The Dismal Monetary Science
Detractors of Adam Smith's Real Bills Doctrine
by Antal E. Fekete
Professor Emeritus, Memorial University of Newfoundland
June 13, 2005
Credit versus clearing
Strictly speaking a bill of exchange, pejoratively called "real
bill" by Milton Friedman following his mentor Lloyd Mints, is not
a credit instrument. It is a clearing instrument. It
enables the market to clear goods in most urgent demand without needlessly
invading the pool of circulating gold coins that would cause monetary
contraction whenever division of labor is further refined and production
processes are made more "roundabout" (to use the phrase of Böhm-Bawerk)
by the most progressive elements in the ranks of entrepreneurs and
inventors. Lending and borrowing are not involved. The real bill
circulates on its own wings and under its own steam by virtue of
the urgent demand for the underlying consumer good.
Self-liquidating credit
In spite of the conceptual difference between credit and clearing,
it is customary to extend the concept of credit to include, in addition
to credit arising out of the propensity to save that finances fixed
capital, self-liquidating credit arising out of the propensity
to consume that finances circulating capital in the final
phases of production of merchandise moving sufficiently fast to the
final, gold-paying consumer. Thus, then, the bill of exchange is
the embodiment of self-liquidating credit, so called as the credit
is liquidated directly with the gold coin surrendered by the consumer
in 91 days or less, 91 days being the length of the seasons of the
year. With the change of seasons the type of merchandise demanded
most urgently by the consumer also changes in the temperate zones
where spontaneous bill circulation has taken its origin during the
Renaissance. For this reason bills of exchange are limited to maturities
91 days or less. Under no circumstances would a bill circulate after
maturity. If the underlying merchandise couldn't be sold during the
current season, then it wouldn't be sold until the same season comes
around again the following year.
Chicken or egg?
Detractors of the Real Bills Doctrine (RBD) studiously avoid reference
to its prestigious pedigree and its author, Adam Smith. No less are
they anxious to avoid reference to self-liquidating credit and to
clearing. They also ignore the fact that, as a matter of merchant
custom, producers and distributors would hardly ever pay the producers
of higher order goods cash. The terms "91 days net" are standard
and part of the deal. It is understood by everyone concerned that
the bill will not be paid in full until the underlying merchandise
is sold to the final consumer. Yet the supplier can use the bill
to pay his own suppliers. Endorsed on the back, the bill can be passed
along a number of times, the endorsement indicating that title to
the proceeds has thereby been transferred from payer to payee. This
transaction is also called "discounting" as the payee applies an
appropriate discount, calculated at the current discount rate, to
the face value of the bill proportional to the number of days remaining
to maturity. Upon maturity the last payee presents the bill for payment
to the producer on whom the bill is drawn.
Such bill circulation was wide-spread in the city-states of Italy
in the Quattrocento and, more recently, in the 18th century
in Lancashire, before the Bank of England opened its branch in Manchester,
as observed by Ludwig von Mises in his 1912 treatise Theorie des
Geldes und der Umlaufsmittel, although he stopped short of investigating
the economic forces animating spontaneous bill circulation.
Unlike the question whether the chicken was first or the egg, the
question whether bills or banks came first has a definite answer.
There can be no doubt that the former did. Logically and historically,
the bill predates the bank. What is more, it is perfectly feasible
to have an economy without any commercial banks at all wherein circulating
bills of exchange emerge as the supplier delivers semi-finished consumer
goods to the producer. Instead of recognizing this fact, detractors
link bills and banks as if they were Siamese twins. In refraining
from ever mentioning the self-liquidating nature of the bill detractors
of the RBD insist that credit has been created "out of nothing" and
the bill is the engine driving paper-money inflation. Their methodology
consists in summarily denouncing any and all as a "monetary crank" who
is searching for and disseminating truth pertaining to bill circulation,
without the slightest effort to examine the evidence for spontaneity.
In doing so they betray their ignorance. Their blinkers do not let
them notice the extensive body of scholarly literature on clearing
and self-liquidating credit.
