|
One of the weaknesses of the libertarian movement today is that too many of
its supporters have gotten bogged down in the dogmatic prescriptions of high
voltage but flawed intellectuals. In doing so, they miss the more rational
Big Picture view on key issues concerning a free society. The recent debate
over the legitimacy and efficacy of "real bills" and their relationship to
gold is an example of this unfortunate tendency among libertarians.
The all-important question regarding "real bills" is this: Are real bills
just another form of fraudulent paper credit issued by banks that will result
in ever-spiraling price inflation? If they are, then they should be outlawed.
If they are not, then they should be promoted if they are beneficial and
desired by free men in voluntary association in the marketplace.
Libertarians profess to champion a FREE-market, but in regards to the issue
of real bills, they denounce the use of a form of credit (or clearing) that
springs spontaneously and FREELY from the interactions of the market. Real
bills do not come from the machinations of greedy bankers. They do not originate
from special privileges conveyed to cartellized banks via government bureaucrats.
They do not entail misrepresentation on the part of their issuers and acceptors.
They are openly disclosed promissory notes utilized between producers, distributors,
and retailers to facilitate the movement of goods along the production line.
To prohibit their emergence in the market would require that we denounce the
right of free trade among men -- hardly what libertarians are supposed to stand
for. Since real bills are not the result of government coercion, since they
are not fraudulent, and since they do not come from privileges conveyed to
banks, the only question that needs to be answered is: Are they inflationary? If
they are, then we need to denounce them. If not, then we need to espouse them.
A Proper Definition of Inflation
What then is the evidence in this issue? To determine whether real bills are
inflationary or not, we need to first arrive at a proper definition of inflation.
The venerable economist, Henry Hazlitt, is the man to turn to. Long ago he
gave us the correct definition. In his book, What You Should Know About
Inflation, he wrote:
"Inflation is not a scientific term. It is very loosely used, not only by
most of us in ordinary conversation, but even by many professional economists.
It is used with at least four different meanings:
1. Any increase at all in the supply of money (and credit).
2. An increase in the supply of money that outruns the increase in the supply
of goods.
3. An increase in the average level of prices.
4. Any prosperity or boom.
Let us here use the word in a sense that can be widely understood and at
the same time cause a minimum of intellectual confusion. This seems to me
to be meaning 2.
Inflation is an increase in the supply of money that outruns the increase
in the supply of goods." [Funk & Wagnalls, 1968, pp. 139-140. Emphasis
in the original.]
Here then is the real issue that all honest intellects must confront. Does
the free and non-fraudulent issuance (and subsequent circulation) of real bills
between producers, distributors, and retailers in a marketplace result in "an
increase in the supply of money that outruns the increase in the supply of
goods?"
Blumen's Rothbardian Errors
Robert Blumen writes in his latest article, Real
Bills, Phony Wealth: Part II:
"[A]n increase in the quantity of fiduciary media necessarily results in
a higher market price for some good because when they are issued, there is
no offsetting savings that withdraws demand elsewhere. When a business sells
its bills to a bank for unbacked paper claims, the firm might use their phony
paper money to pay wages to employees, rent office space, or purchase machinery.
Whatever it is, it will sell at a higher price than would be the case in
the absence of the fiduciary media."
This is most emphatically NOT true! The increase in the fiduciary media of
an economy (i.e., redeemable paper money) does not "automatically" result in
an increase of prices for goods and services over the long haul. Such an increase
only creates general price inflation if it increases the monetary aggregate
at a faster rate than the simultaneous production of goods and services accompanying
it is being increased.
The fact that there is "no offsetting savings that withdraws demand elsewhere" is
not the sole criterion in determining whether there will be price inflation
or not. This is far too narrow of a criterion, for obviously the supply of
goods and services coming into being at the same time is a crucial determining
factor. So to claim that automatically goods "will sell at a higher price than
would be the case in the absence of the fiduciary media" is absurd. If we are
to take Hazlitt's above definition of price inflation as true, then we must
take into consideration the increase in the supply of goods in order
to evaluate whether real bills are detrimental or beneficial to an economy,
i.e., inflationary or not.
