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AMERICAN MONETARY
INSTITUTE
PO BOX 601,
VALATIE, NY 12184
Tel. 518-392-5387, email ami@taconic.net
http://www.monetary.org
Stephen Zarlenga, Director
Dedicated to the
independent study of monetary history, theory, and reform
Stephen Zarlenga's speech at the U.S. Treasury
(Dec. 4, 2003)
TALK
AT THE US TREASURY DECEMBER, 2003,
INCLUDING
SENIOR ADVISORS
THE LOST SCIENCE OF MONEY -
A SOLUTION TO THE STATES’ FISCAL CRISES
I thank the US Treasury
for inviting me. It’s a great honor and opportunity to bring the
research results of the American Monetary Institute to your attention,
which are relevant to the developing fiscal crises faced by several
states. Part of our 501c3 mission statement is to do just that.
The fiscal problem has its roots in the structure and control of our
monetary system and I intend to show how that structure has ultimately
been based on a false or inadequate concept of the nature of money.
THE
PROBLEM IS THAT MONEY HAS NOT BEEN ACCURATELY DEFINED
Perhaps the chief
failure of economics is its inability, from Adam Smith to the present
to define or discover a concept of money consistent with logic and
history. Economists rarely define money, assuming an understanding of
it.
It’s still being argued whether the nature of money is a concrete
power, embodied in a commodity like gold; or whether it’s a
credit/debit issued by private banks. Does its value come from the
material of which it’s made? Or is it, as we have concluded, an
abstract social power - an institution of the law, having value because
its accepted in exchanges due to the sponsorship of government?
The correct answer leads to conclusions on the proper monetary role of
government; whether the power to create and control money should be
lodged, as at present in a somewhat ambiguous private issuer - the
Federal Reserve System and its member banks - or should be wholly
reconstituted within government. An accurate concept of money will
light the way to solving the present fiscal crisis.
IN
DEFINING MONEY, METHODOLOGY IS CRUCIAL
We have two basic
approaches to understanding money: A theoretical method based on logic;
and an empirical approach based on experience or history. Practitioners
of the two methods arrive at very different conclusions. Theoreticians
usually support private commodity money and private credit money.
Historians normally want a much larger role for government.
Alexander Del Mar the great monetary historian wrote "As a rule
political economists...do not take the trouble to study the history of
money; it is much easier to imagine it and to deduce the principles of
this imaginary knowledge."
Today we’ll examine some historical cases where important principles
clearly stand out.
Lets
start with ARISTOTLE (384-322 BC) who gave the culmination of
Greek thought and experiment on money around 330 BC:
“All goods must therefore be measured by some one thing...now this unit
is in truth, demand, which holds all things together...but money has
become by convention a sort of representative of demand; and this is
why it has the name nomisma - because it exists not by nature, but by
law (which in Greek was nomos) and it is in our power to change it and
make it useless.” (See The Lost Science of Money, (LSM, Ch. 1) (XXX
ARISTOTLE SLIDE)
So Aristotle calls money a creature of the law. Not a commodity from
nature but an abstract social institution. Its essence is not tangible
wealth in itself, but a power to obtain wealth.
THIS IS REGARDED AS A SUPREMELY IMPORTANT
DISTINCTION - BETWEEN MONEY and wealth. If you are
always trading in “things” it’s just an advanced form of barter.
PLATO Agreed With
Aristotle and advocated fiat money for his Republic:
“The law enjoins that no private individual shall possess or hoard gold
or silver bullion, but have money only fit for domestic use.
...wherefore our citizens should have a money current among themselves
but not acceptable to the rest of mankind....”(Laws) “Then they will
need a market place, and a money-token for purposes of
exchange.”(Republic)
So both Aristotle and
Plato noted the paramount principle - that the nature of money is a
fiat of the law, an invention or creation of mankind. This principle,
part of a lost science of money, must now be relearned in the 3rd
Millennium in order to achieve the monetary reforms needed to move back
from the brink of nuclear disaster, to move away from a future
dominated by fraud and ugliness, toward a world of justice and beauty.
