Thursday, April 26, 2007

Panama Has No Central Bank

http://www.mises.org/story/2533

For a real-world example of how a system of market-chosen monetary policy would work in the absence of a central bank, one need not look to the past; the example exists in present-day Central America, in the Republic of Panama, a country that has lived without a central bank since its independence, with a very successful and stable macroeconomic environment.

The absence of a central bank in Panama has created a completely market-driven money supply. Panama's market has also chosen the US dollar as its de facto currency. The country must buy or obtain their dollars by producing or exporting real goods or services; it cannot create money out of thin air. In this way, at least, the system is similar to the old gold standard. Annual inflation in the past 20 years has averaged 1% and there have been years with price deflation, as well: 1986, 1989, and 2003.

This is a short essay about the argument that we don't need a "federal reserve" or central bank. It doesn't go into a lot of detail about the pitfalls of a central banking system and fiat currency, but it references them clearly. National financial systems can seem horribly complex - and they usually are, when a government agency, beholden to politicians, instead of shareholders, contols monetary policy. Panama provides a good example of how a free market banking system would work.

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