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Is the Gold Standard Now Alive or Dead?

What is a gold standard and why is gold valuable?

In developed markets for gold, inflation has risen sharply for the very 1st in 40 years, double digits. The demand for a restoration the escalating. Names including former US Donald Trump, for American Institute of Economic Analysis, and United States politician Ron Paul are on the list of supporters. Congressman Alexander Mooney of the US even introduced a measure in 2022 that would “define the dollar as a set weight of gold.”

Alan Greenspan - Wikipedia

In a 2016 interview, Alan Greenspan, a former head of the Federal Reserve, said, “It would be exciting if we went back to using gold as it was before 1913. Keep in mind that the years 1873 to 1913most in American history.

Jerome Powell, the current chairman, disagrees that it would be wise to go back to the gold standard. John Maynard Keynes, a prominent “barbarous relic” that was no kind.

The value of a nation’s currency to gold. This can be performed immediately by fixing the price of the dollar or indirectly by fixing the price of other dollars and so indirectly linked to gold. Complete paper money issued be fully backed by gold. Another choice is fractional backing, which only backs the total gold.

Franklin D. Roosevelt - Wikipedia

Only non-US official owners of dollars (central banks, for example), convert their holdings into gold under the Bretonat at the value of $35 per ounce. Franklin Delano Roosevelt banned private possession of gold in the US in 1933. In 1974, President Ford made ownership.

There is above-ground gold (estimated at around 200,000 tonnes). As rich resources have been mined, gold in ores has decreased in ores has already been decreasing. Gold mines now have an average grade of 1 to 5 grams per tonne. The amount of gold that can be economically mined by the high energy requirements (to crush & transport rock, for example). Over 2,800 and 3,600 tonnes, increasing the available stock of gold by less than 2% annually.

Pros and cons of a gold standard

An intended to provide a strong currency that serves as the cornerstone of an effective economy. Large swaths of the population become impoverished during a currency crash. Political from this would eventually put democracy in danger. According to historians, the emergence of the Nazis in Germany resulted from hyperinflation.

A gold standard has the following benefits, among others:

•       Inflation would be held in control, resulting in the expansion of the correlated with the rise of gold holdings.

•       The quantity of tax revenue would be the cap on government expenditure. Any debt-based call for more gold.

•       Given that gold determines the amount banks would’ve been immune to political pressure.

However, there are several negative aspects, including the following:

•       The amount of money that could circulate, economic expansion.

•       Fixed be deflationary in a depressed economy and bankruptcies.

•       The success of gold mining operations & ongoing investment in the search be necessary for the increase.

•       It’s possible standards were on hand. As a result, the gold it would be hard to sustain the gold stock’s 46% annual growth rate between 1900 and 1909.

•       The inability of policymakers to react to economic shocks.

•       Due to a shortage of gold deposits or miners, no fair opportunities for gold.

•       If international trade imbalances were resolved in gold, they would eventually cause gold reserves to be depleted, resulting in a crisis of balance of payments and the incapacity to pay.

•       Who would have the authority to issue more debt if it were (unlikely) possible due to gold on hand? Who is in charge? Banks? Households? Who would decide who could incur new debt?

The problem with a gold standard

The US dollar’s ability to be converted into gold was stopped by US President Nixon in August 1971, thereby terminating the gold standard. Since that time, the overall sum of debt has grown from $1.6 b to $92 trillion, an 8% annual increase. The Gross domestic product (GDP) increased from $1.1 b to $25.7 trillion over the same period or 5.8% annually. Debt, which is a synonym for “money,” than GDP.

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Existing house sales dropped from 6.5 million to 4.1 million, a 36-percentage drop, as the average 30-year mortgage rate in the US rose from 2.7% at the end of 2020 to above 7% in October 2022. Without access to credit, prospective homeowners would have to save up the whole purchase price for an “all-cash” transaction, which would prevent the majority of people from ever being able to buy a home.

Many supporters of that flexibility, with changes in gold underpinning (downwards) or even the value of the currency (upwards, depreciating the currency). However, how would that change from the existing setup? A flexible gold would allow imbalances to develop over time, encourage speculation, cause financial friction, and maybe have unforeseen effects. The treatment may end up being more harmful than the illness itself.

The unsustainability of gold

From existing to unsustainable over the long term.

