The Gold Standard Strikes
Back
with a 36-year lag
Antal E. Fekete
Gold Standard University Live
aefekete@hotmail.com
Sep 25, 2008
"Two legs bad, four legs good!"
There were two main direct
assaults on the gold standard by the American government: the
first on the watch of a Democratic president, Franklin D. Roosevelt,
when the U.S. defaulted on its domestic gold obligations
in 1933; the second on the watch of a Republican president, Richard
Nixon, when the U.S. defaulted on its international gold
obligations in 1971. In each case, the gold standard struck back.
Uncannily, in each case there was a lag of 36 years, signifying
the fact that it takes that long for a new generation to acquiesce
in the slogan "two legs bad, four legs good!" as in
George Orwell's Animal Farm, a parody of the Soviet Union
and the Bolshevik revolution. It will be recalled that the pigs
have overthrown the farmer and took over the farm, trying to
run it under this revolutionary slogan.
The run on the dollar in the
wake of the 1933 default started in 1969, wiping out more than
one half of the value of the currency in a few years, the worst
episode of monetary destruction in history of the dollar up to
that point. The second run on the dollar in the wake of the 1971
default started in 2007, when American banks faltered as bond
insurance premiums they were paying on their assets skyrocketed.
The second run still continues as foreign dollar account holders
have not been heard from. Make no mistake about it: the present
financial crisis is a gold crisis, even though this fact is vehemently
denied by the Establishment.
Cause and effect
Causality may be camouflaged
by lags, and the longer the lag, the more perfect the camouflage
is. This is confirmed in the case of the government sabotaging
the gold standard. From the point of view of the Establishment,
the causality nexus must be covered up by hook or crook. The
propaganda line is that gold has long since outlived its usefulness
and it was necessary for the government to make some housekeeping
changes in order to get rid of this useless and annoying appendage.
Note that this is exactly what you would expect to hear from
a banker defaulting on his gold obligations: he would badmouth
gold and promote his own dishonored paper. But if gold is really
so useless, and so entangled with superstition, then why not
pay it out as honor demands, and avoid the stigma of national
dishonor?
The 36-year long lag is explained,
in part, by the servility of academia and media in parroting
government propaganda - betraying their sacred mission to inform
without fear and favor. The general public, even if indignant
at the time of the default, gets desensitized to the enormity
of gold confiscation and the government's declaring default fraudulently.
As Hitler said, propaganda does work, provided that it is diligently
repeated year after year. Nazi Germany just was not given 36
years for its propaganda to sink in. The Soviet Union was; that's
why the tenets of international socialism are still treated as
holy writ, and those of national socialism as garbage, regardless
of the close similarity.
"Four legs good, two legs better!"
Animal Farm could just as well be a parody of
the regime of irredeemable currency. The pigs have overthrown
the gold standard. They started to mimic its operation, prodded
by the chief of pigs, Alan Greenspan. Their revolutionary slogan
later gave way to a new one: "four legs good, two legs better!",
when the pigs tried to walk on their hind legs instead of all
four, to the endless amusement of the other four-legged creatures
on the farm. Unfortunately for them, their new manner of walking
could not help the fact that they remained just as pig-headed
and ham-handed as ever.
Kill the Constitution to make it a
"living document"
The role of gold in the monetary
system is anchored in the U.S. Constitution. The Founding Fathers
were no fools. They knew exactly what they were talking about
when they insisted on a blanket denial of power for the government
to monetize its own debt, or any debt for that matter. They knew
perfectly well that a metallic monetary standard is the only
effective prophylactic that can deny that power. The fact that
the U.S. government never considered proposing an amendment to
the Constitution to legalize fiat money is a telltale. Policy-makers
could not muster the necessary moral courage to face counter-arguments
in an open debate. Irredeemable currency has no integrity: the
issuer is given privileges with no countervailing responsibilities.
He is granted unlimited power in a republic based on the
principle of limited and enumerated powers. The principle
of checks and balances is thrown to the winds. These features
are all alien to the spirit of the Constitution, not just to
its letter. Rather than facing a public debate, the government
prefers to live with the odium that it is the destroyer of the
Constitution.
