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What the Price of Gold Is Telling Us
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
Before the
U.S. House of Representatives, April 25, 2006
The financial
press, and even the network news shows, have begun reporting the
price of gold regularly. For twenty years, between 1980 and 2000,
the price of gold was rarely mentioned. There was little interest,
and the price was either falling or remaining steady.
Since 2001
however, interest in gold has soared along with its price. With
the price now over $600 an ounce, a lot more people are becoming
interested in gold as an investment and an economic indicator.
Much can be learned by understanding what the rising dollar price
of gold means.
The rise
in gold prices from $250 per ounce in 2001 to over $600 today
has drawn investors and speculators into the precious metals market.
Though many already have made handsome profits, buying gold per
se should not be touted as a good investment. After all, gold
earns no interest and its quality never changes. Its static,
and does not grow as sound investments should.
Its
more accurate to say that one might invest in a gold or silver
mining company, where management, labor costs, and the nature
of new discoveries all play a vital role in determining the quality
of the investment and the profits made.
Buying gold
and holding it is somewhat analogous to converting ones savings
into one hundred dollar bills and hiding them under the mattress
yet not exactly the same. Both gold and dollars are considered
money, and holding money does not qualify as an investment. Theres
a big difference between the two however, since by holding paper
money one loses purchasing power. The purchasing power of commodity
money, e.g., gold, however, goes up if the government devalues the
circulating fiat currency.
Holding gold
is protection or insurance against governments proclivity
to debase its currency. The purchasing power of gold goes up not
because its a so-called good investment; it goes up in value
only because the paper currency goes down in value. In our current
situation, that means the dollar.
One of the
characteristics of commodity money one that originated
naturally in the marketplace is that it must serve as a
store of value. Gold and silver meet that test paper does
not. Because of this profound difference, the incentive and wisdom
of holding emergency funds in the form of gold becomes attractive
when the official currency is being devalued. Its more attractive
than trying to save wealth in the form of a fiat currency, even
when earning some nominal interest. The lack of earned interest
on gold is not a problem once people realize the purchasing power
of their currency is declining faster than the interest rates
they might earn. The purchasing power of gold can rise even faster
than increases in the cost of living.
The point is
that most who buy gold do so to protect against a depreciating currency
rather than as an investment in the classical sense. Americans understand
this less than citizens of other countries; some nations have suffered
from severe monetary inflation that literally led to the destruction
of their national currency. Though our inflation i.e., the
depreciation of the U.S. dollar has been insidious, average
Americans are unaware of how this occurs. For instance, few Americans
know nor seem concerned that the 1913 pre-Federal Reserve dollar
is now worth only four cents. Officially, our central bankers and
our politicians express no fear that the course on which we are
set is fraught with great danger to our economy and our political
system. The belief that money created out of thin air can work economic
miracles, if only properly managed, is pervasive in
D.C.
In many ways
we shouldnt be surprised about this trust in such an unsound
system. For at least four generations our government-run universities
have systematically preached a monetary doctrine justifying the
so-called wisdom of paper money over the foolishness
of sound money. Not only that, paper money has worked surprisingly
well in the past 35 years the years the world has accepted
pure paper money as currency. Alan Greenspan bragged that central
bankers in these several decades have gained the knowledge necessary
to make paper money respond as if it were gold. This removes the
problem of obtaining gold to back currency, and hence frees politicians
from the rigid discipline a gold standard imposes.
Many central
bankers in the last 15 years became so confident they had achieved
this milestone that they sold off large hoards of their gold reserves.
At other times they tried to prove that paper works better than
gold by artificially propping up the dollar by suppressing market
gold prices. This recent deception failed just as it did in the
1960s, when our government tried to hold gold artificially low
at $35 an ounce. But since they could not truly repeal the economic
laws regarding money, just as many central bankers sold, others
bought. Its fascinating that the European central banks
sold gold while Asian central banks bought it over the last several
years.
