The
Gold Standard: Myths and Lies
by
Bob Murphy
Recently
by Bob Murphy: The
Capitalist in the Hat
With various
states debating measures to elevate the monetary status of gold,
the gold standard is more politically relevant now than it has been
in decades. When the LA
Times (to pick just one example) runs an article stating
matter-of-factly that "economists" uniformly oppose gold,
you know the defenders of the current system are getting nervous.
Precisely because
a gold standard is such a hot topic lately, it's important for people
to understand its rationale. In the present article I'll try to
clear up a few misconceptions.
Do All Economists
Oppose the Gold Standard?
I realize I
am betraying my naïvete by admitting this, but I was very surprised
at the depth of falsehood in the LA
Times article mentioned above. Here is the blurb below the
title, "Pushing for a Return to the Gold Standard":
The idea
to make the precious metal legal tender has gained currency in
more than a dozen state capitals, aided by Tea Party support and
other efforts to rein in federal power. Economists say the plan
would be disastrous.
I suppose the
final sentence is technically true, but it's very misleading. It's
a bit like saying, "Baskin-Robbins offers 31 flavors, but customers
buy chocolate." Yes, some economists say a return to
the gold standard would be disastrous, and I'd grant that perhaps
even a large majority do. But the blurb above makes it sound
as if virtually all economists oppose the move, which isn't
true.
The writer,
Nathaniel Popper, reinforces this misconception in two other places.
He quite clearly tries to pit the rube businessmen and tea-party
politicians against the professional economists. First he writes,
The ultimate
goal is to return the nation to the gold standard, in which every
dollar would be backed by a fixed amount of the precious metal.
Economists of all stripes say the plan would be ruinous,
but that view is of scant concern to Pitts [a South Carolina state
representative].
"Quite
frankly, I think that economists from universities are thinking
within the confines of their own little world," Pitts said.
"They don't deal with the real issues." (emphasis added)
Just to make
sure the reader gets the point, Popper writes later in the article:
The United
States and most of the rest of the world operated on a full gold
standard until the Great Depression. Economists generally agree
that the policy helped cause the depression and earlier severe
downturns by limiting the amount of money the government could
create, constraining its ability to stimulate the economy.
Scholars
say moving to a gold standard now would be likely to slow the
economy's already meager growth.
"At
some point someone may be crazy enough to try it, but they won't
stay with it any more than they did in the past," said Allan
Meltzer, a Carnegie Mellon University economics professor and
a critic of the Fed's current monetary policy.
Given the
lack of support from mainstream economists, activists have turned
a few texts written by outsiders into their bibles, such as "Pieces
of Eight," an out-of-print book by [constitutional lawyer]
Vieira.
In the entire
article, Popper doesn't quote a single economist who is in
favor of the gold standard, or even paraphrase his or her views.
This might be acceptable, except for the fact that Popper quotes
or makes reference to businessmen, politicians, and the lawyer Vieira.
(I am not familiar with Vieira's work, and it should go without
saying that I'm not criticizing him.)
Now, it would
be easy for me to accuse Popper of lying, but for all I know he
was so sure of the stupidity of the gold standard that he didn't
even try to find actual PhD economists currently teaching at colleges
(some even at top-20 graduate schools) who would have nice things
to say about the gold standard. I personally know at least 20 such
people, so believe me, they're out there if Popper or other journalists
actually want to give the case for gold a fighting chance.
As far as books
touting the advantages of the gold standard, yes indeed there are
volumes written by people with PhDs in economics. A classic text
is Ludwig von Mises's The
Theory of Money and Credit, while a newer, much more reader-friendly
selection is Murray Rothbard's What
Has Government Done to Our Money? My own book
on the Great Depression exploded the myth that the gold standard
had something to do with it.
Did Gold Cause
the Great Depression?
Before moving
on, let me quickly address that particular claim. I've written a
longer
response here, but for now we have to wonder: If the gold standard
caused the Great Depression, what else was going on? After all,
the gold standard wasn't implemented in the 1920s. Although
there had been plenty of industrial crises or financial panics in
the previous hundred years, there had been no prolonged global depression
approaching the experience of the 1930s — even as more and more
countries joined the growing worldwide market of gold-based economies.
