Ron Paul: The Time Ben Bernanke Shocked Me With This Gold Confession

Guest Post by Ron Paul

Ron Paul: The Time Ben Bernanke Shocked Me With This Gold Confession

Recently, my friends at Birch Gold Group asked me about some of my more infuriating confrontations with the Federal Reserve. This one immediately sprung to mind…

Back in July of 2011, in the aftermath of the Great Financial Crisis, I served as the Chairman of the Financial Services Subcommittee on Monetary Policy (basically, the Federal Reserve watchdog). I was seriously concerned about the Fed’s ongoing “quantitative easing,” injecting trillions of dollars into the U.S. economy and the subsequent decline in the dollar’s purchasing power.

Here, take a look at this chart that starts just before the Great Financial Crisis and runs through today, and tell me whether the blue line (dollar strength) goes down when the red line (dollar supply) goes up:

 

Well, most hard-working Americans don’t directly control how much money they make. They do their best at their jobs, or run their businesses as efficiently as possible – but they can’t “make” money – they earn it.

The Federal Reserve, on the other hand, is the only institution in the world that can literally “make” or print U.S. dollars!

Printing more dollars doesn’t make more wealth. It just makes more dollars, which lowers the value of every other dollar in the world. We call this “inflation.”

Gold isn’t money? Then why do central banks have so much of it?

In this exchange I was trying to corner Mr. Bernanke into admitting that gold is, in fact, money – which is why global central banks all have stockpiles of gold bullion.

Here’s how that dialogue went:

Me: Do you think gold is money?
Bernanke: (long, awkward pause) No.
Me: It’s not money?
Bernanke: It’s a precious metal.
Me: Even if it has been money for 6,000 years, somebody reversed that and eliminated that economic law?
Bernanke: Well, it’s, you know, it’s an asset. Would you say Treasury bills are money? I don’t think they’re money either, but they’re a financial asset.
Me: Why do central banks hold it?
Bernanke: Well, it’s a form of reserves.
Me: Why don’t they hold diamonds?
Bernanke: Well it’s tradition — long-term tradition.

Just to be clear, here’s a financial definition of an asset:

An asset is a resource with economic value that an individual, corporation, or country owns or controls with the expectation that it will provide a future benefit.

Here’s a financial definition of reserves:

Reserves, in the world of business and finance, refers to ‘money in hand’ – money that is available to be used for a wide range of possibilities, including meeting future planned payments, unexpected events, emergencies, opportunities, etc. They are funds that individuals, companies, organizations, central banks, and governments set aside for future use or ‘just in case.’

To me, this whole exchange felt like he was dancing around the issue. It reminded me of a famously shameful moment in our nation’s history when a sitting President said, “It depends on what the meaning of the word ‘is’ is.”

The chairman of the central bank of the United States of America is deliberately quibbling with me because he wants to avoid admitting that gold is money!

Let’s connect the dots:

  • An asset “is a resource with economic value,” and how do we measure economic value? In money.
  • Reserves “refers to ‘money in hand’” and yep, the word “money” is right there in the definition.
  • Bernanke admits that gold is bothan asset” and “a form of reserves.”

It’s pretty clear to me that even he believed that gold is a form of money, but didn’t want to admit it. Now, why on earth might that be?

I’ll tell you why…Over the last 34 years, the U.S. gold reserve hasn’t changed. The supply of dollars, on the other hand? The number of dollars has gone up more than five-fold.

If Bernanke had admitted that gold is money, he would’ve had to explain how the same amount of gold was able to back a limitless supply of U.S. dollars! He knew he couldn’t say that – because that would topple the entire house of cards.

So instead, he merely denied that gold is money per se (while admitting it’s both an asset and a form of reserves.)

You get used to people misleading you and dancing around important questions in Washington, D.C. but this particular exchange sticks with me.

Bernanke admits gold is “a protection”

Now, I’ll be the first to admit this surprised me.

When I asked Bernanke whether he followed the price of gold, I expected him to shrug the question off. But he didn’t. Instead, he supported one of the most important reasons that people buy gold.

