transportable, storable, resilient, measurable, has a High Unit
Value, and is increasingly Desirable and Rare. However, Divisibility
is limited to cartridge and there is no Fungibility. Counterfeiting
is possible, but, non-functional copies that pass muster are expensive
to make.
Ammunition
has 7 out of the 10 attributes of money. However, it does not perform
nearly as well in those 7 attributes as does gold and silver. If
we hold ammunition to the same standards as gold and silver then
it would be used as money only on a supplemental or transitional
basis.
The most acceptable
forms of tradable ammo would be cartridges in wide demand, manufactured
with consistent and trusted components and transported and stored
in a manner to keep it from coming into contact with water. The
end result being a half-dollar (Or .45 ACP round, in this case)
that you could use to buy a pack of gum with in the morning or shoot
a rattlesnake with in the afternoon!
If thats
how Ammunition measures up against gold and silver how do Federal
Reserve Tokens (dollars) measure up?
Dollars
vs. Money
Dollars are
transportable, measurable and storable on a par with paper cut into
uniform pieces. They are not divisible, fungible, resilient, desirable
or hard to counterfeit. They do not have a high unit value and are
rare on a par with the stars in the sky or the sand at the beach.
Dollars have
3 out of the 10 attributes of money, performing poorly within those
attributes. If we hold dollars to the same standards as gold and
silver the dollars would be used as money only if a government forced
their acceptance at the point of a gun.
The ammo in
that gun would be a far superior form of money than the dollars
they enforce.
Reverse
Ammo Multipliers
A disastrous
economy combined with an increasing awareness of the need for security
is causing ammo to fly off the shelves. The inability of manufactures
to keep up with demand is making the lack of supply visible. And
Californias recent ban on the importation of ammunition and
our growing distrust of the victim disarmament gang is not exactly
quelling demand.
All these factors
are ricocheting off one another and imparting to ammunition two
of the key ingredients of money: Desirability and Rarity.
Another reverse
multiplier is the falling dollar amidst surging commodity prices.
This dynamic duo is imparting to ammunition a third key ingredient
of money: High Unit Value.
Ammunition
Deflation
If ammo were
being used as money, today, wed be in a deflationary period.
The ammo presses
are not physically able to print enough. What ammo is
being printed is quickly purchased and shot off or saved for the
future. The only banking system is in personal physical storage
where owners do not loan it back into the money supply. That takes
it completely out of circulation.
To make matters
worse the ammo that is shot off is only partially recycled to bring
it back into the money supply. And more and more new gun owners
are buying their first 200 rounds to practice with their favorite
new security tool.
The net effect
is that one unit of ammo can now purchase more goods and services.
If you had been using ammunition as money and savings you would
have tripled the return you received on the equivalent amount of
dollar savings over the last year.
In fact, if
you substitute ammo for dollars it turns out the deflationists were
right!
October
23, 2009
Terence
Gillespie [send him mail]
has worked at IBM, played jazz piano on cruise ships, is an instrument-rated
pilot, songwriter, and is attempting to optimize every aspect of
life one article at a time on his
blog at YourOptimal.com.
Copyright ©
2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in part
is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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