The Correlation Between The
Gold Standard And Stupendous Growth Is Clear
By Nathan Lewis
For some reason, it
is conventional wisdom today that the years 1870-1914, the era of the Most
Perfect Monetary System Ever Created, was a time of
chronic recession and disaster.
But how could that
be? The United States was the world’s greatest economic success story of the
last two centuries. When did that happen? It didn’t happen during the Civil War
and the Great Depression. It must have happened — logically — during times of
peace and prosperity.
That’s why Professor
Brian Domitrovic says the usual
story you hear about the gold standard years is completely wrong.
The United States
actually did not return to a gold standard until 1879. However, by 1870, most
of the rubble of the Civil War, including the floating “greenback” dollar, had
been cleared up. Between 1870 and 1912, a period of forty-two years, industrial
production in the United States rose by
682%.
Six hundred and
eighty-two percent. Not too shabby.
Today, we live in an
environment of floating fiat currencies, which began in 1971. Conventional
academic wisdom is that this period has been a wonderful example of how
economic management via currency manipulation can solve the terrible problems
of the bad old gold standard years.
How did the United
States do in the 42 years of floating fiat currencies, between 1970 and 2012? Industrial
production rose by 159% over that time.
Even that mediocre
result reflects some pretty good times in the 1982-2000 period, when the
dollar’s value was crudely stable vs. gold around $350/oz. If you look at the
periods where the dollar’s value fell significantly vs. gold — 1970-1982 and
2000-2012 — the picture looks a lot worse. During the twelve years of the 1970s
(until the end of the 1982 recession), U.S. industrial production rose a meager
21%. Yes, 21% in twelve years.
During the 2000-2012
period, it rose by — get this — 7%. Not seven percent per year. Seven percent
total!
Yes, that floating
fiat money is surely some kind of cure-all. Thanks a bunch Ben Bernanke, and
Arthur Burns.
During the 1946-1970
era — the Bretton Woods gold standard system, when the dollar’s value was held
at $35/oz. — U.S. industrial production rose by 209%.
We remember the
Bretton Woods era as one of the most successful and prosperous periods in all
of U.S. history. But, actually, the 1870-1912 period had a higher annualized
rate of growth in industrial production, 5.0% per year vs. 4.8%.
Not bad for an era
that most economists today think was a time of chronic economic difficulties
and stagnation.
Most of what you hear
is a fairy tale designed to serve present-day political purposes. We still
worship at the altar of funny money. For anyone who looks, the record is clear.
The United States had its greatest periods of economic advancement with a gold
standard system.
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