Gold
has opened 2008 with a bang. The price of the yellow metal has soared
to all-time nominal highs, surpassing $900 per ounce. “So what?” you
may ask. “Unless one works for a mining company or a jeweler, gold is a
trivial or nonexistent factor in one’s life.” True. But do you use
dollars for your money? If so, then you ought to be concerned about the
rising price of gold (POG).
Gold is sometimes known as an inflation
barometer. I prefer to characterize it as the most reliable indicator
of confidence in our currency. When confidence in the U.S. dollar is
high and people desire to hold dollars, then POG is low in dollar
terms. Conversely, when confidence in the dollar is low and people’s
desire to hold dollars has ebbed, then POG is high in dollar terms.
Why is gold a reliable monetary indicator?
Historically, gold emerged as the preferred choice of money in
countries around the world. Because of the painful hyperinflation of
the Continental currency during the Revolutionary War, our Founding
Fathers made the U.S. dollar a fixed quantity of gold. Indeed, that was
the case for most of our history; thus, the saying as late as in the
mid-1900s that “the dollar is as good as gold.”
From our everyday perspective, in which we
habitually express economic value in terms of dollars, gold appears to
fluctuate greatly in value. This, however, is an illusion, comparable
to the illusion that the sun orbits the earth. If we change our frame
of reference from the dollar to gold, we note that gold has maintained
roughly the same purchasing power for centuries, and it is paper money
that fluctuates wildly in value. Federal Reserve Notes, for example,
have less than five percent of the purchasing power they had when
introduced in 1914; yet, in not too many years, we will look back
longingly on paying “only” three Federal Reserve Notes for a gallon of
gas.
POG is telling us in no uncertain terms that confidence in the dollar is falling. As explained in my Dec. 27 “Anatomy of a Financial Crisis,”
U.S. policymakers decided to sacrifice the dollar to keep the financial
markets from grinding to a halt. Even before that crisis emerged, the
demise of the Federal Reserve Note could be foretold. Americans are
drowning in debt. Individuals and corporations hold record amounts of
debt, but the greatest debtor of all is Uncle Sam. Only the naïve would
think that Uncle Sam can indefinitely finance his $9 trillion of
officially acknowledged debt, his other trillions of off-budget debt,
and the tens of trillions of unfunded liabilities for Medicare, Social
Security, etc. The only viable political option is to have the Fed
inflate the money supply, thereby reducing the exchange value of each
currency unit, and repay creditors with cheapened dollars.
Our overall financial weakness, combined with
vigorous economic growth in other countries and the consequent ongoing
shrinkage of the U.S. share of global GDP, mean that the dollar’s days
as the global reserve currency are numbered. POG will rise even higher
as this process unfolds.
In addition to the overwhelming economic
factors working against our fiat dollar, there are geopolitical
factors, too. Although the rest of the world loves to criticize the
United States, they like the stability of a Pax Americana. If the
United States can maintain order in the world, global business
benefits. On the other hand, when the United States appears to be
losing control, confidence in our currency swoons in lockstep with
confidence in our power.
The last time POG exceeded $800 per ounce, Iran
had taken American hostages, the Soviets had invaded Afghanistan, and
the United States appeared impotent. By contrast, seven years ago—in
the aftermath of the dissolution of the Soviet Union and Communist
Bloc, and before 9/11—the United States was regarded as the
unchallenged, largely benevolent superpower, confidence in our currency
was very high, and gold sold for under $300 per ounce. Now, with the
assassination of Benazir Bhutto threatening to unravel nuclear-armed
Pakistan, Russia and China acting to spite and discomfit us any way
they can, and tensions with Iran mounting, there is diminishing
confidence in the U.S. ability to maintain a peaceful global order.
Consequently, investors around the world are exchanging dollars for
gold.
The current high POG indicates that these are
challenging times for our country, both economically and
geopolitically. If the two major parties cannot set aside their endless
bickering and unite to address the major challenges facing our country,
the dollar will sink more and gold will continue to rise. Let us pray
that this doesn’t happen.