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The Political and Economic Agenda for a Real Gold Standard
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
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This paper
was originally delivered at the Mises Institute's 1985 conference
on the gold standard. It later appeared as the final chapter in
The
Gold Standard: Perspectives in the Austrian School.
One of the
basic insights of the great Austrian economists, both Carl Menger
and Ludwig von Mises, is that money emerged by evolution from the
market process. It was not invented by governments. There are basic
economic forces today that are contributing to the further evolution
of the monetary system, and there is a political strategy that I
believe will make it possible to liberate those forces and restore
the monetary role for gold. Because of the current economic and
political climate, it is important to understand what we can do
– and what we cannot hope to do in the short run.
The
Political Climate for Reform
In his 1952
epilogue to The
Theory of Money and Credit, Mises included a section with
the title, "The United States' Return to a Sound Currency."[1]
The Korean War inflation was fresh in most people's minds that year,
when Mises prepared his proposal. Food prices in 1951 had jumped
11.1 percent, with consumer prices in general jumping 7.9 percent.
Yet by the mid-1950s, the public interest in monetary reform seemed
to abate. Changes in the consumer price index were in the vicinity
of 1 percent per year for the next decade, and food prices even
declined in 1952–53.
The political
and economic agenda for creating a real gold standard in the United
States – a new international gold standard led by monetary reform
in this country – depends very much upon the climate of political
and economic opinion. If the Korean War inflation had continued,
I believe Ludwig von Mises's proposal would have received much wider
attention.
My belief that
periods of monetary disorder always focus attention on gold as the
solution is strengthened by the recent occasion of a congressionally
mandated Gold Commission, on which I was proud to serve. It was
created in response to the high rates of inflation in the late 1970s
and a rising cry from the general public to restore gold to its
rightful monetary role.
Most people
know of the Gold Commission merely what the press reported – that
it rejected a return to the gold standard. I believe the true significance
of the Gold Commission is that the politicians and central bankers
were so alarmed at such a thing that they made sure it was packed
by an array of Keynesians and monetarists. These advocates of the
established institutions and arrangements certainly don't want any
role for gold to threaten their cozy theories about scientific monetary
management and macroeconomic planning.
The dramatic
reduction in average price increases during the recent recession
has once again diverted attention from fundamental monetary reform,
but it is clear to me that our present unstable arrangement will
break down once more, and there will be another Gold Commission
in the future.
The
Mises Proposal
I want briefly
to review the plan Mises described, and then set down the steps
I believe would achieve his goal. Any differences in the proposals
I am supporting in Congress from the plan he described in 1952 are
based on my judgments about the progressive deterioration in our
monetary and fiscal system during the intervening thirty years and
the politics of the task today.
In The
Theory of Money and Credit, Mises wrote, "The first step
must be a radical and unconditional abandonment of any further inflation."[2]
Although I strongly support this objective, I do not believe it
would ever be possible to achieve such a requirement if we place
it as "the first step."
Banishing inflation
is, in fact, the ultimate objective we expect to achieve by creating
a new gold standard. The US government has moved so far in the direction
of fiscal irresponsibility that the reform of our basic monetary
and financial institutions has become much more complex. For political
reasons, ending inflation cannot be the "first" step. We must subdivide
it into many smaller preparatory steps even to approach the task.
Happily, the
second step that Mises described has already been achieved: "All
restrictions on trading and holding gold must be repealed."[3]
In January
1975 it became legal for Americans to own and trade gold, and in
1977 the remaining prohibitions on gold clauses in contracts were
repealed. In my view, this restoration of liberty is the most important
change in circumstances since 1952, and the one condition that is
today most favorable to the restoration of gold to its proper monetary
role.
One of the
points on which Mises was adamant is the role of the Federal Reserve
System: "It is essential for the reform suggested that the Federal
Reserve System should be kept out of its way."[4]
Mises advocated the creation of a "Conversion Agency" that would
be responsible for issuing gold coins and bullion to the public,
and redeeming excess quantities of gold in circulation if the public
should choose to exchange gold for paper. The Federal Reserve would
continue to have some responsibility under his plan, as a fiscal
agent for the Treasury in managing the national debt, but the Conversion
Agency would maintain the domestic and international exchange value
of the dollar.