Here’s that part of the exchange, with the important parts in bold:

Me: When you wake up in the morning, do you care about the price of gold?

Bernanke: Well, I pay attention to the price of gold but I think it reflects a lot of things. It reflects global uncertainties. I think people are, the reason people hold gold is as a protection against what we call tail risk, really really bad outcomes. And to the extent that the last few years have made people more worried about the potential of a major crisis, then they have gold as a protection.

Now, even though he’d never, ever admit that gold is money, not even the head of the Federal Reserve would try to argue against gold as protection against what he called “really really bad outcomes.”

And that’s exactly why world central banks have so much gold! The same way gold is a protection for individuals, for everyday folks like you and me, against “really really bad outcomes” – well, it works exactly the same way on an international level.

Global central banks have gold because it’s a liquid asset they can rely on even when everything else falls apart. You can’t wave a magic wand over gold and make more of it.

Ultimately, I think what Bernanke was trying to communicate was that gold is a protection, but not for you and me. Sure, central banks around the world have owned gold as a “long-term tradition” for centuries – but if American families diversified their savings with gold instead of throwing their hard-earned money at the stock market casino, well, that takes power away from the Federal Reserve!

Bernanke wanted Americans to invest in financial markets – to speculate, to consume and buy into the myth of perpetual economic growth.

Personally, I think it’s much more prudent to make sure at least some portion of your savings is secured in an asset like physical gold. An asset the Fed won’t admit is money simply because they can’t control it.

Remember, the Federal Reserve is the only institution on earth that can make dollars. I would argue that printing dollars is not the same thing as making money – and it’s far from “earning money” as well.

I believe Bernanke’s insistence that gold isn’t money was no more than an admission that gold was outside his control. And, if you’re like me, you’d prefer to have your savings diversified with “an asset” that has a “long-term tradition” as a stable store of value. One that the Federal Reserve can’t control, manipulate, inflate or print.

If you’re interested, you can watch the full exchange between Chair Bernanke and me here:

Ron Paul is a medical doctor, a retired Captain of the U.S. Air Force, an author who’s published 21 books and former twelve-term U.S. Congressman representing the state of Texas. He’s emerged as one of the leading voices challenging government’s addiction to deficit spending and the Federal Reserve’s wealth-destructive monetary policies.  He works with Birch Gold Group to educate Americans about the threats to their financial futures, and how to protect themselves and their families.

With global tensions spiking, thousands of Americans are moving their IRA or 401(k) into an IRA backed by physical gold. Now, thanks to a little-known IRS Tax Law, you can too. Learn how with a free info kit on gold from Birch Gold Group. It reveals how physical precious metals can protect your savings, and how to open a Gold IRA. Click here to get your free Info Kit on Gold.

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16 Comments
mileytheduchess
mileytheduchess
October 11, 2022 4:13 pm

I’ve been arguing in vain for some assets to be redirected into physical gold, to no avail. Meeting with the financial advisor last week just made me laugh. I know it’s his job to be in complete denial, but wtf.

Daddy Joe
Daddy Joe
  mileytheduchess
October 11, 2022 4:50 pm

And it was Bernankes job to say one thing while personally believing another. He did that well and for that he won the Nobel prize. Thank you Dr. Paul for sharing the conversation.

really
really
  Daddy Joe
October 11, 2022 5:46 pm

“And it was Bernankes job to say one thing while personally believing another.”

Public relations.

Freddy Uranus
Freddy Uranus
  mileytheduchess
October 12, 2022 6:15 am

Just curious, why do u have to argue? Just do it.

Stephanie Shepard
Stephanie Shepard
October 11, 2022 4:55 pm

Bernanke has a long history of not knowing what money is or who he’s giving it away to.

really
really
  Stephanie Shepard
October 11, 2022 5:14 pm

He might not know. He supervises production, not distribution.

really
really
October 11, 2022 5:15 pm

Gold won’t be money again until it’s more effective and efficient than robbery.

mark
mark
  really
October 11, 2022 7:37 pm

Gold has always been money and you are REALLY off base??? Trying to steal??? No snarc? Gold is for wealth…Silver is for the rest of us/U.S. What do you say about this?

