Chapter 6
Toward a Natural Monetary System
Since money is but the mathematics of value, there is no
more justification for the nations of the world to have separate
monetary systems than separate systems of mathematics.
It has been said that a communist is a socialist in a hurry,
to which it may be added that a fascist is a socialist dragging
his feet. They all face in the same direction. All groups, whether
they are called radicals or conservatives, progressives or reactionaries,
have turned their backs upon personal enterprise and their faces,
directly or obliquely, toward state dictatorship. All advocate
state intervention in some form or degree.
Adam Smith in his political economy allocated the money power
to the state, and thus he anteceded Marx as a socialist. It is
his followers, unconscious socialists, and not those of Marx,
who constitute the greatest peril to the social order. The Smith
philosophy is taught in all our schools and colleges, and we are
all indoctrinated with it, unaware that in its monetary concept
it is antithetic to the true philosophy of personal enterprise.
The Smith and Marx philosophies are of the Old World, authoritarian.
America, under the democratic ideal, must perfect the personal
enterprise system by reserving to it all three essential factors,
to wit, the means of exchange, the means of production, and the
means of distribution. In the Old World structure of the enterprise
system, monetary power, the keystone of the arch, has always been
lacking, and thus the temple of personal enterprise has never
withstood the political winds and storms.
"Political economy," the gospel of the so-called free
world, is an assembly of speculations upon the behavior of man
in political subjection. It offers no emancipation. It challenges
no political presumptions, nor does it embody a fundamental concept
of money, the lifeblood of economy. Hence its speculations are
useless, for man's behavior must of necessity differ under a true
monetary system than under a perverse one. An unnatural monetary
system begets unnatural economic manifestations.
How can a free economy work with the monetary system socialized?
As the very name suggests, political economy is an attempt to
compound antitheses. The term is usually applied to the so-called
classical school founded by Adam Smith, but it can be applied
just as appropriately to the mercantilists, the physiocrats, and
others that went before. All take the socialist approach; they
differ on the extent and means of political intervention, but
not on the principle. We search their literature in vain for any
challenge to the basic socialistic doctrine of political money
power.
With the modern world thus educated to think in terms of the
political means of accomplishment, is there hope of salvation?
Professional economists do not find the principle of separation
of money and state in their textbooks, and to espouse it would
require turning somersaults in public. If salvation depended altogether
on reason, therefore, there might be none, for statism is deeply
imbedded in the mores of the peoples of the earth. But it is not
solely upon the rationality of the truth that we must depend;
the irrationality of the existing order is being demonstrated
by the collapse of the political monetary system. As we progress
toward runaway world inflation and all that that signifies, there
will come a public demand for an escape which political action
cannot supply. Private, non-political action alone can provide
a true monetary system to which the peoples of all lands may turn
for self-preservation.
A monetary system is simply a system that facilitates the money
issuing powers of its constituents and accounts for their monetary
instruments. Personal enterprisers, which term includes employees
as well as employers and the self-employed, have in their hands
all the powers for the establishment and maintenance of such a
true and stable system, while governments hold none. The substantive
element of all money ever issued has been supplied by personal
enterprisers, hence it is nothing new to propose that money be
issued by them. What is new is the idea that governments be excluded
from the issue power. Governments under such a system would be
enabled to collect and dispense money that had been created by
personal enterprisers, and they would also be enabled to borrow
such money, but they would not be permitted to undertake the creation
of money.
Whence will come this saving and liberating movement? It might
come through a worldwide effort of superstatesmen of the business
and financial spheres, or it might arise, instead, from small
local action in one or several locales with the humble and modest
purpose of preserving and promoting local trade. In the former
case, a world authority would be set up with a single monetary
unit and overall administration. In the latter case, each locale
would nominate its unit and govern itself until mergers brought
about unification under one unit and one administration.
Any sizable group anywhere, any day, could start a nonpolitical
monetary unit and system. There is no law against it, and no legislation
need be invoked. The legal tender provision is gratuitous window
dressing, for any monetary unit that is not acceptable in trade
cannot be made so by law and, if acceptable, needs none.
