Gulf News

GOLD CAN COME BACK AS RESERVE CURRENCY

Sanctions-hit economies are well within their rights to consider such a move

- By Steve H. Hanke ■ Steve H. Hanke is Professor of Applied Economics at Johns Hopkins University.

How will Iran, Russia, and Turkey react to the plethora of financial sanctions being placed on them by the US? Well, they will do what anyone being beaten with a stick would do: they will try to escape.

An escape is always available. That is one reason why sanctions are weapons used only by losers. Indeed, the escape has been dubbed — by my good friend, mentor, and Nobelist Robert ‘Bob’ Mundell — as the ‘Afghan Effect’.

Following the Soviet invasion of Afghanista­n, the US imposed a grain embargo on the Soviets in January 1980.

With that, American farmers were prohibited from selling grain to the Soviets who had a huge grain deficit.

President Jimmy Carter, on the ill-conceived advice of his National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski, weaponized grain.

In response, the Soviets looked for an escape. They found one in Argentina. Indeed, the Argentines were delighted to cut a deal with the Soviets.

The Argentine farmers sold large quantities of grain, the Soviets obtained a good price, and American farmers were left out to dry. The icing on the cake (read: Bob Mundell’s Afghan Effect) was the fact that the Argentine military junta was handed an enormous benefit on a silver platter. This brings me to today’s favourite weapon of war: financial sanctions. With each passing day, the US Treasury rolls out, or threatens to roll out, more sanctions. We all know about the sanctions that cover Iran like a wet blanket.

We also recently witnessed the imposition of sanctions on Turkey, where the pretence for imposing them was a US pastor who was allegedly not tending his Turkish flock properly. When it comes to Russia, new US sanctions are an almost daily affair.

The weight of sanctions has clearly created great difficulti­es for the Iranian rial, Russian rouble and Turkish lira. Indeed, even in the best of times, these are all halfbaked currencies with long troubled histories. They are all vulnerable to sanctions.

Indeed, their vulnerabil­ity should be viewed as threats to national security.

So, how can Iran, Russia, and Turkey escape the sanctions stick? They could make their currencies as good as gold. This would provide an attractive escape.

Gold is already an internatio­nal currency that holds its purchasing power over time. It is also a currency that is not issued by a sovereign. So, it has no political baggage to carry.

In addition, gold is already widely revered and used in Iran, Russia, and Turkey.

Higher growth rate

In 1997, Bob Mundell predicted that “Gold will be part of the structure of the internatio­nal monetary system in the 21st century.” As has often been the case, Mundell’s prediction might just be prescient.

Indeed, Iran, Russia, and Turkey could, and just might, make Mundell’s prediction a reality. One foolproof way to do that is via gold-based currency boards. Currency boards have existed in more than 70 countries, and a number are in operation today. Countries with such monetary institutio­ns have experience­d more fiscal discipline, superior price stability, and higher growth rates than comparable countries with central banks. A currency board is a monetary institutio­n that only issues notes and coins.

These monetary liabilitie­s are freely convertibl­e into a reserve currency (also called the anchor currency) at a fixed rate on demand. The reserve currency is a convertibl­e foreign currency or a commodity chosen for its expected stability.

For reserves, such a currency board holds low-risk, interest-earning securities and other assets payable in the reserve currency.

By law, a currency board is required to maintain a fixed exchange rate with the reserve currency and hold foreign reserves equal to 100 per cent of the monetary base. This prevents the currency board from increasing or decreasing the monetary base at its own discretion. A currency board system is passive and is characteri­sed by automatici­ty.

Currency boards have existed in some 70 countries. The first was installed in the British Indian Ocean colony of Mauritius in 1849. No currency board has failed.

The “Great Escape” from US financial sanctions for Iran, Russia, and Turkey would be to establish gold-backed currency boards. By doing so, the rial, rouble, and lira would literally be as good as gold.

And from one day to the next, a significan­t gold bloc would be establishe­d. Oh my!

 ?? Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News ??
Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News

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