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Comment by bhouston

5 hours ago

I'm not a gold bug but Alan was a proponent of the gold standard. He wrote about how the gold standard created responsible spending and more equality in the world:

https://ritholtz.com/2008/11/gold-and-economic-freedom-by-al...

The world we are in now, especially in the US, is one where there is near unlimited government credit but it is, according to many, papering over deep structural problems. At some point, these chickens will come home to roost in some way or another. But it is hard to predict when.

So he was in favour of the gold standard because it prevented massive unconstrained expansion of credit and that seems sensible.

> He wrote about how the gold standard created responsible spending and more equality in the world:

The Gilded Age, which had quite high levels of inequality, occurred when the gold standard was active:

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilded_Age

It should also be noted that the gold standard did not bring any kind of price stability:

* https://archive.is/https://www.theatlantic.com/business/arch...

Further, sticking to the gold standard made the Great Depression worse as it reduced flexibility and options of central banks had, and made deflation worse:

* https://www.nber.org/papers/w3488

The sooner countries left the gold standard the sooner they started recovering from the Great Depression:

* https://www.nber.org/papers/w27586

  • > The Gilded Age, which had quite high levels of inequality, occurred when the gold standard was active

    I've got some news for you about modern levels of inequality.

  • The separation of wealth during the Gilded age was caused by the same thing it is caused by today: rapid industrialization. This rapid industrialization began when the US was off the gold standard during the civil war. The 1920's gilded age was fueled by fiat money, the greenback.

    The great depression was triggered in part by imbalanced gold flows when we returned to gold back currencies.

    https://explaininghistory.org/2025/06/12/golden-fetters-the-...

    We are essentially replaying the greenback inflation of the 1860's and have been doing it since 1971.

    • > The 1920's gilded age was fueled by fiat money, the greenback.

      Cite? I'm pretty sure that the 1920s, $20 was literally a gold coin of a certain size.

    • From your linked article.

      ” The Wall Street Crash of October 1929 precipitated a U.S. recession, but it was the gold standard that converted this into a worldwide depression. With currencies locked to gold, there was little scope to ease monetary conditions. When the U.S. economy slumped, its import demand plummeted and it exported deflation to the rest of the world. Gold-standard countries could not respond by cutting interest rates or letting their currencies depreciate to stimulate exports – their priority was to defend the peg. As a result, economic downturns spread rapidly.”

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    • > The separation of wealth during the Gilded age was caused by the same thing it is caused by today: rapid industrialization.

      What "rapid industrialization" is happening today?

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  • The Great Depression was caused by France panic hoarding gold https://www.nber.org/papers/w16350

    Semi-ironically France was the reason the US fell off the dollar standard after it panic hoarded gold AGAIN when the French government made one last, massive purchase of gold from the US using US dollars, paying $35/oz. A French warship arrived in New York in early August 1971 to load the gold and bring it back to France.

    Reckless spending post WW2 was the main reason the US shot itself in the foot and got into this position where they couldn't reasonably pay most clients back and France saw this developing.

    All in all France managed to deal massive blows to the US economy covertly TWICE within the same century.

    https://scholarship.law.columbia.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?art...

    • Sorry no. France was a wreck of itself after WWI having lost an entire generation of its young men. Germany was even worse off. The US was the economic engine of the world after WWI. Despite the fact the US regulatory institutions was in its infancy. The FED at that time had no teeth. It was only after FDR became president and the continuous bank runs that the FDIC and Glass Steagall (which has been repealed) and modern banking regulations were put in effect. When the US stock market bubble popped and plunged the US into depression, it was the hard money policies such as the Smoot Hawley tariffs and Hoover’s economic hands off policies that made everything worse.

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    • And then later in the 1930s as world gold flowed into the US (in response to the rise of the Axis) the economy began to recover here. By the end of the war most gold was in the US.

    • This still happens today but with instruments other than gold, right? Like foreign owned shares. Today's equivalent would be China owning all the treasury bonds.

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    • > All in all France managed to deal massive blows to the US economy covertly TWICE within the same century.

      And now it seems to be the US' turn in returning the favor. First 2007ff (caused by irresponsible actors in the financial world), then the lackluster response to Covid and Russia's invasion against Ukraine, and now we're set to look at the AI bubble collapsing, a bubble much much larger than Lehman Brothers ever was.

  • Eh, aren't most of those points non-sequiturs?

