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Competitive Currencies Instead of the Euro Monopoly

Saturday, July 10, 2010 – by Richard Ebeling

Dr. Richard Ebeling

A new study prepared by the Dutch financial institution, ING, called "Quantifying the Unthinkable," has warned that a collapse of the Euro as the European single currency would lead to a global economy cataclysm. The worldwide banking system would face a new and far more disastrous crisis than the one experienced during the last two years. A real economic depression would threaten the planet.

If Europe is facing such a catastrophe it must not be forgotten that it is the making of the governments and the monetary central planners who imposed the Euro on the people of Europe. And like Dr. Frankenstein, they are now terrified of the consequences of the monster they have created.

It is important to remember that the Euro is not a market-generated institution. It is a political creation inspired by the French and German governments in opposition to the desires and choices of their own citizens. Public votes on the implementation of the Euro were avoided like the plague, and in those countries where the people had a say, the answer was often a resounding, "No." Only "outside" political pressures and fears drove more countries into the Euro-Zone, when in fact economic integration and prosperity were all possible without a monopoly currency over the continent.

The political elites in Europe, and especially in France, wanted a European-wide currency as a means to have global power against the financial and political dominance of the United States in the post-Soviet era. It was viewed as a tool in the "great game" of international diplomacy and strategic influence. All the references to the "transaction costs" saving from a single currency stretching from the Atlantic to the borders of Russia were secondary propaganda to the wider political goals: a United States of Europe centrally controlled and regulated from Brussels, with special influence on its policies emanating from Paris and Berlin.

But even from the narrower economic perspective, all the rationales for a single currency issued and managed by a European central bank were examples of what Austrian economist and Nobel Laureate, Friedrich A. Hayek, once called the "pretense of knowledge."

We need to remember that central banking is a form of central planning. A central bank possesses monopoly control of the money supply. It determines the quantity of money in circulation and therefore influences the value, or purchasing power, of the monetary unit. It can also influence (at least in the short run) some market rates of interest, which can affect the amount and direction of investment.

Throughout the twentieth century, governments again and again have used their central banks to finance budget deficits through money creation—and have continued to do so in the 21st century. The end-products of such monetary mischief have been prolonged periods of price inflation, which eat away at people's accumulated wealth; distort market prices resulting in imbalances between savings and investment, and supply and demand; and create disincentives for long-term business planning and capital formation.

Thirty-five years ago, Hayek warned of the dangers from European-wide monopoly money, and made the case for competitive currencies among which the citizenry may freely choose (See, F. A. Hayek, Choice in Currency: A Way to Stop Inflation, published by the London-based Institute of Economic Affairs in 1975).

Hayek explained that due to the influence of Keynesian economics over monetary and macroeconomic policy, governments were invariably guided by short-run goals in the service of special interest groups. The consequence was the constant abuse of the printing press, with its resulting price inflation, to feed the seemingly insatiable demands of those privileged and politically influential groups.

Hayek concluded that some method had to be found to free ordinary citizens from the government's monopoly control over the medium of exchange. The answer, he suggested, is to allow them to use whatever money they choose. Hayek said:

There could be no more effective check against the abuse of money by the government than if people were free to refuse any money they distrusted and to prefer money in which they had confidence. Nor could there be a stronger inducement to governments to ensure the stability of their money than the knowledge that, so long as they kept the supply below the demand for it, that demand would tend to grow. Therefore, let us deprive governments (or their monetary authorities) of all power to protect their money against competition: if they can no longer conceal that their money is becoming bad, they will have to restrict the issue.

Make it merely legal and people will be very quick indeed to refuse to use the national currency once it depreciates noticeably, and they will make their dealings in a currency they trust.

The upshot would probably be that the currencies of those countries trusted to pursue a responsible monetary policy would tend to displace gradually those of a less reliable character. The reputation of financial righteousness would become a jealously guarded asset of all issuers of money, since they would know that even the slightest deviation from the path of honesty would reduce the demand for their product.

Governments remain today, as much as when Hayek spoke these words, under the sway of political ideologies that insist it is the duty of the state to regulate the market in the service of powerful special-interest groups, to redistribute wealth, and to secure "safety nets" under most aspects of everyday life. The budgets and deficits of many EU countries, and the fiscal crisis they have now gotten themselves into demonstrate this beyond any doubt.

The Euro's monetary central planners still presume to have the wisdom and ability to target rates of price inflation and move interest rates in directions they consider "optimal." I would suggest that just as the central planners in the old Soviet Union were not wise or informed enough to successfully plan the supply of shoes and the production of bread, the managers of the European Central Bank cannot know what interest rates should be or what target to set for the general level of prices. Interest rates should be set by the market to bring the actual supply of savings into balance with the demand for loans. Both the general level and the relative structure of prices should be determined by those same market forces, that is, people's willingness to trade money for goods and goods for money.