This is one
of the most distinctive differences between Mises and other advocates
of the gold standard, who want the Federal Reserve to buy and sell
gold at a fixed conversion for dollars. The government's fiscal
agent necessarily performs a banking function as it collects and
disburses tax money. It would have to be separate from a conversion
agency that would function more like an office of the National Bureau
of Standards than like a bank. Mises's analysis of financial institutions
and the market process led him to favor free, decentralized banking.[5]
He was thus a consistent advocate of a separation of powers.
Ludwig von
Mises understood that the problem with monetary institutions is
first of all a political problem. By proposing this separation of
powers between the central bank and a conversion agency, he was
an early proponent of an institutionalized competition in currency.
Even the government of a constitutional republic like the United
States could not be trusted with discretionary monetary power:
The President,
Congress, and the Supreme Court have clearly proved their inability
or unwillingness to protect the common man, the voter, from being
victimized by inflationary machinations. The function of securing
a sound currency must pass into new hands, into those of the whole
nation.[6]
Restoring the
monetary role for gold must become a popular crusade in the United
States. In the political sphere, popular crusades require tangible
– as opposed to ideological or intellectual – benefits that people
can recognize and subscribe to.
The
First Step: Gold Coinage
The heart of
Mises's proposal to restore gold to our monetary system is a gold
coinage. He wrote,
Gold must
be in the cash holdings of everyone. Everybody must see gold coins
changing hands, must be used to having gold coins in his pockets,
to receiving gold coins when he cashes his paycheck, and to spending
gold coins when he buys in a store.[7]
In this one
detail – the critical importance of the gold coinage – I believe
lies the key to establishing a new gold standard.
We should make
no mistake about it: the more progress we make toward reestablishing
the gold standard, the more aggressive our opposition will become.
Some vested interests, as you know, have a lot to lose if we succeed
in getting the monetary system reconstructed on a gold basis. The
first political step is, therefore, to get the coinage into circulation.
One objective
might be to aim for every American to become a gold owner. We must
encourage a broader base of political support for gold ownership
and the availability of gold for personal economic objectives. Certainly
a broader base of gold ownership in the country would help to reduce
the threats of discriminatory taxation or regulation of gold ownership
and gold coin transactions, which are seriously favored in Congress
today.
Ludwig von
Mises and most advocates of a gold-coin standard have understood
the coinage as something similar to what we had in the 19th century,
until 1933. Under this concept, coins would be various sizes, with
face values in "dollars" but not exact sizes in any system of weights.
We could advocate a coinage of $50.00 denominations, about one-eleventh
of an ounce, or $100.00 denominations, about one-fifth ounce; but
that would start the process of rebuilding the gold monetary system
at the wrong end. It would require, first, a majority in Congress
to vote to establish a new par value for the dollar.
By starting
with the necessity for a congressional majority to decide on the
sizes and weights of gold coins, we must presume in advance that
we know the "correct" par value for the dollar. We must presume
that a majority of the public already supports the restoration of
a gold standard. The political task becomes a gigantic educational
problem. Before anything constructive could be accomplished, millions
of people who understand nothing about the causes of inflation or
the advantage of a free-market monetary system would have to be
persuaded to join a political movement. All the misconceptions that
are propounded today by academic economists, all the mysticism of
the central bankers, all the objections of the politicians would
have to be expunged from the popular mind. I do not believe this
would be an efficient way to approach the problem.
What we must
first do is get the coinage into circulation, and then build the
political base to lock the government's fiscal folly with golden
handcuffs. People have always understood the tangible value of gold
coins in circulation. They don't need to agree or even understand
the fine points of monetary theory to own gold coins, trade gold
coins, or use gold coins to satisfy part of their marginal-utility
demand for cash balances.
Most people
understand very little about economics or monetary theory. When
they see supposed experts in disagreement, the status quo wins by
default, because nobody with the power to change it has the courage
of conviction. The majority of voters see the debate among experts
and hesitate to support any leaders with comprehensive reform schemes.
This is why all efforts to rebuild a gold monetary system have met
with frustration and stalemate in the past.
