Abstract

AbstractThe traditional argument for unbacked fiat money stresses its potential benefits in terms of production costs. While there is an undeniable grain of truth in the traditional cost‐saving argument, actual fiat money regimes around the world are belying it. The Eurosystem, the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan and the Federal Reserve System all operate under relatively high costs. In fact, their operating expenses exceed the estimated costs of a generic fractional‐reserve gold standard. Even when the reserve ratio of the estimated gold standard is increased up to 100% on M1, the operating expenses of these modern central bank systems remain in a similar range. Hence, the cost‐saving argument is illusory in these cases. These results suggest that a return to a money that is at least partially backed by gold might be more efficient even from the vantage point of the production costs of money. The Eurosystem and the Bank of Japan are particularly expensive institutions. Their annual operating expenses as a fraction of nominal GDP are more than twice as high as those of the Federal Reserve System and the Bank of England.

Highlights

  • Monetary policy has become more and more activist since it had been entirely freed from its golden fetters in the 1970s

  • Financial market instability, systemic risk and growing macroeconomic fluctuations are in large measure due to monetary policy interventions that would never be possible in a system based on the principle of sound money developed in classical political economy (Mises, 1953, ch. 21)

  • We look at the operating expenses of four central banks or central bank systems: the Federal Reserve System, the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan and the Eurosystem

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Summary

Introduction

Monetary policy has become more and more activist since it had been entirely freed from its golden fetters in the 1970s. It is shown that the operating expenses of all four of them lie above the lower-bound benchmark for the estimated costs of a generic gold standard derived from Friedman (1960), White (1999) and Garrison (1985).

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