Around With Ludwig
by Chris Clancy
by
Chris Clancy
I’m coming
to the end of the third year of my journey into Austrian economics.
At times it has become almost obsessive as so much of what I believed
before has been turned on its head.
Its been a
bit like playing a new golf course – one which has been cunningly
designed with all sorts of traps and hazards – to play this course
properly a new approach is needed. Every hole has been a challenge.
Each has had its own tricks and quirks. Each has its own special
name – like the opening one – the ominous sounding "What is
Seen and What is Unseen." Then a few holes on the terrifying
"Keynesian Menace"; then later the forlorn and deadly
"More Tragedy Than Hope." The front nine finished with
a deceptively easy looking Par 3 which had a name similar to many
pop groups which thrived in the 1970s and faded in the 1980s – "Milton
Friedman and the Monetarists!"
I reached a
turning point in my round when I found that I could read people
like Frank Shostak without having to go on a paper chase. In a recent
article he demolishes "Obamanomics" with remarkable
calmness and patience.
I find it
difficult to be as calm and patient. I’m
in good company.
The fact that
they’re only making things worse is depressing. I’m not saying that
I sit by myself in the kitchen, in the small hours of the morning,
with a bottle of scotch in one hand and a loaded revolver in the
other – but it is depressing.
All is not
lost however. I haven’t completed the round yet. I’m somewhere on
the back nine but just not too sure where. I’ll never get to the
eighteenth – I don’t think anyone ever does – it’s the nature of
the subject.
At the moment
I’m standing at the tee of a monstrous Par 5. Double-bogey strength
– at least.
It’s called
"The Barbarous Relic."
I’ve been dreading
this one because I’ve known all along that all of my unlearning,
learning and relearning would inevitably have to converge at some
point.
Well this is
it and the question is critical.
How do we escape
from our fiat money system?
The legitimacy
of Austrian economics as a realistic and workable alternative centers
on a return to sound money.
" … [S]o
many of the policy ideas suggested within the Austrian framework
can be subsumed under the need to abolish the central bank."
~
Lew Rockwell.
Things have
begun to happen on this front. The campaign to "End
the Fed" is growing ably aided and abetted by Ron
Paul’s efforts.
If successful
it would be a start, in fact it’s the only way that a return to
sound money can ever begin.
Austrian economists
are united in their views about the disaster of fiat money; its
history, without exception, has been one of abuse by those running
it. They simply cannot be trusted, it has happened time and time
again they just can’t help themselves.
We used to
have a global currency system that worked the gold standard. Currencies
were backed by something which was reliable and stable. It could
not be created out of nothing. If governments and banks behaved
irresponsibly there was no protection – they went bankrupt – they
were forced to behave with honesty and integrity or else.
The case for
abandoning fiat money is clear. However, even Austrian economists
begin to break ranks when it comes to the feasibility or probability
of returning to a commodity based system.
It’s all very
confusing.
Will we ever,
or can we ever, return to a gold standard? Here’s just five examples
of the diversity of views amongst Austrian advocates.
1. Back in
1977 F. A. Hayek said here:
"[Any]
hope of returning to the kind of gold standard system which has
worked fairly well over a long period is absolutely vain."
(Emphasis added).
2. Murray Rothbard
argued here
(1995), that the job of privitizing money, of returning it to the
market economy, was not as impossible as it seemed. By way of example
he says the job would be:
" … much
less difficult than [was] the daunting task of denationalizing
and decommunizing … the former Soviet Union." (Emphasis added).
3. When asked
if he would see a return to the gold standard in his lifetime Peter
Schiff replied in this
interview:
" Yes,
I will – it has to happen.." (Emphasis added).
This is a prediction.
Given his track record it is worth bearing in mind.
4. Byron
King suggests that China has taken the first tentative steps
back to something partly resembling a gold standard system by building
up and then monetizing its gold as reserves.
5. Gary North,
writing here (Chapter
14 – Conclusion), doubts if gold will become money in his lifetime.
"A return
to gold as money in the West will take a cataclysm … "
(Emphasis added).
Where does
all this leave us?
Hayak said
it would never happen, Rothbard said it’s not as difficult as we
think, Schiff says it has to happen, King says it may already have
started to happen and North says it will only happen following some
monumental disaster.
Who’s right?
If I had to
go for just one right now it would be the "North Criteria."
Given the power of the vested interests and the apathy and ignorance
of the general public the whole thing would first have to come crashing
down before it could be rebuilt with sound money. It’s
a frightening prospect:
" [L]ife-threatening,
in my view" – Gary North here
(Chapter 14 – Conclusion).
Anyway, a mist
has descended on The Barbarous Relic. I’m not quite sure which line
of attack to take. But here goes anyway. I tee the ball up. I select
a driver with a sweet-spot almost as big as the ball itself – I’m
going to need it. I check my grip, check my stance and then address
the ball. I’m going to give this sucker one God-Almighty smack!
Let’s just
see where it leads me.
June
8, 2009
Chris
Clancy [send him mail]
is Associate Professor of Financial Accounting at Zhongnan University
of Economics and Law in Wuhan, Hubei Province, People's Republic
of China.
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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