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Non-Tech : MONEY SUPPLY & THE FEDERAL RESERVE [FED] (UNMODERATED) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: LTK007 who wrote (5)6/10/2007 3:02:23 AM
From: NYBob1  Respond to of 6
 
Money in a Free Society - With fair market fields -

What have we learned about money in a free society?
We have learned that all money has originated, and
must originate, in a useful commodity chosen by the
free market as a medium of exchange.
The unit of money is simply a unit of weight of the
monetary commodity—usually a metal, such as gold or silver.
Under freedom, the commodities chosen as money, their
shape and form, are left to the voluntary decisions of
free individuals.
Private coinage, therefore, is just as legitimate
and worthwhile as any business activity.
The "price" of money is its purchasing power in terms of
all goods in the economy, and this is determined by
its supply, and by every individual's demand for money.
Any attempt by government to fix the price will interfere
with the satisfaction of people's demands for money.
If people find it more convenient to use more than one
metal as money, the exchange rate between them on the
market will be determined by the relative demands and
supplies, and will tend to equal the ratios of their
respective purchasing power.
Once there is enough supply of a metal to permit the market
to choose it as money, no increase in supply can improve
its monetary function.
An increase in money supply will then merely dilute
the effectiveness of each ounce of money without helping
the economy.
An increased stock of gold or silver, however, fulfills
more non-monetary wants (ornament, industrial purposes, etc.)
served by the metal, and is therefore socially useful.
Inflation (an increase in money substitutes not covered by
an increase in the metal stock) is never socially useful, but
merely benefits one set of people at the expense of another.
Inflation, being a fraudulent invasion of property, could
not take place on the free market.

In sum, freedom can run a monetary system as superbly as
it runs the rest of the economy. Contrary to many writers,
there is nothing special about money that requires
extensive governmental dictation.
He, too, free men will best and most smoothly supply all
their economic wants.
For money as for all other activities, of man, "liberty is
the mother, not the daughter, of order."

mises.org

blog.lewrockwell.com

investorshub.com

investorshub.com

investorshub.com