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The Anti-Concepts of Money: Conclusion

PhD in Economics, CEO of Monetary Metals
April 24, 2024

The Anti-Concepts of Money

The cash-value of promoting each of these anti-concepts is that they lead people to think that the central bank should impose a monetary policy. To make our lives better. 

Our monetary policy is set by the Federal Reserve, which states that in pursuit of its mandate for price stability, it will engineer chronic 2% annual inflation. If we had nuclear reactor policy like this, power plant engineers would seek a slow, steady increase in core temperature. If we had airplane policy, pilots would want a slow, steady loss of altitude. 

The purpose of monetary policy is to boost GDP and employment. So long as it does not reduce purchasing power too rapidly, i.e. cause too much inflation, and of course if actually boosts GDP and employment and avoids stagflation, then nobody has any reason to complain. 

Anti-concepts are pretty sneaky. There is no way that people would accept that the debts of a spender so profligate that it puts drunken sailors to shame, a spender who spends based on the votes of third parties who receive benefits but do not feel the costs, are free of risk. But for one thing. 

They admit into their mind anti-concepts that prevent them from grasping the key ideas about money

The Existential Money Crisis

The world faces an unprecedented crisis. We have twin long-term trends: exponentially rising debt at all levels, and falling interest rates (punctuated with corrections, as now). These trends cause consumption of capital. 

The wealth effect enables and encourages people to consume more. They purchase plane tickets and hotel rooms, and don’t forget the booze. And cars. And lots of boats and planes, too. 

But they are not spending income, which is a share of production. They are liquidating assets.

The anti-concept GDP prevents us from seeing this process for what it is. We see only the consumption, which we celebrate as growth. The economy is cannibalizing itself, while this pernicious anti-concept blinds us to the destruction and even makes us see it as a good thing. 

When speculators bid up asset prices—which they’re forced to do as they are deprived of a return on their capital—people see their value storage containers overflowing with purchasing power. They ask not how it is bestowed upon them. 

And most people, including most economists, do not see the picture which I just painted. Handicapped by their acceptance of a heap of anti-concepts, they believe that inflation can only be caused by increasing the money supply, or the closely-related velocity.  They also believe that increasing money supply has only one effect: inflation

That pseudo-equation does not have more variables to express, for example, what happens if regulators force refiners to add ethanol, or environmental agencies block oil and natural gas pipelines. 

This allows them to put the cart before the horse, and use consumer prices to measure the value of money itself. And this leads to two lethal conclusions: 

  1. If your assets are going up as fast as consumer prices, then you have a good store of value 
  1. Or, if your assets are going up at a faster rate, then you have more purchasing power 

This purchasing power paradigm is a philosophy for a Prodigal Son, or a Prodigal Society. It encourages people to view the seed corn as food to be eaten, to think of the farm as something to liquidate to buy groceries. 

A Proper Field of Monetary Science

If there is to be a proper field of monetary science, not to mention a real conversation about our monetary disease, then we must establish some proper concepts and discard the anti-concepts that have taken their place. 

If we fail to do so, then we will witness the greatest civilization that ever existed consume itself. With increasing incentives to hollow out the capital on which our society stands, it will eventually collapse. The consequences will be horrific. Food and energy production are capital intensive. Starved for capital in the end, production will collapse. It will dwarf the collapse of Rome. 

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Keith WeinerDr. Keith Weiner is the CEO of Monetary Metals and the president of the Gold Standard Institute USA.  Keith is a leading authority in the areas of gold, money, and credit and has made important contributions to the development of trading techniques founded upon the analysis of bid-ask spreads.  Keith is a sought after speaker and regularly writes on economics.  He is an Objectivist, and has his PhD from the New Austrian School of Economics.  His website is www.monetary-metals.com.


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