Wikipedia defines gold standard to be “the monetary system where the standard economic entity is measured in terms of a specific weight in gold”. Hence, the Gold Standard unit of currency is usually defined in reference to the precious metal.
Past Standard
There was no formal gold standard in the past although the Sir Isaac Newton did make an evaluation of gold and silver using his invented measurement system in 1717. Hence, many take that this kicked start the Gold Standard that was to be established. But it was only in the 1870s that there was an official Gold Standard.
With the establishment of an official Gold Standard, many governments began adopting this official gold standard for trading currency notes amongst themselves. The users of the Gold Standard view the standard as a contrast to the expansion of debt and credit. It is not possible for any government to generate arbitrary funds that are backed by gold unlike the fiat currencies of today.
Gold Standard Opposition
With a Gold Standard, it is not possible to create an artificial inflation through currency devaluation. Hence, the monetary authority’s credit is constant; there is no ‘currency uncertainty’ with more lending encouraged.
However, not all countries adopted the Gold Standard of the day; they manipulated the paper currencies which led to debt crises and currency depressions where the central banks manipulated the currency until inflation comes on.
One example of this occurrence was the 1819 panic in U.S. when the country’s second National Bank turned more towards paper-based currencies with opposing movements against the Gold Standard that was politically motivated. Hence, the Gold Standard started to lose its grip over many industrial nations and the international market. It was decided that the Gold Standard was dropped as a consequence of its lack of support and functionality in most nations with the emergence of fiat currency.
It was only the private institutions that continued with the digital gold currency and used accounted gold in grams as money form.
Rise of the Dollar
The US was on a gold standard for the most part from 1795 to 1971. In 1933 we were taken off of the gold standard domestically, meaning citizens could not exchange dollars for gold but countries still could. Then in 1971 Nixon removed the US from the gold standard for good, thus causing inflation to begin to rise dramatically. Since then the dollar has lost over 80% of its purchasing power.
Monday, September 12, 2011
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