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December 14, 2006
Misunderstanding
Gold
by Gary North, Ph.D.
I
am a gold bug. A gold bug is a believer in the
public's use of gold coins as the basis for a
nation's money supply. Because very few
university-certified economists are gold bugs, and
very few gold bugs are academic economists, there
is enormous confusion on all sides regarding gold:
why it is valuable, why it serves as money, why
gold money is necessary for freedom, and why we
don't need a government-guaranteed gold standard in
order to have a gold standard.
I begin with a
recent observation by Hans Sennholz, the dean
of the Austrian School of economics. He has written
on all aspects of the economy, as his teacher,
Ludwig von Mises, also did. He has written more
than any other living Austrian School economist.
Here is his recent assessment of gold as a way to
attain stable money.
- Money is no yardstick of prices. It is
subject to man's valuations and actions in the
same way that all other economic goods are. Its
subjective, as well as objective, exchange
values continually fluctuate and, in turn,
affect the exchange ratios of other goods at
different times and to different extents. There
is no true stability of money, whether it is
fiat or commodity money. There is no fixed point
or relationship in economic exchange. Yet,
despite this inherent instability of economic
value and purchasing power, man is forever
searching for a dependable medium of
exchange.
-
- The precious metals have served him well
throughout the ages. Because of their natural
qualities and their relative scarcity, both gold
and silver were dependable media of exchange.
They were marketable goods that gradually gained
universal acceptance and employment in
exchanges. They even could be used to serve as
tools of economic calculation because their
quantities changed very slowly over time. This
kept changes in their purchasing power at rates
that could be disregarded in business accounting
and bookkeeping. In this sense, we may speak of
an accounting stability that permits acting man
to compare the countless objects of his economic
concern.
We can hope for usable price stability over the
time period of accounting, but if we seek to
establish a fixed-value currency, we will gain only
government-issued money and monetary
instability.
So, the goal of price stability is an
illegitimate goal. All that we can legitimately
hope for is loose predictability of those specific
prices that affect us as individuals, so that we
can make accurate plans for the future.
Any attempt by the government or its agent, the
central bank, to attain general price stability is
inherently self-defeating.
First, what matters is not some committee's
official price index, but rather specific prices as
they affect acting individuals. To get the official
national price index to stabilize, the planners
must raise some prices, which would otherwise have
fallen, and reduce some prices, which otherwise
would have risen. This is beyond any committee's
ability to forecast or administer.
Second, even if politics did not intrude, which
it will, the central planners of money will be
forced to adjust the money supply to the
committee's central plan. The wisdom of this
market-insulated bureaucracy's central plan will
not match the combined wisdom of profit-seeking,
loss-avoiding forecasters and entrepreneurs in an
economy that has a gold coin standard.
HOW GOLD INVESTORS LOST A LOT OF
MONEY
If you have taken my free email course on gold,
"The Gold
Wars," you understand the basics.
If not, then allow me to summarize.
There is a naïve view of gold that teaches
that the price of gold doesn't vary. Only the value
of paper money varies. Sennholz is arguing against
this view. The price of every good and every
service varies as conditions change: supply and
demand. There is no fixed standard. There is no
yardstick for money. There is no such thing as a
free lunch, and there is no such thing as a measure
of value. Economic value is subjective. Prices
change as subjective values change.
When you buy a gold coin -- which I suggest you
do -- you should not do so on the expectation that
its price will automatically rise when the dollar
falls in value. I realize that sophisticated
investors say to themselves, "I know this." But
when they buy gold, they often move from commodity
investors to true believers. They read articles
written by people with no background in economic
theory or history, who become acolytes for gold.
They become vulnerable to hype.
Gold bullion was an illegal investment for
Americans from 1933 through 1974. This fact kept
the average American from buying gold bullion
coins. This reduced the demand for gold. Gold's
price did not change on international markets from
1934 to 1967. People made money buying collector
gold coins from 1967 to 1974. Then gold fell by
almost 50% in 1975-76. Only after September, 1976,
did it soar: from $106 to $850 for one day: January
20, 1980. After that, it became a very bad
investment until 2001. It was then that I began
promoting gold once again.
Yet year after year, 1934 to 2006, the dollar
has depreciated. Decade after decade, the Federal
Reserve System has created money to buy U.S.
government debt, thereby lowering the purchasing
power of the dollar, as estimated in terms of
various official price indexes, private and
governmental.
