Money, Gold, and History
In Money, Gold, and History, Lewis E. Lehrman raises three questions:
1) Will the perennial global monetary crisis and the century-old age of inflation still be underway a generation from now?
2) Will the global economy have succumbed to national rivalries, mercantilism, financial disorder, and entropy?
3) Or, will monetary order have been restored by the leading nations of the world in their own self-interest?
2) Will the global economy have succumbed to national rivalries, mercantilism, financial disorder, and entropy?
3) Or, will monetary order have been restored by the leading nations of the world in their own self-interest?
The authentic and effective American solution is neither esoteric nor
complicated. It is simple and straightforward. The solution is
authorized by the United States Constitution in Article I, Sections 8
and 10 whereby the control of the quantity of dollars in circulation is
entrusted to the hands of the people because the definition of the
dollar was entrusted to Congress. In 1792, Congress defined by statute
the dollar as a specific weight unit of precious metal.
There it remained for most of American history, especially from 1792 to 1914 because the dollar was precisely defined by congressional statute as a weight unit of gold or silver. This gold standard economic era was America s longest period of rapid, non-inflationary, economic growth almost four percent annually with the budget under control, except during major wars.
Congress need only mobilize its unique, constitutional power under Article I "to coin money and regulate the value thereof." Until 1971 U.S. law defined the gold value of American currency such that paper dollars and bank demand deposits were convertible to their gold equivalent by the people (1792-1914) and/or by governments (1933-1971). The last vestige of convertibility was terminated by President Richard Nixon s Executive Order of August 15, 1971.
Congress should now exercise its constitutional power to restore discipline in the Federal Reserve System by dollar-gold convertibility, especially because of the proven, budgetary, and economic growth benefits of a dollar as good as gold.
There it remained for most of American history, especially from 1792 to 1914 because the dollar was precisely defined by congressional statute as a weight unit of gold or silver. This gold standard economic era was America s longest period of rapid, non-inflationary, economic growth almost four percent annually with the budget under control, except during major wars.
Congress need only mobilize its unique, constitutional power under Article I "to coin money and regulate the value thereof." Until 1971 U.S. law defined the gold value of American currency such that paper dollars and bank demand deposits were convertible to their gold equivalent by the people (1792-1914) and/or by governments (1933-1971). The last vestige of convertibility was terminated by President Richard Nixon s Executive Order of August 15, 1971.
Congress should now exercise its constitutional power to restore discipline in the Federal Reserve System by dollar-gold convertibility, especially because of the proven, budgetary, and economic growth benefits of a dollar as good as gold.
History tells us we need to embrace
the least imperfect monetary system
A Gold Standard Now.
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