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“The issuer’s
promise” is a phrase I have used recently to describe the backing for
fiat currencies. The purpose of this article is to define it further, given that
it is increasingly likely to be challenged in the foreign exchange markets
with respect to the euro.
To begin we need to define the
principal difference between gold and a fiat currency. Gold has no price when
it is used as money, other than what it is exchanged for in goods. Uniquely
as money, it was in demand everywhere by all societies to settle their own
domestic and foreign trade. Fiat money is only used to settle transactions in
the jurisdiction to which it relates, and foreigners who end up with it
exchange it for their own fiat money, because out of jurisdiction it is not
money.
There are three basic exceptions
to this rule. The dollar, through its original gold convertibility became a
substitute for gold, and still enjoys an international role as a result of
that legacy. A second exception is when governments intervene and build up
holdings of foreign fiat money. And the third is when ownership of foreign
currencies accumulates for speculative purposes. Otherwise, outside its
jurisdiction a fiat currency has no useful value.
Its validity is based on a
promise by the issuing central bank and the relevant government that it
actually has value. The value of that promise is subjectively assessed in
foreign exchange markets, where dealers compare fiat currencies. The result
is that the purchasing power of a fiat currency can diminish
substantially in foreign exchanges before disrupting its domestic monetary
role. The dollar, for example, has lost most of its purchasing power since it
became completely disconnected from gold in 1971, but Americans still think
automatically “I have 10 bucks to spend: what shall I buy?”
rather than “I must get rid of these 10 bucks before they lose yet more
value”.
We all think like that with our
respective fiat currencies, and the moment we don’t marks the start of
a collapse in confidence in the issuer’s promise. This could be the
euro’s Achilles Heel, because there is no identifiable government actually
prepared to stand behind the European Central Bank, and as the crisis
intensifies, there is a growing risk the promise will be found wanting by the
eurozone’s own citizens.
Fiat money is managed by
neoclassical economists at central banks who think they understand price
theory. The euro is in danger of a sudden collapse, and it is not clear that
the powers-that-be in the ECB understand this. It is not even clear if they
understand that hyperinflation is not, as the term in modern usage suggests,
an accelerating rise in the price of goods. Instead it is a collapse in the
value of fiat money that arises from a reassessment of the issuer’s
promise by domestic users.
The euro’s future is
essentially tied to a collection of disparate governments. If any of them
leaves, it risks bringing on a collapse in its value that is completely
beyond the control of the ECB.
Originally published on Goldmoney here
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