A "fairy" tale
Let us look at another instance of clearing and self-liquidating
credit that was vitally important in the Middle Ages: the institution
of city-fairs. Among the most notable ones were the fairs of Lyon
in France, and those of Seville in Spain. They were annual events
lasting up to a month. They attracted fair-goers from places as far
as 500 miles away who brought their merchandise to sell, as well
as their shopping-list of merchandise to buy. One thing they did
not bring was gold to pay for the purchase of goods on their shopping
list. They would leave it home for fear of highwaymen. They hoped
to pay for their purchases with the proceeds of their sale. However,
this presented problems. The fact is that there were far fewer gold
coins available at the fair than the total value of merchandise waiting
to be sold. Fairs would have been a total failure but for the institution
of clearing. Buying one merchandise while selling another could be
consummated perfectly well without the physical mediation of the
gold coin. Gold was needed to finalize the deal only to the extent
of the difference between the purchase price and the sale price.
In the absence of clearing the merchant arriving from a far-away
place would have to sell before he could buy. Moreover, he would
have a hard time selling because of the dearth of gold coins in the
hands of prospective buyers. But even if he could sell out his wares,
by the time he has done so the cream of the offering at the fair
would be gone, and he might be left with the choice between seconds
and rejects.
To avoid this, organizers of the fair set up a clearing house. Merchants
from afar registered their merchandise upon arrival and received
a quota of scrip money in proportion to its value at the clearing
house. Scrip money could be used right away to make purchases, even
before the purchaser sold any part of his registered merchandise.
The quota had to be returned to the clearing house at the end of
the fair. Scrip money in excess of the quota was redeemed, and shortfall
made up, in gold coin. The marvelous institution of the clearing
house and the invention of scrip money could move a far greater amount
of merchandise than scarce gold coins ever could.
Those who call the issuance of scrip money "credit created out of
nothing" are utterly blind to the true nature of the transaction.
Fair-goers did not need a loan. What they needed was an instrument
of clearing. The clearing house was not an engine of inflation. Its
scrip money represented self-liquidating credit that was extinguished
just as soon as the fair was over. As this example clearly demonstrates,
a loan is very different from an advance to the seller of wares with
a ready market at hand. The advance, scrip money, circulated spontaneously
at the fair, while other credit instruments such as loan contracts
and mortgages would never do.
Goods in bottoms
Or look at one other example of clearing that was important before
World War I. Suppose a cargo ship is ready to sail from Tokyo to
Hamburg carrying in its bottom consumer goods in urgent demand in
Western Europe. The sea-voyage takes up to 30 days. Does the importer
need to raise a loan to pay the supplier for the shipment prior to
sailing? Hardly. The goods are known to be in high demand and to
have a ready market upon arrival. The cargo is insured against losses
at sea. Accordingly, the supplier bills the importer for value received
f.o.b. Tokyo, payable in 30 days in London. The importer endorses
the bill, attaches the insurance documents, and sends it back to
the supplier. The boat is now ready to sail. The supplier has an
instrument he could use as ready cash to pay for goods needed in
order to replenish his depleted inventory. When the boat docks in
Hamburg, the wholesale merchant pays for the cargo with a sight bill
on London, with which the importer meets his maturing obligation.
This is self-liquidating credit "on the go". No loan is involved.
There is no need to invade the pool of circulating gold coins and
to tie up savings for 30 days in moving goods in urgent consumer
demand.
If you insist that this is credit expansion as money has been created
out of nothing without recourse to saved funds to finance the movement
of cargo across the high seas, and if you say that the bill drawn
on the importer has been misused to fan the fires of inflation, then
you have failed to grasp how foreign trade is financed.
Vanishing risks
It is true that production and distribution of consumer goods, no
less than that of producers goods, involve risks. However, there
is a difference. Risks of dealing in consumer goods in urgent demand
vanish as the "journey" of the "maturing" good is coming to an end,
and the final cash-paying consumer is already in sight, so that the
consummation of sale can no longer be doubted. From this point on
the last leg of the journey can be financed with self-liquidating
credit. By contrast, for producers goods, risks do not disappear
even after the sale.