The problem with Blumen and the Rothbardians is that they are obsessed with
a very rigid definition of inflation. I assume that they officially subscribe
to Murray Rothbard's concept of inflation in his book, What
Has Government Done to Our Money?: "Inflation may be defined as any
increase in the economy's supply of money not consisting of an increase in
the stock of the money-metal." [Rampart College Press, 1964, p. 23.]
In other words, to a Rothbardian, inflation is any increase in money substitutes
that exceeds gold and silver reserves. Obviously this is one definition of
inflation. But it is only monetary inflation. We have to then concern
ourselves with whether such monetary inflation results in price inflation.
After all, this is the real issue, is it not? Will an increase in the money
supply bring about general PRICE inflation throughout the economy over the
long haul? We also have to concern ourselves with whether such inflation of
the money supply is brought about by government privileges and bank fraud,
or whether it is brought about by market participants in free and open exchange.
Both of these questions must be considered in determining if monetary inflation
is bad or benign.
So Blumen and the Rothbardians are starting with an unsatisfactory concept
of inflation. To steadfastly insist, as they do, that any credit creation not
arising from savings (i.e., in excess of gold and silver reserves) is automatically
bad is not a rational way to approach the issues herein. Nor is it the way
to arrive at optimum economic productivity for a free society.
But this is only the beginning of the Rothbardian errors. Where real bill
detractors also go wrong is in their interpretation of the discounting process
with banks. They are primarily concerned that when real bills are discounted
they will lead to the issuance of excessive notes to purchase the real bills,
which will then lead to spiraling prices. Blumen stresses repeatedly in his
article that as more bills are discounted and more fiduciary media enter the
system, prices in general will increase.
"Here," he says, "we see the error in the idea that particular fiduciary
media are backed by specific goods and therefore non-inflationary. The money
prices of goods are formed by the interaction of everyone who has a money
balance and everyone who has something to sell in exchange for money. This
means that the goods in process, in the case of a non-monetized bill, have already
been priced given the existing supply of money. When the bill becomes
a fiduciary medium, new prices are formed, through the interaction of
all money and fiduciary media in relation to the same set of goods.
This will result in higher prices for the goods in relation to the new
total supply of money and fiduciary media." [bold phrasing added]
This is totally wrong! Yes, goods are priced according to the interaction
of the circulating real bills in relation to the goods they represent. But
when the bills are discounted at the bank and turned into fiduciary media so
as to circulate more easily (because fiduciary media can be broken down into
smaller denominations), no NEW money comes into being! The circulating
real bills are merely exchanged for a different form of media that will circulate
more easily. The bank notes enter the economy as the real bills are withdrawn
and held in the banker's vault for 30-90 days before their expiration and conversion
to gold coins when they then go out of existence. So the monetary aggregate
does not increase in any way because of the banker's issuance of fiduciary
media to purchase the real bills. And since the original creation of real bills
was in proportion to the goods that they represented, there will be no price
inflation. This is elementary monetary economics!
Let's examine other errors from Blumen in hopes of more clarity here. He writes
that, "There is no way that paper by itself can fund production." This
is certainly NOT true! Paper funds production all the time. If it didn't, we
would not be growing as an economy today. But we need to ask, will paper fund
production in a safe and healthy manner? Will it fund production without incurring
spiraling prices that then negate the increased production and its value to
us? Will it, as Hazlitt says, bring "an increase in the supply of money
that outruns the increase in the supply of goods?" This is the real question
with which we need to concern ourselves. (More later on the issue of paper
funding production.)
Blumen writes also that, "The only way to provide goods more cheaply is to
produce more of them through savings, work, and investment." On this point,
he is correct. A pure gold monetary system would produce cheaper overall goods.
In fact, there would probably be a subtle and prolonged deflation of general
prices over the long haul. But there are other factors than just cheap goods
that must be considered. We need to also ask how much goods would a pure
gold monetary system produce. It is the contention of Dr. Fekete and myself
that a pure gold monetary system would produce considerably LESS GOODS AND
SERVICES than a gold monetary system that allows for the free and spontaneous
use of real bills.
Is Cheaper Better?
As I wrote in my last article, Cranks
in the Gold Community, there are basically three fundamental monetary
/ credit systems available to human society. We have made use of all three
during the past two thousand years. They are: 1) a pure 100% gold and silver
monetary system, 2) a gold and silver monetary system accompanied by real
bills, and 3) a fiat paper monetary system. The first system was used from
ancient times up through the late Middle Ages. The second was used primarily
from about the 14th and 15th century to 1914. The third has been in use throughout
the world since 1914.
