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The System Of Money
The Gold Standard
by Mike Moffatt
An extensive essay on the gold
standard on The Encyclopedia of Economics and
Liberty defines it as:
“... a commitment by
participating countries to fix the prices of their domestic currencies in terms
of a specified amount of gold. National money and other forms of money (bank
deposits and notes) were freely converted into gold at the fixed price.”
A county under the gold
standard would set a price for gold, say $100 an ounce and would buy and sell
gold at that price.
This effectively sets a value
for the currency; in our fictional example, $1 would be worth 1/100th of an
ounce of gold.
Other precious metals could be
used to set a monetary standard; silver standards were common in the 1800s.
A combination of the gold and
silver standard is known as bimetallism.
A Brief History of the Gold Standard
If you would like to learn
about the history of money in detail, there is an excellent site called A Comparative Chronology of Money which
details the important places and dates in monetary history.
During most of the 1800s, the
United States had a bimetallic system of money; however, it was
essentially on a gold standard as very little silver was traded.
A true gold standard came to
fruition in 1900 with the passage of the Gold Standard Act.
The gold standard effectively
came to an end in 1933 when President Franklin D. Roosevelt outlawed private
gold ownership.
The Bretton Woods System,
enacted in 1946 created a system of fixed exchange rates that allowed
governments to sell their gold to the United States treasury at the price of
$35/ounce:
The Bretton Woods system ended
on August 15, 1971, when President Richard Nixon ended trading of gold at the
fixed price of $35/ounce.
At that point for the first
time in history, formal links between the major world currencies and real commodities
were severed.
The gold standard has not been
used in any major economy since that time.
What system of money do we use today?
Almost every country,
including the United States, is on a system of fiat money, which the glossary
defines as "money that is intrinsically useless; is used only as a
medium of exchange."
The value of money is set by the supply and
demand for money and the supply and demand for other goods and services in the
economy.
The prices for those goods and
services, including gold and silver, are allowed to fluctuate based on market
forces.
The Benefits and Costs of a Gold Standard
The main benefit of a gold
standard is that it ensures a relatively low level of inflation.
In articles such as "What Is the Demand for Money?" we've seen
that inflation is caused by a combination of four factors:
1. The supply of money goes up.
2. The supply of goods goes down.
3. Demand for money goes down.
4. Demand for goods goes up.
So long as the supply of gold
does not change too quickly, then the supply of money will stay relatively
stable.
The gold standard prevents a
country from printing too much money. If the supply of money rises too fast,
then people will exchange money (which has become less scarce) for gold (which
has not).
If this goes on too long, then
the treasury will eventually run out of gold.
A gold standard restricts
the Federal Reserve from enacting policies which
significantly alter the growth of the money supply which in turn limits
the inflation rate of a country.
The gold standard also changes
the face of the foreign exchange market.
If Canada is on the gold
standard and has set the price of gold at $100 an ounce, and Mexico is also on
the gold standard and set the price of gold at 5000 pesos an ounce, then 1
Canadian Dollar must be worth 50 pesos.
The extensive use of gold
standards implies a system of fixed exchange rates. If all countries are on a
gold standard, there is then only one real currency, gold, from which
all others derive their value.
The stability of the gold
standard cause in the foreign exchange market is often cited as one of the
benefits of the system.
The stability caused by the
gold standard is also the biggest drawback in having one. Exchange rates are not allowed to respond to
changing circumstances in countries.
A gold standard severely
limits the stabilization policies the Federal Reserve can use. Because of these
factors, countries with gold standards tend to have severe economic shocks.
Economist Michael D. Bordo explains:
“Because economies under the
gold standard were so vulnerable to real and monetary shocks, prices were
highly unstable in the short run. A measure of short-term price instability is
the coefficient of variation, which is the ratio of the standard deviation of
annual percentage changes in the price level to the average annual percentage
change. The higher the coefficient of variation, the greater the short-term
instability. For the United States between 1879 and 1913, the coefficient was
17.0, which is quite high. Between 1946 and 1990 it was only 0.8.”
Moreover, because the gold
standard gives the government little discretion to use monetary policy,
economies on the gold standard are less able to avoid or offset either monetary
or real shocks.
Real output, therefore, is
more variable under the gold standard. The coefficient of variation for real
output was 3.5 between 1879 and 1913, and only 1.5 between 1946 and 1990.
Not coincidentally, since the
government could not have discretion over monetary policy, unemployment was
higher during the gold standard.
It averaged 6.8 percent in the
United States between 1879 and 1913 versus 5.6 percent between 1946 and 1990.
So, it would appear that the
major benefit to the gold standard is that it can prevent long-term inflation
in a country. However, as Brad DeLong points
out:
“... if you do not trust a central
bank to keep inflation low, why should you trust it to remain on the gold
standard for generations?”
It does not look like the gold
standard will make a return to the United States anytime in the foreseeable
future.
Mike
Moffatt
Writes
extensively about economic issues
Studied
economics at four different universities in three countries
Taught
economics at both the university and community college levels
Experience
Mike
Moffatt is a former writer for ThoughtCo who wrote articles about Economics for
more than seven years. He contributed 260 articles to ThoughtCo, mainly on
economic issues including free-market policy, as well as the economic effect of
tariffs. Mike's background in writing about Economics includes work for The
Globe and Mail and Rogers Communications publications. He was an assistant
professor with the Richard Ivey School of Business for more than 14 years and
has served as the director of Policy and Research for Canada 2020. Further,
Mike held a position as the chief innovation fellow at Innovation, Science and
Economic Development where he advised Deputy Ministers about policy. He is the
senior director of Smart Prosperity Institute, a national research and policy
think tank in Ottawa, Canada.
Education
Mike
Moffatt received a Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Management Science from the
Richard Ivey School of Business in 2012. He also holds a Master Arts (M.A.) and
a Bachelor Arts (B.A.) in Economics.
Awards
and Publications
Co-wrote A Review of the Economic Impact of Energy East on Ontario (Mowat
Center Energy Research Hub, 2015)
Making it Simple: Boosting Canadian competitiveness through
selective tariff elimination(Mowat Center Energy Research Hub, 2016)
Towards an Inclusive Innovative Canada (Canada 2020,
vol. 1, 2017)
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