    > The Gilded Age, which had quite high levels of inequality, occurred when the gold standard was active:

    And the Gilded Age [1] ended long before the gold standard. Which makes sense since the Gilded Age is a political issue not a monetary one; how will the productivity from railroads be redistributed?

    > It should also be noted that the gold standard did not bring any kind of price stability:

    A comparison of 35 years against 4?

    That's like bragging about how smart private credit is by showing the low volatility in it's price over the past year.

    The large concern from gold bugs is that by printing money we just make the next crash even larger. But of course we just print more in the next crash so it doesn't happen. Take a look at the fed balance sheet [2]; under Kaynsian ideology you were supposed to sell that off during the boom years so you can take on debt during the busts but politicians are not disciplined enough to do that so the Gold Standard would've never let them.

    ---

    IMO, the real argument against the Gold Standard is that the US left it is because we spent more money than we made to finance the Vietnam War. If we returned to it, then we'd just leave it again when it became inconvenient. It's not the Gold Standard that needs fixing in the country.

    [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Progressive_Era

    [2]: https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/bst_recenttren...

    • The Gilded Age was the 1870-1900, the gold standard was from 1870-1920s. Gold did not help stop inequality, and many progressive elements rallied against it when it was in effect:

      * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross_of_Gold_speech

      > A comparison of 35 years against 4?

      * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Moderation

      Panics and economic downturns during the Gold Standard period were much more frequency. The term "Great Depression" used to refer to something else besides what happened in the 1930s, and the gold standard was a contributing factor to that as well:

      * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_Depression

      > Take a look at the fed balance sheet [2]; under Kaynsian ideology you were supposed to sell that off during the boom years so you can take on debt during the busts but politicians are not disciplined enough to do that so the Gold Standard would've never let them.

      On the Gold Standard the flexibility of emergency spending during bad years would not be possible: see 1930-1932, and then again in 1937–1938 when FDR tried to go back to balanced budgets through austerity.

      * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recession_of_1937–1938

      The politicians that tend to talk about "hard money" and responsible spending are the GOP—but who only seem to talk about it when a Democrat is in the White House. When their guy is in then it's all tax cuts, which do not pay for themselves:

      * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kansas_experiment

      and spending (see >$1T Pentagon budget(s)). They're mostly trying to roll back the New Deal (and later Great Society) and cut social programs:

      * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starve_the_beast

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  • It depends on how inequalities is defined. But from the wealth distribution point of view, today’s wealth distribution skews much more towards the top. Although the lowest living standards improve thanks to the technology advancement.

    • Ah the classic "you have a fridge, king louie didn't have a fridge therefore in the scope of ALL of human existence you are obscenely wealthy" trope.

There’s no roosting. It’s frog boiling. Every day your money loses value.

That’s why stocks go up, spending goes up and the asset class gets richer. When you peg these to an arbitrary “value” you can see, companies aren’t getting trillions of dollars more efficient, the government isn’t delivering more services and the utility of a business or property hasn’t increased.

He also oversaw the economy for twenty years before one of the worst recessions in the world. He helped set the stage for multiple disasters with his policies, so I'd take his opinions with a grain of salt.

  • By the same standard shouldn’t he also get credit for those 20 years of prosperity?

    • "He burned the house down, but for a while we were VERY warm and it was good."

      You don't credit an arsonist with "keeping a homeless person warm" when they set a homeless person on fire...

  • Really?

    I don't think anyone really holds him responsible for the dotnet crash of 2000 as that was a market issue and irrational exuberance issue and not a monetary one.

    And 2008 was similar. The Fed doesn't control or have any responsibility for lower lender standards or ARM mortgages.

    Congress was responsible for the GSE's that bought any mortgages and wrote insurance on those mortgages, so you can't blame the FED for that.

    Wallstreet are their regulators were responsible for the securitization of mortgages that went bad in 2008, not the FED.

    At worst you can say they had the wrong monetary policy but that's an opinion and not something that can be said as a fact.

    Can you flesh out how you feel Greenspan is responsible for 2008?

    • He actively campaigned against any regulation of derivatives. There is an infamous lunch that he had with Brooksley Born (who was head of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission) in the late 1990s where she attempted to regulate them. The details of the meeting are fuzzy and none of the participants will go on the record to what was said, but the gist is that he said he would fight her tooth and nail. After massive lobbying from Greenspan, as well as Lawrence Summers, congress passed legislation prohibiting her agency from regulating derivatives. She resigned shortly after.

