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Because the followers of the late scholar, Murray Rothbard, at the Mises Institute
espouse a 100% gold money system, they naturally are in vehement opposition
to the Real Bills Doctrine of Adam Smith and the works of Dr. Antal Fekete.
This is because the Real Bills Doctrine allows credit to be expanded in excess
of gold reserves so as to give flexibility to our monetary system.
Therefore a very spirited debate has sprung up over the past several months
on whether Rothbard's 100% gold system is workable or not. It is this writer's
belief that it is not workable. In fact, it is my belief that in trying to
inform Americans about how to fight for freedom, the Rothbardians are tragically
misdirecting them with serious misunderstandings about history, real bills,
credit, and what is necessary to restore gold as money. This essay will put
forth some of the reasons why.
Lip Service to Real Bills
In his recent two articles on the Real Bills Doctrine, Fool's
Gold Redux and Clearing
the Air, Sean Corrigan (who is a follower of Rothbard) attempts to give
his readers the impression that he actually has no basic quarrel with real
bills as clearing instruments. On the contrary, he does indeed have
a quarrel with them and has merely paid lip service to them in his latest
articles so as to appear to be a free-marketeer on this issue to his readers.
But one cannot be a free-market advocate if one refuses to allow traders
and bankers to engage in fully disclosed, non-fraudulent trade among themselves.
As we will see, Rothbard's 100% gold system requires just such a refusal
in order to be implemented.
The problem lies in the way that Corrigan and the Rothbardians are willing
to allow for real bills to circulate. I quote Corrigan in his article, "Clearing
the Air":
"But, even if the 'needs of trade' mean we come to exchange ever more IOUs
among one another -- in the form of [real] bills...the only important thing
is that these must NOT be allowed to form a "money" themselves: a transformation
which they are only likely to achieve if we accord property-infringing privileges
on bankers." [Emphasis added]
This endorsement of real bills is not an endorsement of them at all. The essence
of real bills is that they do indeed become "money." In this way, they
give elasticity to the gold system and allow society's gold reserves in its
savings pool to be directed toward funding fixed capital productivity. By becoming
money (and then being discounted through the banks), real bills allow for consumer
goods to be distributed and retailed over a 90 day period that would not otherwise
come into being and reach the consumer. If we are to rely on the way that Corrigan
and the Rothbardians wish to finance such distribution and consumption, we
would have to rely solely on the savings pool (i.e., the gold and silver reserves)
of society. This would drastically lower the amount of savings that would be
available for financing fixed capital, and as a result drastically lower our
standard of living.
Moreover, Corrigan is saying we need to prohibit real bills from becoming
money because their acquiring of monetary status is based upon the government
conveying "property-infringing
privileges on bankers." This is not true at all! Their origin as money has
nothing to do with banks or privileges. Real bills spontaneously arise
from the free-market! They become money the minute they are written
among traders. And they merely continue as money when they are discounted by
bankers via issuance of bank notes so as to allow the real bills to circulate
more readily. But what Corrigan is grossly missing is that the discounting
of real bills by banks is NOT fraudulent. Why? Because it is fully disclosed between
banker and bill holder, and thus it requires no special privileges from government
regarding contractual law. Therefore, it complies with the requisites of a
legitimate free-market banking system. Traders openly and voluntarily write
promissory notes among themselves, and then they discount these notes through
other traders openly and voluntarily. To allow the state to prohibit such free
trade marks one as a "government interventionist," not a free trader as Corrigan
wishes to convey.
Is Discounting Dangerous?
Is such discounting dangerous, however, as the Rothbardians maintain? No it
is not because the new money created by the bank, in discounting the real bill,
is matched by the goods that are simultaneously coming into existence. And
the real bill is redeemed at the end of 90 days with the gold coins of the
consumer; thus it cannot be rolled over irresponsibly. Here lies the crux of
this entire issue. It is the primary point that hangs up the Rothbardians.
And this is why we have to define inflation properly, or we fall victim to
the fallacy that real bills will bring about the danger of price inflation.
Rothbard defines inflation as, "any increase in the economy's supply of money
not consisting of an increase in the stock of the money-metal." [What Has
government Done to Our Money?, p.23] Corrigan defines inflation in his
article, "Clearing the Air," as:
"An increase in the quantity of money above and beyond people's desire to
hold it, rather than spend it: gold and silver do not enter into the discussion,
save as a functional means to make inflation as difficult as possible to promote,
to the benefit of all."
Corrigan has objected to the claim in my latest
article that he subscribes to Rothbard's rigid definition of inflation.