Of course, not every consumer good has the quality that risks disappear
during the last leg of its journey. Luxury goods and specialty items,
for example, fall into this second category. So do consumer goods
sold on instalment plans. The production and distribution of these
have to be financed out of savings through loans, as is done in case
of producers goods. Merchandise of the first category may occasionally
have to be downgraded to the second, if demand for it slackens. Conversely,
consumer goods of the second category could be upgraded to the first
if demand for them picks up sufficiently. The bill market is the
final arbiter to draw the shifting line of demarcation separating
the two categories. If a bill can find takers and is readily discounted,
then the underlying merchandise belongs to the first category. Otherwise
it belongs to the second.
"Telescoping" payments
We have seen that the RBD has nothing to do with credit expansion
by the banks. On the contrary, the remarkable fact is precisely that
the RBD works also in an economy bereft of banks. It deals with the
singular phenomenon that bills drawn on emerging goods sufficiently
close to the ultimate cash-paying consumer circulate on their own
wings and under their own steam, provided only that those goods are
in urgent demand.
For this reason, if you want to refute the RBD, then it is not good
enough to attack the banks for their part in credit expansion. You
have to refute the phenomenon, acknowledged by Mises himself, that
the bill of exchange is, in and of itself, fully capable of spontaneous
monetary circulation. Typically, it is used in payment for higher-order
goods by the producer of lower-order goods. In more details, bills
drawn on the producer of an (n
1)-st
order good, by virtue of his being that much closer to the ultimate
gold-paying consumer, become a means of exchange in the hand of the
producer of n-th order goods when he pays the producer of
(n + 1)-st order goods for supplies. As the final product
is sold to the consumer, his gold coin will liquidate all claims
that have arisen along its journey through the various stages of
production. Several payments have been, as it were, telescoped into
one. This is clearing at work. This is the meaning of the assertion
that the credit represented by the bill of exchange is self-liquidating.
This is credit the volume of which flows and ebbs with the propensity
to consume.
Can circulating capital be financed out of savings?
Moreover, as I shall now show, it is not possible to finance all
of society's circulating capital out of savings. It would put inordinate
demand on savings that simply could not be met. Consider a hypothetical
product called "miltonic". It is in urgent demand as a medicine that
helps preventing cancer. Its production cycle takes 91 days, with
as many as 90 firms participating, so that the sojourn of the semi-finished
product at every one of the 90 stops takes one day. The ultimate
consumer is willing to pay $100 for a bottle while the producer of
the 90th order good has paid $11 for raw materials. We
shall also assume that the value added to the maturing product at
every stop is $1. Now if you want to finance the movement of one
bottle of miltonic through the various stages of production, then
the pool of circulating gold coins will have to be invaded 90 times,
and you have to withdraw savings in the amount of
11 + 12 + 13 + ... + 98 + 99 + 100 = ½(11 + 100)x90 = 45x111
or $4995, almost 50 times retail value. In other words, there must
be savings in existence in the amount of almost $5000 to move just
one bottle of miltonic through the production process all the way
to the consumer. This sum does not include fixed capital that also
has to be financed out of savings! And what about other items of
food, fuel, and clothes, also urgently demanded by the consumer?
Let me suggest it to you that no conceivable economy can generate
savings so prodigiously as to move all the indispensable items to
the consumer. I conclude that the division of labor could have never
been refined, and the "roundaboutness" of the production process
could have never been lengthened, beyond the level reached by the
cottage industries of the medieval manors, wherein every family had
to produce not only its own food and fuel, but also its clothes and
shelter.
If it did not happen that way, and production has become vastly
more efficient, was in large part due to the invention of the bill
of exchange, heralding the end of the Middle Ages. Clearing has been
put to work making it entirely unnecessary to invade the pool of
circulating gold coins and divert savings, to finance the movement
of consumer goods through an ever more refined and roundabout process,
provided only that those goods be demanded by the consumer urgently
enough.
