Friday, August 26, 2011

Status Change: Gold Moves From Investment To Money 1 comments, 0 called-out + Comment now


This is the Cantillon effect posited by Irish economist and Adam Smith predecessor Richard Cantillon: price inflation is relative and staggered as “newly created is distributed neither equally nor simultaneously among the population.” Picture banks and their favored borrowers with access to the Fed’s zero interest rate program borrowing dollars and investing in assets that have either higher yields like Treasuries or long-term security like gold. Later on, consumers without those resources or sophistication are punished at the gas pump and grocery story by the resulting price inflation. Printing money doesn’t just cause financial disorder; it stokes inequality.

Political opponents of the gold standard have said in the past that people will not tolerate the sacrifice of monetary and fiscal flexibility that comes with it. But people are losing tolerance for monetary and fiscal flexibility run amok. Zero inflation and balanced budgets or rising inflation and debt crises? It’s obvious which choice of outcomes is more in demand these days.

Stoferle envisions a future in which people routinely ask for the price in gold rather than the price of gold. Given that its production rate and supply growth are so stable, gold’s value is certainly beyond question. What aren’t beyond question are the paper currencies which have caused so much economic disorder and destruction recently. Gold’s transition from an investment to money will continue until people can freely and legitimately transact in gold and gold-backed currency.

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