The demonstrated
popularity in the United States of Krugerrand coins, and all the
imitators of the Krugerrand (Maple Leaf, Panda, Onza, and the US
Gold medallions) have shown us that it is possible to adopt another
tactic, that of getting gold coins into circulation prior to setting
a new par value for the dollar. Indeed, the only affirmative recommendation
of the Gold Commission was to create a new US gold coinage in units
of weight.
I would love
to see a purely private, free-market monetary system with any honest
manufacturer able to produce coins, as Americans saw in California
from 1849 to 1864. There must certainly be no restrictions on the
private production of coins, but I believe that getting the US Mint
further into the act, producing a gold coinage with some of the
mystique of the government, will be useful in the further political
stages of monetary reform. Honest money, after all, is a political
objective; it is fitting that people should demand honesty from
their government, as well as an economic policy that permits individuals
to compete honestly. An official coinage that reflects honest bullion
weights is a powerful symbol of the gold standard we support.
The
Transition to a Gold Standard
The coinage
should be based on exact units of bullion weight. The coins should
be denominated in troy ounces, half-ounces, and smaller sizes if
feasible. The denomination of the coinage is the secret to our success
in the later stages of the political agenda, so let me take a few
moments to explain the central importance of the denominations.
There are several
important advantages to starting with a gold coinage denominated
in troy ounce and fractional units of an ounce. Since the unit of
money should be defined as a definite weight of bullion, a coinage
denominated by units of troy weight contributes significantly to
the reeducation of the public. This knowledge, which is now almost
completely lost to three generations of Americans, must be reimplanted.
Murray N. Rothbard
has made this point most forcefully:
The transition
from gold to fiat money will be greatly smoothed if the State
has previously abandoned ounces, grams, grains, and other units
of weight in naming its monetary units and substituted unique
names, such as dollar, mark, franc, etc. It will then be far easier
to eliminate the public's association of monetary units with weight
and to teach the public to value the names themselves. Furthermore,
if each national government sponsors its own unique name, it will
be far easier for each State to control its own fiat issue absolutely.[8]
Some writers
have resisted the suggestion of a coinage denominated only by units
of weight, arguing that the "dollar" was originally a unit of weight;
but I think this is a misstatement. "Dollar" was the name of a coin
that had a definite weight, but it was not a "unit" of weight. Adopting
the name of the standard unit of bullion weight as the denomination
of the coinage will bring together two important concepts about
money that we must actively teach to a majority of Americans if
we are ever going to restore a gold standard. The educational job
becomes that much easier.
Second, as
Mises understood, the Federal Reserve and existing banks have to
be kept separate from the remonetization of gold until the progress
of popular support is broad and deep enough that special interest
lobbying will not pervert the system. By avoiding any use of a dollar
denomination on the coins, the Federal Reserve System is automatically
kept out of the picture during this developmental period. The dollar
denomination is today a monopoly trademark for the Federal Reserve
System.
Third, when
the date finally arrives, at the end of the transition period, to
provide the US dollar with a fixed definition in terms of gold,
it will be a very easy detail to announce to the public that the
conversion agency stipulated by Mises is starting to buy and resell
the troy-ounce coins at a fixed price. The dollar was defined as
25.8 grains of standard gold in 1900. Today it might be defined
as one grain of standard 0.900 gold. There is nothing inconsistent
with this requirement if the coins are denominated in troy ounce,
half-ounce, or quarter-ounce sizes.
In Mises's
monetary reform proposal, and under the classical gold standard,
the various substitutes for coin – bank notes, bank drafts and acceptances,
and demand deposits – are supposed to be fixed in value to the underlying
coin and exchangeable for it. The conversion agency would function
as a resale buyer and wholesale distributor of the coins, and equally
as a buyer of last resort for the paper money of the Federal Reserve.
The question
that is most difficult to answer about the transition to a new gold
standard is how long it should take. The transition plan envisioned
by Mises called for a period of time in which the free market in
gold discovered the new parity rate that would produce neither inflation
nor deflation.
It is probable
that the price of gold established after some oscillations on
the American market will be higher than $35 per ounce …
maybe somewhere between $36 and $38, perhaps even somewhat higher.