Significantly, the term
“nomisma” is seldom found in early Greek texts. It’s in Herodotus in
the 400s BC, but not again until Aristotle, over a hundred years later.
This concept of money was probably suppressed in an ongoing struggle
between oligarchic forces – a kind of “old Boy Network” relying on
personal relations, arrayed against public money, and the developing,
more democratic, public sphere of the Greek Polis, which introduced and
controlled the nomisma payment mechanism. (LSM, Ch. 1)
This “private vs.
public” battle for the control of the money power is part of a great
ongoing social battle recurring throughout history to this day. This
factor shapes the most important outcomes determining how well a money
system works. A good system functions fairly; helping the society
create values for living. A bad one obstructs the creation of values;
places special privileges in the hands of some to the disadvantage of
others, and promotes unfair concentrations of wealth and power, and
disharmony and social strife.
PUBLIC
(Government) MONEY HAS A SUPERIOR RECORD
Now it may
be surprising, but the historical record actually shows that publicly
controlled systems function much better than private ones. Furthermore,
it shows that the concept of money - how money is defined – usually
determines whether the system will be publicly or privately controlled.
So there is a lot at stake in how a society defines money. (LSM, Ch. 16)
Here are two
ancient
cases from Greece and Rome based on Aristotle’s NOMISMA concept of
money:
LYCURGUS SPARTAN
PELANORS
Plutarch describes an example of this
nomisma in his discussion of Lycurgus of Sparta’s 8th century BC
monetary reform, aimed at a society where wealth had become overly
concentrated. Lycurgus banned using gold and silver and instituted iron
slugs called Pelanors for Sparta’s money system. Furthermore those iron
pieces were dipped in vinegar while hot, to render them brittle and to
purposely destroy any commodity value that they had as iron! They
received their value through legal sanction. This system of iron
nomisma lasted about 350 years and Sparta became a premier power. Plato
confirms that Sparta’s iron money was rendered useless with the vinegar
treatment, and remarked that it was based on the “Dorian System”
indicating the existence of an earlier tradition. (LSM, Ch. 1)
REPUBLICAN
ROME USED A SIMILAR SYSTEM
Rome isolated herself
monetarily, basing her money on copper. This “disenfranchised” the
gold/silver hoards and therefore much of the power of the East. While
gold could still be traded in Rome as merchandise; without the monetary
power, the ability of the East to control or disrupt Rome’s money would
be reduced and she had a better chance to control her destiny.
Republican Rome used Aristotelian Nomisma, where bronze discs were
valued far above their commodity values. Under this money, she grew
powerful, staying independent from the East. (LSM, Ch. 2) (AES GRAVE
SLIDE)
When the US rose to
become the dominant world power, we didn’t have this advantage of
monetary isolation. But during the two great crises of our nation – the
Revolutionary War, and the Civil War - we erected money systems
independent of Old World Power: the Continental Currency and the
Greenbacks. And though both have been severely criticized, they served
our nation well. (ROMA COIN, DENARIUS, OATH SCENE SLIDES)
Rome won the Punic wars,
but her money system was destroyed in the process and she regressed to
the metals systems of the East. First to silver, and then with the
imposition of Empire, Julius Caesar established a gold standard based
on the weight system of the ancient temples. The growth of plutocracy
accelerated; wealth concentrated in its hands and the population
degenerated into slavery. Adopting the East’s commodity money caused
power and even the Empire’s headquarters to shift eastward to
Byzantium.
[Today one often hears moralistic warnings about Roman inflation
destroying the Empire, but on closer examination, it appears that
deflation was a much greater problem. There were several great causes
for this, which we can discuss in the question period if anyone asks.
(Weight of Bezant was constant. 1. No mining; 2. Only Pontifex Maximus
could mint gold coins; 3. Silver continually draining East; 4. False
concept of money as commodity)] (LSM, Ch.2 & 3)
The breakdown of law and
money continued to operate negatively, the one upon the other for
centuries, in a slow downward spiral of societal decay, especially in
the West, where the administration couldn’t stop the city of Rome from
being temporarily overrun. In this context the concept of money
regressed back to crude metallism. (XXX CHARLEMAGNE slide)
CHARLEMAGNE attempted to
re-institute money in the West around 800 AD. But minting his pennies
depended on working slaves to the death in his silver mines. (LSM, Ch.
