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The Gold Standard

The Gold Standard. Chapter 2, International Financial Mgmt, Eun et al 3460.02 notes by A.P. Palasvirta, PhD. Historical Monetary Standards. Bronze Silver Gold U.S. Dollar Standard. The Bank of Deposit. Bank of Amsterdam (15 th century) 100% reserves of gold and silver

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The Gold Standard

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  1. The Gold Standard Chapter 2, International Financial Mgmt, Eun et al 3460.02 notes by A.P. Palasvirta, PhD

  2. Historical Monetary Standards • Bronze • Silver • Gold • U.S. Dollar Standard 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  3. The Bank of Deposit • Bank of Amsterdam (15th century) • 100% reserves of gold and silver • Depositors brought gold, silver • Were given warehousing certificates for the amount of gold, silver minus a charge • Depositors would use the warehousing certificates as money • Lower transactions costs • Easier to use 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  4. Bank of Deposit Bank of Amsterdam Gold 100% Warehouse receipts Assets Liabilities 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  5. Bank of Issue • Queen Elizabeth I 1563 to 1603 • Created the Bank of England • Held partial reserves of gold and silver • The rest were in treasury bills • This was not a strict gold standard, but a gold exchange standard • This bank could not refund all claims for gold with gold 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  6. Gold Standard - Bank of England Gold 30 – 40% T-bills 60 – 70% • http://www.gata.org/node/104 Assets Liabilities 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d. currency

  7. Objective of a monetary standard • Fix the value of the unit of account • Something immutable • Ounce of silver • Ounce of gold • Gold standard • Unit of account the troy ounce • Medium of exchange • Coinage • Gold certificates 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  8. Gold as a unit of account • If the cost of mining gold increases • deflation • Value of gold increases • Value of other goods remain constant • Prices decrease • If the cost of mining gold decreases • Inflation • Value of gold decreases • Value of other goods remain constant • Prices increase 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  9. Deflationary environment 1/P 1/P Supply Demand Gold 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  10. Inflationary environment 1/P 1/P Supply Demand Demand Gold 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  11. The Act of Arbitrage • Two markets for gold • official government market • Legal unofficial private markets • Parity Price greater than market price • government’s price (parity) the high price • external markets price the low price • trader buys low sells high • buys externally • sells to government 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  12. Arbitrage Pg S2 Private Market S1 Government Market Par Pg D2 D1 Qg 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  13. The Effects of Arbitrage • Private market gold supplies decrease • holders of gold will sell first to the government • arbitrageurs will buy up stocks and sell to the government • excess supply will dry up bringing market price to equal the parity price • Government gold supplies will increase • increases the money supply • decrease the value of money (inflation) 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  14. Gold Standard • Countries fix parity price of gold • usd parity price = $20.67/ounce • uk parity price = 4.2474£/ounce • usd/uk£ = 4.8665$/£ • They allow arbitrage between two markets • parity price of gold at Central Bank • free market price of gold • De facto single currency the ounce of gold • many units of account • periodic falling off of the gold standard • Balance of Payments deficits settled with gold 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  15. BOT Surplus • Mechanism which mitigates BOT surplus • gold is paid to pay for excess of exports to imports • gold coming into the central bank increases money supply • inflation in the economy • your goods now more expensive in foreign markets • foreign goods less expensive to you • Price-specie flow mechanism • BOP balances settled in gold • Money adjusts • Prices adjust • International prices converge 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  16. Gold Standard Treasury Gold T-bills gold increases due to BOT surplus cash currency Money supply increases Liabilities Assets 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  17. Gold Standard monetary effects • Gold backs all money • prices move relative to • excess demand for gold (economic growth) • deflation • excess supply of gold (new gold finds) • inflation • Treasuries have no independent monetary policy 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  18. Inflation/Deflation • Fixed parity price (not fixed value) • Unit of account varied with the cost of mining gold • Often the unit of account appreciated (increased in value) as gold supplies were harder to mine • With new gold discoveries, the unit of account depreciated (decreased in value) as the cost of mining gold decreased 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  19. Gold standard & exchange rates • All currencies fixed to gold • Gold is the de facto currency • single world wide currency • all international trade is denominated in gold • No need to hedge exchange rate volatility since exchange rates are constant 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  20. Off the Gold standard • When CBs execute a monetary policy • discipline of the gold standard is gone • after WWII governments ran inflationary policies • interest rate policies • employment policies • inflation sometimes running at 200% or more • Exchange rates fluctuate • creating uncertainty for trade 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  21. Bimetallism up to 1875 • Colonizers (France, Spain, England, Portugal) • Gold standard • Colonies • Silver standard • Gresham’s Law • Bad money drives out good 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  22. Interwar period • Germany reparations heavy and denominated in Deutsche Marks not gold • Germany inflated their currency in order to reduce the cost of reparations • Inflation 1 trillion% • United States had most of the gold • France, England paid for war materials bought from the U.S. in gold • Stock market crash of 1929 • Led to protectionism • Sterilization polices • Depression 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  23. Bretton Woods 1945-72 • WWII U.S. again the supplier of arms got most of the gold in the world • 1944 end of the was the Gold Exchange Standard • The U.S. dollar became the reserve currency • Traded at par value with all currencies part of system • Balance of payments imbalances were cleared with U.S. dollars instead of gold • Cheaper to ship dollars instead of gold • Countries could earn interest on their foreign exchange reserves Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  24. Bretton woods 1945-72 • Creation of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) • International clearing house for exchange transactions with SDRs and dollars • Special Drawing Rights • Exchange reserves held at the IMF • Value weighted average of basket of major currencies • Deutsche Mark (20%), franc (12%), pound (12%), yen (16%), us dollar (42%) • The SDR as well as the U.S. dollar became the reserve currencies 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  25. Difficulties with system • U.S. had to run a chronic BOP deficit to supply us dollars to the worlds economies • The fixed parities between currencies dependent on certain assumptions for all economies • Monetary policies aligned • Fiscal policies aligned • Revaluations necessary periodically • Monetary policies of many countries very expansionary 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  26. Failure of system • US running inflationary monetary policy to finance Vietnamese war • US increase the dollar parity price (devalued) twice • DeGaulle demanded payment of BOP surplus with the U.S. in gold 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  27. Current flexible exchange rate regime • January 1976 • All currencies will float with respect to each other 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

  28. Current price of metals (Jun 1) • Gold = $1,212.1 • Silver = $18.411 • Platinum = $1,548.7 • Paladium = $462.7 3460.02 gold standard notes: a.p. palasvirta, ph.d.

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