First, money cannot be created without incurring liability. The existing system is “damned” debt levels to support economic expansion. In a world with finite resources, the exponential function of debt with interest owing, further use interest rates (interest upon interest in succeeding periods), is an issue.

India's GDP contracts by 6.6% in FY21: Govt - BusinessToday

levels have risen, and the marginal usefulness of debt has fallen. The US GDP has grown by $11 trillion since the total amount has soared by $40 trillion. In other words, debt only results in cents of GDP. While GDP resets to zero on January 1st, debt-related interest is due annually (and adds to the debt load). Increasing debt makes it more difficult to produce more GDP.

Interest is being paid on growing debt levels. The Institute of International Finance (IIF) estimates that the global debt-to-GDP ratio is at 343%. If we (generously) estimate interest of 3%, the economy loses more than 10% of its GDP each year to interest payments. Even the principle of this is not included.

Is a return to the gold standard inevitable?

Would the present order pave the ground for the gold standard again? Despite their denial of the existence of gold, central banks continue to maintain over 36,000 tonnes of the metal, which is worth over $2 trillion at today’s rates ($1,838 an ounce; 1 metric tonne = 32,150.75 troy ounces). From 1968 through 2008, central banks decreased their gold reserves. Interestingly, central banks started buying between 250 & 750 tonnes of gold each year during the “Great Financial Crisis” of 2008–2009.

Russia (1,875 tonnes), Chinese (1,447 tonnes), India (428 tonnes), Turkish (373 tonnes), and Kazakhstan have been at the top in years, with them being (324 tonnes).

The United States (8,133 tonnes), German (3,355 tonnes), the International Monetary Fund (IMF), (2,814 tonnes), Italian (2,452 tonnes), and France (2,437 tonnes) are the top absolute terms. These are largely “old world” nations.

A total of 10,771 tonnes are held by euro-area members, European Central Bank (ECB). However, none of them has been increasing their holdings since doing so in markets that they are losing faith in their respective currencies. Emerging market economies must catch up in both absolute and relative to GDP.

The benefit of owning gold is currency collapse, The central fix a gold price (dramatically increased), achieving a gain on current gold holdings.  Banks the 6 trillion euros in book value by tenfold the price of gold. In a recent interview, Klaas Knot, President of the Reserve Bank of the Netherlands, proposed a gold tool for the problem not, the President of the Reserve Bank of Netherlands, proposed gold valuation as a solution problem.

In addition, revaluing gold would result in unexpected profits for private owners, possibly giving consumers a lift in a climate. Germans reportedly retain more gold privately than Germany’s federal bank, the Bundesbank.

The result for the US is less certain. There is no information on gold in the United States. Most people are unaware that the Federal Reserve does not possess any gold. It was mandated to transmit all of its bullion to the Treasury under the Physical Gold Act of 1934.

In return, the Fed got a “non-redeemable gold certificate” worth $42.22 per ounce of “statuary” gold, which is a lot less than the current market price of $1,838 per ounce. Due to the price of $42.22, the Fed is “owed” 261 million oz, but only at the valuation of $11 billion. Since it is kept in Fort Knox and West Point, the military controls over 75% of the gold in the United States.

The European Central Bank (ECB), in contrast, hand, lists its gold above all values at market rates (now at roughly EUR 600 billion, or $633 billion).

It is up to the ECB to purchase or sell gold on the open market. Since it does not hold any gold, the Federal Reserve is unable to sell any. Additionally, it could have trouble purchasing gold at market rates because doing so would result in a loss on away due to the necessary price of gold of $42.22 noted before.

Regarding gold, the Fed has limited options. Demonetizing gold is the dollar to take its commodity for the central issuer of the reserve currency.

This exposes between central bankers in Europe and the Federal Reserve: European central bankers were pro-gold, although surreptitiously. In contrast to the latter, the former weapon is to recapitalize its banking system (and later, commercial banks).

An international convention (similar to Bretton Woods) that was convened in the collapse of the would probably be unable to come to a consensus on how gold should be used.

This would mean that the dollar’s role as the world’s reserve currency would disappear. Market players produced by central banks’ reserve during the coming chaos. Given the drawbacks already highlighted, banks will not return to something like instead revalued reserves in the ongoing use of fiat money.

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