Inflation is Legalized Counterfeiting

In earlier posts, I have regarded inflation as counterfeiting conducted by the government. This is not hyperbole. It is merely calling an activity its proper name. The Illegal Case To understand this label, let us go over what happens when an ordinary criminal counterfeits money. Suppose these fake tokens are virtually indistinguishable from already circulating monetary units. The criminal and his associates are able to go to the market and buy goods and services at prevailing rates. These people benefit the most: they did not even have to part with anything of value to obtain these tokens. ...

May 26, 2026 · 635 words

Effects of Inflation

Inflation (that is, the counterfeiting of money by the government) has several destructive effects on the economy. It transfers wealth from late recipients of newly issued monetary units to those who receive them relatively earlier. It hurts the ability of economic actors to perform economic calculation. It degrades the quality of goods and services produced in the economy. Furthermore, it causes boom and bust cycles in the economy. Wealth Redistribution The overall effect of the introduction of new monetary tokens is a general increase in price levels. But this effect is neither smooth nor instantaneous. Not everyone acquires an equal amount of these tokens, or at the same time. Also, not all prices rise proportionately, or at the same time. ...

May 25, 2026 · 548 words

How Governments Generate Revenue

Private individuals and businesses must either sell something of value to acquire money or expend time and resources to mine it directly (think of gold mining in the case of a gold standard). Governments, in contrast, do not obtain payment for goods or services they produce; they generate revenues through the seizure of assets. In the past, they might have sent their agents to seize grains, cattle, coins, etc. from people. But in a monetary economy, they simply seize monetary assets, which is a lot easier to do. ...

May 24, 2026 · 290 words

Natural Limits on Free Banking Reserve Requirements

In a free banking system, various banks issue their own banknotes which are redeemable for the gold that they hold. The banks set their policies independently and compete with other banks in the free market. This is distinct from the central banking system we experience today, where a central bank dictates key requirements the chartered banks must obey, and these banks issue a single fiat currency. One important decision a bank needs to make in a free banking system is how much reserves it shall hold on to at any moment to meet the withdrawal demands of the depositors. If the reserves are less than 100% of the deposits, the bank engages in fractional reserve banking. (Setting aside the question of morality of such a system, free banks with fractional reserves have emerged in the free market and operated for a long time in the past.) ...

May 24, 2026 · 480 words

The Immorality of Fractional Reserve Banking

Before discussing fractional reserve banking, let’s go over the concept of full reserve banking. Suppose a bank takes in total deposits worth $100 million from its depositors. The bank promises the depositors that they may withdraw their deposits anytime. The bank, in this case, simply acts as a warehouse for the money deposited, collecting fees from the depositors in return. At any time, all deposited money remains within the bank; and at any time, any or all depositors may come to collect the money they have deposited. This is full reserve banking: all the deposits remain in reserve. ...

May 23, 2026 · 538 words

When Money is Abundant, Everything Else is Scarce

Any amount of money in an economy is ‘abundant’ provided it can be divided and combined according to the needs of the economic actors. That’s not the kind of abundance I’m referring to in the title. I’m instead referring to monetary inflation. More than the absolute stock of money, what’s relevant is the rate at which it is increasing. The Medium of Exchange Problem As discussed in Price and Money, a price is simply the exchange rate between two goods/services. Money is a good that acts as a medium of exchange, negating the need for double coincidence of wants. Due to the prevalence of money, Adam can sell his service to ‘buy’ money, and then ‘sell’ the money to buy goods he wants. This renders unnecessary for the sellers of those goods to desire Adam’s service before Adam may have his wants met. ...

May 21, 2026 · 563 words

Thinking Correctly About Inflation

Central bankers and economic textbooks will have you believe that economic inflation is “an increase in the general price levels.” Due to inflation, your money is worth less than before—its purchasing power lower than it used to be. Capitalism, fall in supply, rise in demand, etc. are blamed. Everything but the main culprit is discussed. This is an instance of exclusionary detailing. Learn to see through the smoke and mirrors. ...

May 20, 2026 · 251 words

Gresham's Law and Price Ceilings

Note that the law applies not just to a particular type of coins, but to the exchange rates between different money commodities as well. Suppose in a bimetallic standard, metal A is pegged to metal B at a ratio of 1:10, but the market value of a unit of metal A is 12x that of metal B. In this case, we have a price ceiling whereby metal A is artificially undervalued, and per Gresham’s Law, will be driven out of circulation. ...

May 18, 2026 · 354 words

Gresham's Law Clarified

Gresham’s Law is frequently oversimplified as “bad money drives good money out of circulation.” This phenomenon has been observed in history whenever debasement of coins has occurred. In such cases, people choose to collect coins with the greater precious metal content and spend the debased coins. Over time, the ‘good’ money, the coins with more precious metal in them, get driven out of circulation by ‘bad’ money, the debased coins. ...

May 17, 2026 · 239 words

Price and Money

A price is simply a ratio of something in terms of something else. It need not necessarily be in terms of a fiat currency. The price of a certain watch may be ten pairs of a certain brand of shoes, or equivalently, an hour of consulting service of a certain expert, and so on. The ratios in terms of some goods become more prevalent due to their characteristics: durability, recognizability, divisibility, scarcity; these goods begin to acquire monetary recognition as individuals start accumulating them for the express purpose of exchanging them (as opposed to consuming them). These goods are traded more frequently than other goods due to their utility as media of exchange. The most traded good, thus, emerges as money, and market participants find it convenient to denominate prices in terms of this money, which, historically, has been gold. ...

May 15, 2026 · 145 words