The legislative branch usurped
powers denied to it by the Constitution. The executive branch
conspired with the legislative branch to pull it off. All presidents,
starting with Franklin D. Roosevelt, have perjured themselves
when they swore to uphold the U.S. Constitution, and then turned
around and signed bills into law to keep raising the limit on
government debt payable in irredeemable currency, i.e., monetized
government debt. The judiciary branch of the government, rather
than exposing the conspiracy, has joined it, on the basis of
the spurious doctrine that the Constitution "is a living
document" which does not say what it says, but what the
judiciary say it says. In other words, you have to kill the Constitution
to make it a "living" document.
Regulator of debt
To expect that the gold standard
can be destroyed with impunity is a pipedream. The Establishment
will never admit that the present monetary and financial crisis
is a gold crisis, or that the day of reckoning has dawned. It
will find any number of ad hoc explanations, such as too
little regulation, too relaxed lending standards, naked short
selling of financial stocks, etc., etc. The big picture is blackened
out. For this reason, it is necessary to state the cause-effect
nexus between ousting gold from the monetary system and the credit
collapse that is now unfolding before our eyes, after a 36-year
lag, in the clearest possible terms.
Gold has the same role to play
in the monetary system as the fly-wheel regulator does in an
engine, the brake does in a train, and circuit-breakers do in
an electrical network. Gold is the regulator of the quantity
of debt in the economy that can be safely created and carried.
It is also safeguarding quality by rejecting toxic debt
before it can start metastasis. Debt-based currency utterly lacks
safeguards limiting quantity and vouching for quality of debt.
Debt-based currency is an invitation to disaster, that of the
toppling of the Tower of Babel. Its effects are far from being
instantaneous. There is a threshold and there is a critical mass
involved. We have long since crossed that threshold and passed
that critical mass. By no rational calculus can the outstanding
debt be expected to be repaid without inflationary or deflationary
adventures, even if further increase were stopped dead in its
track. The discussion of the present financial crisis by academia
and media avoids all reference to this fact. Under the gold standard
a fast-breeder of debt was unthinkable, and debt was retired
in an orderly manner.
Destabilizing interest rates
The significance of gold in
the monetary system is not that it can stabilize prices, which
is neither possible nor desirable. It is the fact that gold
can stabilize interest rates. No debt-based currency can
do it, because the value of the unit of account is left undefined
and is subject to political manipulation by the pressure groups.
The discussion of the present financial crisis by academia and
media avoids reference to this fact as well. Under the gold standard
interest and foreign exchange rates were so stable that there
was no bond speculation - for lack of volatility would make it
unprofitable. There was no Debt Tower of Babel to threaten with
burying the economy underneath. Under the gold standard there
were no credit-default swaps. There was no need for them.
Barbarous relic or accounting tool?
The gold standard has been
called a "barbarous relic". However, the unpleasant
truth, one that government propagandists have 'forgotten' to
consider, is that the gold standard is merely a tool for sound
accounting and, yes, for sound moral principles. Book-keeping
under the regime of irredeemable currency is an exercise in prestidigitation.
The gold standard is the only conceivable early warning system
to indicate erosion of capital. It was not the gold standard
per se that politicians and adventurers wanted to overthrow.
Above all, they wanted to get rid of certain accounting and moral
principles, especially those applicable to banking, that had
become a fetter upon their ambition for aggrandizement and perpetuation
of power. Historically, sound accounting and moral principles
had been singled out for discard before the gold standard was
given the coup de grâce. Just how monetization of
debt has led to unprecedented and previously unthinkable corruption
of accounting and moral standards, this is a question that has
never been addressed by impartial scholarship before.
In order to see the connection
we must recall that any durable change of the rate of interest
has a direct and immediate effect on the value of financial assets.
Rising interest rates make the value of bonds fall, and falling
interest rates make it rise. As a result of this inverse relationship
the Wealth of Nations flows and ebbs together with the variation
of the rate of interest.
Capital destruction
Indeed, rising interest rates
destroy wealth as they render the productivity of capital submarginal.
Establishment economists and financial journalists preach the
false doctrine that, conversely, when the government and its
central bank suppress interest rates, new wealth is being created.