4) (PENNYslide)
When Charlemagne’s Empire ran out of conquests and slaves, the money
system faltered. This plunder/conquest/slavery basis of precious metals
systems continued well into the 19th century. Modern 19th and 20th
century moneys claiming to be precious metals systems, depended on an
element of fraud as we’ll see.
EUROPE’S
MONEY SYSTEMS became more functional only after the plunder of
the Americas. The total loot taken at gunpoint from the Indians from
1500 to 1700, was over 1200 tons of gold and 60,000 tons of silver!
These amounts far overshadowed European supplies, and prices rose about
400 to 500% during that time.
The theft was their
minor offense. Estimates place the Indian population under Spanish
control at 32 million souls and in less than 40 years they killed about
15 million of them; working most to the death in silver and gold mines.
For example, at a mine near Mexico City one report states:
“For half a league round the mine, and for a great part of the road to
it, you could scarcely make a step except upon dead bodies or the bones
of dead men. The birds of prey coming to feed on these corpses darkened
the Sun.”
Spain did the dirty work on the ground, while England and Holland
formed companies - privateers - to raid the Spanish fleets intercepting
much of the loot. (LSM, Ch. 8) (POTOSI COIN
slide)
This was a very rare
period where the supply of new gold actually kept pace with population
growth. Historically it hasn’t done this, and so a gold money system
has usually been a formula for deflation. As this “blood stained money”
entered Europe it had profound effects, forcing great structural
changes in economies, distributing wealth more broadly and creating a
“Renaissance of the North.” The Reformation is usually given the credit
for the dynamic developments this influx of new money helped produce in
northern Europe.
THIS
INFLOW OF METAL HELD BACK monetary thought in metallism. Even
so, the principles of the science of money re-emerged from time to time
as in England’s 1601 Mixt Moneys case, or the writings in Bishop George
Berkeley’s Querest in 1735.
BUT
THEN IN 1776, ADAM SMITH’S WEALTH OF NATIONS took a giant leap
backward and formally obliterated any concept of money in the law, by
defining money this way:
“By the money price of goods it is to be observed, I understand always,
the quantity of pure gold or silver for which they are sold, without
any regard to denomination of the coin.”
He thereby regressed the
concept of money backwards from an advanced nomisma based in law, not
just back to a “Moneta” level of unlimited coinage, but all the way
back to “Ponderata,” pure metal by weight. This was where the concept
of money had been before the Romans arrived in England - even more
backward than the Ancient Oriental money systems which had at least
monetized agricultural commodities.
The Bank of England had
advanced to abstract paper money 80 years earlier; not in theory, but
in practice. Adam Smith regressed to commodity money, not in practice,
but in theory. His theory applied to their practice would cause
confusion and create mystery to this day. (LSM, Ch. 12) Interestingly,
Karl Marx followed Smith's misdefinition of money.
The Bank of England Had
Usurped England’s Money Power from the Crown in 1694, after Dutch
William 3rd of Orange took over England. It signaled a recovery of the
science of money, but it was organized privately for the power and
profit of a small group instead of the whole nation.
Recounting the stealth with which this “revolution bank,” was formed,
bank founder William Paterson remarked:
“The very name of a bank
or corporation was avoided, though the notion of both was intended, the
proposers thinking it prudent that a design of this nature should have
as easy and insensible a beginning as possible…But it was found
convenient to put it to hazard and expose so much of the nature of the
thing…as was needful to have it espoused in Parliament.” (LSM, Ch. 11)
Until then England’s monetary power was in the Monarch’s hands. But
from this point, bank of England credits – its notes and book credits –
would be substituted in place of public money.
This has promoted a
confusion between credit, and money, to this day. But they are
different things. Credit depends on the creditor remaining solvent.
REAL MONEY DOES NOT PROMISE TO PAY SOMETHING ELSE.
Credit can legally be
improperly made into money, but it’s not itself money. Money is on a
higher order than Credit. It is unconditionally accepted as payment.