Anyone who bought collector gold coins after
1933 or gold bullion coins in 1973 lost money most
of the time. There was a brief period of high
profits, from 1975 to late 1979, but the losses
sustained after mid-January, 1980, were
horrendous.
I repeat all this because I want readers to
recognize the nature of gold. It is a hedge against
serious and generally unexpected monetary
inflation. But the investing public remains
unfamiliar with gold. Only a few tiny companies
sell gold coins. The big brokerage firms downplay
gold.
Gold and silver were bubble markets, 1975-1979.
They popped in January, 1980. In terms of
purchasing power, gold at $600 today is the
equivalent of gold at $250 in 1980. But gold peaked
at $850 in 1980.
It will take unexpected and extensive monetary
inflation to create a comparable boom in gold.
THE CASE FOR GOLD
The case for gold is the case against government
control over the money supply. It is the case
against experts who invariably substitute their
judgment of what is best for society in place of
the decisions of individuals regarding what is best
for themselves. The case for gold is the case
against the civil government's manipulation of the
money supply.
Today, gold has been demonetized for everyone
except central banks. Large nations' central banks
do keep some gold reserves as the legal basis of
their nations' currencies. But government bonds
make up the bulk of central bank reserves: their
national debt and foreign governments' debts --
mainly U.S. government debts.
The fall in value of the dollar against the euro
began in January, 2002. The move upward of gold had
begun in the previous quarter. People forget how
long this decline of the dollar has been going on.
It did not begin this year.
Gold peaked at $725 on May 12, 2006. The fall of
the dollar against the euro has been attracting
attention in recent months.
If
you follow the monetary statistics, you are
aware that the crucial statistic, the adjusted
monetary base, has barely moved since February. The
other monetary indicators have also fallen from
their highs late in 2005.
Bernanke's Federal Reserve has put on the
monetary brakes. The fact that gold is down against
the dollar since the May high is consistent with
the FED's policy. What has surprised people is the
fall of the dollar against the euro.
This tells us that there is no one-to-one
correlation between monetary policy and prices. At
best, there is a broad correlation. Gold rose,
2001-2006. The euro rose, 2002-2006. But they did
not rise in a straight line.
THE DECLINE OF THE DOLLAR
The dollar will decline. Of that, I am
confident. At some point, it will begin to decline
much faster than it is declining today. When that
era comes, gold will be a fundamental investment to
buy and hold. It will preserve purchasing
power.
We must not be naïve about gold's potential
during an era of relative monetary stability, which
we are in today. The FED can shift back to
inflation at any time. But Bernanke will resist
this. He has bet his new career on fighting price
inflation. He says that price inflation is too
high. Yet the CPI, year to year, is under 2%. The
Median CPI is under 3%. He will pressure the Board
of Governors to accept a monetary policy that keeps
all of the official price indexes under 2%.
When this monetary policy produces a recession,
there will be great pressure put on him by Congress
to lower interest rates to get the economy out of
the doldrums. At that time, we will see how
committed the FED is to Bernanke's litany about
inflation being too high. But we had better take
him seriously when he says that prices are rising
too much.
CONCLUSION
Because of the war, which is not going away in
2007, gold should be in everyone's portfolio. But
because recession looks increasingly likely in
2007, the case for gold as an inflation hedge looks
much less relevant.
Long-term, the case for gold is the case against
central banking. But central bankers have managed
to gain power over money for over three centuries.
Whenever they attain their goal, as they did in
December, 1913, they have not surrendered this
control. I do not expect them to do so in my
lifetime.
As the government's debt obligation increases,
the politicians will look to the FED to buy the
debt with fiat money. But, in 2006, the FED has
bought almost no debt. It will take a lot of
political pressure to force the FED to create a
sufficient amount of fiat money to get a replay of
the bubble market of 1976-1979.
Assume this when you buy gold.
Dr.
Gary North earned a Ph.D. in history and is one of
America's keenest economic analysts and
commentators. He supports the Austrian school of
economics and is a previous assistant to
libertarian congressman Dr. Ron Paul. Visit his
website at http://garynorth.com.
To
subscribe to Gary North's Reality Check go to
http://www.dailyreckoning.com/sub/GetReality.cfm
If
you enjoyed this essay and would like to read more
of Gary's writing please visit his website at
http://www.garynorth.com
or http://www.freebooks.com.
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on its website does not imply acceptance or
approval of the comments or opinions expressed by
the author of the material. Nor is the Academy
responsible for any misrepresentation of the facts
included. It is your job to be a critical
reader.
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