CHINA'S
DOLLAR MILLSTONE, Part 3
History
of monetary imperialism
By
Henry C K Liu
Over the course of the 19th century, enough
gold was known to have been accumulated by Britain to make it
credible for the British Treasury to introduce paper currency backed
by its gold to force the demonetization of silver in Europe to
advance British monetary imperialism.
Many historians
inaccurately ascribe to 19th century mercantilism as the policy of
accumulating gold for a country through export of merchandise. The
fact is that gold
accumulation can only be achieved by a purposeful policy of monetary
imperialism.
Mercantilism under bimetallism
gave a trade surplus country
both silver and gold. Only monetary imperialism could cause an inflow
of gold with an outflow of silver.
In reality, Britain earned
gold in the 19th century not from export
of merchandise because buyers
of British goods had a choice of paying in silver or gold under
bimetallism. In reality, Britain accumulated
gold by overvaluing gold monetarily all through the 19th century.
This allowed Britain to force the world to demonetize silver and to
replace bimetallism with the gold standard after enough of the
world's gold had flowed into Britain to enable the pound sterling, a
paper currency backed by gold, but essentially
a fiat current [currency]
without
bimetallism, to act as a reserve currency for world
trade with which to finance Britain's role of sole superpower after
the fall of Napoleon.
With the pound sterling as reserve
currency, British banks, operating on a fractional reserve system
backed by the Bank of England, the central bank, as lender of last
resort, could practice predatory lending all
over the world, sucking up wealth with boom and bust business cycles
instigated by her predatory monetary policy of fiat paper currency.
The strategy worked for more than a century until the end of
World War I. Between 1800 and 1914, the main British export was
financial capital denominated in fiat pound sterling disguised by the
gold standard to be as good as gold. The factor income from banking
profits derived from pound sterling hegemony paid for the wealth and
luxury that Britain enjoyed as the world's preeminent power in the
century between the fall of Napoleon in 1815 and the start of First
World War in 1914.
The demonetization of silver stealthily
turned the gold standard into a fiat paper money regime through the
officially gold-backed pound sterling because the gold backing it was
no longer priced in silver at a fixed rate, or any other metal of
intrinsic value for that matter. Gold and only gold became a fiat
unit of account set by the British Mint, a fact that made Britain the
monetary hegemon of the age.
No transactional meaning
An
asset that is priced by or in itself has no transactional meaning,
even if it is gold. This is because a transaction
must involve at least two assets of different value, expressed with
different prices in exchangeable currencies. And there must be an
agreed-upon exchange ratio at the time of the transaction to
effectuate a transactional outcome. Even in barter, an exchange ratio
between the two assets to be exchanged needs to be agreed upon. For
example, an ounce of gold can be exchanged for 15 ounces of silver.
An ounce of gold that can be exchanged for another ounce of gold
carries no information of transactional value.
Thus the pound
sterling, even when backed by gold, was in fact a fiat paper currency
because the monetary value of gold is set by fiat devoid of any
relationship to any other thing of intrinsic value beside gold
itself. Without bimetallism, specie money
cannot have any meaning of transactional worth. Currency
backed by gold turns into a fiat currency if it can be redeemed at
its face value only in gold. The monetary value of gold is not
separate from the commercial value of gold. Gold then can fluctuate
in purchasing power due to any number of factors, including
government policy, but is not fixed to any other metal of intrinsic
value at a universally agreed upon ratio.
That a pound
sterling is worth another pound sterling is no different than an
ounce of gold is worth another ounce of gold. And the
market price of gold can be manipulated by the government that is in
possession of more gold than any other market participant.
This means that any unwelcome speculator can be
quickly ruined by the government. This is of course how
central banks nowadays intervene in the foreign exchange market for
fiat currencies. Central banks with sufficient dollar reserves, a
fiat currency, can drive speculators against their national
currencies toward bankruptcy.
Before silver was demonetized,
the silver/gold ratio was set monetarily at 15.5/1 in England and
15/1 in France, motivating speculators to buy silver with gold in
England and buy gold with silver in France for an arbitrage profit of
half an ounce of silver for each ounce of gold so transacted in the
two countries. This caused a continuous flow of gold to England
independent of international trade flows in other commodities. Even
when Britain incurred a trade deficit, gold continues to flow into
Britain because of the monetary hegemony of the pound sterling.
After silver was demonetized, gold could be exchanged at the
British Treasury only for pound sterling notes at the rate of 21
shillings, or one pound one shilling, per ounce of gold fixed in
1717. The commercial price of gold in England was set by the British
Treasury on par with its monetary value because the gold price was
denominated in pound sterling. The commercial price of silver or any
other commodity in England was also denominated in pound sterling,
which had a monetary value in gold set by the British Treasury by
fiat.
After the demonetization of silver, no one knew how
much silver was worth as money because it was no longer used anywhere
as money. Thus there could not be any discrepancy between the
commercial price of silver and its monetary value because
silver ceased to have
a monetary value. Silver then became a commercial commodity
like any other commercial commodity, while only gold remained a
monetary unit of account accepted in the British Treasury and in
other treasuries of countries which observed the gold standard.
Countries that refused to join the gold standard saw their currency
kept out of international trade and had to pay a penalty of high
interest rates on loans denominated in their non-gold-backed
currency.
The Bank of England could issue more pound sterling
notes by fiat based on the fractional reserve principle in banking.
She only needed to keep enough gold to prevent
a run on pound sterling notes for gold
at the Bank of England. And since England was in possession of more
gold than any other country at the time, Britain under the gold
standard became the monetary hegemon, with more money at her disposal
than justified by the amount of gold she actually held. Other gold
standard countries had to maintain a much higher fractional reserve
in gold than Britain and therefore had less money with which to
participate in international capital markets. The monetary hegemon
could sustain a trade deficit with an inflow of gold caused by
monetary policy.
Without a fixed exchange-rate regime, each
nation could adopt a gold standard unrelated to other nations' gold
standard. For example, the US at $20.67 per ounce of gold and Britain
at three pounds, 17 shillings and 10 pence per ounce of gold would
let the exchange rate between the dollar and the pound sterling work
itself out mathematically. This is what a fiat currency regime does,
except instead of being valued by a gold standard based on the
amount of gold held by the issuing government, the exchange
rate of the currency is valued by each country's monetary policy
implications and financial conditions, such as interest rates,
balance of payments, domestic inflation rate, fiscal budgets, trade
deficits, and so forth.
The United States, though formally on
a bimetallic (gold and silver) standard, switched to gold de facto in
1834 and de jure in 1900. In 1834, the United States fixed the price
of gold at $20.67 per ounce, where it remained for a century until
1933, when president Franklin D Roosevelt devalued the dollar to $35
per ounce of gold, but made it illegal for US citizens to own gold in
amounts worth more than $100.
Before World War I, Britain had
fixed the per ounce price of gold at three pounds, 17 shillings and
10 pence, three times the original price of gold set in 1717 which
was at one guinea, or 21 shillings. The exchange rate between US
dollars and pounds sterling, the "par exchange rate",
mathematically came to $4.867 per pound during the period between
1834 and 1914. Between 1914 and 1933, the dollar/pound exchange rate
mathematically rose to $2.214 per pound sterling.
On August
25, 2008, a relatively uneventful trading day, the per-ounce market
price for silver was $13.45 and that of gold was $829, yielding a
silver/gold ratio of 61.6/1. This was four times the historic British
Mint ratio of 15.5/1. On that same day, the exchange rate between the
dollar and the pound sterling, both free floating fiat currencies,
was $1.853 per pound sterling, determined by monetary policies of
their respective central banks. The exchange rate between the dollar
and the pound sterling on that day was less than one third of the
"par exchange rate" from 1834 through 1914.
The
British pound had lost more than a third of its exchange value
against the dollar in 94 years while the dollar itself had also
fallen against gold by 2,360%, from $20.67 to $829. The dollar had
not become stronger, only the pound had become weaker against the
dollar. This is because the pound, like all other fiat currencies in
the world, has become a derivative currency of the dollar.
Quantity
Theory of Money refined
John Locke (1632-1704) and David Hume
(1711-76) provided considerable refinement, elaboration and extension
to the Quantity Theory of Money (QTM), allowing it to be integrated
into the mainstream of orthodox monetarist tradition.
Locke
developed the right of private property based on the labor theory of
value and the mechanics of political checks and balances that were
incorporated in the US Constitution. Locke, in 1661, asserted the
proportionality postulate: that a doubling of the quantity of money
(M) would double the level of prices (P) and half the value of the
monetary unit.
Hume, in 1752, introduced the notion of
causation by stating that variation in M (money quantity) will cause
proportionate changes in P (price level). Concurrently with Irish
banker Richard Cantillon (1680-1734), Hume applied to the QTM two
crucial distinctions: 1) between static (long-run stationary
equilibrium) and dynamic (short-run movement toward equilibrium); and
2) between the long-run neutrality and the short-run non-neutrality
of money. Hume and Cantillon provided the first dynamic process
analysis of how the impact of a monetary change spread from one
sector of the economy to another, altering relative price and
quantity in the process.
They pointed out that most monetary
injections would involve non-neutral distribution effects. New money
would not be distributed among individuals in proportion to their
pre-existing share of money holdings. Those who receive more will
benefit at the expense of those receiving less than their
proportionate share, and they will exert more influence in
determining the composition of new output. Initial distribution
effects temporarily alter the pattern of expenditure and thus the
structure of production and the allocation of resources. This is how
inflation causes income disparity.