Detractors of the RBD, above all Nobel prize laurate Milton Friedman,
put his foot into his mouth when he ridiculed the idea of bill circulation
suggesting that it was inflationary. It is hard to see how thoughtful
people can treat the notion, that circulating capital no less than
fixed capital must be financed out of savings, with respect.
Rate of interest versus discount rate
Although Mises was fully cognizant with the bill of exchange, he
failed to come to grips with the idea that there was no credit expansion
involved in its spontaneous circulation. Bills emerged together with
the emergence of marketable merchandise, and were extinguished when
the latter was removed from the market by the consumer. At no point
did the bill increase the amount of purchasing media relative to
the available supply of merchandise. The bill is an instrument of
clearing or, if you will, self-liquidating credit. It is one of the
marvelous creations of the human genius, fully commensurate in importance
with the evolution of indirect exchange, arising spontaneously and
opening up new avenues to human progress. Unfortunately, Mises was
not interested in the concepts of clearing and self-liquidating credit.
He dismissed them as paraphernalia belonging to credit expansion.
In this way Mises missed his chance to make his theory of money and
credit withstand the ravages of time.
His error of omission led to several errors of commission, the most
conspicuous of which was his assumption that the discount rate at
which maturing commercial paper changed hands was simply a subset
of the rate of interest, in particular, the rate on short-term borrowing.
This was a most serious error indeed, as the rate of interest and
the discount rate were governed by entirely different, sometimes
diametrically opposing, economic forces. They could move independently
of one another, frequently in opposite directions, subject to the
only constraint that the rate of interest can never be lower than
the discount rate. If it were, the propensity to save would outstrip
the propensity to consume. But saving becomes pointless if human
life cannot be sustained for lack of spending on the wherewithal
of life. If you save too much, then you die of starvation. No one
ever has done so, rumors notwithstanding. The anecdotal miser is
just that, anecdotal. This also explains why the rate of interest
cannot go to zero. However, the discount rate may, whenever consumer
confidence becomes most exuberant making shop-windows spill over
their contents to the curbside.
To recapitulate: the rate of interest is governed by the propensity
to save and, by contrast, the discount rate is governed by the propensity
to consume. In either case the rate changes inversely with the propensity.
For example, the higher the propensity to save, the lower is the
rate of interest; the lower the propensity to consume, the higher
is the discount rate. That the two propensities are not rigidly linked
is due to the existence of a cushion, the propensity to hoard.
Irredeemable currency: present good or future
good?
But Mises spurned the idea that there was a theory of an independent
discount rate. In consequence his theory of interest is flawed. This
fact cannot be swept under the rug, as it has led to further curious
errors and contradictions. For example, Mises concluded that fiduciary
money, i.e., money originating in the credit expansion of banks,
was a present good on exactly the same terms as was the gold
coin, and not a future good as was the bill of exchange. In
his eyes even irredeemable currency was a present good, in spite
of the fact that it could be created at the pleasure of the government ad
libitum. Elsewhere Mises rightly ridicules irredeemable currency
by saying that only the government is capable of the feat of taking
two perfectly useful goods, such as paper and ink, and make the former
perfectly worthless by sprinkling some of the latter on it. But if
we declare irredeemable currency a present good, then we credit the
government with power to create wealth out of nothing, a notion antithetical
to Mises' opus.
Had Mises admitted that a discount rate existed independently of
the rate of interest, then he could have avoided such contradictions.