Since participants in a personal enterprise monetary system will
have to be drawn from the established political monetary systems,
its success will depend upon demonstrated merit. By the test of
competition, it will have to prove itself worthy of universal
acceptance by traders. Such a system will enjoy no monopoly privilege.
It will entail no political action. Therefore, there will be no
question of majorities or minorities denying to any his right
to trade with whatever medium is preferred by him. If the system
does not prove responsive to the needs and preferences of all
people, it will soon face competition from one or more alternative
systems. Because trade naturally tends to unify and to adopt a
single monetary language, one of these systems, through sheer
merit, must sooner or later become universal.
To avert the utter and complete disorder of a moneyless world,
however, such a system must come into being before the present
expires through total inflation. The present monetary units must
not sink to complete worthlessness before a new unit and a true
one becomes available. Not only must we act while exchange is
still operating under the political monetary system, but we must
also make it as easy as possible to exchange the old currencies
for the new. To do this, it will be necessary also that we exchange
old ideas for new.
The Valun Universal Monetary System
The valun plan for a nonpolitical, universal monetary system
represents a concrete effort to implement a new approach to freedom.
It takes its name from valun, which is the name for any value
unit that is established by a social compact of its users, who
agree to bargain with one another in terms of it.
(Dennis Riness, of Seal Beach, California,
has suggested Riegel as an appropriate name for a new, wholly
nonpolitical monetary unit.—Editors.)
This proposed system will not be the only one devised or tried,
nor need it be the one that ultimately prevails, but it provides
a much needed starting place for thought and action. Free competition
in the marketplaces of the world will be the ultimate arbitor,
as it is in all things where free choice prevails.
The "built-in" features of the valun system have been
limited to those considered indispensable to a successfully working
monetary system, leaving to experience and the process of competition
the selection of operating policies and details. The "built-in"
principles are two:
a) All governments are excluded from the issue power.
b) The power to convert check drafts into currency shall not
be limited.
The first principle, being basic to the whole thesis, needs no
elaboration. The second is necessitated by the distinction made
in the political monetary system between currency money and check
money, a distinction which, as we have seen, puts a purely gratuitous
hazard in the banking business. The political monetary system
imposes artificial restraints upon the banks' ability to convert
any or all bank deposits into currency. This is the reason for
the recurrent bank crises of the past. Bank runs forced banks
to resort to clearinghouse certificates or else fail, even though
they were perfectly solvent but for the arbitrary distinction
between currency and checks. This hazard in the banking business
has been displaced in recent years by the yet greater evil of
legal counterfeit. The banks have purchased so many government
securities that there is practically no possible demand for currency
that they could not meet. A true monetary system, however, must
preclude not only the major evil of counterfeiting, but the secondary
evil of the business cycle as well. Hence the provision for the
full interchangeability of checks and currency.
Let us now look beyond these bare-bones features which would
obtain in any successful private enterprise monetary system, and
envision how such a system actually might work in operation.
Organization of the Valun System
The valun system would be governed on a mutual participation
basis. A board of governors would license the participating banks,
and the board and member banks would be served by a separate service
organization which, like the banks, would be organized and operated
for profit. This basic structure is illustrated in Figure
4.
Figure
4
THE UNIVERSAL VALUN SYSTEM
The board of governors would be a non-capitalized, mutual association
of participating banks in which all members would have one vote.
With the bank stocks, in turn, being held by personal enterprisers,
the whole monetary system would thus be truly of, by and for personal
enterprise. The banks would pay stipulated fees to the board,
and any surplus accruing would be redistributed among the banks
in proportion to their volume of valun business, probably with
check clearances being the criterion.
The board would license new and existing banks to operate under
the system, without distinction as to nationality or the monetary
unit in which the latter normally transacted business. Valun banking
would require merely a separate set of books. The operating licenses
would stipulate rules of practice and provide for periodic examinations.
