DriftWood:
The way i see it, the different types of gold deposit notes, are really just different type of gold debt instruments. Either the bank owes and stores gold directly in wich case the debt is only between you and the bank. Or the bank trusts the gold to some 3rd party, in wich case the debt is still between you and the bank, but there is also a debt between the bank and the 3rd party. You could probably use both of these gold debt instrument in trade, an their value would be close to that of gold, if the traders trusted that the bank actually owned or could easily get the gold needed to exchange the gold debt into real gold.
Economics is not merely about getting the accounting right. The one thing the Austrian School understands that way too many other people don't seem to understand is that economic phenomenon is, at its core, the product of people acting to attain ends.
Just because a piece of paper represents some kind of claim on gold doesn't mean it will function as money in place of gold, which is what fractional-reserve banking presumes. A piece of paper may represent a legitimate contract that says the bank must pay you gold under some described circumstance, and consequently that piece of paper may have genuine value in the market place. But value alone does not determine what will function as money in the marketplace.
A piece of paper representing a claim on gold stored in a warehouse will only trade in place of gold under very specific circumstances. A piece of paper representing a mere promise to pay gold is so profoundly different than actual gold that the chance that it will trade in place of gold as money is vanishingly small. I mean, be honest with yourself. If you're trying to sell something to someone, and one person offers you a one-ounce gold coin, and another person offers you a piece of paper issued by a bank you may or may not have heard of that represents a promise to pay you gold that you know they may or may not have at the time, which are you going to accept?
From the first article DriftWood cites:
"If, for
some reason, the legal obligation to redeem these possibly excess banknotes
into gold (typical in the 19th century) could be avoided in some
way, as was common in the Western and Southern states in the US for example,
then the banknotes would lose value compared to their gold parity and the
situation would become inflationary."
This is completely wrong. The bank notes didn't lose value because a person was less likely to be able to redeem them for gold. They lost value because there were more of them bidding for the pool of goods and services that existed at the time. That's why fractional-reserve banking is always inflationary in the sense that prices are always higher than they otherwise would have been. Prices may stay steady during expansion of the money supply, as they did in the 1920s, but all that this means is that without expansion of the money supply, prices would have gone down to reflect the fact that there were more goods and services for that money to bid for.
More from the article:
"Many people today claim that debt creation causes an
increase in the 'money supply,' although this is incorrect. Money,
properly identified as base money, is not created in the lending process, but
by the central bank. Central banks can create base money, but not debt (unless
they use the discount window perhaps, which is extremely rare). Commercial
banks (and all other lenders or issuers of bonds) can create debt, but not base
money. As we noted two weeks ago, most measures of "money", such as
M2, M3, or MZM, are in fact measures of cash-like debt. So, to say that debt
creation creates debt (M2, M3, MZM) is not very interesting."
This completely ignores the fact that when a bank hands you a Federal Reserve note, you have no way of distinguishing whether it is "base money" or whether it is debt-backed money. And this is by design. Fractional-reserve banking requires that someone who accepts a bank note either not know whether it represents a title versus credit (because of fraud), or not be allowed to distinguish whether it represents a title versus credit (because of legal tender laws).
When people are able to distinguish between a title to gold, and credit to be repayed in gold, the latter will not function as money, and consequently fractional-reserve banking will not happen under free-market conditions.
I didn't bother to read the rest of the articles.