But whatever differences he may have with the Rothbardian concept are irrelevant
because in all real world examples, the policies he espouses are structured
around complementing Rothbard's definition. In the quote above (and in another
below), Corrigan insists that all forms of credit (conventional and clearing)
must be backed 100% by gold. Thus what's important is that Corrigan agrees
with Rothbard's rigid monetary policy that stems from his view of inflation.
What Does History Tell Us?
Very few economists (including Antal Fekete) agree with this rigidity. And
most importantly, history does not bear out any need for such rigidity. For
example, the entire 19th century was a period of gentle price deflation (about ¼ %
annually), yet money and credit were not tied rigidly to gold and silver reserves.
And real bills flourished as "money."
This irrefutable fact is, of course, conveniently ignored by Corrigan and
the Rothbardians. Why? Because as I pointed out in my previous article, they
have an agenda. And that agenda is to convince mankind that we must have
a 100% gold monetary system if we are to avoid the dangers of price inflation
and the return of John Law. This was Rothbard's fervent desire.
Once an agenda becomes such a fervent desire, however, it invariably induces
in its proponent the susceptibility to try and bend the facts of reality (and
history) to fit the agenda. This, I contend, is what happened to Rothbard,
and this susceptibility now afflicts his followers. This is why they blind
themselves to the fact that during the 19th century banking era both conventional
credit and clearing credit (i.e., real bills) exceeded gold and silver reserves. Yet
we had a gently lowering price level throughout the era!
For example, from 1800 to 1913, there was a 40% decrease in an index of consumer
prices from 51 to 30, and a 23% decrease in a composite of wholesale prices
from 133 to 102. [Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times
to 1970, U.S. Department of Commerce, 1975, p. 211. Also Warren and Pearson, Gold
and Prices, Wiley & Sons, 1935, pp. 19-20.]
Of course, Rothbardians are going to say that we still had price inflation
in the 19th century because "prices were distorted from their true market level" and
thus were higher than they would have been had we been on a 100% gold system.
In other words, we could have achieved much more than the gentle deflation
that occurred during the era. Yes, this is true. If we had been on a pure 100%
gold standard, we would have had far more deflation. And it would have been
accompanied by a considerably lower standard of living because the proportion
of society's savings devoted to productivity would have been far lower. This
is because real bills would not have been used as circulating capital to distribute
goods to consumers. Consequently savings through conventional credit of borrowing
and lending would have had to be used to try and finance the production and
distribution of consumer goods to retail stores.
Yet this low-productivity, deflationary 100% gold system is apparently what
Rothbardians are trying to achieve. I quote Corrigan again from "Fool's Gold
Redux":
"If we're to rule out chronic and endemic inflation totally, when a commercial
bank discounts a bill...it cannot be allowed to credit the seller's account
with new 'money' instantly created by the bank....
"Instead, the discounting bank should only be able to buy the bill with a
sum of money already in existence in the form of gold itself, or of 100% gold-backed,
instantly-convertible notes or account entries on its books."
If this is to be the case, then we have no meaningful "real bills." We have
lip service to real bills. We have the Rothbardian 100% gold money system in
which all credit must be drawn solely from gold reserves. This is what Antal
Fekete is trying to say will lead to a much lower standard of living. Our modern
economy would regress toward that of the Middle Ages. Much of the advanced
productivity of modern economies would be negated. Corrigan and the Rothbardians
can toot their horns of denial all they want, but facts are facts. If all clearing
credit (i.e., real bills) is to be drawn 100% from gold reserves, then we will
have trillions of dollars less in long term credit to apply to the creation
of factories, offices, shopping centers, plant equipment, technology, etc.
We will have a lower standard of living. Period.
Other Misdirections
Perhaps the most crucial misunderstanding of Corrigan is his Misesian assumption
that credit is monolithic, and thus consumer goods can be financed via lending
in the manner that we finance fixed capital assets. This is because he fails
to perceive the distinction between lending and discounting. This is one of
Professor Fekete's most important points. There are two forms of credit, the conventional form
of borrowing and lending for fixed capital funding and the clearing form
of real bills for consumer goods funding. Merchants for consumer goods do not
deal in cash, nor in conventional borrowing and lending. As Fekete puts it:
"Credit for 90 days is part of the deal in every instance of the distributor
delivering consumer goods to the retailer for resale. That is the primary fact.
The secondary fact is the discount which serves as the temptation for the retailer
to prepay the bill. The distributor could not make a single sale unless on
the term of '90 days net.' That is to say, distributors never quote cash prices.
