Havenstein's
Choice
The Philosopher's Stone
of Monetary Science
By Franklin Sanders
Editor, The Moneychanger
November 29, 2001
"The whole extraordinary
depreciation of the mark has naturally created a rapidly increasing
demand for additional currency, which the Reichsbank has not
always been fully able to satisfy. But these enormous sums [printed]
are barely adequate to cover the vastly increased demand for
the means of payment, which has just recently attained an absolutely
fantastic [nominal] level ***" --Dr. Rudolf Havenstein,
Reichsbank President, August, 1923, quoted in When Money Dies by Adam Ferguson,
p. 173; London: Wm. Kimber & Co., Ltd, 1975.
AXIOMS:
"Inflation" is an
increase in the money supply that eventually causes prices to
rise because it cheapens the purchasing power of each and every
monetary unit. Inflation is the cause, rising prices the effect.
"Deflation" is a
decrease in the money supply that eventually causes prices to
fall because it enhances the purchasing power of each and every
monetary unit. In a deflation money becomes more, not less, valuable.
Deflation is the cause, falling prices the effect.
Every monetary inflation causes
and masks a real deflation and economic contraction. While nominal
prices rise, real prices fall as paper (fiat) money loses value
relative to all other assets.
Inflation makes money appear
cheap because it suppresses the interest rate. The lower price
of money fools businessmen into making investments that look
profitable at the inflation-lowered interest rate. Consumers
are not really forcing down interest rates by saving more now
to spend more later, so the lower rate sends a false signal about
future demand. When the future arrives, those who were fooled
go bust. Inflation induces malinvestment that at some point will
be liquidated (written off).
Inflation always brings on
lower commodity prices eventually because it initially induces
overproduction. Overproduction will always call out lower prices.
When will inflation not be
able to raise prices? When the fiat money is debt-based (borrowed
into circulation) and the debt is being revalued (written down
and off) around the world, i.e. a deflation of debt is underway.
New money is not borrowed into circulation because no matter
how much money is offered (by increasing reserves), or how low
its price (interest rate), borrowers are afraid to borrower and
lenders to lend, so the monetary authorities are "pushing
on a string."
Government cannot cure economic
deflation by outright printing and spending money into circulation
because the recipients will save and not spend it (the velocity
of money drops because demand for cash and safety increases).
Hence when the snapping turtle
of deflation locks on to the economy's leg, he won't let go until
he hears the thunder of:
- the last bankrupt's rubble
being cleared off the economy's foundation, or:
- the guns of war.
Economic deflations (depressions)
last for years and do not respond to government spending or central
bank monetary tricks.
Gold and silver are money by
nature while fiat national currencies are only money substitutes.
Formerly gold and silver along with other money substitutes formed
one single monetary system, but today they form two parallel
and competing systems.
If a monetary unit's purchasing
power declines, the most likely explanation is a money supply
inflation. If a monetary unit's purchasing power rises, deflation
is the most likely explanation.
Generally falling commodity
prices usually mean a deflation is in progress; rising prices
point to an inflation.
Falling paper money prices
for gold and silver cannot foretell a deflation, because gold
and silver are not mere commodities among all others. They are
money; they are the numeraire; they are the denominator, unlike
any other commodity. If their prices are falling in paper money,
the fall can only mean:
- the supply of fiat money is
falling, or:
- the supply of gold and silver
is rising (being inflated).
Above our axioms the puzzling
quotation, reveals an arresting paradox about inflations: increasing
the money supply actually shrinks its purchasing power. Throughout
the German hyperinflation of 1920-1923 Havenstein contended that
his job was to print money as fast as possible. Why? Because
the country was suffering a shortage of money. But how was this
possible? Wasn't the country already choking on the tidal wave
of paper money pouring from Havenstein's presses?
Havenstein had a choice: print
more money to ease the shortage of purchasing power caused by
inflation, or stop printing and bring on a deflationary collapse.
Either way, Havenstein's Choice is only Havenstein's Trap. The
faster you print money, the faster its value evaporates; stop
printing money and the economy collapses into a deflationary
depression. It can only end in the death of the monetary unit.
THE INFLATIONISTS' FALSE
HOPE
Inflationists presuppose
in the teeth of all history and logic that they can increase
wealth by increasing the money supply. True, if there were more
money there would be more wealth, but only if the money itself
is wealth. Money created out of thin air fiat money, whether
bank credit created by bookkeeping magic or by crude printing
has no value in itself. It is not wealth, only an alleged
representative of wealth.
