Quote from Onlygold:
We have a clean simple proof why our fixed money supply Simple Quantity Theory can accommodate changes in economic growth:
Proof by Refutation
Assume it cannot. This means the real GDP must be a constant. But this is clearly illogical. Assume a bumper harvest in the agricultural sector. This must mean a real GDP growth or changes in real GDP changes. Thus the theory must be able to accommodate changes in real GDP.
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A fixed money supply economy within our theory does not in any way disallow changes in growth. It can accommodate growth expansion as well as contraction.
Fractional Reserve Banking is flawed. A monetary system unlimited on the supply side for money serving to match the real product of a country limited on the supply side is fraught with unpredictable, and likely detrimental, consequences.
Deflation is the net result in any fixed-money system.
Production expands YOY, yet money to price that growing asset base remains fixed = deflation.
With deflating prices, comes deflating wages. No company will pay employees 50K a year when sales revenues decline 10%, YOY at fixed volume.
That said, deflation - nor inflation - is inherently destructive unless it occurs at extreme levels.
Monetarists fear-monger deflation because it means the end to their livelihood - fractional reserve lending. When in reality, some type of gold-standard would only mean the opposite of what we now have - savers benefit over borrowers, prices decline, wages decline. Most importantly, Government spending is severely restricted, imperial war-making grinds to a halt, and special interests no longer manipulate Congress because money cannot be freely printed and gifted away!! Government becomes constrained by its revenue, and the Nation is no longer sold for 30 Sheckles by the Judas Iscariot's in Washington.
Another criticism of deflationary systems is capital creation.
Under a hard-money standard, capital creation is displaced from banks to people, or the market. This is actually a good thing.
The way our system works now: the FED keeps rates low to allow cheap capital creation for the benefit of enterprise and banks. The cost - real inflation (not underreported BLS stuff) is high and hard-working Americans are robbed via inflation to subsidize low interest rates for Big Corporations and Banks.
In a hard-money system, fractional reserve banking no longer exists because gold cannot be printed. So where does capital formation come from? From the savings of average, everyday people.
This is actually how textbook Keynesian works: savers drive economic growth through level of savings that determines interest rates.
Anyway, this is a more ideal model because the aggregate decisions of many individuals (aka the Free Market) determine rates, not the FED, which is owned by Commercial Banks who distort interest rates for their own profit.
Critics then complain markets are a bad arbiter of value, and free market rates would succumb to herd behavior and generate worse boom-bust cycles then we have currently.
This is more baloney peddled by bankers to protect the status quo. In reality, its the extreme leverage in financial markets that creates volatility in prices. Some 95% of all futures contracts are cash settled. That means only 5% of volume is non-speculative. All markets are geared at similar levels and all that gearing originates from one place -- fractional reserve banking. Deposit 1 dollar which is leveraged 100 times to smash T-bill futures in a 200 point range!!
Under a hard-money system, no ridiculous leverage can be gamed hence volatility and wild fluctuations give way to slow, plodding, rational market movement.
As far as alternative money systems, gold isn't the best. Ideally, a currency that holds static value over time is best.
Some alternatives:
1) Precious metal-backed.
2) Commodity-backed (precious metals + grains + energy + agriculture and livestock etc).
3) FREE MARKET ALTERNATIVES - basically open up legal tender laws, and let the market innovate and invent the best solution. This should be instituted in addition to whatever money system we adopt next.
4) Neo-Colonial Script - the Founders created their own debt-free script to avoid tyrannical usury charged by england for use of her fiat money.
This system would be ideal. Basically, the Government creates sufficient debt-free money to meet its obligations AND ensure the easy, fair, and smooth flow of commerce.
The only problem with colonial script -- regulating its issuance so Government doesn't blow it out like the current fiat dollar.
Any system that isn't debt-backed, is a better system, tho.
The FED and its fractional reserve whores are a blight on this Country. The Framers fought to keep these guys out of America, and now they've got near total control. Their prescience was startling.
"If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around them will deprive the people of all property until their children wake up homeless on the continent their Fathers conquered."
Thomas Jefferson.