how the gold standard works, how the gold standard failed

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3/13/2014 How the gold standard works, how the gold standard failed http://www.econtrader.com/economics/explain/how-gold-standard-works.htm 1/3 Home Guides Topics History Speak Technology Dictionary Search How the gold standard works Related: Why is gold so valuable What is a gold standard? A gold standard is a monetary system where gold is used to measure the value of goods, services or investments in an economy. Printed money is used as legal tender where it has an equivalent value of gold upon demand. This system ensures that issued notes by a government is backed by the intrinsic value of gold. This gold standard was introduced in 1816 by Great Britain to ensure ease of trade by using bank notes that represents a particular weight of gold. It soon became universal for countries to use the gold standard in their monetary system. Under the gold standard, prices of goods and services slowly deflated as the industrial revolution gave way for more efficient tools and thus boosting output. The value of money is higher under the gold standard because the resulting surplus of income from lower prices turned into interest producing savings into banks, the banks then lend the savings to finance projects that benefits the economy such as a new business venture for a car company. Another factor is that once the savings was used to finance a major venture, few is left for real money to be used therefore, credit for capital is harder to acquire until a sufficient amount of gold is mined to back new currency issues. While this system prevents an economy from acquiring too much debt than it can handle, the mere fact of a new project that cant be fully financed because savings needed to finance it ran out can restrict an economy to expand or grow at a faster pace. This system requires the economy to spend time in order to expand noting that the opportunity cost for waiting to start the venture forgoes the benefits of possible revenues. Under the gold standard, money can also be created or inflated to accommodate the necessary capital to finance consumption or investment. However, once the public realise that there are far fewer gold than there are paper currency, inflation can happen. But during times when people panic and make runs to the bank to pull out their savings, a bank may not have enough gold to pay. As a result an economic depression may occur, because inadequate gold to finance expansion causes a credit crunch and a massive sell off occurs triggering one huge selloff after another. Now, how did the gold standard fail? During periods of very high demand such as World War 1, countries involved needed an unlimited supply of ammunitions and war equipment in order to win. A victory is unattainable if the gold needed to finance the seemingly limitless demand for war equipment is in short supply. This war scenario is equivalent to an expanding economy where people's desire for goods and services are boundless, but without a boundless supply of capital this cannot be attained and would always lead to a contraction. Countries involved in the war abandoned the gold standard, at least temporarily to accomodate the limitless demand that gold cannot keep up with. But since World War 1 happened during the industrial revolution noting that efficiency for producing goods was exponentially increased, prices of goods should continue to decline, then why did the gold standard unable to deliver the required demand? The answer may lie in the technological capacity to produce the required ammunition. The seemingly unlimited demand for war equipment reveals a quota or limit to the quantity of items that a single equipment can produce per a designated amount of time. Meaning, if 20 machines can only make 10,000 bullets a day and bullets are consumed in the front lines at a rate of 50,000 per day, extra machines and man power are needed to accomodate that demand. This would mean that extra workers and equipment are needed to produce 50,000 bullets. If the daily cost to manufacture 10,000 bullets is $100,000, then producing 50,000 bullets requires the manufacturer to buy 80 more machines and hire more workers causing the daily production cost to increase to $500,000. It is now obvious that the marginal cost to produce extra bullets to meet the demand would require additional capital and thus more gold. This enormous demand coupled with the boundaries of technology would definitely stagnate production if extra capital is not obtained. Gold restricts this mega expansion and the gold standard was suspended for a fiat currency system. more questions World's 10 largest economies in 2012 Is the U.S on the brink of financial collapse? Why is gold valuable? Gasoline production How a fiat currency works What makes currencies rise and fall in value? How banks make money? Why brown eggs costs more than white eggs? How a ponzi scheme works How the gold standard works What is the debt ceiling? How an economy grows What causes a stock to split? Is a gold backed currency better than fiat money? How does the stock market work? Top 10 US states to visit Resume writing tips 5 Comments econtrader Login

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Page 1: How the Gold Standard Works, How the Gold Standard Failed

3/13/2014 How the gold standard works, how the gold standard failed

http://www.econtrader.com/economics/explain/how-gold-standard-works.htm 1/3

Home Guides Topics History Speak Technology Dictionary Search

How the gold standard works

Related: Why is gold so valuable

What is a gold standard? A gold standard is a monetary system where gold is used to measurethe value of goods, services or investments in an economy. Printed money is used as legal tenderwhere it has an equivalent value of gold upon demand. This system ensures that issued notes by agovernment is backed by the intrinsic value of gold. This gold standard was introduced in 1816 byGreat Britain to ensure ease of trade by using bank notes that represents a particular weight ofgold. It soon became universal for countries to use the gold standard in their monetary system.Under the gold standard, prices of goods and services slowly deflated as the industrial revolutiongave way for more efficient tools and thus boosting output.