Fiduciary money and irredeemable currency belong to the species of
a promissory note and as such are not a present good but a future
good. Even a gold certificate is a future good: "there's many a slip
between cup'n lip". Only a gold coin qualifies as a present good
among the multifarious forms of purchasing media. This makes the
gold coin sui generis, one of a kind, in the context of the
theory of interest. In fact, a theory of interest without gold is "Hamlet without
the prince". The interest rate on a loan repayable in irredeemable
currency can never be the benchmark on which to build a theory of
interest, no matter how many armored divisions the government foisting
off currency on the world may have at its disposal. Debt repayable
in irredeemable currency is nothing but an interest-bearing promise
to pay that is exchangeable at maturity for a non-interest-bearing
one. Bonds at maturity are exchanged but for an inferior instrument,
insofar as interest-paying debt is considered preferable to non-interest-paying
debt. The time-preference theory of interest is vacuous unless it
explicitly stipulates that interest and principal be payable in gold
coin. Without this provision prestidigitation is involved: future
goods are juggled to make the impression that debt is being retired
through the surrender of a present good.
But debt can never be retired under the regime of irredeemable currency.
At maturity it is shifted from one debtor to another. People are
constructing a Debt Tower of Babel destined to topple in the fullness
of times.
The Lady of Threadneedle Street
It is commonplace to badmouth the Bank of England for her role in
the corruption of the gold standard of Sir Isaac Newton, the Master
of the Royal Mint from 1699 to his death in 1727. But whatever one
can say of the low circumstances of her birth in 1696, and of her
most recent role as the "Bag Lady of Threadneedle Street" in selling
her gold reserve to the drumbeat from the paper mill on the Potomac,
we must give the Bank of England credit for financing Pax Britannica
for a period of one hundred years between the close of the Napoleonic
Wars and the outbreak of World War I. Authors often wondered how
the Bank of England could run the international gold standard on
a shoestring of a gold reserve.
The mystery readily finds its solution if we contemplate that the
Bank of England acted as the clearing house for real bills financing
world trade between 1815 and 1914. This was history's most successful
episode demonstrating the power and the potential of the RBD. By
1913 world trade in consumer goods had reached a high mark that was
not surpassed until the 1990's. In whichever countries they were
domiciled, the exporter billed the importer and the terms of the
bill "91 days net payable in London" were standard. The importer
endorsed the bill, attached shipping and insurance documents, and
sent it back to the exporter. Thereafter the bill circulated world-wide
in lieu of gold till it matured. Hardly ever did a default occur,
and even then it was in consequence of violations of bill trading
rules. Gold was shipped only to the extent of the difference between
imports and exports. The modest size of the gold reserve of the Bank
of England was no fetter on a most prodigious increase in world trade,
a monument to the triumph of clearing. Goods in bottoms did not have
to sail anywhere near England to be eligible for financing through
bills drawn on London.
It is incumbent on the detractors of the RBD to explain how the
phenomenal increase of world trade in consumer goods, on which the
remarkable prosperity of the world before World War I depended, was
possible with only a negligible amount of gold changing hands.
The permanent crisis of the world's monetary system
The outbreak of World War in 1914 put an end to international bill
circulation and wiped out world trade in consumer goods almost entirely.
When the war ended, the garrison states that emerged did not allow
real bill trading to recover. Bill trading assumes that the gold
is outside of the banks, in the hands of the people. Strategic imperatives
called for the concentration of monetary gold in bank vaults. People
had to be weaned from the gold coin. Nor was the reintroduction of
real bill trading considered an option at the Bretton Woods conference
in 1944 that was charged with the task to regenerate the world economy
and trade after the ordeal of World War II. The world is still doing
without the benefits of real bills. Trade has been placed under the
direct control of governments. Political, not economic considerations
govern the flow of consumer goods across international boundaries.
Government regimentation of the lives of the people has become virtually
complete.
The expulsion of real bills and the failure of world trade to recover
after World War I, together with the advent of "cash and carry" mentality,
was one of the main causes of the failure of the international gold
standard and the Great Depression about a dozen years after the cessation
of hostilities. A strong case could be made that if bill circulation
had been allowed to return, then world trade would have quickly recovered,
too, and the international gold standard would not have collapsed.
