Posted 2011-July-15, 10:15
Gold has two uses: as a money, and as a, hm, "trade good", I guess. It's useful for things like jewelry, fillings (although we have cheaper and, I think, better materials for that now), electrical connectors, and probably other things. As a money, it's worth what it is. IOW, an ounce of gold is an ounce of gold. As a trade good, it's worth whatever the market will bear.
A "dollar" (the word has an interesting etymology) was, at one time, arbitrarily set to some fraction of the value of an ounce of gold. Now it's set to... I dunno, nothing. It's "fiat money", worth whatever people believe, and the government says, it's worth, I suppose.
In discussing a return to a gold standard (and I agree it's not likely to happen any time soon, if ever), Rothbard suggests one approach (that he did not particularly like) is to set the value of a dollar arbitrarily to $35 a gold ounce, as it was just before 1933. This would cause deflation, of course, but he seemed to think that's not necessarily a bad thing. Me, I don't know. The other approach he suggested was to figure out how many dollars there are, and divide that by the number of ounces of gold available to back it. He said back in the 60s that doing this would raise the value of gold (in dollars) by at least a couple of orders of magnitude (he was not, that I have found so far, specific). There wouldn't be deflation then, but I suppose there might be other problems. Anyway, if his estimate is accurate, or even close, $1600 an ounce is not absurd; it may even be too low. A third possibility, says Rothbard, is some combination of these two extremes. He didn't give a specific combination, he suggested it needed study (a point with which I agree). However, given he suggested that in 1962, and no one has done such a study yet (AFAIK), we're back to "ain't gonna happen".
One of the problems we (humans) have always had with money is that we do things like mint a coin, call it a "dollar" or a "quarter" or whatever, and then when the coin wears down, losing some of its metal, we want to "revalue the dollar". Or do what governments used to do, and by fiat rule that a "quarter" was worth whatever, no matter how much silver was actually in it. Wrong way to do it. Instead, label it as what it is by weight and accept that as the weight changes, so does the value. A one ounce silver coin will buy whatever one ounce of silver will buy. A 0.9 ounce silver coin, whatever it's labelled, will buy 0.9 what a one ounce coin will buy. I dunno, makes sense to me. All this stuff with the bankers arbitrarily telling us what a "dollar" is worth, and setting of interest rates, and telling the Treasury to print another billion dollars or whatever, strikes me as smoke and mirrors.
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