Through its control of the name valun, the board would guarantee
adherence to uniform standards by all banks in the system. The
board would also authorize the printing of bills and minting of
coins and provide for surveillance against counterfeiting of valun
currency.
A chief responsibility of the board would be with respect to
credit policy. The board could set what it deemed to be the most
conservative policy and provide therefor a minimum percentage
to be charged for loss insurance, and from there up graduations
of more liberal policies, with appropriate percentages for loss
insurance for each. Thus there would be no more need for standardizing
the basis of credit in the valun system than in the present banking
system. Each bank could choose its own credit policy. The appropriate
loss insurance percentage would then be added to the check clearing
charge made to the customers. In this way, customers of the various
banks would pay more or less as the policy of their bank was less
or more conservative. The insurance fund thus set up against defaults
would be held by the board, subject to draft by any bank to cover
any "loss" from credit default.
The service organization would be a profit corporation with capital
adequate to promote the adoption of the system by banks and their
depositors. In addition to negotiating licenses for the board,
it would supply the banks with checks and other forms required
by them, as well as any mechanical equipment desired. It would
also supply valun currency in bills and coins, as authorized by
the board. In view of the national and international potentialities
of the valun system, it can be seen that the service organization
would have the possibility of becoming a very profitable enterprise,
expanding both in capital and income with the growth of the valun
system.
The function of the banks would be to administer, for an appropriate
service charge, the mutual credit of their account holders. The
banks would provide credit facilities for the issuance and redemption
of valuns by personal enterprisers and would clear checks and
render other appropriate banking services. There would, of course,
be no interest charge for lines of credit, since the banks would
take no credit risks. Traders to one another would extend the
credit, and the banks would not be involved except as administrators.
Hence, under the valun system, credit would be free, but not
printing, bookkeeping, insurance and other expenses; service costs
would be paid for by the account holders. The small percentage
charge stipulated by the board of governors to set up reserves
against credit "losses" might range from 1/20th to 1/10th
of a percent per month. Thus the valun system would save business
the tremendous sums paid in interest under the speculative political
monetary system.
Parity Provision
As noted, each bank would adopt and pursue its own credit policy
under an insurance agreement. Hereunder a base, or minimum, premium
rate would be charged, subject to increase according to that bank's
"loss," or charge-off experience, the board, of course,
reserving the right to determine what constituted a charge-off.
Under this arrangement, all valuns issued through all banks would
be of equal validity. The insurance rate would compensate for
all charge-offs, and the cost of insurance would be reflected
in the charges for banking services. Thus, no matter how many
banks were authorizing the issuance of valuns, nor wherever in
the world their borrower-issuers might be, there could be no variation
in the worth of valuns.
In other words, every issuer of valuns would be practically underwritten
by the account holders of his bank, through the provision of reserve
percentages adjusted to the "loss" experience of each
bank. The board of governors might, for example, set a median
rate of 1/10th of one percent per month on debit balances, and
then raise or lower this rate in accordance with the experience
of each bank. Since these reserve percentages would affect the
service charges of each bank, competition among banks would tend
to deter laxness in the administration of credit. This credit,
it will be remembered, would be based upon the debtor's potentiality
of placing in the market, at the market price, the commodity or
service that he dealt in, and not any specific, price-pegged commodity.
This insurance feature might better be called the parity provision.
Unlike the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, its purpose
would not be to insure depositors against default of the banks,
but rather to preserve the parity of valun issues emitted through
the various banks.
How much money might the banks permit each issuer to issue? As
much as he could redeem, which means, as much as he might need
to get a turnover in his business. This, admittedly, would vary
with different lines. All lines, taken together, average about
four turnovers a year. Thus, roughly speaking, business would
need an issue power sufficient to span three months. This question
will be dealt with more fully under "Credit Limits"
below.
There would be no need for valun currency at first, because all
existing currencies would be purchasable with valun checks at
the going rate of exchange. When these currencies became so depreciated
as to be inconvenient to use, then valun currency in bills and
coins would be made available. These bills and coins would be
uniform the world over and would be made of the cheapest serviceable
material, without any suggestion of intrinsic value. Such currency
would bear the certification of the board of governors and would
be available from banks by check requisition, its author being,
of course, the check writer from whose check it was converted.
