Re: The American money capture
There are a couple of things I disagree with in Gary Jeffers' post. (Mild spelling flame - it's "fiat" money, not "fait" money.) I am interested not from the conspiracy aspects, but from the private- versus public-money angle.
PAPER MONEY BACKED BY PAPER There is only one cause of inflation; it is officially - but not constitutionally - authorized counterfeiting of money, the official issue of paper money substitutes that are not fully backed by & redeemable in the real lawful money they purport to represent.
Until 1850, there was no official paper money in the United States. The US government controlled coinage, but they had a lot of problems getting enough money into circulation, especially in the fast-growing frontier area. Between 1800 and 1850 a great number of private banks were started whose main function was to issue paper money. Although this money was not a legal tender (meaning simply that people could refuse to accept it) it did circulate widely as cash, often displacing coins. Although ostensibly backed by lawful money (e.g. US coins), this did not stop the bankers from engaging in fractional-reserve banking. Indeed, if they had not done so, their banks would have been of no value, as they would not have helped remedy the shortage of circulating money. (Today, with our experiences of inflation in the 1970's and 1980's, it is hard for us to appreciate the problems with deflation. But I think deflation was much worse. The effects are similar to what we see today when the Fed tightens the reins on the money supply - a halt to economic growth, business bankruptcies, growth of unemployment, debtors unable to pay off their debts, mortgage foreclosures, etc.) (Also, note that a constant money supply in a growing economy is effectively deflationary. The money supply must increase at least as fast as economic growth or it will serve as an active brake on the economy, IMO. I don't know what economic school this view comes from, but I first heard it from Milton Friedman.) Even though the cash was not "official", inflation was a problem. In fact, it was a chronic, overwhelming problem. Once a bank realizes that it can buy things simply by printing money, it takes more self-restraint than most institutions (private _or_ public) have to keep from doing so. Things were made worse by the fact that our understanding of the inevitable bad results of such inflation was simply absent back then. The bankers did not under- stand that printing more money would inevitably devalue the currency. They thought that the inflation they saw was due to psychological factors, people not trusting the bank, or greedy merchants trying to take advantage of the public. (These arguments were echoed in the 1970's and 1980's, but they have of course been widely discredited now. The issue was far less clear in 1850.) Throughout the private-banking era, runs on banks, booms, busts, and panics, all the traditional extreme manifestations of the business cycle, were seen. And all this occured at a time when the only lawful, legal tender money was hard currency: gold, silver and copper coins. Clearly having such a money is no proof against the pernicious effects of inflation. Despite this historical record, I think that private currencies today would have the potential to succeed. The increased economic sophistication about the effects of different monetary policies would help bankers steer clear of the most egregious errors of the 1800's. Digital cash signatures avoid the widespread counterfeiting and discounting which also plagued that era. Hal Finney hfinney@shell.portal.com
Date: Sun, 1 May 1994 10:08:14 -0700 From: Hal <hfinney@shell.portal.com> (Also, note that a constant money supply in a growing economy is effectively deflationary. Below, you call this a "view". I call this a clear fact, and feel sorry for anyone who doesn't immediately see it also! The money supply must increase at least as fast as economic growth or it will serve as an active brake on the economy, IMO. I don't know what economic school this view comes from, but I first heard it from Milton Friedman.) They thought that the inflation they saw was due to psychological factors, people not trusting the bank, or greedy merchants trying to take advantage of the public. (These arguments were echoed in the 1970's and 1980's, but they have of course been widely discredited now. The issue was far less clear in 1850.) Discredited but still bandied about. -russ <nelson@crynwr.com> ftp.msen.com:pub/vendor/crynwr/crynwr.wav Crynwr Software | Crynwr Software sells packet driver support | ask4 PGP key 11 Grant St. | +1 315 268 1925 (9201 FAX) | Quakers do it in the light Potsdam, NY 13676 | LPF member - ask me about the harm software patents do.
(Today, with our experiences of inflation in the 1970's and 1980's, it is hard for us to appreciate the problems with deflation. But I think deflation was much worse.
The Great Depression was pretty clearly caused by deflation in the money supply. To quote Milton Friedman: "All told, from July 1929 to March 1933, the money stock in the United States fell by one-third [...]" Capitalism and Freedom, p. 50 Eric
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