As always with money, it should be stressed up front how much better the monetary discussion would be if those who insert themselves into it actually understood money. Most don’t.
Strange about this is that money is simple. It’s simple when it’s properly understood that no one exchanges “money” when they transact. In reality, trade is always and everywhere products for products.
Thousands of years ago money was merely a creation of producers of real goods, services and labor who sought a way for producers with disparate wants to trade with one another. Translating what is basic, I love Whataburger. The problem is that most Whataburger owners and their employees have little interest in my books and opinion pieces. If I showed up with them in pursuit of two breakfast tacos, large fries, small fries, and a medium Coke, they would reject my barter.
Thankfully there’s money. Like everyone else, I work for money, but what I’m really working for is access to Whataburger meals, clothes, shelter and all manner of other things that money is exchangeable for.
Money wasn’t a creation of the state as so many assume; rather it was once again an agreement about value that actual producers created so that they could exchange with one another despite wildly varying wants. The butcher wants the baker’s bread, but the baker only wants the vintner’s wine. With an agreement about value in circulation, exchange can happen between the butcher, baker and vintner even though their desires are very different.
All of the above explains the why behind an endless search for monetary stability among producers over thousands of years. Since money is just a measure of value enabling the exchange of real things, the best money is that which holds its value. Money in a perfect form neither rises nor shrinks in value. It just is. Kind of like the inch or foot.
Gold was eventually happened upon by monetary types around the world not due to mysticism, or official religion, or because the sun set a funny way, but because per John Stuart Mill, it was the commodity “least influenced by any of the causes which produce fluctuations of value.” The desire for stable money was a logical outgrowth of the basic truth that it’s always and everywhere products for products. Per Mill met again, stable money measured in terms of gold was born of a “want of a common measure for values of different sorts.”
Which brings us to David Wilcox, a former Federal Reserve functionary in Washington, D.C. Wilcox surely means well, but plainly doesn’t understand money. He’s not very good on history either, or for that matter the policy portfolio of the Fed he used to work for.
Wilcox refers to the multi-century gold standard era as a “disastrous experiment in monetary policymaking.” Such a view just isn’t serious. That’s true even for those who have a real problem with commodity-defined money. Implicit in Wilcox’s evidence-free assertion about a “disastrous experiment” is that a commodity used around the world to facilitate exchange was somehow bogus all along. Disastrous in fact. Again, his argument is much less than serious. It presumes the world's producers went stupid centuries and millennia ago, only for Richard Nixon to save them from horrid money....Goodness, central banks around the world (including the Fed he toiled for) keep enormous amounts of gold at the New York Fed. Just coincidence, or is gold a unique store of value?
Wilcox’s hatred for gold-defined money has him calling for the U.S. Senate to not confirm Judy Shelton when they vote on her nomination to the Fed Board. Shelton has been a vocal supporter of bringing back gold as a way to define the dollar over the decades, and her support has Wilcox triggered.
Shelton’s advocacy of gold-defined money just shows she properly understands money. What we call money is production determined, as in it serves no purpose other than as a medium of exchange. Where there’s lots of production there’s logically lots of money enabling its exchange. Where there’s little production there’s logically very little money. Poor David Wilcox, he believes money is an instigator, that its production stimulates growth. He gets it backwards. Money is a consequence of growth. Gold brings stability of value to the exchange medium that is money. Crucial here is that if ever a better measure came about, or a better way to maintain dollar-price stability came about, Shelton would support it. It’s not gold she supports as much as Shelton understands that money serves its purpose best when its value is stable.
Money confuses Wilcox, and evidence supporting this claim is his witless attempt to take Shelton down. Wilcox believes monetary policy must be altered during troubled times to stimulate the economy. Implicit in the economist’s droolings is that a basketball player who isn’t generating any interest from the NBA should shrink the inch so that he can magically be 7 feet tall. No, an inch is just a veil. So is money. It doesn’t alter reality as Wilcox assumes.
As for devaluing the currency as Wilcox advocates, such a response to slow growth amounts to even slower growth. Think about it. Investors are the source of economic progress, and they buy dollars in the future when they invest. Implicit in Wilcox’s lack of understanding of money is that devaluation of returns appeals to investors seeking returns in dollars.
Wilcox also thinks that the Fed can boost economic growth by reducing interest rates. He probably believed rent controls worked in the 1970s too. Sorry, but the borrowing of “money” is the borrowing of real economic goods. The Fed can’t decree artificially cheap access to them despite what Wilcox imagines.
After which, Wilcox should simply know better. Shelton would be but one official on the Fed Board. The idea that she could put us back on the gold standard amounts to willful ignorance on the part of the former Fed official. The Fed operates based on consensus, and most at the central bank think as Wilcox does; that money has magical powers such that it can alter reality. Shelton would be a minority opinion, and Wilcox knows that. Or maybe he doesn’t.
All that, plus the dollar’s exchange value has never been part of the Fed’s portfolio as is. Wilcox references President Nixon de-linking the dollar from gold, and that was the point. Then Fed Chairman Arthur Burns begged Nixon to not do as he did, but he was powerless to stop the president.
Wilcox’s impressive lack of understanding of money, along with willful ignorance about how the Fed operates argues loudly for Judy Shelton’s confirmation. She would bring a different voice to an institution staffed by supercilious know-nothings. In short, Shelton would shrink the influence of people like David Wilcox, who sadly still dominate the central bank.
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