O Gold! I still prefer thee unto paper, which makes bank credit like a bark of vapour. — Lord Byron

The castle gates will always open for gold-laden donkeys. — Russian Proverb

If you are sick, think about your life; if you are better, think about your gold. — Mongolian Proverb

Pure gold does not rust. Only gold alloys do so. You may have golden dreams. But if you go in the company of toxic people, you become “a gold alloy” and what that means is that you can rust at any time! ― Israelmore Ayivor

The beauty about gold, though, is that in all states from uncertainty to conviction, it never for once gives up its luster. ― Ufuoma Apoki

Gold — what can it not do, and undo? — William Shakespeare

Gold opens all locks. No lock will hold against the power of gold. — George Herbert

Gold gives to the ugliest thing a certain charming air, for that without it were else a miserable affair. — Moliére

Truth, like gold, is to be obtained not by its growth, but by washing away from it all that is not gold. — Leo Tolstoy

Whenever destroyers appear among men, they start by destroying money, for money is men’s protection and the base of a moral existence. Destroyers seize gold and leave to its owners a counterfeit pile of paper. This kills all objective standards and delivers men into the arbitrary power of an arbitrary setter of values. Gold was an objective value, an equivalent of wealth produced. Paper is a mortgage on wealth that does not exist, backed by a gun aimed at those who are expected to produce it. Paper is a check drawn by legal looters upon an account which is not theirs: upon the virtue of the victims. Watch for the day when it bounces, marked: “Account Overdrawn.”— Ayn Rand

You have to choose (as a voter) between trusting to the natural stability of gold and the natural stability of the honesty and intelligence of the members of the Government. And, with due respect for these gentlemen, I advise you, as long as the Capitalist system lasts, to vote for gold. — George Bernard Shaw

Gold would have value if for no other reason than that it enables a citizen to fashion his financial escape from the state. — William F. Rickenbacker

Like Liberty, gold never stays where it is undervalued. — John S. Morrill

It is extraordinary how many emotional storms one may weather in safety if one is ballasted with ever so little gold. — William McFee

The desire of gold is not for gold. It is for the means of freedom and benefit. ― Ralph Waldo Emerson

Because silver and gold have their value from the matter itself, they have first this privilege, that the value of them cannot be altered by the power of one, nor of a few commonwealths, as being a common measure of the commodities of all places. But base money may easily be enhanced or abased. – Thomas Hobbes

Gold is a treasure, and he who possesses it does all he wishes to in this world, and succeeds in helping souls into paradise. – Christopher Columbus

Gold is not necessary. I have no interest in gold. We will build a solid state, without an ounce of gold behind it. Anyone who sells above the set prices, let him be marched off to a concentration camp. That’s the bastion of money. – Adolf Hitler

There can be no other criterion, no other standard than gold. Yes, gold which never changes, which can be shaped into ingots, bars, coins, which has no nationality and which is eternally and universally accepted as the unalterable fiduciary value par excellence. – Charles de Gaulle

We have gold because we cannot trust governments. ― Herbert Hoover

It’s absolutely critical that we audit the Fed so the American people can see what’s going on over there. Do it from top to bottom so that we can have transparency in this entity called the Federal Reserve. Hopefully, the American people will see that we need to go back to the gold standard, which I’ve introduced, and get rid of the Fed. – Paul Broun

Gold is money. Everything else is credit. – J. P. Morgan

Never trust money more than gold. ― Toba Beta

In reality, there is no such thing as an inflation of prices, relatively to gold. There is such a thing as a depreciated paper currency. — Lysander Spooner

In the absence of the gold standard, there is no way to protect savings from confiscation through inflation. There is no safe store of value. — Alan Greenspan

A gold standard doesn’t imply stability in the prices of the goods and services that people buy every day, it implies a stability in the price of gold itself. — Ben Bernanke