Thus it is understandable
that conservatives would be sympathetic to the QTM to maintain the
wealth distribution status quo, or if the QTM is skirted, to ensure
that the mal-distribution tilts toward those who are more likely to
engage in capital formation, namely the rich. This is precisely what
happened in the past two decades and caused sharp rises in income
disparity. Thus developing economies in need of capital formation
would find logic in first enriching the financial elite while
advanced economies with production overcapacity would need to
increase aggregate demand by restricting income disparity, which
free-market fundamentalism has failed to do. This is the
problem of central banking in market capitalism: it delivers money to
those who need it least. This excess money is
called capital.
Hume describes how different degrees of money
illusion among income recipients, coupled with time natural and
artificial delays in the adjustment process, could cause costs to lag
behind prices, thus creating abnormal profits and stimulating
optimistic profit expectations that would spur business overexpansion
and employment during the transition period. These non-neutral
effects are not denied by the adherents of QTM, who nevertheless
assert that they are bound to dissipate in the long run, albeit often
with great damage if the optimism is unjustified. The latest evidence
of the non-neutral effects of money is observable in expansion of the
so-called New Economy from easy money in the past decades and the
recurring collapse of its serial bubbles.
The QTM formed the
central core of 19th-century classical monetary analysis, provided
the dominant conceptual framework for interpreting contemporary
financial events and formed the intellectual foundation of orthodox
policy prescription designed to preserve the gold standard. The
economic structure in 19th-century Europe led analysts to acknowledge
additional non-neutral effects, such as the lag of money wages behind
the rise of prices, which temporarily reduces real wages; the
stimulus to output occasioned by inflation-induced reduction in real
debt burdens, which shifts real income from productive
debtor-entrepreneurs to unproductive creditor-rentiers; the so-called
"forced saving" effect occasioned by price-induced
redistribution of income among socio-economic classes having
structurally different propensity to save and invest; and the
stimulus to investment imparted by a temporary reduction in the rate
of interest below the anticipated rate of return on new capital.
Yet classical quantity theorists tended persistently to
minimize the importance of non-neutral effects as merely
transitional. Whereas Hume tended to stress lengthy dynamic
disequilibrium periods in which money matters much, classical
analysts focused on long-run equilibrium in which money is merely a
veil. Ricardo, the most influential of the classical economists,
thought such disequilibrium effects ephemeral and unimportant in
long-run equilibrium analysis. Gods, of course, enjoy longer
perspectives than most mortals, as do the rich over the poor. As John
Maynard Keynes famously said: "In the long run, we will all be
dead."
As leader of the Bullionists, who advocated
immediate and full-par resumption of convertibility of notes in gold,
Ricardo charged that inflation in Britain was solely the result of
the Bank of England's irresponsible over-issue of money, when in
1797, under financial stress from the Napoleonic Wars, Britain left
the gold standard for inconvertible paper.
At that time, the
Bank of England was still operating as a national bank, not a central
bank in the modern sense of the term. In other words, it operated to
improve the English economy rather than to strengthen the sanctity of
international finance by protecting the value of money against
inflation. Ricardo, by focusing on long-term equilibrium, discouraged
discussions on the possible beneficial output and employment effects
of monetary injection on the national level. Like modern-day
monetarists, Bullionists laid the source of inflation, considered a
decidedly evil force in international finance, squarely at the door
of the national bank.
Milton Friedman declared some two
centuries after Ricardo: "inflation is everywhere a monetary
phenomenon". Friedman's concept of "money matters" is
the diametrical opposite of Hume's view of money that most monetary
injection would involve non-neutral distribution effects. This has
been the result of Greenspan's abusive use of liquidity to moderate
the business cycle by creating price bubbles.
The historical
evolution in 18th-century Europe from a predominantly full-metal
money to a mixed metal-paper money forced advances in the
understanding of the monetary transmission mechanism. After gold
coins had given way to banknotes, Hume's direct mechanism of price
adjustment was found lacking in explaining how banknotes are injected
into the system.
Quantity Theory of Money and government
policy
Henry Thornton (1760-1815), in his classic The Paper
Credit of Great Britain (1802), provided the first description of
the indirect mechanism by observing that new money created by banks
enters financial markets initially via an expansion of bank loans, by
increasing the supply of lend-able funds, temporarily reducing the
interest rate below the rate of return on new capital, thus
stimulating additional investment and loan demand. This in turn
pushes prices up, including capital good prices, drives up loan
demands and eventually interest rates, bringing the system back into
equilibrium indirectly.
The central issue of the doctrines of
the British classical school that dominated the first half of the
19th century was focused around the application of the QTM to
government policy, which manifested itself in the maintenance of
external equilibrium and the restoration and defense of the gold
standard. Consequently, the QTM tended to be directed toward the
analysis of international price levels, gold flow, exchange-rate
fluctuations and trade balance. It formed the foundation of
mercantilism, which underpinned the economic structure of the British
Empire via colonialism, which reached institutional maturity in the
same period. But it was the British who discovered that gold flow was
guided by Gresham's Law of bad money driving out good, and caused
gold to flow into Britain by purposefully overvaluing its monetary
ratio to silver.
Bullionists developed the idea that the
stock of money, or its currency component, could be effectively
regulated by controlling a narrowly defined monetary base, that the
control of "high-power money" (bank reserves) in a
fractional reserve banking regime implies virtual control of the
money supply. High-power money is the totality of bank reserves that
would be multiplied many times through the money-creation power of
commercial bank lending, depending on the velocity of circulation.
Under the gold standard, bank reserve can take the form of gold or
bank notes.
In the three decades after Britain returned to
the gold standard in 1821, the policy objective focused on the
maintenance of fixed exchange rates and the automatic gold
convertibility of the pound. But the Currency School (CS) versus
Banking School (BS)
Page 2
of 5
CHINA'S
DOLLAR MILLSTONE, Part 3
History
of monetary imperialism
By
Henry C K Liu
controversy broke out over whether the "Currency
Principle" of making existing mixed gold-paper currency expand
and contract in direct proportion to gold reserves was sufficient to
safeguard against note over-issuance, or whether additional
regulation was necessary. This controversy grew out of the
expansionist pressure put on the supply of pound sterling by the
rapid expansion of the British Empire. Or rather, the increase in the
supply of pound sterling allowed Britain to finance the considerable
expenses of creating and maintaining a global empire.
Members
of the CS argued that even a fully, legally convertible currency
could be issued in excess with undesirable consequences, such as
rising domestic prices relative to foreign prices,
balance-of-payments deficits, falling foreign-exchange
rates, gold outflow resulting
in depletion of gold reserves and ultimately forced suspension of
convertibility. The rate of reserves drain often accelerated when the
external gold drain coincided with internal domestic panic conversion
of paper into gold in fear of pending depreciation. Thus the CS
promoted full convertibility plus strict regulation of the volume of
banknotes to prevent the recurrence of gold drains, exchange
depreciation and domestic liquidity crises.
The apprehension
of the CS was fully justified by past actions of the Bank of England,
which had been perverse and destabilizing by international finance
standards. The destabilizing argument stressed the time lag on the
Bank's policy response to gold outflow and to exchange-rate
movements. The inevitably too little, too late measures taken by the
national bank, instead of protecting gold reserves, merely
exacerbated financial panics and liquidity crises that inevitably
followed periods of currency-credit excess. The famous Bank Charter
Act of 1844, in modern parlance, imposed a 100% reserve requirement,
with an unabashed bias toward wealth preservation over wealth
creation. The CS also asserts that money substitutes cannot impair
the effectiveness of monetary regulation. Thus if banknotes could be
controlled, there would be no need to control deposits explicitly, on
the ground that money substitutes have low velocity and are of
declining substitutional value in times of crisis.
By the end
of the 19th century, bimetallism
had become a political issue in
the US. Newly discovered silver mines in the West caused an effective
decrease in the value of money. In 1873, the US Congress passed the
Fourth Coinage Act, which demonetized silver, shrinking the money
supply and causing severe deflation. Silverites called this "the
crime of '73" as deflation caused farmers to default on their
fixed rate mortgages while prices of farm produce fell. There
similarity between the crime of 1873 and that of 2007 when the
subprime mortgage crises broke out is striking in many respects.
French
monetary regime
The
French livre was
established by Charlemagne (747-841) as a unit of account equal to
one pound of silver. From the crusades, Louis IX (1214-1270) brought
back the idea of a royal monopoly on the minting of coinage to
France. He minted the first gold ecu d'or and silver gros d'argent,
whose weights (and thus monetary divisions) were roughly equivalent
to the livre tournois, a standard used in Tours, one of the richest
town in France at the time. Argent still means both silver and money
in modern French. Between 1360 and 1641, coins worth one livre
tournois were minted and known as francs. The first French paper
money was issued by Louis XIV in 1701 and was denominated in livres
tournois.
France, then with the largest economy in Europe,
had been the powerhouse anchor of silver/gold bimetallism since the
time of Louis XIV (1643-1715). The silver/gold ratio of 15/1 was
maintained because France always stood ready to exchange gold into
silver and back at that ratio. Monetarily, French money was neutral,
never good or bad in the Gresham Law sense because the French state
kept the commercial price of silver to gold also at the fixed
monetary ratio of 15:1.
The
French franc was
the national currency of France from 1360 until 1641 and again from
1795 until 1999 (franc coins and notes were legal tender until 2002).
The franc was also minted for many of the former French colonies,
such as Morocco, Algeria, French West Africa, and others. Today,
after independence, many of these countries continue to use the franc
as their standard denomination.
