INTRODUCTION
Exchanges
with the world outside of the organism are an essential feature of
life and in this regard human life is no different to all other life
forms.
The
only difference is that humans have distinguished some of these
exchanges from the rest and created a conceptual label for this
grouping of exchanges. The conceptual label for these exchanges is; economic
exchanges.
We
here are only interested in healthy exchanges, that is exchanges that
benefit the life form concerned. Thus from here on, unless stated
otherwise, any reference to an exchange presumes that it is a healthy
one.
Economic
exchanges embrace some, but not all, of the exchanges that take place
between human beings. Economic exchanges that are healthy involve
mutually acceptable exchanges of goods and/or services between
parties. When these exchanges are considered as a whole they are
referred to as an economy.
We
distinguish these particular exchanges from other exchanges because
we want to organise and manage them in a way that benefits us. In
other words we want to try to ensure that the exchanges enhance our
lives rather than threaten or degrade them in some way.
For
us to be able to do this management thing, in any sphere of life
including this one, we need to be able to think meaningfully about
the sphere and for this we need to be able to construct mental models
of the sphere, models that mirror aspects of the sphere concerned. In
order to achieve this we have to identify and then label, with
concepts, the relevant features of the sphere concerned.
The
life sphere we are concerned with here is that of economic exchanges
and what follows hereunder is an in depth exploration of that sphere
and the only proper, the only honest, role that money can play within
it.
ENSURING
HONEST MONEY
What
is honest money?
Money
is only usable if all members of the community in which it is used
share the experience that it is exchangeable, at any point in time
for real goods and/or services to the value that the money reflects.
One could justifiably call the money of such a currency honest
money.
In short it could be said that members of such a community have,
gained through personal experience, faith in the stability and
trustworthiness of their currency.
Unfortunately
this cannot be said with any conviction for many currencies around
the world today including our own. Is it possible to have honest
money? How do we ensure that our money is honest? Is it possible to
achieve this?
In
order to be able to ensure that we can answer these questions in the
affirmative we need to reacquaint ourselves with the basics of our
economic lives.
The
basics of our economic lives
Voluntary
exchanges of real goods and/or services
Economies
come into existence only because some of the real goods and/or
services existing within a community are exchangeable within that
community. That means that community members are freely able to
exchange such goods and/or services with one and other. Such
completed exchanges are the fundamental building blocks, or
indivisible
atomic units, out of which any economy is built.
It
is worth noting here that these indivisible
atomic units of an economy do not include money as one of their
components. This is because money is just a very useful conceptual
addition to economic life but not the basis of it. Exchange, without
the use of money, is known as bartering.
Now
historically gold has always been regarded ,almost universally, as
the good that can be guaranteed to be exchangeable for any other good
and/or service on offer. Thus psychologically it will be useful for
us to regard such bartered exchanges as the real gold out of which
any healthy economy is built and in order to enshrine this evocative
metaphor in our economic discourse we will refer to a completed, a
bartered, economic exchange as an 'economic
nugget'.
The
problem with bartering
However
bartering is a very time and effort consuming business. This is
because of the difficulty of finding someone who has for exchange
something that you want and who in turn wants something of equivalent
value to themselves that you are wiling to exchange. This major
difficulty hampers the frequency with which bartered exchanges are
entered into within any community where the economy is based on bartering, thus drastically reducing the amount of economic activity that takes place.
Money,
the way out of the bartering problem
Basically
when arranging a bartered exchange of goods and/or services the
parties involved would have to accord relative values to the
goods and/or services involved. Having done that the parties involved are then in a position to determine whether they were suitably
equivalent in value. If they were the exchange would proceed
otherwise it would not. Now these relative values are obviously only
existant in the heads of the parties concerned and it was only once
it was realised that these values could be stated in some external
form. Then money was created in order to reflect, these internal values, in the external world.
The
acceptance of the externalisation of the values of real goods and/or
services in the form of money transformed the bartering process
because it enabled the two halves of the exchange process to be
separated from one and other in time, in location, and in the
matching of needs Money offered the possibility of the involvement
of one, or more, additional parties and their offerings in the
initial exchange process enabling it to be completed.
Note Full completion of the initial exchange process, even though involving more parties, is still necessary for the honest creation of an 'economic nugget'.
Note Full completion of the initial exchange process, even though involving more parties, is still necessary for the honest creation of an 'economic nugget'.
Money
does this by enabling one party to an initial exchange, A, to give,
not real goods and/or services to the other party to the exchange, B,
but money in exchange for the real goods and/or services supplied by
B to A.
Money
is acting here as a temporary surrogate for the real goods and/or
services that still
need to be supplied into the community by A in order to complete the
initial exchange and thus create an 'economic
nugget'.
Comparing
bartered exchanges with exchanges where money is used
In
a bartering exchange process, the completion of which results in an
'economic
nugget',
the two parties to the process are simultaneously both givers and
receivers. Thus in bartering, i.e. when no money is involved, a
completed exchange process has the following four elements:
- Two exchanging parties A and B
- Two sets of exchangeable goods and/or services, GSa and GSb
and
the process works to completion as follows:
- A and B exchange GSa and GSb with one and other.
However
when money becomes involved and the two halves of the process are
separated from one and other both halves still need to achieve
completion in order for the exchange process to become an 'economic
nugget'.
Thus with the use of money as facilitator of exchange a completed exchange
process necessarily has the following seven elements:
- Three exchanging parties A,B and C
- Two sets of exchangeable goods and/or services, GSa and GSb, supplied by A and by B respectively
- Two sets of money, Ma and Mc, used by A and by C respectively, the money being to the value of the goods and/or services involved in the exchange process
and
the process works as follows:
- In exchange for receipt of GSb A pays B with Ma
- In exchange for receipt of GSa C pays A with Mc.
