The New Gold Standard
John Wiley & Sons Inc (Verlag)
978-1-118-04322-6 (ISBN)
The guide to returning to a gold standard All that glitters is gold and gold has never glittered so much as it has in the last decade, reaching staggering new prices in recent years. The definitive modern argument to returning to a gold standard, The New Gold Standard succinctly and clearly explains the nature of sound money, the causes and cures of inflation and deflation, the importance of fiscal responsibility within a sound monetary system, and the reasons for recessions and depressions.
Little has been written beyond academic histories of the gold standard, but gold standard expert Paul Nathan fills that void for the first time
Written for beginning and professional investors, the book provides guidance on how a gold standard will strengthen the dollar, reduce debt, and help stabilize the economy, offering easily applied strategies for investing in gold now and in the future
The degree of depressions and recessions and the boom bust cycle can be avoided with a sustainable, stable monetary policy
The international return to gold is not a fad but a sign of a world in monetary transition
As long as governments continue to print money and deficits continue to rise, gold will be a hot commodity. As inflation creeps up, more and more talk will turn to returning to some version of the gold standard, and The New Gold Standard is the first major work to explicitly address the challenges and benefits of such a move.
PAUL NATHAN is an exclusive contributor of articles on gold for kitco.com. With more than one million hits a day, kitco.com is the leading site for gold bugs worldwide. He wrote articles in the ’70s for the Freeman and today writes a weekly commentary and market update for hard money enthusiasts and investors at paulnathan.biz. Nathan was there at the birth of the Libertarian Party, and his mother was the first national candidate to run on the Libertarian Party ticket in 1972. Nathan began writing on monetary and economic matters in 1968 while studying under Ayn Rand and Alan Greenspan at the Foundation for the New Intellectual.
Foreword xiii
Preface xvii
Part I: Gold and the Domestic Economy
Chapter 1 Why Gold? 3
Gold: The King of Metals 4
Gold Becomes the Standard of the World 5
Too Little Gold—Or Too Much Paper? 6
The “Gold Prevents Prosperity” Myth 8
In Gold We Trust 10
Chapter 2 The Gold Standard: A Standard for Freedom 13
What Money Is 15
.AndWhat Money Is Not 18
The Nature of Inflation 20
The Fiat Standard at Work 22
The Illusion of Prosperity 23
The Meaning of the Gold Standard 25
Chapter 3 Why Prices Have Not Skyrocketed 27
On Human Action 28
Quantity versus Values 31
The Quantity of Money and the Gold Standard 32
Too Little Fiscal Responsibility Chasing Too Many Politicians 33
Chapter 4 The Inflation/Deflation Conundrum 35
The Cause of the Recent Spike in Commodities 38
Chapter 5 Central Banking in the Twenty-First Century 41
The Rise of Populism 42
A World in Transition 45
The Fed of the Twenty-First Century 48
Part II: The International Gold Standard
Chapter 6 The Making of an International Monetary Crisis 55
Monetary Theory: Past 57
No Curb on Governments 58
The Policy Makers 59
The Process of Confusion 60
Condemnation of Gold 61
Evolution of the Theory 62
Fractional Reserve Banking 63
The Great Depression 65
Devaluation in 1934 66
Bretton Woods 67
The Theory Projected 67
“If at First You Don’t Succeed .” 69
The SDR: As Good as Gold Again! 70
Debt Amortization or Default: The False Alternative 71
The Frightening Prospect of an International Debt 72
Toward an International Fiat Reserve System 74
Simply Repetitious 75
The Real Meaning of Monetary Reform 75
Chapter 7 The Death of Bretton Woods: A History Lesson 79
Fixed Exchange Rates, Flexible Rules 80
Export or Devalue: Institutionalizing the Devaluation Bias 82
“Hot Money” Blues 84
The Role of the Dollar under Bretton Woods 85
Limited Gold—Unlimited Dollars: A Formula for Disaster 86
Confidence versus Liquidity—A Two-Tier Tale 87
Gold’s Limitations: A Blessing in Disguise 87
U.S. Balance of Payments Problems 89
The First Straw 89
On Selling One’s Cake and Wanting It Too 89
The Illusion of the Last Straw 90
The High Price of Gifts 91
On Domestic Dreams and International Nightmares 92
Chapter 8 Who’s Protected by Protectionism? 95
A Few Principles 97
Enter Protectionism 98
Trade between Nations 99
To Protect the Balance of Trade 100
To Protect Domestic Markets 102
To Protect Domestic Wages 102
Protectionism: The Greatest Threat to Prosperity 104
The U.S. Balance of Payments Problem in Perspective 106
The Protection Racket 106
Part III: Returning to a Gold Standard
Chapter 9 Are the Fiat and the Gold Standards Converging? 111
A Monetary System Needs to Know Its Limitations 113
Reduced Leverage Equals Reduced Speculation 115
The Process of Convergence 116
A New Day 118
Chapter 10 Gold: The New Money 121
Rediscovering Gold 123
The International “Walk” on Gold 124
Competing Monies 125
Chapter 11 How Not to Advocate a Gold Standard 129
The Intrinsic Worth Argument 130
The Store of Value Argument 131
Gold Price Predictions 132
The Legal Tender Argument 133
The Official Price of Gold Fetish 134
The Devaluation Syndrome 137
The Stop Printing Money Argument 139
The Demonetization Threat 140
On Context, Cause, and Effect 142
Part IV: Investing in Gold
Chapter 12 Lessons of a Life-Long Gold Investor 147
On Trading 151
The Rules of the Game 152
When to Be Flexible 154
And When to Stick to Your Guns 156
On Investing 157
Shakeouts 160
Turning a Disadvantage into an Advantage 163
On Leverage 164
When to Sell a Stock 167
“Be Afraid. Be Very, Very, Afraid ” 168
How to Own Gold 170
Chapter 13 My Final Word on Gold 173
On Bretton Woods II 173
The New SDR Threat 175
On QE 2 178
The Banking System of a Free Society 181
In Conclusion 183
Recommended Reading 185
Bibliography 189
About the Author 191
Index 197
Vorwort | Donald Luskin |
---|---|
Verlagsort | New York |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 160 x 236 mm |
Gewicht | 404 g |
Themenwelt | Wirtschaft ► Volkswirtschaftslehre ► Finanzwissenschaft |
ISBN-10 | 1-118-04322-7 / 1118043227 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-118-04322-6 / 9781118043226 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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