Why
gold is money
Historically,
many things have been used as money. Cattle have been
used as money in many societies, including Roman society. That’s where
we get
the word “pecuniary” from: the Latin word for a single head of cattle is
pecus.
Salt has been used as money, also including in ancient Rome, and that’s
where the word “salary”
comes from; the Latin for salt was sal (or salis). The North American
Indians
used seashells. Cigarettes were used during WWII. So, money is simply a
medium
of exchange and a store of value.
Some
things work better than others.
Precious metals have emerged as the best form of money. Gold and
silver
both, though primarily gold.
Aristotle
defined five reasons why gold is money in the fourth
century BC. Those five reasons are as valid today as they were then. A
good
form of money must be: durable, divisible, consistent, convenient, and
have
value in and of itself.
Gold for durability
You
can’t have your money disintegrating in your pockets or bank
vaults. That’s why we don’t use wheat for money; it can rot, be eaten by
insects, and so on. It doesn’t last.
Gold for divisibility
It’s
why we don’t use diamonds for money, nor artwork. You can’t
split them into pieces without destroying the value of the whole.
Gold for consistency
The
lack of consistency is why we don’t use real estate as money.
One piece is always different from another piece.
Gold for convenience
That’s
why we don’t use,
for instance, other metals like lead, or even copper. The coins would
have to
be too huge to handle easily to be of sufficient value.
Gold Value of itself
The
lack here is why you
shouldn’t use paper as money. Moreover, it can’t be created out of thin
air.
Why government print money
Paper
money is an
excellent means for governments to tax people indirectly,
surreptitiously,
through inflation. That’s one reason central bankers love paper money.
These are the reasons why gold is the best money. It’s not a
gold
bug religion, nor a barbaric superstition. It’s simply common sense.
Gold is
particularly good for use as money, just as aluminum is particularly
good for
making aircraft, steel is good for the structures of buildings, uranium
is good
for fueling nuclear power plants, and paper is good for making books.
Not
money. If you try to make airplanes out of lead, or money out of paper,
you’re
in for a crash.
That gold is money is simply the result of the market
process,
seeking optimum means of storing value and making exchanges.