Once the market price has attained some stability, the time has
come to decree this market rate as the new legal parity of the
dollar and to secure its unconditional convertibility at this
parity.[9]
Mises did not
discuss how long this transition period should last before fixing
the new par value for the dollar, but it would have to last as long
as it might take to build a political majority. This is almost a
truism, because Congress would have to enact legislation to fix
the gold weight of the US dollar.
The choice
for advocates of a gold-coin monetary system, therefore, is straightforward:
either we move ahead with a program for US gold coins denominated
by weight, with no face value in terms of dollars – thereby starting
the transition period immediately – or we sit on our hands, perhaps
for decades, debating the fine points of banking theory, until the
paper money system collapses around us. Even then, it is not obvious
that the collapse of the paper money system would bring about the
political pressure necessary to restore a gold standard. We might
end up with controls on wages, prices, credit, and exchange controls
instead of a gold-coin standard.
Longer-Term
Benefits of Bullion-Weight Coinage
Over the longer
term, assuming the transition to a new gold standard is successful
(with Congress enacting a gold value for the dollar and fiscal policy
disciplined by monetary convertibility), there are still distinct
advantages to retaining the coinage in units of troy weight rather
than assigning an official, stamped dollar value on the face of
the coins.
First, Gresham's
law – Bad money drives out good – tends to affect even the most
perfect gold-coin standard. If we want gold coins to circulate freely
in an economy where all prices are quoted in dollars, the coins
themselves should not be denominated in dollars. Gresham's law operates
even when bank notes are 100 percent warehouse receipts for gold.
People might be able to trust that bank notes are fully backed by
gold, but given the choice of which to spend and which to keep in
the cash box, the paper will be spent and the coin will be saved
because each monetary instrument has its own subjective value qualities.
The mere fact
that honest coins are more secure than even the most secure paper
is a sufficient qualitative difference to give them a premium value.
The subjective evaluation of every person in the free-market economy
must be employed to help keep the monetary system honest and noninflationary.
To assure that gold coins move in active commerce, rather than sitting
in vaults, we must let free-market pricing operate. Let the coins
command a slight premium everywhere except at the conversion agency,
which would have to redeem any excess Federal Reserve dollar bank
notes (token money) for honest coin at the par value in response
to public demand.
Gresham's law
is a natural consequence of price fixing, mandating the exchange
of items with different marginal utilities at a ratio not determined
by the free market. It is, in fact, a special case of setting a
price by law slightly too low for gold coins, the preferred form
of money for long-term savings. Only the conversion agency should
be mandated by law to exchange genuine coin for paper dollars at
the par value. There are costs in terms of real resources, opportunity
costs in the operations of a gold coin monetary system. These costs
are worth paying; they must be paid to have an operational monetary
constitution that prevents financial exploitation, but the issue
of "Who pays?" must also be considered.
Most economists
who support a gold-coin standard do not recognize the importance
of distributing the marginal costs of coinage throughout the entire
spectrum of the monetary economy. In the 19th century, this system
of fixing the face value of gold coins in terms of paper bank notes,
rather than by units of weight, led to the centralization of gold
hoards in bank vaults, which made it all the easier for governments
to confiscate them. The simple confusion of the coin and the denomination
of the money produced the effect of Gresham's law during the classical
period. If it is left up to the government, the central bank, or
the banking system to absorb the costs of having coin always on
hand to redeem bank notes at face value, the managers at each stage
will attempt to economize these costs, rather than charging the
consumer for them, and there will be a constant pressure to take
coins out of circulation and replace them with substitutes: paper
bank notes and demand deposits.
If the coinage
is denominated only in terms of troy ounces and fractions of an
ounce, the free-market pricing structure takes care of this problem
instantly and effortlessly. The official conversion agency must
redeem Federal Reserve notes at par, but others should be free to
charge a competitive premium for gold coins (that is, to discount
Federal Reserve notes). This would tend to assure a continuing flow
of gold coins into private ownership.
