Thoughts from the Frontline

A Gold Standard?

April 28, 2012

Choose your language

There are times, my friends Michael Lewitt and Dr. Lacy Hunt agreed today at lunch, when the study of economics is best informed by a sound knowledge of history. Indeed, Michael's son wants to follow his father into the finance world, and Michael is starting him off in history. I have spent hours listening to Lacy stroll through economic history, detailing the path of economic thought from Fisher to Kindleberger to Minsky. The last few days have been one of those times when I realized how much I don't know and how much more there is to learn. Not only Lacy and Michael are here in Florida, but a long list of bright minds to learn from. James Rickards, who has recently written the tour de force book Currency Wars, Harry Dent, Doug Casey, Porter Stansberry, Greg Weldon, and John Williams of Shadow Stats, with whom I look forward to meeting (do I have questions for him!). And so many more.

And it is because I simply have to stop, listen and learn (and visit with friends) that this week I will kind of take the weekend off and instead send you one of the more remarkable essays I have read in a long time. It is a speech by Jim Grant to the New York Federal Reserve. The always erudite Grant takes us back in time to the very beginnings of the Federal Reserve, to show us how far we have strayed from the original intent. I really think you should read this. I have perused it several times and intend to read it yet again – and then some more.

Grant argued for a return to the gold standard in the very halls of fiat money! It seems the New York Fed is asking some of its critics to come and speak. I have read some of the speeches, but this is the best so far for several reasons, not the least of which is that it contains some very funny lines. If you find yourself invited to the lion's den, Grant seems to think it is best to make fun of their teeth! You really do have to admire his courage. I think I would be a little concerned that I might be on the menu!

I will make a few comments at the end of his speech and then note some upcoming speaking events in Atlanta and Philadelphia. But let's jump straight away into today's main event.

A Piece Of My Mind

My friends and neighbors, I thank you for this opportunity. You know, we are friends and neighbors. Grant's makes its offices on Wall Street, overlooking Broadway, a 10-minute stroll from your imposing headquarters. For a spectacular vantage point on the next ticker-tape parade up Broadway, please drop by. We'll have the windows washed.

You say you would like to hear my complaints, and, on the…

Discuss This

2 comments

We welcome your comments. Please comply with our Community Rules.

Comments

Kent Schmidt

May 1, 2012, 3:18 p.m.

Once the gnomes at the Fed abandon a system that acts to discover price they cease to believe in markets and trundle down a never ending path that John Hussman refers to as something akin to the game “Whack-a-Moles”. The deeper into the resulting morass they create the greater the cry for “More”! Please have your friend Paul McCulley tell us what the end game is, or at least why Argentina isn’t wealthy.  Kent Schmidt

Joseph Moffa

April 28, 2012, 3:41 p.m.

Probably one of the best articles I have read on this site. I find it amusing that the NY Fed is bringing in speakers that are so polar opposite than the current Keynesian thinking. Although I enjoyed this article here is a better one. This to was a speaker, Robert Wenzel that was asked to speak at the Fed. I find his speech to be a little more to the point and with an Austrian Economics take on the Federal Reserve and the lousy job they have done since inception.
www.zerohedge.com/news/robert-wenzels-david-speech-crushes-federal-reserves-goliath-dream
Probably one of the most shocking speeches ever heard at the NY Fed.
Personally, I would not throw my pearls at such swine.
Joe