A Response To The Real Bills Doctrine
Douglas V.
Gnazzo
Aug 1, 2005
Introduction
The recent debates in the public
forum concerning the real bills doctrine, has been a treat for
those longing for a return to Honest Money, as well as an overflowing
well-spring of positive discourse on a most timely and complex
set of issues.
It is only by questioning the
great thinkers that progress will be had, whether they agree
with each other is of no consequence. What matters is the discourse,
the search for truth, the give and the take of inquisitive minds,
which opens the mind to greater vistas that unfold far a field.
"If all
mankind minus one were of one opinion, and only one person were
of the contrary opinion, mankind would be no more justified in
silencing that one person, than he, if he had the power, would
be justified in silencing mankind." [John Stuart Mill of the Liberty of
Thought and Discussion.]
There appears to be many points
and issues concerning the real bills doctrine that may have been
misunderstood, which could lead to not only further misunderstandings,
but to ill-advised rhetoric and even the spreading of disinformation.
This will not help in the pursuit of an honest monetary system.
It is best to let cool heads
and calm hearts prevail, and to throw away any and all preconceived
allegiances, except for the search for truth - let that alone
be our guide.
We need to unite against the
foe of irredeemable paper fiat-debt money, and the elite international
bankers that foster such evil upon us. A house divided falls
- united we stand, steadfast and resolute. We must all work out
the differences.
The history of mankind shows
that the genesis of thought and the openness and awareness of
knowledge takes place slowly over time. In any given science
or discipline, the present day proponents add, change, and fine-tune
the work of those that came before. Such has always been the
way of progress.
None of us are perfect, far
from it - if we were we wouldn't be here, we are here to learn:
what to do, and what not to do, in this the university of the
universe, in which we move and have our being.
Money
In reading Professor Fekete's
work on the real bills doctrine I noticed that one of the qualifications
for the use of such bills is that there must be a parallel system
of gold coin in use as Honest Money.
"Only
a gold coin qualifies as a present good among the multifarious
forms of purchasing media. This makes the gold coin sui generis,
one of a kind, in the context of the theory of interest."
[Fekete
- The Dismal Monetary Science]
Note the distinction
that only
a gold coin qualifies as a present good amongst all forms of purchasing media.
This point is very important to a sound theory of money and interest,
and should be fully examined and discussed by all those in pursuit
of an honest monetary theory and system that can be implemented
and that will work.
As has been stated:
"Limiting
the danger of inflation is a most prominent reason for using
gold as money. While the supply of gold can at best grow slowly,
the quantity of paper can be multiplied without limit."
[Real
Bills, Phony Wealth: Part 2 Tastes Great! Less Filling?- Blumen]
So it does appear that both
Mr. Blumen and Professor Fekete believe that the use of gold
as Honest Money is imperative. This is a solid starting point
from which progress can be had.
As has been shown in my previous
series Honest
Money and Silver
IS Money, I believe that gold
and silver should be returned to their rightful
place as the original form of constitutional money within the
United States.
We shall refer to the use of
the precious metals as money, as point #1. However, there
are other important considerations involved in such belief -
such as the legal tender issue and the place of the State in
regards to the issuance of money, to name just a few.
Wealth
Mr. Blumen uses the following
quote in part two of his work:
"The fundamental
error of our financial policy lies in the attempt to create wealth
by creating currency: it is putting the servant before the master
-- the wrong power, in advance. We can create wealth only by
producing commodities." [Carroll]
I agree with the basic premise
of this quote in regards to wealth creation, however, I'm not
sure that Professor Fekete ever stated that wealth could be created
by the mere issuance of currency, especially any type of paper
currency per se.
Money is only employed for
one basic use, it is used as the medium of exchange with which
needed goods are procured. Money also performs other functions,
especially if it is Honest Money of gold and silver - such as
being a store of wealth.
Paper fiat-debt money on the
other hand, as represented by Federal Reserve Notes, have lost
95% of their purchasing power since 1913, hence it is an extremely
poor instrument by which to store value, and or by which to use
or exchange as a value unit of measure for other goods.
Note in the above quote the
last sentence that reads "we can create wealth only by
producing commodities." In the final analysis, it is
man's labor that is wealth, and that which man's labor can produce
and or provide as a service to other men - life's necessities
that sustain our continued existence. Money is but a medium of
exchange to procure these goods and services.
This is simply a restatement
that money is used as a medium of exchange to procure other commodities
that represent and are wealth: food, cloths, shelter and other
of life necessities needed for survival. We shall refer to this
as point #2, but as with all of this points, there is much more
that could, should, and must be discussed.
