Depreciation Is Nothing New
by
Ron Paul
Recently
by Ron Paul: The
Illusion of Safety
Exerpted
from Gold,
Peace, and Prosperity (1981)
In Marco Polo's
great book of travels, he talks about a coin called the bezant circulating
in Kublai Khan's Mongol Chinese empire. The emperor, like the vast
majority of politicians, found the lure of paper money irresistible.
In his case, however, it was money printed on pieces of mulberry
tree bark. The same disastrous effects, seen everywhere else in
history, followed. Prices increased, and the gold bezant took on
increasing importance for the people as the government debauched
the irredeemable fiat currency. Abuse of paper money helped lead,
notes Antony Sutton, to the expulsion of the Mongol dynasty from
China. Government demands that the people accept printed mulberry
bark as equivalent to metallic money had no effect.
The bezant,
however, was minted not by the Chinese, but by the Byzantine Empire.
For ten centuries Byzantine coins were accepted all over the world,
and Byzantium dominated trade for thousands of miles in every direction
from Constantinople. Even the royal accounts of medieval England,
says Dr. Sutton, were kept in bezants. The Byzantine Empire only
declined when it debased the bezant, adding more cheap alloys and
removing gold.
In more recent
times, to finance our Revolutionary War, the Continental Congress
issued paper money in great quantities. Over a period of about four
and a half years, the Continental currency fell from a value of
one paper dollar per one gold dollar, to about 1,000 to one.
William Gouge,
writing
in 1833, quotes one member of the Continental Congress: "Do
you think, gentlemen, that I will consent to load my constituents
with taxes, when we can send to our printer, and get a wagon load
of money, (25 sheets) of which will pay for the whole?"
Most of the
burden, Mr. Gouge notes, fell on the patriots, "as it was in
their hands the paper depreciated. The Tories, who had from the
beginning no confidence in it, made it a rule to part with it as
soon as possible."
Those
who trusted the Congress were destroyed; the cynics were not. As
a result of this paper-money inflation, wrote one of our earliest
economists, Pelatiah Webster,
frauds,
cheats, and gross dishonesty are introduced, and a thousand idle
ways of living attempted in the room of honest industry; economy,
and diligence, which have heretofore enriched and blessed the
country.
While we
rejoice in the riches and strengths of our country, we have reason
to lament with tears of the deepest regret, the most pernicious
shifts of property which the irregularities of our finances introduced,
and the many of thousands of fortunes which were ruined by it;
the generous, patriotic spirits suffered the injury: the idle
and avaricious derived benefit from said confusion.
Reprinted
from Mises.org.
See
the Ron Paul File
September
1, 2011
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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