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With Willem Middelkoop essay, central bank forum takes a shine to gold

Section: Daily Dispatches

This essay by gold advocate and longtime GATA supporter Willem Middelkoop, author of the 2014 book "The Big Reset," has top position today at the internet site of the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum in London, an organization catering to government and central bank officials around the world. The essay acknowledges the longstanding policy of central banks and particularly the U.S. government to suppress the price of gold in favor of the dollar. That such an organization would not just publish such an essay but highlight it is amazing, an indication that the official sector is moving just as Middelkoop's book outlines -- toward a big reset of the world financial system restoring gold to its place as impartial money for a freer world.

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Toward the New De-Facto Gold Standard

By Willem Middelkoop
Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum, London
Thursday, July 18, 2019

https://www.omfif.org/analysis/commentary/2019/july/towards-new-de-facto...

Last year 22 central banks, situated largely to the east of Germany, bought the largest amount of gold since 1967, the year the London Gold Pool collapsed. The gold repatriations by many European countries of the last few years are another sign that we are reaching the end of four decades of monetary calm. This could bring about the largest monetary changes since the closing of the gold window by U.S. President Richard Nixon in 1971.

... Dispatch continues below ...


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The United States wants its fiat dollar system to prevail for as long as possible. It has every interest in preventing a "rush out of dollars toward gold," as happened in the 1970s. Since then bankers have been trying to exercise control over the precious metal's price. This war on gold has been ongoing for almost 100 years but gained traction in the 1960s with the forming of the London Gold Pool, whose members included the US, UK, Netherlands, Germany, France, Italy, Belgium, and Switzerland.

During meetings of central bank chiefs at the Bank for International Settlements in 1961, the eight participating countries agreed to make available a gold pool worth $270 million. This was focused on preventing the gold price from rising above $35 per troy ounce, as set during Bretton Woods, by selling official gold holdings from the central banks' gold vaults.

However, in March 1968 the pool was disbanded because France would no longer co-operate. This signalled the start of a 13-year "bull market" and sent gold to more than $800 per troy ounce in 1980.

Today Washington may consider it useful to bring back gold to support the dollar. Some U.S. insiders have even been calling openly for a return to the old way of doing things. Neo-conservative Robert Zoellick, the former president of the World Bank, wrote an open letter to the Financial Times in 2010 entitled "Bring Back the Gold Standard."

A 2012 study by the Chatham House gold task force suggested that the metal could be added to the International Monetary Fund's special drawing right. One of the members of this task force was Lord Meghnad Desai, chair of the OMFIF advisers council. During a conference in Dubai he remarked, "We could ask that gold be nominated as part of the Special Drawing Right. That is one thing I think is quite likely to happen. This will be easier if China increases its official gold holdings."

Beijing wants to increase its gold reserves in the shortest time possible to at least 8,000 tonnes. This would put China on par, in terms of its gold-to-GDP ratio, with the U.S. and European Union. It would open the way, should the need arise, for a possible joint US-EU-China gold revaluation to support the financial system.

Beijing must realize that the U.S. could surprise the world with a unilateral gold revaluation. Wikileaks revealed a cable, sent in early 2010 to Washington from the U.S. embassy in Beijing, which quoted a Chinese news report about the consequences of such a dollar devaluation: "If we use all of our foreign exchange reserves to buy U.S. Treasury bonds, then when someday the Federal Reserve suddenly announces that the original 10 old dollars are now worth only one new dollar, and the new dollar is pegged to the gold -- we will be dumbfounded."

In recent years there have been numerous statements demonstrating China's understanding of the "dark forces" suppressing the price of gold on Wall Street. Zhou Xiaochuan, then governor of the People's Bank of China, revealed in a 2009 article that the Chinese recognise the hypocrisy of U.S. policy toward gold: "After the disintegration of the Bretton Woods system in the 1970s, the gold standard, which had been in use for a century, collapsed. Under the influence of the dollar hegemony the stabilizing effect of gold was widely questioned; the 'gold is useless' discussion began to spread around the globe… Currently there are more and more people recognising that the 'gold is useless' story contains too many lies. Gold now suffers from a 'smokescreen' designed by the U.S., which stores 74% of global official gold reserves, to put down other currencies and maintain the dollar hegemony."

Since then China and Russia have stopped buying U.S. Treasuries while adding physical gold reserves.

Clearly gold is making a remarkable comeback to the world financial system. A new gold standard is being born without any formal decision. At least that is how Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, an influential international business editor of The Telegraph, described the ongoing efforts by countries to lay their hands on physical gold: "The world is moving step by step toward a de-facto gold standard, without any meetings of G20 leaders to announce this."

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Willem Middelkoop is a Member of the OMFIF Advisory Board, founder of the Netherlands-based Commodity Discovery Fund, and author of "The Big Reset: War on Gold and the Financial Endgame."

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