How Much Will Be Enough?

Mr. McAdoo is an investment advisor residing in Nevada.

In what are turning out to be “the old days,” a special kind of advertisement appeared regularly in many magazines. It pictured an attractive, gray-haired couple, attired in sports clothes, and smiling happily. The caption said, in effect, “I retired with $250 a month, for life”. The clear implication was that, with the proper plan for prudence and thrift, the reader could provide for a comfortable lifetime income.

As years went by, the $250 a month became $350, and then even higher. Obviously, the idea of a future income inadequate to meet future expenses has little appeal. If the ad is still being run today, it is doubtful that any monthly income figure is mentioned at all. No one knows what it will cost to live for a month in 1985, or 1995. The price level, ten or twenty years hence, is anybody’s guess.

For many people, the future has arrived. Those who have retired from their working careers are now relying upon whatever sources of income their previous planning provided. It is a fair guess that very few of those who are now de­pendent on the fruits of their early planning could have envisioned how little their money would buy. An income figure which might have seemed abundant twenty years ago might today be less than adequate.

A money income is almost essential in a modern economy. Dreams of happy self-sufficiency on a picture postcard farm are dreams of the young and energetic. For almost everyone else, an income of money is the sine qua non of survival. With enough money, it is generally believed, people can buy what they need. Such a premise, however, contains one fallacy, and one disquieting uncertainty. Money cannot buy what is not produced and made available for exchange. And it is highly uncertain how much money will be “enough.” While we may have a good grasp of current prices, no one can predict, with any degree of assurance, what prices will prevail even one year from now, much less ten or twenty.

Planning for a future income is seriously hampered by one crucial fault of our money: it is not a store of value. Despite the faith and the law which give the Dollar currency as a medium of exchange, the Dollar has shown a pronounced tendency to lose its purchasing power. Anyone who seriously considers, and tries to plan for his needs for a future money income, must take that phenomenon into account.

There is little evidence to suggest that the adequacy of future income is a prominent concern of the majority of people. Those who think of it at all are subject to continuing reassurance that inflation will soon be controlled, and that prices will not rise at previous rates. Added to the hopes and promises of a more stable price level ahead are built in programs for the production of future income: Social Security, Pension Plans, and Retirement Programs. Further opportunities for future income lie in the individual’s ability to save and invest: bank savings accounts, corporate stocks, life insurance programs, Government bonds, real estate, and so forth. With careful planning, and reasonable thrift, an individual can provide for a future income in Dollars. But the nagging question remains: how many Dollars will be enough? The problem, whether or not we prepare for it, will arise for all those who live to see the future.

Inflation Eats the Principal

It is an obvious, but shocking, fact that, with an inflation rate of 10%, the break-even point on a tax-free investment is a yield of 10%! And even such a remarkable return on a municipal bond, for example, would not provide future income; it would only offset inflation’s 10% erosion of capital.

Given the same inflation rate, a person in the 50% tax bracket would require a yield of 20% on a Government bond, just to stay even. If inflation rose to 15% he would need a 30% return, and would still have no real income.

While someone in the 50% bracket may neither solicit nor merit public sympathy, the problem he faces is even more severe for those in lower tax brackets. The scissors like effect of inflation and taxes inevitably destroys the adequacy of a money income. Planning for the future becomes a scramble to assure the largest possible Dollar income, in the hope that that amount will prove to be enough.

Recognizing the problem, and seeking countermeasures, many people have tried to identify, and acquire, a store of value. They strive to convert capital and income not currently essential for survival into some thing which will at least retain its value into the future. A list of things considered by some to be stores of value would include rare stamps, rare art works, rare porcelain pieces, rare firearms, rare books, rare coins, and rare metals.

Yet, even those who have the means and the inclination to acquire rare collectibles must do so with considerable reluctance. Aside from the downside risks involved, such “investments” have many drawbacks. A rare stamp, or painting, or book can never yield an income. Nor can it, with any certainty, appreciate in value. What is usually construed as appreciation is most often only the reflection of money’s reduced purchasing power. While a calf or a lamb should appreciate in value as it matures, a rare coin or rare metal remains precisely what it always was.

Perhaps equally regrettable to some who seek the shelter of stores of value is the non-productive de­ployment of assets. A rare and valuable painting represents, to some, capital which might under more favorable circumstances be employed in enhancing the productivity of an expanding and success­ful enterprise. The argument may not hold water, but the feeling may be there, nonetheless. Unfortunately for the general welfare, those who have proven their ability to contribute to productivity through successful investment may be the very ones whose attention is diverted to an emphasis on stores of value. Inflation, coupled with taxation, diminishes the incentive to engage in customary forms of investment.

One can only imagine with horror the devastating impact upon our entire economy if a substantial number of traditional inves­tors were to divert their assets into what they considered superior stores of value. Yet, the ravages of inflation upon the real return available through traditional forms of investment tend to direct attention to stores of value. Considerations of future income are of increasing urgency in a period of anticipated inflation. When no traditional form of investment can yield a real income after inflation and taxes, prudent people will look for a way to preserve capital. They will seek merely a store of value; some thing that will hopefully provide the equivalent of a future income.

A Better Store of Value

Every citizen has a stake in securing future income. The question of how many Dollars will be needed to assure an adequate stand­ard of living in the future is not one to be left for future consideration; it is of vital importance now, when plans can be made, and when suitable action can be taken. Hope, or even confidence, that “things will work out” are an unreliable hedge against an uncertain future value of money.

What are becoming, in a restricted sense, popular forms of a store of value are largely beyond the experience, if not the means, of the public at large. Few people could distinguish between the genuine and the counterfeit. What is sorely needed, by everyone who will require future income, is an ideal store of value, equally available to all. Fortunately, the creation of an ideal store of value is within the capabilities of an informed and active electorate: a better money.

Historically, money has served well as a store of value. Indeed, that characteristic has been an essen­tial aspect of a good money. With disappointing regularity, however, governments have either caused or permitted money to be deprived of that characteristic. Through either debasement of coinage or inflation through legal tender paper currency or bank credit, money has periodically been divested of its intrinsic or representative value. The Dollar is presently in that condition.

For more than a generation, fashionable economic theory has held that a money devoid of intrinsic value is not only the equal of, but superior to money which serves as a store of value. Legal tender and credit are defended as being “more flexible,” and free of the “tyranny” of precious metals. De­spite these supposed “advantages”, however, our money continues to lose its value. As history has shown so often in the past, an intrinsically worthless money not only reduces the adequacy of present income, but jeopardizes the reliability of future income. Equally serious are the inescapable attendant problems of social and political discord.

While it would be incautious to predict the economic future for this or any other country, it is safe to say that the future is, at best, uncertain. Past experience of others would strongly suggest that the best money is one which serves not only as a medium of exchange, but as a store of value. Those who are concerned about the adequacy of future income might best prepare for that future by asking the Government to restore the value of money.