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To: d:oug who wrote (72816)7/4/2001 12:00:40 AM
From: Stephen O  Respond to of 116753
 
mises.org

The Right Way to Gold

By Steven Piraino *

[July 3, 2001]

The advantages of a gold standard are familiar to supporters of the free market. Gold possesses all of the attributes of an
ideal medium of exchange. It is durable, portable, malleable, valuable, and fungible, which is why the market chose it as the
dominant money before the age of paper money.

Most importantly, gold is brought into circulation through private investment rather than executive fiat. As a result, its
quantity is impervious to the manipulations of politicians and central bankers. Indeed, had the supply of money consisted
only of the above ground supply of gold, all of the disastrous inflations of the twentieth century could have been
avoided.

As such, former congressman and Dole running mate Jack Kemp should be commended for his recent Wall Street Journal editorial, "Our
Economy Needs a Golden Anchor" (6-28-01). It is refreshing, to say the least, to see that someone, somewhere can still land an article in a major
newspaper on behalf of the "barbarous relic". And for this, Kemp’s gutsy, unapologetic pro-gold stance deserves the applause of everyone
who believes in sound money.

Unfortunately, his position falls drastically short of the kind of radical reform that would be necessary to remove the meddling hands of
government from monetary affairs for good. In his own words, Kemp proposes that…

…There is nothing mysterious about how gold could be used as a reference point… It would simply mean the Fed would stop
guessing how much liquidity is good for the economy and allow the market to make that decision for it. With the dollar defined
in terms of gold and with American citizens free to buy and sell gold at will, the Fed would forget about raising or lowering
interest rates and simply add liquidity (buy bonds) when the price of gold tries to fall and subtract liquidity (sell bonds) when it
tries to rise. Markets would determine interest rates.

In Kemp’s scheme, the Federal Reserve announces an official dollar-gold parity (he suggests $325/oz.) and conducts open market operations
accordingly. Dollar-gold convertibility plays, if anything, a secondary role. Although the Fed is rule bound to pursue a certain gold price target,
a dollar is not defined as a legal claim on a specific weight of gold.

This proposal is flawed on at least two counts.

First, the central bank would retain the power to create and destroy money at the stroke of a pen. At first glance, this seems to be a mere
technicality. After all, given that the central bank is statutorily required to stabilize the gold value of its fiat money, isn’t this fiat money, for all
practical purposes, as good as gold? Not necessarily.

Often, markets simply do not find statutory restrictions on central banks credible, and for good reason. Ever since its inception in 1913, the
Federal Reserve has violated its own proclaimed commitment to fixed exchange rates, each time with a different excuse.

The fed engineered a massive inflation in the 1920’s in order to slow the drain of England’s gold reserves and prop up the overvalued pound.
The resulting crisis of confidence in the dollar-gold-pound link plunged the world into depression and forced FDR to restrict gold convertibility
and devalue the dollar by 33%.

This entire saga was repeated in the 1960’s. This time, American politicians rationalized the fed’s inflation as a means of promoting "full
employment" while financing the Vietnam war and LBJ’s "Great Society". In 1971, the dollar-gold link was severed and a decade of stagflation
followed. In light of this experience, Kemp’s eagerness to appoint the Federal Reserve guardian of the gold standard is puzzling, to say the
least. Experience suggests that the Federal Reserve and the gold standard cannot lastingly coexist.

Second, in Kemp’s proposal, fiat money rather than gold (or paper claims thereon), remains the medium of exchange. Unfortunately, if
individuals do not hold gold in their cash balances, gold’s value reflects its utility as an inflation hedge, a consumer good and a factor of
production. It is one of the more perverse consequences of Kemp’s proposal that the Fed would have to create and destroy liquidity to offset
these non-monetary influences on gold’s value.

The uncertainty and instability inherent in this arrangement could be worse than America’s reigning fiat money regime.

Instead, gold itself should be declared legal tender and the dollar should become nothing more than a warehousing receipt for gold. Then, the
supply of money would be determined by the supply of gold. And the demand for gold would be almost exclusively determined by the demand
for the medium of exchange.

This is basically the arrangement that served the world economy so well for so long during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Whatever problems existed under the gold standard were due to government interventions: e.g., bimetallist policies that fixed the price ratio
between gold and silver, interventions in the banking system that permitted government bailouts of failing banks, and other such policies. The
lesson of history is that the purer the gold standard, the better it works.

Jack Kemp is right that central bank manipulation of money and credit is a destabilizing influence on the global economy. However, his call for
a dollar that is "as good as gold" is self-defeating. A real gold standard requires a Federal Reserve that is as good as dead.

--------

Steve Piraino, an alum of the Mises University and the Human Action Seminar, is an economics major at Harvard
University. piraino@fas.harvard.edu. See also the Austrian Study's Guide's section on Money and Banking and What Has Government Done
to Our Money? by Murray Rothbard.



To: d:oug who wrote (72816)7/4/2001 1:03:49 AM
From: ubetcha  Respond to of 116753
 
Doug,

Boy, that is a tall order. Here is one place to start. You can move around in this sight. I am a charter member of this organization, and receive each politicians ratings once a year, but do not currently have a copy.

cagw.org

They rate each member of congress on whether they are a big spender, and who brings in the most for their state. Of course Byrd is the best at bringing in the BACON!!

It definitely shows that the democrats are a lot better at bringing in the money to their states than are the republicans. Go figure.

For those who invested in tech stocks last year, and have now lost a goodly portion of their investment, I will point you to a site that will at least help you eat.

techsoup.org

Since you can no longer eat at Steaks Are Us, you might be able to subsist on soup. It looks like it really has some good recipes. It is also a sight for non-profit companies. How appropriate.

Let me know if you want to pursue your chore Doug.

Terry



To: d:oug who wrote (72816)7/6/2001 8:17:46 AM
From: d:oug  Respond to of 116753
 
To: dougak@GoldSucks.com
Date: 7/5/01
From: LePatron@LeMetropoleCafe.com

Le Metropole Members,

Bob Landis has served commentary:
The Toulouse-Lautrec Table:
"A Reach Too Far:
Kinross, Kinam and the Road to Redemption."

"Overreaching by corporate insiders can...

"To answer this question properly...

"You don't mean to suggest...

"WHAT!?!," we shrieked; "you can't do that...

This takes some focus, but...

The gold company world is in complete disarray
and falling apart at the seams.

"Black" Jack Thompson, Homestake CEO, sells out
his faithful shareholders after 127 years
of Homestake carrying the gold banner
- mostly because of mismanagement.

Now, Kinross tries to pull a fast one
on preferred shareholders.

The Gold Cartel is wreaking havoc
- all of which does not have to be.

They have been getting away with it because
companies like Homestake and Kinross refuse
to fight back and call a spade a spade.

For years GATA has tried to wake up the executives
of these two firms and all we get is a blankish
"see no evil", "hear no evil" response.

It is time for shareholders to speak out
like Bob Landis and ask the gold producer CEO's
to stand up for ALL shareholders or resign.

There is much that can be done, but not if
the gold producer chief executive officers
are content to be pushed over a cliff
without mounting a counter challenge to The Gold Cartel.

They must speak out about the manipulation
of the price of gold that is destroying
their industry and those investors
that believe in their product.

All the best,
Bill Murphy
Chairman, Gold Anti_trust Action GATA gata.org
Le Patron, LeMetropoleCafe.com