NESARA
The National Economic Stabilization and Recovery Act

Monetary and fiscal policy reform that will double the standard of living for every American
within one generation and restore economic and social prosperity across the land.

 
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Currency as Debt: A New Theory of Money
A Practical Application of the Concept of Virtual Wealth
Part 1 of 7
 

Suppose you have $80 in silver coin, which is all the currency in the world, and you spend it producing a valuable product that according to your market analysis should sell for $100. But there is only $80 in the entire world’s economy so you can’t possibly sell your product for more than that. And if you knew that before you started expending your efforts to produce the product, you never would have started production. But without production, the world’s economy collapses. Doom and gloom prevail.

This illustration exemplifies typical micro-static arguments encountered in the study of monetary policy. That is, the idea that the market value of production output cannot exceed the total currency in circulation. The conclusion of that argument is based on two assumptions:

  1. That all commercial transactions are completed instantaneously, and
  2. That a fixed amount of currency limits the size of a commercial transaction.

Both assumptions are false.

You are due a paycheck on Friday as payment for your labor for the week, and at the end of the month your mortgage payment and household bills are due. Both examples quickly expose the fallacy that all commercial transactions are completed instantaneously.

In any realistic economy, currency circulates in the time domain. A single coin might change hands several times in a year. Someone works for you and you pay him $1 for his labor. He uses that $1 to buy food from a third person. She uses the same $1 to buy fuel from you. There was only $1 used in this example but it changed hands three times, generating $3 worth of commercial activity. If every coin in the $80 example changed hands on average 10 times in a year, the $80 in silver coin would support an $800 annual economy. An $800 economy does not mean there is $800 of actual currency in existence.

With this understanding you can now sell a product for $100 in an economy with only $80 of currency in circulation. You could sell your product and agree to accept payment of $5 per month for the next 20 months. Each month you receive the $5 in payment and each month you spend that same $5 back into general circulation. Each month the purchaser of your product earns $5 from the general circulation from which to pay you.

On a much larger scale, Annual Gross Domestic Product, GDP, is the sum of all commercial transactions taking place in a single year. Normally this number exceeds the total volume of currency in the economy. For the United States, a little more than $3 Trillion supports a $9 Trillion economy. That means a typical dollar changes hands—circulates—throughout the aggregate economy three times in a year. If the typical dollar circulated only once every three years, the U.S. would have only a $1 Trillion annual economy. Such examples show that the total dollar volume of commercial transactions each year is not directly related to the total quantity of currency, but to the quantity of currency times its average rate of circulation.

Why are such exchanges possible? Because according to the classical definition of money, money is anything that is used as a medium of exchange. More importantly, money is a psychological creation; a concept; the mental image of that which is used as a medium of exchange. A medium of exchange is an intermediate used during trade or commerce; an expediency accepted in an exchange; that which is used as money in an exchange. Currency is that intermediate “thing” that circulates as a medium of exchange; anything that is in immediate, continuous and widespread use as money.

In other words, people do not exchange money or currency, they exchange wealth. Wealth is ownership of labor, and of anything upon which labor has been expended, whether material or immaterial, which can directly satisfy human wants, needs or tastes. That is, wealth is goods and services (property) owned. The thing used to represent the concept of money merely serves as a temporary claim check for future exchanges of wealth. Currency is the grease that facilitates these exchanges. Therefore, by definition, currency—the thing used to represent the concept of money—circulates as people exchange wealth. Thus, in any economic community, the minimum monetary requirement is enough currency in circulation to satisfy that community’s need to exchange wealth. Fundamentally then, all currencies are backed by goods and services.
 

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