I think it is safe to say that a pure 100% gold system will result in the cheapest goods
and services. A Keynesian fiat paper system will result in the most expensive goods
and services. While a gold system accompanied by real bills will result in
a price level somewhere in between the cheapest and the most expensive.
If the Rothbardians have as their goal only the cheapest prices possible, then
they are correct. We should adopt a pure 100% gold system. But the perceptive
man sees a bigger picture and is concerned not just with the price of
things, but also with the prevalence of things. He asks which of these
three systems are capable of producing the most amount of productivity with
the most price stability -- all within the context of freedom and individual
rights. He knows that cheap goods are of little use to mankind if there aren't
very many of them.
Thus the perceptive man looks at the history of monetary systems in their
actual practice to see which one will bring about the greatest amount of productivity
and wealth with accompanying price stability. He does not rely solely on theoretical
suppositions of what money should be. He matches his theories with the historical
record of what he is espousing. If one does this, he comes to the conclusion
that a pure 100% gold system will certainly work, it will produce price stability
(if the coins are not tampered with), and it will no doubt bring about the
cheapest overall prices for society. But an objective study of history from
ancient times through the Dark and Middle Ages to the Renaissance and modernity
shows that a pure metallic money system will also bring about an extremely
primitive, low-level amount of goods and services. It will create much
less wealth and productivity than a monetary system based upon a proper form
of credit (or clearing) that exceeds the gold reserves of that society. The
key to assure such credit propriety is to make sure that the credit / clearing
instruments are non-fraudulent and non-inflationary.
The central message of Dr. Antal Fekete is that such a monetary system did
come close to existing in the past and could be perfected for the future. It
was the gold / silver systems of the 18th and 19th centuries accompanied by
the use of real bills among producers, distributors and retailers. The price
inflations that existed during this era of history were not due to the circulation
and discounting of real bills, but to the interventions of government into
the monetary affairs of the market to corrupt all credit and clearing instruments
by shielding banks from full disclosure and exempting them from the rules of
contractual law. The other two sources of price inflation during this era were
the funding of government wars with paper money and new strikes of gold large
enough to bid up prices.
Thus the perceptive man asks: Is there a mean between the cheap, low
productivity of the pure 100% gold system of the Middle Ages and the expensive,
high productivity of the Keynesian fiat paper systems of the 20th century?
Is there a system that finds a balance and does not sacrifice abundance of
productivity in favor of cheapness of price? This is the question that a perceptive
man asks. He concentrates on the big picture of history and how money actually
operated over the centuries. He asks: Which monetary system will bring about
the most amount of productivity and wealth while maintaining the most stable
prices? It's not enough to show that one's system will bring about the cheapest
prices. That, a 100% gold system will undoubtedly do. But we must also
ask how much productivity will our monetary system bring about?
Listed below is an example of what I mean by the fact that the 18th and 19th
century monetary system of gold and silver accompanied by real bills (but purged
of the fraudulent, inflationary aspects of fractional reserve banking) would
be the mean, i.e., the proper balance which we should strive for. It
would avoid the "defects" of a 100% gold and silver system, and it would also
avoid the "excesses" of a Keynesian fiat paper money system. In this way, it
would approach the Aristotelian ideal which states that the good is the rational
course that lies between the two opposite extremes of defect and excess.
All students of the market know that there is a mean to which prices always
return. Well, philosophical Aristotelians realize that not just the stock market,
but also much of life itself is constructed around the three positions of defect-mean-excess,
and that humans and their societies constantly swing back and forth between
the three positions striving for the mean.