The National Constituent
Assembly during the French Revolution issued a paper currency in 1790
known as Assignats, based on the value of confiscated church
properties. Assignats were used successfully to retire a significant
portion of the public debt as they were accepted as legal tender by
domestic and international creditors. Lack of control over the amount
to be printed soon pushed the face value of the assignats to exceed
the market value of confiscated church properties, causing
hyperinflation by 1792. Napoleon I reintroduced the franc to replace
assignats in 1803 to the new currency, by which time assignats had
become worthless. On December 31, 1998, transitioning to the European
Monetary Union, the value of the French franc was locked to the euro
at 1 euro to 6.55957 francs.
Napoleon I, in reviving the
franc, made the mistake of allowing Britain to continue to overvalue
gold against silver monetarily, an
error of monetary policy that eventually cost France her financial
preeminence. This
was despite Napoleon's Continental System, declared on November 21,
1806, by the Berlin Decrees, to blockade British trade with the
continent so as to deny Britain the ability to fund the wars waged
against France by British allies on the continent. The French effort
to enforce the Continental System was a key reason for the Peninsular
War, which drove Spain into alliance with Britain despite French
liberation of Spain from the unpopular reign of Charles IV. It was
also a key factor behind Napoleon's disastrous invasion of Russia.
British financial prowess played a significant role in her
ability to form the Sixth Coalition with Austria, Russia, Sweden and
the Germanic states to defeat Napoleon I in the Battle of Nations at
Leipzig in 1814 and again to support Austria to defeat Napoleon III
in the Franco-Prussian War in 1870. British monetary hegemony could
have been prevented by France if only Napoleon had matched the
monetary silver-gold ratio of 15.5 to 1 to stop the flow of gold into
Britain.
The
Spanish monetary regime
Spanish
dollars, know popularly as Pieces of Eight,
were silver coins minted for use in the Spanish Empire after a
Spanish currency reform in 1497. The coin was legal tender in the US
until congress discontinued the practice in 1857 and was the first
world currency - accepted in Europe, the Americas and Asia in the
late 18th century. Many currencies in use today, such as the US and
Canadian dollars, and most Latin American currencies, the Chinese
yuan, the Japanese yen and the Phillipine peso, were initially based
on the Spanish dollar and 8-reales coins. Spain's adoption of the
peseta and her joining the Latin Monetary Union meant the effective
end for the last vestiges of the Spanish dollar in Spain itself.
The Austrian
monetary regime
Austria
introduced the
Guldengroschen in
1486, a large silver specie coin with high purity that eventually
spread throughout the rest of Europe.
Wilhelm von Schr๖der
(1640-1688) advocated a monetary strategy to stimulate the Austrian
economy in his 1886 book Furstliche
Schatz- und Rentkammer, nebst einem notwendigen Unterrichte zum
Goldmachen (The Royal
Treasury and How to Make Money), calling for the introduction of
paper banknotes to provide the sovereign with "an unlimited and
perpetual source of gold and finance."
It is one of the
three major works of Germanic cameralism, in the company of
Politische Discurs
of 1668 by Johan Joachim Becher
(1635-1682) and Philipp von Hoernigk's Oesterreich
uber alles of 1684.
Cameralism is a Germanic version of mercantilism particularly
concerned with the political and economic phenomena of the
territorial states. Its aim was an efficient and just administration,
via a fiscal policy and similar financial measures designed to fill
the state's treasury, marked by an active and paternalizing
interference in society. Like the other mercantilist writers, the
cameralists have been accused of the error of confusing money and
wealth. Money is not wealth, only a measuring devise of wealth. One
can have a lot of money and be poor, a state known as hyperinflation.
Schroder held that "it is not the import and export of money,
but the equilibrium of the different trades which causes the wealth
or poverty of a country." He was wrong, which explained why
Austria was left behind by a rising Britain.
In fact,
Schroder was among the first of the German mercantilists who
distinctly supported the balance-of-trade theory. He supported free
trade, which he regarded as "the principal and the best means
whereby a country may become rich". Keynes praised Schroder for
his arguments against other mercantilists who advocated the
accumulation of state treasury as a means for the enhancing of the
power of the state. Schroder however "employed the usual
mercantilist arguments in drawing a lurid picture of how the
circulation in the country would be robbed of all its money through a
greatly increasing state treasury" (Keynes General
Theory, p344).
Schroder was influenced by the view of Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) on
social contract and civil society, the theories of William Petty
(1623-1687) on fiscal contributions, national wealth, money supply,
circulation and velocity, value, interest rate, international trade,
government investment and above all, the importance of full
employment. He was also influenced by the scientific views of British
chemist Robert Boyle (1627-1691) as well as the views of Thomas Mun
(1571-1642) on the merits of mercantilist colonialism in empire
building.
Unfortunately, Austria
did not implement Schroder's proposal. She
resorted instead to the conventional path of raising taxes and to
borrowing. During the regency of Charles VI (1711-1740), Austria
borrowed from her allies and sold sovereign debt to anyone who would
buy it.
The mercantilist reforms towards statist activism in
economic policies in the first half of the 18th century required the
standardization of currency against increasing defacement of coinage.
Empress Maria Theresa (1740-1780) introduced a new bi-metal coinage
standard that all German lands joined except Prussia. The Austrian
coinage standard was extended to become Convention Standard, and
remained in effect for more than a century to facilitate
international payments until 1858. The Austrian standard, by fixing
the monetary ration of silver/gold at 15/1, contributed to the flow
of gold to Britain where the ratio was 15.5/1.
The pretext
for the War of the Austrian Succession (1740-1748) was the
eligibility of Maria Teresa of Austria to succeed to the Habsburg
throne, as Salic law precluded royal inheritance by a woman.
Continuous war costs presented Austria with a persistent financial
problem. Foreign credit bridged budget deficits temporarily but
interest costs exacerbated the state's unsustainable financial
deterioration. During the regency of Charles VI, the national debt
ballooned by two-thirds to a total of over 54 million Austrian
gulden.
The high premium on silver in the wake of the gold
rushes in California and Australia triggered heavy outflows of
European silver coins to the Americas and to East Asia, particularly
China, while gold flowed into Britain. For many European countries,
the switch to a gold standard appeared attractive because it provided
borrowers of gold-back currency loans with lower interest rates.
To
finance war debts, Maria
Theresa in 1762 issued paper money for the first time in Austrian
history while
keeping the coinage standard. Wiener-Stadt-Banco, a bank that had
handled the national debt, was selected as the issuer of paper notes.
State revenue was reserved as backing for 12 million gulden worth of
non-interest-bearing bank notes, known as Banco-Zettel, declared as
legal tender for any type of payment. Banco-Zettel worth 200 gulden
or more were also exchangeable for imperial bonds at 5% interest.
However, the banknotes were not tied to the coinage standard.
The notes had a slight premium over coins at the beginning, but in
later years they fell in value relative to the coins until their
value was fixed in 1811 at one fifth of their face value in coins.
That year, the Priviligirte
Vereinigte Einl๖sungs
und Tilgungs Deputation (Privileged
United Redemption and Repayment Deputation) began issuing paper money
valued at par with the coinage, followed by the "Austrian
National Note Bank" in 1816 and the "Privileged Austrian
National Bank" between 1825 and 1863.
In essence,
Austria
moved away from specie money to adopt a regime of sovereign credit
with a fiat currency based on the State Theory of Money, or
Chartalism, later spelled out by Georg Friedrich Knapp (1842-1926) in
his 1918 book The
State Theory of Money.
While
there was no obligation to accept Banco-Zettel as legal tender
outside of Austria, there was no doubt that they would be redeemed
for silver coin on presentation, so that the Banco-Zettel at times
even commanded a premium of 1% to 2.5% on silver coins. Banco-Zettel
were issued again in 1771 and 1785.
After the wars against
the Ottoman Empire in 1788 and Revolutionary France in 1792, Austria
was left in dire financial difficulties. Public expenditure, which
had come to approximately 90 million gulden before the Ottoman war,
skyrocketed to 572 million gulden in 1798. Emperor Francis II
(1792-1835) opted to print more paper money. As the volume of paper
money mushroomed, gold and silver coins grew scarce, following
Gresham's Law of bad money driving out good.
Inflation
resulting from the quantity theory of money reached dangerous highs
between 1800 and 1806, after which more paper money was repeatedly
issued. The reparation payments imposed on Austria by the Peace of
Schonbrunn of 1809 fueled inflation further. In 1810, the volume of
Banco-Zettel in circulation exceeded 1 billion gulden. In December
1810, the government imposed a moratorium on all payment obligations
in coin. Just three months later, on February 20, 1811, Austria had
to declare national bankruptcy. The Banco-Zettel and the Banco-Zettel
divisional coins were to be exchanged for exchange coupons also
referred to as "Vienna currency" at a rate of one coupon to
five Banco-Settel notes.
The state coffers were severely
strained by wars and the Congress of Vienna in 1814-15, making it
necessary to issue paper money once again soon after the Banco-Zettel
had been exchanged for Vienna currency. The volume of Vienna currency
exchange coupons made it necessary to call the new paper money issues
"anticipation coupons" (Antizipationsscheine),
as they were covered by tax revenue not yet collected.
The
consequence of war
Inflation
was an inevitable consequence of war. The public lost 90% of their
cash wealth from paper currency devaluation, the redistribution of
incomes, the outflow of assets abroad, and the monetary
reconstruction which followed.
