David Frum on the Gold Standard
Although Frum naturally doesn't say it explicitly, the only "cushion" that unbacked fiat money can provide is that it allows politicians to literally paper over crises, limping along from one to the next.
Although Frum naturally doesn't say it explicitly, the only "cushion" that unbacked fiat money can provide is that it allows politicians to literally paper over crises, limping along from one to the next.
Mises said that such a monetary policy would ultimately end in the destruction of the exchange value of money.
So, in both cases of the "gold standard" and "free banking" we find that much of the case against the free-market policy is based on misrepresentations of the policies and semantic subversion.
Needless to say, during the course of this history, the federal government took more and more monetary powers so that, today, our monetary arrangements would be unrecognizable to any of the Founders. Our coins, in particular, are ugly little pieces of nothing and a constant reminder of our degradation.
The May/June issue of Foreign Affairs, the organ of establishment policy, published
From National Review Online’s David Frum:
Make the dollar as good as gold and you eliminate the inflation problem and the business cycles that go along with it.
Why, after years of the market’s neglect of gold, is the paper money price of gold no
But then finally the masses wake up. They become suddenly aware of the fact that inflation is a deliberate policy and will go on endlessly. A breakdown occurs. The crack-up boom appears
Publisher Wiley Business Finance has released a new book, Gold: The On