Credit Limits
The major policy question to be resolved in valun banking would
be the matter of credit limits, i.e. how much should the enterpriser
be permitted to issue (to take goods and services out of the market)
before being obliged to cancel out an equal sum (to recapture
by sales). This could be worked out on the basis of the needs
of various trades and professions, rather than passing upon the
applications of each member thereof. On the other hand, account
holders, once established, might be extended a line of credit
based on a percentage of their previous year's business. This
being done, each participant would be authorized to draw checks
against his assigned credit without giving any note or other instrument.
The credit would have no term, but would be in the nature of a
call credit, since the pledge would be to deliver value on tender
of money.
Different banks would have different needs, determined by whether
they were largely agricultural, manufacturing, or mercantile.
The nature of the prevailing industry and the degree of presence
of reciprocating trades would determine the need for debit balances.
For instance, a farmer who sold only once every six months or
year, but who bought continuously, would need a longer debit line
than a shopkeeper whose selling was more closely synchronized
with his buying. A territory where the local product had to be
transported a considerable distance before a sale could be effected
would also need more time than one which was more integrated or
self-sufficient.
The ideal issue policy would be that each customer of the bank
be empowered to purchase equivalent to his capacity to sell and
to emit sufficient money within such limitation. Whether this
ideal could be determined would depend upon a solution of the
problem as to what constituted "capacity to sell," since
value can be determined only in actual exchange and not prospective
exchange. Whether the ideal would need to be attained would depend
upon the actual requirements of the money volume and its relation
to total exchangeable wealth, of which the former can be determined
only by experience and the latter can only be estimated.
Whenever men organize, there is always the possibility that their
association may disadvantage some of their number or non-associates.
If a debit policy is adopted that makes the money supply inadequate
for some or all of the members, the ideal that animates the undertaking
is defeated and conspiracy, in effect, exists against those adversely
affected. For the money issuing function, although it is private,
can be exerted only within the limits of the communal arrangement.
There is an ideal debit policy, but it may have to be worked out
by trial and error.
Launching the Valun
The determination of what value relativity a monetary unit should
represent at the time of its adoption is a matter of choice. It
might be the equivalent of a bushel of wheat, a bale of cotton,
a pound of brass, or any other commodity. On the other hand, it
could be placed on a parity with an existing political monetary
unit which had attained a significance. It would be easier, obviously,
to identify a unit in the public mind by making it at the outset
equivalent to the current unit. Doubtless it was for this reason
that the United States dollar was initiated at par with the Spanish
dollar. For the same reason, therefore, the valun would be initiated
at par with the United States dollar.
This does not imply constancy of parity; it merely means keynoting.
All monetary units are, in practice, established by relativity
to an existing unit. The relativity thereafter is subject to the
issue policy governing each. Hence the valun would have an initial
value of one dollar, which would be equal to the power of the
dollar on the day of the valun's launching. Thereafter, it would
be entirely dissociated from the dollar and independent of any
subsequent fluctuations in value that the dollar might have.
Existing banks presumably could open valun departments without
legal difficulty or political embarrassment, since under the valun
system, they would extend no credit and therefore take no risks.
Banks would merely administer the credit extended by the account
holders to one another. A large bank such as the National City
Bank could make the valun plan a world system overnight by offering
it from all its far-flung branches.
The actual launching of the valun might be accomplished by enlisting
a number of business concerns to pay their bills with valdol
checks, which would offer the payee the option of accepting payment
in valuns or dollars. The purpose of this would be to establish
parity for the initial valun issues. It is expected that sufficient
acceptances would be had that, from that point on, there would
be a money exchange market for valuns in terms of dollars. After
this, the free money market would be the guide to the values of
the respective units and would govern the number of valuns required
to pay for bills rendered in dollars.