Since gold
has proven to be the real money of the ages, we see once again
a shift in wealth from the West to the East, just as we saw a
loss of our industrial base in the same direction. Though Treasury
officials deny any U.S. sales or loans of our official gold holdings,
no audits are permitted so no one can be certain.
The special
nature of the dollar as the reserve currency of the world has
allowed this game to last longer than it would have otherwise.
But the fact that gold has gone from $252 per ounce to over $600
means there is concern about the future of the dollar. The higher
the price for gold, the greater the concern for the dollar. Instead
of dwelling on the dollar price of gold, we should be talking
about the depreciation of the dollar. In 1934 a dollar was worth
1/20th of an ounce of gold; $20 bought an ounce of gold. Today
a dollar is worth 1/600th of an ounce of gold, meaning it takes
$600 to buy one ounce of gold.
The number
of dollars created by the Federal Reserve, and through the fractional
reserve banking system, is crucial in determining how the market
assesses the relationship of the dollar and gold. Though theres
a strong correlation, its not instantaneous or perfectly
predictable. There are many variables to consider, but in the
long term the dollar price of gold represents past inflation of
the money supply. Equally important, it represents the anticipation
of how much new money will be created in the future. This introduces
the factor of trust and confidence in our monetary authorities
and our politicians. And these days the American people are casting
a vote of no confidence in this regard, and for good
reasons.
The incentive
for central bankers to create new money out of thin air is twofold.
One is to practice central economic planning through the manipulation
of interest rates. The second is to monetize the escalating federal
debt politicians create and thrive on.
Today no
one in Washington believes for a minute that runaway deficits
are going to be curtailed. In March alone, the federal government
created an historic $85 billion deficit. The current supplemental
bill going through Congress has grown from $92 billion to over
$106 billion, and everyone knows it will not draw President Bushs
first veto. Most knowledgeable people therefore assume that inflation
of the money supply is not only going to continue, but accelerate.
This anticipation, plus the fact that many new dollars have been
created over the past 15 years that have not yet been fully discounted,
guarantees the further depreciation of the dollar in terms of
gold.
Theres
no single measurement that reveals what the Fed has done in the
recent past or tells us exactly what its about to do in
the future. Forget about the lip service given to transparency
by new Fed Chairman Bernanke. Not only is this administration
one of the most secretive across the board in our history, the
current Fed firmly supports denying the most important measurement
of current monetary policy to Congress, the financial community,
and the American public. Because of a lack of interest and poor
understanding of monetary policy, Congress has expressed essentially
no concern about the significant change in reporting statistics
on the money supply.
Beginning
in March, though planned before Bernanke arrived at the Fed, the
central bank discontinued compiling and reporting the monetary
aggregate known as M3. M3 is the best description of how quickly
the Fed is creating new money and credit. Common sense tells us
that a government central bank creating new money out of thin
air depreciates the value of each dollar in circulation. Yet this
report is no longer available to us and Congress makes no demands
to receive it.
Though M3
is the most helpful statistic to track Fed activity, it by no
means tells us everything we need to know about trends in monetary
policy. Total bank credit, still available to us, gives us indirect
information reflecting the Feds inflationary policies. But
ultimately the markets will figure out exactly what the Fed is
up to, and then individuals, financial institutions, governments,
and other central bankers will act accordingly. The fact that
our money supply is rising significantly cannot be hidden from
the markets.
The response
in time will drive the dollar down, while driving interest rates
and commodity prices up. Already we see this trend developing,
which surely will accelerate in the not too distant future. Part
of this reaction will be from those who seek a haven to protect
their wealth not invest by treating gold and silver
as universal and historic money. This means holding fewer dollars
that are decreasing in value while holding gold as it increases
in value.
A soaring
gold price is a vote of no confidence in the central
bank and the dollar. This certainly was the case in 1979 and 1980.
Today, gold prices reflect a growing restlessness with the increasing
money supply, our budgetary and trade deficits, our unfunded liabilities,
and the inability of Congress and the administration to reign
in runaway spending.
