Although Bryan lost the general election to pro-gold William McKinley (and lost two other presidential races) that line still rings in the popular imagination. It represents a handy epithet against the gold standard by those who are unfamiliar with its history or superior track record.
As, in 1896, noted by The Nation and reprised there last week, rather surprisingly but for Karl Marx's recognition that "money is by nature gold and silver:"
Gilder writes about how Shannon information theory underlies the working of the classical gold standard. Gilder explains with lucidity and authority some of the mechanics as to why the gold standard historically correlates so closely with good job creation, economic mobility, and a thriving working and middle income America — the key issue of the 2016 presidential race.
Bryan’s speech, conversely, illustrates an anti-scientific — even superstitious — stance of many of the gold standard’s most prominent critics both then and now. It is beyond odd that modern academics such as Paul Krugman should, in, for example The Cross of Gold, echo Bryan as if his words carry some intellectual authority.
Public intellectual Megan McArdle, in a 2007 column in the Atlantic.com (which she recently referenced in the context of presenting her thoughts on Greece) recycled some conventional, if ill-founded, tropes about the gold standard. She wrote “Money is a mysterious thing. … Economists studying this fascinating topic tend to suffer from migraines as they suffer from all the mysterious–hell, nearly mystical–attributes of money.” She might think twice before again opining on a subject about which she has made such a candid confession of ignorance.
At base, money is no more mysterious, nor mystical, than are calipers. (A comparable point is made by Steve Forbes and Elizabeth Ames’s splendid work Money: How The Destruction Of the Dollar Threatens The Global Economy — And What We Can Do About It.) Money is not “nearly mystical.” Money merely has been rendered thoroughly incoherent by demagogues and rascals.
This is not a new phenomenon. A much more apt observation than McArdle’s was that of Senator Nelson Aldrich, chairman of the National Monetary Commission, in a 1909 speech before the National Economists’ Club in New York City:
To this day demagogues ignore the shameful antisemitic innuendos by Bryan both in this line and elsewhere. They ignore how roundly Bryan was rejected. And, as observantly noted by Forbes.com‘s own Brian Domitrovic in As The Fed Splintered The Cross Of Gold, Farmers Held The Bag, they ignore how destructive a direct derivative of Bryan’s position proved in practice.
Anti-gold-bugs furthermore coyly ignore the fact that Bryan mostly, now, is remembered for his career’s final act, a Quixotic effort to criminalize the departure from reaching literal Biblical Creationism. Bryan served as a prosecutor of John Scopes in the infamous “Scopes Monkey Trial.” Bryan also, famously, served as an “expert” witness in the prosecution of Scopes. This trial caused a nationwide sensation.
A snippet from the famous cross examination of Bryan by Clarence Darrow:
A–No.
Q–You have not?
A– No; the God I believe in could have taken care of that, Mr. Darrow.
One of his cabinet colleagues later sneered: “I discovered that one could drive a prairie schooner through any part of his argument and never scrape against a fact or a sound statement.”
There are a number of myths about the gold standard. These have ossified in the minds of such Keepers of the Conventional Wisdom, besides Prof. Krugman, as Austin Goolsbee, once President Obama’s top economist. These myths also paralyze the thinking of the current crop of our economic officials and policy makers. Keynes, in his day, wryly described such figures as “Madmen in authority, who hear voices in the air … distilling their frenzy from some academic scribbler of a few years back.”
The quaintest of the anti-gold-standard myths is that the gold standard is an atavism, a holdover from an expired age, like buggy whips, ox-carts and clipper ships. Some economists, such as gold’s most flamboyantly persistent (and stubbornly uninformed) critic, Paul Krugman, bitterly cling to the pretense that contemporary macroeconomics is “scientific” while gold a “barbarous relic,” with its proponents “adopting a pre-Enlightenment attitude toward monetary and fiscal policy — and why not? After all, they hate the Enlightenment on all fronts.”
Krugman’s pretensions and accusations demonstrably are unsound. In my review of Forbes.com editor John Tamny’s Popular Economics I reprised Prof. Reuven Brenner’s astute observations in Asia Times on this subject:
That critique by Hayek, a fellow Nobel laureate, did not discourage Prof. Krugman from facilely dismissing Austrian, i.e. neoclassical, economics as “a theory that I regard as being about as worthy of serious study as the phlogiston theory of fire.” Prof. Krugman thereby put himself into a terribly awkward position.
Joseph Priestley, an authentic scientist, is credited with discovering oxygen. This was the discovery fundamental to the debunking of “the phlogiston theory of fire.” Priestley, however, expressed, in his Lectures on History and General Policy, erudite appreciation of the workings of the classical gold standard.
The gold standard, as Gilder trenchantly shows, is eminently scientific and, thus, modern. It is macroeconomics that is the pseudo-”science.”
The academic opponents of the gold standard resemble nothing so much as the Wizard of Oz. Iin the movie version of his farewell address the Wizard declaims: “I, your Wizard, per ardua ad alta, am about to embark upon a hazardous and technically unexplainable journey into the outer stratosphere…to confer, converse, and otherwise hobnob with my brother wizards.”
(The balloon, without Dorothy, then drifts upward, the Wizard shouting, “I can’t come back! I don’t know how it works!“ The fundamental things really don’t change as time goes by.)
It adds a delicious dollop of irony to note, as originally posited by the late Henry M. Littlefield in The Wizard of Oz: Parable on Populism that the The Wizard of Oz was a parable of late nineteenth century populism. (Dr. Littlefield, full disclosure, was my collegiate adviser at Amherst College.)
The yellow brick road denoted gold. The — originally — silver slippers alluded to “free coinage of silver.” Dorothy was the metaphorical representative of the American people. That anti-imperialistic veteran of the Spanish-American War, William Jennings Bryan, served as the model for the Cowardly Lion.
History surely will hold the Prof. Krugman to have played the role of defender of the economic equivalent of the phlogiston theory of fire. Real science, which Gilder describes, provides the real antidote to superstitions defended with pyrotechnic propaganda.
Thanks to George Gilder’s brilliant new 106 page monograph, elucidating the monetary implications of Shannon information theory, we better understand the scientific grounding for the classical gold standard. Gilder teaches us how Shannonism, rather than academic shamanism, has the right stuff with which pave ourselves a yellow brick road to a future of equitable prosperity.
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Ralph Benko is senior advisor, economics, to American Principles in Action’s Gold Standard 2012 Initiative, and a contributor to he ARRA News Service. Founder of The Prosperity Caucus, he was a member of the Jack Kemp supply-side team, served in an unrelated area as a deputy general counsel in the Reagan White House. The article which first appeared in Forbes was submitted for reprint by the author.
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