It is essential however for the completion of any exchange using money that the money involved is honest money. In this instance for example both monies, Ma and Mc, need to be comprised of honest money if the exchange is to result in an 'economic
nugget'.
Now if it was always the case that honest money was involved in exchanges there would be no problems for the
health of any economy. Ensuring that this is the case, that Ma and Mc
are comprised of honest money, is however under our current money
system not a foregone conclusion.
Ensuring
the honesty of money
What
is counterfeit money?
As
already explained above money is a material representation of the
value accorded to real goods and/or services. Now for the money to be
honest each unit of currency must be representing the values in a definite set of of real goods
and/or services otherwise, in the purist sense of this word, the
money is counterfeit. Counterfeit items being items that appear to
observers to be something that they are not.
Thus
in purist terms counterfeit money means that the money states that it
represents the values in an actual set of real goods and/or services
but in reality there are actually no real goods and or services for
the money to represent the values of, consequently the money is just a
sham.
Unfortunately
because money is a totally human creation a dis-connection between money and
the values of real goods and/or services that it is supposed to represent has been accepted into
the money system. This is shown by the definition of counterfeit
money given in Wikipedia,
Counterfeit
money is
currency that is produced without the legal sanction of the state or
government to resemble some official form of currency closely enough
that it may be confused for genuine currency. Producing or using
counterfeit money is a form of fraud
or
forgery.
In
other words counterfeit money is money which simulates legally
authorised money whilst not in fact being authorised.
This
is a very weak definition of counterfeit money because it relies on
the State to ensure that, in its production of money, it maintains
the integrity of the link between actual goods and/or services and
their value represented by the officially sanctioned money. This, as we all know, is honoured by the State and its agents more in the breach than in practice.
A
more rigorous definition of counterfeit money would read as follows:
Counterfeit
money is
currency that has no backing in real goods and or services to the
value that it purports to represent.
This
is the definition of 'counterfeit money' that is intended in all uses
of this phrase here.
What
is honest money?
Honest
money
is currency that has the backing of, the value attached to, actual goods and/or services.
This
definition of honest money is what is intended in all uses of the
phrase here.
To
maintain a healthy economy the challenge is to produce and put into
circulation only honest money.
Producing
and putting into circulation honest money
The
concept of money was invented for the purpose of facilitating
voluntary exchanges of real goods and/or services between members of
a community.
Clearly if money is to function to the optimum in its role as a facilitator of voluntary exchanges it needs to be equally accessible to everyone in a community. It is thus a public good. Not only does it hinder money's purpose but it is morally wrong for money and the system which controls its distribution in society to become the income generating possession of any group within society. In a growing and changing economy however there is a constant need for 'new money' to be issued, how is this to be fairly and justly done?
Clearly if money is to function to the optimum in its role as a facilitator of voluntary exchanges it needs to be equally accessible to everyone in a community. It is thus a public good. Not only does it hinder money's purpose but it is morally wrong for money and the system which controls its distribution in society to become the income generating possession of any group within society. In a growing and changing economy however there is a constant need for 'new money' to be issued, how is this to be fairly and justly done?
The
reality is that all new money is, at the point of issue, counterfeit
because it has not yet been connected to the equivalent value actual
real goods and/or services that it is serving as a surrogate for.
How
is this connection to be achieved then?
It
is best achieved when new money is issued to one party in an exchange
who needs some money and who then goes on to complete the exchange in
full by supplying, equivalent in value to the money, real goods
and/or services to a third party and thus ensuring the exchange is
turned into an 'economic
nugget'.
If
the issued money is not responded to in this manner by the person to
whom it was issued then the money remains counterfeit, or dishonest.
Have
a look at www.ces.org.za
for a working alternative currency system that successfully operates according to this principle.
The
production and circulation of dishonest money
The
consequences of the production and circulation of dishonest money are
wide ranging and destructive of both individuals and the community at
large, as well as of the whole economy.
The
biggest problem in modern economies is
that dishonest money is legally part and parcel of their fabric. This
is because there are official producers of 'new money ' who have no
intention of themselves ever supplying goods and/or services of
equivalent value into the community. These producers are the State
and the banks who, these days, are in fact the major suppliers of new
money into the economy. The banks do so under the Fractional Reserve
Banking [FRB] rules which authorise them to issue new money provided
that the quantity of new money issued falls within a stipulated
multiple of the quantity of fully accessible
deposits of honest money that they hold.
The
negative implications of FRB
Firstly
because banks issue new money as though it was honest money, even
though they accept no obligation to supply equivalent value real
goods and/or services into the community thus making the money counterfeit.
They
use this newly issued money to make loans to people on which they
charge interest, profiting from it as though it was honest money.
This although legal is quite clearly fraudulent. In any event the
costs of issuing new money should be borne by the fiscus not by its
initial recipients, newly issued money should be free to the first
recipients.
Secondly
people who live in cash poor communities and who have real goods
and/or services to exchange are prevented from doing so by the lack of money in their communities. This has the effect of
constraining the growth of the economy and keeping people in
poverty.
Thirdly
counterfeit money in circulation debases the value of the already
existing honest money by stealing some of the honest money's value.
In this way its issuers, i.e. the banks, are pocketing this stolen
value for themselves whilst ordinary citizens' wealth is constantly
eroded. Citizens experience this as continuous price escalation,
known as inflation.
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