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March 2, 2007
The
Gold-Plated Sting
by Gary North, Ph.D.
Any
American over age 50 probably remembers "The
Sting," the 1973 movie starring Paul Newman and
Robert Redford. Their characters were a pair of
penny-ante crooks who got even with a murderous
criminal by setting him up for a scam. Like most
scams, it appealed to greed. They persuaded him
that he could get something for nothing. Then they
stripped him of his money.
It was a great movie. All you had to do was
ignore the ending, which violated an
incontrovertible truth that had been revealed in a
less well-known movie, "The Gang That Couldn't
Shoot Straight" (1971). That truth was announced by
Big Momma, the Italian mother of an incompetent
gang: "If it ain't in the Daily News, there ain't-a
no murder."
Compared to what central bankers have done to
the general public, "The Sting" was a con job run
by amateurs.
So successful has their sting been that it has
taken in 98% of the gold bugs.
THE GOLD BUG'S CREED
I am a gold bug. In early 2001, there were
hardly any of us remaining.
What is a gold bug? It is a person who believes
the following:
- 1. The gold standard was good for world
trade, 1815-1914.
-
- 2. The gold standard was good for individual
liberty.
-
- 3. A gold standard reduces the likelihood of
monetary inflation.
-
- 4. Gold was a good investment,
1976-1979.
-
- 5. Gold is still a good investment, despite
1980-2001, when it fell 70% while consumer
prices doubled.
The problem has always been this: there is
almost no agreement among gold bugs as to what
features a gold standard should always have. Should
a gold standard be
- 1. Guaranteed by law?
-
- 2. Whose law?
-
- 3. Enforced by which government agency?
-
- 4. With the gold in which form?
-
- 5. Stored where?
-
- 6. At whose expense?
-
- 7. With what restrictions on entry?
-
- 8. With what competition from
government-issued money?
-
- 9. With what competition from central
bank-issued money?
-
- 10. At what price?
Then there is the question of silver. Gold bugs
are usually also silver bugs. So, all of the above
questions apply to silver.
There were gold coins in circulation in my
parents' youth. There were silver coins circulating
in my youth. These coins used to be money, all over
the industrial West. No longer. What happened?
The sting happened.
In June, 1914, you could have walked into a bank
anywhere in the West and handed over the national
paper money in exchange for either gold coins or
silver coins. You could have purchased these coins
at a fixed price: a specific quantity of paper
money per coin. You would have paid nothing for the
transaction, other than standing in line.
The gold standard was therefore a free lunch. So
was the silver standard.
Problem: "There ain't no such thing as a free
lunch."
So, there was something rotten in Denmark --
also in England, France, the United States, and
every other gold standard country. There was at
least one fundamental flaw in the international
gold standard, which was also a series of national
gold standards. All of them rested on a lie:
"something for nothing."
Whenever you are offered something for nothing,
keep your hand upon your wallet and your back
against the wall.
THE FRAUD OF THE GOLD STANDARD
The gold standard as it actually operated,
1815-1914, was a gigantic fraud. That fraud was
revealed every time there was a major war.
Commercial banks suspended gold redemption on
demand, and governments always legalized this
violation of contract.
The gold standard in wartime wasn't worth the
paper it was written on.
In late 1914, Europe's banks suspended payment
when World War I broke out. But this time the
central banks in each country confiscated the gold
that the commercial banks had just confiscated from
their depositors.
After World War I was over, in 1925, Great
Britain re-established gold coin redemption on
demand, but at the pre-war, pre-wartime inflation
price. This meant that gold withdrawals would strip
the Bank of England of its gold unless it shrank
the currency supply, which it feared to do. In
1931, gold withdrawals threatened the Bank of
England's gold horde. The Bank, with the
government's approval, suspended payment. It has
never been re- established.
In 1933, Franklin Roosevelt imitated the Brits.
He went even further. He made it illegal for
American citizens to own gold bullion or gold
bullion coins.
Central banks could redeem gold for dollars at
the U.S. Treasury after 1934 at $35/oz -- not the
previous $20. That policy ended on August 15, 1971,
when Nixon unilaterally broke the government's
contract with foreign central banks.
So. . . .
The gold standard was a restraint on governments
. . . until the governments grew tired of the
restraint.
The gold standard was a restraint on privately
owned central banks after governments turned their
nations' gold over to the central banks . . . until
the central bankers grew tired of the
restraint.
The modern gold standard was therefore from day
one a gigantic con job. Governments and later
national central banks made this offer to the
public:
- "Bring your gold coins to your local
commercial bank. Your bank will give you paper
money in exchange. Paper money is light. It's
easy to carry. Any time you want gold coins
rather than paper money, just bring in paper
money, and your friendly banker will give you
government-guaranteed gold coins at a fixed,
government-guaranteed price. This way, you can
store your gold free of charge. Think of the
convenience. It's a no-risk deal. Trust
us."
Something for nothing! The public bought it. In
every nation, the public bought it. In every gold
standard nation, the governments allowed the
central banks to confiscate the public's gold and
never return it.
Silver, too.
THE STING
The mark of a successful sting operation is that
the victim never knows that he has been stung.
I know of no more successful sting operation
than the bait-and-switch scam known as the gold
standard.
Not only did the general public in every nation
shrug its collective shoulders when the governments
confiscated their gold "in the name of the people,"
the voters re-elected the politicians who turned
over the government's gold to the privately owned,
barely regulated central banks.
