This sounds like the NYCity Transportation system.    The system is largely
publically funded but from time to time when the democratic public demands
lower fees than the system can support, the private rises and claims
efficiency and a clean bus and "outcompetes" the public system and money
flows into the private system until the shareholders begin to demand money
from the infrastructure and the private sector is then outcompeted by a
better financed or slimmed down public sector and everything stays roughly
the same.    

 

In actuality there is no advancement through productivity.   There is just a
power game that either lowers the return on the private sector or lowers the
expectations from the public.   The relative costs to the rest of society
are the same as always.    When one group, like the wealthy,   Medical
Profession or like the Scientists on the new Webb Telescope,  begins to
demand more than their share it must be taken from someplace else.   Usually
the poor or the highly trained starving artist for "the good of their
creativity".     What is missing in all of this is "intelligence"   and a
belief in the ability to intelligently design your future as a society.
The Invisible Hand of the marketplace, and even this article on "Gold"  is
just an Anglophillic laziness that runs through the culture and language and
is at its heart irresponsible and infantile.      Thanks for posting this
Keith and thanks for keeping our feet to the fire on this issue, even if I
do disagree with what I believe your position to be.    REH

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Keith Hudson
Sent: Sunday, November 14, 2010 2:54 AM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, , EDUCATION
Subject: [Futurework] What a follow-up!

 

And then, as a sort of follow-up for my previous comments today, I read the
following in today's New York Times. This is a much more powerful piece than
Greider's. It is a piece about the gold standard. For the last 30 or 40
years the New York Times, together with the Wall Street Journal and the
Financial Times has abjured articles about the gold standard. In the last
two or three months there has been what can only be described as a spate of
them, Robert Zoellick's article (he, the President of the World Bank -- in
support of gold as a "reference point") being one of them last week.

(Zoellick's article will, I'm sure, have been explosive in the minds of the
cognoscenti. This one might well be more widely explosive. This is not, as
yet, the editorial policy of the New York Times -- still as yet under the
influence of Paul Krugman -- but it may well be before too long.)

Of course, the following doesn't apply just to the dollar but to all
national currencies which are printed to suit governments' problems.

Keith

<<<<
HOW TO MAKE THE DOLLAR SOUND AGAIN
 
James Grant


By disclosing a plan to conjure $600 billion to support the sagging economy,
the Federal Reserve affirmed the interesting fact that dollars can be
conjured. In the digital age, you don't even need a printing press. 

This was on Nov. 3. A general uproar ensued, with the dollar exchange rate
weakening and the price of gold surging. And when, last Monday, the
president of the World Bank suggested, almost diffidently, that there might
be a place for gold in today's international monetary arrangements, you
could hear a pin drop. 

Let the economists gasp: The classical gold standard, the one that was in
place from 1880 to 1914, is what the world needs now. In its utility,
economy and elegance, there has never been a monetary system like it. 

It was simplicity itself. National currencies were backed by gold. If you
didn't like the currency you could exchange it for shiny coins (money was
"sound" if it rang when dropped on a counter). Borders were open and money
was footloose. It went where it was treated well. In gold-standard
countries, government budgets were mainly balanced. Central banks had the
single public function of exchanging gold for paper or paper for gold. The
public decided which it wanted.

"You can't go back," today's central bankers are wont to protest, before
adding, "And you shouldn't, anyway." They seem to forget that we are forever
going back (and forth, too), because nothing about money is really new.
"Quantitative easing," a.k.a. money-printing, is as old as the hills.
Draftsmen of the United States Constitution, well recalling the
overproduction of the Continental paper dollar, defined money as "coin." "To
coin money" and "regulate the value thereof" was a congressional power they
joined in the same constitutional phrase with that of fixing "the standard
of weights and measures." For most of the next 200 years the dollar was, in
fact, defined as a weight of metal. The pure paper era did not begin until
1971. 

The Federal Reserve was created in 1913 -- by coincidence, the final full
year of the original gold standard. (Less functional variants followed in
the 1920s and '40s; no longer could just anybody demand gold for paper, or
paper for gold.) At the outset, the Fed was a gold standard central bank. It
could not have conjured money even if it had wanted to, as the value of the
dollar was fixed under law as one 20.67th of an ounce of gold. 

Neither was the Fed concerned with managing the national economy. Fast
forward 65 years or so, to the late 1970s, and the Fed would have been
unrecognizable to the men who voted it into existence. It was now held
responsible for ensuring full employment and stable prices alike. 

Today the Fed's hundreds of Ph.D.s conduct research at the frontiers of
economic science. "The Two-Period Rational Inattention Model: Accelerations
and Analyses" is the title of one of the treatises the monetary scholars
have recently produced. "Continuous Time Extraction of a Nonstationary
Signal with Illustrations in Continuous Low-pass and Band-pass Filtering" is
another. You can't blame the learned authors for preferring the lives they
lead to the careers they would have under a true-blue gold standard. Rather
than writing monographs for each other, they would be standing behind a
counter exchanging paper for gold and vice versa. 

