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December 20, 2006
Gold and
Deflation
by Gary North, Ph.D.
The
standard refrain is this: "Gold is an inflation
hedge." The problem with this refrain is 1980-2001.
Prices in general doubled, but gold's price fell
from $850 to $257. The only investment worse than
gold was silver.
If we define inflation as "an increase in the
money supply," then gold is usually not an
inflation hedge. The Federal Reserve System is
almost always increasing the monetary base, which
in turn leads to an increase in the various
definitions of money. Yet gold did not rise,
1913-1934, then rose because the U.S. government
re-defined the dollar from one-twentieth of an
ounce of gold to one-thirty-fifth of an ounce,
i.e., devaluated the dollar by 43%.
From 1934 until 1971, the official price of gold
did not rise. The dollar's purchasing power
fell.
The number of years in which gold's price has
risen over the last century are few and far
between: 1971-74, 1976-1980, 2001-2006.
Why wasn't gold an inflation hedge through most
of these years? First, when the U.S. was on a
government-defined gold standard, the government
bought and sold gold in a narrow trading range.
Gold was not a free market commodity. It was a
rigged commodity. That is what a
government-enforced gold standard is: a rigged
market.
Second, gold became a bubble commodity, from
1976 until January, 1980. The bubble burst as a
result of the Federal Reserve System's tight-money
policy, launched in October, 1979. Gold fell so far
that it did not recover when the FED reversed
policy in August, 1982, when the Dow Jones
Industrial Average fell below 800. The Mexican
government threatened a default on all
international loans to its banks. The FED inflated,
bailing out the Mexican banks.
Gold went down after January, 1980, as did most
commodities. Anyone holding commodities for two
decades lost his shirt. Yet monetary inflation
never ceased. Neither did price inflation.
MONETARY DEFLATION
There are sellers of gold who say that not only
is gold an inflation hedge (which it rarely is), it
is also a deflation hedge. Historically, it really
has been a deflation hedge, for the same reason
that it was not an inflation hedge. Its market was
rigged by the U.S. government.
During the periods in which the U.S. government
operated a gold standard, it guaranteed a fixed
price for gold. The famous $20 gold piece was a $20
gold piece because the U.S. government stood ready
to redeem it for $20 in paper.
If prices in general fell in a depression,
people could protect themselves by hoarding
currency. This included gold.
Any currency issued by a bank was at risk. The
bank could go bankrupt (bank + rupture). Whenever
this happened, the certificates it had issued fell
in value, often to zero. Under such circumstances,
the safest currency to hold was gold. Coins were
more convenient than bullion, but both worked.
In 1862, the U.S. government began issuing its
now-famous greenback dollars: U.S. Notes unbacked
by gold or silver. These served as legal tender
(compulsory) currency. The wartime issues were
limited to $450 million. They began to be redeemed
by the government in 1866, but the recession of
1867 halted this. A total of $356 million were
allowed to remain in circulation. They are still in
circulation. They are not common. Federal Reserve
Notes are the common currency.
Prior to 1862, currencies were private, and
private currencies varied in value. There was no
agency to guarantee their value. There were no
legal tender laws. Nobody was compelled to accept
any bank's currency notes.
When gold coins circulated, they were familiar
to most Americans. They were perceived as money.
So, they were money. They functioned as money in
exchange.
In times of monetary deflation, which meant
failing banks, gold did well. It was the safest
currency to own. Prices fell in relation to gold
coins. So, gold did well in deflations. A
detailed article on this is here.
There is much talk in "gold bug" circles about
gold's performance in a future deflation. All such
talk is sheer speculation. There is no historical
data to back it up. The following facts make
comparisons with the past illegitimate:
- 1. Prior to 1933, American banks were
allowed to go bankrupt, taking depositors'
balances with them. No longer. The FDIC
officially insures deposits up to $100,000.
- 2. The United States government was legally
obligated to pay a fixed amount of paper money
in exchange for an ounce of .999 fine gold. This
was a legal price floor for gold.
- 3. Gold coins circulated as money. The
public was familiar with gold.
Today, paper currency circulates. Gold coins do
not. A handful of tiny retail coin dealerships make
a market for gold coins. No one except gold bugs
and coin collectors know the price of gold
coins.
Today, credit cards function as money most of
the time. These cards are issued by banks that are
protected and regulated by the Federal Reserve
System, the Comptroller of the Currency, and the
FDIC. No one worries about the solvency of his
bank, other than investors in the bank and its
officers. They can lose if the bank goes under; the
depositors can't. Or so everyone believes.
There is never monetary deflation for as long as
12 consecutive months. A tight-money policy
produces recessions, which in turn threaten
incumbents. So, we occasionally get a few months of
monetary deflation. Then the Federal Reserve
returns to the policy of inflation.
Prices year to year have not dropped in the
United States for over half a century. The last
time they did, for one year, in 1955, they dropped
about one percent.
Yet throughout the entire period, there have
been forecasters who have predicted price
deflation. They have been wrong for 50 years. This
does not faze them. Then they die.
SLOWING PRICE INFLATION
Ever since Bernanke became Chairman in February,
the FED has been in tight-money mode. For several
months, there was actually monetary deflation.
The result of this policy, if pursued, will be
price stability. But this policy will produce a
recession. Bankruptcies will rise. Home
foreclosures, already at a million units this year,
will rise. The figure was 650,000 in 2005.
This is why there will be bipartisan support for
a policy reversal.
The FED's monetary policy has begun to have the
inevitable effect: Price inflation is slowing. I
use the Median CPI, published by the Federal
Reserve Bank of Cleveland. In June and July, it
rose at .4% per month. Then it fell to .3% per
month. In November, it fell to .2%.