So clearly it's not enough to point to the "golden fetters" of the
monetary system to explain what happened in the Great Depression.
Thus, to blame
the Great Depression on the gold standard is just as nonsensical
as blaming it on the "laissez-faire" policies of Herbert
Hoover, who (even if we take the caricature of him seriously)
was no different from all his predecessors. It would be like explaining
a particular airplane crash by citing gravity.
As a final
point, let's not forget that FDR abandoned the gold standard in
1933. The Great Depression thus lingered on after
leaving the allegedly awful gold standard for at least another
8 years (and I would say 13 years, because I don't think World War
II "fixed" the economy), in what was still the worst economic
period in US history. It's odd that the gold standard could wreak
so much havoc in the early 1930s even though it had never
done anything comparable earlier in US history and then could
continue to "cause" the Great Depression, from 8 to 13
years after abandoning it. It starts to make you wonder whether
the "economists of all stripes" know what they're talking
about.
"You
Can't Eat Gold!"
One of the
most absurd objections to returning to a gold standard is that "You
can't eat gold." I am not making this up; Dave Leonhardt of
the New York Times actually said that to Ron Paul when he
defended the
idea on the Colbert Report.
Dr. Paul didn't
really get a chance to answer (Colbert instead made a funny joke
about idolatry), but it would have been delicious had he quickly
asked the cynic, "Oh, so you make sandwiches out of Federal
Reserve notes?" (We also would have accepted, "Oh, so
I take it you are proposing a hamburger standard for the dollar?")
The utter absurdity
of the objection namely that you "can't eat gold"
is that gold actually is a useful commodity even for
nonmonetary purposes. It's true, you can't eat gold, but you can
wear
it, you can fill
cavities with it, and you can treat
arthritis with it. In contrast, all you can do with fiat
paper currency is use it in exchange, and you'd better not keep
a large fraction of your wealth in actual paper dollars, since their
purchasing power constantly erodes with the passage of time.
Don't Austrians
Favor Market Choice?
Ironically,
in addition to ill-informed critiques such as those emanating from
the LA Times, the gold standard has critics from the purist
libertarian camp. Such critics often ask, "What's so special
about gold? Why do Ron Paul and so many other alleged fans of the
free market favor the federal government telling us what the money
should be?"
Of course
Murray Rothbard and as far as I know, every living Austrian
economist would prefer that money and banking were returned
to the private sector, receiving neither special regulations nor
privileges distinguishing them from any other industry. That means
banks would be free to issue their own paper notes (backed by gold
reserves) if they wanted, but if they issued too many and got caught
in a "run," the government wouldn't declare a "bank
holiday" and relieve the irresponsible institution of its contractual
obligations.
What Rothbard
and his modern followers believe is that gold almost certainly would
be the free choice of individuals all over the world, if
they were allowed to settle on a money without government legal-tender
laws and other interventions stacking the deck.
In the meantime,
given that there is a Federal Reserve (and other central banks),
many Austrians (though here the agreement is not universal) believe
that restoring the convertibility of the dollar to a fixed weight
of gold would be a move in the right direction, even though it would
still not be perfect.
The purpose
of repegging the dollar to gold would be to remove what is euphemistically
called "monetary policy" (a more sinister description
would be "legalized
counterfeiting") from politics and special-interest corruption
as much as possible. People laud the current Fed as being
"independent," but of course that is absurd. The Fed as
it currently operates is clearly a cartelization device that shoves
new money into the pockets of rich bankers, and that allows the
government to finance massive deficits much more cheaply than would
otherwise be possible.
"So You
Want the Government to Set Prices?"
Related to
the above criticism, some purists also ask, "Why don't you
favor a market-driven price for the dollar and for gold? Just let
supply and demand determine prices, not some rigid number picked
out of a hat by the politicians."
