Guest Post: Why A Gold Standard, Alone, Is Not Enough
Submitted by Tyler Durden on  10/09/2012 10:25 -0400
  Submitted by Martin Sibileau of 'A View From The Trenches',
...The Argentine case and the Dutch Golden Age suggest that the 
elimination of the credit multiplier (i.e. extinction of shadow banking)
 is more important than the asset backing a currency...
As we pointed in our last letter, we 
have lately noticed that there is an ongoing debate on whether (or not) 
the world can again embrace the gold standard. We join the debate today,
 with an historical as well as technical perspective. Today’s letter 
will deal with the historic part of the discussion. In the process, you 
will see that we side with some popular ideas, while we challenge 
others.
The gold standard will be the last option: If adopted, it will be out of necessity and in desperation
We are not historians. In our limited 
knowledge, we note however that historically, the experiment of adopting
 a gold standard –or a currency board system- was usually preceded by 
extremely trying moments, including the loss by a government of its 
legal tender amidst hyperinflation.
The change to a commodity standard has 
often been then out of necessity. We witnessed one of these episodes 
first-hand, in Argentina, back in 1991. The local currency was decreed 
convertible into US dollars (i.e. a currency board) at a rate of 10,000 
to 1, and assigned a new name: peso argentino. The method with 
which this was carried out challenges the current speculation regarding 
gold, according to which gold bullion would be confiscated, in 
order to provide reserves to a central bank daring to return to the gold
 standard. In Argentina, US dollars were not confiscated to back the 
peso. There was no need do that. On the same grounds, we don’t think 
gold would need to be confiscated, although one must never, ever 
underestimate stupidity.
How did Argentina implement its 
convertible system? The central bank adopted two relevant measures: The 
first was to change its charter to prohibit holding government debt. The
 second measure was to commit to sell unlimited dollars at the established peg of 10,000  to 1. Of course, the first measure was later violated. But that’s a discussion for another day. What it matters is that they committed to sell the asset backing their liability (i.e. the peso), but not to buy it. From
 then on, nobody dared to challenge the central bank until 1994-5, when 
the Mexican peso was devalued. And even then, the system passed the 
test.
The 10,000:1 peg was based simply on the
 fact that that was back then, the amount of local currency per each US 
dollar in reserves. It is very conceivable that, under an 
inflationary spiral, the US government may proceed similarly. If at that
 time there are x thousand US dollars per ounce of gold at the US 
Treasury, a peg may be established to reflect that ratio. And just like 
it occurred in Argentina, we would not expect the Fed to be challenged.
From those years, we also remember this: When
 the peg was set at 10,000:1, there were many who thought that the US 
dollar was still underpriced. However, think about this: Why would the 
market have paid for your US dollars more than 10,000 (Australes), when 
the market knew that, in the absence of a bid, all you could get from 
the central bank was going to be 10,000? We can very much 
foresee a similar situation where, the market price of gold collapses 
from its peak to the established peg, leaving painful losses.
A gold standard with reserve requirements below 100% will not work
There were many flaws with the currency 
board rehearsed by Argentina. But remember: It was established out of 
necessity, without time to plan. Just like the European Union is 
handling its problems today and just like the US will handle theirs 
tomorrow...
The most important flaw, in our opinion,
 was that it left the central bank in its role as lender of last resort,
 while at the same time it allowed banks to have reserve requirements 
below 100% (about 30%). Therefore, the credit multiplier was after all 
still very much in place. The fact that the central bank would later 
invest some of its US dollars in USD denominated (Argentine) government 
debt was not critical. Nor was it relevant that banks were coerced to 
buy government bonds with deposits (like they are in the Euro zone 
today). The crux of the matter was that as both of these things 
happened, the central bank was….well, the central bank! The lender of 
last resort! Had the central bank been only a note bank for legal 
tender, without any other responsibilities, the Argentine default of 
2001 would have not triggered a systemic crisis. But it was not a note 
bank, it was the lender of last resort and the crisis became 
systemic….just like we fear will happen, if the US implements a gold 
standard in a rush. Why do we fear this? Because if all plays out that 
way, the world will lose faith in the gold standard for the wrong 
reasons.