Denying us
statistical information, manipulating interest rates, and artificially
trying to keep gold prices in check wont help in the long
run. If the markets are fooled short term, it only means the adjustments
will be much more dramatic later on. And in the meantime, other
market imbalances develop.
The Fed tries
to keep the consumer spending spree going, not through hard work
and savings, but by creating artificial wealth in stock markets
bubbles and housing bubbles. When these distortions run their
course and are discovered, the corrections will be quite painful.
Likewise,
a fiat monetary system encourages speculation and unsound borrowing.
As problems develop, scapegoats are sought and frequently found
in foreign nations. This prompts many to demand altering exchange
rates and protectionist measures. The sentiment for this type
of solution is growing each day.
Though everyone
decries inflation, trade imbalances, economic downturns, and federal
deficits, few attempt a closer study of our monetary system and
how these events are interrelated. Even if it were recognized
that a gold standard without monetary inflation would be advantageous,
few in Washington would accept the political disadvantages of
living with the discipline of gold since it serves as a
check on government size and power. This is a sad commentary on
the politics of today. The best analogy to our affinity for government
spending, borrowing, and inflating is that of a drug addict who
knows if he doesnt quit hell die; yet he cant
quit because of the heavy price required to overcome the dependency.
The right choice is very difficult, but remaining addicted to
drugs guarantees the death of the patient, while our addiction
to deficit spending, debt, and inflation guarantees the collapse
of our economy.
Special interest
groups, who vigorously compete for federal dollars, want to perpetuate
the system rather than admit to a dangerous addiction. Those who
champion welfare for the poor, entitlements for the middle class,
or war contracts for the military industrial corporations, all
agree on the so-called benefits bestowed by the Feds power
to counterfeit fiat money. Bankers, who benefit from our fractional
reserve system, likewise never criticize the Fed, especially since
its the lender of last resort that bails out financial institutions
when crises arise. And its true, special interests and bankers
do benefit from the Fed, and may well get bailed out just
as we saw with the Long-Term Capital Management fund crisis a
few years ago. In the past, companies like Lockheed and Chrysler
benefited as well. But what the Fed cannot do is guarantee the
market will maintain trust in the worthiness of the dollar. Current
policy guarantees that the integrity of the dollar will be undermined.
Exactly when this will occur, and the extent of the resulting
damage to financial system, cannot be known for sure but
it is coming. There are plenty of indications already on the horizon.
Foreign policy
plays a significant role in the economy and the value of the dollar.
A foreign policy of militarism and empire building cannot be supported
through direct taxation. The American people would never tolerate
the taxes required to pay immediately for overseas wars, under
the discipline of a gold standard. Borrowing and creating new
money is much more politically palatable. It hides and delays
the real costs of war, and the people are lulled into complacency
especially since the wars we fight are couched in terms
of patriotism, spreading the ideas of freedom, and stamping out
terrorism. Unnecessary wars and fiat currencies go hand-in-hand,
while a gold standard encourages a sensible foreign policy.
The cost
of war is enormously detrimental; it significantly contributes
to the economic instability of the nation by boosting spending,
deficits, and inflation. Funds used for war are funds that could
have remained in the productive economy to raise the standard
of living of Americans now unemployed, underemployed, or barely
living on the margin.
Yet even
these costs may be preferable to paying for war with huge tax
increases. This is because although fiat dollars are theoretically
worthless, value is imbued by the trust placed in them by the
worlds financial community. Subjective trust in a currency
can override objective knowledge about government policies, but
only for a limited time.
Economic
strength and military power contribute to the trust in a currency;
in todays world trust in the U.S. dollar is not earned and
therefore fragile. The history of the dollar, being as good as
gold up until 1971, is helpful in maintaining an artificially
higher value for the dollar than deserved.