Ludwig von
Mises proposed to solve this problem by forcing the circulation
of gold coins by prohibiting any paper bank notes in the $5, $10,
and $20 denominations. In 1952 it seemed reasonable to him that
the dollar might be worth something nearer l/40th ounce, so gold
coins could replace those denominations. Today only the $100 bill
would be affected by this proposal, since gold coins now would be
too tiny for most commercial transactions. Where they would find
most popular utility would be in financial transactions and in the
purchase of consumer durables, because of the generally higher prices.
Over time, the Federal Reserve dollar will come to be recognized
as a form of token money that is just a tiny fraction of a gold
ounce.
We can only
make political use of the fact that the public treasures hard money
over paper money if we make it clear that there is a difference.
A different denomination for each form – "dollars" for paper and
"troy ounces" for coin – is the easiest and most obvious way to
achieve this objective. There is a specious similarity in this proposal
to the gold exchange standard of the 1920s, but the active circulation
of small-denomination gold coins would defeat any such criticism.
The denial of any small-denomination coins was the distinguishing
feature of the pseudogold standard adopted in the 1920s and
perpetuated under the Bretton Woods arrangement in 1944.
So long as
the conversion agency performed its role, it would also be impossible
for the Federal Reserve System to produce a monetary inflation because
the conversion agency, which would be completely separate from the
government's banking activities, would be engaged in the process
of absorbing excess dollars from circulation, in exchange for the
troy-ounce coins that it issues. If the Federal Reserve made the
opposite mistake, as it has often done in the past, of overly restricting
the money supply, the market could always sell coins to the conversion
agency to obtain any dollars demanded. A precise balance would be
achieved between the general public's demand for money in the form
of coin and its demand in the form of bank notes or deposit accounts
with banks by the existence of the conversion agency as something
separate from the Federal Reserve.
Agenda
for Monetary Reform
The genius
of Ludwig von Mises was his profound insight into the free-market
process, the science of catallactics. The most important thing I
have learned from his work is that the achievement of a new gold
standard in our society will have to come from the free market itself.
This is why I believe the first step must be a new troy-ounce gold
coinage, even without any legal tender qualities or special tax
treatment. As we have found in recent banking deregulation, the
market develops new procedures and techniques in the monetary and
financial system, and Congress follows with repeal of old, restrictive
laws. This is the political and economic dynamic process that we
also can harness to restore gold to its proper monetary role.
All the government
needs to do is to get out of the way. The political and economic
agenda for monetary reform, therefore, consists of the following
steps:
-
Congress
must adopt the legislation recommended by the Gold Commission
to bring a new US gold coinage into circulation, denominated
only in troy-ounce units and fractions thereof.
-
Advocates
of the remonetization of gold must work both in the political
arena and in the marketplace to get as many of these new coins
into the possession of the public as possible. Politically,
this means resisting taxation or any regulations on the utility
of the new gold coins for purposes of exchange either for other
goods and services or for dollars. As Ludwig von Mises demonstrated
in his Theory
of Money and Credit,[10]
it is the marketability of a good that gives it a monetary character.
The more easily recognized and marketable the new gold coinage
becomes, the more it will be recognized as genuine pieces of
money.
-
The fact
that the troy ounce of gold is well defined and the paper dollar
has no fixed referent at all should be made the focus of continued
education and debate, just as we are now doing. The continuing
academic work by students of Carl Menger and Ludwig von Mises
in monetary and financial theory is vitally important, particularly
to expose the fallacies of centralized macroeconomic planning
and the failure of "managed money." The acquiescence of the
economics profession, which is today disdainful of gold, will
have to be secured. Serious academic work will stimulate interest
in a new Gold Commission, which would be able to focus this
research in economic theory on the political issue of monetary
reform. It is essential to move the center of monetary debate
from the question of how the central bank should perform monetary
management to the more general question of managed money versus
market-process money.
-
The objective
would remain to persuade a majority of Congress to enact a new
par value for the US dollar in terms of gold. When every American
family is familiar with gold coins and understands the intrinsic
defects in a managed paper standard, a majority in Congress
can be persuaded by the demands of voters to enact a new par
value for the US dollar and to establish the conversion agency
described by Mises.