The desire for gold is the most universal and deeply rooted commercial instinct of the human race. — Gerald M. Loeb

When goods are exchanged between countries, they must be paid for by commodities or gold. They cannot be paid for by the notes, certificates, and checks of the purchaser’s country, since these are of value only in the country of issue. — Carroll Quigley

The gold standard did not collapse. Governments abolished it in order to pave the way for inflation. The whole grim apparatus of oppression and coercion — policemen, customs guards, penal courts, prisons, in some countries even executioners — had to be put into action in order to destroy the gold standard. Solemn pledges were broken, retroactive laws were promulgated, provisions of constitutions and bills of rights were openly defied. And hosts of servile writers praised what the governments had done and hailed the dawn of the fiat-money millennium. — Ludwig von Mises

With the exception only of the period of the gold standard, practically all governments of history have used their exclusive power to issue money to defraud and plunder the people. — Friedrich August von Hayek

Monetary policy today is guided by little more than government fiat — by the calculations, often-mistaken economic theories and whims of central bankers or, even worse, politicians. Under such a regime, inflation of three or four percent annually has come to be viewed as a stellar monetary performance. However, under a more sound monetary system — i.e., a gold standard — such increases in the general price level would be seen as wildly inflationary. — Raymond J. Keating

Although gold and silver are not by nature money, money is by nature gold and silver. — Karl Marx

Governments lie; bankers lie; even auditors sometimes lie. Gold tells the truth. — Lord Rees Mogg

Until government administrators can so identify the interests of government with those of the people and refrain from defrauding the masses through the device of currency depreciation for the sake of remaining in office, the wiser ones will prefer to keep as much of their wealth in the most stable and marketable forms possible — forms which only the precious metals provide. — Elgin Groseclose

If you don’t trust gold, do you trust the logic of taking a beautiful pine tree, worth about $4,000-$5,000, cutting it up, turning it into pulp and then paper, putting some ink on it and then calling it one billion dollars? — Kenneth J. Gerbino

The great merit of gold is precisely that it is scarce; that its quantity is limited by nature; that it is costly to discover, to mine and to process; and that it cannot be created by political fiat or caprice. — Henry Hazlitt

Gold will be around, gold will be money when the dollar and the euro and the yuan and the ringgit are mere memories. — Richard Russell

Those entrapped by the herd instinct are drowned in the deluges of history. But there are always the few who observe, reason, and take precautions, and thus escape the flood. For these few gold has been the asset of last resort. — Antony C. Sutton

The modern mind dislikes gold because it blurts out unpleasant truths. — Joseph Schumpeter

They don’t give you gold medals for beating somebody. They give you gold medals for beating everybody. — Michael Johnson

My advice to you, my violent friend, is to seek out gold and sit on it. ― John Gardner

Because gold is honest money, it is disliked by dishonest men. — Ron Paul

Commodities such as gold and silver have a world market that transcends national borders, politics, religions and race. A person may not like someone else’s religion, but he’ll accept his gold. — Robert Kiyosaki

Gold has intrinsic value. The problem with the dollar is it has no intrinsic value. And if the Federal Reserve is going to spend trillions of them to buy up all these bad mortgages and all other kinds of bad debt, the dollar is going to lose all of its value. Gold will store its value, and you’ll always be able to buy more food with your gold. — Peter Schiff

If the world does well, gold will be fine. If the world doesn’t do well, gold will also do fine…but a lot of other things could collapse. — Thomas Kaplan

If you want an alternative currency, check out gold. It has stood the test of thousands of years as a store of value and medium of exchange. — Paul Singer

The world’s central banks and the International Monetary Fund still have vaults full of bullion, even though currencies are no longer backed by gold. Governments hold on to it as a kind of magic symbol, a way of reassuring people that their money is real. — James Surowiecki

If you trade in paper, the notion of many who trade gold…if the financial world comes to an end, they’re going to have the gold. If you’re playing in ETFs, you’re going to have a piece of paper. — Rick Santelli

