Kaj Grussner, a tax-adviser in Finland, has a piece at the Mises blog that responds to Stephen Zarlenga. Zarlenga is the director of the American Monetary Institute and the author of “The Lost Science of Money.” He had previously criticized the Austrian position at Gnostic Media.
The critique is important because Zarlenga’s ideas have been adopted by Dennis Kucinich and they may very well bear fruit in policies (the American Monetary Act) that could make things worse (if you can imagine that). Here’s Grussner:
“Zarlenga criticizes economists for many things. One of these is that economists have taken morality out of the science of economics. He also says that economists have tried to hide this exclusion of morality, because if people were told about this atrocity they would be outraged.
Of course, morality has no place in the science of economics.
[Lila: I see where Grussner is coming from, but actually he’s mistaken, mainly because economics isn’t a science, but also for other reasons].
Science is, by its very nature, value-free.
[Lila: Actually, this too isn’t quite right. Science has a different set of values, but I take his point].
When you try to explain why action A had consequence B, you should examine theory and fact. It is only when you start too advocate certain actions or programs, such as the 100-percent-reserve solution, that morality comes into play. Let us therefore examine the moral aspects of Zarlenga’s monetary reform.
From the very outset, printing dollars out of thin air, declaring them legal tender, and purchasing goods and services with them is tantamount to theft. The printer acquires property without giving anything of real value in return. After all, the money is merely ink on paper with no value of its own except what it derives from the violent force of the government.
In addition, it is always those who get the new money first who benefit the most. In this instance, it would be the government. But those who are second in line will benefit too, while the new money still has most of its value. The recipients of the new money can turn around and again acquire something for nothing. The amount that can be acquired diminishes over time, so those who get the money last are the ones who pay for the early recipients’ gains.
Zarlenga explicitly mentions healthcare and education as being areas of government spending, as this would benefit the masses, who otherwise couldn’t afford such services. What he fails to understand is that it isn’t the students and patients who benefit, but the hospitals and universities. It is the medical professionals and academics who are the true recipients of the money. It is to them that the money is paid for the services they provide, and the constant influx of new money into these sectors will of course raise prices significantly over time.
[Lila: All this is true, and, in addition, cheapening will actually strengthen big business, because it is big business that takes on the most debt. This is an act that will win the approval of the underclass that doesn’t pay taxes; debtors, who get to see their debts diluted; the governing class and all its clients, who live on public money; and the corporate class that pays taxes, but extracts much more back from the government in the form of subsidies and the use of infrastructure].
Every bout of new money will draw value from the existing amount of money, which means that after the initial theft of property by the government and its preferred interest groups, the debasement of the currency will continue at an ever-increasing rate; the more devalued the dollar gets every year, the more dollars must be printed every year to pay for the same things. For people far away from the printing press, this means that the value of their savings and income is transferred to the money printers and first recipients of the new money, much as it is today.
Another obvious problem with having the government print money is that it creates rent-seeking behavior. With fresh supplies of money coming from the government at an increasing rate, it becomes more and more reasonable for private corporations to lobby for a part of the public-spending cake than to appeal to consumers. In the long run, this means that an ever-increasing part of the private sector will become dependent on the influx of new government money.
From a moral point of view, it makes no difference who counterfeits the money and acquires property for nothing. It is still fraud and theft.
Conclusion
There is no point in making the Austrian case for commodity money here. There are many easily read books that do that. The purpose of this article is to explain that no matter how bad a system is, it can always get worse. Not all reforms are improvements. As we have seen, the 100-percent-reserve solution is ripe with unintended consequences.
When this economic crisis evolves into a currency crisis, which it most probably will, reform will become inevitable. The question then is what ideas for reform are lying around for the people and the politicians to choose from.
The reform advocated by Zarlenga and introduced to the Congress by Dennis Kucinich may very well appeal to politicians and bureaucrats. Also, the increasing animosity toward both the Fed and the banking establishment as a whole will likely encourage ordinary Americans to support Zarlenga and Kucinich’s initiative. On the face of it, the solution sounds rather reasonable and has the support of a very popular congressman.