The value of money is higher under the gold standard because the resulting surplus of income fromlower prices turned into interest producing savings into banks, the banks then lend the savings tofinance projects that benefits the economy such as a new business venture for a car company.Another factor is that once the savings was used to finance a major venture, few is left for realmoney to be used therefore, credit for capital is harder to acquire until a sufficient amount of gold ismined to back new currency issues. While this system prevents an economy from acquiring toomuch debt than it can handle, the mere fact of a new project that cant be fully financed becausesavings needed to finance it ran out can restrict an economy to expand or grow at a faster pace.This system requires the economy to spend time in order to expand noting that the opportunitycost for waiting to start the venture forgoes the benefits of possible revenues. Under the goldstandard, money can also be created or inflated to accommodate the necessary capital to financeconsumption or investment. However, once the public realise that there are far fewer gold thanthere are paper currency, inflation can happen. But during times when people panic and make runsto the bank to pull out their savings, a bank may not have enough gold to pay. As a result aneconomic depression may occur, because inadequate gold to finance expansion causes a creditcrunch and a massive sell off occurs triggering one huge selloff after another.

Now, how did the gold standard fail? During periods of very high demand such as World War 1,countries involved needed an unlimited supply of ammunitions and war equipment in order to win. Avictory is unattainable if the gold needed to finance the seemingly limitless demand for warequipment is in short supply. This war scenario is equivalent to an expanding economy wherepeople's desire for goods and services are boundless, but without a boundless supply of capitalthis cannot be attained and would always lead to a contraction. Countries involved in the warabandoned the gold standard, at least temporarily to accomodate the limitless demand that goldcannot keep up with.

But since World War 1 happened during the industrial revolution noting that efficiency for producinggoods was exponentially increased, prices of goods should continue to decline, then why did thegold standard unable to deliver the required demand? The answer may lie in the technologicalcapacity to produce the required ammunition. The seemingly unlimited demand for war equipmentreveals a quota or limit to the quantity of items that a single equipment can produce per adesignated amount of time. Meaning, if 20 machines can only make 10,000 bullets a day andbullets are consumed in the front lines at a rate of 50,000 per day, extra machines and man powerare needed to accomodate that demand. This would mean that extra workers and equipment areneeded to produce 50,000 bullets. If the daily cost to manufacture 10,000 bullets is $100,000, thenproducing 50,000 bullets requires the manufacturer to buy 80 more machines and hire moreworkers causing the daily production cost to increase to $500,000. It is now obvious that themarginal cost to produce extra bullets to meet the demand would require additional capital andthus more gold. This enormous demand coupled with the boundaries of technology would definitelystagnate production if extra capital is not obtained. Gold restricts this mega expansion and the

gold standard was suspended for a fiat currency system.

more questions

World's 10 largest economies in 2012Is the U.S on the brink of financial collapse?Why is gold valuable? Gasoline production

How a fiat currency worksWhat makes currencies rise and fall in value? How banks make money? Why brown eggs costs more than white eggs?

How a ponzi scheme worksHow the gold standard works What is the debt ceiling?How an economy grows

What causes a stock to split? Is a gold backed currency better than fiat money? How does the stock market work? Top 10 US states to visit Resume writing tips

5 Comments econtrader Login

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• Reply •

sixerfixer1976 • 5 months ago

So, in other words, neither side could have afforded to produce war material

were it not for deficit financing -- that is, WWI could not have happened without

fiat money.

Sounds like a great argument FOR a gold standard...

2

• Reply •

therooster • 11 months ago

Good article even if the idiocy of the argument is 40+ years out of date. Gold's

historical problems of liquidity (economic reach) that the author describes are

accurate for the specified time period, but why is the fact that gold then had

FIXED trade values overlooked. Monetary gold's liquidity is the product of

(weight x trade value), not weight alone. When gold has a static fix on its value,

such as it had throughout history, the only way to increase monetary gold

liquidity is to bring up more gold from beneath the ground. Not so anymore. The

trade value can rise. Gold at $1500/oz has a great deal more liquidity than gold

that trades at $35/oz. Real-time capabilities have much to do with this .... so

it's true ..... you cannot pour new wine into old wineskins.

1

• Reply •

guy • a year ago

So in other words.....Don't start a freaking war Einstein.

1

• Reply •

OpposingVue • a year ago guy

Great idea, guy... except what happens when someone else starts one,

like Germany did to its neighbors in 1941? Or when 19 members of al-

Qaeda drop planes onto US buildings, killing thousands? What then?

Send them an angry letter?

1

Paul Robinson • 2 months ago

This ignores the fact most of the cost of anything is the overhead to produce it,

not the raw materials. If they're making bullets they're charging something

more than mere cost of materials and labor, there's electricity costs, overhead

for operating the factory, depreciation on the machines and profit. Or you're

kidding yourself right into Chapter 11. So now, if they need to make 50,000

bullets, certain overhead costs are already absorbed by the first 10,000. The

factory overhead, heating and cooling, payroll for the office people and so on is

already absorbed, so either the manufacturer makes more profit for making 5

times as much, or can cut prices since the volume is so much greater that

they get more efficiencies (an order of 2 tons of steel costs more per ton than

an order of 10 tons for the same reasons), so the costs do not go up linearly.

But wars always have to be deficit financed because no government has the

money to fight a war out of its checkbook; they have to collect taxes to pay for

them and they're already collecting plenty, and typically governments do not

have huge reserves. Thus the only way they can finance a war is through

plunder or through borrowing, then if they win they plunder the losers (or their

own citizens later) to pay for it. If they lose, those who bet on their side by

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