In May 1815, Austria began to
put her monetary system back on a sounder footing. The Privilegirte
Oesterreichische National-Bank was founded June 1, 1816, modeled on
the French and English national banks, as an independent stock
company vested with the right to issue banknotes to stabilize the
monetary system, to finance the chronic budget deficit and to manage
the expansion of the money supply. By 1847, the Vienna currency
exchange coupons had been almost wholly exchanged for Convention
coins, and after a 25-year pause, it became possible to mint gold and
silver coins again.
Austria, however, decided to keep its
silver currency and sought to join the
German Zollverein,
a customs union established
in 1834 among the
majority of the states of the German Confederation during the
Industrial Revolution to remove
internal customs barriers, although upholding a protectionist tariff
system with foreign trade partners.
The main ideological contributor behind the customs union was
Friedrich List, an advocate of economic nationalism. The Zollverein
had excluded Austria because of its highly protected industry. The
exclusion exacerbated the Austro-Prussian rivalry for dominance in
central Europe during the late 19th century.
The member
states of the Zollverein had already embarked on a unification of
currency systems with the Agreement of Munich in 1837. Twenty years
later, Austria relinquished its Convention monetary standard in the
Vienna Monetary Agreement of 1857 and adjusted the Austrian gulden to
the
North German thaler,
a silver coin used throughout Europe for almost four hundred years.
One and a half Austrian gulden were equal to a Convention thaler. The
coin weight unit was the "pound" of 500 grams, with 30
Convention thalers (45 Austrian gulden) being struck from one pound
of fine silver. Under the decimal system that was obligatory for the
Zollverein currency, the Austrian gulden was subdivided into 100
kreuzer.
The
Zollverein was effectively ended in 1866 with
outbreak of the Austro-Prussian War. A new organization with the same
name was formed in 1867 when peace was restored.
After
Prussia defeated Austria at the Battle of K๖niggrไtz
in 1866, Austria pulled out of the Zollverein and in 1867 oriented
its coinage on the bimetallic standard of the Latin Monetary Union
(LMU) founded by France, Belgium, Switzerland and Italy in 1865. In a
nod to the LMU, Austria minted gold coins of a value of eight and
four gulden, which were the equivalent of 20 and 10 francs. However,
Austria never actually joined the LMU, a step it had planned for
1870, because its monetary system remained in disarray.
Monetary
impacts of the 1848 revolutions
After
the successful consolidation of the monetary system of Austria, the
revolutions of 1848 represented a renewed disruption. The money
supply shot up. In May, the redemption of banknotes in silver was
suspended, making paper money legal tender, that is, acceptance of
paper money was declared a legal obligation (it was declared fiat, or
fiduciary, money).
Whereas the state resorted to issuing
banknotes to cover the cost of quelling the revolution and of the
wars with Hungary and Italy, the municipalities and citizens issued
notgeld
(emergency
money) to cope
with the lack of change. Tokens
of brass, lead, tin, copper and even glass, leather,
wood and cardboard were
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CHINA'S
DOLLAR MILLSTONE, Part 3
History
of monetary imperialism
By
Henry C K Liu
circulated.
By prohibiting the acceptance of such privately issued token coinages
and by issuing sufficient amounts of official divisional coins, the
imperial treasurer managed to regain control of the monetary system
before the end of 1848.
Latin
Monetary Union
The
US Civil War (1861-65) led to demonetization of silver in the US and
the rise of the Republican Party of big finance. After blocking the
Silver Republicans from control of the party, the Grand Old Party
established the gold standard and became closely linked to British
banking interests and shifted the preserved union further from its
founding focus of popular democracy.
As the US Civil War
began to exercise upward pressure on the
market price of silver,
Second Empire France (1852-70) under Napoleon III launched a broad
initiative to create monetary union in Europe based on standardized
silver coinage. It came to be called the Latin Monetary Union (LMU),
a forerunner of today's euro, which was established by the 1992
Maastricht Treaty on European Economic and Monetary Union. The LMU
came into being in 1865 between France, Italy, Belgium and
Switzerland, setting the silver/gold monetary ratio at 15.5/1. To
conform to union standard, the alloy/silver content in the French
franc was increased from 1/10 to 1/6. Thereafter silver and gold
coins of LMU member countries were accepted as legal tender in the
whole union but token coins were legal only within countries of
origin. Greece joined the LMU in 1868, but Scandinavian countries
withdrew in 1870 as a result of the Franco-Prussian War. Other
countries fixed their coinage to LMU standard without formal
membership.
By 1873, the relatively high market value of
silver in relation to gold in Europe engineered by Britain's
overvalue of the monetary value of gold in England caused a wave of
conversion from silver to gold at the LMU monetary rate of 15.5
ounces of silver to one of gold for easy profit by shipping the gold
to England for silver to return to Europe to buy more gold to ship to
England. In 1873, 154 million francs were exchanged for gold for
export to England, over five times the amount exchanged in the
previous year.
Fearing that a massive influx of silver
coinage to Europe coupled with a massive outflow of gold to Britain
would destroy bimetallism, the LMU member nations agreed in Paris on
January 30, 1874, to limit the free conversion of silver temporarily.
By 1878, with no stabilization in the commercial price of
silver in sight, minting of silver coinage was suspended entirely.
From 1873 onwards, the LMU was on a de facto gold standard under
British monetary pressure. The LMU was finally disbanded in 1927
since the gold standard had made it superfluous. Two years later, the
gold standard caused the crash of 1929 and brought on the Great
Depression and eventually World War l. Switzerland, a neutral nation
still with honest banking, continued to mint Swiss silver and gold
coins set to the LMU bimetal standard until 1967.
The
silver/gold bimetal standard adopted by the LMU at first required
little government intervention in foreign exchange markets beyond
setting commonly agreed upon monetary standards among member states.
This created a direct conflict with British strategy to demonetize
silver through the overvaluing of the monetary ratio of gold to
silver. After enough gold had flowed into England, she began, as
planned, to use the gold standard to finance the expansion of the
British Empire by expanding pound sterling money supply without
destabilizing international exchange rates. The LMU was standing in
the way of this strategy by keeping bimetallism operating.
England
needed to destroy the LMU by causing the commercial price of silver
in Europe to rise against gold and above the monetary silver/gold
ratio set by the LMU bimetal regime, making seignoriage costly to LMU
member governments.
French Second Empire
The French
economy modernized during the Second Empire (1852-70) under Napoleon
III (1808-73), the bourgeois emperor who fashioned himself as a
reformer and social engineer. The industrialization of France during
this period was supported at first by both big business and workers.
Yet Napoleon III mongered fear of social radicalism where his heroic
uncle promised the vision of a new world order. Architecturally, he
resurrected the baroque style of the counter-reformation and infested
it with the cultural obesity of vulgarity and ostentatious
exhibitionism of the Second Empire. Bonapartism, militarism,
clericalism, conservatism and liberalism were incorporated
superficially in the new bourgeois political culture. Napoleon III
faced a delicate balancing act between the legitimacy conferred by
parliamentary liberalism and the need to maintain a police state to
control opposition. Napoleon III's populist authoritarian style of
empty substance, both political and esthetical, would since be
imitated by every subsequent pint-size dictator.
Some of the
supporters of the Second Empire were Saint-Simonians who described
Napoleon III as the "socialist emperor". Saint-Simonians
founded a new type of banking institution, in the form of Credit
Mobilier, which sold stock to the public then used the money raised
to invest in industrial enterprises in France. This sparked a period
of rapid economic development and became the model for investment
banking in modern times. The discovery of gold in California in 1849
and in Australia soon afterwards greatly increased money supply in
Europe, which fitted in with the rise of new credit institutions. The
new investment banks built large-scale projects such as the Suez
Canal at first through state-owned enterprises. With the appearance
of private banking, large corporations followed to mobilize capital
to build rail roads, the new transportation system that allowed
development of landed interior, breaking the trade monopoly of
coastal cities.
In 1863, a new law of limited liability was
proclaimed by which a stockholder would risk only the par value of
his stock regardless of the scale of insolvency and outstanding debt
carried by the company. The public, even those with no skill in
business and finance, could now invest in enterprises that could
operate at a scale beyond what individual shareowners could otherwise
do separately. Financiers who were skilled in handling money, credit
and securities assumed a new prominence in society. Some became super
rich to rival dukes and princes of the feudal age. Industrial growth
was accompanied by a decline in deep-rooted morals. The purpose of
life transformed into a single-minded quest for easy money through
speculation.
French capital went overseas to develop
colonies. In the US, it took the form of Credit Mobilier of America,
the builder of the Union Pacific Railroad, which was later engulfed
in a major scandal involving the bribing of members of congress with
company stocks. The investment company charge $94 million for
construction that cost less than $50 million to pay dividends of
348%, a hundred times more than convention. Four merchants with names
that history would immortalize: Leland Stanford (Stanford
University), Collins P Huntington, Charles Crocker (Crocker National
Bank) and Mark Hopkins (Mark Hopkins Hotel in San Francisco) were
part of Credit Mobilier of America.
Conditions in the second
half of the 19th century were favorable for industrial expansion due
to a confluence of factors. Technology took a big leap forward from a
sharp increase of the money supply to turn an eruption of scientific
discoveries into new industrial enterprises. The gold rush in
California, and later Australia, increased the global money supply
operating under the gold standard. The steady rise of prices caused
by the increase of the money supply encouraged the forming of joint
stock companies that provided respectable returns and prospered from
domestic and overseas investments.
In France, the mileage of
railways increased from 3,000 to 16,000 kilometers during the 1850s,
and this growth of a new form of land transportation allowed inland
mines and factories to operate at higher rates of productivity,
benefiting continental powers, while new iron steamships fueled by
coal replaced wooden sail ships. Between 1859 and 1869, a French
joint stock company with the government as the major share owner
built the Suez Canal, opening a new chapter in global transportation
and trade with Asia.
