Hiltzik echoes MSM confusion on gold

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Hiltzik echoes MSM confusion on gold 

Written by Peter Diekmeyer (CLICK FOR ORIGINAL)

 

 

Hiltzik echoes MSM confusion on gold - Peter Diekmeyer

 

 

 

John Maynard Keynes once wrote that: “… by a continuing process of inflation, governments can confiscate, secretly and unobserved, an important part of the wealth of their citizens….in a manner which not one man in a million is able to diagnose.” Recently, Michael Hiltzik illustrated that he is not one in a million.

In piece published in the Los Angeles Times, the Pulitzer Prize winning journalist called Ted Cruz’s advocacy of the gold standard, “the worst idea,” in a recent US Presidential debate. Hiltzik cited several reasons.

These include the fact that the ability to print money gives governments more flexibility to manage crises. That the gold standard does not promote stability. And that the gold standard benefits one economic class: creditors.

Hiltzik of course isn’t alone. Preoccupied with ratings, the 24-hour news cycle, and thus with saying clever things that grab mass attention, main street media (MSM), has long had trouble understanding gold.

 

Journalists get little economics or history training

Few business reporters today, most whom studied fields such as journalism, or worse, literature and communications, have formal training in economics or history. Fewer still were in school before the early 1970s, when economics departments effectively stopped teaching about the gold standard, after US president Richard Nixon, broke the dollar’s link to gold.

So the fact that Hiltzik, - and others, such as Jason Zweig, of the Wall Street Journal, who recently labelled gold “ a pet rock,” or CNBC producer Alex Rosenberg, who called a prediction that gold would rise to $5,000 an ounce the “worst” ever made on CNBC, - would trash the yellow metal, is understandable. More so because their arguments make some sense – on the surface.

That said, the rise of the gold standard as an electoral issue, provides a useful opportunity to refute some of the objections to it. Let’s start with the three cited by Hiltzik.

 

The daily crisis

Hiltzik’s argument that the ability to print money, unfettered by a gold standard, gives governments increased ability to act during financial crises, is not only true, it is nearly impossible to refute. All governments abandon links to gold, during times of war, though often with disastrous results. For example the US government printed so much paper during the revolutionary war, that at the end, it was all worthless. The confederacy’s experience during the US civil war, netted the same results.

Of course governments have long learned to invoke a new “crisis” not just during times of war, but essentially every day, to justify continued printing under all circumstances. Hence the US government and Federal Reserve have been in “crisis,” mode, since 2007 at least. But both have also evoked the terms following the dot.com bubble in the year 2000, the 1998 Asian Crisis and accompanying Long Term Capital Management implosion, the 1994 Mexican crisis, the 1987 crash, and to uncountable events in between.

Government economic policy in this regard, not just in the United States, but throughout the Western world, can be broadly summarized as follows: constant crises, to justify constant short-term pump priming of the economy. In fact few reporters working today, have ever covered a true rate tightening cycle, nor a government that cut actual spending (as opposed to cutting the growth in spending).

 

The unstable world

Hiltzik’s second major argument against the gold standard: that there is no guarantee that it promotes “economic stability,” is also hard to refute. Anyone who has watched oil prices lately, which fell from over USD $100 per barrel, to near the USD $30 handle, as these words are being written, can attest that economies, like human beings, are inherently unstable.

Governments have long learned to take advantage of this fact, as discussed above, by invoking these repeated “crises,” which they say require more “action.” However many, if not most, of these government moves, consist of wealth transfers to their favorite groups. The United States Congress for example voted a stimulus package worth more than $800 billion after the last recession, much of which consisted of raises to government employees, tax cuts to special interest groups and the like. “Shovel ready,” infrastructure projects, which have at least some justification during times of trouble, were few and far between.

More broadly, one only has to look at the “ghost cities,” across China to grasp the mal-investments that occur when governments attempt to juice up the economy. Here on the home front another example is the bubble in US equities, during a time when total corporate earnings are actually falling - all of which is camouflaged by stock buybacks financed by low interest rates.