EXCESS -- Keynes System
1. Fiat paper as money
2. Used during the 20th century and in present day
3. Price inflation is the norm
4. Boom / bust economy that grows in wild cycles
5. Super productivity
MEAN -- Fekete System
1. Gold and silver as money accompanied by real bills
2. Used imperfectly during the 18th and 19th century
3. Price stability would be the norm
4. Productive economy that grows vigorously
5. Excellent productivity
DEFECT -- Rothbard System
1. Pure 100% gold and silver as money
2. Used during ancient times up through the Middle Ages
3. Price deflation would be the norm (if circulating coins are not tampered
with)
4. Stagnant economy that grows very slowly
5. Poor productivity
Why a 100% Gold System Will Fail
Here is why a 100% gold monetary system fails. Without a clearing system of
real bills, any gold monetary system will be exactly what Keynesians say it
will be -- contractionist. Our economy would crash into a very low level
of productivity. If we were to attempt such a system, we would have to accept
a much lower standard of living. As Fekete shows, the reason why Keynes got
away with claiming that a gold monetary system is contractionist and a barbarous
relic is that the central banks of Europe and the U.S. in the 1909-1920 era
succeeded in sabotaging the clearing system that real bills gave to gold throughout
the 19th century. So of course gold became contractionist without its clearing
system of real bills. But as Fekete demonstrates repeatedly throughout his
works, there is no limit to the amount of productivity that can be cleared in
a non-inflationary way if gold is accompanied by the use of real bills
among producers, distributors and retailers.
Dr. Fekete is presently beginning a new series of articles entitled, A
Revisionist Theory and History of Money, in which he intends to
explain HOW and WHY this sabotaging was done by the creators of our modern
day fiat money systems. The resplendent age of freedom that existed in
the 18th and 19th centuries throughout Europe and America came crashing
down with the guns of August in 1914. Socialism was sweeping the world,
and the concept of government banking fit right into its paradigm of monstrously
regimented lives for humans. Gold became the favorite whipping boy of the
collectivists during the thirties when, in fact, it was not the problem
at all. Gold is capable of funding a modern economy, but not by itself.
It needs a clearing system.
Rothbard is very mistaken when he claims that a pure gold monetary system
would be quite adequate to finance a growing economy in a stable manner. In The
Case for a 100 Percent Gold Dollar, he writes, "that the supply of money
essentially does not matter. Money performs its function by using a medium
of exchange; any change in its supply, therefore, will simply adjust itself
in the purchasing power of the money unit, that is, in the amount of other
goods that money will be able to buy&.There is therefore never any need for
a larger supply of money." [Meriden, CT: Cobden Press, 1984, p. 28.]
As I wrote in The Future
of Gold As Money, if there is "never any need for a larger supply of
money," why does the marketplace (when left free) naturally expand the purchasing
power via bills of exchange and extend temporary monetary privileges to them?
The marketplace itself is telling us that there is always a definite need
for a larger supply of money. Our only necessity is to make sure that the
implementation of this increasing money supply is carried out in a way that
cannot be corrupted into the inflated travesty we now endure.
According to Rothbard, a 100 percent gold dollar would "simply adjust itself
in the purchasing power of the money unit." Gold (and silver) would become
elastic and would suffice to clear the market of goods being produced. But
if this is true, why didn't they? History shows us no proof of gold and silver
on their own making such an adjustment easily and prosperously. In fact history
shows us proof of just the opposite.
A pure 100% gold and silver system is one of the reasons why the Middle Ages
remained stagnant productivity-wise in relation to what followed in the Renaissance,
the Enlightenment, and the modern age. Though there were numerous other reasons
why commerce and productivity began to increase greatly with the onset of the
Renaissance, one important reason was surely that trade during this era
was no longer tied to a pure metallic money. With the emergence of real
bills and their sophisticated, non-inflationary clearing system, manufacturers
and merchants were now able to expand their productivity to a much higher level.
Rothbardians will, of course, dispute this by repeating their mantra that
Blumen uses: "Paper by itself cannot fund production." As they see it, real
bills, being a paper instrument, cannot increase the productive and distributive
capacity of an economy. This, as I have pointed out above, is a fallacy. Both
gold and paper are capable of increasing production. But they will not do so
with equal safety, nor with equally benign results. The latter (when it is
employed fraudulently and indiscriminately) will result in inflationary prices,
malinvestment, and a highly unstable boom / bust economy. But if paper instruments
are of a certain kind (i.e., self-liquidating real bills) they will readily
increase production safely and benignly. Too many libertarians miss this crucial
distinction between conventional, corruptible credit instruments and real bills.
As a result, they denounce all credit instruments that exceed gold and silver
reserves. They crudely lump them all together and thus dismiss the immense
benefit of real bills.
