The Fall of the Gold Standard

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 18 ก.ย. 2024
  • At the start of the Federal Reserve, very little changed for average Americans. Over time, an ounce of gold had become valued at $20, which itself was still worth an ounce of silver.
    The eruption of World War I changed the world forever.
    As we have seen, governments have viewed the printing of money as a convenient means to raise government revenue-particularly in times of war. The incredible costs of World War I quickly forced European central banks to end currency exchanges to gold.
    As a result, after the war, European currencies found themselves being valued far less than they were previously. The British pound, for example, was traditionally defined at a weight that made it equal to $4.86. After the war, it was valued at $3.50.
    The proper solution to this issue would have been to readjust the pound's peg to gold at this new postwar level. Instead, the British government tried to force the pound to its prewar strength, which would have required a massive reduction of the money supply. Given that prices-including salaries-had now adjusted to the current pound, this was highly disruptive.
    The result was global economic instability, contributing to the financial crisis around the world in the twenties and thirties.
    In America, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's response to the Great Depression was an aggressive use of government power. The creation of new government programs, bureaucracies, and public works required levels of spending far beyond anything seen during World War II. Since the government does not create anything on its own and taxing is difficult during a depression, the Federal Reserve was a major tool of the state.
    This was made easier in 1933, when FDR announced Executive Order 6102, which said Americans would no longer be able to trade in their dollars for gold and that all privately owned gold was to be confiscated. This allowed FDR to immediately devalue the dollar-an unprecedented transfer of wealth away from Americans and into government.
    Agents of major central banks gathered in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, and adopted a new gold exchange standard.
    This Bretton Woods system worked as follows.
    The US remained on the classical gold standard, redeeming dollars in gold. British pounds and other currencies were not payable in gold coins, but only in large-sized bars, suitable only for international transactions. This prevented the ordinary citizens from using gold in their daily lives and empowered governments to accept a wider degree of paper and bank inflation-which they did.
    The following decades saw many of FDR's radical expansions of government power made permanent and then expanded. This was coupled with a growing American military footprint, with wars in Korea and Vietnam-and military bases established around the world.
    This continued increase in spending both domestically and abroad resulted in severe inflation beginning in the 1960s. This led foreign countries to consider exchanging their dollars for gold, as was still allowed. In response, the American government cut the dollar from its last tie to gold in 1971, under Richard Nixon.
    For the past fifty years, the world government has been engaged in a radical experiment with global currencies backed by nothing but the credibility of their issuing central bank. Understanding the consequences of this modern fiat money system is one of the most important economic issues in the world today.
    ________________________________________
    This series was inspired by Murray Rothbard's classic introduction, What Has Government Done to Our Money?-available for free in PDF, ePub, HTML, and Audiobook at Mises.org/WHGD
    To learn more about the operations of the Federal Reserve, check out Bob Murphy's book, Understanding Money Mechanics, available for free in PDF, ePub, and HTML at Mises.org/BobM...
    For more animated content, check out Economics for Beginners at BeginEconomics....

ความคิดเห็น • 13

  • @GenXstacker
    @GenXstacker 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    In 1971, Nixon suspended the convertibility of the US dollar into gold.
    In 1972, I was born to put gold back in it's rightful place in our monetary system. So far it's going great 😬

  • @simon2234
    @simon2234 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Great videos, keep them coming.

  • @John_.Cabell_.Breckinridge
    @John_.Cabell_.Breckinridge 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    The gold standard temporarily stop being used during the great depression because people were hoarding gold

    • @timcory4455
      @timcory4455 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      People had the right to own gold before 1933 but FDR decided to steal the gold from everyone to support his big government controlling agenda. At that point the gold standard backing the US dollar was no longer valid and we have today's mess of massive debt that goes all the way back to 1933.

  • @republicradio431
    @republicradio431 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    I feel like so much good quality pro gold propaganda always mixed with anti state sentiments and or fear mongering is probably because it benefits rich benefactors
    I mean gov can have shitty monetary policies but gold can be controled by the private sector
    Also as a comodity they need to inspire us to buy it in order to sell it at a pfrofit

    • @TheAdamAdy
      @TheAdamAdy ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The rich are literally the part of the state. They use the state to their benefit.

    • @JamieZero7
      @JamieZero7 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      What propaganda? And fear mongering? Do you deny that government has been the cause of these crashes? You think the state printing money is fine? Tell me where are these perfect angels in government that are so much wiser than normal people.

  • @user-ti9or6qx4i
    @user-ti9or6qx4i 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Keyword "experimental" also them tentacles creepin

  • @henrygustav7948
    @henrygustav7948 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    So you people from Mises wish to move from a floating exchange rate currency in which the market has a hand in determining value, to gold backed US dollars where the Government tells us exactly how many dollars can be exchanged for a certain amount of gold.
    Libertarians and Austrians...full of contradictions.

  • @willramirez75
    @willramirez75 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Them tentacles 😂 based