If only they gave it some thought, though, the economists -- nothing if not
smart -- would fairly jump at the chance for counter duty. For a convertible
currency is a sophisticated, self-contained information system. By choosing
to hold it, or instead the gold that stands behind it, the people tell the
central bank if it has issued too much money or too little. It's democracy
in money, rather than mandarin rule. 

Today, it's the mandarins at the Federal Reserve who decide what interest
rate to impose, and what volume of currency to conjure. 

The Bank of England once had an unhappy experience with this method of
operation. To fight the Napoleonic wars of the early 19th century, Britain
traded in its gold pound for a scrip, and the bank had to decide
unilaterally how many pounds to print. Lacking the information encased in
the gold standard, it printed too many. A great inflation bubbled. 

Later a parliamentary inquest determined that no institution should again be
entrusted with such powers as the suspension of gold convertibility had
dumped in the lap of those bank directors. They had meant well enough, the
parliamentarians concluded, but even the most minute knowledge of the
British economy, "combined with the profound science in all the principles
of money and circulation," would not enable anyone to circulate the exact
amount of money needed for "the wants of trade." 

The same is true now at the Fed. The chairman, Ben Bernanke, and his minions
have taken it upon themselves to decide that a lot more money should
circulate. According to the Consumer Price Index, which is showing
year-over-year gains of less than 1.5 percent, prices are essentially
stable. 

In the inflationary 1970s people had prayed for exactly this. But the Fed
today finds it unacceptable. We need more inflation, it insists (seeming not
to remember that prices showed year-over-year declines for 12 consecutive
months in 1954 and '55 or that, in the first half of the 1960s, the Consumer
Price Index never registered year-over-year gains of as much as 2 percent).
This is why Mr. Bernanke has set out to materialize an additional $600
billion in the next eight months. 

The intended consequences of this intervention include lower interest rates,
higher stock prices, a perkier Consumer Price Index and more hiring. The
unintended consequences remain to be seen. A partial list of unwanted
possibilities includes an overvalued stock market (followed by a crash), a
collapsing dollar, an unscripted surge in consumer prices (followed by
higher interest rates), a populist revolt against zero-percent savings rates
and wall-to-wall European tourists on the sidewalks of Manhattan. 

As for interest rates, they are already low enough to coax another cycle of
imprudent lending and borrowing. It gives one pause that the Fed, with all
its massed brain power, failed to anticipate even a little of the troubles
of 2007-09. 

At last week's world economic summit meeting in South Korea, finance
ministers and central bankers chewed over the perennial problem of
"imbalances." America consumes much more than it produces (and has done so
over 25 consecutive years). Asia produces more than it consumes. Merchandise
moves east across the Pacific; dollars fly west in payment. For Americans,
the system could hardly be improved on, because the dollars do not remain in
Asia. They rather obligingly fly eastward again in the shape of investments
in United States government securities. It's as if the money never left the
50 states. 

So it is under the paper-dollar system that we Americans enjoy "deficits
without tears," in the words of the French economist Jacques Rueff. We could
not have done so under the classical gold standard. Deficits then were
ultimately settled in gold. We could not have printed it, but would have had
to dig for it, or adjusted our economy to make ourselves more
internationally competitive. Adjustments under the gold standard took place
continuously and smoothly -- not, like today, wrenchingly and at great
intervals. 

Gold is a metal made for monetary service. It is scarce (just 0.004 parts
per million in the earth's crust), pliable and easy on the eye. It has
tended to hold its purchasing power over the years and centuries. You don't
consume it, as you do tin or copper. Somewhere, probably, in some coin or
ingot, is the gold that adorned Cleopatra. 

And because it is indestructible, no one year's new production is of any
great consequence in comparison with the store of above-ground metal. >From
1900 to 2009, at much lower nominal gold prices than those prevailing today,
the worldwide stock of gold grew at 1.5 percent a year, according to the
United States Geological Survey and the World Gold Council. 

The first time the United States abandoned the gold standard -- to fight the
Civil War -- it took until 1879, 14 years after Appomattox, to again link
the dollar to gold. 

To reinstitute a modern gold standard today would take time, too. The United
States would first have to call an international monetary conference. A
chastened Ben Bernanke would have to announce that, in fact, he cannot see
into the future and needs the information that the convertibility feature of
a gold dollar would impart. 

That humbling chore completed, the delegates could get down to the technical
work of proposing a rate of exchange between gold and the dollar (probably
it would be even higher than the current price of gold, the better to
encourage new exploration and production). 

Other countries, thunderstruck, would then have to follow suit. The main
thing, Mr. Bernanke would emphasize, would be to create a monetary system
that synchronizes national economies rather than driving them apart. 

If the classical gold standard in its every Edwardian feature could not,
after all, be teleported into the 21st century, there would be plenty of
scope for adaptation and, perhaps, improvement. Let the author of "The
Two-Period Rational Inattention Model: Accelerations and Analyses" have a
crack at it. 

-----

James Grant, editor of Grant's Interest Rate Observer, is the author of
"Money of the Mind."




Keith Hudson, Saltford, England 

_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to