It is important to point out that the central flaw of fractional reserve banking
does not lie in its use of paper to fund production. It lies in the kind
of paper that it uses to fund production. It lies in the laxity of banking
laws upon which it is sustained. It lies in the monopolistic fascism that it
engenders between bankers and bureaucrats. Paper (or credit) can certainly
fund production. Witness the explosion of productivity that paper and credit
gave us to fight World War II. Witness the recent explosion of productivity
during the nineties.
Whether our money is metal or paper, humans will use increased quantities
of it to create new businesses, more goods, and higher standards of living.
But (and it's a big but) paper is fraught with danger because it is so easy
to roll off the printing press. It is so easy to loan out, to roll over and
extend. It is so readily corruptible in the hands of short-sighted, greedy
bankers. As a result, it invariably brings about relentless price inflation.
If it is fiat paper, it will always end in worthlessness because of the nature
of man. This is why there are necessary procedures that must be followed in
the banking world so as to inhibit this tendency to corrupt the money and credit
of an economy. These procedures were abandoned in successive waves throughout
the 20th century starting in 1913, which has led us to the runaway malignancy
we term a "money system" today.
These procedures are: the decentralization of banks and the prohibition of
monopolized government banking, the application of objective law to all banks
(i.e., no special privileges conveyed to them), the legal curtailment of surreptitiously
loaning out demand deposits, the requirement of full disclosure of bank portfolios
to the public on a quarterly basis, etc.
If these procedures are followed, then credit in excess of gold reserves is
not bad. It simply must be structured according to proper principles and objective
laws so as to prohibit its abuse. Real bills fit very nicely within such a
structuring.
Glossing Over History
In conclusion, Rothbard's followers are barking up the wrong tree with their
animosity toward these marvelous clearing instruments. Their theoretical grasp
of the nature of real bills is flawed because both Mises and Rothbard failed
to research them thoroughly, and dismissed them as just another form of corruptible
credit. By glossing over the history of real bills, they failed to see their
crucial link to the transformation of economic society from low productivity
in the Middle Ages to the higher productivity of the Renaissance and its evolution
into the modern day. Antal Fekete, however, perceived the link, did the research,
and has written a powerful array of works on the subject matter, Monetary
Economics 101 and 102. It behooves us all to delve into this man's dynamic
and independent thought. A whole new way of viewing money will be opened up
to the reader.
The majority of today's real bill detractors will, no doubt, refuse to change
their minds. The nature of many humans is that they prefer to twist the facts
of reality semantically and let sophistry shield them from facing up to a flawed
viewpoint. But in every generation, there is always a core of genuine truth
seekers who do not let past prejudices and errors on the part of their intellectual
leaders prohibit them from correcting those errors and thus strengthening the
cause they espouse. It is with these stalwart souls that the future of freedom
now lies.
I would say this to Rothbardians: You need to step back from all the minutiae
and appraise the Big Picture. It would be very helpful if you would concentrate
on what is essential in this debate:
1. Real bills worked splendidly for 500 years. Should you not consider why?
2. Real bills are open, non-fraudulent agreements among market participants
that help to move goods on a grand scale. Is it possible that Mises and Rothbard
were mistaken in their interpretation of real bills? No sin here. Humans are
not gods; they make errors.
3. Real bills spring from the market, not from bank chicanery and not from
government coercion. How then does one prohibit their free and spontaneous
use and still claim to stand for freedom?
4. For over 100 years from 1800 to 1914, real bills flourished throughout
the world, yet prices in Europe and America came down. Why did this happen
if they are so inflationary?
5. The central banks sabotaged real bills in the early 20th century. Why would
central bankers, who are arch-inflationists, have such an aversion to real
bills if they are tools of inflation as Rothbardians claim? Would not central
bankers have fought to retain them if they are so inflationary?
In his book, What
Has Government Done to Our Money?, Murray Rothbard writes that, "There
is no need to tamper with the market in order to alter the money-supply
that it determines." [op.cit., p.13.]
Why then are all his followers trying so hard to tamper with the market in
order to suppress the natural emergence of real bills? Real bills are simply
an example of self-liquidating credit that springs up FREELY in response to
a genuine need. They are an example of the market determining the money supply
in a non-fraudulent, non-inflationary manner. Those who denounce real bills
and work for their suppression are not advancing the cause of gold and freedom.
On the contrary, they are stifling the restoration of them to our lives.
|