Just think about it. It would strip the banks of their privileges and put the money power back into the hands of the people through their elected representatives; it would break the bankers’ secretive monopoly racket, which enables them to pay out billions in bonuses while ordinary people suffer. Doesn’t that sound familiar? Isn’t that how the Federal Reserve system was sold to the American public following the Panic of 1907?
For Austrians, it is easy to dismiss Zarlenga as a crank, which, based on the ridiculous claims he makes, he undoubtedly is. So why should we pay attention to someone like him? Because if we don’t, we increase the risk of him being successful in making the American Monetary Act become law. After all, similar monetary systems have been tried before.
This is why Austrians need to expose the real dangers of such a system. It would be a mistake to simply assume that that everyone will recognize its inherent problems and reject it. If the government can pass a constitutional amendment to sign the Federal Reserve Act into law and thus create a private central bank, they can certainly do this too.
So in addition to making the case for the free-market solution in money and banking, Austrians need to take up the debate with all their intellectual opponents. Zarlenga is one of them, and he should not be taken lightly.”
I’m posting a response to Grussner I saw here.
I can’t say I was impressed by Zarlenga’s original criticism of the Austrians or the response to Grussner. The monetarists seem completely mistaken on fundamental economic principles, and I’m appalled that they are being taken so seriously.
In the first place, Zarlenga does not seem to understand that both money and debt represent claims to real goods. But while debt is a claim to real goods not yet produced, money is a claim to those goods in the present. That is, money represents production.
If a bank (either private or public) issues money without sufficient real goods to back that, the money is essentially “funny money” and it represents a theft from people who have savings based on real production. That’s what’s happened already. Savers have lost the high interest rate they ought to have received for the past two decades, and have subsidized an orgy of debt and spending by other people. Now the “other people” are using the force of the law (the gun, really) to make the savers give up more, so that the debtors can walk away from their debts. If the debts were fraudulently contracted, the defrauders should pay, not innocent savers who had nothing to do with the fraud. And if the debts were fairly contracted, the debtors should pay up.
Invoking imaginary golden ages where “the people” simply gave themselves whatever they wanted doesn’t cut it. Ain’t no such thing. Proof? Look at countries where there is “public” money. Inflation runs even higher in India than in the US. Corruption is rampant. A resource-laden, skilled and manpower-rich country has a per capita income no better than some of the poorest countries in sub-Saharan Africa.
The banking mafia is a symptom, not the root cause of our problems. The root cause is the state, and the philosophy that allows the state to set aside natural law because it is “the lawgiver.”
Peter Schiff said it in a nice way:
“We Americans also must be honest with ourselves and recognize that we have been living beyond our means and that our lifestyle has been largely financed by austerity in China.”
And here, Peter Gorenstein (who, amazingly, seems to approve) states the obvious – the Fed wants to inflate away debt because it believes it will grow the economy (I kid you not):
“The Fed can’t admit that one reason it wants high inflation is to reduce the real burden of our debt, but you can bet that that’s one of its objectives. What’s more, says Nobel-winning economist Paul Krugman, inflation should be one of the Fed’s objectives. Because that’s how we’ve gotten out from under debt burdens in the past.
So how did the U.S. government manage to pay off its [World War 2] wartime debt? Actually, it didn’t. At the end of 1946, the federal government owed $271 billion; by the end of 1956 that figure had risen slightly, to $274 billion. The ratio of debt to G.D.P. fell not because debt went down, but because G.D.P. went up, roughly doubling in dollar terms over the course of a decade.
In other words, after World War 2, we didn’t “pay down” our debt. We grew into it.
And, importantly, this growth came from a combination of real growth AND inflation:
The rise in G.D.P. in dollar terms was almost equally the result of economic growth and inflation, with both real G.D.P. and the overall level of prices rising about 40 percent from 1946 to 1956.
So inflation is an important tool in getting us out of this mess. It’s painful and unfair–those who have been responsible and saved money will pay the price for those who borrowed money, racked up huge debts, and spent more than they could afford. But it’s what the Fed is (quietly) aiming for.”
Someone might say that the system where I do the borrowing and spending, and you do the saving and working is a version of slavery.
