By David Morgan
By Jonathan (TMR Member)
Most people tend to take most things in life for granted – they never question how or why things are the way they are. Almost everyone in advanced economies these days has a car, television, mobile phone, computer, clean drinking water from a tap, and electricity. Most of us, especially the younger generation, were born into this reality. However, depending on how old you are and your geographical location, things can be quite different. Your parents and grandparents have a totally different experience. When they were younger, not everyone had a car or a television, and the thought of having a small device in your hand that can instantly connect you to anyone across the globe was something that nobody thought or even dreamed about.
One of the things that impacts us all on daily basis and most aspects of our lives, regardless of ethnicity, religion, culture, and geographical location, is money/currency. Every person needs to eat, wear clothes, have a roof over his head, have means of transportation, and countless other transactions – currency enables such things with relative ease. All currencies today are fiat (by decree) currencies issued by governments and their central banks. But that has not always been the case, and I argue that such currencies are dangerous and immoral. To understand how things came to be, I’ll delve a bit in history.
Prior to currency, there was barter. Barter’s major problems was that you had to be at the right place and time to find someone else who wanted to trade his goods or services for yours. Currency solved that problem, and helped facilitate trade and investment, thereby enabling larger economic activity and increased production. Throughout history, across borders, centuries, and cultures, gold and silver emerged as a superior form of currency, as they were able to be a store of value of long periods of time, measured in decades, centuries, and millenniums.
However, on occasions, there were also paper currencies, which in some places started as a receipt of the thing of value (gold and silver), but they were short lived, as they weren’t a reliable store of value. Paper currency was and is abused by politicians and banks, which eventually devalue the currency, causing the general public to lose purchasing power, thus reducing the overall prosperity of a society. While theoretically paper currency can be managed responsibly, history has shown time and again, that is never the case. The temptation to paper over problems rather than solving them and letting the free market determine winners and losers, is simply too great for most people. This is especially true of politicians, who want to get re-elected, and the various powerful special interest groups which are attracted to political power and influence it for their own advantage, usually at the expense of the public.
Most people, myself included at one point, view currency/money as wealth. After researching the subject for a prolonged period of time, I came to a conclusion that the proper way to view wealth is tangible items/goods and services provided by society’s members. Currency, is a claim (or representation) on wealth, and some currencies do and have done a better job at preserving that claim, allowing to store economic energy over long periods of a time until a person wishes to use it, thereby translating a claim on wealth (whether it is paper currency or precious metal) into real wealth, such as a house, car, farmland, gym membership, etc. Creating more currency units does not increase wealth – it merely increases the claims/representations on real tangible items and services. A prosperous society is one with enhanced production capability, thus increasing the claim each currency unit has on real wealth (prices go down)
The public at large does not know or taught how currency is created. There are two ways it is created: by the Federal Reserve (central bank) and fractional reserve banking.
Federal Reserve (central bank) Currency Creation Process:
- The government’s treasury issues a bond which is a piece of paper
stating it owes X amount of dollars plus interest for a certain period of
time Y. - Thru a process called bond auction, certain banks (primary dealers) are
allowed to buy bonds from the treasury and sell it to the Federal Reserve. - The Federal Reserve prints physical notes or inputs a bunch of numbers
into a computer program and swaps the newly created currency with the
treasury’s bond (I.O.U), using the primary dealers as a middleman. - After a period of time Y passes, the treasury must pay the principal
amount plus interest back to the central bank. Since the total amount it
owes is greater than the amount of currency previously created, it must
borrow more currency into existence to pay the interest and the processes
repeats itself again. - The Federal Reserve remits some of the interest profit to the treasury
and some is disburses as dividends to its private shareholders. Yes! This
perpetual debt design guarantees that large currency amounts end up in some
people’s pocket.
Fractional Reserve Banking
If I had a ten dollar bill and loaned it to a friend of mine, he would be able to purchase goods for ten dollars but I would lose that purchasing power until he returns me the ten dollars. Banks, however, have been given enormous power. When a typical loan such as a mortgage or automobile loan is made, the bank doesn’t really loan you another depositor’s currency. Instead, it creates new currency and the debt associated with it, for which you have to pay back with interest. That currency can be deposited into another bank and the process repeats. There is a limit to how much currency can be created out of thin air, but it is quite small and allows for a great expansion of the currency supply, and the debt which is associated with it.
These two processes of currency creation increase the currency supply faster than the production capability of a society, thus increasing the ratio of currency to goods and services. As long as the public’s psychology remains “calm”, this translates into price increases and reduced standards of …read more
From:: David Morgan