It is said that the Chinese word for "crisis" means both "danger" and "opportunity." It is certainly the case that the fiscal irresponsibility of most of the European Union governments has put the economic and financial structures of their countries in grave danger. But hoping that the European Central Bank can set it all right – or to delay the inevitable until some "someday" when "something" will provide a way out without the consequences of decades of fiscal mismanagement – will only mean truly dangerous inflationary forces being set loose. Because the only way for the European Central Bank to try to "paper over" this problem is by printing a lot of paper money. And Europe has already seen several times where that leads during the last hundred years.

The "opportunity" from this crisis is to admit and accept that the Euro plan was a wrong idea. It is necessary for the member governments in the Euro-Zone to begin a new plan for an "orderly retreat" back to national currencies. This is not the first time that a single currency has had to be dissolved into separate national currencies. This happened in 1919, following the disintegration of the old Austro-Hungarian Empire in Central Europe; or more recently with the collapse in 1991 of the Soviet Union into fifteen independent republics, or the splitting of Czechoslovakia into two separate countries, or the breakup of Yugoslavia.

There are lessons to be learned from these historical cases that should be carefully studied and applied to begin and complete the process of bringing the Euro "experiment" to a close with the least pain and disruption in a financial and fiscal environment in which each of the European governments will have to get their own economic affairs in order.

Even in the short run, however difficult the transition will be, those European countries that have less of a fiscal problem to get into order will at least be able to avoid being pulled into a worst vortex by their more irresponsible fiscal neighbors, if they remained within a single currency zone.

In addition, if a new multi-currency world reemerged in Europe, it should be accompanied, as Hayek suggested, with the freedom for the citizens of all of these nations to choose which currencies they prefer to hold and use in exchange. National governments should not attempt to lock their respect citizens behind barbed-wire currency barriers and restrictions.

Market freedom in money would act as a powerful force and incentive for the individual European governments to move in a more fiscally responsible direction, if they do not want to see their own national currency dramatically depreciate relative to other monies. This would serve as an additional and important "external" discipline, as Hayek also emphasized, to try to get political elites to move their domestic policies into more stable and sustainable paths.

Or will Europe continue on its present course, and go over a fiscal and monetary cliff that it otherwise might have avoided?




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  Posted by Pat Fields on 07/13/10 07:19 PM

CF Cite: "Devalue us dollar, then devalue euro, then devalue pound, then devalue canadian and australian dollar, and the game goes on..."

Didn't Mises describe this eventuality as 'the race to the bottom' culminating in the 'Crack-up Boom'?

Reply from The Daily Bell

Good point.

  Posted by Dh on 07/13/10 10:20 AM

Enlightening and interesting discussion. How about this the world banking hegemony goes cashless (digital) with the worlds Heritage Sites as the basis of this digital currency. Which in turn sets the "price/valuation" of each countries monies. A mixture of fiat and value backed currency system.

  Posted by Cf on 07/13/10 12:14 AM

"euro a tool in a great game of international diplomacy in the post-soviet era"

Euro was a tool there, it is a tool here in a pre-china era.

Devalue us dollar, then devalue euro, then devalue pound, then devalue canadian and australian dollar, and the game goes on...

  Posted by Geoff on 07/12/10 06:10 PM

I have traveled within Cambodia twice in recent years. There they use $US, Thai Baht and the local currency – Cambodian reals. Menus in restaurants commonly quote prices in $US. Generally in transactions you pay in $US and they give change in the local currency. Seems to work fine.

  Posted by Ray on 07/11/10 10:54 AM

As a young currency the euro is more vunerable to attack from large financial bodies, the dollar will be printed into oblivian before the November elections and will become more vunerable to serious attack. QE just debases flat currencies, BUY GOLD, SILVER, BULLION... AND OIL STOCKS..............

  Posted by Pat Fields on 07/11/10 06:58 AM

What is a tax, but to take a portion of the goods exchanged between parties. As exchanges are private by their antecedent nature, such an act is inherently unjust interposition absent some right inured to the taxing agent.

In a case where plain pieces of silver are traded for a set of clothing as two parties agree, there can be no justification for any tax, because no rightful claim exists for any third party to intervene upon the items subject of the deal.

Where a third party had stamped those silver pieces, however, with proprietary markings advertising a guarantee of the silver's weight and fineness at their striking, only ... THEN ... is a right of intervention created. Where the immediately dealing parties choose dependency upon the imprimatur of assay, they invite the jurisdiction of a claim, as it is warranted through indirect service rendered them.

A private minter earns his rightful seigniorage as an initial fee for his assaying and striking. Similarly, a 'government money' seigniorage is billed in incremental 'tax'. As a government declares its authorities to derive from society's Free Choice of its interpositions, it conversely abdicates that license ipso facto, wherever it acts without definable jurisdiction.

Consequently ... things ... in exchange wholly beyond the indicia and definitions comprising government's jurisdictional underpinnings can not be levied. Clearly, then, it is impossible for 'competitive currencies' NOT to exist in fact. All that prevents their circulation is mere ... perception.

  Posted by Ingo Bischoff on 07/10/10 12:41 PM

To merely rely on the demand and supply of a currency to establish its worth, is folly. Unless a currency is redeemable, the chances for mischief in issuing the currency are simply too great. The flexibility of a currency to adjust for business cycles is provided by a "Bills of Exchange" market along with a redeemable currency.

