The Case for Natural Money
"By far the biggest fallacy is the belief that a growing economy requires a growing money supply."
"By far the biggest fallacy is the belief that a growing economy requires a growing money supply."
"Gold's market premium to the official price was no small matter as it questioned the very fundamentals of the planned monetary system."
Although the dollar is no longer tied to gold, that will not stop the dollar price of gold from exploding when more investors realize that no one, not even a sharp guy like Ben Bernanke, ought to hold the fate of the world's economy in his hands.
Only two things can save the Fed at this point. One is a bailout by the federal government. This recapitalization could be financed by taxes or by monetizing government debt in another blow to the value of the currency.
Recorded at the Mises Circle in Houston, Sponsored by Jeremy S. Davis; Saturday, 24 January 2009.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt's 1934 Gold Reserve Act was the greatest theft of wealth I'm aware of in American history:
I conclude with an important final warning: naturally (and I must never tire of repeating it) the solution I propose is only valid in the context of an irrevocable decision to establish a free-banking system subject to a 100% reserve requirement on demand deposits.
Presented at the Mises Institute’s first conference, November 16-17, 1983; in Washington, DC.