The public still had one possible recourse: to
go to the local bank and demand paper money. That
act is deflationary. Every dollar withdrawn in the
form of paper currency and not redeposited in
another bank shrinks the money supply by nine to
one. Paper currency is not fractionally reserved.
Deposits are. Paper money is the bottom of the
inverted pyramid of money.
That threat no longer exists. The February 17th
issue of "The Economist" ran a cover story: "The
End of Cash." The cover featured a picture of
dinosaurs.
Today, the only institutional restraining factor
to protect the public from mass inflation is the
bond market. If long-term rates climb in response
to price inflation, bonds' prices fall. That
threatens institutional investors.
The sting has removed the ability of the public,
person by person, to penalize the commercial banks
by withdrawing money and not re-depositing it.
The public is unaware of any of this.
The politicians are unaware of any of this.
The media are unaware of any of this.
Academic economists are vaguely aware of some of
this, but they don't really care. They do not
mention any of this in class or in their textbooks.
They approve of central banks' efficiency. Those
few who do voice objections do not receive tenure,
and surely not in any of the high-prestige
universities.
Most amazing of all, the vast majority of gold
bugs are unaware of any of this. Authors still
write their unread book-long defenses of the gold
standard, 1815-1914, as if the system had not been
designed and implemented by the Bank of England to
further the British Empire's commercial interests
and the interests of the commercial banks that
served commerce.
And the beat goes on. And the beat goes on.
WHAT IS THE SOLUTION?
In theory, there are two possible solutions,
neither of which has any possibility of being
implemented in my lifetime or yours.
One solution is free banking. This was Ludwig
von Mises' suggestion. There would be no bank
regulation, no central bank monopolies, no bank
licensing, and no legal barriers to entry. Let the
most efficient banks win! In other words, the
solution is a free market in money.
Another solution is 100% reserve banking. Banks
would not be allowed to issue more receipts for
gold or silver than they have on deposit. Anything
else is fraud. There would be regulation and
supervision to make sure deposits matched loans.
This was Murray Rothbard's solution. The question
is: Regulation by whom? With what authority?
There would be no government-issued money. There
would be no government mint. There would be no
legal tender laws. There would be no barriers to
entry into coin production.
There would also be no free services. There is
no such thing as a free lunch.
Anything other than free banking or 100% reserve
banking is a pseudo-gold standard or silver
standard. It is just one more invitation to
confiscation.
There is no organized movement today to
establish either free banking or 100% reserve
banking. There has never been a movement to impose
100% reserve banking. It has been well over a
century since a handful of economists and pamphlet
writers recommended free banking.
Anyone who tells you that it would be easy to
switch over to a gold standard has either no
understanding of the politics of money and banking
or else has been smoking some funny-smelling
leaves.
To switch by official decree to a
non-governmental banking system would require the
wholehearted co-operation of central bankers,
commercial bankers, politicians, academic
economists, and political parties, all of which
have a vested interest in controlling the money
supply at the expense of the public. They fear
above all the depositors' ability to bring down the
entire international cartel through bank runs.
These bank runs would create massive deflation,
international depression, and the collapse of the
division of labor.
IMPLEMENTING THE SOLUTION
If a free market gold standard ever arrives, it
will be the result of an unplanned response by men
and women to a disaster created by the existing
central bank cartel. This would require that the
switch be preceded by massive inflation, followed
by deflation, producing the bankruptcy of the
existing banks and brokerage houses.
Problem: Where will we buy our gold coins? With
what?
In the summer of 1963, I began buying silver
coins at face value at a local bank. By 1964, there
were no more silver coins to buy at banks. The run
on silver coins had begun. Only in tiny coin stores
could you buy silver coins at a premium over face
value.
Where could you buy numismatic U.S. gold coins
in 1963? At those same little coin shops.
For example, you could buy gold coins from
Camino Coin Company in Burlingame, California.
Today, over four decades later, you can still buy
coins there. It is still tiny. The same guy owns it
and runs it. I was 21 back then. I am 65 today.
The more things don't change, the more they stay
the same.
An international gold standard requires
widespread access to gold coins or digital
warehouse receipts to gold coins. More important,
it requires widespread awareness of the
government-restraining aspect of gold coins. There
is no such network of dealers.
Problem: the sting was completely successful.
Almost no one today understands the power of gold
coins and silver coins in relation to the rival
power of governments to buy votes. Among those who
think they understand -- the gold bugs -- almost
none of them really do understand. They are
advocates of stage one of the sting operation, as
if time could run back. They want a return to the
good old days, when governments issued honest money
and central bankers were public-spirited seekers of
legitimate profits.
That'll be the day.
CONCLUSION
Gold coins once provided a degree of personal
liberty because governments were forced by public
opinion regarding the money supply to maintain
convertibility of paper money into gold coins. But
war by war, central bank by central bank, economic
emergency by economic emergency, textbook by
textbook, central bank insiders have persuaded
politicians to authorize the removal of gold from
the public's bank accounts. They have also
persuaded academic economists and the media to
re-shape the public's opinion regarding gold: "A
barbarous relic."
It all goes back to the original lie: something
for nothing. It also goes back to the lie's
corollary: guaranteed by law. Those two lies made
possible the creation of a government-guaranteed
gold-plated gold standard. They were part of the
sting.
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
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If
you enjoyed this essay and would like to read more
of Gary's writing please visit his website at
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