This objection
sounds plausible at first, but it too misses the mark. If the Fed
were to say, "We are now announcing a new policy objective
of maintaining the price of gold at $2,000 per ounce, from now until
the end of time, and we will begin accumulating stockpiles of gold
to reassure investors that we will be able to maintain the target,"
this would not be analogous to the federal government saying,
"We are establishing a minimum price of labor at $7.25 per
hour."
Under a genuine
gold standard, when the Fed "sets" the dollar price of
gold it isn't threatening people with fines or jail time if they
want to trade gold at a different price. Rather, the Fed (or the
government in general, if there were no central bank) would adjust
the quantity of dollars in existence to maintain the target.
If the forces of supply and demand were such that the market price
of gold had drifted upward to, say, $2,025 per ounce, then the Fed
(assuming a $2,000 target) would need to sell off some of its gold
holdings,[1] which
would (1) flood the market with more gold and (2) shrink the amount
of dollars in the financial system. This contractionary policy would
push down the price of gold toward the peg of $2,000.
On the other
hand, nobody would be so foolish as to sell his gold for less
than $2,000 per ounce, if the Fed (or the Treasury) had a standing
invitation for anyone to trade in an ounce of gold in exchange for
$2,000 in Federal Reserve notes. Why sell your gold to another private
citizen for (say) $1,950 an ounce, when the US government stands
prepared to buy unlimited quantities of gold at a fixed price of
$2,000 per ounce?
Finally, a
critic could (and actually did, on my blog) ask how this arrangement
differs from the current one? After all, right now Bernanke "sets"
interest rates, but not through literal price controls. Instead,
the Fed adjusts the quantity of reserves in the banking sector such
that the "market-determined" federal funds rate is close
enough to the Fed's target for this interest rate. So isn't this
basically the same thing as the gold standard, with a different
"good" serving as the monetary commodity?
There are two
problems with this sophisticated objection. First, in the current
system the Fed has a moving federal-funds target. At best,
then, it would be analogous only if the Federal Open Market Committee
said after each meeting, "We are now setting the target price
of gold at such-and-such dollars. However, if unemployment begins
rising and core CPI is under 2 percent, we will begin raising the
target price of gold in $10 increments over the next few meetings."
That system would be nothing like the classical gold standard.
Yet the deeper
problem with the analogy is that on a classical gold standard, the
government is (imperfectly) mimicking what would happen if the money
were actually gold, with people walking around with gold
coins in their pockets, and merchants quoting prices not in dollars
but in grains or ounces of gold. The classical gold standard, by
fixing the dollar as convertible into a definite and constant weight
of gold, doesn't introduce another price: the dollar is supposed
to be a claim-ticket to gold. This isn't really "price fixing,"
any more than defining a foot as 12 inches is "central planning."
In contrast,
what would be the free-market analog of the Fed's current strategy
of targeting short-term interest rates? The only thing I can think
of is if the money commodity in a community weren't something tangible
like gold, silver, or tobacco, but rather overnight bonds issued
by banks. Yet what is a bond but a promise to deliver money?
So how could the money itself be a short-term bond? At this point
I am dropping the analogy, lest I become permanently cross-eyed.
Conclusion
As the Fed's
debasement of the currency reaches literally unprecedented levels,
more and more regular Americans are waking up to the merits of commodity
money. Yet this isn't some populist fad; there is a whole tradition
of excellent academic scholarship touting the virtues of the gold
standard. If he returns to the subject, I hope critics like the
LA Times's Popper will give gold a fairer hearing.
Notes
[1]
The operation would be automatic if the system were set up along
the lines of the classical gold standard. People all over the
world would have the guarantee that they could always turn over
$2,000 in Federal Reserve notes in exchange for a physical ounce
of gold. If the market price of gold ever went above $2,000, therefore,
speculators could earn arbitrage profits by buying from Uncle
Sam at $2,000 and reselling gold in the market for more.
Reprinted
from Mises.org.
June
16, 2011
Bob
Murphy [send him mail],
adjunct scholar of the Mises Institute,
is the author of The
Politically Incorrect Guide to Capitalism,
The
Human Action Study Guide,
and The
Man, Economy, and State Study Guide.
His latest book is The
Politically Incorrect Guide to the Great Depression and the New
Deal.
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