No retailer ever pays cash for delivery of consumer goods unless he discounts
the quoted price at the going discount rate. That is why it is called discounting.
Does this look like lending?" [Email to this writer, September 8, 2005]
Corrigan and the Rothbardians seem to have no grasp of how consumer goods
are produced and distributed to the retail market. If they believe that these
trillions of dollars in transactions can successfully be funded by conventional credit
of "borrowing and lending," then they have indeed opted out of the real world.
The producers, distributors and retailers of consumer goods would no more utilize
the conventional lending form of credit than surgeons would use machetes to
operate on their patients. Goods are moved from producer to consumer via clearing credit,
i.e., "bills of exchange." And in a truly FREE market, these bills will circulate
as money and be discounted by banks in order to facilitate the process.
To try and suppress them would greatly diminish our productive wealth. In addition
it would also require a state mandated money system. It would negate
free-market banking!
Rothbardians miss this crucial dimension of the market because both Rothbard
and Mises missed it. As Fekete writes in his essay, Where
Mises Went Wrong:
"Mises misconstrued the problem of discounting. Insisting that retail inventory
was financed through loans at the bank, Mises failed to notice that the marginal
retail merchant was doing arbitrage between bills and consumer goods. He would
thin out merchandise on his shelves while beefing up his portfolio of bills
in response to the consumer's reining back spending, while he would sell bills
from his portfolio and use the proceeds to replace the missing merchandise
on his shelves upon renewed interest of the consumer in buying. Wrongly, Mises
blotted out the important distinction between the discount rate and the rate
of interest which are governed by entirely different economic factors and move
quite independently of one another."
Here lies a great deal of the reason why Corrigan and other Rothbardians are
so oblivious to the crucial role that real bills play in economic development,
a role that is dramatically demonstrated by mankind's evolution from the Renaissance
to 1914. Corrigan and the Rothbardians are uncritically accepting Mises' theoretical
mistakes about credit. They are failing to ask the important questions: Must
the funding of consumer goods be taken out of savings? Or is there another
form of credit that operates to do the job in a non-inflationary manner,
which would then release our savings to fund higher levels of production? Fekete's
answer is yes! It is the market's spontaneous generation of real bills that
circulate as "money."
Adam Smith's RBD vs. the Inflationist RBD
As it so often is in paradigm clashes of the intellectual world, those on
the wrong side of the clash misinterpret the new paradigm being offered. The
Rothbardians, being on the wrong side of this clash, are misinterpreting the
advocacy of real bills by Antal Fekete. When they condemn the Real Bills Doctrine
as "having been discredited long ago," they are condemning the crude and bastardized
versions of the doctrine, which indeed were discredited long ago.
These flawed versions were basically the John Law version (early 1700s) and
the Antibullionist version (early 1800s). Both of these versions were inflationist
in their formulation because they failed to understand the importance of mandating
gold convertibility, and they attempted to employ the doctrine within central
bank regimes -- Law's Banque Royale in 1718 in France and the Antibullionists'
Bank of England in the 19th century.
Adam Smith's version of the Real Bills Doctrine did not make these mistakes.
Smith, being the laissez-faire advocate that he was, and also a very wise student
of human nature, would have nothing to do with the John Law version, and he
also avoided the crudities of the Antibullionists in England who followed him
with their naïve and irresponsible formulation of the doctrine. Both of
these flawed versions of the doctrine led to the excessive issuance of paper
notes to discount the real bills.
Smith understood the vital necessity of mandating gold convertibility and
advocated such. Without this, he warned, real bills would fail. Also his natural
laissez-faire inclinations led to the other necessary safeguard of no central
banking. They motivated Thomas Jefferson's animus toward any form of a national
bank here in America. Thus as long as the requirement of gold convertibility
was maintained and no central bank was employed, real bills worked their wonders
in a non-inflationary way.
Because Smith understood the paramount importance of gold convertibility in
any use of real bills, he was able to sever the dangerous feedback linkage
between increased money and prices that plagued the flawed versions of the
Real Bills Doctrine.
As Thomas M. Humphrey explains in a famous recent study, by mandating gold
convertibility, Adam Smith "breaks the vicious circle of inflation and money
growth inherent in conventional versions of the real bills doctrine and renders
Smith's version immune to the problem of dynamic instability." [The
Real Bills Doctrine, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, Economic Review,
September/October, 1982]
Therefore because Smith's laissez-faire inclinations were adopted by the Jeffersonians,
which prohibited a central bank regime in America, this combine of gold convertibility
and no government banking made the real bills concept workable and largely
incapable of being abused as John Law and the Antibullionists had done.
