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In a recent article, Robinson
Crusoe and the Curse of 'Real Bills', Sean Corrigan of the Mises Institute
writes that all the hoopla that the "real bills doctrine has lately drawn
does show that a fundamental misperception exists about monetary matters." [Emphasis
added]
This is certainly true. In fact there are several fundamental misperceptions,
and unfortunately they are held by Corrigan and the followers of Murray Rothbard,
about which Dr. Antal Fekete, Dr. Vasilios Koures, and I have written quite
extensively.
What exactly are these "fundamental misperceptions?" To start with, Rothbardians
have not adequately researched history because they believe so deeply in the
rationalist myth that truth can be discerned solely through the spinning out
of deductive logic. Consequently they have confused the Financial Bills Doctrine
of central government banking with the Real Bills Doctrine of Adam Smith. They
misunderstand the nature of credit, for they perceive it as monolithic, rather
than dual. They misunderstand interest, believing that there is no difference
in the interest rate and the discount rate. They fail to grasp the difference
between the propensity to save and the propensity to consume. They think the
distribution of consumer goods can be financed like the production of fixed
capital assets through borrowing and lending. They presume in their ivory tower
world of deductive logic that gold will easily adjust prices down to accommodate
expanded productivity. But only in the Middle Ages was this done, and it resulted
in a primitive level of economic activity. History fails totally to corroborate
their fanciful deduction. Because they cling to such pure rationalism without
bothering to seek historical corroboration they are ignored by big league scholars
and much of the intelligentsia that is beginning to doubt the Keynesian paradigm.
This is impeding the cause of gold and freedom, not helping it.
As a result of these misperceptions, they fail to see that under a 100% gold
system we would have to endure a much lower standard of living because the
trillions of dollars of credit necessary for the production and distribution
of consumer goods would have to be taken out of savings, i.e., gold reserves,
and thus could not be used to finance factories, technology, plant and equipment,
etc. This makes their 100% gold paradigm unworkable for any society that wishes
to achieve modern levels of capital accumulation.
Seeing that the Rothbardian ideology has been constructed over many decades
upon 100% gold, Rothbard's present day followers are not about to deviate from
this sacred belief. But for those more open minded in their thinking processes
who seek reasons as to how the restoration of gold as money can be brought
about in the upcoming years, the place to begin is with Antal Fekete's remarkable
works on the subject, Monetary
Economics 101 and 102. He demonstrates that what is needed is a new
theory of interest and credit in order for gold to become a viable monetary
system again.
It is regrettable that Rothbardians continue to evade the glaring misperceptions
listed above. Perhaps they hope these gigantic flaws will not be noticed by
the intelligentsia if they are never talked about. But silence in face of the
elephant in one's living room does not make the elephant go away.
Answers to Corrigan Misperceptions
What follows are some more misperceptions that Corrigan's article puts forth,
which only make the elephant in the Rothbardian living room bigger and smellier.
Accompanying each of them are my answers.
* * * *
Corrigan: "The moment we allow the legally-favoured bankers to issue
fiduciary media (by which we mean bank-created money entirely unbacked by previously-saved
final goods) against such credit, we are doomed to end up with too many instantly-payable
claims on the stock of goods currently in existence."
Answer: This is one of the dogmas on which Rothbardians have built
their case for a 100% gold system. But what the history of monetary economics
demonstrates is that, if central banking is disallowed, and if contractual
law is upheld consistently regarding fraud, then fiduciary media to discount
real bills will NOT result in "too many instantly-payable claims on the stock
of goods." This is because real bills, though not backed by "previously-saved final
goods," are backed by already-produced goods that are urgently needed
and in the pipeline. This negates any price inflation. In addition when real
bills are discounted by the banks, the notes issued to do so are backed 100%
by bank reserves of gold and real bills that mature into gold within 90 days.
Thus we are not talking about the conventional concept of fractional reserve
banking that government-backed banks have practiced so abusively in the past.
In a truly free-market banking system that prohibited fraud (such as borrowing
short to loan long), banks would have to keep 100% reserves in gold and gold
instruments (i.e., real bills). The real bills are as good as gold because
they can be sold in the bill market for gold at any time by a banker to meet
any demands from depositors for specie redemption. On this point, see my article, Musings
on Fekete and Rothbard.