Gold is still the ultimate store of wealth. It’s the world’s only true money. And there isn’t much of it to go around. All of it ever mined would fit into a small building — a 56-foot cube. The annual world production would fit into a 14-foot cube, roughly the size of an ordinary living room. If each Chinese citizen were to buy just one ounce, it would take up the annual supply for the next 200 years. — Mark Nestmann

If ever there was an area in which to do the exact opposite of that which government and the media urge you to do, that area is the purchasing of gold. — Robert Ringer

Regardless of the dollar price involved, one ounce of gold would purchase a good-quality man’s suit at the conclusion of the Revolutionary War, the Civil War, the presidency of Franklin Roosevelt and today. — Peter A. Burshre

I like gold because it is a stabilizer; it is an insurance policy. — Kevin O’Leary

Last…my favorite:
Gold is the money of kings; silver is the money of gentlemen; barter is the money of peasants; but debt is the money of slaves. — Norm Franz

really
really
  mark
October 11, 2022 7:40 pm

(Not to the subject matter.)

All true – in their time and circumstance. And that time and circumstance will come again. But not until the dollars, and then the ammunition, run out.

mark
mark
  really
October 11, 2022 8:47 pm

(To the bigger picture subject matter)

Both fiat and ammo are secular manmade props in God’s play.

The last battle of the soon to end War is upon us…but it is ‘Spiritual’…I believe demonic fiat dollars and lost man made ammo will not decide anything of real importance…collectively and individually.

God will decide their use or their uselessness down to “Every jot and tittle”.

Collectively and individually.

Machinist
Machinist
  really
October 11, 2022 8:54 pm

really, If all debts that are based in the US dollar were settled tomorrow, there would be no US dollars.

mark
mark
October 11, 2022 7:31 pm

FUCK ALAN GREENSPAN JUST ANOTHER “DOOMED” SELLOUT.

This is an old rant from a long time ago:

“It is fascinating to read what All Greenspan wrote in 1966 – the truth – before he sold out to the Banksters, and then repudiated everything he had wrote and believed in once elevated to Federal Reserve Chairman, creating trillions out of thin air, lending it to the Government, who then taxes us to pay the Federal Reserve (private bankers) billions in interest for money they made out of thin air, doing nothing.

Nice work if you can get it – and the International PRIVATE BANKSTERS have been getting it since 1913 – all from a Democrat Congress and President, and all passed into law on Christmas Eve and hushed up.

Gee, you may ask yourself…why doesn’t Congress do what the Constitution states and, THEY PRINT THE MONEY ON BEHALF OF THE PEOPLE…then they could lend it to ourselves without any interest??? Ane We the People would be in control of our money as the Founders intended and instructed?

Here is what the Constitution says about the money power of the government.

From Article I, Section 8, there is “Congress shall have Power…to coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin.” And from Section 10, “no state…shall make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts.” That’s 27 words, some of them offbeat or capitalized like in German, pertaining to monetary policy in the founding document of the government of the United States.

Well you may ask why do we owe 22 trillion in debt, its simple The International Banksters have owned (bought, bribed, blackmailed) most Presidents and most Congressmen of both parties since 1913. It’s that simple.

When it comes to swindling the American people it’s called the UNI-Party. The Left Wing is Democrat, The Right Wing is Republican and the head of the bird is the Federal Reserve Vulture.

Oh yea, the normies, and sheeple, and Joe Sixpack and Jane Amazon think the symbol of the US is an eagle….most of them think the Federal Reserve is Federal…when it’s just greedy, manipulative, banksters, most of whom aren’t even Americans.

Silly Wabbits”…

GOLD AND ECONOMOC FREEDOM
by Alan Greenspan

[written in 1966]

This article originally appeared in a newsletter: The Objectivist published in 1966 and was reprinted in Ayn Rand’s Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal

An almost hysterical antagonism toward the gold standard is one issue which unites statists of all persuasions. They seem to sense – perhaps more clearly and subtly than many consistent defenders of laissez-faire – that gold and economic freedom are inseparable, that the gold standard is an instrument of laissez-faire and that each implies and requires the other.