 

Debt monetization inevitable, pension funds in jeopardy

The real problem posed by these government interventions and promises, is they have lead the public to expect action by others to solve their problems. This to the point that many Americans refuse to adjust their earnings expectations during tough times, or to take jobs that are “beneath them,” as evidenced by the labour force participation rate, which hovers at near record lows.

The real question is not whether gold makes the world more or less stable. The real question is what to do about the inherent instability. Do we allow a series of small crises to erupt and then to work themselves out? Or do we attempt, through government interventions financed by borrowing and money printing, to stamp out all problems as they occur, only to foster colossal, unprecedented bubbles? Western governments have chosen the latter course.

We will soon see how this plays out. The early signs can already be seen in the successive bankruptcies and monetization of private sector and municipal pension plans, a process that is likely to continue in a world, in which government bonds pay no little or no interest in real terms, and in which the stock market has been inflated to the point that returns over the next decade are likely to be negligible.

 

The “rentier” class stews

Hiltzik’s final argument, that the gold standard benefits only the creditor class, also sounds good on the surface. Particularly if you believe that people and governments should pay back, instead of inflate away, their debts. The trouble is that – as historians Will and Ariel Durant observed in their grossly underestimated book “The Lessons of History,” - there really is no rentier class any more. The wealthy have long learned that the only way to escape government inflation and money printing, is to put their money to work by investing in businesses and hard assets.

Today’s “creditor class” of bond holders, consists largely of the public, who hold those bonds either in their retirement accounts, or indirectly in their pension plans. And as noted above the formula there is simple: if those pension plans don’t earn money on their investments, the contributors will not get paid back.

 

A dime a dozen

However it is the economics profession itself that absolves MSM of nearly all of the blame, for its confusion on gold. Hiltzik cites a 2012 survey by the University of Chicago of 51 “experts,” drawn from a “spectrum of economic theory” as to whether a return to the gold standard is a good idea. Not a single one did.

This of course is not surprising. That’s because a researcher who believed in the gold standard and wanted to study it, is unlikely to be given grants, research funds or even a job, in any major university. That’s a problem. Because as I have detailed in a previous article (The Krugman Con), for more than four decades now, the economics profession has been advocating policies that have led the western world to the brink of what will likely be catastrophe, though at this point, it is uncertain whether the consequences will be inflationary, deflationary or some combination of the two.

However in this respect, being on the gold standard would have helped considerably. Unlike the US dollar or other fiat currencies, the gold standard would have provided the public with a more stable unit of measure, that would have enabled it to measure economic progress, or lack thereof. It would have also have blatantly shone a spotlight on government wealth confiscation.

Governments, which in the western world, extract between 40 and 55 percent of gross domestic product, will always take what they can. A gold standard, would be unlikely to change that. However by limiting government’s ability to print money, the gold standard would force them to tax these funds openly, as opposed to “secretly and unobserved,” as Keynes noted. This would give voters a chance to have a say in the matter.

By not understanding this crucial fact, mainstream media reporters who attack gold, without taking a closer look at the historical and economic implications, are far from “one in a million.”

“A dime, a dozen,” is more like it.

 

 

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Hiltzik echoes MSM confusion on gold 

Written by Peter Diekmeyer (CLICK FOR ORIGINAL)

 

 

 

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Fri, 01/15/2016 - 11:18 | 7050569 GRDguy
GRDguy's picture

"the fact that the ability to print money gives governments more flexibility to manage crises." simply means that governments have more flexibility to create crises.  And they certainly do.  Stability means the 99% keeps and trades their profits;  creating and managing crises steals profits from the 99%, and that's why trading goods ceases.

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 10:02 | 7050368 eishund
eishund's picture

is ZH freaking getting DDOSed???

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 09:55 | 7050277 austrianboy
austrianboy's picture

____________________

The main advantage of the gold standard and thus stable money, is that it makes it easier to measure economic progress.