[That isn’t an anti-American statement either. It was made by a rather plain-speaking CEO of an American company…]
Debtors are demanding that savers work for them, through foregoing their own consumption and the market- price of money. Monetarists are demanding that people walk away from the obligations of their government with a slow-motion dilution of the currency. People on fixed income will be destroyed. People dependent on wages in industries where wages are not rising (nearly every industry) will find prices rising beyond them. Responsible workers and savers, here and around the world, will get stiffed. Future borrowing costs will soar. The US will suffer retaliatory treatment from foreign countries. Other countries will default on their debt or renege on their contracts. So will citizens everywhere. Corruption will rise. Gamblers in the stock market will benefit, as their portfolios of cash now get plumped up. That is banana-republicanism.
What is needed is NOT a “return to the gold standard” of the coin, corruption and clipping of the realm. It is grams of the people. It’s the most obvious, most fair, and historically most assaulted.
ADN,
what do you mean by grams of the people?
Lila-
As another monetary-economic heretic, I can only respond briefly on your premise.
LR : From the very outset, printing dollars out of thin air, declaring them legal tender, and purchasing goods and services with them is tantamount to theft.
The Constitution of our democratic republic gives to the Congress-assembled the right to do all those things. We can pass legal tender laws, and we have and they have been found to be Constitutionally-integral. We can pass laws that empower the government to issue its currency without debts – and we have done so in the past.
And, we the people, acting through our Congress-assembled, can use fiscal and budgeting powers to introduce that money into existence for the purchase of goods and service by our government, without debt, inflation or deflation.
We had our Revolution against the private money-creation powers of the Bank of England that resulted in our sovereign nation, our Constitution and our money powers.
As a sovereign nation, our currency laws grow out of our collective rights to pursue our happiness and economic well-being. Is there more to it than that?
I feel this issue of monetary sovereignty and the rights of our Congress-assembled to create the nation’s money is finally resolved in the article by Prof. Robert G. Natelson, published in the Harvard Journal of Economics and Public Policy in July 2008, linked at our website – economicstability.org .
LR : The printer acquires property without giving anything of real value in return. After all, the money is merely ink on paper with no value of its own except what it derives from the violent force of the government.
First, remember that Zarlenga’s proposal includes a change to full-reserve banking. Thus it would end the private creation of debt-money for nothing, and at the same time transition to a system where all banking and investment activities would be done with real money already created by the government.
The government, in using its creation powers so as to limit the new money quantities to what is needed to support the improvement in our economic well-being, is merely providing the monetary system with circulating medium to enable the increase in the production and consumption of goods and services by the American people.
The fact that the government issues the money to support economic stability and full employment for the American people and the American economy means that the government provides “something of real value” to most students of monetary system history .
The payment of that money into existence for the purchase of goods and services is providing purchasing power to the recipient of that payment, supporting a secure and stable basis for economic growth, without debt, inflation or deflation.
These are just a few of your early points.
Hi Joe –
What Monetarists propose isn’t anything heretical at all…it’s the grand old orthodoxy of all statists who by invoking the doctrine of state sovereignty think they can do away with all laws.
Well, they can do away with man made laws, for sure.
The state can decree that offense is actually defense and debt is actually money or anything else it pleases.
Unfortunately for it (but fortunately for people who adhere to the idea that the market place is a real phenomenon until it got distorted by state intervention), the state can legislate prosperity all it wants, but can’t create it out of nothing.
Funding make-work in the government, or even worthy projects (it’s not clear who will decide what is worthy and how much of it we need) is not the road to prosperity, because until you have market prices that accurately reflect true costs, true demand, and true growth, what you have is funny money papering over make-work. As in, they pretend to pay us, and we pretend to work.
There is only one genuine road to recovery, but we don’t have the political will for it.
Every fraudulent contract should be voided under RICO and all criminal profits disgorged from the offenders.
Jail time for senior managers and government officials.
Retroactive seizure of the assets of all those involved in the bail out, including congressman.
Dismantling of the war machine, withdrawal from foreign bases, slashing of the budget beyond the minimum necessary to keep certain essential services and provide a life-line to the truly indigent.
Then abolish all income and corporate taxes.
That will bring US businesses back to the country.
Then we will begin to go in the direct direction
To mb4
Interesting comment.
It was Lila who named Zarlenga a monetary crank, another word for economics heretic. I am in Stephen’s camp.