The Bank of Amsterdam and the Industrial Revolution of the XIX century
Popular wisdom has the birth of the 
industrial revolution in XIX century England. Some, with a technological
 emphasis, are willing to concede that already by the time of the French
 Revolution, the years of the Enlightenment, the seeds had been planted 
for the technical developments that would come later. The Napoleonic 
Wars are thus regarded by these people as an interruption, a hurdle, in 
the race by the West to conquer the world. Only a few point out and even
 admit that, as a coincidence, during that industrial revolution and 
particularly at the end of the XIX century, gold was money. But this is 
treated as a mere coincidence. There are others too, who are convinced 
that if gold had not been money, if Great Britain had not adopted the 
gold standard, the speed of the industrial revolution would have been 
even more impressive.
None of this, in our opinion, could be 
farther from the truth. We are not historians and we expect many to 
challenge our comments today, but we offer this view: 
The 
industrial revolution did not begin in England, but in what was then 
known as the Low countries, and was enabled in a decisive way by a gold 
standard with 100% reserve requirement established by the city of 
Amsterdam. There are two parts in this conjecture: The first 
one is that the industrialization began in the Low Countries. We side 
here with 
Henri Pirenne and suggest that this birth was brewed by the system of 
Hansastädte, and in particular, in Brugge, where very early, for instance, the Medici opened a branch.
 
If our view is correct, the 
counterfactual argument therefore lies in proving that the development 
from that stage into the XIX century would have been possible, had the 
city of Amsterdam not established the 
Bank of Amsterdam (Amsterdamsche Wisselbank). We leave to our readers to do their own research on this speculation.
 
The Bank of Amsterdam took upon itself 
to accept bullion in deposit, issue notes in exchange for circulation 
and charge (yes, you read well, charge!) depositors for their bullion as
 well as a “liquidity” fee for making such deposits liquid, thanks to 
the issuance of their (i.e. the bank’s) notes.
In his book, “The Ascent of Money”, Neil Ferguson makes a few interesting observations about this period:
Inflation (don’t ask us how Mr. Ferguson
 measured it, but this is what we read) fell from 2% p.a. between 1550 
and 1608 to 90bps pa between 1609 and 1658 and 10bps p.a. between 1659 
to 1779! This represents no less than 229 years of price stability! With
 the low life expectancy of those years, this period would have easily 
encompassed 9 generations. Can you even begin to picture that? In 
today’s terms, this would mean that the currency held by an American 
living back at the time George Washington was president would have kept 
its purchasing power to this day, had a similar financial stability 
taken place!
In 1602, the Vereenigde Nederlansche 
Geoctroyeerde Oostindische Compagnie (East India Co.) had its IPO. 
Between 1602 and 1733 its share price rose from par (100) to 786, in 
spite of the fact that between 1652 and 1688 they had to face, with 
violence, the attacks of Britain at their trading posts. By 1650, with 
the dividend payments the company made, buy-and-hold IPO holders would 
have earned an annual compounded rate of return of 27%. Given how 
popular this IPO was,  this context of financial stability brought about
 perhaps the most widespread capitalization ever witnessed by a nation.
This stability was based on a 100% 
reserve requirement. With it, when the East India Co. began to fall, its
 decadence was gradual: It took 60 years and by 1794, it was still worth
 120 or 20% above par, in terms of a currency that had preserved its 
value all along! In other words, it was still 20% up in real terms. In 
real terms also, by 1690, the company was bringing back to the harbours 
of the Netherlands about 156 ships per year, all loaded up with 
consumption goods for the enjoyment of the Dutch people. In other words,
 on average, one ship every two days was being loaded up in a trading 
post in Asia. There were no cranes, no trains, no telecommunications.
In summary, the Argentine case 
and the Dutch Golden Age suggest that the elimination of the credit 
multiplier (i.e. extinction of shadow banking) is more important than 
the asset backing a currency. The Argentine case shows what can go 
wrong, when a currency is asset backed, but reserve requirements are 
allowed below 100%. The Dutch case shows what can go well, when a 
currency is commodity-backed and reserve requirements are held at 100%. Bear in mind that the notes of the Bank of Amsterdam were not enforced upon the people, they were not legal tender.
Unlike today’s policy makers, the Dutch 
of the XVII century had the luxury of planning their system, based on 
the collective wisdom of their merchant class. Does anybody think that 
the Dutch Golden Age would have taken place had the Bank of Amsterdam 
not existed? Does anybody think that England would have been able to 
accumulate capital from its natural resources (wool, meat), without the 
demand of the early industries of Brugge,  Liege,Amsterdam or Antwerp? 
We don’t!
Therefore, the question that lies before
 us is: How can we replicate the success of the Bank of Amsterdam, in 
today’s context? How can we not fall prey to necessity, just like 
Argentina fell back in 1991? That remains the subject for our next 
article.