by donshan » Tue 22 Nov 2005, 14:24:16
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')I'm also more than willing to be shot down about the idea of a metals/ no usury sustainable monetary system. But I don't think its due to the fact that there is limitless precious metals in the earth. Furthermore, in a powered down world, it will be increasingly impossible to mine at the level we are doing today. In essence we are dealing with a finite supply of a substance that we could base a currency on. A finite and knowable amount of currency can be the basis for a sustainable economy. (But I'm open to other suggestions).
I think the premise of continued exponential growth clearly defines the endpoint, as Dr. Bartlett so eloquently illustrates in his lectures. I may not remember the his exact numbers, but the drift of it goes like this--- " If you take the current world population growth of "just" 1.3% per year in about 750 years you have one person per square meter of land space on earth, and in about 2500 years the weight of humanity exceeds the weight of the earth". Clearly this is impossible, so something has to give. The best case scenario is a slowdown in growth of everything from population to use of resources with a manageable decline. Dr. Smalley sort of goes this direction, but that will take some miracles of technology to supporting everyone on earth with a fair allotment of solar electricity.
The problem is what CEO of a corporation, any Mayor, Governor, Congressman, Senator, President, or their equivalents in any other form of government can get elected on a platform of " I am laying out my plan for lower growth, lower profits, lower wages, and lower employment, and as Churchill did in WWII " All I can offer you is Blood, toil, sweat, and tears"? That is what is needed, but it can't happen until like Churchill's era, a major crisis is recognized and denial is no longer possible.
Once the crisis is recognized by and becomes the majority opinion, the politics change. People who have been preaching a long term sustainable society are suddenly popular, and are selected as leaders ( Just as Churchill replaced Chamberlain). Society begins move in a new direction.
I think that is what will happen with our fiat money system. I am dumbfounded by explanations that there is "no problem", importing about 60% of our oil, and paying for it with paper IOUs. Something will break. Only then will some other monetary system such as Gold be acceptable again.
A good introduction to the history of the Gold Standard and pros and cons, is at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_standard
During the 1800s, and up to the Great Depression the Gold standard too, produced its share of misery among many peoples. One problem was that when a government had to send gold to another country to settle accounts, they had to contract the paper money in the economy. This contraction of money created a severe contraction in the economy and dropping prices, and increased unemployment. It was regarded as "bad".
If however, once the majority recognize we NEED to contract our use of the earth's resources, maybe something like a gold standard will be once again be needed to use monetary policy to force a world contraction on a slowly managed rate, recognizing that the only alternative, will be a crash.
Note added:
A new monetary standard does not have to be gold, which has the problem of needing energy intensive mines to increase the amount of "money" available and energy may be too precious for that. At one time the prospectors and gold rushes "created" new money. In the era of declining energy it might be useful to tie money in some way to an energy standard, (but I have not thought it out). If energy is a scarce item, those who work to create more of it get rich, just like the gold prospectors of old, but they help the economy at the same time. The new "prospectors" would be those who put their efforts into solar arrays(for just an example) which would increase energy flows for substantial lengths of time.
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