SOUND
MONEY CONFERENCE
"Money is sound when it embodies the
same virtues we all try to nurture in our children: honesty, trustworthiness,
reliability." Dr. Judy Shelton, A Guide To Sound Money,
(2010) Atlas Economic Research Foundation
(October 2015) The Policy Foundation
is celebrating its 20th anniversary as a market-based think tank this
year. The Foundation, as part of the
celebration, is hosting a Sound Money Conference to examine monetary policy in
the 21st Century. The event is tailored to students and teachers, though
everyone with an interest in monetary policy is welcome to attend.
The Conference will be held Thursday,
November 19 at 4:45 p.m. at the MacArthur Museum of Arkansas Military History
in Little Rock. The museum is located
downtown within MacArthur Park at 503 E. 9th Street. The conference is free and
open to the public. Please contact the
Policy Foundation at (501) 537-0825 to make a reservation.
Unconventional
Monetary Policies
The conference will feature a
discussion of unconventional monetary policies including the Zero Interest Rate
Policy (ZIRP) and Negative Interest Rate Policy (NIRP). ZIRP describes monetary policies that set
nominal interest rates at or near zero. The
Bank of Japan established ZIRP as a monetary regime in 1999, with the U.S. following
in late 2008. NIRP describes policies that set nominal rates less than
zero. A NIRP on bank deposits was
established by the European Central Bank in 2014.
Dr.
Judy Shelton on Sound Money
Dr. Judy Shelton has written widely on
the topic of sound money. Her work
includes two concepts that shall be used for purposes of discussion:
·
"Sound money is honest
money in that it accurately conveys price signals and reliably serves as a
store of value."
·
"Sound money is trustworthy
and reliable in that it functions as a meaningful unit of account so
that market participants-consumers and producers, investors and entrepreneurs-can
make informed decisions and rational plans."
Sound
Money and Pro-Growth Policies
Dr. Shelton notes that free markets
need "accurate money. Money should
convey price signals with clarity so that free markets can operate efficiently." One function of money is to serve as a medium of exchange, allowing individuals
"who are strangers to voluntarily carry out economic and financial
transactions with each other."
Another function is to serve as a unit
of account, i.e., a "reference point for evaluating everything that is
brought to the marketplace."
Several benefits of sound money are
identified by Dr. Shelton in her book:
·
Sound
money provides a dependable store of value for citizens engaged in commerce;
·
Sound
money leads to clear price signals for economic calculation, a key to economic
stability;
·
Sound
money encourages the virtue of thrift.
One of the last episodes of unsound
money in the U.S. resulted in double-digit inflation and unemployment
rates. Inflation finally peaked at 13.5
percent in 19801
and unemployment reached 10.8% in 19822 until pro-growth economic
policies advanced by monetarist economists and President Ronald Reagan lowered
both indicators. The link between sound
money and pro-growth economic policies is oftentimes overlooked.
--Greg Kaza
1 Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, Consumer
Price Index, 1913-
2 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics,