JRM wrote:Hi Keith,
RFC has constructed the best of all possible worlds economically speaking. We know that productivity can grow explosively when you can skip steps in the normal evolution of production. We have seen that in Japan, the Asian Tigers, and even China. As long as they were skipping steps in business processing, they could grow twice as fast as the U.S. When they finally achieved parity in technology, their growth slowed down as their productivity was limited by technology that is being created.
The reason that I mentioned that is because the Inner Circle knows what new technology is being developed, and Owl can calculate the growth in productivity. That is on immediate critical technology that the EOC needs. The EOC has also created the academic basis to make new technology available to an open economy. Whether the EOC needs the products the technology make possible or not, investors can decide to use the technology if they believe that they can profit from it.
All of that means that the growth in the GDP should be in the double digits, and stay there as long as the money supply is growing, as long as new products are being produced as older products achieve market saturation, and the consumer spending is based on increases in take home pay verses increases in consumer debt.
In the immediate future some of those condition are not too critical as the government of the EOC is the largest consumer, and the EOC doesn't have to use deficit spending, or increased taxes to pay for goods and services. In fact, the EOC is now in a position make major reduction in taxes that will improve the profitability of all EOC businesses.
So the answer to the gold question would be as much as possible to promote GDP growth without consumer inflation, and/or asset inflation.
James
I believe I will follow Friedman's advice here. He supported the idea of constant and predictable expansion of the money supply. Decide how quickly the gold can be mined and establish a pace for when additional gold coins will be available to the crown.
I would recommend addressing actually supplying economic growth with currency via facilitating increasing the velocity of money. That is improve how quickly money can change hands. The easiest way to do this would be to increase the use of bullion backed notes. So, the House of Ahrmahk would issue zero coupon bonds payable by future gold production. The bonds would be sold at a discount to face value and be redeemed at some future date. Since the pace of gold production is known, the amount of bonds issued can be compared to the future production. This makes it easier to evaluate the Writ's fair measure requirement. How far into the future production Cayleb wants to issue bonds against depends on the growth rate of the economy.
One thing that doing this does is to facilitate circulating currency. The Bank of Ahrmahk auctions the bonds to other banks or investors with sufficient capital to purchase the minimum lot size. Those banks or investors can issue their own, smaller denominated, notes or shares of the purchase. These smaller denominations are easier to use by more people as payments or transfer wealth. The gold will tend to sit in accounts or safes storing wealth while these paper notes will circulate. Gresham's Law suggests this will happen.
The difference between the needs of this fast growing economy will fall mainly on these notes. The more demand for capital the economy engenders, the more quickly these notes will circulate or the more quickly the velocity of money circulates. As the economy slows to accommodate and digest a series of changes, the velocity of money slows. The market does this by increasing/decreasing the interest rate of the discount used to calculate the present value of the bond's face value at maturity. Another benefit for this approach is that as bonds are issued at later maturities, the interest rate associated with the discounts of those zero coupon bonds will form a interest rate yield curve for essentially no risk securities. In this way, by separating the two monetary functions of currency from bullion coins, Charis can make their economy more efficient. That is support a larger economy with a smaller monetary base. The mechanisms for maintaining adjustments will be the velocity of money and the market interest rates.