Under cover
of its multiplicity of fabricated wars on drugs, terror, tax evasion,
and organized crime, the US government has long been waging a
hidden war on cash. One symptom of the war is that the largest
denomination of US currency is the $100 note, whose ever-eroding
purchasing power is far below the purchasing power of the €500
note. US currency used to be issued in denominations running up
to $10,000 (including also $500; $1,000; $5,000 notes). There
was even a $100,000 note issued for transactions among Federal
Reserve banks. The United States stopped printing large denomination
notes in 1945 and officially discontinued their issuance in 1969,
when the Fed began removing them from circulation. Since then
the largest currency note available to the general public has
a face value of $100. But since 1969, the inflationary monetary
policy of the Fed has caused the US dollar to depreciate by over
80 percent, so that a $100 note in 2010 possessed a purchasing
power of only $16.83 in 1969 dollars. That is less purchasing
power than a $20 bill in 1969!
Despite this
enormous depreciation, the Federal Reserve has steadfastly refused
to issue notes of larger denomination. This has made large cash
transactions extremely inconvenient and has forced the American
public to make much greater use than is optimal of electronic-payment
methods. Of course, this is precisely the intent of the US government.
The purpose of its ongoing breach of long-established laws regarding
financial privacy is to make it easier to monitor the economic
affairs and abrogate the financial privacy of its citizens, ostensibly
to secure their safety from Colombian drug lords, Al Qaeda operatives,
and tax cheats and other nefarious white-collar criminals
Now the war
on cash has begun to spread to other countries. As reported
a few months ago, Italy lowered the legal maximum on cash transactions
from €2,500 to €1,000. The Italian government would
have preferred to set a €500 or even €300 maximum limit
but reasoned that it should permit Italians time to adjust to
the new limit. The rationale for this limit on the size of cash
transactions is the fact that the profligate Italian government
is trying to reduce its €1.9 trillion debt and views its
anticash measures as a means of cracking down on tax evasion,
which "costs" the government an estimated €150
billion annually.
The profligacy
of the Italian ruling class is in sharp contrast to ordinary Italians
who are the least indebted consumers in the eurozone and among
its biggest savers. They use their credit cards very infrequently
compared to citizens of other eurozone nations. So deeply ingrained
is cash in the Italian culture that over 7.5 million Italians
do not even have checking accounts. Now most of these "bankless"
Italians will be dragooned into the banking system so that the
notoriously corrupt Italian government can more easily spy on
them and invade their financial privacy. Of course Italian banks,
which charge 2 percent on credit-card transactions and assess
fees on current accounts, stand to earn an enormous windfall from
this law. As controversial former prime minister Berlusconi noted,
"There's a real danger of crossing over into a fiscal police
state." Indeed, one only need look at the United States today
to see what lies in store for Italian citizens.
Meanwhile
the war
on cash in Sweden is accelerating, although the involvement
of the state is less overt. In Swedish cities, cash is no longer
acceptable on public buses; tickets must be purchased in advance
or via a cell-phone text message. Many small businesses refuse
cash, and some bank facilities have completely stopped handling
cash. Indeed in some Swedish towns it is no longer possible to
use cash in a bank at all. Even churches have begun to facilitate
electronic donations from their congregations by installing electronic
card readers. Cash transactions represent only 3 percent of the
Swedish economy, while they account for 9 percent of the eurozone
and 7 percent of the US economies.
A leading
proponent of the anticash movement is none other than Bjorn Ulvaeus,
former member of the pop group ABBA. The dotty pop star, whose
son has been robbed three times, believes that a cashless world
means greater security for the public! Others, more perceptive
than Ulvaeus, point to another alleged advantage of electronic
transactions: they leave a digital trail that can be readily followed
by the state. Thus, unlike countries with a strong "cash
culture" like Greece and Italy, Sweden has a much lower incidence
of graft. As one "expert" on underground economies instructs
us, "If people use more cards, they are less involved in
shadowy economy activities," in other words, secreting their
hard-earned income in places where it cannot be plundered by the
state.
The deputy
governor of the Swedish central bank, Lars Nyberg, gloated before
his retirement last year that cash will survive "like the
crocodile, even though it may be forced to see its habitat gradually
cut back." But not everyone in Sweden is celebrating the
dethronement of cash. The chairman of Sweden's National Pensioners'
Organization argues that elderly people in rural areas either
do not have credit or debit cards or do not know how to use them
to withdraw cash. Oscar Swartz, the founder of Sweden's first
Internet provider, a supporter of the phasing out of cash, argues
that without the adoption of anonymous payment methods, people
who send money and make donations to various organizations can
be "traced every time." But, of course, what the artless
Mr. Swartz does not see is that this is the whole point of a cashless
economy to make even the most intimate economic affairs
of private citizens transparent to the state and its fiscal and
monetary apparatchiks, who themselves hate and fear transparency
like vampires do sunlight. And then there are the benefits that
accrue to the government-privileged banking system from the demise
of cash. One Swedish small businessman shrewdly noted the connection.
While he gets charged 5 kronor (80¢) for every credit-card
transaction, he is prevented by law from passing this on to his
customers. In his words, "For them (the banks), this is a
very good way to earn a lot of money, that's what it's all about.
They make huge profits."
Fortunately,
the free market provides the prospect of an escape from the fiscal
police state that seeks to stamp out the use of cash through either
depreciation of central-bank-issued currency combined with unchanged
currency denominations or direct legal limitation on the size
of cash transactions. As Carl Menger, the founder of the Austrian
School of economics, explained over 140 years ago, money emerges
not by government decree but through a market process driven by
the actions of individuals who are continually seeking a means
to accomplish their goals through exchange most efficiently. Every
so often history offers up another example that illustrates Menger's
point. The use of sheep, bottled water, and cigarettes as media
of exchange in Iraqi rural villages after the US invasion and
collapse of the dinar is one recent example. Another example was
Argentina after the collapse of the peso, when grain contracts
(for wheat, soybeans, corn, and sorghum) priced in dollars were
regularly exchanged for big-ticket items like automobiles, trucks,
and farm equipment. In fact Argentine farmers began hoarding grain
in silos to substitute for holding cash balances in the form of
depreciating pesos.
As has been
widely reported
recently, an unlikely crime wave has rapidly spread throughout
the United States and has taken local law-enforcement officials
by surprise. The theft of Tide liquid laundry detergent is pandemic
throughout cities in the United States. One individual alone stole
$25,000 worth of Tide detergent during a 15-month crime spree,
and large retailers are taking special security measures to protect
their inventories of Tide. For example, CVS is locking down Tide
alongside commonly stolen items like flu medications. Liquid Tide
retails for $10$20 per bottle and sells on the black market
for $5$10. Individual bottles of Tide bear no serial numbers,
making them impossible to track. So some enterprising thieves
operate as arbitrageurs buying at the black-market price and reselling
to the stores, presumably at the wholesale price. Even more puzzling
is the fact that no other brand of detergent has been targeted.
What gives
here? This is just another confirmation of Menger's insight that
the market responds to the absence of sound money by monetizing
highly salable commodities. It is clear that Tide has emerged
as a subsidiary local currency for black-market, especially drug,
transactions but for legal transactions in low-income areas
as well. Indeed police report that Tide is being exchanged for
heroin and methamphetamine and that drug dealers possess inventories
of the commodity that they are also willing to sell. But why is
laundry detergent being employed as money, and why Tide in particular?
Menger identified
the qualities that a commodity must possess in order to evolve
into a medium of exchange. Tide possesses most of these qualities
in ample measure. For a commodity to emerge as money out of barter,
it must be widely used, readily recognizable, and durable. It
must also have a relatively high value-to-weight ratio so that
it can be easily transported. Tide is the most popular brand of
laundry detergent and is widely used by all socioeconomic groups.
Tide also is easily recognized because of its Day-Glo orange logo.
Laundry detergent can also be stored for long periods without
loss of potency or quality. It is true that Tide is somewhat bulky
and inconvenient to transport by hand in large quantities. But
enough can be carried by hand or shopping cart for smaller transactions
while large quantities can easily be transported and transferred
using automobiles.
Just like
the highly publicized war on drugs that the US government has
been waging and losing for decades, it is doomed
to lose its surreptitious war on cash, because the free market
can and will respond to the demand of ordinary citizens for a
reliable and convenient money.