For an excellent treatment of this and other aspects of the real bills issue
from a more theoretical approach, see Bill Koures' paper, Real
Bills: An Emergent Market Phenomenon. Koures is a colleague of Dr. Fekete,
and is a brilliant scholar in his own right (PhD in Theoretical Physics). He
has taught at the University of Utah and worked in commercial banking circles
in New York (JP Morgan) for a number of years. For some background on him, click
here.
Failure to note the profound difference between Adam Smith's version of real
bills and the inflationist versions of John Law and the early Antibullionists
of England has led the Rothbardians astray. They apparently have not investigated
this difference and have lumped all the versions together. Seeing that the
Rothbardians also lumped the two major forms of credit together (conventional
credit and clearing credit) it's probably inevitable that they would lump all
versions of real bills into one heap and summarily dismiss them. Why? Because they
have an agenda! They have basically become fanatics for 100% gold. This
kind of fervency leads them into misunderstandings, evasions, suppressions,
etc. It leads to reading history they way they want to read it. Truth always
suffers when fervently held agendas guide the pursuers of it.
Is Fractional Reserve Banking Criminal?
Here is the important question for Rothbardians. Do you support a free-market
banking system? If we are to have such a system, then we are going to have
to come to grips with allowing banks to freely create notes to discount
real bills as long as they do so openly, and as long as they stand ready to
redeem such notes with gold coins upon a depositor's request. This will
allow for fractional reserve banking. An advocate of free-market banking
cannot justifiably suppress such an openly disclosed process between consenting
adults. It is not fraudulent and it is not a result of special privileges granted
to the banker from government.
To clarify this issue better, let's refer to Edwin Vieira, seeing that he
is the nation's foremost scholar in regards to the legality and constitutionality
of monetary issues. In a paper titled, How
t o Restore Constitutional Money, that he presented to the Conservative
Caucus Foundation in Washington, D.C. on January 13, 1997, he states:
"Article I, Section 8, Clause 3; Article IV, Section 2, and the Fifth, Ninth,
Tenth, and Fourteenth Amendments... guarantee individuals free entry into private
banking." They also guarantee that private banks can, if they choose, "issue
their own non-fraudulent notes and securities, and deal in deposits of silver,
gold, foreign currencies, or any other monetary medium." In other words, these
sections of the Constitution "grant a complete free market to money."
Thus (even though the federal and state governments CANNOT), private banks
CAN issue paper notes as long as such paper instruments do not breach the laws
of fraud, i.e., as long as the issuing banks provide in Vieira's words, "complete
disclosure of their operations and are fully responsible civilly (and a
fortiori criminally) for the same." [Email to this writer, February 3,
2005.]
This is why I maintained in my previous article that Corrigan and the Rothbardians,
in their fighting against real bills, are fighting against a form of
money that springs from traders freely interacting. By prohibiting
the banks from freely issuing notes to discount the real bills, they are contradicting
their espoused philosophy of "non-intervention on the part of government unless
a crime has occurred."
Is it a crime for traders to write real bills? Is it a crime for banks to
discount them with NEW bank notes of their own issuance? No it is not -- as
long as the writing of such real bills and their subsequent discounting are
done openly under full disclosure, and as long as they do not require the dispensing
of government privileges regarding contractual law.
The fact that the bank notes used in the discounting process are NEW and not
backed 100% by gold reserves (as Corrigan insists they be) does not make this
endeavor in free trade a crime. Therefore it cannot be outlawed by legislation
from government. If this is how Corrigan and the Rothbardians intend to stop
such discounting, then they will have to become government interventionists!
How then, one asks, is such a fractional reserve banking policy to be contained
so as to avoid price inflation? As I pointed out in my previous article, Real
Bills vs. Rothbard's 100% Gold System, this is done through the principle
of "competition for reputation." In a free-market system, all banks will, in
their pursuit of depositors, be forced to NOT abuse the process in order to
attract those depositors. But in the discounting of real bills, it is perfectly
legal for banks to have less than 100% gold backing for the notes they issue
to purchase the bills. The banks just have to be willing to redeem such notes
with gold upon request or face the consequences of bankruptcy. In other words,
the government cannot allow any bank the privilege of suspending specie payment
in order to get through a crisis.