French capitalism and imperialism
The
connection of global finance with imperialistic expansion made
Britain into a superpower even before the railway age because of the
long coastline of the island nation. Following Britain's example,
France under Napoleon III adopted free trade in 1860 and took steps
to establish an empire in Indochina.
In 1680, the French East
India Company, which had been chartered by Louis XIV in 1664 to
compete with its British and Dutch counterparts, opened a trading
post in Pho Hien. In 1858, Napoleon III launched a punitive naval
expedition against the Vietnam kingdom with the pretext of punishing
Buddhist Vietnamese for their resistance to French Catholic
missionaries and forced the Vietnam king to accept a French presence
in the country. An important factor in his decision was the belief
that France risked becoming a second-rate power by not expanding its
influence in East Asia.
Also, the idea that France had a
civilizing mission spreading beyond Europe was in the French psyche.
This eventually led to a full-out invasion in 1861. By 1862, victory
in war created the French Empire in Indochina with a federation of
four protectorates (Tonkin, Annam, Cambodia and Laos) and one
directly-ruled colony (Cochin-China), with Nanoi as capital. Three
ports were opened exclusively to French trade, with free passage of
French warships up river, freedom of action for French missionaries.
France received a large war indemnity.
In China, France took
part in the Second Opium War in support of Britain, and in 1860
French troops entered Peking alongside British troops. China was
forced to concede more trading rights, allow freedom of navigation of
the Yangtze River, permit Christian missionaries to operate on
Chinese soil, and give France and Britain huge war indemnities. This,
combined with the intervention in Vietnam, set the stage for further
French influence in China leading up to a sphere of influence over
parts of southern China.
In 1866, French naval troops
launched a failed attack on Korea in response to the execution of
French missionaries, which resulted in the eclipse of French
influence in the region. In 1867, a French military mission to Japan
was sent, which played a key role in modernizing the troops of the
Shogun Tokugawa Yoshinobu, and even participated on his side against
Imperial troops during the Boshin war.
In Europe, the
Franco-Prussian War (1870-71) broke out over the issue of a German
Hohenzollern prince for the vacant Spanish throne, a vestige of the
Holly Roman Empire, following the deposition of Isabella II in 1868
against a background of historic hostility dating back to the defeat
of Napoleon I at Waterloo by a British-Prussian coalition. The war
gave Britain an opening to force the demonetization of silver in
Europe via its support of Prussia, whose Crown Prince was married to
a princess daughter of Queen Victoria. The liberal democratic attempt
to unify Germany had failed along with the 1848 democratic
revolutions. Prussian victory over France of Napoleon III paved the
way for German unification on January 23, 1871 through conservative
politics of blood and iron engineered by Otto von Bismarck, the
welfare statesman who gladly paid the price of demonetizing silver to
buy British acquiescence. A unified Germany would rise to challenge
British hegemony, resulting in World War l in 1914.
The
Paris Commune of 1871
The Second Empire political culture was
a mixed bag of Bonapartism, adventurism,
militarism, expansionism, colonialism, clericalism, conservatism and
liberalism, particularly in trade and finance. It could only be
sustained by victory in foreign wars. The Franco-Prussian War
was France's response to a rising German challenge against French
hegemony in continental Europe. The fate of the Second Empire
depended on a continuing train of victories in foreign war, which was
derailed by the better-led Prussian army.
On September 4,
1870, two days after Napoleon III surrendered to the Prussian army at
the disastrous Battle of Sedan and allowed himself to be taken
prisoner, the French emperor was deposed by republican forces in
Paris. The end to the Second Empire was proclaimed along with the
creation of the Third Republic of France headed by Louis-Adolphe
Thiers.
On March 3, one month after the signing of the
armistice with Germany by the new Third Republic, and 70 days before
the official end to the war, German troops marched into a Paris of
empty streets and shuttered windows, shut down in silent protest by
the indignant people of Paris. The Parisians elected a municipal
council - the Paris Commune - consisting of moderate republicans,
Proudhon anarchists, Blanqui putschists and Marxist worker
association members.
On March 18, to regain control of Paris
from Communards, Thiers attempted to seize the cannons of the
National Guard, an armed militia of some 260 battalions organized
earlier by the fallen government of the Second Empire to help defend
Paris against the Prussian siege in the last days of the disastrous
Franco-Prussian War, and to use them against the Communards.
But
the attempt was foiled by the Women of Montmartre who appealed to
government soldiers, many of whom refused to fire on the people of
Paris and turned their muskets against Third Republic government
forces in a gesture of solidarity with the Commune. Within hours
Paris was in a state of insurrection, and the Mairies of many
arrondisements in the capital came under the control of the National
Guard. During these feverish hours, an angry mob seized two
commanding government generals, one of whom having been involved in
trying to capture the cannons against the people, and summarily
executed them against the wall of a garden in Montmartre. The firing
squad included members of the National Guard as well as disgruntled
government troops.
Thiers and his provincial government fled
to Versailles to join the National Assembly under a majority of
Monarchists from previous elections. The Central Committee of the
National Guard occupied the abandoned Hotel de Ville and announced
preparations for new municipal elections. On March 26, the left
coalition gained enough votes to establish a socialist-oriented
"Commune" - which lasted until May 28. On March 28, the
Commune installed itself at the Hotel de Ville, and for the next two
months ran Paris to implement a program of social reform while
fending off a growing siege from the Versaillais, who advanced closer
and closer in a singularly brutal war fought on the western edges of
the capital.
During its short reign, the Paris Commune
proclaimed the separation of church and state and the nationalization
of church property. On April 8, 1871, it removed all representations
of religion from the schools of Paris. The Communards tried to
introduce a series of radical social measures, such as separation of
church and state, establishing a lay education system, opening
professional education for women, provision of pensions to unmarried
women workers, and abolition of night-work for bakers.
On
April 11, government troops sent by Thiers began a new siege of
Paris. Intense fighting continued into May. After the official end to
the war with Prussia on May 10, government troops, free from
confronting a victorious enemy that their former emperor had
surrendered to, broke through the people's defense and entered Paris
on May 21, and for eight days they overwhelmed Communard resistance
street by street. This period was known in history as la semaine
sanglante - "the bloody week". In an orgy of reprisals,
up to 20,000 workers and peasants, including children, were killed by
a French army under the direction of its most senior generals that
had not shown similar elan against foreign enemy soldiers in a
foreign war.
Many have since viewed the Paris Commune as a
monument of struggle for liberation that provided a symbolic model
for a political system based on grass-root participatory democracy.
Several Chinese revolutionaries, such as Zhou Enlai and Deng
Xiaoping, as young students in France in 1920 and inspired by the
Paris Commune, formed the nucleus of what later became the Communist
Party of China.
The collapse of the Paris Commune was another
disappointment on top of the failed revolutions of 1848 for
revolutionaries worldwide, including Marx and Engels. Reactionary
hostility to revolution helped elect to the new National Assembly
delegates close to the church and in favor of restoring the monarchy,
and in 1873 a monarchist majority forced Thiers to resign. However,
with monarchists weakened by internal factional division, moderate
Republicans won enough support in France's parliament to frustrate
monarchist aims, and the Third French Republic was born in 1879 to
survive until 1940.
Marx and class struggle
After
the failures of the democratic revolutions of 1848, socialist
movements went into abeyance for two decades, until Karl Marx
published his Das Kapital in 1867 (first English translation
was in 1887, four years after his death, with Volume II and III, ed.
by Engels 1884-94, English translation 1907-9). The manuscript for
the fourth volume was edited by Karl Kautsky and published in German
as Theroien uber den Mehrwert (three parts, 1905-10). The full
English translation of the first part, A History of Economic
Theories, was not published until 1952. Selected translations
were published as Theories of Surplus Value in 1951. Yet the
spirit of 1848 echoed around the world among the oppressed.
Marx
rejected utopian socialism and introduced scientific socialism. Louis
Blanc (1811-82), in his Organization du Travail, published
1840, from which sprung the famous "from each according to his
ability, to each according to his needs", advocated workers
cooperatives supported by the state, provided a link between utopian
and scientific socialism. Breaking with the tradition of natural
rights as a basis for reform, Marx invoked "inevitable"
laws of historical premises. Through dialectic materialism, which
presumes the primacy of economic determinants in history, the premise
of class struggle holds that a specific class can rule only as long
as it represents the productive forces of society, and from this
historical process, a classless society would eventually emerge.
Class struggle has nothing to do with promoting hatred
between classes, as capitalist propaganda fear-mongering would have
the world believe. Class struggle leads to the demise of capitalism
out of a scientific historical process by the nature of economic
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CHINA'S
DOLLAR MILLSTONE, Part 3
History
of monetary imperialism
By
Henry C K Liu
concepts such as the labor theory of value and
the idea of surplus value. These concepts argue that the
value of a commodity is determined by the amount of labor required
for its manufacture,
not
by its exchange value in a market manipulated by capitalists.
The value of the commodities meant for purchase by worker
wages is set higher than the value of the commodities workers produce
with their labor. The difference, called surplus value, is the profit
for capitalists who own the capital. When surplus value becomes
excessive, overcapacity and insufficient demand will result because
workers who produce the products cannot afford to buy them with their
low wages. Globalization of trade under dollar hegemony in the 21st
century via cross-border wage arbitrage to
deny the labor theory of
value will lead to the collapse of neo-liberal free-market
capitalism. It is a scientific phenomenon, unrelated to ideology or
morality.