This is the gravest error of all! Falling interest rates destroy
capital in a most devious way, as they increase the liquidation-value
of debt contracted earlier at higher rates. All observers
miss the point that as interest rates fall, the burden of servicing
outstanding debt is increased. They blithely assume that all
debt is automatically refinanced at the lower rate. This
is definitely not the case. The issuer must continue to redeem
the maturing coupons of fixed nominal value, regardless how far
the rate of interest may have fallen after selling the bond.
To that extent all issuers of bonds (along with other borrowers)
are subject to impairment on capital account in a falling interest
rate environment. If the impairment is ignored, the outcome is
wholesale bankruptcies in due course.
Enterprises should make up
for losses of capital due to falling interest rates whenever
they occur. The trouble is that they don't. As a result they
report losses as profits. There is a negative feedback. Capital
is eroded further. When the truth dawns upon them, it is already
too late. I shall argue that this is the essence of the present
banking crisis in America, and it was caused by the destabilization
of the interest rate structure, the ultimate cause of which was
the overthrow of the gold standard in 1971.
Interest rates have been falling
for the past 28 years with the result that the liquidation-value
of outstanding debt has reached the tipping point, where capital
is plunged into negative territory. Capital dissipation stops
as there is nothing more to dissipate. This is sudden death for
the enterprise. Producing firms fold tent and look for greener
pastures in Asia where wage rates are lower, while financial
firms and banks start falling like dominoes.
No commentator is able to explain
how American banks could run out of capital in spite of obscene
profits they have been making. My explanation is simple. Capital
destruction has been going on stealthily for 28 years but the
banks were not paying attention. The magnitude of the decline
in interest rates, if not its length, is historically unprecedented.
The banks have been paying out phantom profits in dividends and
in compensation, in the belief that their capital accounts were
in good shape. They were not. They were insidiously eroded by
the falling interest rate structure, as it inevitably increased
the cost of servicing capital already deployed. The banks were
unwilling or unable to raise new capital to cover the shortfall.
Under these circumstances they should have reduced their own
exposure to borrowing. Instead, they were vastly expanding it.
By the time they woke up, capital was gone and they were in the
grips of bankruptcy.
This puts the importance of
the gold standard into high relief. Both rising and falling interest
rates are extremely harmful to enterprises, banks not excepted.
The plight of General Motors is no different from that of Morgan
Stanley. The environment in which they can safely prosper is
that of stable interest rates, that only a gold standard
can provide.
Not all risks can be effectively insured
against
Academia has failed to study
and expose the untoward consequences of ousting gold from the
monetary system. It dismissed the problem of fluctuating - nay,
gyrating - interest rates by saying that insurance against those
risks is available, just like insurance against the risk of fluctuating
foreign exchange rates is, through the derivatives markets. If
academia had done its job to research the problem properly, it
would have discovered that there are risks against which no effective
insurance is available. For example, there is no effective insurance
against risks artificially created at the gaming tables in a
gambling casino. Likewise, risks represented by fluctuating interest
and foreign exchange rates have been artificially created by
the government in ousting gold from the monetary system. Under
the gold standard, there was no risk of fluctuating interest
and foreign exchange rates. Bond values were stable.
Bond values are no longer stable,
but there is no effective insurance against diminishing bond
values. If you were to offer insurance against losses due to
declining bond values or bond default, then you would have to
look for second-round insurance to cover your assumed risk. Second-round
insurers would need third-round insurance, and so on and so forth.
This means an infinite chain of insurers, in effect, a Tower
of Babel growing ever taller ever faster. Such a tower is not
a figment of the imagination. It is real; it exists even though
the earth is quaking under its foundations. This Tower of Babel
is the derivatives market. At each level the instrument of insurance
is a credit-default swap. The amazing thing is that there
are far more credit-default swaps outstanding than there are
bonds in existence that they are supposed to be insuring.
Observers make wild guesses
in trying to explain this strange phenomenon. They suggest that
most are "dry swaps", that is, they have been created
solely for speculative purposes. In this way speculators can
gamble with almost no money down. This is the position, for example,
of Floyd Norris of The New York Times (Reckless? You are
in luck! September 19, 2008.)
I reject this explanation.