This is how real bills worked throughout history and would do so again if
not for government centralizers intervening into the marketplace to corrupt
the banking industry. Rothbardians need to understand that there is a BIG difference
between free-market banking that deals in real bills and central
government banking that deals in the vast array of financial bills that
it is able to conjure up. The two practices will be governed by totally different
laws, and they will result in totally different outcomes. The former is governed
by the "competition for reputation," a natural law of the free-market, which
mandates that bankers constantly operate in a high-minded (liquid) manner in
order to attract customers. The latter is governed by coercive monopoly and
privilege, the tyrannical contrivances of bureaucrats, which allow bankers
to operate in a disreputable (illiquid) manner.
Corrigan's treatment of these two forms of banking as the same and declaring
the problem to be "fractional reserve banking" itself is a huge flaw. To not
make the distinction between the two different types of banking is most unscientific.
Moreover it is inconceivable that any free-market advocate would blank out
so on the principle of "competition for reputation," which is the cornerstone
of laissez-faire political economy. It seems that Corrigan and his cohorts
would prefer to only employ their principles selectively when it serves their
interest.
In other words, you can't have it both ways. You can't preach the power of
competition for reputation (which all Rothbardians do emphatically in their
defense of laissez-faire), but then ignore the principle in the arena of banking
as irrelevant because it detracts from your agenda. For an explanation of how "competition
for reputation" would keep the use of real bills from being abused, see my
article, Real Bills
vs. Rothbard's 100% Gold System.
A thorough perusal of the history of 19th century banking shows us that its
inflationary booms and busts were not the result of free-market banks dealing
in real bills, but were the result of government centralization of banking,
government paper issuance to fight wars, government intervention to convey
privileges to banks, and government refusal to prosecute fraud.
* * * *
Corrigan: "Nor can any such tinkering ever be enough to extend the
operation of [fractional reserve banking] beyond the speedy collapse it would
otherwise endure were it not underwritten by the terms of that tyrannical Devil's
bargain of the kind most famously drawn up between the corrupt Whig financiers
of the 'Glorious' Revolution and their importunate, invited overlord, William
of Orange, for the 'better prosecution of the war with France'."
Answer: If Corrigan is trying to say that the discounting of real bills
would collapse if not for the "Devil's bargain" of government banking "underwriting" them,
this is preposterous, for it's precisely the opposite. The writing and discounting
of real bills spring from the free-market and precede banks. Government banking
is what destroys their integrity. It doesn't shore them up.
But Corrigan apparently assumes that government created financial bills are
the same as Smith's Real Bills. Dr. Koures paper, Real
Bills: an Emergent Market Phenomenon, discusses at great length why this
is not so. Mr. Corrigan needs to go back and do his homework. To j ust repeat
ad infinitum his ornate ad hominems and Rothbardian mantras is not legitimate
argumentation. A large, smelly elephant is standing in his living room. A truth
seeking scholar would be attempting to confront the elephant rather than spinning
out spiteful inanities.
* * * *
Corrigan: "Not to be discouraged either by reason or experience, however, these good
[Feketian] souls roundly declare that 'real bills' have never been given
a true test, having always been adulterated by the prolific rediscounting of
all sorts of other, less worthy bills - a crime perpetrated, of course, by
exactly the same coterie of foolish and greedy bankers that the Feketians want
to foist upon the ideal future Commonwealth of their promises!"
Answer: Not so! We in the Fekete camp want to rid the Commonwealth
of the "coterie of foolish and greedy bankers." This coterie is made up of
government bankers, however, and Corrigan is failing to distinguish between
free-market bankers and central government bankers. But, of course, he has
to blank out on the difference, for to draw the distinction would call attention
to the fact that fractional-reserve banking in real bills is not the problem.
It is fractional-reserve banking practiced by government bureaucrats with their
coercive monopolies, their privileges, and their myriad of bogus financial
instruments that is the problem.
* * * *
Corrigan: "To the first group of [Feketians], we can only say that
to make a fuss about the fact that 'price levels' at either end of the 19th
century were more or less equal - and to disregard the vertiginous topography
they mapped out within it - is to say that because America's sea level is the
same on its Atlantic coast as at its Pacific one, one can safely fly between
the two at an altitude of fifty feet!"
Answer: Calling attention to the fact that prices were slightly lower
at the end of the 19th century than they were at the beginning is hardly "making
a fuss." It is one of the most crucial elements of this era, and it is very
important to delve into why.
Moreover the "vertiginous" prices during the 19th century were clearly the
result of central government banking through the 1st and 2nd U.S. Banks between
1791 and 1833, and through the National Banking System (the quasi central bank
forerunner to today's FED) established from 1863 to 1913. In addition, our
government flooded the country with paper during the War of 1812 and the Civil
War. Even in the so called "free banking era" from 1835 to 1860 initiated by
Andrew Jackson, there were special privileges galore conveyed to banks by government.
