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Advantages of Fiat Currency?

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aelephant posted on Wed, Jan 12 2011 6:12 AM

Hey Mises Community members, I'm back with another question. I've been trying to figure out why we have a fiat currency system. There is a ton of information on the 'net about the DISadvantages of fiat currency, but few resources that address its advantages. The best I've found so far is the disadvantages of a gold standard from Wikipedia. I'll give my amateur thoughts, but I'd greatly appreciate input from those more knowledgeable than I.

Deflation rewards savers[20][21] and punishes debtors.[22][23] Real debt burdens therefore rise, causing borrowers to cut spending to service their debts or to default. Lenders become wealthier, but may choose to save some of their additional wealth rather than spending it all. The overall amount of expenditure is therefore likely to fall.[24]

Inflation rewards debtors and punishes savers. If you want to hold on to your own money rather than investing it, it loses value over time due to inflation. In an inflationary system, you basically HAVE TO invest your money; typically people keep their savings in a savings account wherein the bank is investing your money and paying you a small amount of interest (to offset inflation, I suppose).

Why is a high amount of expenditure a good thing?

I'm not sure I understand the part about debt burdens.

Many economists believe that economic recessions can be largely mitigated by increasing money supply during economic downturns.[32] Following a gold standard would mean that the amount of money would be determined by the supply of gold, and hence monetary policy could no longer be used to stabilize the economy in times of economic recession.[33]

Austrian economics argues that increasing the money supply doesn't mitigate recessions, but post-pones them, correct? When deflation inevitably hits (as the market corrects itself), it is worse than it otherwise would have been?

Monetary policy would essentially be determined by the rate of gold production. Fluctuations in the amount of gold that is mined could cause inflation if there is an increase, or deflation if there is a decrease.[36][37]

Deflation isn't necessarily a bad thing?

Although the gold standard gives long-term price stability, it does in the short term bring high price volatility. In the United States from 1879 to 1913, the coefficient of variation of the annual change in price levels was 17.0, whereas from 1943 to 1990 it was only 0.88.[37] It has been argued by among others Anna Schwartz that this kind of instability in short-term price levels can lead to financial instability as lenders and borrowers become uncertain about the value of debt.[41]

Don't understand this part. I'd appreciate if someone could translate into something easier for me to digest.

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Answered (Verified) Bogart replied on Wed, Jan 12 2011 12:24 PM
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Have your friend take a dollar bill and tear it in half.  The output of the good and services in the economy has not been altered, but the distribution of claims on these good and services has changed, all holders of dollars have 1/10^13 more buying power or something like that.  So take the dollar bill and tape it back together.  You just changed the distribution of good and services again.  Imagine that instead of taping two valueless dollar haves you simply print more money or with even less effort, change balances on an electronic ledger.  In each case the counterfeit money you just created helps you or the people you give it to.  Of course all others are not hurt because the buying power of their dollars is less.

So if you control the amount or buying power of a currency you have enormous power to reward yourself and your friends at the expense of everyone else.

This is exactly what the central banks do and why the money controllers of the world like the governments will treat people who try to counterfeit or not use their fiat currency with harsh violence.

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"

Having a sound money—meaning a money for which the value doesn’t

bounce around erratically, and doesn’t lose its purchasing power over

time—makes all of these activities much more orderly. Having an unsound

fiat money is (usually) still better than nothing, but in the extreme governments

can render their monies so useless that the public literally abandons

the currency and adopts other items as media of exchange." -Robert Murphy, Lessons For The Young Economists, page 338...

So basically, fiat money is usually better than having no money at all but sound money is the best. Fiat's only advantage is that it allows indirect exchange among individuals, since having a pure direct exchange society is very limited...

My Blog: http://www.anarchico.net/

Production is 'anarchistic' - Ludwig von Mises

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Answered (Verified) Bogart replied on Wed, Jan 12 2011 12:24 PM
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Have your friend take a dollar bill and tear it in half.  The output of the good and services in the economy has not been altered, but the distribution of claims on these good and services has changed, all holders of dollars have 1/10^13 more buying power or something like that.  So take the dollar bill and tape it back together.  You just changed the distribution of good and services again.  Imagine that instead of taping two valueless dollar haves you simply print more money or with even less effort, change balances on an electronic ledger.  In each case the counterfeit money you just created helps you or the people you give it to.  Of course all others are not hurt because the buying power of their dollars is less.

So if you control the amount or buying power of a currency you have enormous power to reward yourself and your friends at the expense of everyone else.

This is exactly what the central banks do and why the money controllers of the world like the governments will treat people who try to counterfeit or not use their fiat currency with harsh violence.

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I was under the impression that counterfeit only refers to "unauthorized" creation of "fake" or "imposter" currency, like painting a piece of paper green and calling it a u.s. dollar or painting a rock yellow and calling it gold. Since the Fed and the u.s. treasury are the "authorized" creators of their money and the money is "real" it is not counterfeiting.

I agree that it is bad, but I'm not sure I agree with the term counterfeit when used in reference to what the Fed and the u.s. treasury are doing. It could be viewed as theft from a certain point of view since they are in effect stealing value from the money that is in our hands.

In this case, the problem is more the monopoly on the "authorized" creation of fiat currency, not necessarily the idea of fiat currency itself?

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People readily use the word "counterfeiting" to impugn the FED, in part, because the FED (nor its supporters) refuses to acknowledge what it is doing. They use fancy terms like quantitative easing to trick people and the politicians (and media) merrily play along.

So yes, counterfeiting, is the wrong term technically, since what they are doing is legal - but still - it's succinct and to the point when criticizing the FED. If the FED would just say we are "printing money" instead of "quantitative easing," I doubt opponents would impugn them as much with the counterfeiting tag.

