Just my 2 paisa worth of opinion.
The perils of gold monetisation scheme
I believe government has no business to do business. The focus should be on Minimum Government but Maximum Governance.
- Narendra Modi
All the policies implemented in the various spheres have clearly shown Prime Minister Narendra Modi knows what the common man problems are. The efficacy of the various economic programs like 'Pradhan Mantri Jan-Dhan Yojana' or 'Mudra Bank Project' will be noticeable within a reasonable time frame. And unlike many, on either side of the political divide, who would like to proclaim its success or failure, this write up is not to prove one side is correct or not. The earlier governments being profligate ensured the hand-to-mouth conditions of the majority of the population persisted. Implicit threats like 'Garibi Hatao' made no inroads into the poverty trap that the poor Indian found himself in. And with an implicit agenda of improving the life of the common Indian, Mr Modi got the mandate the nation desired to ensure the years of neglect were reversed.
The Modi led government has inherited multitude of problems but I would like to concentrate on the economic aspect of these problems. Modi being a shrewd Gujarati understands business perhaps a bit more than many of us. He understands the sustainability of any economic reforms depends on the solid foundations on which these reforms are based. And among many new policies implemented is the old wine in a new bottle – The Gold Monetisation Scheme
The objectives of this scheme are three-fold
1. To mobilize the gold held by households and institutions in the country.
2. To provide a fillip to the gems and jewellery sector in the country by making gold available as raw material on loan from the banks.
3. To be able to reduce reliance on import of gold over time to meet the domestic demand
With the huge current account deficit, it has always been tempting for any government to blame gold imports as fundamental cause of the problem. And they are partially accurate. In India, gold demand and the petroleum demand is price in-elastic. To circumvent the deficit in the current account multitude of schemes, ideas, plans have been floated which selectively target the gold market in India. Needless to say most have failed. And there is a very good reason why they have failed. The rampant inflation, unavailability of credit, under-developed banking sector could be a few causes. But among many things Gold is a bell-weather of the trust deficit of the populace with regards to the government.
We are already in a international economic turmoil which was until 2008 restricted to the Anglo-Saxon world. We are staring at it's the final collapse which is being brought about a quantitatively eased, qualitatively poor fiat money generated asset boom . And in such an environment, desperate investors are seeking monetary returns to compensate for the risks they face. But this problem has a solution. The solution is not gold standard or a gold backed currency or a Gold plus Special Drawing Right (SDR). The solution is GOLD. Or more specifically gold which is demonetised.
The wish to monetise gold scheme is the main reason why this gold monetisation scheme is going to fail.
The concept of Money
Money broadly is a mental concept. I get a cow from you and I pay back in milk over time. You get a brood of chickens from me, I hope to get a few eggs regularly. In the past, on a ledger somewhere this transaction may have been recorded, not as a cow or a chicken. But as gold. No gold was exchanged but to prevent the double coincidence of wants we recorded it as gold i.e. 1 gold coin for 20 chickens or 1 gold coin for a cow. This permitted a trader to not rely on barter exclusively and still get goods that he wanted without having something in return.
Money concept is further sub-divided into 3 aspects -
1. Its a unit of account
2. Its a medium of exchange
3. Its a store of value
Over centuries money has lubricated the trade. Modern money has served the 3 functions fairly well. However, we cannot fail to notice the store of value function of money is failing. As inflation reduces the purchasing power of the rupee note, we are forced to risk our hard earned money in the stock or bond market, without being aware of the enormity of risks. We are mainly savers. We want to save our hard earned money without risking it through inflation or via a money manager in stocks or bonds. We have been conditioned by the media to believe we are investors or speculators. We would want our money to remain honest. If you follow some talking heads, usually of the left bent they will say that money should remain honest. But what exactly does that mean?
Gold was demonetised globally in 1971 by the closure of the gold exchange standard by US president Nixon. As the economic troubles worsen, there will be even shriller cries to back currency with gold. Or even a SDR – Special Drawing Right. As they say – once bitten but twice shy.
The concept of Marginal Utility
Karl Marx proposed the Labour Theory of Value. According to this theory the value of a particular good depends on the cost of labour required to produce it rather than the utility of the good. This theory permeates mainstream thinking in economics today. Karl Marx's ideas have been consigned to the dustbin but his economic theories are considered sacrosanct by the right (and left) wing parties in the Anglo-Saxon west ergo to the rest of the world too. Most of the Marxian ideas were in synergy with the economic ideas of Adam Smith. The problems with this theory were constructively challenged by a lawyer called Carl Menger who came up with an elegant Theory of Marginal Utility. According to this theory, every good has a value independent of its usage and the value can differ depending on the usage.
Let me explain. If I own a very expensive German car, I can use it to go to work or play in comfort, style, elegance. It will give me all the enjoyment that a modern car could/should give. I can use this car for 30 days of the month and derive the same enjoyment. According to the Labour Theory of Value (LTV) the cost of this fine German car is Rupees 2 crore. After all its one of the fine pieces of German engineering! They have used some fine things and skills to make this machine! Now if I buy another identical car and use it exactly like the first one, the marginal utility of the first one has reduced by half. If I buy 1 of these cars for every day of the month, the marginal utility of each one decreases proportionately. However, the cost will still be Rupees 2 crore for each car.