Foreign policy
contributes to the crisis when the spending to maintain our worldwide
military commitments becomes prohibitive, and inflationary pressures
accelerate. But the real crisis hits when the world realizes the
king has no clothes, in that the dollar has no backing, and we
face a military setback even greater than we already are experiencing
in Iraq. Our token friends may quickly transform into vocal enemies
once the attack on the dollar begins.
False trust
placed in the dollar once was helpful to us, but panic and rejection
of the dollar will develop into a real financial crisis. Then
we will have no other option but to tighten our belts, go back
to work, stop borrowing, start saving, and rebuild our industrial
base, while adjusting to a lower standard of living for most Americans.
Counterfeiting
the nations money is a serious offense. The founders were
especially adamant about avoiding the chaos, inflation, and destruction
associated with the Continental dollar. Thats why the Constitution
is clear that only gold and silver should be legal tender in the
United States. In 1792 the Coinage Act authorized the death penalty
for any private citizen who counterfeited the currency. Too bad
they werent explicit that counterfeiting by government officials
is just as detrimental to the economy and the value of the dollar.
In wartime,
many nations actually operated counterfeiting programs to undermine
our dollar, but never to a disastrous level. The enemy knew how
harmful excessive creation of new money could be to the dollar and
our economy. But it seems we never learned the dangers of creating
new money out of thin air. We dont need an Arab nation or
the Chinese to undermine our system with a counterfeiting operation.
We do it ourselves, with all the disadvantages that would occur
if others did it to us. Today we hear threats from some Arab, Muslim,
and far Eastern countries about undermining the dollar system
not by dishonest counterfeiting, but by initiating an alternative
monetary system based on gold. Wouldnt that be ironic? Such
an event theoretically could do great harm to us. This day may well
come, not so much as a direct political attack on the dollar system
but out of necessity to restore confidence in money once again.
Historically,
paper money never has lasted for long periods of time, while gold
has survived thousands of years of attacks by political interests
and big government. In time, the world once again will restore
trust in the monetary system by making some currency as good as
gold.
Gold, or
any acceptable market commodity money, is required to preserve
liberty. Monopoly control by government of a system that creates
fiat money out of thin air guarantees the loss of liberty. No
matter how well-intended our militarism is portrayed, or how happily
the promises of wonderful programs for the poor are promoted,
inflating the money supply to pay these bills makes government
bigger. Empires always fail, and expenses always exceed projections.
Harmful unintended consequences are the rule, not the exception.
Welfare for the poor is inefficient and wasteful. The beneficiaries
are rarely the poor themselves, but instead the politicians, bureaucrats,
or the wealthy. The same is true of all foreign aid its
nothing more than a program that steals from the poor in a rich
country and gives to the rich leaders of a poor country. Whether
its war or welfare payments, it always means higher taxes,
inflation, and debt. Whether its the extraction of wealth
from the productive economy, the distortion of the market by interest
rate manipulation, or spending for war and welfare, it cant
happen without infringing upon personal liberty.
At home the
war on poverty, terrorism, drugs, or foreign rulers provides an
opportunity for authoritarians to rise to power, individuals who
think nothing of violating the peoples rights to privacy
and freedom of speech. They believe their role is to protect the
secrecy of government, rather than protect the privacy of citizens.
Unfortunately, that is the atmosphere under which we live today,
with essentially no respect for the Bill of Rights.
Though great
economic harm comes from a government monopoly fiat monetary system,
the loss of liberty associated with it is equally troubling. Just
as empires are self-limiting in terms of money and manpower, so
too is a monetary system based on illusion and fraud. When the
end comes we will be given an opportunity to choose once again
between honest money and liberty on one hand; chaos, poverty,
and authoritarianism on the other.
The economic
harm done by a fiat monetary system is pervasive, dangerous, and
unfair. Though runaway inflation is injurious to almost everyone,
it is more insidious for certain groups. Once inflation is recognized
as a tax, it becomes clear the tax is regressive: penalizing the
poor and middle class more than the rich and politically privileged.
