'Monetary reform' is a government policy reform centred on changes in
banking,
central banks,
money supply, and
monetary policy. It affects how
money is created and destroyed, and what constitutes a reliable measure of
economic growth and
measures of national income.
In the
United States, the
Federal Reserve and
Department of the Treasury are responsible for these functions. Thus the term 'Treasury reform', which is a synonym but one that applies only to such reform of the
US dollar.
In recent years debates have focused on improving the use of currency. These debates have been linked to some extent with the valuation of non-traded goods and social outcomes.
While ensuring the independence from government of the
central bank or the creation of a
currency board are practical monetary reforms that many countries have implemented (e.g.
Bank of England) to combat inflation or currency speculation, many suggest that more radical monetary reform can assist in sweeping economic or social changes.
Many prominent economists have criticised the existing global financial institutions like the
World Bank and
International Monetary Fund and their policies regarding
money supply,
banks and
debt in developing nations.
Many people criticize the fact that governments pay interest for the use of their own money. This leaves the state of a nation's economy susceptible to the interests of private bankers who control the issuance of money through
fractional reserve banking. Many prominent Americans such as
Thomas Jefferson,
James Madison,
Andrew Jackson,
Martin Van Buren,
Abraham Lincoln, and
William Jennings Bryan have favored government issued money. It follows that if a government issues the money, they earn interest instead of having to pay interest, thus circumventing the need for an income tax and not having to accumulate a national debt. Some Governments have experimented in the past with government-created money independent of a bank. The American Colonies used this "
Colonial Scrip" system prior to the Revolution, much to the praise of
Benjamin Franklin. Franklin even believed that it was the efforts of the English bankers to revoke this government-issued money that caused the Revolution.
Abraham Lincoln used interest-free money created by the government to help the Union win the American Civil War. Lincoln called these '
Greenbacks' "the greatest blessing the people of this republic ever had." In America and Britain, however, government-issued money has never been able to gain enough momentum to become an established institution because of the large degree of influence that private bankers have in governments. There is also the Island of
Guernsey in the
Channel Islands which creates its own money to supplement the
British Pound.
There is also widespread criticism of the role of
money GDP as a method of
measuring well-being rather than methods based on
human development theory. See
measures of national income.
Some go further and suggest that wholesale reform of money and currency, based on ideas from
green economics or
Natural Capitalism would be beneficial. These include the ideas of
soft currency,
barter and the local
service economy.
Many theorists (e.g.
Robert Mundell) see a role for global monetary reform as part of a system of global institutions alongside the
United Nations to provide global
ecological management and move towards
world peace.
Some (e.g.
Henry Liu) argue that monetary reform is an important part of a move towards
post-autistic economics.
Binary economics proposes central bank-issued interest-free repayable loans (administered by the banking system) for the spreading of productive (and the associated consuming) capacity, on market principles, throughout the population.
While most mainstream economists favour monetary reforms to reduce
inflation and
currency risk and to increase
efficiency in the allocation of
financial capital, the idea of all-encompassing reform for green or peace objectives is typically espoused by those on the
left-wing of the subject and those associated with the
anti-globalization movement.
Still other radical reform proposals (with utopian objectives) emphasize
monetary, tax and capital budget reform which empowers government to direct its economy toward solutions to economic problems markets do not solve.
A classic example of this is the emerging system of thought known as Transfinancial Economics, or TFE. This claims that direct, and indirect taxation could be abolished, and new non-repayable money could be created responsibly. Hyperinflation would be impossible as this would be directly controlled by advanced computer technology which would allow for flexible pricing necessary for a competative capitalist system. Charitable NGOs could be funded in full, or in part by new-non repayable money where, and when necessary. TFE is still in the process of research, and development, and is starting to attract academia as its social, economic, and political implications are stupendous.
See also
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financial capital
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Debt-based monetary system
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Debt-free money
★
Monetarism
★
Social Credit