Future Versus Present Goods
So far we have two important
issues established: the importance of gold and or silver as honest
money; and that wealth is created by producing commodities, goods
and services. It follows from these two points that gold and
silver as money is used to procure commodities that are needed
to live, hence gold and silver are employed to exchange for other
goods.
When one buys other goods with
their money, one is selling their money for the other goods.
When one sells their goods or services they are buying money.
Hence money is both bought and sold. This is an important distinction
not often discussed.
Returning to Professor Fekete's
original quote at the beginning of this paper, we note that he
states, "only a gold coin qualifies as a present good
among the multifarious forms of purchasing media." This
is a very important issue that appears to be misunderstood by
some, but perhaps not.
As I have shown in the Honest
Money Series, as well as Silver
IS Money Series, only gold and silver coin as Honest Money
are present goods.
Any type of paper, be it a
bank note or a gold certificate, is a future good, as it represents
an obligation to pay - to pay in the future, hence it is not
itself payment, it is a future
obligation waiting to be transacted. In a paper fiat system of
debt money, payment can never be made - only discharged. We shall
refer to this as point #3.
The Issue of Credit
Honest money of gold and silver
coin are present goods, they are real money that can be used
to "pay" or exchange for other goods. When gold or
silver is handed over from one individual to another, the transaction
is complete, there does not remain any type of future obligation
or action needed to be taken. The act of trade or commerce between
the buyer and the seller has been fulfilled and satisfied by
both parties. It is a done deal.
When one individual hands another
individual a bank note, or even a gold certificate, in exchange
for a new coat, the act of buying and selling has not been fully
completed.
For example, say the bank note
is "backed" or redeemable in gold and silver. Just
as the gold certificate represents a receipt - an obligation
to pay a certain amount of gold upon demand, so too does the
"backed" bank note contract as to be redeemable in
gold or silver.
When either piece of paper
is handed from one individual to another during a transaction
or trade, the transaction is not complete
for the holder of the paper until he redeems
it for the gold or silver for which it is a receipt.
Hence, such paper receipts
or obligations are future
goods, not present goods. The gold or silver the paper obligations
are redeemed for are present goods.
Paper bank notes, paper gold
and silver certificates, paper of any kind, if the paper obligations
are part and parcel of a monetary system that includes gold and
silver, and more specifically, are "backed" by gold
and silver, all such paper obligations represent and are - future goods. Only the gold
and silver coin are present
goods.
All paper obligations, being
future goods, upon the exchange of them for present goods in
the marketplace, automatically extend credit, credit that remains
to be paid, a contractual obligation that remains to be fulfilled.
We shall refer to this as point #4.
A Modern Doctrine
As many have noted, there exists
many different types of "fiduciary" media, or money
substitutes. What appears to be a point of confusion in the discussion
of the real bill doctrine is that there may exist variations
of the doctrine, similar to the variations of the quantity theory
of money, or of theories of interest or money supply, which in
turn lead to different schools of thought, even under the heading
of the Austrian School of thought or economics, as occurs in
all other disciplines as well.
This is true for all sciences
and systems of thought and disciplines. Such is how man's awareness
grows and evolves. The work of those in the past is built upon
by those that come after. Even the greatest thinkers never got
it all right.
The point being that it may
not be the best of ideas to lump all variations of the real bills
doctrine under one definition or meaning, specifically the present
doctrine as being espoused by Professor Fekete.
If we are all looking for the
most viable solutions for the present dysfunctional monetary
system of paper fiat-debt money, it is imperative that every
nook and cranny of monetary theory is looked into for any possible
positive contributions in the offering that may have been overlooked
in the past.
It is a fact that the real
bills doctrine has been used extensively in the past by all the
world's major industrialized nations, and that it worked to facilitate
international trade on the global level. This alone suggests
that it may well offer some positive points that at least should
be looked into. To do otherwise who be folly at best, and a complete
disregard for the search for truth at worst, which can only end
badly.
From what I have read, Professor
Fekete's variation is somewhat different from others that have
come before, as with the aid of hindsight, he has adjusted for
past mistakes and limitations, as well as trying to foresee future
pitfalls. We shall refer to the possible misunderstanding and
generalization of the real bills doctrine as point #5.
No Inflation
Detractors of the real bill
doctrine maintain that the use of real bills will cause inflation.