I don’t accept the premise that anyone working from a foundation of a sovereign peoples’ collective rights, especially their monetary system rights, automatically assume the postural right to do away with other laws, etc.
On the other hand, to be sure, white man has been speaking with forked tongue for centuries.
I prefer that we dialogue from the perspective of the reality of the day, and what our options are going forward.
Thus, leaving the rhetoric of orthodox statism on the table.
Zarlenga proposes replacement of all bank-credit, debt-money with government issued, debt-free, real money, in order to provide for a transition, and then afterward all financial transactions take place with real money, with lending by private banks based on savings and investments.
I thought the Austrians agreed with that concept, from a functional perspective.
I see no plan for the state to ‘create prosperity’, that is left completely to a private banking system, including the establishment of market-based interest rates. The government’s role is limited to providing adequate circulating medium without the need for debts, so that we can avoid a repeat of the current crisis where our well-being is denied due simply to the unwillingness of bankers to make loans, thereby depriving the economy of its circulating medium. The fact that this is all due to fractional-reserve banking notwithstanding.
As far as jailing those of fraudulent behavior and all that, fine.
But Silas Adams’ book: “The Legalized Crime of Banking” convinced me a long time ago of the need for systemic, structural reforms, rather than a bunch of regulations and a lot of work for lawyers. Even government lawyers.
We will never abolish taxes. But we can abolish those used for repayments of the national debt. Good enough for me.
A heretic adheres to something with some intellectual merit. A crank adheres to things that are on its face illogical, unreasonable or untrue.
A scientific heretic might say oil isn’t produced from fossils. A scientific crank would say the moon is made of nougat and cherry.
Disagreeing with how pi is calculated is one thing.
Saying that 2+1 = 9 is a crank..
“I prefer that we dialogue from the perspective of the reality of the day, and what our options are going forward.
(THERE ARE PLENTY OF OTHER OPTIONS, INCLUDING LETTING SAVERS BUY LAND, HOUSES AND INFRASTRUCTURE IN THIS COUNTRY, OPEN IMMIGRATION TO HIGHLY SKILLED LABOR AND BUSINESS MEN, WHICH WOULD PROVIDE JOBS, AND SLASHING INCOME TAXES AND CORPORATE TAXES WHICH WOULD DO AWAY WITH CORRUPTION AND BRING BUSINESS BACK INTO THE COUNTRY AND OUT FROM THE OFFSHORE HAVENS)
Thus, leaving the rhetoric of orthodox statism on the table.
YOU’RE SCHEME IS PURELY STATIST..IT DEPENDS ON THE STATE
Zarlenga proposes replacement of all bank-credit, debt-money with government issued, debt-free, real money, in order to provide for a transition.”
ZARLENGA PROPOSES FRAUD AND COUNTERFEIT, DISGUISED AS DEBT JUBILEE.
IS HE WILLING TO EXTEND THIS FORGIVENESS TO ALL FOREIGN DEBTS TOO?
LILA:
If debtors are going to get debt-free money to clear their debts, then savers should get debt-free money to reward them for not having debts right?
Would be good for the economy to have prudent savers have more money than people who were imprudent?
If this project is sincere, the AMI will have to prove it by issuing “debt free” dollars, one for each you saved.
That is, if you have $1000 worth of debt, under the new scheme, you’d be be at zero, right? Or are you planning to give people money equal to their losses?
In which case, I’m emigrating right now.
If you held $1000 worth of bonds, you’d get $1000 cash.
And a saver with $1000 worth of savings would get $1000 for each dollar of savings plus $1000 for the debt he never got into (and the costs he saved the economy).
Every saver should get three times his portfolio OR $3000 IN THIS CASE.
If that’s not okay, then the whole scheme is just a swindle.
i need to go to bed. otherwise, i would have fun refuting the refutation. morality is code word for natural law – assignment of public wealth to the public. i agree with the left position except i would favor funding a minimum government and cutting a check to the public and giving it to the public to spend as the public (private individuals) sees fit. beats giving it to the bankers who have most of the gold and silver in markets they love to easily manipulate.
The idea that market prices reflect true costs is a joke. One word “externaltities”.