What Has Government Done to Our Money? Going off the Gold Standard
What Has Government Done to Our Money?
Murray N. Rothbard
III.
Government Meddling With Money
10. Going off the Gold Standard
The establishment of Central Banking removes the checks of bank
credit expansion, and puts the inflationary engine into
operation. It does not remove all restraints, however. There is
still the problem of the Central Bank itself. The citizens can
conceivably make a run on the Central Bank, but this is most
improbable. A more formidable threat is the loss of gold to
foreign nations. For just as the expansion of one bank loses gold
to the clients of other, non-expanding banks, so does monetary
expansion in one country cause a loss of gold to the citizens of
other countries. Countries that expand faster are in danger of
gold losses and calls upon their banking system for gold
redemption. This was the classic cyclical pattern of the
nineteenth century; a country's Central Bank would generate bank
credit expansion; prices would rise; and as the new money spread
from domestic to foreign clientele, foreigners would more and
more try to redeem the currency in gold. Finally, the Central
Bank would have to call a halt and enforce a credit contraction
in order to save the monetary standard.
There is one way that foreign redemption can be avoided: inter-Central Bank cooperation. If all Central Banks agree to inflate
at about the same rate, then no country would lose gold to any
other, and all the world together could inflate almost without
limit. With every government jealous of its own power and
responsive to different pressures, however, such goose-step
cooperation has so far proved almost impossible. One of the
closest approaches was the American Federal Reserve agreement to
promote domestic inflation in the 1920s in order to help Great
Britain and prevent it from losing gold to the United States.
In the twentieth century, governments, rather than deflate or
limit their own inflation, have simply "gone off the gold
standard" when confronted with heavy demands for gold. This,
of course, insures that the Central Bank cannot fail, since its
notes now become the standard money. In short, government has
finally refused to pay its debts, and has virtually absolved the
banking system from that onerous duty. Pseudo-receipts to gold
were first issued without banking and then, when the day of
reckoning drew near, the bankruptcy was shamelessly completed by
simply eliminating gold redemption. The severance of the various
national currency names (dollar, pound, mark) from gold and
silver is now complete.
At first, governments refused to admit that this was a permanent
measure. They referred to the "suspension of specie
payments," and it was always understood that eventually,
after the war or other "emergency" had ended, the
government would again redeem its obligations. When the Bank of
England went off gold at the end of the eighteenth century, it
continued in this state for twenty years, but always with the
understanding that gold payment would be resumed after the French
wars were ended.
Temporary "suspensions," however, are primrose paths to
outright repudiation. The gold standard, after all, is no spigot
that can be turned on or off as government whim decrees. Either a
gold-receipt is redeemable or it is not; once redemption is
suspended the gold standard is itself a mockery.
Another step in the slow extinction of gold money was the
establishment of the "gold bullion standard." Under this
system, the currency is no longer redeemable in coins; it can
only be redeemed in large, highly valuable, gold bars. This, in
effect, limits gold redemption to a handful of specialists in
foreign trade. There is no longer a true gold standard, but
governments can still proclaim their adherence to gold. The
European "gold standards" of the 1920s were pseudo-standards of this type. [14]
Finally, governments went "off gold" officially and
completely, in a thunder of abuse against foreigners and
"unpatriotic gold hoarders." Government paper now becomes
the fiat standard money. Sometimes, Treasury rather than
Central Bank paper has been the fiat money, especially before the
development of a central banking system. The American
Continentals, the Greenbacks, and Confederate notes of the Civil
War period, the French assignats, were all fiat currencies
issued by the Treasuries. But whether Treasury or Central Bank,
the effect of fiat issue is the same: the monetary standard is
now at the mercy of the government, and bank deposits are
redeemable simply in government paper.
[14]See Melchior Palyi, "The Meaning of the Gold
Standard," The Journal of Business (July 1941) pp.
299-304.