As an example it has been said that:
"The discounting
of bills as per the doctrine would introduce fiduciary media
into circulation. The creation of fiduciary media is always inflationary
because the paper notes have equivalent purchasing power to money
itself and therefore affect prices in the same way." [Blumen]
As is obvious, the main issue
under dispute is the question as to whether the discounting of
real bills is always inflationary. Let's look at the definition
of inflation as given by Mises:
"In theoretical
investigation there is only one meaning that can rationally be
attached to the expression inflation: an increase in the quantity
of money (in the broader sense of the term, so as to include
fiduciary media as well), that is not offset by a corresponding
increase in the need for money (again in the broader sense of
the term), so that a fall in the objective exchange value of
money must occur. Again, deflation (or restriction, or contraction)
signifies a diminution of the quantity of money (in the broader
sense), which is not offset by a corresponding diminution of
the demand for money (in the broader sense), so that an increase
in the objective exchange value of money must occur. If we so
define these concepts, it follows that either inflation or deflation
is constantly going on, for a situation in which the objective
exchange value of money did not alter could hardly ever exist
for very long." [Ludwig
von Mises - The Theory of Money and Credit]
So, on the one hand we have
the statement that "the creation of fiduciary media is
always inflationary because the paper notes have equivalent purchasing
power to money itself and therefore affect prices in the same
way." Let's take a closer look at just what is being
said.
The paper notes are said to
be inflationary because they have "the equivalent purchasing
power to money itself, and therefore affect prices in the same
way."
Earlier we saw that money serves
one major purpose - it is a medium of exchange by which other
goods are procured. Hence, money is used to purchase other goods.
The ability to purchase other goods is what gives money its purchasing power or quality.
In the above definition of
inflation by Mises, it is said that "inflation: an increase
in the quantity of money (in the broader sense of the term, so
as to include fiduciary media as well), that is not offset by
a corresponding increase in the need for money."
So inflation is not simply
an increase in the quantity of money, it is "an increase
in the quantity of money that is not offset by a corresponding
increase in the need for money."
With this distinction in mind,
let us return to Professor Fekete's description of the emergence
of real bills in the economy.
"Bills
emerged together with the emergence of marketable merchandise,
and were extinguished when the latter was removed from the market
by the consumer. At no point did the bill increase the amount
of purchasing media relative to the available supply of merchandise."
[Fekete - The
Dismal Monetary Science: Detractors of Adam Smith's Real
Bills Doctrine]
Note that the "bills
emerged together with the emergence of marketable merchandise",
and that the bills were "extinguished when the latter
was removed from the market by the consumer."
If the "latter"
which is referring to the "marketable merchandise"
is "removed from the market by the consumer",
this means that the consumer has procured the merchandise.
The act of buying merchandise
by a consumer(s) is the manifestation of demand
for the merchandise, merchandise that has been added to the supply
of goods in the market.
The real bills are not adding any new
purchasing power into the market per se, as they are backed by the merchandise coming to market. They also represent increased supply of goods into the market.
The real bills only have the
purchasing power of the new supply of merchandise being added
to the market; they do not add any new purchasing power over
and above the existing goods in the market, hence they do not
create inflation.
Or in Mises' own words: "an
increase in the quantity of money that is not offset by a corresponding
increase in the need for money."
The new
supply of merchandise
is the "offset" of the real bills, which are
"extinguished when the latter is removed from the market
by the consumer."
Furthermore, "at no
point did the bill increase the amount of purchasing media relative
to the available supply of merchandise." If there is
no increase in the purchasing media relative to the new supply
of merchandise, there is no inflation taking place. We will refer
to this as point #6.
Self-Liquidating Bills
Elsewhere it has been stated
that:
"Limiting
the danger of inflation is most prominent reason for using gold
as money. While the supply of gold can at best grow slowly, the
quantity of paper can be multiplied without limit. The resulting
inflation erodes the purchasing power of wages and savings. The
Real Bills Doctrine -- a theory advocating the creation of more
paper money substitutes -- cannot be exempt from this evil." [Blumen]
Once again this position is
perhaps misunderstanding the presently proposed real bills
doctrine. Real bills are backed by, and therefore represent actual
real goods coming to the market, goods and service that are in
the "pipeline" which will soon sit on the shelves of
merchants for sale in the marketplace, and then they will be
consumed by consumers.
They are a special type of
promissory note for x amount of goods coming to market. They
therefore do not add any excess money into the market. Once those
goods are sold, the real bills represented by these goods are
then liquidated or removed from the marketplace - hence they
are self-liquidating.
The cart may be being placed
before the horse in the above example, as the idea that "the
quantity of paper can be multiplied without limit" is
an all-encompassing statement that precludes that all "paper"
is the same or acts the same in the money market.
This is not the case, as their
is self-liquidating "paper", as well as short term
"paper", as well as long term "paper", etc.
There are many other distinctions and types as well.