In order to understand the source of their antagonism, it is necessary first to understand the specific role of gold in a free society.

Money is the common denominator of all economic transactions. It is that commodity which serves as a medium of exchange, is universally acceptable to all participants in an exchange economy as payment for their goods or services, and can, therefore, be used as a standard of market value and as a store of value, i.e., as a means of saving.
The existence of such a commodity is a precondition of a division of labor economy. If men did not have some commodity of objective value which was generally acceptable as money, they would have to resort to primitive barter or be forced to live on self-sufficient farms and forgo the inestimable advantages of specialization. If men had no means to store value, i.e., to save, neither long-range planning nor exchange would be possible.

What medium of exchange will be acceptable to all participants in an economy is not determined arbitrarily. First, the medium of exchange should be durable. In a primitive society of meager wealth, wheat might be sufficiently durable to serve as a medium, since all exchanges would occur only during and immediately after the harvest, leaving no value-surplus to store. But where store-of-value considerations are important, as they are in richer, more civilized societies, the medium of exchange must be a durable commodity, usually a metal. A metal is generally chosen because it is homogeneous and divisible: every unit is the same as every other and it can be blended or formed in any quantity. Precious jewels, for example, are neither homogeneous nor divisible. More important, the commodity chosen as a medium must be a luxury. Human desires for luxuries are unlimited and, therefore, luxury goods are always in demand and will always be acceptable. Wheat is a luxury in underfed civilizations, but not in a prosperous society. Cigarettes ordinarily would not serve as money, but they did in post-World War II Europe where they were considered a luxury. The term “luxury good” implies scarcity and high unit value. Having a high unit value, such a good is easily portable; for instance, an ounce of gold is worth a half-ton of pig iron.

In the early stages of a developing money economy, several media of exchange might be used, since a wide variety of commodities would fulfill the foregoing conditions. However, one of the commodities will gradually displace all others, by being more widely acceptable. Preferences on what to hold as a store of value, will shift to the most widely acceptable commodity, which, in turn, will make it still more acceptable. The shift is progressive until that commodity becomes the sole medium of exchange. The use of a single medium is highly advantageous for the same reasons that a money economy is superior to a barter economy: it makes exchanges possible on an incalculably wider scale.

Whether the single medium is gold, silver, seashells, cattle, or tobacco is optional, depending on the context and development of a given economy. In fact, all have been employed, at various times, as media of exchange. Even in the present century, two major commodities, gold and silver, have been used as international media of exchange, with gold becoming the predominant one. Gold, having both artistic and functional uses and being relatively scarce, has significant advantages over all other media of exchange. Since the beginning of World War I, it has been virtually the sole international standard of exchange. If all goods and services were to be paid for in gold, large payments would be difficult to execute and this would tend to limit the extent of a society’s divisions of labor and specialization. Thus a logical extension of the creation of a medium of exchange is the development of a banking system and credit instruments (bank notes and deposits) which act as a substitute for, but are convertible into, gold.

A free banking system based on gold is able to extend credit and thus to create bank notes (currency) and deposits, according to the production requirements of the economy. Individual owners of gold are induced, by payments of interest, to deposit their gold in a bank (against which they can draw checks). But since it is rarely the case that all depositors want to withdraw all their gold at the same time, the banker need keep only a fraction of his total deposits in gold as reserves. This enables the banker to loan out more than the amount of his gold deposits (which means that he holds claims to gold rather than gold as security of his deposits). But the amount of loans which he can afford to make is not arbitrary: he has to gauge it in relation to his reserves and to the status of his investments.