On the other hand, gold and
silver inflations do contribute new wealth, and hence do boost
prosperity long term (after initial dislocations). After 1492
new gold and silver pouring into Europe from the Americas laid
the foundation for growth lasting centuries. Huge discoveries
of gold and silver in the mid-1800s in the Carolinas, California,
Australia, Nevada, and South Africa -- all contributed to the
world's wealth and later prosperity. However, all this new money
was itself valuable. Every new ounce mined contributed to the
sum total of wealth. Conversely, every new unit of fiat money
divides the sum total of wealth, impoverishing many to benefit
a few.
HAVENSTEIN'S CHOICE REMAINS
This paradox abides for every
inflation. More money ought to makes us all rich, but it never
does. It seems contradictory, still holds true. Never mind the
enormous volume of paper money thrown into circulation, the actual
purchasing power in circulation decreases with every new emission.
The faster the money is issued, the faster the total purchasing
power declines. Two parallel hyperbolas grapple for supremacy,
one graphing the amount of money circulating, the other depicting
its rate of depreciation. Depreciation always wins.
You can easily see the depreciation
by turning upside down the graph of any price index under an
inflationary regime. Viewed right side up, the graph shows prices
increasing. However, to understand what it truly means, you have
to turn the graph upside down: the monetary unit's purchasing
power is decreasing. More and more money buys less and less.
Nominally increasing fiat money prices mask a real fall in the
value of all goods against real money, gold and silver.
Check this out for yourself.
Look at the price of anything in 1964, the last year that the
United States minted silver money and while the dollar was still
tied to gold at a rate of $35 to the ounce. As a rule of thumb,
you will find that fiat prices have increased by a factor of
about ten times. In 1964, a package of cigarettes cost about
a quarter. Today, it costs $3.00. (Gasoline is about the only
exception to this rule of thumb. It has actually decreased in
price, 20¢ a gallon in 1964, about a dollar today. However,
less than a year ago, gas prices were over $2.00).
Until recent years prices in
gold and silver had uniformly dropped. Now that no longer holds
true. At $4.07 silver that 1964 25¢ pack of smokes now costs
73¢. In gold, it cost 0.0071 ounce in 1964, but today at
$280 gold costs 0.0107 ounce.
"Aha!" you shout,
"That proves your theory wrong!"
"Oho!" I shout back,
"In a pig's eye! That proves my theory right: they're suppressing
the gold and silver prices."
WHAT ABOUT THE GOLD/SILVER
RATIO?
In 1964 the government fixed
gold and silver at $35 and $1.2929, a ratio of about 27:1. Today
the ratio stands at 68:1. The change in ratio can only mean either:
- silver has become much more
plentiful than gold, or:
- the market has been deceived
into believing silver ought to be much cheaper than gold.
Alternative No. 1 we can reject
out of hand, because it is demonstrably false. In the past 35
years mankind has continued to consume (use up) silver in ever
increasing amounts and vast silver stockpiles have disappeared
while most of the gold ever mined is still in existence. Compared
to silver, only miniscule amounts of gold are consumed yearly,
like the gold necklace your sister wore on a date and lost.
Contrary to the worshippers
of the free market mechanism, Alternative No. 2 certainly is
possible without conscious and concerted manipulation. Fashion
the change in social mood - rules the investment world
as strictly as it rules hemlines. Fashion (social mood) makes
bull and bear markets. No matter how attractive some investment's
fundamentals may be (silver, for example, after ten years of
supply deficits), if it is out of fashion, most investors just
won't see it.
On the other hand, something
more sinister than mere social mood may be at work. Somebody
may be actively manipulating the market. Since we can prove from
history and from statute that the U.S. government and the Federal
Reserve, as well as foreign central banks, all manipulate markets,
the manipulation hypothesis cannot be rejected as frivolous or
without factual foundation. Indeed, on its face it offers the
most logically preferable explanation because it is the most
obvious, the simplest, and explains the most things. Occam's
Razor, you know.
PEOPLE ARE CONFUSED
I keep hearing analysts citing
the falling gold price as a sign that Gigantic Deflation is coming.
In fact, history teaches us that can't possibly be true. Look
at Roy Jastram's figures below to prove it to yourself once and
for all.
