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Putting a Price on Gold Standard Parity

Should we pick $800 or $1600 as the Gold Price for a reinstated Gold Standard...?

EDITOR of Opinions at Forbes and editor of RealClearMarkets.com John Tamny and I have been discussing a good parity value at which one could reinstate a Gold Standard system today, writes Nathan Lewis on his New World Economics blog, in an article first published on Forbes.

I wrote a little about the principles involved just a few weeks ago. I think Tamny's understanding of Gold Standard principles is exemplary. If you have been following my columns, you know that is praise that I hand out very rarely in these benighted days. If, for some reason, people listened to Tamny and nobody else on the subject, I have confidence that the job would be done right.

I am trying to get him to write his own book on the topic, so I can praise it as he has praised my own efforts. I could count the people I consider the "A-Team" on my fingers, without using my thumbs. Tamny is on that list.

Thus, I found it intriguing that we differed so much in our perception of what a good parity value would be today, and that John was fairly confident about his stance and reasoning. I asked him to make his views public, so that readers could see how we might debate the topic.

This is a little different way of doing things compared to trying to put forth a public face of consensus. The purpose is not to have a "winner" or a "loser" of the debate, but rather for people to understand how this sort of discussion should be done, and how a compromise or final solution should be reached. It's about process. Because, if you get the process right, a good and workable conclusion is the natural result.

You can read John Tamny's arguments on why he chose $800 per ounce as a parity value here. If asked, I would recommend a parity value around $1600 per ounce today, which is about the 12-month moving average for the Dollar/gold ratio.

Tamny mentions that his $800 per ounce figure is around the ten-year moving average. He is ribbing me a bit with this figure, because I wrote in my book Gold: the Once and Future Money that the ten-year moving average would be a good approximation to begin this discussion. He's reminding me, in other words, that I am disagreeing with myself!

Or, maybe I have changed my mind. Actually, I find that it is hard to think of any one rules-based solution that is appropriate for all situations. Discretion plays a larger part here than I thought previously.

The two of us reflect two poles of a debate that has been common throughout the last two hundred years of US and British history. A number of times, usually during a war, governments suspended the Gold Standard system and allowed their currencies to float. They usually lost value, and ended the war at roughly half the value that they were at the beginning.

Governments wanted to reinstate a Gold Standard system after the war. They faced the choice of repegging to gold around the prevailing, devalued rate, thus accepting a permanent devaluation of the currency, or returning the currency to the prewar parity value (ratio with gold), which would require a period of revaluation (increasing valuation), with potentially recessionary implications.

For the most part, the US and British governments chose the latter option. Although Tamny does not at all recommend a return to the last Gold Standard system parity at $35 per ounce., the Bretton Woods figure, his value of $800 per ounce (compared to a 12-month average of $1600 per ounce.) represents about the same 2:1 revaluation that Britain undertook in the 1920s or the US undertook after the Civil War. It is also what happened, more or less by accident, in the early 1980s, as we settled around $350 per ounce during the 1980s and 1990s after a period of weakness which brought the 12-month moving average to $612 per ounce in late 1980 and the daily close to $850 per ounce at one point in 1980.

Tamny's solution – involving roughly a 2:1 revaluation, in other words a doubling of currency value from today's recent levels – is similar to the choice that the US government chose in 1879 and 1921, and the British government chose in 1821 and 1925. It was found to be sensible and workable at those times, and reflected the principles, ideals, and political realities of those eras.

However, there were consequences. You can identify recessionary effects in most cases, during the 1870s (including the Panic of 1873), a brief but harsh US recession in 1921, and a harsh but not at all brief recession in Britain in 1925. Indeed, it was the Gold Standard advocates themselves who blamed the 1982 recession in large part on this accidental revaluation. (I'm not sure if there was a recessionary effect in Britain in 1821.)

The consequences varied according to fiscal policy and other factors. Britain eliminated its wartime income tax in 1816, which probably did a lot to ameliorate recessionary effects. The US eliminated its first income tax, imposed to fund the Civil War, in 1872. In 1921, Warren Harding began a series of tax cuts that lowered the top income tax rate from 77% at the end of World War I to 46% in 1924, and it continued lower to 25% with Coolidge in 1925. (The 1982 revaluation/recession was accompanied by the Reagan tax cuts, but they weren't phased in until mostly after 1983, and the very high interest rates of the period made the revaluation particularly hard for debtors.)