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"

Having a sound money—meaning a money for which the value doesn’t

bounce around erratically, and doesn’t lose its purchasing power over

time—makes all of these activities much more orderly. Having an unsound

fiat money is (usually) still better than nothing, but in the extreme governments

can render their monies so useless that the public literally abandons

the currency and adopts other items as media of exchange." -Robert Murphy, Lessons For The Young Economists, page 338...

So basically, fiat money is usually better than having no money at all but sound money is the best. Fiat's only advantage is that it allows indirect exchange among individuals, since having a pure direct exchange society is very limited...

My Blog: http://www.anarchico.net/

Production is 'anarchistic' - Ludwig von Mises

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Joe replied on Wed, Jan 12 2011 9:17 PM

one tiny advantage of fiat money is that there are no commodities in the economy that are 'wasted' on being used simply as exchange goods.

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A fiat currency can be more fun because you can gamble your money when you deposit it in a fractional reserve bank.. it could turn out to be a positive investment!

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one tiny advantage of fiat money is that there are no commodities in the economy that are 'wasted' on being used simply as exchange goods.

One tiny advantage to having no legs is no dragging on the ground when you walk.

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aelephant:
but few resources that address its advantages

 

Advantages, for whom?

Spending without taxing

Increased state power

Ease of war

Transfer of wealth by stealth

Incentive to submit to debt, benefiting creditors

Erode savings, requiring continued work and / or dependence on the state

Free raw materials for the banking industry

 

Is that enough advantages?

 

 

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BioTube replied on Wed, Jan 12 2011 10:41 PM
There's one genuine advantage for the masses - fiat currency is infinitely subdivisible, so whenever the money supply began to squeeze trade, all that need happen is that a new subdivision is declared and new coins designed rather than the market needing to come up with a supplemental money(such as silver to gold). Of course, this smashes one of the bigger arguments of the inflationists.
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Isaac "Izzy" Marmolejo:

Having a sound money—meaning a money for which the value doesn’t

bounce around erratically, and doesn’t lose its purchasing power over

time—makes all of these activities much more orderly. 

I would change a minor issue: even in a free market with  a gold standard the value of money could also change - go up and go down - depending on consumer preference regarding money. Obviously, though, this wouldn't be bad because it's consumer based and probably not as much as with the current monetary system. 

The state is not the enemy. The idea of the state is. 

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Bogart replied on Thu, Jan 13 2011 8:28 AM

The lack of alternative uses of fiat money is a disadvantage.  The alternate uses of a currency tend to help regulate the value of commodity money.  For example,gold is commonly used in jewerly and dentistry.  As the price of gold (The buying power of gold currency) goes up then less will be used for these alternate uses thus helping to drive the price back down.  The same is true for a drop in the price of gold or it buying power, the folks with alternate uses could bid back up the price by using more of it.  Contrast this with a fiat currency, as the creator makes more thus decreasing its purchasing power, there are no alternate uses keeping the price up.  So the purchasing power drops more rapidly.  The same is true on the other side, without alternate usese the fiat currency can as in our most recent "Great Recession" suddeny increase and have no alternate uses to add that supply to keep the buying power down.

The issue here is your definition of waste.  Waste according to Rothbard is just any product or service that does not satisfy a consumer demand.  It has nothing to do with the technical mechanism or byproducts of creating a product or service.

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Kaz replied on Thu, Jan 13 2011 3:42 PM

Having a sound money—meaning a money for which the value doesn’t bounce around erratically, and doesn’t lose its purchasing power over time—makes all of these activities much more orderly.

And what money, precisely, are you imagining this to be?

Gold fluctuates wildly in price and value...as do most commodities. It's not magically exempt. It also tends to lose its value over time, as does every other commodity.

Paper money, in fact, tends to retain its value longer than gold, and to be more stable in value than gold. In the past decade, the dollar rose declined3% per year in value for the first five or six years, then stabilized in value, actually increasing slightly in value for the past three. Meanwhile, gold doubled in value, fell by half of that, shot up even higher, fell back...a roller coaster of MULTIPLES of its price of ten years ago.

Imagine if you were trying to deal with buying bread, or investing in something expensive like a house, car, or stocks, when you had to worry about the price not only multiplying over the course of a few months, but even changing dramatically between when you last checked and when you sign the papers for the investment.

-Robert Murphy

He's just a Rothbardian, not a real Austrian. I'd take him seriously on pretty much anything but monetary theory, based on fallacies like the above.

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Part of gold's instability is due to its use as an inflation hedge for worried money men. If it were commonly used as geld, its price would likely be much more stable, since it would depend mostly on how much was in a given area at a time(much like the idea of the dollar's value fluctuating rapidly is absurd). The fact that there's only one known bubble under a (more or less?)true gold standard and that can be traced to a huge amount of gold entering the Netherlands at once attests to its stabilizing influence. Not to say commodity money's infallible, but it's better than paper by a long shot.
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As I have said in every past thread about paper money, the "advantages" of fiat currency are always given with the assumption that existing problems do not exist.  The supposed disadvantages of commodity are necessary features of market money.  That cost of extraction and transaction is what allows it to be used without counterfeit to oblivion or planned wealth redistribution.  To deem that a disadvantage is like deeming it a disadvantage to have to borrow money at 5% to buy something with a return of 10%.  5% return is better than 0%.  The "advantage" of  low cost creation of electronic money is only an advantage for those gaining net over depreciated purchasing power.

As for price stability, here's a no-brainer...

Note the years of fluxuation.  Gold is terrible money except when it is money.

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