People who make this "falling
gold price presages deflation" argument have adopted the
inflationists' presupposition that gold and silver are mere commodities,
and that "money" is whatever government says is money.
They believe that gold and silver, along with all other commodities,
will drop under a deflation.
But gold and silver are not
commodities like all other commodities. They are money by their
nature. However vociferously tyrants and inflationists may scream
that gold and silver have been "officially demonetized,"
their monetary essence remains. The question is, how hard will
the frauds try to suppress that? How many people or nations must
they impoverish or shoot before they will give up?
PROOF FROM TWO CLASSICS
In his books The Golden Constant
(1976) and Silver the Restless Metal (1980) Roy Jastram defined
"`inflation' and `deflation' in a sense descriptive of prices'
behavior. Inflation refers to a period of rapidly rising prices;
deflation connotes an interval of swiftly falling prices."
(p. 84). This differs, of course, from the definitions I use:
inflation is "an increase in the money supply" and
deflation is "a decrease in the money supply." Jastram's
usage focuses on the effect of the change, mine focuses on the
cause. However, as we will see, his work supports my conclusions,
namely, that gold and silver should gain purchasing power in
a deflation. (See table, "Gold, Silver, & Prices under
Inflation or Deflation").
FIX YOUR OWN CONTRADICTION
Now I am left with an apparent
contradiction of my own. How come the prices of gold and silver
rose in all the deflations Jastram listed and fell in all inflations,
except in inflations since 1933? What changed? Why would their
purchasing power now rise in an inflation? Does that also mean
their purchasing power will fall in a disinflation, the slower
inflation we saw from 1980 1995?
The reason gold and silver's
value now rise in inflations instead of dropping is because the
once-unified monetary system that embraced gold, silver, and
money substitutes (bank notes, etc.) has been split into two
systems sealed off from each other, fiat money versus metallic
money. These separate systems now meet only at their exchange
rates. They no longer belong to one system, but form alternative
and competing monetary systems. When confidence in one blooms,
the value and price of the other wilt, and vice versa.
Before the days of central
banks and government run currencies, money supply consisted of
gold and silver coin and bank notes. Both the metallic monies
and money substitutes worked together in one system. Since central
banks have ascended the throne of monetary monopoly, however,
both gold (1934) and silver (1873 & 1967) have been pushed
out of the system "demonetized," as the inflationists
claim.
There now exists a fiat money
system based on debt but claiming a theoretical gold backing
of 15%: the gold "reserves" which the US government
claims to hold against gold certificates issued to the Federal
Reserve. However this only forms a 15% reserve when measured
against outstanding Federal Reserve currency ("bank notes').
When compared to the wider measures of money supply, the vast
amount of bank-created deposit currencies, credit card debt,
money market funds, and on and on, the percentage of gold "backing"
the system becomes minuscule. (See Tables, "Theoretical
Gold Backing," & "Price of Gold Needed.")
Even the banks' so-called "reserves" held in fiat Federal
Reserve currency are tiny, a paltry 0.83% of the banking system's
liabilities.
Further, the "gold reserve"
does not function as a constraining reserve the public can reach
by convertibility, but only as an illusion. It gold plates the
fiat money system to lend it the illusion of redeemability without
the tedious restraint of a genuine anchor.
DEFLATION LIKE PROCRUSTES,
OR CROOKS LIKE CLINTON?
Is that why the prices of gold
and silver are falling? Or is a mysterious, disembodied "deflation"
stalking the world, chopping off values like Procrustes chopping
off his victims at the ankles? Many otherwise astute analysts
think this "deflation" is causing the prices of gold
and silver to remain low. Their prices, these people claim, foretell
a worldwide deflation.
But if gold and silver "prices"
are falling then it can only be the result of an inflation of
the gold and silver money supply, not a deflation in fiat money,
or even an economic deflation. That's what Jastram's figures
show. Otherwise you have to adopt the inflationists' viewpoint
that gold and silver are mere commodities and not money at all.
Where can this "gold and
silver inflation" be coming from? Inflation with gold and
silver money is not only possible, but also a historical fact.
Every year the supply also increases as more gold and silver
are mined, but normally that happens so slowly that the amount
of metals added to the money stock no more than matches the growth
of the economy. But what if gold and silver supply suddenly surged?
In the past it has only proven beneficial, as I mentioned above.