As productivity improves through industrialization,
the fruits of production are increasingly kept from the workers who
contribute most to its production, through the exploitation of labor
by capital via the capitalistic structure in the economy. The
workings of this artificial structure are presented as economic laws
of the market. If and when these exploitative features of market
economy are removed, capitalism will be replaced by socialism as
feudalism, having lost its economic function, had once been replaced
by capitalism.
It is when the capitalist class employs armed
suppression of this evolutionary development that revolution by the
working class is made necessary. Socialist revolutionaries seek to
destroy only the political structure that insists on foiling the
organic evolutionary process from capitalism toward socialism.
Capitalism by itself has already exhausted its socio-economic
function in history and its demise needs no further coaxing.
The
collapse of the Paris Commune of 1871, suppressed with bloody
ferocity by the French bourgeoisie, consolidated a reactionary
backlash that dissipated the First International, an international
socialist organization founded in 1864 and which aimed at uniting a
variety of different progressive political groups and trade union
organizations that were based on advancing the cause of the working
class through the theory of class struggle. Marx praised the Paris
Commune and introduced the concept of the dictatorship of the
proletariat as a defensive countermeasure against anticipated
capitalist reactionary barbarism.
By 1880, a popular movement
to restore protective tariffs against British commercial dominance
emerged, but tariffs were impediments rather than effective barriers,
which were finally brought on by the start of World War 1 in 1914. As
with the US today, Britain, the finance hegemon in the 19th century,
and despite the export of manufactured goods of the industrial
revolution, consumed more goods from abroad than it sent out, with
exports increasing eightfold while imports increased by 10-fold
between 1800 and 1900. In the decades before 1914, Britain had an
annual import surplus of more than $750 million on average. She was
able to do this because of pound sterling hegemony as the US is able
to do the same today because of dollar hegemony.
What many
trade economists fail to understand is that a trade surplus is not a
plus for an economy when trade is denominated in a foreign currency
even if that currency is backed by gold. When trade is denominated in
a fiat paper currency backed by military power, a trade deficit by
that currency-issuing country is pure monetary imperialism against
its trade surplus partners. For the monetary hegemon, such as the US
after the Cold War, factor income from overseas investment more than
out weighs the loss of domestic factor income from wages.
Council
of Economic Advisers chairman Martin Feldstein, a highly respected
conservative economist from Harvard with a reputation for
intellectual honesty, was not only among the first to understand the
obscure relationship between trade deficits and the reserve currency
for trade. He was also the first to propose it as US national policy.
Feldstein pointed out the benefits of a strong dollar in
president Ronald Reagan's first term, arguing that the loss suffered
by US manufacturing for export was a fair cost for national financial
strength derived from a strong currency that had the advantage of
being the reserve currency for trade. But such sophisticated views
were not music to the ears of the uninformed chauvinistic Reagan
White House, nor the Treasury under Donald Reagan, former head of
Merrill Lynch, whose roster of clients included all major
manufacturing giants. These had yet to catch on to the escape valve
of outsourcing labor-intensive manufacturing to low-wage countries
and to recognize that it was more profitable to import low
price-goods from overseas than to export non-competitive over-priced
products overseas.
Feldstein, given the brush-off by a White
House run by astrology, went back to Harvard to continue his quest
for truth in theoretical global geo-economics after serving two years
in the Reagan White House, where voodoo economics reigned.
Feldstein went on to train many influential economists who
later would hold key positions in government, including Larry
Summers, Treasury secretary under president Bill Clinton and later a
failed president of Harvard University; Lawrence Lindsey, dismissed
presidential economic advisor to President George W Bush; and Gregory
Mankiew, chairman of the Bush White House Council of Economic
Advisers, who sparked an uproar by saying, in the same intellectual
tradition: "Outsourcing is a growing phenomenon, but it's
something that we should realize is probably a plus for the [US]
economy in the long run." Whether that is true depends of course
on which part of the US economy one is housed.
The
classical gold standard era
The gold standard was an
international standard that determined the value of a country's
currency in terms of other currencies through the monetary value of
gold as expressed in each currency. Because adherents to the gold
standard maintained a fixed price for gold, rates of exchange between
currencies tied to gold were necessarily fixed. For example, the
United States fixed the price of gold at $20.67 per ounce from 1834
until 1933; Britain fixed the price at 3 pounds 17 shillings and 10.5
pence per ounce until World War l and restored it in 1925. The
exchange rate between dollars and pounds - the "par exchange
rate" - necessarily came to $4.867 per pound sterling during
these periods.
Other major trading countries joined the gold
standard in the 1870s. The period from 1880 to 1914 is known in
monetary history as the classical gold standard era. During that
time, a majority of trading nations adhered in varying degrees to the
gold standard. It was also a period of unprecedented economic growth,
with relatively free trade in goods, labor and capital without being
hampered by government or market exchange-rate manipulation.
Between 1880 and 1914, the period when the United States was
on the gold standard, inflation averaged only 0.1% per year. This was
because the physical supply of gold was in sync with the rate of
economic expansion, and not because of the endogenous effect of the
gold standard. Nevertheless, the demonetization of silver gradually
destroyed the myth that the gold standard could keep the value of
money stable without the anchor of bimetallism.
Also, stable
currency was generally associated with the gold standard partly
because international trade during the classical gold standard era
was a relatively small portion of all national economies. Trade for
Britain was largely an intra-empire affair dominated by the pound
sterling. Today, for nations that fall into the trap of excessively
high foreign trade dependency, generally viewed as above 35% of GDP
in total two-way trade, exchange rate issues related to a reserve
currency denominated in foreign fiat currency, such as the dollar,
can and will do great damage to their national economies in cyclical
financial crises.
Gold standard restoration problems
As
noted before, the commercial value ratio between silver and gold was
61.6/1 on August 25, 2008 with the market price for silver at $13.45
and that of gold at $829. The commercial value of gold was four times
higher than the monetary value of gold set by bimetallism. A return
to the historical gold standard now would drive any government
bankrupt unless gold was set at a monetary value higher than its
highest recorded commercial value, which is about $1,000 so far.
The US Treasury now owns 261 million ounces of gold. At its
peak in December 1941 it owned 650 million ounces. As of August 30,
2008, the US national debt was $9.65 trillion. The price of gold
required to pay back the national debt with gold held by the US would
have to be US$36,983 per ounce. The rise in the price of gold
necessary to keep up with the rise in US national debt at current
rate is US$8.15 per ounce per day. There is no free market for gold.
The price of gold is the most manipulated item in government
intervention of the market. When there is no free market for gold,
there is no free market for anything else. Free markets have never
existed in civilization for that matter. Free market fundamentalism
is merely a fantasy.
To restore the gold standard, the gold
price would have to increase constantly even it there is no inflation
because the rate of physical production of new gold is far below the
accepted rate of economic expansion in modern time. The monetary
inelasticity of gold is the strongest obstacle to a restoration of
the gold standard.
World War I and the decline of
Britain
Prior to World War I, Britain's economy was the
world's strongest, controlling 40% of the world's investments and 80%
of world trade, mostly due to its vast network of colonies. However,
by the end of the war, Britain owed 850 million pounds sterling,
mostly to the United States, with interest payment taking up 40% of
the government's budget. Attempting to protect her financial
advantage against rising German challenge was a fundamental cause of
the war.
Spoiled
by pound sterling hegemony that had reduced industrial productivity
in the British Isles in favor of financial manipulation, having to
reply heavily on exploiting the wealth of her colonies, Britain fell
into debtor-nation status from war spending,
allowing the US to become the world's strong financial power. Even
though the British Isles was also exempted from war destruction in
World War I, British productivity suffered from the disruption of her
network of far-flung colonies.
The Federal Reserve under
Benjamin Strong after World War I tried to help Britain maintain the
gold standard as a way to rebuilt Europe's war-torn economy under
British leadership, a move that contributed significantly to the 1929
crash on Wall Street.
The export of capital meant that an
older and wealthier country, instead of using its entire national
income to raise the standard of living of its own people by raising
wages and investing in better houses and more efficient factories,
diverted an increasing large portion of the national income for
overseas investment to increase trade.
Banks of rich
countries lend money to banks of less-developed countries not to
improve the living standard of the borrowing countries, which in turn
lend money to support foreign trade in those countries. Capital
then comes from profit from keeping both domestic and foreign wages
low, creating a structural widening of income and wealth disparity
both among nations and within nations. Workers of the world
over forego better income to support capitalist[s]
of the world.
In the US, economic expansion from the 1850s on
was largely finance by French capital and by British capital after
the fall of Napoleon III.
By 1914, Britain controlled $30
billion in foreign investment, about one quarter of her national
wealth. France controlled $8.7 billion, about one sixth of her
national wealth, and Germany controlled $6 billion of overseas
investment, [which was rising] at a
faster rising pace than the two leaders. It was this German threat to
British/French overseas investment supremacy that led to World War 1,
by the end of which Britain lost about one quarter of her overseas
investment, France about one third and Germany the entire amount, all
to the US.
Before 1914, world trade was
denominated in currencies that adhered to the gold standard anchored
by the pound sterling, with London as the preeminent financial
center. Trade surpluses and deficits at fixed exchange rates caused
an inflow and outflow of gold across national borders. Exchange rates
could not be manipulated by governments or through market forces to
correct imbalance of payments.
After World War I, with a
massive gold drain from the British Treasury, Britain was forced to
replace the gold standard with a new "gold exchange standard",
basing the pound sterling on the gold-back dollar instead of directly
on gold held by Britain. The US, being
the world's largest creditor nation as a result of war finance, saw
her central bank becoming the world's lender of last resort.