Except for
random shocks in the financial markets, due to Federal Reserve central-planning
mistakes, and occasional political disturbances, such as a Middle
East war or troubles in South Africa, the dollar value of the troy-ounce
coins should stabilize, just as we saw in 1984. The old myth that
"gold is too unstable to serve as money" will be disproven by the
common popular experience.
The strategy
set forth in these four steps, I believe, is the only politically
feasible way it can be done. All of the wishful thinking about restoring
the gold standard by electing the "right person" to be president,
or by attempting to educate the general public, will fail without
first making available a tangible gold coinage as something they
can see, touch, use for a portion of their savings, and become accustomed
to using for many kinds of transactions. Public opinion polls have
shown strong support for monetary stability. There is substantial
support for a gold standard among the American public, yet the various
proposals for enacting a par value for the dollar are dismissed
by congressmen, the financial and business press, and "experts"
of all stripes.
The task at
hand, therefore, is to remove every roadblock to the realization
of the will of the majority. The sentiment for gold must be mobilized.
The question is no longer "Why do we need a gold standard?" but
"How do we get it enacted?" To restore the gold standard to its
central role in our system of constitutional government, we must
lead a second kind of American revolution, a popular movement for
honest money.
As Mises wrote,
"Without such a check all other constitutional safeguards can be
rendered vain."[11]
The gold standard
as a constitutional restraint on our government was abolished in
the United States, not in 1934 nor in 1971, but in 1819 with the
US Supreme Court case of McCulloch v. Maryland.[12]
With this famous Supreme Court interpretation of the Constitution,
the federal government acquired the sovereign power to manipulate
the nation's money, from which the legal tender laws of the Civil
War, the central-banking powers of the Federal Reserve System, and
the ultimate prohibition on any private use of gold as money in
1934 derived. This link between sovereignty and currency manipulation
has been ably argued by Henry Mark Holzer.[13]
The
key to the government's power to manipulate money is its control
over the definition of the word "dollar." A troy ounce coinage in
widespread circulation would significantly alter the public's perception
of the government's monetary role. If the Congress should ever attempt
to change the par value of the dollar in terms of the gold coinage,
the holders of coins would be fully protected. Financial promises
to pay coins would be protected, in a way that promises to pay dollars
would not be. Best of all, as a result of the separation of currency
and coin denominations, there would be no public purpose served
by asking citizens to turn in old coins for new ones; the crime
of January 1934 would not be repeated.
Restoring a
gold coinage is also the highest duty we now face, as citizens of
this country. We no longer live in a world where the free market
is taken for granted. On the contrary, most people assume government
must control and guide the economic system for the benefit of all.
Ludwig von Mises suffered during most of his career because he understood
too well the stakes of this ideological conflict:
"Cynics dispose
of the advocacy of the restitution of the gold standard by calling
it Utopian. Yet we have only the choice between two Utopias: the
Utopia of a market economy, not paralysed by government sabotage,
on the one hand, and the Utopia of totalitarian all-round planning
on the other hand. The choice of the first alternative implies
the decision in favour of the gold standard."[14]
I believe the
goal of a market economy, not paralyzed by government sabotage on
behalf of vested interests and pressure groups is an ideal worth
fighting for. This is why I first ran for Congress, and it is the
only reason I believe justifies political action.
Notes
[1]
Ludwig von Mises [1952], The
Theory of Money and Credit (Irvington-on-Hudson, New York:
Foundation for Economic Education, 1971), pp. 448–52.
[2]
Ibid., p. 448.
[3]
Ibid.
[4]
Ibid., p. 450.
[5]
Ibid., pp. 395–99.
[6]
Ibid., p. 452.
[7]
Ibid., pp. 450–51.
[8]
Murray N. Rothbard, Man,
Economy and State (Los Angeles: Nash, 1970), p. 941n.
[9]
Mises, Theory
of Money and Credit, p. 449.
[10]
Ibid., pp. 30–34.
[11]
Ibid., p. 452.
[12]
17 US 316.
[13]
Henry Mark Holzer, Government's Money Monopoly (New York:
Books in Focus, 1981).
[14]
Mises, Theory
of Money and Credit, p. 457.
See
the Ron Paul File
January
19, 2008
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
Copyright
2008 Mises Institute
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