Such price volatility that was experienced during the 19th century was due
precisely to the factors that we in the Fekete camp have been shouting about
-- government banking, government privileges conveyed to bankers, government
winking at bank fraud, etc. Yet Corrigan ignores this totally and acts as if
the price volatility was just due to "fractional-reserve banking" itself. It
is inexcusable to consider the problem so crudely and simplistically. If we
had had a truly free-market banking system that discounted real bills during
the 19th century, we would have never had the price volatility that was experienced
under the government privileged systems.
* * * *
Corrigan: "To the second group [of Feketians], we can only confess
that they seem most like the hapless plague doctors of Pepys' London; quacks
who well recognise the symptoms of the disease, but who are unable to identify
its root cause - in our case, fractional reserve bankers, rather than
the equally pestilential rats and fleas! - and instead opt for a truly Hermetic
mysticism in treating it." [Emphasis added]
Answer: On the contrary, it is Corrigan who fails to identify the ROOT
CAUSE of our monetary disease because of his crude defining of the problem
as just "fractional reserve bankers." Without drawing the distinction between
free-market bankers and government managed bankers, he obfuscates the issue
in the worst way and misleads his readers. But what else can he do since he
insists on clinging to the myth that a 100% gold monetary system is mandatory?
In order to maintain such monetary rigidity, he must paint fractional reserve
banking per se as "diabolical," rather than do as a true scientist would
do -- analyze the two different forms of fractional reserve banking, which
would demonstrate that the use of real bills is not only not diabolical, but
immensely beneficial. He must blank out on the fact that government intervention
into the mix is the real ROOT CAUSE of our problems. If he were to face up
to these quite demonstrable facts, then he would have to face the distasteful
realization that his 100% gold monetary paradigm is not mandatory at all. This,
of course, is not going to happen. He and his cohorts have an agenda; and if
facts of reality get in the way, then damn the facts.
* * * *
Corrigan: "So, we are left to wonder just how that Feketian Pietist,
Mr. Hultberg, proposes to prevent the fractional reserve bankers he so ardently
defends from once again debauching his new Jerusalem of 'real bills' and from
inexorably transforming it into an inflationary Sodom and a speculative Gomorrah
of monetized credit instruments... without himself having to resort to an appeal
to the same violence of authority which he falsely supposes his opponents to
endorse."
Answer: How are we to "prevent fractional reserve bankers from debauching" the
system? By means of three quite effective legal / regulatory methods: 1) the
objective implementation of contractual law, i.e., no special privileges dispensed
to bankers, 2) consistent prosecution of fraud, and 3) the principle of competition
for reputation.
Mr. Corrigan should certainly know that the beauty and genius of the free-market
is that it contains powerful and natural regulatory mechanisms with which it
polices itself. In this case, the natural mechanism would be the COMPETITION
FOR REPUTATION among bankers. This is understood by all free-market advocates
as the reason why we do not need government intervention to manipulate and
regulate. All we need on the part of government is an objective system of law
(i.e., the proper prosecution of fraud and no privileges dispensed to market
participants) to complement this natural regulatory principle. With such a
complement, the discounting of real bills would not get out of hand. Reason
and the study of economic history show us this if we approach the issue with
an open mind.
Thus we do not need to utilize government regulatory coercion to prevent "real
bills" from debauching the Commonwealth. As long as the government will do
its legitimate job of prosecuting fraud and objectively implementing contractual
law, then the marketplace will take care of the regulatory job naturally through "competition
for reputation," which will mandate that bankers remain highly liquid and responsible
in order to attract customers. Our problem lies in the fact that government
did not do its job during the 19th century. It privileged bankers by allowing
them to deal in irresponsible banking practices and hide their irresponsibility
from the public, which resulted in boom / bust economic swings. If Mr. Corrigan
had thoroughly researched this era, he would realize this. But such research
and recognition of the true source of the problem would not support the 100%
gold agenda with which he and his fellow Rothbardians are so obsessed. Thus
it is far better to gloss over the era and spin its boom / bust volatility
in more simplistic terms that support the agenda.
Of course, Rothbardians don't "endorse the police power of government
authority" to mandate their 100% gold monetary system. But that is what they
will have to tolerate if they ever want to actually implement it rather
than just bandy their busy little blogs back and forth about it. They will
have to make use of government police power to mandate it because a free-market
would never choose such a system. Free men would not opt for it. Free men would
make use of real bills. And free bankers would discount them in a non-inflationary
manner via competition for reputation.
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