Monetizing bank credit places special privileges into the hands of
bankers, to the detriment of the nation. Furthermore “Credit expands
when there is a tendency to speculation, and sharply contracts just
when most needed to assure confidence…,” wrote Henry George.
Those behind the Bank of England obscured the real source of the Bank’s
power – ITS LEGAL PRIVILEGE – its notes were accepted
as money by government.
Using the principles of
money for such private purposes produced harmful results: 120 years of
near continuous warfare, spawning an unpayable national debt, leading
to excessive taxation which led directly to horrors such as the Irish
Potato Famine.
[Before then, when a
nation’s money system was used for taxation, the revenue generally
aided the society at least in terms of what a Republic or King thought
was needed.] But private moneys like the Bank of England’s concentrated
society’s resources into a few hands, crippling the possibility for
government to function properly, leading to a growing contempt of
government.
OUR
AMERICAN EXPERIENCE contains many of the best “case studies” for
understanding money. We have been a great monetary laboratory - every
conceivable solution was tried at some time, and we’ve been a paper
money nation from Colonial days. Our development was inseparable from
it - without it there’d be no United States.
English and Dutch laws
forbade sending coinage to the colonies, placing them in continual
distress. The intent was to extract raw materials, not for the
colonists to trade with each other. An early form of globalization. The
Colonies had to devise monetary innovations. (LSM, Ch. 14 & 15)
In the country pay
period (1632 – 92) 17 different commodities were monetized by
law at specified prices. It didn’t work - everyone wanted to pay with
the least desirable commodity, in the worst condition.
1633 - Virginia and
Maryland monetized tobacco, issuing warehouse receipts for it. A
bumper crop in 1639. Half crop was burned; debts were reduced 60%
1652 – Hull’s mint
in Massachusetts stamped the and silver “tree coinage.” But it
quickly flowed to England and was melted down. (PINE
TREE COINS slide)
Private land banks
were set up but were shunned by the colonists, who considered
money a prerogative of government, as it was in England until 1694.
Then in 1690, 4
years before the Bank of England, Massachusetts embarked on a radical
course and issued paper bills of credit, spending them into
circulation. Rather than a promise to pay anything, they were a promise
to receive them back for all payments to the commonwealth. The colony
thrived. Other colonies copied them and INFRASTRUCTURE
arose. (Mass bill of Credit slide)
In 1723
Pennsylvania’s system loaned the bills into circulation,
charging interest on them and using it to pay colonial expenses.
Ben Franklin wrote:
“Experience, more prevalent than all the
logic in the World, has fully convinced us all, that paper money has
been, and is now of the greatest advantages to the country.”
In
Franklins’s words, one detects atension even then, between theoretical
argument and practical experience, a continuing battleground in
economics today. (Franklin slide)
Some long lost
principles of the Science of Money quickly resurfaced:
* Money need not have intrinsic value; its nature is more of an
abstract legal power than a commodity.
* Accepting the government paper back in taxes was the key feature
needed to give it circulating value.
* The quantity of money in circulation had to be regulated to maintain
its value.
* They observed that paper money helped build real infrastructure.
* Most importantly, the colonies did not issue more money than their
legislatures authorized. They have an outstanding record issuing
currency.
Of over a hundred colonial issues I found only one case of fraud. In
Virginia, a Mr. Robertson who was supposed to be burning the old notes
as new ones were printed, was giving them to friends instead.
BUT IN THE
BATTLE FOR MONETARY DOMINANCE
the colonial monetary
experience has been miscast as irresponsible inflation money. This was
the result of 18th century Boston’s medical Dr. William Douglas’
inaccurate writings. The error was corrected by Alexander Del Mar in
1900 in The History of Money in America, but was ignored. It was
authoritatively cleared up again by Professor Leslie Brock in 1976 and
again ignored. Many economists, and especially the libertarians still
haven’t got the message that colonial government paper money was
crucial in building the colonies.
In 1764, England’s Lords
of Trade and Plantations prohibited all colonial legal tender issues,
and that became the underlying cause of the American Revolution, not
some tax on tea.