While irredeemable currencies can serve very well as a "consumption" currency, they are practically useless as a "savings" currency. A good example is the "greenback" USD, which was the longest continuous issued irredeemable currency. It was issued by the U.S. Treasury from 1862 until 1964.

However, as von Mises proved, unless capital can be valued by a currency with a fixed standard, capital contribution in business operations cannot properly be evaluated. Nixon's decision in 1971 to reneg on the Bretton Woods Agreement made proper capital accounting impossible.

As to the interest rate, when people invest their "savings" currency (currency redeemable into gold), their willingness to do so, or not to do so, establishes the interest rate. An interest rate set by a central bank is not a market interest rate. Instead, it amounts to manipulation, pure and simple.

Europe still has a chance to go to a redeemable currency based on "Real Bills" and gold. While those were the provisions of the original FRA of 1913, the conduct of FOMOs by the FED for decade after decade has led to the inevitable demise of the FRN/USD.

  Posted by Not Anti-military Per Se on 07/10/10 12:36 PM

Excellent article describing requirements of an environment of liberty and prosperity.

However the reality is that the power elite do not plan on aiding the interests of liberty at their own expense, irrespective of the preferences of the "serfs" they dominate.

The million dollar question is what will the elites impose?

What is the implication of governments (China, India, Israel, Russia) hoarding gold?

What is the risk of asset confiscation and how to prepare?

The Daily Bell perspective is superior to my own certainly in so far as they have provided an excellent historic context to many of their insights. I have to believe The Daily Bell is capable of calling on their free-market perspective of past fiat money implosions and then make some reasoned predications as to what the power elite may/will impose in light of todays economic realities.

Please fell free to lead the way. No guarantees are expected.

As always thank-you for a great web site.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Thanks for the kind words. It seems to us that there are so many variables that making firm predictions are difficult. We watch and wait.

  Posted by Shantu Dand on 07/10/10 12:17 PM

What is true of Euro is even more true of $. We in USA are equally, gleefully destroying value of our currency. What currencies will survive strong and unscathed from the present bout of universal madness? May be Chilean Peso? Brazilian Real? I find it easier to buy gold and silver for speculation and as an insurance for future that looks dark and foreboding. Governments may not want to go back to gold standard but people do!

  Posted by Laura K on 07/10/10 11:10 AM

Are you sure the political elites are willing to yield power to benefit the fiscal responsible citizens? I honestly, doubt it. At least not in the long-term. It is always the case that governments are not the decision makers in order to promote individual growth, but to control the means in order to benefits those who are in power. Or why would they exist for? That is, government usually monopolize services and goods in order to seize the resources of the ones who produce them.

Clear and plain example is the monetary system that promotes the fiat money and the regulatory policies to falsely protect the national economies, when in reality are creating fake or deceptive environments that sooner will collapse into what we have now: deflation and economic uncertainty.

I am not an economist and do not need to have a degree to know this. I am a house maker that inform herself for the well being of her kids and furious to the fact that this so called "political elites" are just leeches and parasites that are fed by those who are productive. BTW, that is why I read the MB. Congrats on this article.

  Posted by Bob Hand on 07/10/10 11:00 AM

I live in the state of Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil, which shares a border with Uruguay, Argentina, and Paraguay. Recently I went to the city of Rivera, Uruguay. There, the stores, restaurants, and hotels accept the Peso (Uruguay), Real (Brazil) and Dollar (USA). In fact, I paid my hotel bill in Uruguay partly in Reals and partly in Dollars.

This convinces me that the use of competitive currencies is definitely feasible. I don't understand the mechanism for making this a general condition, but I certainly think the idea would have positive consequences as the free market would definitely keep the various governments honest.

  Posted by Patrick O'sullivan on 07/10/10 10:57 AM

@ David and Dr.Richard,

I live in ireland,and as you know the republic of ireland has been conned into joining Europe.What could you suggest,and advise, what i should do with the money i have not invested in gold.(i have my life's savings invested in gold bullion).I mean the money needed for everyday living,and also for repairs to my house,and what to do with the money invested in gold with EVERBAVK,which will be due on november 2010.

Please don't tell me to put it into a bank in europe especially ireland.

ALSO MANT GURU'S IN THE USA SAY THAT THE USA DOLLAR COULD GO OUT OF EXISTENCE ALTOGETHER.

Reply from The Daily Bell

The US dollar is not in a healthy state, agreed ...

  Posted by Victor Barney on 07/10/10 10:11 AM

Dr. Richard Ebeling, I'm not a Doctor's degree. My Master's was in Behavior Analysis, but I'm predicting a "cashless society" coming soon, before the election for sure! Watch!

  Posted by David Redick on 07/10/10 05:43 AM

Right On!, and it's all in my book 'Monetary Revolution-USA', available on Click to view link. Who will do a review??
See Click to view link (parts 1 & 2 in left margin)

Regards, Dave