Money and Credit : Did it matter to frontier stores that the American dollar was backed by gold? Was there a backstop holding the financial system together?

Money and Credit

First, read the case Money and Credit on the American Frontier.

Additional readings (not required, but recommended by the case study’s author)

Michener, R. (2011, January 13). Money in the American colonies. Retrieved from http://eh.net/encyclopedia/money-in-the-american-colonies/
Schweikart, L. (2001, January 1). The non-existent frontier bank robbery. Retrieved from https://fee.org/articles/the-non-existent-frontier-bank-robbery/
Second, answer the questions below. In your initial response to the topic you have to answer all questions:

People often say that the gold standard is unworkable because there is not enough gold in circulation to back up the value of all the cash assets now stored in banks.

  • Did it matter to frontier stores that the American dollar was backed by gold?
  • Was there a backstop holding the financial system together?
  • Considering that local stores and home-grown banks can organically develop and create their own forms of credit, what good is a national currency, or attempts to connect financial markets beyond the immediate area?

Like credit at a frontier store, Bitcoin has no physical presence, but is merely a string of written characters that represent an account balance.

  1. What similar problems of the availability of cash and credit might new digital currencies such at Bitcoin solve?
  2. If money and financial instruments evolve, what kind of money is best for our society going forward?