Historical data showed that when New York Federal Reserve
president Benjamin Strong leaned on the regional Feds to ease the
discount rate on an already overheated economy in 1927, the Fed lost
its last window of opportunity to prevent the 1929 crash. Some
historians claimed that Strong did so to fulfill his internationalist
vision at the risk of endangering the US national interest.
While
British restoration of the gold standard did not occur officially
until April 1925, the decision to re-join the gold standard had
effectively been taken some seven years earlier. In the final months
of the World War I in 1918, the UK Treasury and the Ministry for
Reconstruction set up the Cunliffe Committee, headed by Lord
Cunliffe, a former Governor of Bank of England. Committee members
included Cambridge neoclassical economist Arthur Cecil Pigou
(1877-1959), a star student of Alfred Marshall (1824-1924) and
intellectual heir to Marshallian orthodoxy of supply/demand and
marginal utility. The committee was to consider the problems of
currency and foreign exchange during the reconstruction and "report
upon the steps required to bring about the restoration of normal
conditions in due course". It was the forerunner of the
post-World War II Bretton Woods Conference.
The Cunliffe
interim report in August 1918 concluded that sterling should re-join
the pre-war parity of 3 pounds 17 shillings and 10.5 pence per ounce
of gold, equivalent to $4.86 at $20.67 per ounce of gold, saying "it
is imperative that the conditions necessary to the maintenance of an
effective gold standard should be restored without delay".
But
before the gold standard restoration decision was implemented,
wartime decontrols and pent-up post-war demand released a happy boom
in England and the US, which history referred to as the Roaring
Twenties. The British trade deficit widened to cause the exchange
value of sterling to fall substantially. Fiscal policy was then
tightened and interest rates were raised by the Bank of England to
slow demand and support the pound sterling, turning the boom into the
1921 slump in England, creating the steepest recorded recession in
British economic history to that date, as unemployment climbed from
1.4% to 16.7% within a year and wholesale prices fell sharply with
deflation.
Britain, a debtor nation by then, was in no
position to go along with the US on a liquidity joy ride.
The
deflationary policy stance of the Bank of England brought British
prices down towards US levels and put upwards pressure on sterling
exchange rate. The Bank of England felt comfortable enough with the
strength of the pound to lower interest rates in the summer of 1922
to below US levels. But by the following summer, with sterling again
under downward pressure and monetary policy focused on restoring the
parity exchange rate to $4.86, interest rates had to be raised again.
By 1924, UK interest rates were above US levels.
This
monetary policy squeeze achieved its dubious objective of a strong
pound. Sterling rose steadily from a low of $3.20 in February 1920 to
$4.32 and then up to the pre-war parity of $4.86 in the 10 months
before the April 1925 decision to re-fix, a 32% currency appreciation
to restore the gold standard that had been demolished by the war.
After adjusting for what was, despite the post-slump deflation, the
relative inflation of wholesale prices, which rose by 60% in the UK
between 1914 and 1925 compared with 40% in the US, this translated to
a real exchange rate appreciation of well over 10% since 1914.
Historian Robert Skidelsky records that there was general
consensus among monetary economists at the time that the gold
standard would anchor the value of domestic money and prevent
inflation. Bank of England governor Montagu Norman argued in his
evidence to parliament that a return to the gold standard would
prevent a "great borrowing by public authorities". Also,
the return to gold was seen as necessary to revive world trade and
restore Britain's trading advantage by restoring the pound sterling
as a reserve currency. Finally, opinion in the City, the financial
heart in London, was near unanimous in the view that a return to gold
was necessary to restore it to its former position as the world's
leading banker, and sterling to its former position as the world's
leading currency. In hindsight, many now suspect that the British
ruling circle knew that the gold standard without bimetallism was
merely a fancy fiat currency regime, and that the gold standard was a
fraud.
Winston Churchill, as chancellor of the Exchequer,
said in his April 1925 budget statement: "If we had not taken
this action [restoring the gold standard] the whole of the rest of
the British Empire would have taken it without us, and it would have
come to a gold standard, not on the basis of the pound sterling, but
a gold standard of the dollar."
For Britain, the 1925
gold standard attempt was a final battle of sterling versus dollar
for supremacy. It was Britain's monetary Waterloo. The then young
John Maynard Keynes, later a key framer of the Bretton Woods regime
based on a gold-backed dollar, was not against fixing the pound
sterling at its pre-war
Page 5
of 5
CHINA'S
DOLLAR MILLSTONE, Part 3
History
of monetary imperialism
By
Henry C K Liu
parity with the dollar if circumstances had
justified; but he argued that it should not be an object of policy
and was especially opposed to a deliberate policy of deflation to
bring it about. But Keynes at that time was only a young economist
with a lone voice waiting for events to make his views creditable
four years later with the crash of 1929. He was introduced to
president Roosevelt in 1933 by Felix Frankfurter, then a Harvard law
professor and later Supreme Court Justice.
The 1925 return to
the gold standard ended in failure with sterling devaluation because
Britain suffered from the delusion of dealing from a position of
strength when in fact it was dealing from a position of hopeless
strategic weakness. International monetary
leadership was passing from
London to New York by larger trends.
The
post-war gold exchange standard
Britain's
post-war gold exchange standard called for the UK to keep its
monetary reserves not in gold, as it had before 1914, but mainly in
gold-backed dollars, while the countries of continental Europe, still
in the depths of war-torn depression, would keep their reserves in
sterling backed by dollars. The US was persuaded by Britain, her
victorious but greatly wounded ally, to fund the recovery of war-torn
Europe through the British pound sterling because the US was not
interested in having too many dollars go overseas except to London.
After 1925, British pound sterling became a derivative
currency of the dollar and European currencies became derivative
currencies of the pound sterling. The Federal Reserve lowered the Fed
Funds rate target to encourage US banks to lend profitably to British
banks backed by the Bank of England at rates lower than rates
prevalent in Europe so that British banks could in turn lend to
European borrowers at higher interest rates for "carry trade"
profit.
The Bank of England in effect became a monetary agent of
the US dollar after World War l, which was the reason why post-war
reconstruction of Europe never benefited the British economy and
failed to restore Britain, a victor in the war, to her pre-war glory.
Most of the profit went to Wall Street.
The Finance Committee
of the League of Nations, dominated by British bankers, pressured
European member states to establish central bank collaboration with
the Bank of England around the new gold exchange standard in which
claims on gold were merely theoretical, difficult to exercise by
non-government market participants.
Holders of European
currencies could lay claim on the pound sterling, after which they
become pound sterling holders. But because cross-border flow of funds
was strictly controlled, they could not lay claim on the dollar
because they did not hold British nationality. British holders of
pound sterling had no claim on dollars or gold because Britain was a
debtor to the US.
Only central banks were able to transact
foreign exchange deals. This allowed all currencies to deface
together without creating volatility in exchange rates, providing the
world economy with massive liquidity without destabilizing the fixed
exchange rate regime all through the 1920s. The League of Nations
Finance Committee provided a model for the International Monetary
Fund after World War II to allow the issuer of the world's reserve
currency, namely the US, to dominate global finance with dollar
hegemony.
Finance
internationalism verses economic nationalism
The
return to the gold standard via the new gold exchange standard in
war-torn Europe in the 1920s was engineered by a coalition of
internationalist central bankers on both sides of the Atlantic as a
prerequisite for postwar economic reconstruction. Strong, the New
York Fed president, and his former partners at the House of Morgan
were closely associated with the Bank of England, the Banque de
France, the Reichsbank, and the central banks of Austria, the
Netherlands, Italy, and Belgium, as well as with leading
internationalist private bankers in those countries. The
supranational institution supervising the international arrangement
was the finance committee of the League of Nations.
Montagu
Norman, governor of the Bank of England from 1920-44, enjoyed a long
and close personal friendship with Strong. They were also ideological
allies. Their joint commitment to restore the gold standard in Europe
and so to bring about a return to "international financial
normalcy" of the prewar years has been well documented. Norman
recognized that the impairment of Britain's financial hegemony by war
meant that, to accomplish postwar economic reconstruction that would
preserve residual British monetary advantage, Europe would "need
the active cooperation of our friends in the United States". Not
the distinction between "our friends in the United States",
and not "our friend the United States".
Like other
New York bankers, Strong perceived World War I as an opportunity to
expand US participation in international finance, allowing New York
to move toward a coveted international-finance-center status to rival
London's historical preeminence, through the development of a
commercial paper market, known as bankers' acceptances in England,
breaking London's long monopoly.
The Federal Reserve Act of
1913 permitted the Federal Reserve Banks to buy, or rediscount, such
paper and the New York Fed has since become the national agent for
all six regional reserve banks. This allowed large US money center
banks in New York to play an increasingly central role in
international finance in competition with the London money market.
Herbert Hoover, after losing his second-term US presidential
election to Franklin D Roosevelt as a result of the 1929 crash,
criticized Strong as "a mental annex to Europe", and blamed
Strong's internationalist commitment to facilitating Europe's postwar
economic recovery for the US stock-market crash of 1929 and the
subsequent Great Depression that robbed Hoover of a second term.