(Continental
Currency slide)
THE CONTINENTAL
CURRENCY became the lifeblood of the revolution.
$200 million were authorized and $200 million issued. The Currency
functioned well. In late 1776 the notes were only at a 5% discount
against coinage, when General Howe took over New York City and made it
a center for British counterfeiting. The Brits counterfeited billions;
newspaper ads openly offered the forgeries; yet English General Clinton
complained to Lord George Germaine:
“The experiments suggested by your Lordships have been tried, no
assistance that could be drawn from the power of gold or the arts of
counterfeiting have been left untried; but still the currency ... has
not failed.”
In March 1778 after 3 years of war, it was at $2.01 Continental for $1
of coinage.
The Continentals
carried us over 5½ years of Revolution to within 6 months of its
final victory. Thomas Paine wrote:
“Every stone in the Bridge, that has carried us over, seems to have a
claim upon our esteem. But this was a corner stone, and its usefulness
cannot be forgotten.” (LSM, Ch. 14)
(TOM PAINE slide)
OUR
CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION considered two grand themes of
humanity:
First whether mankind could be
self-governing or had to be ruled by authority. Often referred to as
the American experiment. We are still learning the outcome, and one of
the reasons it’s still in doubt is because of the way the Convention
mishandled the other grand theme – which was over the nature money.
By the time of the Convention, the great benefits of the Continentals
was nearly ignored; along with much of the rest of our hard won
monetary experiences. Some wanted to emphasize that the Continentals
became worthless and rejected the idea of paper money altogether.
They ignored that paper
money was crucial in giving us a nation; that abstract money requires
an advanced legal system in place; that the normal method of assuring
its acceptability is to allow the taxes to be paid in it. Then there
was the matter of a WAR against the world’s strongest power.
Tom
Paine said it best:
“...But to suppose as some did, that, at the end of the war,
(Continental Currency) was to grow into gold or silver, or become equal
thereto, was to suppose that we were to get 200 millions of dollars by
going to war, instead of paying the cost of carrying it on.”
The convention met from
May to September 1787 but the money subject didn’t come up until August
16. Remember, Jefferson and Paine were not there. Franklin was too old
to speak.
A curious book on money
appeared just then, written anonymously by Calvinist Minister John
Witherspoon, – the only clergyman signer of the declaration of
Independence. The book attacked Government money and promoted Adam
Smith’s view that only gold and silver are money. He stonewalled our
hard won colonial monetary experience. (Witherspoon
slide)
The power for
government to properly create money, long considered as a necessary
part of sovereignty, was contained in 5 magic words – to emit bills of
credit. This provision was already in the articles of Confederation,
but the Federalists - the merchant/commercial interest, largely
responsible for calling the Constitutional Convention in order to
strengthen the national government, fought to exclude this monetary
power, from the new government, arguing that it could not be trusted
with it! Some of them intended to get hold of the power privately as
had been done in England.
THE
SUPREME IMPORTANCE of the concept of money now becomes
evident: For if money is primarily a commodity, convenient for making
trades, which obtains its value out of “intrinsic” qualities, then it
could be viewed more as a creature of merchants and bankers than of
governments.
But if the true nature
of money is an abstract social institution embodied in law – obtaining
its value largely through legal sanctions, then its more a creature of
governments, and the Constitution had better deal with it adequately.
Describing how a uniform currency is to be provided, controlled and
kept reasonably stable, in a just manner. It was on this crucial
question that the Constitutional Convention faltered.
The delegates accepted
Adam Smith’s primitive commodity definition of money as gold and silver
and didn’t firmly place the monetary power into government, leaving it
ambiguous. Later they’d argue over what they had done.
But the power would still exist, since it is as important as the
legislative, judicial and executive powers.
I
am suggesting that the nature of human affairs requires government to
have four branches, not three; the fourth branch to embody and
administer the monetary power.
The Constitution trusted
the people with the political power; but didn’t firmly place the
monetary power in their government. This (along with slavery) is the
Original Sin of American Politics! As a result the power was left up
for grabs. Alexander Hamilton wasted no time in “grabbing.”