Now look at gold from the same perspective. Gold is and has historically been the most effective store of value. For rich or poor, for a king or a pauper, gold acted like the best money. And in the earlier era, when lifespans were short, those who came into gold used to trade it for something useful. Gold being easily acceptable to everyone, attracted the easiest trade.
If I buy 1 ounce gold coin for rupees 28000 and put it in my personal locker, it stays there acting like a store of value. If I buy a second gold coin and put it next to the 1st gold coin, it still acts like the same store of value like the 1st coin. According to Marxian LTV, I have wasted rupees 28000 on the 2nd gold coin. After all that gold is lying idle. However, according to Mengerian marginal utility theory, I am adding to my purchasing power. Adding another 28 gold coins to the earlier coins does not reduce the marginal utility of the 1st gold coin. As the main function of the gold coin is to just sit the 'idle' and act like a 'timeless' store of value.
The relevance of the Marginal utility to Gold Monetisation Scheme
The 2013 report
https://rbidocs.rbi.org.in/rdocs/Public ... 012013.pdf by RBI titled '
Report of the Working Group to Study the Issues Related to Gold Imports and Gold Loans by NBFCs' sum up their finding as follows;
“There is a need to moderate the demand for gold imports, as ensuring external sector’s stability is critical. But, it is necessary to recognise that demand for gold is not strictly amenable to policy changes and also is price inelastic due to varied reasons. What is critical is to ensure provision of real returns to investors through various financial savings products. What is also relevant is the need for banks to introduce new gold-backed financial products that may reduce or postpone the demand for gold imports. The Working Group believes that providing real rate of return to investors through alternative instruments holds the key to reducing the excessive demand for gold. Meanwhile, there is also a need to increase monetisation of idle gold stocks in the economy for productive purposes. As of now, there appears to be no close substitute to wean away investors’ attention from gold. Investors’ awareness and education is important, in this context, to channel the investment to gold-backed financial products. Banks and NBFCs may continue to deliver gold jewellery loans, which monetises the idle gold in the country. The gold loan market has grown well in recent years. It is time for consolidation of the operations of the gold loan NBFCs. The gold loans NBFCs need to transform themselves into institutions free of complaints, have proper documentation and auction procedures, with rationalised interest rate structure and have a branch network that is fully safe and secure. Gold loans NBFCs’ linkage with formal financial institutions may be reduced gradually. Such transformation ensures the gold loans NBFCs’ future growth more robust, besides making them a contributing segment to the financial inclusion process.”
As we can elicit from the above paragraph the government through the gold monetisation scheme wishes to officially enter into the gold loan business by trying to eliminate the non bank financial companies. NFBC's currently offer loans with gold as a collateral. It might be not as well regulated as it could be, but its very efficient. They wish to monetise the so called idle gold that most Indian families and temple institutions own. As stated early, the gold demand in India is price in-elastic. Raise the price of gold from 28000 per ounce to 56000 per ounce, the average Indian will still buy it.
The general public knows if they deposit their gold jewellery (usually stree-dhan), it will be melted, assayed and added to a general pool. The government has not informed the true cost of assaying gold that is deposited, as assaying costs are quite high irrespective of the quantity of gold. Opening multiple assaying centres is mooted as a solution, but it still does not address the problem of the idea that gold will be melted and added to the general pool. It's given that the interest rate payable will drop substantially after assaying costs are added. The government has also not explained how it is sensible to pool gold which is currently held by many families independently into a large single bar. If these families want to redeem their deposits, even after taking into account substantial premature exit fees, a big bar cannot be melted that easily. And in case of severe economic turmoil where the banking activity ceases, what guarantees does it provide that gold will be available. If the main purpose of the gold monetisation scheme is to reduce gold imports thus reduce the Current Account Deficit, does the government wish to provide the gold deposited by gullible folks to the jewellers so they can sell it back to the same people?
Concluding remarks
Over generations, the Indian housewife has understood the role of gold and she has subconsciously imbibed the concept of marginal utility. She might be well educated or might not have attended much of schooling, but she understands what gold is. The west describes Indian attraction of gold as 'tradition'. That’s inaccurate. It is the consequence of generations of empirical research. Gold is best if its owned and held in possession rather than sold or leased for the sake of interest. The gold monetisation scheme is in my humble opinion a scheme which could impoverish people. Though it intends to address an essential economic issue which plagues the national exchequer, the unseen consequences of this scheme could lead to some serious legacy issues for the current Modi led government potentially making this government unelectable in the future elections.
Ludwig Von Mises sums up my argument well-
We are told relentlessly by the mainstream media that politics is the most important thing in the world. We must constantly decide which politicians to support, which government programs to debate, and how to vote. In fact, real change is brought to society not through participation in the regime's tightly-controlled political games, but through radical decentralization, and the building up of non-state institutions such as families and markets. One of the state's greatest triumphs in the 20th century was the politicization of everything from education to employment to marriage.
To undo this, we must seek to de-politicize our culture, and we do this not through elections and political pageantry, but by building up our businesses and communities where our actions make a real difference, where participation is truly voluntary, and where real wealth can be built and preserved.
The only realistic way to preserve inter-generational wealth is by leaving the gold lying in the lockers or around necks and wrists idle. For gold is never idle. Its traversing time. Alas the neo-Keynesian advisers who dominate the advisory panel of the government do not see this or they choose to not see it. At our peril.
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