Collapse it did because, without the clearing mechanism provided
by real bills, it could not cope with world trade, much reduced though
it was. People were talking about an "acute shortage of monetary
gold". Money doctors rose with a phony diagnosis that the malady
was due to the increase in the price level that was not accompanied
by a commensurate increase in gold reserves. This diagnosis holds
no water. It is based on the Quantity Theory of Money, a flawed theory
that is applicable only in a world where all changes are in a linear
relationship with their causes. In reality, however, changes in our
world are a non-linear function of causes. There is no way of telling
how much trade a given amount of monetary gold can support at any
given price level. The volume of trade depends, not on the stock
of monetary gold, but on the clearing system which can be improved
to meet the challenge. Instead of improving it, governments conspired
to sabotage the clearing system by blocking international trade in
real bills that had worked so efficiently before the war. The proper
prescription should have been the restoration of the clearing mechanism
through real bills. Please remember that you have seen it here first: the
main cause of the Great Depression of the 1930's was government sabotage
of the Real Bills Doctrine of Adam Smith. The world's monetary
and payments system is still limping from crisis to crisis, and will
continue doing so until the RBD is fully rehabilitated.
The pipedream of the 100 percent gold standard
Some detractors of the RBD advocate what they call the "100 percent
gold standard" in which they leave no room for real bill circulation.
They maintain that real bills must be superseded by loans financed
out of savings.
This is a momentous issue that must be addressed adroitly and fairly
by all protagonists of sound money. We must put aside prestige, rancor,
and personal ambitions in order to bring about a consensus concerning
the shape of the gold standard that we all hope will arise from the
ashes of the regime of irredeemable currency. We must all cooperate
that the new gold standard will not only survive but flourish as
well.
The first thing to be observed about the "100 percent gold standard" is
that nothing approximating it has ever been tested in practice. All
historical metallic monetary standards had a supporting clearing
system, more or less developed, which limited the actual payment
in the monetary metal to net trade, that is, the difference between
the value of total purchases and that of total sales. It follows
from my analysis above that a "100 percent gold standard" will not
be able to survive for reasons having to do with the burden it unnecessarily
puts on savings. There isn't, nor will ever be, savings in sufficient
quantity to finance circulating capital in full, given our highly
refined division of labor and roundabout processes of production.
Luckily, this is no problem, as so much circulating capital to move
merchandise in sufficiently high demand by the final consumer can
be financed through self-liquidating credit. Advocates of the "100
percent gold standard" must realize that they have grossly underestimated
the degree of sophistication of the structure of production in the
modern economy. They must also come to grips with the fact that financing
circulating capital with real bills is not inflationary. Real bills
enter and exit circulation pari passu with the emergence and
ultimate sale of consumer goods.
Only if we approach our differences with sufficient humility can
we prevail against the evil forces opposing freedom armed, as they
are, with the formidable weapon of irredeemable currency. Given the
stakes, I am convinced that Ludwig von Mises would, if he were alive
today, put pride aside and admit that his 1912 judgment in dismissing
the discount rate as an independent variable, distinct from the rate
of interest, was a mistake.
* * *
Further reading
In addition to Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations I recommend
my Adam Smith's Real Bills Doctrine that was published on
the internet as Monetary Economics 101 in the Gold Standard University
series in 2002, see the website http://www.goldisfreedom.com.
Xicotepec, Mexico, June 13, 2005.
Note
The Mises Institute's broadside on Nelson Hultberg and myself, see Real
Bills, Phony Wealth by Robert Blumen calling us "monetary
cranks" fails to meet the standards of polite academic debate.
Our sin: we had the temerity to suggest that a proper monetary
system for the United States should incorporate not only a gold
standard but also a clearing system based on Adam Smith's Real
Bills Doctrine (see: Breaking the Demopublican Monopoly by
Nelson Hultberg, published by Americans for a Free Republic,
P.O.Box 801213, Dallas, TX 75380, http://www.afr.org)
The present paper was written as a rejoinder, explaining why a "100
percent gold standard" was a pipedream, and that it was not good
enough to put gold coins into circulation (which would promptly go
into hiding). One would also have to make provisions for a clearing
system, without which the gold standard could not function in a complex
economy.