My neighbor Martin Van
Buren 8th US President wrote a great book on the Convention – The
Origin of Political Parties in the US. He spent time with Jefferson in
Virginia – discuss.
Hamilton
And The Money Power Attack – First
The Bond Theft
The
Constitution went into effect in late 1789; Van Buren described
Hamilton’s first move as Secretary of the Treasury, in 1790:
“Hamilton assumed some $15 million of the state debts...an
act...neither asked nor desired by the states, unconstitutional and
inexpedient…”
What was so bad about it?
“A large proport ion of the domestic debt (was held by) the soldiers
who fought our battles, and the farmers, manufacturers and merchants
who furnished supplies for their support....When it became known to
members of Congress, which sat behind closed doors, that the bill would
pass...every part of the country was overrun by speculators, by horse,
and boat, buying up large portions of the certificates for (pennies on
the dollar).” (LSM, Ch. 15)
Madison, attempted to have the law pay speculators less than the
original holders, but was voted down.
NEXT HAMILTON AND ASSOCIATES, HAVING KEPT
THE MONETARY POWER out
of government hands, moved to assume it themselves. The Bank of North
America was the only bank in the US, formed in Pennsylvania on Tom
Paines initiative to assist the revolution. Arguing that it was only a
state bank, Hamilton suggested it come forward if it wanted to alter
itself for the national purpose. Curiously, the Bank took no steps
toward this obvious increase in profit and power.
Hamilton’s Federalists
quickly put through legislation to charter the First Bank of The United
States, as a privately owned central bank on the Bank of England model.
The Bank would be issuing paper notes not really backed by metal, but
pretending to be redeemable in coinage, on the one condition that not a
lot of people asked for redemption! They really did not have the
coinage. The bank would do what they had blocked the government from
doing! Print paper money.
Thus the real question
in practice was whether it would be private banks or the government
that would create paper money. Will the immense power and profit of
issuing currency go to the benefit of the whole nation, or to the
private bankers? That’s always been the real monetary question in this
country. (BANK OF US NOTE slide)
While gold and silver
served as a smoke-screen what the bankers really counted on, were the
legal considerations of the money. They knew that all that was needed
to give their paper notes value, was for the government to accept them
in payment for taxes. That, and not issuing too excessive a quantity of
them. Under those conditions, the paper notes they printed out of thin
air, would be a claim on any wealth existing in the society.
And we see why the Bank
of North America was not put forward for this purpose: the U.S.
Government had owned 60% of it. Thomas Willing resigned the Presidency
of the Bank of North America, to become President of the first Bank of
The U.S. The government would only own 20% of the new bank.
Just where did the money
for first Bank of the U.S. came from?
The $10 million share subscription for the banks shares, was
oversubscribed within 2 hours. Less than 1/10 of it was ever paid in
gold. The rest of the payment was accepted in the form of bonds – the
very government bonds that Hamilton had turned from pennies on the
dollar to full value. So you see where the money for the bank actually
came from – from the American people!
THAT’S HOW PRIVATE CENTRAL BANKING STARTED IN
AMERICA!
Even if the bank had
“faithfully” stuck to gold and silver, the nation’s monetary power
would still have been alienated to the east - to the European holders
of those commodities. Same people we’d just fought the revolution
against!
Thanks in large
part to Jefferson’s efforts, the bank was liquidated in 1811. Three
quarters of it was found to be owned by Europeans – English and Dutch. (LSM, Ch. 15)
THE
2ND BANK OF THE U.S. - THE BANK FROM HELL
operated
illegally from inception, accepting IOU’s instead of the required gold
in payment for its shares. So again the banker’s gold “requirement”
turned out to be a masquerade.
This private central
bank immediately embarked on a wild monetary expansion. Beginning
operations in April 1817, by July it had 19 branch offices and had
created $52 million in loans on its books and an additional 9 million
in circulating currency, based on gold and silver coin reserves of only
$2.5 million. This tremendous expansion caused a wild speculative boom.
Then in August 1818, the bank turned abruptly and began an insane
contraction, causing the panic of 1819. It cut its outstanding loans
and advances from a high of $52 million, down to $12 million in I819.
