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In the first place, what has simply happened is an increased demand for money on the part of the miser. As a result, prices of goods fall, and the purchasing power of the gold-ounce rises. There has been no loss to society, which simply carries on with a lower active supply of more "powerful" gold ounces.
I agree with this article from the perspective of an individual. Whether a single individual chooses to hoard or not is not important. The money is removed from circulation, prices drop slightly, someone else consumes in their place. Not an issue.
As I said earlier, I completely agree with this principle. When someone uses money as a store of value (hoards it) they are deferring their consumption to later. The hoarded money is temporarily removed from circulation. This causes a reduction in money supply, causing a drop in prices. This drop in prices encourages someone else to consume in the hoarders place.
However, this doesn't work if too many people all hoard all at once. If lots and lots of people all decide to hoard all at once then this causes a massive drop in prices. But people cannot necessarily be encouraged to consume more without limit. An economy that has built up to service 1000 people may suddenly find it only has 500 clients. The economy is now massively overproducing for the needs of the people. It doesn't matter how cheap bread might be, I'm not going to buy another loaf if my family and I are all stuffed full! If I use my car to drive to work, then I'm not going to drive to work and back again extra times just because petrol is really cheap now. So what happens is that the economy contracts to service the needs of the 500 people who are spending money. This means businesses closing, layoffs and all the traditional trappings of a recession.
So what could cause lots and lots of people to all hoard at once? The answer is a deflationary spiral ...
- Previously I was lending my money out at interest.
- Now there is deflation no one can afford to repay money at interest, to find borrowers I'd have to offer a negative rate of interest.
- But why lend money at a negative rate of interest when I can just hold onto it (hoard it) instead?
- This means previously I was investing (lending) and now I'm hoarding.
- This reduces the money supply, causing further deflation. This now encourages other lenders to hoard instead of lend, and so the cycle repeats.
As I said it would only happen when a large enough proportion of the money was being lent into circulation rather than being spent into circulation.