When Michele Bachmann told the Wall Street Journal that she lays on the beach and reads Ludwig von Mises some libertarians perked up, but most of us saw it as a shameless appeal to the first wave of the Tea Party that campaigned for Ron Paul in 2008. Then when she promised $2/gallon gasoline we all rolled our eyes and understood she didn’t know the first thing about Austrian economics. But it’s only appropriate that Ron Paul, who probably mumbles more Mises in his sleep than Bachmann has ever read, be the one to school her. At the Reagan Library/MSNBC/Politico debate on Tuesday the good doctor said,
“I want to address the subject of two dollar gasoline because I can do much better than that. I can get you a gallon of gasoline for a dime... You can buy a gallon of gasoline today for a silver dime. A silver dime is worth three dollars and fifty cents. It’s all about inflation.”
The drafters of the US Constitution recognized the importance of honesty currency and they understood inflation, which is why they wrote,
“No State shall… make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts.” (Article I, Section 10, Paragraph 1, Clause 5)
When Congress and the Federal Reserve increases the money supply (a.k.a. When they sell you) it dilutes the buying power of the money already in the economy. This means that the same number of dollars buy less goods. Prices rise. The buying power of that new money is stolen from the buying power of the dollar in your pocket. It’s an invisible tax that is built into the US monetary system. Increases in the price of oil usually indicate decreases in the buying power of money, not authentic market fluctuations.

















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