What Has Government Done to Our Money? The Revenue of Government
What Has Government Done to Our Money?
Murray N. Rothbard
III.
Government Meddling With Money
1. The Revenue of Government
Governments, in contrast to all other organizations, do not
obtain their revenue as payment for their services. Consequently,
governments face an economic problem different from that of
everyone else. Private individuals who want to acquire more goods
and services from others must produce and sell more of what
others want. Governments need only find some method of
expropriating more goods without the owner's consent.
In a barter economy, government officials can only expropriate
resources in one way: by seizing goods in kind. In a
monetary economy they will find it easier to seize
monetary assets, and then use the money to acquire goods
and services for government, or else pay the money as subsidies
to favored groups. Such seizure is called taxation. [1]
Taxation, however, is often unpopular, and, in less temperate
days, frequently precipitated revolutions. The emergence of
money, while a boon to the human race, also opened a more subtle
route for governmental expropriation of resources. On the free
market, money can be acquired by producing and selling goods and
services that people want, or by mining (a business no more
profitable, in the long run, than any other). But if government
can find ways to engage in counterfeiting--the creation
of new money out of thin air--it can quickly produce its own
money without taking the trouble to sell services or mine gold.
It can then appropriate resources slyly and almost unnoticed,
without rousing the hostility touched off by taxation. In fact, counterfeiting can create in its very victims the blissful
illusion of unparalleled prosperity.
Counterfeiting is evidently but another name for
inflation--both creating new "money" that is not
standard gold or silver, and both function similarly. And now we
see why governments are inherently inflationary: because
inflation is a powerful and subtle means for government
acquisition of the public's resources, a painless and all the
more dangerous form of taxation.
[1]
Direct seizure of goods is therefore not now as extensive
as monetary expropriation. Instances of the former still
occurring are "due process" seizure of land under eminent
domain, quartering of troops in an occupied country, and
especially compulsory confiscation of labor service (e.g.,
military conscription, compulsory jury duty, and forcing business
to keep tax records and collect withholding taxes).