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The Golden Revolution: How to Prepare for the Coming Global Gold Standard
 
 
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The Golden Revolution: How to Prepare for the Coming Global Gold Standard [ハードカバー]

John Butler

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Why the gold standard is due for a comeback

A reserve currency can only function as such if there is a general consensus that it provides a stable store of value. Without this trust, money, no matter what form it takes, will be abandoned—either suddenly in a crisis, or gradually over time—in favor of something else. The Golden Revolution looks at how the world is rapidly moving toward some form of global metallic standard, in which money, at least in official, international transactions, is linked directly to gold, silver, or both.

The practical reality of the transition to the coming global gold (or bimetallic) standard is going to be substantially different from the global fiat monetary and financial regime of today. It is not just money that is going to change. The nature and business of banking will also be affected, as will finance in general.

  • Incisive and thoughtful, The Golden Revolution is a treatise on the broad effects of the current and future monetary structure
  • Looks at why the world is headed inexorably back towards a metallic money standard
  • Explores what the transition period might look like, including some historical examples of both orderly and disorderly transitions
  • Examines how the world of banking, finance, and investment, including asset valuation and portfolio management techniques, will work under a future gold standard and which industries, countries and markets are likely to benefit and which are likely to suffer

Full of advice on how investors can profit and protect themselves during this critical time of change, the book knows that those who are prepared will prosper, while those who won't stand to lose it all.

著者について

John Butler worked for over 15 years asan interest rate, foreign exchange, and commodity strategist at major banks around the world before founding Amphora Capital, an independent investment and advisory firm, in London. He has written extensively on financial topics, and his work has been cited in the Financial Times, the Wall Street Journal, and the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, among other publications. He is also the author and publisher of the popular Amphora Report newsletter and is an occasional speaker at global investment conferences. He resides in the English countryside with his wife and four children.


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26 人中、26人の方が、「このレビューが参考になった」と投票しています。
5つ星のうち 5.0 A Golden Book 2012/3/25
By Jman - (Amazon.com)
形式:ハードカバー
Many books analysing the ongoing economic crisis and fallout from the 2008 credit crunch are either overly polemical and anectodal or overly technical and dense. The Golden Revolution falls into neither of those traps. Fast-paced, engaging, touching on history, politics and economics, this is a fantastic and timely read for anyone interested in getting an edge on understanding the causes and predicting the consequences of the current macro-economic malaise. You don't need a PhD in economics from the University of Chicago to appreciate this book, and even if you don't agree with Butler's premise that a return to the gold standard is inevitable -- be it preferably by means of a proactive and managed policy change by the US, or as an emergency US response to a monetary attack by one or all of the BRIC countries -- you will enjoy this book which among other things probes the link between the advent of fiat currency since Nixon's decision in 1971 to end USD gold convertibility and the severe boom and bust cycles experienced since then. The asset value and investment strategy implications of a return to the gold standard are also thoughtfully considered. Notwithstanding its thesis, this book is neither a gold nutter or Austrian School of Economics manifesto, but rather a well constructed historical, monetary and economic argument in praise of a return to the gold standard by an experienced financial markets professional. Don't read this book at your peril!
20 人中、20人の方が、「このレビューが参考になった」と投票しています。
5つ星のうち 5.0 The Golden Revolution 2012/3/26
By Jon David - (Amazon.com)
形式:ハードカバー
The Golden Revolution: How to Prepare for the Coming Global Gold Standard

Chairman Bernanke's recently gave a lecture about gold where he took aim at proponents of the "gold standard" saying that it handicaps the ability of governments to address economic conditions and hampers solving domestic distress. But what the chairman failed to talk about is what actually caused the economic distress in the first place.

John Butler, the author of the "Golden Revolution", examines how a fiat based monetary system where loose monetary policy creates "dubious" credit growth which in turn favours cheap consumption rather than savings and investment is indeed the root of the problem. What the author proposes is a return to a monetary standard that is open and fair, and does not favour a few insiders.

In a series of essays, John Butler in his "Golden Revolution" lays the ground work that offers the reader a road map back to that classic period of a working gold standard where the world saw almost no inflation and the value of a dollar was known to all. The author shows that under a loose monetary system in which central banks and governments have the power to print money and monetize assets of poor quality nothing will change and savings will be destroyed as the value of all currencies are debased. The author rightfully points out that rebalancing worked naturally under a classic gold standard without any harmful intervention.

In one of my favorite essays, John Butler discusses what a positive transition might look like and offers practical advices on how asset valuation and portfolio management would work under that classic gold standard.

As the author points out the world's 40-year experiment with un-backed fiat currencies is thus rapidly approaching its conclusion and we should join the revolution.

