www.armstrongeconomics.com
QUESTION:
You have said that coins were still fiat and not tangible hard money.
Nobody else has said that. Can you support that statement?
DS
ANSWER:
Of course. During the American Colonial period, there was a shortage of
silver in particular in Britain. They impose restrictions on what coins
could be used to pay Americans for anything. That restriction was
imposed on silver and gold. Therefore, payment to Americans from Britain
was always in copper coins. If Americans wanted to buy something from
Britain, it was typically demanded in silver or gold. This was one of
the reasons for the American Revolution.
Because of these restrictions, the monetary value of copper coins was
twice its actual metal content. All governments produced coins ONLY
at a profit, which is called the seignorage. Here is a table of the
weight and metal content of a U.S. penny. Not only has it declined in
weight, in 1982 it ceased being a copper-based coin. The penny today is
zinc copper plated to maintain the appearance. The price of copper
became worth more than 1 cent and that was not profitable. In May
2012 Canada stopped minting one-cent coins altogether became the metal
content exceeded its value ending a tradition since 1858
when Canada established its own currency.
Even in ancient Roman times, the mines belonged to the government.
They financed their spending by producing new coinage every year. That
covered about 80% of their budget. They set the value of the coin which
was ALWAYS over the intrinsic metal content. So no matter what people you look at, the coinage value was ALWAYS
greater than its pure metal content. Even Bretton Woods fixed the price
of gold at $35 per ounce in 1944. They failed to raise that value and
it eventually caused the monetary system to collapse in 1971. That was
the very same result we see in the penny as well as the debasement in
the Roman Empire of the silver coinage.
Therefore, anyone who tells you that ONLY paper money is fiat, they have absolutely no idea of the monetary system and how it has evolved with time. ALL
money, when fixed in value by the government, is fiat. Even the
infamous Soros attack on the British pound was based upon Britain trying
to “fix” the pound at a high rate within the European Rate Mechanism at
a high rate for pride.
Only a floating exchange rate system ends the fiat. So yes – that
means as long as the “paper” dollar floats in value on world markets, it
is not actually fiat and more than Bitcoin trading. The term “fiat
money” means an arbitrary order or decree declaring the value to be
fixed. The dollar was “fiat” when it was arbitrarily established by
Roosevelt at $35 to the ounce of gold.
Today. as long as a currency floats, it is not an arbitrary
declaration of its value by the government and is therefore not “fiat”
as popularly stated by the hard money crew. This mythical idea that a
currency should be a store of wealth has NEVER existed
even once in history from one decade to the next. Those who argue for
such a system are incapable of comprehending the business cycle and like
Karl Marx want to freeze the system because they cannot cope with it.
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