But today no such source of
new physical gold and silver underlies the gold and silver inflation
(drop in their prices). Still, prices dropping point to supply
increasing, but where? If not from the ground, then only from
paper gold and silver in the form of derivatives and metal leasing.
WHAT ABOUT GOLD AND SILVER
PRICES?
What you expect to see is not
what you do see. How do you explain the contradiction? With verifiably
rising fiat inflation (increasing paper money supply) you would
expect to see silver and gold prices rising as the realisers
edge for the escape hatch. Yet both metals are dropping while
the paper dollar strengthens. How do you explain that?
Greenspan is inflating the
fiat money supply so fast that we should soon, indeed, already
see a drop in fiat's value that sends gold and silver soaring.
But that is precisely the reaction the Fed must suppress. Rising
gold and silver are the safety gauge that alert the world to
dangerous inflation. Greenspan needs to wire down that safety
valve.
What do we need to prove a
crime? Motive, means, and opportunity. Greenspan and the Treasury
have the means and the opportunity. With stocks collapsing, the
dollar threatened, and the US economy fainting, they also have
a powerful motive. Can the jury point to the winner?
That makes all the talk of
gold "forecasting deflation by declining" just so hogwash.
ANOTHER KIND OF DEFLATION
Because our money is borrowed
into circulation our fiat system can cause another kind of deflation:
the great writing down of debt, the revaluation of all values.
Debt builds and builds, and suddenly some creditor runs for the
door with the shout, "I want my money!" That triggers
a universal questioning of debt (remember "change of social
mood"?). Around the world, the creditworthiness of every
debt is scrutinized. Rotten debt is simply written off
the creditor's money "goes to money heaven" (to borrow
Doug Casey's happy turn of phrase). Bankruptcies abound as the
malinvestment induced by the previous paper money inflation ("easy
money") are recognized as failures and written off.
But in the very best of times
the debt-based fiat money system already lives under a perpetual
twofold deflationary threat. New money can only be created by
borrowing it into existence. So think about it:
- If all the money is based
on debt, then the writing down of debt must reduce the entire
money supply, by definition. A loan written off is bank credit
destroyed.
- The money supply must grow
by at least the amount of the interest burden, or bankruptcy
is guaranteed for some players. . The less the money supply grows,
the more numerous the bankruptcies.
What follows from the great
debt deflation? It must reduce economic activity as demand for
money increases and money becomes harder to get. More companies
going bankrupt means fewer companies hiring and more companies
laying off workers. Fewer people working means people have less
money to spend which means they buy less which means that even
for those companies that don't go bankrupt, it's tougher to make
a profit. In other words, times get tougher and tougher and the
economy sinks into a self-reinforcing depression for years.
WHERE DOES IT END?
The whole picture of inflation
confuses us because it acts differently as it develops. History,
however, does not equivocate about inflation's end: it destroys
the monetary unit. Commenting on Havenstein's Choice in a recent
newsletter, James Turk wrote,
"Within a few short years,
the Reichsmark was inflated away; it was destroyed as a currency.
What really killed the Reichsmark? Hyperinflation was only the
result; it was not the cause. The cause was a `flight from the
currency'. No one wanted to hold the currency, and quickly exchanged
it for any good or service. That's why the Reichsmark was losing
purchasing power in the first place; the demand for Reichmarks
was declining.
"Interestingly, these
same circumstances faced by the Reichsbank are what the Federal
Reserve is now facing . . .Unfortunately the governors of the
Federal Reserve have learned nothing from the Reichsbank. The
Fed is pump-priming like a crazy person. Instead of focussing
on building demand for dollars so that people don't take
flight from it they instead are pumping more dollars into
circulation to overcome what are perceived as deflationary forces
in the economy, just like the Reichsbank did. And the end for
the dollar will be just as brutal."
To most people today, a flight
from the US dollar sounds crazy crazier than the Fed's
pump priming. But believe me, from a historical or an economic
perspective, Greenspan & Co. have put the dollar on the fast
track to oblivion. You may toy with Treasury bills for a while,
but the only safety against a depreciating currency is gold and
silver.
The faster Greenspan inflates,
the tighter the cabal tries to suppress gold and silver, the
more the government manipulates markets, the faster they hasten
the day when the dollar dies.
-end-
Copyright ©2001
The Moneychanger
November 29, 2001
--
F. Sanders
email: moneychanger@compuserve.com
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