What Has Government Done to Our Money? The Smithsonian Agreement December 1971 -February 1973
What Has Government Done to Our Money?
Murray N. Rothbard
IV.
The Monetary Breakdown of the West
8. Phase VIII: The Smithsonian Agreement,
December 1971 -February 1973
The Smithsonian Agreement, hailed by President Nixon as the
"greatest monetary agreement in the history of the
world," was even more shaky and unsound than the gold
exchange standard of the 1920s or than Bretton Woods. For once
again, the countries of the world pledged to maintain fixed
exchange rates, but this time with no gold or world money to give
any currency backing. Furthermore, many European currencies were
fixed at undervalued parities in relation to the dollar; the only
U.S. concession was a puny devaluation of the official dollar
rate to $38 an ounce. But while much too little and too late,
this devaluation was significant in violating an endless round of
official American pronouncements, which had pledged to maintain
the $35 rate forevermore. Now at last the $35 price was
implicitly acknowledged as not graven on tablets of stone.
It was inevitable that fixed exchange rates, even with wider
agreed zones of fluctuation, but lacking a world medium of
exchange, were doomed to rapid defeat. This was especially true
since American inflation of money and prices, the decline of the
dollar, and balance of payments deficits continued unchecked.
The swollen supply of Eurodollars, combined with the continued
inflation and the removal of gold backing, drove the free market
gold price up to $215 an ounce. And as the overvaluation of the
dollar and the undervaluation of European and Japanese hard money
became increasingly evident, the dollar finally broke apart on
the world markets in the panic months of February-March 1973. It
became impossible for West Germany, Switzerland, France and the
other hard money countries to continue to buy dollars in order to
support the dollar at an overvalued rate. In little over a year,
the Smithsonian system of fixed exchange rates without gold had
smashed apart on the rocks of economic reality.