First they ignore you, then they ridicule you, and then they want to fight you. Chairman Bernanke's gold lecture and the Golden Revolution shows that the fight has begun!
8 人中、8人の方が、「このレビューが参考になった」と投票しています。
5つ星のうち 5.0 The Golden Revolution is an Important Book 2012/9/11
By Keith Weiner - (Amazon.com)
形式:ハードカバー
There are many books on the market today about the coming collapse of the global dollar-based monetary system. Many of them purport to help the reader "profit" from the collapse(!) Others are filled (just like the blogosphere from which they often come) with dark, conspiratorial whispers, psychologizing of leaders in government and finance, and preposterous ideas about how people actually think and act. They often contain policy prescriptions that consist of doing more of what caused the problem in the first place: politicizing banking and trading with even more regulations, taxes, prohibitions, agencies, etc.

I have not written a book review before now because I think those books are misguided. The nihilistic envy of corporations and banks is a part of the problem and not the solution. The idea that "real estate, stocks, and bonds have had their bubbles and now it's our turn" is nave, at best.

The Golden Revolution by John Butler is not cut from the same cloth.

We have a perverse and self-defeating monetary system today. Without knowing how it evolved, where it came from, and what transitions occurred along the way, it is almost incomprehensible. One can listen to the talking heads on the mainstream media, the strident alternative financial press, or even economists who really understand, and still not understand why the monetary system is the way it is or how it operates. How is one to evaluate whether a failure of regulation caused the collapse of 2008 or whether China-India trade denominated in yuan will threaten the US dollar's reserve status?

Mr. Butler covers the history of what led up to 2008, without dwelling too much on details that will bore most readers. It is important to understand the connection between Nixon's 1971 default on the US government's gold obligations and today's endemic perpetual crisis. Mr. Butler sheds some light on what led up to Nixon's decision. The monetary system today is the product of Nixon's decision and Nixon's decision was the product of an untenable framework that was created after World War II (which itself was the product of earlier decisions, etc.)

Mr. Butler makes the radical (perhaps not to most of my readers!) proposition that the world will end up, one way or the other, on some form of a gold standard. He explores this from various perspectives including Game Theory. He makes a compelling argument, not based on what some shadowy "they" want, but uses a very "Austrian Economics" method. He looks at how each player will react to unfolding events and why they will behave in certain ways.

Human action is not the action of particles of an ideal gas, as modern econometrics presumes. Nor is it the shuffling of sleeping sheep guided by all-knowing shepherds as modern public policy theories would suggest, nor is it accurate to portray the citizens as simply obeying orders they hate strictly under compulsion of a dictator. There is a feedback process between the governor and the governed. Each is pursuing what he defines as his interest. And it is a dynamic system that is inexorably moving somewhere.

I don't think I would spoil a book called The Golden Revolution to say that the system is moving towards gold!

Mr. Butler devotes part of the book to discuss the transition itself, a topic that is not much addressed yet. In a way it's insane: even the enemies of gold must acknowledge that the current system is unsustainable in many different ways and by any definition of sustainability. And yet few of them--or the "goldbugs" either--spend much time thinking seriously and realistically about what the process of change might look like, how it might occur, and how it will impact different people and sectors.

And there is the question: transition to what? Gold is the money of a free market. If one wants the opposite of a free market, i.e. socialism and central planning, then one should be happy for the government to simply print ration coupons for the things it decides that one needs; there is no need for gold. I found a particular pleasure to read Mr. Butler's discussion of regulation and even the very existence of central banks. Why do we need them? Is it even conceivable to live without them?

Along the way, Mr. Butler tackles the Capital Asset Pricing Model, showing how unnaturally low interest rates caused by central banks distort the market's ability to allocate capital. Most people focus on the propensity of prices to rise, and do not think about the impact of the interest rate. If the former can be thought of as a tax, and the latter as something which forces capital out of certain sectors and into others, then it is obvious that distorted interest rates do more damage to the economy. And further, as Mr. Butler shows, GDP is a false measure that is not helpful in understanding the distortion or the consequent damage.

John Butler has had a career at major banks, working in interest rates and foreign exchange. He is on the leading edge of the trend towards re-monetizing gold, being the first that I have seen to report on the Basel and subsequently the FDIC/Fed/OCC proposed rules to allow banks to hold gold as a zero risk-weight asset.

In The Golden Revolution, he has written an important book that should be of interest to any serious observer or participant of the financial system and especially to advocates of sound money.

Keith Weiner is a technology entrepreneur and president of the Gold Standard Institute USA.

He was the founder of DiamondWare, a Voice Over Internet Protocol software company, which he sold to Nortel in 2008. He is an Objectivist who has his PhD from the New Austrian School of Economics.

Keith, who currently trades and analyzes precious metals and commodities, advocates a return to a proper gold standard and laissez-faire capitalism. He lives with his wife near Phoenix, Arizona.
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