In reality all credit-default swaps were created to insure actual
risks directly or indirectly connected with bond-holdings in
the balance sheets of financial institutions. First-round insurance
is usually the purchase of a bond futures contract; second-round
insurance is the purchase or sale of a put or a call options
on bond futures. Third- and fourth-round insurance can also be
negotiated in the form of a credit-default swap in the derivatives
market. I submit that all the credit-default swaps were negotiated
by actual insurers to cover risks they have actually assumed
in writing insurance at a lower round. They were not negotiated
for speculative purposes. However, at bottom, these risks are
artificial, as they have been created by the government in overthrowing
the gold standard. This is the true explanation of the exploding
derivatives market that doubles in size every second year, and
has already surpassed the one-half quadrillion dollar
($500,000,000,000,000) mark.
The derivatives market is the
nemesis of government dishonesty and incompetence. The gold standard
is striking back - with a lag of 36 years.
Conclusion
The present credit crisis is
the greatest ever in history. It burst upon the world in February,
2007, when insurance premiums on bonds in the banks' portfolio
shot up. However, the roots of the crisis go much farther back.
They go back all the way to the ousting of gold from the monetary
system 36 years earlier. Gold is an indispensable tool for the
banks to manage risk. The Federal Reserve can print its notes
ad nauseam, and Helicopter Ben can air-drop them to the
banks and bond insurers. It will not address the risks of declining
or evaporating bond values. To do that you need something more
substantial than irredeemable promises to pay. In Part 2 of this
article I shall look at the present crisis in greater detail
from the distinctive perspective of the gold standard as an early
warning system indicating capital erosion.
###
References:
It
is not a dollar crisis: it is a gold crisis - June 4, 2008
Is our accounting system flawed? - It may be insensitive
to capital destruction - May 23, 2008
Forgotten
anniversary haunts the nation - March 25, 2008
Calendar
of events
New York City,
October 16, 2008
Committee for Monetary Research and Education, Inc., Annual
Fall Dinner.
Professor Fekete is an invited speaker. The title of his talk
is:
The Mechanism of Capital Destruction.
Inquiries: cmre@bellsouth.net
Santa Clara,
California, November 3, 2008
Santa Clara University, hosted by the Civil Society
Institute
Professor Fekete is the invited speaker. The title of his
talk is:
Monetary Reform: Gold and Bills of Exchange.
Inquiries: ffoldvary@scu.edu
San Francisco,
California, November 4, 2008
Economic Club of San Francisco
Professor Fekete is the invited speaker. The title of his
talk is:
The Revisionist Theory and History of the Great Depression
- Can It Happen Again?
Inquiries: ifkbischoff@yahoo.com
Canberra, Australia,
November 11-14, 2008
Gold Standard University Live, Session Five.
This 4-day seminar is a Primer on the Gold Basis - A Most
Important Trading Tool, Mining Tool, and Early Warning System.
Inquiries: www.feketeaustralia.com
A more detailed description of this seminar is found at
the end of my article Cut Off Your Tail to Save My Face!
In view of
the extraordinary events unfolding in world finance and the American
banking scene, I shall put on extra meetings in Canberra where
I can answer the questions of participants. I shall show that
this is not a sub-prime crisis, not a real estate crisis, not
even a dollar crisis. This is a gold crisis: the chickens
of 1933 and 1971 are coming home to roost. I invite you to
come and contribute to the success of Gold Standard University
Live with your questions and comments. At any rate, the sessions
will be taped and the DVDs made available to the public, along
with the conference proceedings.
|
Sep 24, 2008
Antal E. Fekete
Professor
Emeritus
Memorial University of Newfoundland
email: aefekete@hotmail.com
Professor Antal E. Fekete was born and educated
in Hungary. He immigrated to Canada in 1956. In addition to teaching
in Canada, he worked in the Washington DC office of Congressman
W. E. Dannemeyer for five years on monetary and fiscal reform
till 1990. He taught as visiting professor of economics at the
Francisco Marroquin University in Guatemala City in 1996. Since
2001 he has been consulting professor at Sapientia University,
Cluj-Napoca, Romania. In 1996 Professor Fekete won the first prize
in the International Currency Essay contest sponsored by Bank
Lips Ltd. of Switzerland. He also runs the Gold Standard
University.
Copyright ©2005-2010 by A. E. Fekete<
321gold Ltd
|