It is this approach that will spawn the necessary "competition for reputation" that
will make bankers discount responsibly rather than abusively. It is this approach
that was absent during the 19th century, and which led to the booms and busts
that prevailed. Such price volatility was not brought on by the discounting
of real bills, nor was it due to the fact that bankers did not maintain 100%
gold reserves. It was brought on by the special privileges conveyed to banks
by government that allowed them to suspend specie payments and wink at the
laws of fraud, i.e., borrow short to loan long. This led to abusive fractional
reserve banking rather than a responsible practice of it.
If Corrigan and the Rothbardians are taking the stand that they can use government
to prohibit the free discounting of real bills, then how are they going to
stop all the other government interventions into free contractual trade that
bureaucrats dream up to serve the demands of expediency? Corrigan and the Rothbardians
are basically advocating the violation of the merchants' and the bankers'
rights to free trade among themselves. If government can do this once,
then it can do it twice, then ten times, then millions of times as today's
monster interventionist state is doing.
Interventionism's Slippery Slope
We can't espouse a non-interventionist government for the lawful workings
of the market, and then bail out on the principle every second Tuesday when
it is raining. We can't use the principle only when we want. If we try to become
selective and arbitrary in our prohibiting of government intervention, then
we open up Pandora's Box for more and more government in our lives.
There can be no compromise on this principle. Once compromised, we as a people
then lose our ability to prohibit government from still further violations
of rights for still further "benefits from government." We proceed onto
the slippery slope of ever-expanding statism. After all, if it is justifiable
for government to violate rights so as to keep credit from exceeding gold reserves,
then it is permissible for government to violate rights in order to keep corporations
from freely pricing their oil. It is permissible to violate the rights of management
in order to support labor unions in the collective bargaining process, which
is what the Wagner Act and the NLRB Act have done. It is permissible to violate
the rights of the American taxpayer by confiscating his wealth to subsidize
farmers, welfare recipients, starving artists, and fat cat corporations lobbying
for special tax breaks. It is permissible to violate the rights of Caucasian
Americans to free association by implementing affirmative action for minorities.
This is why we have the insufferable locust horde of factions, coalitions,
businesses, foundations, and divergent individuals today who feel their "need" justifies
their lining up at the government trough to lobby for the corrupt favors, handouts,
and pork that have flowed so overwhelmingly from Washington for the past 100
years. Once we allow government to violate individual rights in order
to allow its henchmen to intervene into the free and non-fraudulent activities
of the marketplace (and once we accept this as morally legitimate) then there
is no end to the process. The death knell of freedom has sounded.
This applies to all government interventions into the marketplace at the
expense of rights . All such interventions are morally invalid and politically
impractical. The fact that our academics and pundits today cannot grasp this
fundamental truth is the reason why we have exploding government. Government
tyranny begins with the first intervention's justification that it will be
only for this one instance of need. But the lobbyists are always waiting
on the margin for such self-delusion to manifest itself. They then descend
upon Washington like weevils to the grist mill to demand MORE government
interventions. Due to the blindness Corrigan has contracted because of his
adoption of the Rothbardian agenda, he wishes to prohibit the free discounting
of real bills by banks. Thus he is willing to set loose the first weevil.
And like all government interventionists before him, he thinks that it will
go no further, that he can safely use government arbitrarily when
he wants, but that no one else will want to do so as a result of his example.
This is the fallacy of trying to have it both ways. All libertarians should
be especially mindful of such self-delusion. The fact that Corrigan and the
Rothbardians are willing to engage in such self-delusion does not bode well
for the future of liberty. The libertarian movement has been badly discredited
in academic circles over the past few decades by this and other mistaken ideas
espoused by the Rothbardians in both the monetary / economic realm and the
political / philosophical realm. Antal Fekete has exposed their economic
fallacies with his scholarly works on the Real Bills Doctrine of Adam Smith, Monetary
Economics 101 and 102. I have exposed their political fallacies in
my forthcoming book, Reality's
Golden Mean, to be released next spring.
For all freedom advocates out there in pursuit of the truth, I would urge
you to tap into Dr. Fekete's monetary works and then read my essay, The
Political Spectrum Con, which is a prelude to Reality's Golden Mean.
A free-market society is our goal. Sean Corrigan and the Rothbardians are
demonstrating that they are willing to compromise such a society and tolerate
the police power of government intervention when no crime has been committed
in monetary matters. Because the free-market will always reject a pure 100%
gold money system (for good reason), Rothbardians must, in fact, mandate their
system through state coercion and the violation of basic rights. Such contradictory
thinking will never carry the cause of freedom. This, of course, is not their
intent; they wish for freedom as much as the rest of us. But the cause of freedom
needs more than just good intentions. It needs rationality and truth, which
unfortunately their arguments lack.
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