Anonymous ID: c40f2d July 17, 2020, 8:03 a.m. No.9987373   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Europe Has Been Preparing a Global Gold Standard Since the 1970s

 

Research reveals that European central banks have prepared a new international gold standard. Since the 1970s, policies that paved the way for an equitable and durable monetary system have gradually been implemented.

 

In my view, the current fiat international monetary system is ending—unconventional monetary policy has entered a dead end street and can’t reverse. I have written about this before, and will not repeat this message in today’s article. Instead, we will discuss a topic that deserves more attention, namely that European central banks saw this coming decades ago when the world shifted to a pure paper money standard. Accordingly, European central banks have carefully prepared a new monetary system based on gold.

 

When the last vestige of the gold standard was terminated by the U.S. in 1971, circumstances forced European central banks go along with the dollar hegemony, for the time being. Sentiment in Europe, however, was to counter dollar dominance and slowly prepare a new arrangement. Currently, central banks in Europe are signaling that a new system that incorporates gold is approaching.

 

If you want to read a summary of this article you can skip to the conclusion.

 

Contents:

 

The Rise and Fall of Bretton Woods

Europe Equalizes Gold Reserves Internationally

Private Gold Ownership Distribution

Setting the Stage for a Gold Standard

Conclusion

Sources

 

The Rise and Fall of Bretton Woods

 

At the end of the Second World War, a new international monetary system called Bretton Woods was ratified. Under Bretton Woods, the U.S. dollar was officially the world reserve currency, backed by gold at a parity of $35 per ounce. The United States owned 60% of all monetary gold—more than 18,000 tonnes—and promised the dollar to be “as good as gold.” All other participating countries committed to peg their currencies to the dollar. Bretton Woods was a typical gold exchange standard.

 

It didn’t take long for the U.S. to print and export more dollars than it had gold backing them, which raised concern about the parity of $35 dollars per ounce. As a consequence, foreign central banks started redeeming dollars for gold at the U.S. Treasury. The vast gold reserves of the U.S. began flowing out and ended up mainly in Western Europe.

 

moar:

 

https://www.voimagold.com/insight/europe-has-been-preparing-a-global-gold-standard-since-the-1970s