What Has Government Done to Our Money?
What Has Government Done
to Our Money?
Murray N. Rothbard
Introduction to Fourth Edition
Monetary policy is—aside from war—the
primary tool of
state aggrandizement. It ensures the growth of government,
finances deficits, rewards special interests, and fixes
elections. Without it, the federal leviathan would collapse, and
we could return to the republic of the Founding Fathers.
Our monetary system is not only
politically abusive, it also
causes inflation and the business cycle. What is to be done?
In answer to that question, the Mises
Institute is pleased to
present this fourth and slightly expanded edition of Murray N.
Rothbard's classic What Has Government Done to Our Money?.
First published in 1964, this is one
of Professor Rothbard's most
influential works, despite its length. I can't count the number
of times academics and nonacademics alike have told me that it
forever changed the way they looked at monetary policy. No one,
having read this book, hears the pronouncements of Fed officials
with awe, or reads monetary texts with credulity. What Has
Government Done to Our Money? is the best introduction to
money, bar none. The prose is straightforward, the logic
relentless, the facts compelling—as in all of Professor
Rothbard's writings.
His themes here are theoretical,
political, and historical. On
theory, he agrees with Ludwig von Mises that money originated
through voluntary exchanges on the market. No social contract or
government edict brought money into being. It is a natural
outgrowth of individuals seeking economic relations more complex
than barter.
But unlike all other commodities, an
increase in the stock of
money confers no social benefit, since money's main function is
to facilitate the exchange of other goods and services. Indeed,
increasing the stock of money through a central bank like the Fed
has horrific consequences, and Professor Rothbard provides the
clearest explanation available of inflation.
In policy, he argues that the free
market can and should be
charged with the production and distribution of money. There is
no need to make it a monopoly of the U.S. Treasury, let alone of
a public-private banking cartel like the Fed.
A successful money needs only a fixed
definition rooted in the
commodity most suited to a monetary use, and a legal system that
enforces contracts and punishes theft and fraud. In a free
market, the result has been, and would be, a gold standard.
In such a free-market system, money
would be convertible domestically and internationally. Demand deposits
would have 100%
reserves, while the reserve ratios for time deposits would be
subject to the economic prudence of bankers and the watchful eye
of the consuming public.
It is, however, the historical
dimension of Professor Rothbard's
work that makes it so persuasive. Starting with the 19th-century
classical gold standard, he ends with the likely emergence of a
European Currency Unit and an eventual world fiat money.
Especially notable are his explanations of the Bretton Woods
system and the closing of the gold window in the early 1970s.
Professor Rothbard shows that
government has always and
everywhere been the enemy of sound money. Through banking cartels
and inflation, government and its favored interests loot the
people's earnings, water down the value of the market's money,
and cause recessions and depressions.
In mainstream economics, most of this
is denied or ignored. The
emphasis is always on the "best" way to use monetary
policy. What should guide the Fed? The GNP? Interest rates? The
yield curve? The foreign exchange value of the dollar? A
commodity index? Professor Rothbard would tell us that all such
questions presuppose central planning, and are the root of
monetary evil.
May this book be distributed far and
wide, so that when the next
monetary crisis arrives, Americans will, finally, refuse to put
up with what the government is doing to our money.
Llewellyn H. Rockwell
The Ludwig von Mises Institute
Auburn University
November 1990
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