From the
Echoes of 1776: A Monetary Revolution Is Coming, By Stefan Gleason
Is America on the
cusp of a revolution that will usher in a new monetary order? The lessons of
history tell us that no fiat currency retains its value for long or lasts
forever. And as Shakespeare noted, “what's past is prologue.”
Major episodes in monetary history often stem from political revolutions. Just as there are boom-bust economic cycles, there are cycles of optimism pessimism that drive cultural, geopolitical, and war cycles. American history reflects the ebbs and flows in social sentiment.
Major episodes in monetary history often stem from political revolutions. Just as there are boom-bust economic cycles, there are cycles of optimism pessimism that drive cultural, geopolitical, and war cycles. American history reflects the ebbs and flows in social sentiment.
The Founders
wrote gold and silver into the Constitution as legal tender. They did so not
because the American Revolution was financed with sound money – quite the
opposite. The Founders were keenly aware of the dangers of unbacked paper money
because the Continental Congress printed huge volumes of it to pay for the
Revolutionary war.
The currency was
knows as the “continental,” and its hyperinflationary collapse toward
worthlessness birthed the phrase “not worth a continental.”
The great champion of American independence, Thomas Jefferson , hoped that the newly independent country would never repeat its experiment in fiat currency. Jefferson wrote in 1813, "Paper money is liable to be abused, has been, is, and forever will be abused, in every country in which it is permitted."
The great champion of American independence, Thomas Jefferson , hoped that the newly independent country would never repeat its experiment in fiat currency. Jefferson wrote in 1813, "Paper money is liable to be abused, has been, is, and forever will be abused, in every country in which it is permitted."
Unfortunately,
that lesson of history never seems to stick. The temptation to abandon sound money always proves too great for those
in power to resist, especially during a time of crisis.
Debasement
of Our Money Accelerated during Civil War
Abraham Lincoln
financed the Civil War in part by debasing the currency. By 1863, inflation ran
rampant in the North and in the Confederacy. The Confederate States of America
dollar was backed by nothing but the hope that it would retain its value in the
event of a Southern victory. Today, Confederate dollars aren’t worth anything
except their historical value to collectors – another in a long line of fiat
currencies that failed.
In the aftermath
of the carnage wrought by the Civil War, America entered into an extended
period of economic ascent marked by stable price levels. The U.S. dollar,
backed by gold, became King Dollar. Not until World War I did high rates of
inflation return.
Consumer
Prices 1775 – Present
But instead of
returning to sound money in the decades that followed, the U.S. dollar went
through a series of progressive debasements. A new “Progressive” revolution was
taking hold in America. In 1913, Congress authorized the Federal Reserve to be
the nation’s banker and in 1916 imposed a national income tax. The tax stayed
and the Fed’s power only grew after the First World War.
The New Deal era
ushered in an expansive new government role in the economy and a welfare state.
After the Supreme Court had struck down some of FDR’s New Deal programs,
Roosevelt infamously threatened to pack the Court with additional nominees. It
was only a matter of time before the Supreme Court relented to the new
zeitgeist.
At that point,
the Progressive agenda was fully cemented. Its three major tenets – a powerful
central bank, a progressive income tax, and an unlimited welfare state –
represent a stealth revolution in America that overturned many of its founding
principles. The revolution wasn’t formally declared or fought by soldiers, but
it was every bit as consequential for America’s trajectory as 1776 and
1861-1865.
It would not have been possible for
the government to accrue more than $200 trillion in unfunded liabilities
without the twofer of a central bank and a fiat currency. The U.S. dollar
didn’t become fully fiat until 1971, when President Nixon suspended gold redeemability.
That’s when growth in the national debt became completely unconstrained.
Lack of Gold/Silver Backing Led to Explosive
Growth in Debt
Today, U.S. debt is so enormous, and
the long-term projections so unworkable, that a debt crisis is unavoidable. The
only question is what form it will take – default or hyperinflation?
History
shows that unpayable sovereign debts denominated in fiat currencies tend to be
inflated away rather than defaulted on outright. There are some exceptions, of
course. The recent $1.7 billion Greek debt default owes to the fact that Greece
is on the euro and can’t print its own euros.
The U.S., on the other hand, owns
its own printing press. As former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan
explained, “The United States can pay any debt it has because we can always
print money to do that.”
When that happens, and when the
public loses confidence in the dollar, a revolution for the restoration of
sound money may commence.
At present, the modern-day
Progressives have another revolution in mind. Their agenda is focused more on
overturning the culture rather than the economy. Hence, they’ve been dubbed
“Cultural Marxists.” Their strategy is to strike at the root of American
identity by denigrating its history and its people.
The culture wars won’t ever end,
because demonizing people for holding ideas that were socially acceptable in
the recent past is how the hard left makes advances. But what could set the
Cultural Marxists back is the bankruptcy of the government.
The coming debt crisis will set the
nation on a new monetary course. It just might spark a political revolution,
too, against the failed tenets of Progressivism that caused the crisis.
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