This means that price inflation is not likely to
continue at the rate bequeathed to us by
Greenspan's FED.
Gold as a commodity has been an inflation
predictor since 2001. Those who bought it in 2001
have done well. But gold has fallen from May's $725
price. That's because gold's investors perceived
that price inflation would slow. The gold market
did its work well. It took until August for the
Median CPI to verify what gold's price had
forecast. It has continued to verify this.
Gold moved upward from its bottom at $561 on
October 6. It reached $649 on December 1. It has
skidded since then.
Gold no longer functions as money. It does
function as an inflation predictor. It is
predicting reduced price inflation.
ROBERT ANDERSON'S ASSESSMENT
Robert Anderson replaced me at the Foundation
for Economic Education in 1973. He studied with
Ludwig von Mises. He has been an observer of the
gold market ever since the 1960s.
Recently, he sent me an analysis of this market.
He is convinced that central bankers will not
surrender their control over the financial markets.
He thinks that runaway price inflation would doom
the central banks' leverage over the markets.
Then there is the inertia factor. Voters have
short memories and little historical
perspective.
- Inertia is a powerful force but over time it
does wane. It's been almost 75 years since gold
was used as money in this country, and even
longer in other parts of the world. Since long
before the industrial revolution governments
have controlled and manipulated monetary affairs
by money issue, banking laws, or both. In the
neo-fascist age of today's world all monies have
become totally fiat with state control over
monetary affairs absolute. Central banking is
established everywhere and government monetary
authorities fully understand that a policy of
hyper-inflation in developed countries would be
monetary suicide for them.
These people are self-interested. The name of
their game is power. Their #1 task is to keep the
commercial banking system solvent. Mass inflation
is a form of insolvency. But long before outright
insolvency will come direct controls. What Nixon
did in 1971 will be repeated: price controls.
- I keep reminding myself that inflation is a
fleeting tool of economic manipulation in a
hampered market economy, which can easily be
supplanted by direct controls as a social order
becomes more authoritarian.
In the good old days, gold was an alternative
currency. It no longer is. In the good old days,
depositors could shut down insolvent banks with a
bank run: a demand for gold coins, which took place
under deflation and inflation. Today, this is not
possible. Gold no longer serves as a warning of
looming insolvency.
- Unfortunately, today's market price of gold
is subjectively influenced by fewer and fewer
buyers remembering gold was once money and a
belief it will soon become money again. With the
passing of time such gold buyers will surely
decline further.
There are few gold bugs left in this world of
digital money that is accessed by plastic.
- As we all know gold's price has fallen in
real terms since 1980, reflecting a market
transition over the years from a perspective of
gold as a former monetary good to gold as a
commodity. Given the neo-fascist world we live
in today, it's possible this market trend may
continue to impose a negative force on the
market price of gold as a belief in a price
premium for gold as money continues to diminish
with time. The past divestment of gold by
central banks reflects this belief and
ultimately private holders may very well start
divesting their holdings for the same
reason.
In a recession, this is highly likely. Marginal
existing holders will sell gold to get liquidity.
In mass inflation, no. They will buy gold as a
hedge.
We are entering a recessionary period. While I
do not expect actual price deflation, prices are
unlikely to rise as fast as they did under
Greenspan's last years . . . not until the FED
reduces policy to reverse a recession.
- The case for owning gold is in its wealth
value as a non-monetary commodity today rather
than in some chimera belief that it will soon
become money again. Certainly gold's real
economic performance as a wealth form since 1980
has been deplorable with even government bonds
out performing gold!
-
- Anderson doesn't think that hyper-inflation
is likely. Neither do I.
-
- Perhaps you are more optimistic about the
future direction of the world's economies than I
am, but I simply cannot imagine central bankers
in hampered market economies anytime soon
engaging in hyper-inflation, followed by a
return to gold as money. We live today in an age
of fiat monies manipulated by government central
bankers who know it would be an act of utter
irrationality to destroy their fiat monies and,
further, know a return to gold as money would
destroy their monetary power.
He is pessimistic regarding monetary controls of
all kinds. Here is the tried-and-true way of
central bankers and politicians: "Close the escape
hatches!"
- I'm convinced that today is merely a
momentary era which economic forces will change
tomorrow. But rather than a return to economic
liberty and gold as money, I'm equally convinced
direct controls by an authoritarian state will
prove to be the chosen alternative to escape the
economic burden of today's welfare states.
Hyper-inflation is a relic of the "good old
days" of interventionist governments and
hampered economic liberty.
-
- He does not rule out gold as money. Neither
do I.
But he sees it far in the future. So do I.
- Of course gold as money will eventually
evolve but, unfortunately, it will be in some
far distant free society beyond our time. For at
least the near future, I believe a monetary
price premium in today's market price of gold is
driven more from past inertia than any
likelihood of imminent hyper-inflation or gold
becoming money again.
CONCLUSION
Gold will do well in a time of price inflation
at the double-digit level, but for now, it is
subject to the same forces as any other commodity.
It is subject to the business cycle.
Gold should be part of everyone's portfolio --
gold coins, not gold mining shares. War is still a
threat. If the United States starts a war with
Iran, oil will skyrocket, and gold will move upward
with oil. But today, the pressure is down, not up,
on the price of gold and silver.
Those who tell you that gold is a great
inflation hedge should add: "If inflation is
serious and widely unexpected." Those who tell you
that gold is a deflation hedge should add: "Under a
gold standard, where the price is fixed by
law."
Be careful when you buy gold and then hear
incomplete arguments that persuade you that gold is
beyond the forces of supply and demand. It
isn't.
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.
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