Real bills are used to move consumer goods through the market from manufacturer
to the whole-sale retailer, to the retail-seller, and finally
to the consumer who removes the self-liquidating bills by using his gold coin to purchase the goods under question. We will refer to this
as point #7.
The Offset
Another of the detractor's
arguments ran thusly:
"On the
other hand, an increase in the quantity of fiduciary media necessarily
results in a higher market price for some good because when they
are issued, there is no offsetting savings that withdraws demand
elsewhere. When a business sells its bills to a bank for unbacked
paper claims, the firm might use their phony paper money to pay
wages to employees, rent office space, or purchase machinery.
Whatever it is, it will sell at a higher price than would be
the case in the absence of the fiduciary media." [Blumen]
The real bills represent real
goods that have real value that do not add more money to the
system that isn't
offset. The real goods
represented by the real bills offset
the additional purchasing power that is equal to the new supply
of goods. Point #8.
Consumption Funds Production
Another point
of contention is that "paper does not fund production. There
is no way that paper by itself can fund production, only
the goods purchased with the paper fund production." [Blumen]
Let's assume that it is true
that only goods purchased with the paper fund production.
Ultimately, only man's labor
can produce goods. It is man's labor that is used and exchanged
in all commerce.
Under direct barter, a man
can and did exchange his direct labor for other goods, or he
would trade goods he produced or accrued through his labor for
other goods.
Money is but the medium of
exchange used to facilitate the development of direct exchange
into indirect exchange. Any and all forms of money can only be
used to exchange for other goods if they represent the perceived
"value" of one's labor, which can then be traded for
other goods, or used to "pay" for man's labor to produce
other goods.
Gold and silver are representative
of a unit value of man's labor, which is exchanged indirectly
for other goods which themselves are but manifestations of man's
labor. Real bills represent the value of the goods that are backed
by them, they are backed by the labor and the production of the
labor that produced the goods in question.
The point being that be it
gold and silver, or be it real bills backed by real goods, both
represent purchasing power, the power of labor and the goods
it can produce. Hence the paper itself is not by itself funding production.
It is the value of the goods
represented by real bills that when sold for gold coin, which
in turn is but a unit of value of labor and or labor's production
that is funding production.
In other words the consumption of
that which is produced is funding production. This we will call point #9.
Collateralized Bills of Exchange
There are many more points
that can be made, and should be made; including discussion of
the points heretofore made, as they are not written in stone.
One final issue that warrants a great deal of future discussion
revolves around the idea that:
"There
do exist instruments that are collateralized by particular goods", yet within the same paragraph it
is said that "even
collateralized bills of exchange are subject to market risk." [Blumen]
The question obviously arises
- which is it: do collateralized bills exist or don't they, as
you can't have it both ways just to attempt to support one's
position. Point #10
Summary
So in this very brief and short
discussion, ten different points or issues have been raised,
which are deserving of much further analysis and examination.
The ten points are merely touching the surface of what is a very
complex set of issues regarding an honest monetary system of
gold and silver in conjunction with the use of real bills,
both of which would be in conjunction with the issuance
of actual loans via gold bonds, etc. for long term loans that
can not be executed by self-liquidating bills of credit.
Such a system is not written
in stone and therefore absolute, it is meant as a basic starting
point or plan from which to progress to an honest monetary system
as opposed to the present system of paper fiat debt money, which
is nothing but a wealth transference mechanism or scheme.
Hopefully these and related
issues can be more thoroughly examined by the present day great
thinkers that can collectively work together to provide a better
world for our children and their children.
A reiteration of the ten points:
1. The use of gold and silver
as money per our Constitution and the Coinage Act of 1792 would
be a return to Honest Money
2. Real wealth consists of
man's labor and that which his labor can produce and provide
3. Gold and silver as money
are but a medium of exchange to procure other goods with
4. Gold and silver are present
goods, all paper money is a future good and involves the extension
of credit
5. The real bills doctrine
has been misunderstood and over-generalized
6. Real bills do not create
inflation as they represent and are backed by real goods
7. Real bills are self-liquidating
and facilitate the movement of goods from production to consumption
8. Real goods offset the purchasing
power of the real bills that represent the real goods
9. The consumption of goods
is ultimately financing the production of goods
10. Collateralized bills of
exchange do exist and have been used to fund the past production
of goods in the industrialized world
My hope and trust is that this
paper will simply provide some food for further thought and discussion
with the goal in mind of finding the truth for the implementation
of an honest system of money. Such an accomplishment would be
one of man's greatest works of both labor and love - Honest Money,
which can only be had by honest men.
Jul 28, 2005
Douglas V. Gnazzo
©2005 Douglas
V. Gnazzo. All rights reserved.
All other views
and comments are invited.
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