    • You don't think Greenspan had a major hand in the dot com crash? "In late 1999, the Federal Reserve under Greenspan flooded the financial system with unprecedented liquidity to ward off potential deflationary impacts and cash-hoarding caused by the Y2K bug panic. The Fed expanded the money supply at an annualized rate of 22% in the fourth quarter of 1999."

      As for the Great Recession, taking the Fed Funds rate from 6.5% to 1.0% and holding it there for a year was the catalyst for driving everyone into the mortgage market looking for returns. And then did not regulate subprime lending or the shadow banking market:

      "As the housing market boomed, subprime mortgage originations skyrocketed from 8.2% of all mortgages in 2003 to 23.5% in 2006. The Fed possessed the authority under the Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act (HOEPA) to crack down on predatory lending and loose underwriting standards but chose not to act aggressively."

      "The Fed failed to properly monitor off-balance-sheet vehicles, investment bank leverage, and complex derivatives like mortgage-backed securities (MBS) and collateralized debt obligations (CDOs). Because these instruments developed outside traditional commercial banking oversight, a highly leveraged 'shadow banking' system grew completely unchecked under the Fed's watch."

      So yeah, the Fed has its fingerprints all over the scene of the crime. Lots of blame to go around though..

    • The chief criticism lies in the "Greenspan put"--the idea that the Fed would just never let asset prices fall, a policy which both bears his name and is noteworthy enough to have a detailed Wikipedia article on it.

    • Greenspan actively advocated for more use of ARM mortgages for personal home buying, while in a position to have the best access to data and analysis on the growing risk of those mortgages. Whereas mere common sense and a knowledge of economic history would argue against widespread use of ARMs for individual home purchases. When the fed chair says “we need more ARMs” to a market using ARMs to prop up a growing bubble, that is as much or more responsibility as any other single person.

  • It was generally 20 years of growth and the 2008 banking crisis actually happened after he left.

    • Alan Greenspan acquired too much power and went out of his way to railroad regulators. It was a classic "absolute power corrupts absolutely" and his flooding the markets with dollar liquidity at every crisis completely destroyed any concepts of moral hazard, of which we are still living with the consequences to this day.

      He set the stage for the financial crisis that started crumbling a year after he left the fed chair. It wasn't all his fault (politicians lost any spine and bankers any sense), but he was the conductor.

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    • And when production for a system I built burns down the month after I leave my job, the next guy they hire was actually the culprit! Greenspan was seen as responsible for the dot-com bust as well which was solidly in the center of his tenure.

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I have come around to gold. Money shouldn't be dual purposes, we should apply single responsibility principal. Money should refer to some stable (albeit slightly growing by nature) account of measure.

Prices should get cheaper. That's a progress dividend. We get better at growing food every year, why shouldn't food get cheaper? Imagine a world in which prices regularly go down. You're a passive beneficiary of technological progress.

The argument that prices can't get cheaper or [bad thing will happen] was never very convincing to me. Prices already do get cheaper for large swaths of the economy that have technological progress grow faster than money supply. Cell phones are rapidly depreciating. You can wait 6m to a year and get a significant discount on the latest iPhone version. People don't stop buying iPhones, and Apple doesn't stop investing in iPhones. This is even more true w/ AI models. Investors/companies are burning billions to build tech that will only get cheaper and obsolete in years if not months.

So if you were to try to convince me that deflation would reduce investment or spending, tell me why this doesn't apply to tech products that get cheaper every year.

  • > I have come around to gold. Money shouldn't be dual purposes, we should apply single responsibility principal.

    Gimme all the gold contacts in all of your electronics please, we shouldn't be using gold for those I guess....

  • > Prices should get cheaper.

    Does that include the price of labour? Are you okay with your salary going down? Because the historical record shows that's what happens during deflationary periods: producers of good/services see the price that they can sell things for goes down, and so they insist on their suppliers and inputs—including labour input—reduce their prices as well.

    • Why would it go down? The person is becoming more productive? Do employees at Apple salaries go down because the iPhone they're working on is worth less every year?

      Again, tie it to things that decrease in price over time.

  • Tech product price dynamics benefit from a bunch of things that food doesn’t: they’re optional purchases, they’re early stage developments which have more low hanging fruit, and purchase price can be subsidized with later plays (subscriptions, data sales, network effects, freemium to enterprise pipeline).