Europe's return to the gold standard, with Britain's
insistence on what Hoover termed a "fictitious rate" of
US$4.86 to the pound sterling, required Strong to expand US credit by
keeping the discount rate unrealistically low through manipulation by
the Fed's open market operations, so easing market pressures on the
overvalued pound sterling. Hoover, with justification, ascribed
Strong's internationalist policies to what he viewed as the malign
persuasions of Norman and other European central bankers, especially
Hjalmar Schacht of the Reichsbank and Charles Rist of the Bank of
France. From the mid-1920s onward, the US experienced credit-pushed
inflation, which fueled the stock-market bubble that finally
collapsed in 1929.
Strong's low-rate policies of the
mid-1920s also provoked substantial regional opposition within the
Federal Reserve system, particularly from mid-western and
agricultural elements, who generally endorsed Hoover's subsequent
critical analysis. Throughout the 1920s, two of the Federal Reserve
Board's directors, Adolph C Miller, a professional economist, and
Charles S Hamlin, perennially disapproved of the degree to which, as
they believed, Strong subordinated domestic interest to international
considerations.
The fairness of Hoover's allegation is
subject to debate, but the fact that there was a divergence of
priority between the White House and the Fed is beyond dispute, as is
the fact that what is good for the international financial system may
not always be good for a national economy. This is evidenced today by
the collapse of one economy after another under the current
international finance architecture that all central banks support
instinctively out of a sense of institutional solidarity.
The
issue of government control over foreign loans also brought the Fed,
dominated by Strong, into direct conflict with Hoover when the latter
was secretary of commerce. Hoover believed that the US government
should have right of approval on foreign loans based on
national-interest considerations and that the proceeds of US loans
should be spent on US goods and services. Strong opposed all such
restrictions as undesirable government intervention in free trade and
international finance.
In July and August 1927, Strong,
despite ominous data on mounting market speculation and inflation,
pushed the Fed to lower the discount rate to 3% from 4% to relieve
market pressures again on the overvalued British pound. In July 1927,
the central bankers of the UK, the United States, France, and Weimar
Germany met on Long Island in the US to discuss means of increasing
Britain's gold reserves and stabilizing the European currency
situation.
Strong's reduction of the discount rate and
purchase of 12 million pounds, for which he paid the Bank of England
in gold, not dollars, appeared to come directly from that meeting.
French central banker Charles Rist reported that Strong said that US
authorities would reduce the discount rate as "un
petit coup de whisky for the stock exchange".
Strong pushed this reduction through the Fed despite strong
opposition from Miller and fellow board member James McDougal of the
Chicago Fed, who represented midwestern bankers, who generally did
not share New York's internationalist preoccupation. (See Critique
of Central Banking, Asia Times Online, November 27, 2002.)
Gold
Exchange Standard ended by the Great Depression
The
gold standard broke down during World War I as major belligerents
resorted to inflationary war finance. The classical gold standard was
causing deflation around that world that translated into a worldwide
depression while mercantilism,
the
quest by nations for gold through exporting, was causing
protectionist reaction in all countries.
It was briefly reinstated from 1925 to 1931 as the gold
exchange standard. The idea of the need for international cooperation
in trade and for a new "gold exchange standard" which would
make wider use of gold by supplementing it with an anchor currency
that would be readily convertible into gold had been developed in the
1920 international conference in Genoa, Italy, but the participating
governments failed to reach agreement on account not
all were ready to accept British sterling hegemony.
This idea was incorporated two and a half decades later into
the Bretton Woods regime with a gold-backed dollar replacing the
British pound. The challenge was to devise an operative international
finance architecture out of fiat currencies anchored to a gold-backed
dollar to accommodate post-war international trade.
The gold
exchange standard version broke down in 1931 following Britain's
forced departure from gold in the face of massive gold and capital
outflows. In 1933, president Franklin Roosevelt nationalized gold
owned by private citizens and abrogated all contracts in which
payment was specified in gold. On April 5, Roosevelt issued Executive
Order No. 6102 requiring all US citizens to exchange their gold and
gold certificates to a Federal Reserve Bank for dollars at $35 per
ounce, a currency devaluation of 69.3%, from $20.28 per ounce of
gold.
The public did not object as they were getting $35 for
the gold that they only paid $20.28 to acquired, not realizing that
they only gained
dollars that were worth 69.3% less that they were worth a day
earlier.
Possession
of gold beyond the value of $100 after April 5, 1931 was punishable
by a fine of up to $10,000 and imprisonment for up to 10 years.
Birth
and death of the Bretton Woods regime
As
World War II came to a close, Anglo-US economists came together and
devised a monetary system for the post-war era. The Bretton Woods
conference of 1944 was attended by more than 700 delegates from 44
allied nations, then with World War ll victory in sight . But the
scheme that emerged was designed by the economists from Western
countries led by the US, for the benefit of their advanced economies,
which were expected to hold up the world economy as indispensable
leaders and structural pillars, a financial version of the White
Man's Burden.
The Bretton Woods twins of the International
Monetary Fund and the World Bank were given the roles of fire brigade
and ambulance respectively, the former to police bankrupt poor
nations to prevent credit abuse and the latter to keep systemic
poverty from turning into political instability.
The Bretton
Woods system operated for three decades by getting member nations to
deny their citizens the right to buy and own gold. Many Third World
finance ministers were on the US payroll directly or indirectly to
keep the world network of central banks working smoothly under the
banner of coordination. The key devices were always to not allow
ordinary citizens to buy and own gold and ban the import and export
of gold, under the high sounding name of a gold control policy.
Economic data were structured to show the Bretton Woods
monetary regime as facilitating economic development and eradicated
poverty. Yet a case can be made that such meager advances were made
by technological progress and Cold War competition between the two
superpowers. For the West, where the Bretton Woods regime governed, a
more equitable monetary regime might have produced far superior
results. After the demise of the Bretton Woods regime, neoliberalism
obliterated even the meager progress under the Bretton Woods regime.
The world economy is currently faced with crises more serious than
any in history.
The
Marshall Plan: a Trojan horse
The
Marshall Plan, officially announce on June 5, 1947 as the European
Recovery Program, grew out of the Truman Doctrine, proclaimed three
months earlier on March 12, 1947, stressing US moralistic duty to
resist by force the establishment of communist governments worldwide.
The Marshall Plan spent US$13 billion (out of a 1947 GDP of
$244 billion or 5.4%, equivalent to $777 billion in 2008) to help
Europe recover economically from World War II to keep it from
communism. The amount is about one fifth of the US Treasury's 2008
plan of nationalizing the $4.5 trillion liabilities of Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac.
The Marshall Plan money actually did not come
out of US government budget, but out of US sovereign credit. The most
significant aspect of the Marshall Plan was the US government
guarantee to US investors in Europe to exchange their profits
denominated in weak European currencies back into dollars at
guaranteed fixed rates, backed by gold at $35 an ounce. The key
component of the plan's success rested on its monetary prowess based
on the dollar. At the same time, the Marshall Plan marked the
monetary conquest of Europe by the US.
At a time when the
monetary regimes of Europe lay in ruin, the
Marshall Plan helped establish the US dollar as the world's reserve
currency that
anchored a fixed exchange rate regime established by the recently
created IMF. The Marshall Plan enabled international trade
denominated in dollars to resume after the war, and laid the
foundation for dollar hegemony for three quarters of a century, even
after the dollar was taken off gold by President Richard Nixon in
1971.
While the Marshall Plan did help the German economy
recover, it was not entirely a selfless gift from the victor to the
vanquished. It was more a Trojan horse for monetary conquest. It
condemned Germany's economy to the status of a dependent satellite of
the US economy from which it has yet fully to free itself. For that
matter, all the world's trading economies have unwittingly become
monetary satellites of the US because of dollar hegemony.
The
Marshall Plan loans to Europe to the equivalent of $777 billion in
2008 dollars compares with China' foreign-exchange reserves of $1.8
trillion at the end of August 2008 - still rising despite a marked
slowing of the US economy. Japan's reserves were $1.1 trillion. In
other words, China is lending two and a half times more to the United
States in 2008 than the Marshall Plan lent to war-torn Europe in
1947. And the US is anything but war-torn, albeit it is debt
infested.
Both China and Japan fail to get full benefits from
their trade surpluses because the loans to the US are denominated in
dollars that the US can print at will, and because dollars are
useless in China or Japan unless reconverted to yuan or yen. Trapped
by dollar hegemony, both China and Japan have to buy the dollars they
earn in trade with their domestic currencies. This causes a rise in
the domestic money supply to create inflation and an overheated
economy.
Yet both China and Japan also cannot sell dollars
for yuan or yen without reducing the yuan or yen money supply,
causing the Chinese and Japanese economies to contract and the yuan
and yen exchange rates to rise. Selling dollars will hurt China and
Japan, both heavily trade dependent, and cause them to lose export
competitiveness. So the dollars that China and Japan earn from export
must be invested in US Treasuries or other dollar-denominated assets.
Between 1946 and 1971, trading countries operated under the
Bretton Woods regime under which countries settled their
international payments balances in US dollars pegged to gold at $35
per ounce set since 1933 under a relatively fixed exchange rate
system. It was a trade regime of goods and not financial instruments
because cross-border flow of funds was not considered as necessary or
desirable for international trade.
However, persistent US
balance-of-payments deficits steadily reduced US gold reserves,
reducing confidence in the ability of the United States to redeem its
currency in gold. It was becoming evident that capital movements
across national borders, fixed exchange rates and independent
national monetary policies simply could not coexist peacefully. A
country can have only two of the three, as demonstrated by the
Mundell-Fleming model, which won the authors the 1999 Nobel Prize in
Economic Sciences.
Next:
Gold, manipulation and
domination
Henry
C K Liu is
chairman of a New York-based private investment group. His website is
at http://www.henryckliu.com.
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