When banks loan money to finance productive and profitable endeavors, the loans are paid off rapidly and bank credit continues to be generally available. But when the business ventures financed by bank credit are less profitable and slow to pay off, bankers soon find that their loans outstanding are excessive relative to their gold reserves, and they begin to curtail new lending, usually by charging higher interest rates. This tends to restrict the financing of new ventures and requires the existing borrowers to improve their profitability before they can obtain credit for further expansion. Thus, under the gold standard, a free banking system stands as the protector of an economy’s stability and balanced growth. When gold is accepted as the medium of exchange by most or all nations, an unhampered free international gold standard serves to foster a world-wide division of labor and the broadest international trade. Even though the units of exchange (the dollar, the pound, the franc, etc.) differ from country to country, when all are defined in terms of gold the economies of the different countries act as one-so long as there are no restraints on trade or on the movement of capital. Credit, interest rates, and prices tend to follow similar patterns in all countries. For example, if banks in one country extend credit too liberally, interest rates in that country will tend to fall, inducing depositors to shift their gold to higher-interest paying banks in other countries. This will immediately cause a shortage of bank reserves in the “easy money” country, inducing tighter credit standards and a return to competitively higher interest rates again.

A fully free banking system and fully consistent gold standard have not as yet been achieved. But prior to World War I, the banking system in the United States (and in most of the world) was based on gold and even though governments intervened occasionally, banking was more free than controlled. Periodically, as a result of overly rapid credit expansion, banks became loaned up to the limit of their gold reserves, interest rates rose sharply, new credit was cut off, and the economy went into a sharp, but short-lived recession. (Compared with the depressions of 1920 and 1932, the pre-World War I business declines were mild indeed.) It was limited gold reserves that stopped the unbalanced expansions of business activity, before they could develop into the post-World Was I type of disaster. The readjustment periods were short and the economies quickly reestablished a sound basis to resume expansion.

But the process of cure was misdiagnosed as the disease: if shortage of bank reserves was causing a business decline-argued economic interventionists-why not find a way of supplying increased reserves to the banks so they never need be short! If banks can continue to loan money indefinitely-it was claimed-there need never be any slumps in business. And so the Federal Reserve System was organized in 1913. It consisted of twelve regional Federal Reserve banks nominally owned by private bankers, but in fact government sponsored, controlled, and supported. Credit extended by these banks is in practice (though not legally) backed by the taxing power of the federal government. Technically, we remained on the gold standard; individuals were still free to own gold, and gold continued to be used as bank reserves. But now, in addition to gold, credit extended by the Federal Reserve banks (“paper reserves”) could serve as legal tender to pay depositors.

When business in the United States underwent a mild contraction in 1927, the Federal Reserve created more paper reserves in the hope of forestalling any possible bank reserve shortage. More disastrous, however, was the Federal Reserve’s attempt to assist Great Britain who had been losing gold to us because the Bank of England refused to allow interest rates to rise when market forces dictated (it was politically unpalatable). The reasoning of the authorities involved was as follows: if the Federal Reserve pumped excessive paper reserves into American banks, interest rates in the United States would fall to a level comparable with those in Great Britain; this would act to stop Britain’s gold loss and avoid the political embarrassment of having to raise interest rates. The “Fed” succeeded; it stopped the gold loss, but it nearly destroyed the economies of the world, in the process. The excess credit which the Fed pumped into the economy spilled over into the stock market-triggering a fantastic speculative boom. Belatedly, Federal Reserve officials attempted to sop up the excess reserves and finally succeeded in braking the boom. But it was too late: by 1929 the speculative imbalances had become so overwhelming that the attempt precipitated a sharp retrenching and a consequent demoralizing of business confidence. As a result, the American economy collapsed. Great Britain fared even worse, and rather than absorb the full consequences of her previous folly, she abandoned the gold standard completely in 1931, tearing asunder what remained of the fabric of confidence and inducing a world-wide series of bank failures. The world economies plunged into the Great Depression of the 1930’s.