The participating banks would open valdol accounts upon request,
against which the holders could draw valdol checks. The valdol
account would honor the payee's preference of payment in either
valuns or dollars or both. In the case of a shortage of either
valuns or dollars in an account, and there being an adequate balance
of the other, the bank would be authorized to sell a sufficient
amount of the long unit on the money market to offset the deficit
in the short unit.
Valdol checks are proposed merely as an initial expedient. They
would give non-valun account holders the option of accepting either
valuns or dollars. Because of this option, these checks would
be usable by participating banks in payment of any bill. This
would extend invitations far and wide to others to become members
of the valun system. Between valun account holders, however, such
a form would not be needed, and a single-unit valun check would
be used.
The face of the valdol check would carry spaces for the tender
of either valuns or dollars, or half in each, and a place for
the payee to state his preference and to add his signature. For
the information of the recipient, the back of the check would
carry the following notice:
After stating your preference and signing on the face of this
check, deposit in the regular way if your bank carries valdol
accounts. If it does not, write your name and address here (space)
and mail to us (name and address of issuing bank). We will immediately
send signature card and, upon receipt thereof, will mail you
a valdol checkbook.
Thus prospective valdol account holders, no matter where located,
could bank by mail should there be no valdol bank in their locale.
The Money Exchange Market
All political monetary units are inflated and growing more so.
There is no sound unit to which uneasy money can take flight.
As inflation progresses, many will flee from the dollar into property,
but it is exchange that produces income, and not the holding of
property static. As the many retreat into a static situation,
the volume of product will drop, thus aggravating the general
inflation problem. The true and ideal accomplishment in an inflationary
movement, for the individual as well as for society as a whole,
is to keep active in exchange and thus produce income. Yet in
order to continue in business without grave hazard, one must switch
his exchange commitments to a stable monetary unit and convert
his reserves and working capital to such a unit.
The valun, having no inflationary element and being secure against
any, would naturally be desired by both the holders of idle funds
and by active businesses that wanted to avoid the destruction
of capital and profits. Since no valun could be issued except
by a producer in the market, no inflationary units could enter
into circulation, and the unit would remain stable. The valun
user, therefore, would escape the storm; he would not be tossed
about on a sea of confused costs and prices. Through the money
quotations of the spot market, current remittances could be determined
by translating dollar obligations into valuns. Through the futures
market, manufacturers, importers, and exporters would be enabled
to hedge against the inflationary decline of all national monetary
units.
One of the most vexing problems of business is the difficulty
of adjusting wages to the decline of the monetary unit. These
troubles would be eliminated by employers paying wages with valdol
checks. The employee would have his salary or wage stated on his
check in both valuns and its equivalent in current dollars. Moreover,
given the option to receive their pay in valuns, labor would not
have to strike for cost-of-living raises. As inflation raised
the dollar cost of living, each valun would purchase an additional
corresponding amount of dollar currency.
With the exception of those who had joined the valun system and
who thus, by mutual consent, were using the valun, pricing and
billing at the outset would be in dollars. As the system spread,
however, more and more business would be initiated in terms of
valuns, first by manufacturers, then by wholesalers, and finally
by retailers.
Once the valun system had started in the United States and the
international money market had begun valun trading, check forms
appropriate to the currencies of other nations, such as valmark,
valpound, valfranc, etc., would be provided. As stated, between
valun account holders, valun checks would be used for international
as well as domestic payments.
As valun banking spread in this manner, the implications for
world trade would be far-reaching. Since the valun would be a
universal unit, it would be as much domestic to a nation as would
be the unit of that nation. It would be issuable by the citizens
of any nation, either through an internal bank or through one
beyond the national boundaries. Thus the present obstructions
to international monetary exchange would be removed. With monetary
exchange operating internally between the national unit and the
valun, the limitations on exchange between national units would
no longer be restrictive of trade. Exporters and importers could
operate with valuns. The valun would thus ameliorate trade restraints
—even if the national restrictions upon exchange between national
units continued.
For these various reasons, therefore, it is believed that the
valun would immediately take its place in the world as the monetary
criterion, that the dollar would sell at a discount in valuns,
and that all other units would be affected in relation to their
dollar exchange value.