Its circulating notes dropped from $10 million to $3.5 million in 1820.
A massive wave of bankruptcies swept the nation.
The subsequent history
of this bank and its fight to the death with President Jackson reads
like a financial soap opera. The story of various state chartered banks
is similar.
MEANWHILE THE US
GOVERNMENT ACTED RESPONSIBLY
In the aftermath of
liquidation of the first and second Banks, the US Treasury notes were
responsibly substituted in place of banknotes. About $65 million were
authorized and only $37 million actually issued. The U.S. Treasury
spent them into circulation. Initially they were all large
denomination, paid interest; were redeemable in gold and required
formalities to transfer. By 1815 they became bearer certificates with
no redemption date, paid no interest and were in smaller denominations.
Thus they were nearly a true money form. The fact is that the US
government has always acted responsibly in creating money. Not so the
private banks! (LSM, Ch. 16)
THE
GREENBACKS WERE ON BALANCE OUR BEST MONEY SYSTEM TO DATE
Thanks to 100 years
of misreporting, the image of the Greenbacks coming down to us is
inflated or worthless paper money. In fact, $450 million were
authorized and $450 million were printed. Counterfeiters couldn’t
duplicate the Greenbacks. Every Greenback was eventually exchangeable
one for one with gold coin. (Greenback
Photo)
But Greenbacks were not
promises to pay money later – they were the money.
Since they were not borrowed, they did not give rise to interest
payments and did not add to any national debt. The U.S. Treasury
printed them and spent them into circulation.
Economists usually harp
on the Greenbacks dropping to 36 cents in gold, and they leave it at
that. While that happened, its highly misleading. Here’s the whole
picture. Ultimately the greenbacks exchanged one for one with gold
coinage. (Greenbacks Vs Gold CHART)
Some claim the
Greenbacks kept value because later legislation called for redeeming
them in gold. But that unnecessary Resumption Act couldn’t pass til
1874 for implementation in 1879. That couldn’t have caused the
Greenbacks to start rising in July 1864. What did happen was that in
June 1864, Congress limited the amount of Greenbacks to $450 million.
There was inflation but
remember 13% of the population was fighting a terrible war. 625,000
died. Greenbacks performed well despite being spent on destruction as
this horrific scene from Gettysburg shows. They were also being abused
by the bankers. For every Greenback created by Congress, the banking
system created $1.49 in Bank notes. (XXX
GETTYSBURG slide)
WHAT IF instead of being
spent on destruction, they went into building infrastructure, and
canals and roads? Spending such money on infrastructure need not be
inflationary. For example the Erie Canal lowered freight prices from
$114 a ton down to $9 a ton.
THE GREAT LESSON OF THE
GREENBACKS
Is That In
Times Of Crisis - and other times too - our nation has Power to do what
is financially necessary, through our government. We don't have to beg
or borrow money from the wealthy and, create an astronomical national
debt. We don’t have to tax the middle class into oblivion, or cancel
necessary programs. We can carefully use the nations’ sovereign money
power far more than we presently have been allowed to realize. The
Treasury - You Fellows - could have an indispensable Key role to
Fulfill in this. Many of you already know this. (LSM, Ch. 17)
At the time of the
greenbacks there were also those who fully understood. Senator Howe
said:
“The Government may be able to borrow from the banks, but the
Government cannot borrow coinage of the banks…but (only) their promises
to pay money. ...We must rely mainly upon a paper circulation; and …
that the paper, whoever issues it, must be irredeemable. All paper
currencies have been and ever will be irredeemable. It is a pleasant
fiction to call them redeemable…I would not expose that fiction only
that the great emergency which is upon us seems to me to render it more
than usually proper that the nation should begin to speak the truth to
itself; to have done with shams, and to deal with realities.”
To have done with shams and deal with realities – sometimes that
requires a crisis, to activate us.
THE
STRUGGLE
between private versus public control of money continued
throughout the 19th century. The Greenbacks continued to constitute
about a third of our money supply. Generally the private money power
dominated. But in periods when the government exercised control an
excellent record was established– superior to that of private control.
