|
Annual Christmas Editorial
(This includes a Christmas incident and is dedicated to all "false moneyers".)
One would have hoped that financial rip-offs committed by medieval princes
would have been permanently shelved when liberal enlightenment ended the divine
right of kings.
Last year's imperious announcements by Messrs. Greenspan and Bernanke to use
the "printing press" to inflate anything they can should be considered startling
only in the resort to honesty. Euphemisms for currency depreciations started
with the original promoters of the Fed and the tout was that a "flexible" currency
would prevent serious financial contractions.
Regrettably, since 1914 there have been many financial crises and the dollar
has lost more than 90% of its purchasing power. This is particularly ironical
as the key regular crises have not been prevented. These would be the 1920-1921
and 1990-1991 examples that ended a long period of vigorous economic expansion
and the post-1929 and post-2000 crises that ended, in such a costly fashion,
a "perfectly" managed new financial era. Recall the "Goldilocks" pitch.
Now a Fed-exaggerated speculation has reached a precarious and therefore hazardous
condition.
Nineteenth Century liberals, so rational and principled in their views, could
not have imagined the greedy craft developed by many modern governments in
confiscating private savings earned by productively working citizens. Are we
seeing medieval financial tyranny replicated by today's proponents of the divine
right of bureaucrats? A look at history provides perspective.
Although outrageous when imposed, the passage of time makes early examples
of princely finance somewhat amusing: the colourful Richard I (1189-1199) sold
property to finance his joining the crusade of Peter the Hermit. Upon returning,
he took it back on the pretense that originally he had no right to sell it.
The infamous King John (prompted the Magna Carta in 1215) introduced the clever
plan of imprisoning and ransoming the mistresses of priests, confident that
the funds he could not obtain from their greed he would from their lust.
Edward I (1272-1307) confiscated money and silver or gold plate from monasteries
and churches, faked a voyage to the Holy Land and, in keeping the money, refused
to go.
Edward IV (1461-1483) was described as the handsomest tax-gatherer in the
country; and when he kissed a widow because she gave him more than he expected,
it is said she doubled the amount in hopes of another kiss.
The fiscally sound Henry VII (1485-1509) approached wealthy families with
two arguments. If the household was not extravagant in expenditure, then he
attacked what they had saved by thrift; while if they lived extravagantly they
were considered opulent and could afford any exaction. Named after his minister
of finance, the ploy was called "Morton's Fork".
A broader form of wealth confiscation capable of tapping even the poor was
accomplished by currency debasement and extreme examples in ripping off everyone
provoked severe social disorder. No matter what method employed, financial
outrage prompted the evolution of parliament as a necessary means of constraining
fiscal ambitions of the governing classes.
The struggle between individual freedom and authoritarian state proceeded
until the late 1600s when growing commercial wealth and political power in
London began to become influential with its financial common sense. The specific
event that formalized the victory over the ancient status quo was the "Glorious
Revolution" of 1688, which maneuvered the pro-business and Protestant William
of Orange into the British Crown and displaced James II as the last absolutist
king. How refreshing this was is indicated by the oppressive politics of his
and his predecessor, Charles II. Starting with the restoration of the monarchy
with Charles in 1660, both kings were bribed by France to change the culture
of England - consistently in an authoritarian direction. Scornful remarks by
miffed establishment were similar to those directed to the pro-business and
so-called "religious right" today.
No matter how imaginative or despotic princely financing was, it can't compare
with the long- running compulsion to spend other people's money by today's
bureaucrats and politicians, virtually unrestrained by the checks and balances
of constitution or mainstream media.
But before expanding this point, consideration should be given to the other
event that formally ended the old world, which was the beginning of modern
finance with the incorporation of the Bank of England in 1694. As history shows,
central banking is fine when disciplined by a convertible currency and, when
not, it becomes a tool of state ambition to confiscate wealth though currency
depreciation. That the dollar has lost 90% of its purchasing power in only
50 years exceeds most princely devaluations and, like those, has been no accident.
Indeed, Fed announcements to "print money" could be considered as an attempt
to go for the final 10%. While many outside central banking would consider
this as infinite folly, it is uncertain as to how long this commitment will
maintain credulity, even in academic circles. Regrettably, modern financial
agencies such as the Treasury or Federal Reserve System have become as corruptible
as their medieval counterparts.
Fortunately, history provides some antidotes to such governmental abuse of
the productive sector. Short of rebellion, the most effective of course has
been to force government and its financial agencies to be accountable to the
taxpayer. As for those who have wrecked the currency (also a government responsibility),
Dante, in his Inferno, reserves a special place in hell for "false moneyers".
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles record something equivalent, albeit more temporal:
"1125 A.D. In this year before Christmas King Henry sent from Normandy
to England and gave instructions that all moneyers ... be deprived of their
members ... Bishop Roger of Salisbury commanded them all to assemble at Winchester
by Christmas. When they came hither they were then taken one by one, and
each deprived of the right hand and the testicles below. All this was done
in twelve days between Christmas and Epiphany, and was entirely justified
because they had ruined the whole country by the magnitude of their fraud
which they paid for in full." - The Laud Chronicle (E)
Fortunately, history indicates that the public will eventually figure out
that no matter how beguiling the claims about currency management and taxation
are, the gambit has been mainly to confiscate private savings. They will then
demand the return of sound money and accountable government.
|