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Prof. Lawrence H. White: The Gold Standard, Explained - YouTube
Channel: Learn Liberty
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Why did the United States leave the gold standard?
Basically, because the gold standard constrained the federal government.
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I get a lot of questions from students about
the gold standard. For example, what is it?
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And why don't we have one anymore? I will
start by explaining what it is. Under a gold
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standard, the monetary unit is defined as
a certain amount of gold, like 1/20 of an
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ounce, or 10 grams. In the era of the international
gold standard, before World War I, the U.S.
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dollar was defined as a little less than 1/20
of an ounce of gold. To be precise, one ounce
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of gold equaled $20.67.
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A silver standard follows the same idea. The
British monetary unit, the pound sterling,
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originally meant exactly that: one pound of
sterling silver. A gold standard can operate
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with or without government involvement in
the minting of gold coins, the issuing of
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gold-backed paper currency, and the provision
of gold-backed checking accounts. Historically,
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private mints and commercial banks were reliable
providers of gold-denominated moneys.
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Thanks to the banks, a gold standard doesn't
mean that people have to carry around bags
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of gold coins. Anyone who finds paper currency
and checking accounts more convenient can
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use those. But it does mean that if a person
wants to redeem a bank's $20 bill or cash
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its $20 check, the bank is obliged to give
him a $20 gold coin. The obligation to redeem
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for gold guarantees the gold value of all
kinds of bank-issued money. And the purchasing
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power of gold was historically very stable.
By contrast, under today's unbacked, or fiat,
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dollar standard, there is no value guarantee.
If you take a $20 Federal Reserve note to
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a bank, all you can get for it is other Federal
Reserve notes. The experience with fiat moneys
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in various countries has ranged from mild
inflation to terrible inflation.
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Why did the United States leave the gold standard?
Basically, because the gold standard constrained
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the federal government. The obligation to
redeem in gold limited money printing at times
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when the federal government, rightly or wrongly,
thought more money printing would be a good
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idea. The United States went off the gold
standard in two major steps. First, in the
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1930s, under President Franklin Roosevelt,
the federal government broke its promise to
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redeem Federal Reserve notes in coin for U.S.
citizens.
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Private ownership and use of gold coins were
actually outlawed. Individuals and banks were
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ordered to turn in their gold coins and bullion
to the Federal Reserve. In the late 1960s
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and early 1970s the Fed printed dollars rapidly.
The falling purchasing power of the dollar
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triggered redemptions by foreign central banks,
and the U.S. government began running out
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of gold. Rather than stop printing dollars,
Nixon ended their redeemability in 1971. The
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money printing then accelerated, culminating
in double-digit inflation around 1980. By
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contrast, inflation under the classical gold
standard was never in double digits and averaged
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only 0 to 1 percent per year over the long
term.
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A common objection to a gold or silver standard
is that there can be random shocks to the
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supply or demand curves for metal and that
these will make the purchasing power of metallic
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money unstable. But historically this was
not much of a problem. For example, after
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the major supply shock of the California gold
rush of 1849, as the gold dispersed over the
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entire world, the resulting inflation was
less than 1.5 percent per year for about eight
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years. Thereafter the price level leveled
off and later gradually declined as the world
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output of goods grew faster than the stock
of gold. Under our current fiat standard,
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the supply of money is up to the decisions
of the Federal Open Market Committee. There
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is no self-correcting market tendency to prevent
the creation of too much money under that
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system. The fate of the dollar rests with
a handful of political appointees.
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The practical question is under which system
are the quantity and purchasing power of money
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more stable. In other words, which system
better limits inflation? The answer to that
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question is clear from the historical record.
Gold and silver standards have dramatically
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outperformed fiat standards around the world
in providing stable, low-inflation currency.
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