Unfortunately Lew Rockwell and Jeffrey Tucker at the Mises Institute
have refused to post my rejoinder, letting the attack on my theoretical
work go unchallenged making it appear that no reasonable answer to
the detractors of the Real Bills Doctrine is possible. To say the
least, this is a most peculiar procedure for an institute that pretends
to support the search for and dissemination of truth.
It is difficult if not impossible to enter into a debate on the
Real Bills Doctrine with people who are not conversant with the modern
literature on clearing and self-liquidating credit. I just mention
the names of a few 20th-century authors who have written
on the subject: Charles Rist, Melchior Palyi, Benjamin M. Anderson,
Heinrich Rittershousen, Ulrich von Beckerath, Henry Meulen; the complete
list is too long for inclusion here.
In the 1930's University of Chicago economist Lloyd Mints wrote
a book on real bills in which he reviewed the literature on the subject written
in English only. This is not unlike writing a medical treatise
on tuberculosis reviewing the contributions of English researchers
only. If you cast your net so narrow, then you miss the German
bacteriologist Robert Koch, the discoverer of what has come to be
known as the Koch bacillus which today is recognized as the cause
of tuberculosis. It may be of interest to note that for a number
of years Koch was ridiculed for suggesting a single cause for "consumption",
the earlier name for this devastating disease.
Latter-day detractors of the RBD have obviously missed the contribution
of Ritterhousen who in 1934 published a paper Zahlungsverkehr,
Einkaufsschaffung und Arbeitsbeschaffung in the journal Annalen
der Gemeinwirtschaft. In it he makes a defense of the "Banking
School"and the Real Bills Doctrine against the inflationists, deflationists,
and adherents of the "Currency School". He also discusses how the
first departure in 1909 from the RBD by Germany was later imitated verbatim by
other countries, which was the major cause of unemployment world-wide
in the 1930's. It is not fashionable nowadays to read papers that
have been written and passed by the Nazi censorship during the Third
Reich. Yet you may ignore them at your own peril. Economist and monetary
scientist Rittershousen survived the Nazi witch-hunt by a fluke.
He continued to teach after the war until his retirement as Dean
at the University of Köln in 1966.
For all open-minded Americans my rejoinder will demonstrate why
Murray Rothbard and the Misesians are mistaken in their denigration
of the Real Bills Doctrine and the Banking School, and why their
uncritical embracing of the never-ever-tried idea of the so-called "100
percent gold standard" would impart a congenital disease to the new
metallic monetary standard after the collapse of the regime of irredeemable
currency. In fact I would go so far as to suggest that no greater
favor to the enemies of freedom in America could be done than pursuing
the present policy of the Mises Institute. The enemies of freedom,
the managers of the unconstitutional irredeemable dollar, are rubbing
their hands in joy while getting ready to shout from the rooftop
that "we have told you so". They understand what the Misesians do
not: the "100 percent gold standard" is doomed to failure. If implemented,
it would cause depression, bankruptcies, and unemployment. The Great
Depression of the 1930's would be repeated, which was due, not to
fractional reserve banking, but to government sabotage of the market's
clearing system, the international real bill market.
The "100 percent gold standard" is but a blueprint to discredit
the gold standard 100 percent.
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Antal E. Fekete is Professor Emeritus at Memorial University
in St. Johns, Newfoundland. Born and educated in Hungary, he emigrated
to Canada after the Hungarian Revolution in 1956 and taught for 35
years in the field of mathematics. Over the years, he has been a
visiting professor or Fellow at Columbia University, Princeton University,
and Trinity College of Dublin. He worked in the Washington office
of Congressman W.E. Dannemeyer on monetary and fiscal reform for
five years in the nineties; and in 1996, he won first prize in the
prestigious International Currency Essay contest sponsored by Bank
Lips Ltd. of Switzerland. He is the author of Gold and Interest and Monetary
Economics 101. In addition, his scholarly articles have appeared
on numerous Internet sites such as Financial Sense Online, Free-Market
News, Gold-Eagle, SafeHaven, and LeMetropoleCafe.
E-mail: aefekete@hotmail.com