A Comeback for Gold-Backed Money?
by Andrey
Dashkov
Casey
Research
Several legislative
initiatives caught our attention recently. All of them are related
to the monetary role of gold and range from proposals to return
to the gold standard, to minting gold
and silver as an alternative currency, to having all
state transactions carried out in gold and silver coins, to
permitting
citizens to run their own mints.
Do these proposals
signal a significant attitude change among politicians and mainstream
economic institutions toward gold? No. They are largely regarded
as fringe ideas and dismissed out of hand. The third link above
is written in a condescending tone that implies everyone knows that
the gold standard is bad for an economy and it caused the Great
Depression. Still, it’s quite telling that opinions that gold can
be incorporated into a modern economy are becoming numerous, and
actually making it onto the legislative agenda in various jurisdictions.
Last November,
clearing house ICE Europe began accepting gold bullion as initial
margin for crude oil and natural gas futures. This year, JPMorgan
Chase announced that it would accept
physical gold as collateral for a number of transactions. According
to the Wall Street Journal, stock exchanges in New York,
Chicago and Europe recently agreed to accept gold as collateral
for certain trades, too. The World Gold Council is gaining traction
in its push to have the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision accept
the precious metals as a Tier-1 asset for banks, along with government
bonds and currencies. Private and public institutions alike are
clearly rethinking their attitude toward gold.
Perhaps most
telling of all, the world’s central banks were net
buyers of gold in 2010 and in 2009, after being net sellers
for the previous 20 years. As World Bank President Robert Zoellick
said last November, gold has become the "yellow elephant in the
room" that needs to be acknowledged by policymakers of major economies.
No one can
predict exactly how this will all shake out, but Doug Casey has
long said that a return
to a gold standard, or some modern equivalent, is almost inevitable.
That’s because, for the reasons Aristotle outlined 2,000 years ago
(it’s durable, divisible, consistent, convenient, and has intrinsic
value), gold is hands-down the world’s best money.
Now, Gresham’s
Law tells us that bad money drives out good, but that’s only
true when legal tender laws hold sway (incentivizing people to hoard
what’s perceived to be “good” money and spend the “bad” money as
fast as they can). When people give up on the local legal tender,
Gresham’s Law goes into reverse, and good money chases out bad.
The dollarization of third-world economies is an example of this,
the dollar being perceived as being good when compared to many shakier
currencies.
So, what happens
if fiat currencies as a class start to be perceived as bad money?
Gresham, and history, tells us that they’ll eventually be abandoned,
unless made good (put back on some acceptable standard of value,
like gold).
The key point
here is that it can’t happen just a little bit, just as you can’t
get a little bit pregnant. Once it starts, the good money will drive
out the bad, and in today’s wired global economy, the phenomenon
will be worldwide, fast and devastatingly thorough.
The investment
implications, broadly, are obvious; you want to own gold for safety
and speculate
on gold stocks for profit. The details on how best to do this
are the current raison d’être of our metals publications.
In light of
the information above, it seems that the Mania Phase of the gold
bull market is getting closer every day. You’ll want to stock up
on gold, silver and sound large-cap mining stocks before the investing
crowd catches on. There’s still time, but it may be running short.
To learn everything about prudent precious metals investments, give
BIG
GOLD a try today. Read
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– and his subscribers portfolios – by 90.4%... and how, for only
$79 per year, you can do the same.
March
15, 2011
Andrey
Dashkov is a research analyst for Casey
Research.
Copyright
© 2011 Casey
Research
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