The bankers continued their pretense that gold was the basis of the
system, and even the Federal Reserve in 1913, appeared to be a
gold-based system. But immediately upon inception, we were pushed into
warfare. Within 20 years Americas farms, cities, exchanges and money
system were all wrecked, ending in the great depression. It was again
left to our government to rescue the nation. (LSM,
Ch. 18 - 20)
It’s forgotten today,
but the Thomas Amendment passed with legislation in 1933, gave the
President the power to create $3 billion in Greenbacks, if the banking
system didn’t co-operate.
APPLYING THESE CONCEPTS TO THE PRESENT SITUATION
OUTLINE FORM ONLY
see LSM chapter 24 for details:
Today gold is
not much discussed and bank credits are openly substituted for money.
The definitional problem
continues – they are now confusing credit with money. Economists are
now calling money “high powered” money and they are calling credit
“Lower powered” money. They should be more forcefully distinguishing
between credit, and money. Blurring the difference empowers the bankers.
They should be examining
the unfair privilege this system places in the bankers hands and They
should be examining the results. For example:
The deteriorating infrastructure situation – see Engineers report in
the Lost Science of Money, ch. 24
Another Danger: The
De-funding of government at the local, state and federal levels, arises
out of this disease of attacking government as the enemy.
This attack on
government starts with Adam Smith. His purpose in smearing the English
government was to keep the monetary power in the hands of the privately
owned Bank of England.
WHAT
TO DO NOW?
(schematic form; Spelled out
in detail in LSM, Ch. 24)
In broad
terms:
* Nationalize the
Federal Reserve, place it within the Treasury and use the
greenback mechanism to fund infrastructure improvement and repair. The
American Society of Civil Engineers 1998 Report estimates that $2
trillion will be needed. Much more is required to assure water supplies.
* Remove the
privilege banks have to create money. Only
government should have this power. This means much more than requiring
banks to have 100% reserves. A special 100% reserve solution elegantly
transforms all previously bank created money into U.S. created money.
This does not cause deflation or inflation.
* Institute
anti-deflationary programs to assure that sufficient money is
introduced by government into the system.
EXTRA
FOR QUESTION PERIOD: THE 250 YEAR ATTACK ON GOVERNMENT
We found that the
attack on government originated largely in Adam Smith – in his efforts
to keep the monetary power within the Bank of England. Smith glorified
the Bank and obscured its private ownership calling it as a great
engine of state. He attacked government issued money.
“A revenue of
this kind has even by some people been thought not below the attention
of so great an Empire as that of Great Britain...But whether such a
Government as that of England - which, whatever may be its virtues, has
never been famous for good economy; which, in time of peace, has
generally conducted itself with the slothful and negligent profusion
that is perhaps natural to monarchies; and in time of war has
constantly acted with all the thoughtless extravagance that democracies
are apt to fall into - could be safely trusted with the management of
such a project, must at least be a good deal more doubtful.” (Adam
Smith, Wealth of Nations; p.358 – in the Great Books collection, v. 39)
Smith’s insulting the English Government marks the modern beginning of
a relentless attack on society - the belittling and smearing of its
organizational form - government. Smith also inadvertently illuminates
the major purpose of this attack: - to keep the money power in private
hands.
WHAT
WAS THE MORAL EFFECT OF BANKING ON THE EARLY US?
Here is what William
Gouge, a banking expert wrote in 1833:
“Without
clearly distinguishing the causes, men have come to see clearly the
wealth passing continually out of the hands of those whose labor
produced it, or whose economy saved it, into the hands of those who
neither work nor save. They do not clearly see how the transfer takes
place, but they are certain of the fact. In the general scramble they
think themselves entitled to some portion of the spoil, and if they
cannot obtain it by fair means, they take it by foul.” “The Banking
system is the principal cause of social evil in the United States.” (It still is, in 2004!)
To summarize the
argument: The nature of the money power is societally derived, not one
originating in the activities of private corporations. Because of its
great importance to all, control over the process belongs under public
authority. Both logic and history show that its not safe to delegate
this power, and certainly not acceptable to allow its usurpation.
© 2003 AMI (Written
permission required to reproduce, but website url may be forwarded at
will)
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