Price inflation, a consequence of inflating the money supply by
the central bank, hits poor and marginal workers first and foremost.
It especially penalizes savers, retirees, those on fixed incomes,
and anyone who trusts government promises. Small businesses and
individual enterprises suffer more than the financial elite, who
borrow large sums before the money loses value. Those who are
on the receiving end of government contracts especially
in the military industrial complex during wartime receive
undeserved benefits.
Its
a mistake to blame high gasoline and oil prices on price gouging.
If we impose new taxes or fix prices, while ignoring monetary
inflation, corporate subsidies, and excessive regulations, shortages
will result. The market is the only way to determine the best
price for any commodity. The law of supply and demand cannot be
repealed. The real problems arise when government planners give
subsidies to energy companies and favor one form of energy over
another.
Energy prices
are rising for many reasons: Inflation; increased demand from
China and India; decreased supply resulting from our invasion
of Iraq; anticipated disruption of supply as we push regime change
in Iran; regulatory restrictions on gasoline production; government
interference in the free market development of alternative fuels;
and subsidies to big oil such as free leases and grants for research
and development.
Interestingly,
the cost of oil and gas is actually much higher than we pay at
the retail level. Much of the DOD budget is spent protecting our
oil supplies, and if such spending is factored in gasoline probably
costs us more than $5 a gallon. The sad irony is that this military
effort to secure cheap oil supplies inevitably backfires, and
actually curtails supplies and boosts prices at the pump. The
waste and fraud in issuing contracts to large corporations for
work in Iraq only add to price increases.
When problems
arise under conditions that exist today, its a serious error
to blame the little bit of the free market that still functions.
Last summer the market worked efficiently after Katrina
gas hit $3 a gallon, but soon supplies increased, usage went down,
and the price returned to $2. In the 1980s, market forces took
oil from $40 per barrel to $10 per barrel, and no one cried for
the oil companies that went bankrupt. Todays increases are
for the reasons mentioned above. Its natural for labor to
seek its highest wage, and businesses to strive for the greatest
profit. Thats the way the market works. When the free market
is allowed to work, its the consumer who ultimately determines
price and quality, with labor and business accommodating consumer
choices. Once this process is distorted by government, prices
rise excessively, labor costs and profits are negatively affected,
and problems emerge. Instead of fixing the problem, politicians
and demagogues respond by demanding windfall profits taxes and
price controls, while never questioning how previous government
interference caused the whole mess in the first place. Never let
it be said that higher oil prices and profits cause inflation;
inflation of the money supply causes higher prices!
Since keeping
interest rates below market levels is synonymous with new money
creation by the Fed, the resulting business cycle, higher cost
of living, and job losses all can be laid at the doorstep of the
Fed. This burden hits the poor the most, making Fed taxation by
inflation the worst of all regressive taxes. Statistics about
revenues generated by the income tax are grossly misleading; in
reality much harm is done by our welfare/warfare system supposedly
designed to help the poor and tax the rich. Only sound money can
rectify the blatant injustice of this destructive system.
The Founders
understood this great danger, and voted overwhelmingly to reject
emitting bills of credit, the term they used for paper
or fiat money. Its too bad the knowledge and advice of our
founders, and their mandate in the Constitution, are ignored today
at our great peril. The current surge in gold prices which
reflects our dollars devaluation is warning us to
pay closer attention to our fiscal, monetary, entitlement, and
foreign policy.
Meaning
of the Gold Price Summation
A recent
headline in the financial press announced that gold prices surged
over concern that confrontation with Iran will further push oil
prices higher. This may well reflect the current situation, but
higher gold prices mainly reflect monetary expansion by the Federal
Reserve. Dwelling on current events and their effect on gold prices
reflects concern for symptoms rather than an understanding of
the actual cause of these price increases. Without an enormous
increase in the money supply over the past 35 years and a worldwide
paper monetary system, this increase in the price of gold would
not have occurred.