How can you measure GDP, corporate profits or even your salary, if the value of the measuring stick (the dollar) keeps changing all the time?

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 09:40 | 7050190 austrianboy
austrianboy's picture

The main advantage of the gold standard and thus stable money, is that it makes it easier to measure economic progress. How can you measure GDP, corporate profits or even your salary, if the value of the measuring stick (the dollar) keeps changing all the time. Great piece.

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 09:38 | 7050184 austrianboy
austrianboy's picture

The main advantage of the gold standard and thus stable money, is that it makes it easier to measure economic progress.

How can you measure GDP, corporate profits or even your salary, if the value of the measuring stick (the dollar) keeps changing all the time. Great piece.

 

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 09:37 | 7050177 austrianboy
austrianboy's picture

The main advantage of the gold standard and thus stable money, is that it makes it easier to measure economic progress.

How can you measure GDP, corporate profits or even your salary, if the value of the measuring stick (the dollar) keeps changing all the time. Great piece.

 

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 08:48 | 7049924 pmbug
pmbug's picture

For those interested in an academic discussion of the gold standard, this is also a good read:

http://object.cato.org/sites/cato.org/files/pubs/pdf/bp100.pdf

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 10:14 | 7050419 InnVestuhrr
InnVestuhrr's picture

Here is the URL to companion reading, Aesop's Fables:

http://aesopsfables.org/

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 11:56 | 7050781 12357111317
12357111317's picture

Good stuff.  Thanks.  :-)

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 08:37 | 7049897 InnVestuhrr
InnVestuhrr's picture

US treasuries are zooming UP

AND

they pay interest income

OPPOSITE of shiny shit.

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 13:40 | 7051614 Mercuryquicksilver
Mercuryquicksilver's picture

Not true.  India Gold Deposit Scheme. LOL.

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 11:41 | 7050697 12357111317
12357111317's picture

Money is supposed to be a store of value.  I don't need money to pay interest.  I only need it to store value.

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 11:51 | 7050752 InnVestuhrr
InnVestuhrr's picture
Money is what pays living expenses, buys goods and services, and can be invested in INCOME-PRODUCING assets to earn more money, which creates a positive feedback loop. Shiny-shit does NONE of these.
Fri, 01/15/2016 - 12:01 | 7050798 12357111317
12357111317's picture

Money that stores value can pay living expenses, buy goods and services, and be invested in income-producing assets SUCH AS TOOLS. 

Money which returns interest always seems to end up returning that interest to the banker, not the man who saved the money.  Such money has clearly done this in the USA.

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 12:40 | 7051119 InnVestuhrr
InnVestuhrr's picture

"Money which returns interest always seems to end up returning that interest to the banker, not the man who saved the money."

The money in the portfolio that I manage has been invested in US treasuries, FDIC insured brokerage CDs, and select munis, and they are all paying interest to my portfolio, not the bankers.

You have not been investing in the proper financial assets.

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 16:48 | 7052752 12357111317
12357111317's picture

I like the idea of apportioning some to BONDS, some to stocks, some to real estate, and some to stocks.

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 13:15 | 7051433 12357111317
12357111317's picture

I am invested in US treasuries.  Since October 8.

I like the idea of select munis, especially of one's own city, but I don't own any.

I was speaking about the money, the Fed money.

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 11:03 | 7050481 arbwhore
arbwhore's picture

"they pay interest income" ... not for long. Soon the bond holder will be paying to hold the bond.

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 11:26 | 7050605 InnVestuhrr
InnVestuhrr's picture

You need to have already bought them, like me, before they get to price heights resulting in negative yields, as in EU.

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 08:26 | 7049869 InnVestuhrr
InnVestuhrr's picture

"Hold your real assets outside of the banking system in a private international facility"

where it can disappear or be confiscated and you won't know it or be able to do anything about it.

Fri, 01/15/2016 - 11:01 | 7050476 arbwhore
arbwhore's picture

Just like a bank! or... inflation!

Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!