Britain, however, doubled its tax rates across the board to fund World War I, and didn't reduce them after the war. Thus, Britain endured the revaluation period with excessively high, economy-crushing taxes. The result was an economic disaster, which led directly to civil unrest and the General Strike of 1926. This was particularly terrifying at a time when Communist ideals were still quite fashionable and popular. (The fact that the increasing value of the Pound made existing welfare programs even more generous may have also had an effect.) This affected the political debate dramatically, and greatly undermined the popularity of the Gold Standard policy, with John Maynard Keynes leading the criticism.

France, on the other hand, ended World War I with a franc that was worth only about one-fifth of its prewar value – just as our Dollar today, at $1600, is worth only about a fifth of its $350 per ounce average during the 1980s and 1990s. For France, a return to the prewar parity was out of the question. In the mid-1920s, France returned to the Gold Standard with a new parity around the prevailing rate, and also reduced taxes dramatically. The result was not a British-style recession but instead a booming economy, without much complaint or regret that the new franc was worth so much less than the old, prewar Franc.

The advantages of the revaluation proposal are that it would reduce some of the artificial gains made by debtors, and partially restore the artificial losses suffered by creditors. It would reduce the upward price adjustment necessary in the future, as the economy gradually accommodated the new, devalued currency value. It would probably lead to a substantial reduction in energy costs, thus reducing the artificial advantage enjoyed by energy producers. In short, it would partially correct many of the gross economic distortions caused today by the Federal Reserve's hyper-aggressive "easy money" stance.

Fundamentally, I think we are in more of a France-like situation today, rather than a situation where the Gold Standard had been gone for only a few years, and where it was conceivable that creditor/debtor relationships could be fully restored by returning to a pre-devaluation parity. Although creditors may complain, the fact of the matter is, they formed these contracts in a floating currency environment where the risk of devaluation should have always been a consideration. In practice, even in recent years, the interest payments they received have generally been higher than they would have received in gold-standard eras, to reflect this floating-currency risk.

If you look at the many countries that have suffered devaluations over the years, especially since floating currencies were introduced in 1971, we see that currency devaluation tends to be a one-way street. You don't go back and fix it. You just stabilize the currency again at a new level, around prevailing rates, and enjoy the process of recovery that ensues. When, in the midst of crisis, the Russian Ruble fell from about 5 per Dollar in 1997 to 25 per Dollar in 2000 – again, a France-like 5:1 devaluation – nobody tried to put it back to 5 per Dollar or even 15 per Dollar. Just stabilize it again, around prevailing rates, and let the economy heal from past errors.

The "best" solution also reflects the political consensus. I simply don't think that a consensus today could be built around a revaluation strategy, in the way that it was built in the 1860s or 1920s. I think that we are in a point in what some have called the "debt supercycle" where increasing debtors' already excessive burdens – in other words, a lot more debt default and bankruptcy – would not be politically acceptable. It appears to me (and the astute Economic Cycle Research Institute) that the US is on the edge of recession right now, even with all the "easy money" help from the Fed.

I think the Keynesians, who didn't really exist as an organized element in the 1860s or 1920s, would go nuts on the issue, and their popularity would rise as a result. I think that a large-scale tax cut – as was the case in Britain in 1816, the US in 1872, and the US in 1921-24, which did so much in those times to lessen the recessionary effects of the revaluation policy – is less likely today, and that we would be more likely to end up like Britain in 1925, with taxes that are too high and possibly headed higher. That could be very nasty, and the Gold Standard system would get blamed for whatever happened.

A Gold Standard system is supposed to be a good thing, not a thing that causes horrible recessions.

You will notice that the list above contains several items which are quite particular to today's situation. In another situation, with somewhat different conditions, you might come to different conclusions. This is why I say that it is hard to make a simple rule for these matters.

But, if a political consensus formed around a revaluation policy, similar to Tamny's $800 per ounce proposal today, with an understanding of all the pros and cons inherent in such an approach, I think it could work. I would just say one thing: add a tax reform, and make it a big one. If you are going to introduce these kinds of potentially recessionary forces on an economy that is wobbly as it is, then you must offset them with powerful pro-growth measures. Little tweaks around the edges won't cut it. I would like to see a full-scale Steve Forbes-type flat tax, with a top rate of perhaps 18%.

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Formerly a chief economist providing advice to institutional investors, Nathan Lewis now runs a private investing partnership in New York state. Published in the Financial Times, Asian Wall Street Journal, Huffington Post, Daily Yomiuri, The Daily Reckoning, Pravda, Forbes magazine, and by Dow Jones Newswires, he is also the author – with Addison Wiggin – of Gold: The Once and Future Money (John Wiley & Sons, 2007), as well as the essays and thoughts at New World Economics.

See the full archive of Nathan Lewis articles.
 

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