Certainly
geo-political events in the Middle East under a gold standard
would not alter its price, though they could affect the supply
of oil and cause oil prices to rise. Only under conditions created
by excessive paper money would one expect all or most prices to
rise. This is a mere reflection of the devaluation of the dollar.
Particular
things to remember:
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If
one endorses small government and maximum liberty, one must
support commodity money.
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One
of the strongest restraints against unnecessary war is a gold
standard.
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Deficit
financing by government is severely restricted by sound money.
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The
harmful effects of the business cycle are virtually eliminated
with an honest gold standard.
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Saving
and thrift are encouraged by a gold standard; and discouraged
by paper money.
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Price
inflation, with generally rising price levels, is characteristic
of paper money. Reports that the consumer price index and the
producer price index are rising are distractions: the real cause
of inflation is the Feds creation of new money.
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Interest
rate manipulation by central bank helps the rich, the banks,
the government, and the politicians.
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Paper
money permits the regressive inflation tax to be passed off
on the poor and the middle class.
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Speculative
financial bubbles are characteristic of paper money not
gold.
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Paper
money encourages economic and political chaos, which subsequently
causes a search for scapegoats rather than blaming the central
bank.
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Dangerous
protectionist measures frequently are implemented to compensate
for the dislocations caused by fiat money.
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Paper
money, inflation, and the conditions they create contribute
to the problems of illegal immigration.
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The
value of gold is remarkably stable.
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The
dollar price of gold reflects dollar depreciation.
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Holding
gold helps preserve and store wealth, but technically gold is
not a true investment.
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Since
2001 the dollar has been devalued by 60%.
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In 1934 FDR devalued the dollar by 41%.
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In 1971 Nixon devalued the dollar by 7.9%.
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In 1973 Nixon devalued the dollar by 10%.
These were
momentous monetary events, and every knowledgeable person worldwide
paid close attention. Major changes were endured in 1979 and 1980
to save the dollar from disintegration. This involved a severe
recession, interest rates over 21%, and general price inflation
of 15%.
Today we
face a 60% devaluation and counting, yet no one seems to care.
Its of greater significance than the three events mentioned
above. And yet the one measurement that best reflects the degree
of inflation, the Fed and our government deny us. Since March,
M3 reporting has been discontinued. For starters, Id like
to see Congress demand that this report be resumed. I fully believe
the American people and Congress are entitled to this information.
Will we one day complain about false intelligence, as we have
with the Iraq war? Will we complain about not having enough information
to address monetary policy after its too late?
If ever there
was a time to get a handle on what sound money is and what it
means, that time is today.
Inflation,
as exposed by high gold prices, transfers wealth from the middle
class to the rich, as real wages decline while the salaries of
CEOs, movie stars, and athletes skyrocket along with the
profits of the military industrial complex, the oil industry,
and other special interests.
A sharply
rising gold price is a vote of no confidence in Congress
ability to control the budget, the Feds ability to control
the money supply, and the administrations ability to bring
stability to the Middle East.
Ultimately,
the gold price is a measurement of trust in the currency and the
politicians who run the country. Its been that way for a
long time, and is not about to change.
If we care
about the financial system, the tax system, and the monumental
debt were accumulating, we must start talking about the
benefits and discipline that come only with a commodity standard
of money money the government and central banks absolutely
cannot create out of thin air.
Economic
law dictates reform at some point. But should we wait until the
dollar is 1/1,000 of an ounce of gold or 1/2,000 of an ounce of
gold? The longer we wait, the more people suffer and the more
difficult reforms become. Runaway inflation inevitably leads to
political chaos, something numerous countries have suffered throughout
the 20th century. The worst example of course was the German inflation
of the 1920s that led to the rise of Hitler. Even the communist
takeover of China was associated with runaway inflation brought
on by Chinese Nationalists. The time for action is now, and it
is up to the American people and the U.S. Congress to demand it.
April
27, 2006
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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