    Also - I think if you look at the data you’ll find periods off the gold standard where food prices grew more slowly than inflation and even wages, ie food becomes cheaper. 80s and 90s for example.

  • > Imagine a world in which prices regularly go down

    That world results in a lot of people individually deciding "why buy now, when I can buy for less later" and sitting on their money.

    That in aggregate makes the economy much worse.

    You're up against human nature here. Money may be an arbitrary numerical denomination of value, but people's behavior around it and how that affects the economy at large need to be accounted for. Having prices slowly creep upwards over time (low inflation) tends to result in more, better things sooner.

    • Keep reading the comment.

      Why do people buy iPhones today knowing that they can get a significant discount in 6-12m for that same iPhone

  • > We get better at growing food every year, why shouldn't food get cheaper?

    It has gotten cheaper, as a percentage of people's income and spending.

  • If prices get cheaper all the time, there would be no way for anyone to ever borrow money. Tech products like phones used to get cheaper because 1) they start out at a wild markup; 2) they have intense competition by rivals to build the latest and greatest; 3) the ability to make things faster/smaller continued to increase. Those factors are non-existent for most industries, and they are reducing in effect for tech products over time.

  • >"We get better at growing food every year, why shouldn't food get cheaper? Imagine a world in which prices regularly go down."

    Because a lot of people earn their living by producing or selling food. Your other necessities don't become more affordable just because food prices go down, but if that's your livelihood it becomes at risk. Food was incredibly cheap during the great depression. There's an amazing quote from the PBS documentary series on it; "A sack of flour cost a nickel, but where were you gonna get a nickel?". Steady, controlled inflation via fiat is the only way to keep a capitalistic economy functioning, because you can't micromanage or control the price of everything, and people need money to live. The real issue is stagnation of wage growth while assets explode. It's the transfer of real wealth from earners to owners that has put us in the current position, not absolute prices.

Have you ever read Bertrand Russell's critique of the gold standard in his essay The Modern Midas? It's in the collection "In Praise of Idleness".

It's worth reading all of them, even if you disagree with most of it.

> ...it prevented massive unconstrained expansion of credit and that seems sensible.

At the height of the Great Depression (1936), some economists proposed The Chicago Plan to separate the provision of credit from the money supply by eliminating fractional reserve banking, giving better control of the increases and contractions of credit, the elimination of bank runs, and a dramatic reduction in debt. There was a recent (2012) paper from the IMF [1] that seemed to find this actually is pretty sensible, although I do not claim to be smart enough to understand all of the implications.

[1] https://www.imf.org/en/publications/wp/issues/2016/12/31/the...

39 trillion in debt with no Congressional stomach for...

- spending cuts

- stopping fraud

- figuring out how the net worth of people in Congress increases from hundreds of thousands of dollars to 10s or 100s of millions of dollars

- addressing wasteful and ineffective programs

Given those issues, the only solution will be inflation. The circling the drain moment will hit with the associated welfare programs get a direct staple to inflation itself, so we will spend more to combat inflation, causing more inflation faster.

It's not going to be fun.

  • Also please add as an option: raise taxes on the wealthy individuals and corporations back.

    https://inequality.org/article/11-charts-tax-wealthy-corpora...

    This is really ambiguous:

    "- stopping fraud"

    And can mean many things. On the right, it often means Somali daycares, on the left it means the underfunding of the IRS so that it doesn't do audits of rich people.

    I find this to be mostly a distraction:

    "- figuring out how the net worth of people in Congress increases from hundreds of thousands of dollars to 10s or 100s of millions of dollars"

    We should ban stock trading by members of the government, the Ro Khanna bill, but while it can be a source of corruption, it isn't a major source of inequality in the US.

    This is unclear, can you be more specific as it has different answers based on one's partisan leanings:

    "- addressing wasteful and ineffective programs"

    I think a lot of the distortion of US policy towards the rich is a result of Citizens United and similar unrestrained lobbying funds.

    • “Raising taxes” is a misnomer - “restoring taxes to the level they were when we were deciding how to allocate tax revenue” is more accurate. There’s plenty of other causes of the deficit, but “Congress deciding not to take money from wealthy people and corporations to fund the services they’d promised to the rest of us” is the core. We don’t have a budget deficit, we have a tax revenue deficit.

