Exactly, and I don’t see how using gold is any better than using bread, beer, or a set amount of lead sunk into the sea. It is not the gold or silver which backs the money supply, it is the GNP.
No, but a hand full of silver is much more convenient than a cart full of potatoes, which wil rot if not wanted in barter.
If the money supply exactly kept pace with the GNP, both upwards and downwards, the money would be stable: there would be just enough money to stand in for all the goods and services produced, no more, no less.
The theory of the gold standard was that all international trade be carried out in gold. Thus if your GNP goes up, then goods available for trade likewise increase, so gold koffers are filled, and the money supply grows.
On the other hand, if trade does not follow GNP, then the law of supply and demand will deflate the value of the produce, and prices will fall
As for interest, I don’t see how I or anyone else, should be expected to lend, say, $200,000 to another for the construction of a house, with no compensation whatsoever. How is that just?
I have already explained the mechanics of the Islamic mortgage.
The lender does get his reward, but by a different mechanism, though the result is nearly the same.
In placeof interest, the lender takes a share of the property being financed, starting at 100%, and decreasing pro rata to 0% as the principle of the debt is repayed.
As he has a share in the title of the property, he is entitled to due rent, which is calculated pro rata, according to his remaining share in the title. The nominal rent is set according to normal levels of rental.
Thus the lender does receive payment for his risk, but it is not for usury of the money, but for rent on his share of the property.
The actual amount of money, paid, in respect of the outstanding debt will be essentially the same, but this is for the service of hire, which is Lawful, and not for usury which is not.
Keep in mind the parable in which Jesus praises the servants who invested and increased the money they were given, and condemns the one who buried it in the ground, obtaining no return.
I also recall a parable where a servant about to be dismissed for dishonesty, went to further dishonest lengths to secure his place among rogues. Our Lord also praised his wisdom.