With a logic reminiscent of a generation earlier, statists argued that the gold standard was largely to blame for the credit debacle which led to the Great Depression. If the gold standard had not existed, they argued, Britain’s abandonment of gold payments in 1931 would not have caused the failure of banks all over the world. (The irony was that since 1913, we had been, not on a gold standard, but on what may be termed “a mixed gold standard”; yet it is gold that took the blame.) But the opposition to the gold standard in any form-from a growing number of welfare-state advocates-was prompted by a much subtler insight: the realization that the gold standard is incompatible with chronic deficit spending (the hallmark of the welfare state). Stripped of its academic jargon, the welfare state is nothing more than a mechanism by which governments confiscate the wealth of the productive members of a society to support a wide variety of welfare schemes. A substantial part of the confiscation is effected by taxation. But the welfare statists were quick to recognize that if they wished to retain political power, the amount of taxation had to be limited and they had to resort to programs of massive deficit spending, i.e., they had to borrow money, by issuing government bonds, to finance welfare expenditures on a large scale.

Under a gold standard, the amount of credit that an economy can support is determined by the economy’s tangible assets, since every credit instrument is ultimately a claim on some tangible asset. But government bonds are not backed by tangible wealth, only by the government’s promise to pay out of future tax revenues, and cannot easily be absorbed by the financial markets. A large volume of new government bonds can be sold to the public only at progressively higher interest rates. Thus, government deficit spending under a gold standard is severely limited. The abandonment of the gold standard made it possible for the welfare statists to use the banking system as a means to an unlimited expansion of credit. They have created paper reserves in the form of government bonds which-through a complex series of steps-the banks accept in place of tangible assets and treat as if they were an actual deposit, i.e., as the equivalent of what was formerly a deposit of gold. The holder of a government bond or of a bank deposit created by paper reserves believes that he has a valid claim on a real asset. But the fact is that there are now more claims outstanding than real assets. The law of supply and demand is not to be conned. As the supply of money (of claims) increases relative to the supply of tangible assets in the economy, prices must eventually rise. Thus the earnings saved by the productive members of the society lose value in terms of goods. When the economy’s books are finally balanced, one finds that this loss in value represents the goods purchased by the government for welfare or other purposes with the money proceeds of the government bonds financed by bank credit expansion.

In the absence of the gold standard, there is no way to protect savings from confiscation through inflation. There is no safe store of value. If there were, the government would have to make its holding illegal, as was done in the case of gold. If everyone decided, for example, to convert all his bank deposits to silver or copper or any other good, and thereafter declined to accept checks as payment for goods, bank deposits would lose their purchasing power and government-created bank credit would be worthless as a claim on goods. The financial policy of the welfare state requires that there be no way for the owners of wealth to protect themselves.

This is the shabby secret of the welfare statists’ tirades against gold. Deficit spending is simply a scheme for the confiscation of wealth. Gold stands in the way of this insidious process. It stands as a protector of property rights. If one grasps this, one has no difficulty in understanding the statists’ antagonism toward the gold standard.

Alan Greenspan
[written in 1966]

This article originally appeared in a newsletter called The Objectivist published in 1966 and was reprinted in Ayn Rand’s Capitalism: The Unknown Idea. (Once upon a time I use to pay for it – but to be honest it was over my head at that time).

FUCK ALAN GREENSPAN JUST ANOTHER DOOMED SELLOUT.

Take a number and get in line Alan…its a wide gate line…and you will be in it soon.

AKJOHN
AKJOHN
  mark
October 11, 2022 7:35 pm

And thus the term Global Banksters was born.

mark
mark
  AKJOHN
October 11, 2022 8:57 pm

And thus the term ‘A traitor doomed to hell’ after dew on the grass high living’… became a reality.

James
James
October 11, 2022 8:37 pm

I believe eggs in many baskets the way to go……,i.e. land/food/tools/security goods and skills/alt power ect.,most here get the idea.With all that and perhaps some reasonable amount of goods to trade in a safe environment like lighters/seeds what have you having some monies nf metals not a bad idea.

I still feel the 100’s of bic lighters I own will short term have more value then ounces of silver/gold ect.,but,we hit any point of sanity again feel the metals will have a value…..,time will tell.

Me newest investment:

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400 feet a second with a kill strength of a 100 yards.

Arthur
Arthur
October 12, 2022 3:51 am

That’s Nobel Prize™ winning economist Ben Bernanke to you.