Universal Liquidation
It might seem impossible to liquidate the extant astronomical
numbers of units of money by means of valuns, a unit that would
have to start from scratch and that, at the outset, would be infinitesimal
in volume. But the problem seems otherwise when we remember that
money springs out of exchange, and not vice versa.
If the seller stipulates the unit that a transaction is to be
expressed in, the buyer must provide payment accordingly. If he
has bank credit in the stipulated unit, he creates the desired
units. If he does not have the required bank credit in the unit
stipulated, he uses available funds to buy the desired unit. Any
unit that is not entirely worthless will buy any other unit at
the market price.
Thus, demand for valuns would always be met by supply, either
by bank credit in the purchase of goods or services, or by purchase
of existing valuns by conversion from other units. As demand for
valun bank credit increased, so would facilities therefor, either
by expansion into a wider territory by the banks that already
offered valun credit, or by new banks nearer to the locale of
demand.
By the same token, the supply of valuns would never exceed demand,
even though there would be no credit limitations imposed upon
member banks. The banks would be free to use their discretion,
with the sole proviso that their parity insurance rate would be
upped or lowered in accord with their loss experience. But with
the freedom allowed valun bank credit, one must not visualize
an irresponsible surfeit of valuns, for money can be issued only
when it is bought into existence by a seller. To establish bank
credit does not constitute issue. Issue is not effected until
a tender has been accepted in exchange for value. In other words,
money, to be issued, must be bought into circulation either with
goods or services or by delivery of money of another name, which,
being money, is a claim for goods or services. No issuer will
issue money except for market value, and each, in turn, is under
necessity of bidding for it to remain in business. Thus would
the competitive system tend to maintain the parity of the valun
unit both during and after liquidation of all political monetary
units.
When May the Valun be Expected?
To put the valun theory into practice, it is not necessary to
expand the number of theorists. It is no more necessary for men
generally to understand the science of money than it is for them
to understand the science of any other utility. Given a sufficient
number of traders to participate initially, it will take only
a few directing individuals to put the system into operation.
These numbers of traders are as indispensable as the few theorists,
however. One might understand the theory of baseball, be familiar
with all the rules, have the diamond, the bats, the balls and
gloves, but there would be no game until there were eighteen participants
—nine on a side. Likewise there must be many times nine buyers
and an equal number of sellers before the game of exchange can
be played.
The simile may not seem a good one because the players of ball
must be experts, while to predicate exchange upon expert participants
would seem to be hopeless. Expertness in monetary exchange, however,
does not imply comprehension of the theory of money. It means
expertness in making up one's mind on what is wanted and what
it is worth. Every person has this expertness. However much we
may hear of super-scientific money management, there is no money
management, just as there is no money creation, except by the
buyer. Money management means spending for self gain, nothing
more and nothing less.
To whom shall we look to start the valun? We must look to employers,
for as we have seen, it is the buyer and not the seller who creates
money. The common man begins his exchange activities by selling
his services. He must do this to live, since he cannot apply his
services directly to fashioning all his necessities. His psychology
is really a buying psychology, since his selling is but the means
of his buying. He visualizes the things he needs or desires, and
hence, mentally buys before he sells, but chronologically he sells
before he buys. The bit of paper or metal that intervenes between
the sale of his services and the purchases of his wants, he calls
money—if it works. He gives no further thought to the
matter.
The first buyer in the chain of exchange is the employer.
Therefore we must look to employers to start the valun, and employees
have the right to expect it to be trustworthy. Employees will
repose confidence in what employers profess to be an honest medium
of exchange, and they will underwrite that medium with the basic
commodity, the mother of all wealth, namely brain and brawn and
sweat. If no one cheats—and in the valun system no one could
cheat—the currency will circulate freely without popular
understanding of the theory of its being. Let us understand clearly,
therefore, that while we need numbers, we do not need understanding
numbers. We need no educational crusade. We need but to comprehend
the simple acquisitive instincts and how to serve them.
|