Return of the Gold Standard as world order unravels (Telegraph)

As the twin pillars of international monetary system threaten to come tumbling down in unison, gold has reclaimed its ancient status as the anchor of stability. The spot price surged to an all-time high of $1,594 an ounce in London, lifting silver to $39 in its train.

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On one side of the Atlantic, the eurozone debt crisis has spread to the countries that may be too big to save - Spain and Italy - though RBS thinks a ?3.5 trillion rescue fund would ensure survival of Europe's currency union.

On the other side, the recovery has sputtered out and the printing presses are being oiled again. Brinkmanship between the Congress and the White House over the US debt ceiling has compelled Moody's to warn of a "very small but rising risk" that the world's paramount power may default within two weeks. "The unthinkable is now thinkable," said Ross Norman, director of thebulliondesk.com.

Fed chair Ben Bernanke confessed to Congress that growth has failed to gain traction. "Deflationary risks might re-emerge, implying a need for additional policy support," he said.

The bar to QE3 - yet more bond purchases - is even lower than markets had thought. The new intake of hard-money men on the voting committee has not shifted Fed thinking, despite global anger at dollar debasement under QE2. Fuelling the blaze, the emerging powers of Asia are almost all running uber-loose monetary policies. Most have negative real interest rates that push citizens out of bank accounts and into gold, or property. China is an arch-inflater. Prices are rising at 6.4pc, yet the one-year deposit rate is just 3.5pc. India's central bank is far behind the curve.

"It is very scary: the flight to gold is accelerating at a faster and faster speed," said Peter Hambro, chairman of Britain's biggest pure gold listing Petropavlovsk.

"One of the big US banks texted me today to say that if QE3 actually happens, we could see gold at $5,000 and silver at $1,000. I feel terribly sorry for anybody on fixed incomes tied to a fiat currency because they are not going to be able to buy things with that paper money."

China, Russia, Brazil, India, the Mid-East petro-powers have diversified their $7 trillion reserves into euros over the last decade to limit dollar exposure. As Europe's monetary union itself faces an existential crisis, there is no other safe-haven currency able to absorb the flows. The Swiss franc, Canada's loonie, the Aussie, and Korea's won are too small.

"There is no depth of market in these other currencies, so gold is the obvious play," said Neil Mellor from BNY Mellon. Western central banks (though not the US, Germany, or Italy) sold much of their gold at the depths of the bear market a decade ago. The Bank of England wins the booby prize for selling into the bottom at ?254 an ounce on Gordon Brown's orders in 1999. But Russia, China, India, the Gulf states, the Philippines, and Kazakhstan have been buying.

China is coy, revealing purchases with a long delay. It has admitted to doubling its gold reserves to 1,054 tonnes or $54bn. This is just a tiny sliver of its $3.2 trillion reserves. China's Chamber of Commerce said this should be raised eightfold to 8,000 tonnes.

Xia Bin, an adviser to China's central bank, said in June that the country's reserve strategy needs an "urgent" overhaul. Instead of buying paper IOU's from a prostrate West, China should invest in strategic assets and accumulate gold by "buying the dips".

Step by step, the world is edging towards a revived Gold Standard as it becomes clearer that Japan and the West have reached debt saturation. World Bank chief Robert Zoellick said it was time to "consider employing gold as an international reference point." The Swiss parliament is to hold hearings on a parallel "Gold Franc". Utah has recognised gold as legal tender for tax payments.

A new Gold Standard would probably be based on a variant of the 'Bancor' proposed by Keynes in the late 1940s. This was a basket of 30 commodities intended to be less deflationary than pure gold, which had compounded in the Great Depression. The idea was revived by China's central bank chief Zhou Xiaochuan two years ago as a way of curbing the "credit-based" excess.

Mr Bernanke himself was grilled by Congress this week on the role of gold. Why do people by gold? "As protection against of what we call tail risks: really, really bad outcomes," he replied. Indeed.

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monitor
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ggoldas an international reference point." The Swiss parliament is to

d. Why do people bygold? "As protection against of what we call tail

Perhaps if all government bonds (gilts) were forced to be index linked instead of conventional then politicians wouldn't be so able to inflate to get out of debt, and there would be more incentive to be fiscally neutral over the economic cycle,

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Dave

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monitor

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monitor

I quite like that idea.

Without having thought of the mechanics much...

Would you have to set a threshold to allow guvverments to issue money in line with growth without being penalised?

You would probably have to make sure retribution was swift, otherwise they would push the problem into the future by issuing a bunch of fifty-year notes. So index-link the coupon rather than the face value?

What would be the knock on effect (if any) on international trade and the ability to run a deficit?

What would be the social consequences? i.e. you can say that governments inflate away government debts, but in reality they inflate away people's debts...

Reply to
DVH

I was reading the US Consitution and read Article 1 Section 10: Section. 10.

No State shall enter into any Treaty, Alliance, or Confederation; grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal; coin Money; emit Bills of Credit; make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts; pass any Bill of Attainder, ex post facto Law, or Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts, or grant any Title of Nobility.

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I can't see where this is repealed, or amended. So possibly problems for California? The federal government could rob the states for gold standard money.

Reply to
Dave

There is no way index linking would work, because they will simply change the way the index measures inflation. What is it... the Bank of England says inflation is 2.7% average since 1994... think a real figure is north of 4.2% which compounded is a simply huge difference.

Index linked funds are largely overpriced because they are overbought by insurers & pension funds buying en masse because it writes a liability off their balance sheet. Global Index Linked funds at least give some protection from Sterling, but so too does a Global Equity Income fund. Gov't has debts as though it is starting from 1950 when it has actually lost the economic war and needs to re-align on that basis.

Gov't needs to get a lot smaller and cost of living needs to fall very substantially.

USA meanwhile has a history of avoiding inflation linked gov't debt, take note, it's liabilities are about 66 trillion.

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js.b1

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