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  • > - stopping fraud / - addressing wasteful and ineffective programs

    Good to know that this will be an evergreen argument despite an extremely well-supported project to do just that taking place in the last two years with nothing to show for itself other than hundreds of thousands of deaths.

    • >> stopping fraud / - addressing wasteful and ineffective programs

      > Good to know that this will be an evergreen argument despite an extremely well-supported project to do just that taking place in the last two years with nothing to show for itself other than hundreds of thousands of deaths.

      Not to mention the most prominent example of this this year sidestepped the Congressional stomach completely. An order of magnitude larger budget than all of the NSF grants combined spent on the war with Iran over 100 days.

      Both wasteful and ineffective: it failed to achieve any of its goals and had a massive negative impact on the US economy that will continue for some time.

      Does it count as fraud, though, or just gross negligence when experts had already warned that this would be the exact outcome ahead of time but were ignored?

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    • > despite an extremely well-supported project to do just that

      a weird extremely small executive branch task force with pretty much zero power is not what i would call a well supported project in the context of the trying to reduce spending in the american government.

      Congress controls the purse, doge had nothing to do with congress.

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  • EDIT: I see several comments suggesting that there is nothing left to cut. I'm not sure how anyone squares that perspective with this federal budget growth chart.

    The federal budget over time...

    2026 - $7.5 trillion

    2020 - $4.8 trillion

    2015 - $3.9 trillion

    2010 - $3.7 trillion

    https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/FGEXPND

    We do not have a tax problem, we have a spending problem. There's no reason that the US federal government shouldn't be able to operate on a budget equivalent of about $4 trillion which was just about the average from 2010-2020. There seems to be quite a lot available to cut.

  • This ball is already in motion IMO. Inflation numbers aren’t even believable and It’s already not fun.

    • > Inflation numbers aren’t even believable and It’s already not fun

      For inflation to have an impact on the US debt, it has to be approaching the level at which the US debt is increasing. In the last year, the US debt increased by 7.6%, much higher than inflation.

  • From what I observe from fraud and corruption witch-hunts, they are nothing more than that. The real fraud is that government that is supposed to serve the people who elected it serves everyone else first.

  • There is nothing left (edit: discretionary) to cut, and there is no material fraud. Taxes must go up. Only the top 40% of Americans have any income or wealth to tax (bottom 60% of Americans have no federal tax liability). Or, as you mention, we monetize the debt, print dollars, and burn up the currency value.

    https://usafacts.org/government-spending/

    https://usafacts.org/answers/how-much-debt-does-the-us-have/...

The gold standard and metalism generally, leads to all kinds of unproductive panics bc the quantity of money can’t wisely be adjusted to the situation. It’s a bad trade off, bc it’s well-known in the literature that inflation-targeting works (and that’s the current world-wide central bank policy since 1991).

I always wondered how someone who wrote that could go on to chair the fed with LIRP policies that fueled crazy asset bubbles.

Tying the ability to increase the money supply to a metal we have to dig out of the ground is ridiculous.

>near unlimited government credit

Really? How do we get some? And, beyond that, what do YOU think the limits should be on increasing the money supply by a sovereign nation?

A nation becomes wealthy by producing things to sell. Nothing else matters, including debt. But, we live in a world where people want to be rich, but also don't want to use resources, or build, or manufacture things, or run an empire. It's contradictory, and we are starting to see the effects.

  • Tying it to our goodwill, military might, and diplomacy seems like it might be a bad long term plan.

Gold based money, or eras of coinage, historically have been times of war and slavery. The debt system we are in now is far better in a lot of ways. The outcome of what happens depends on the political will deciding where the credit flows.

  • Seems like a non sequitur. What’s the causality of the gold standard leading to slavery?

Responsibility is not something that the current market players want to see, whether it be through the gold standard, reasonable interest rates, or any other mechanism. They'll argue that the next big thing is simply too expensive for that sort of constraint.

It is well know there weren't deep structural problems at the time of (and caused by) the gold standard...

I don't understand why people keep banging about the theoretical advantaged of a gold standard whan it was the default monetary system for centuries and we have firsthand evidence of the problems it causes (and certainly not more equality in the world!). It has been tried by the whole Earth during several generations.

If you think, like Greenspan and others, that there ought to be a mechanism to force some monetary restraint on governments, try to think of a new mechanism, because the "old way" wasn't better. We know it. Move on.