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How much money, Gold does the world hold?
Published on July 16, 2008 at 11:30
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By Mike Hewitt
This essay compares the money supply of 25 selected economic areas and discusses the ratios between the values of official Gold reserves to outstanding currency.

These 25 economic areas include 38 countries and make up 89.6% of the world's GDP and 65.1% of the world's population. The Bank of International Settlements (BIS) has a link on their website which lists all of the central banks for different countries.

The following charts use money supply data from these official websites. The link to the raw data is at each country's name.

Gold & Money: Defining Supply
There exists variability in the methodology for calculating different monetary aggregates. This makes cross-country comparisons difficult. Money is defined across a continuum from narrow money that includes highly liquid forms of money (money as a means of exchange) to broad money that covers less liquid forms of money (money as a store of value).

In general terms:
M0 refers to outstanding currency (banknotes and coins) in circulation excluding vault cash;

M1 is currency plus overnight (demand) deposits plus vault cash;

M2 includes the sum of M1 and savings deposits (agreed maturity of up to two years or deposits redeemable at notice of up to three months);

M3 is the sum of M2 and repurchase agreements, money market fund units, and debt securities up to two years.

Additionally, not every country publishes all four of the common monetary aggregates.

For instance, the Bank of England does not publish official numbers for M1, M2 or M3. For this article, estimates are made using European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) aggregates for the United Kingdom. These standards are based on those employed by the European Union, of which the UK is a member.

Some countries, such as the United States, do not officially publish M0. So where available, figures for outstanding currency in circulation were used. The US Federal Reserve also ceased publishing M3 data on May 23, 2006. However, various independent sources have continued to publish M3 figures for the US, and one such source is used for US broad money supply.
The money supply levels for each country were converted into US Dollars on July 11, 2008 at the displayed exchange rates for ease of comparison. The last column shows the date at which the money supply data is taken from.

Name of Country
M0 (US$bn)
M1 (US$bn)
M2 (US$bn)
M3 (US$bn)
Exchange (1USD = )
Date Taken
37.7
208.0
459.3
962.0
1.0426 AUD
Apr-08
56.3
114.3
519.2
1,060.8
1.6141 BRL
May-08
49.0
386.6
800.1
1,228.6
1.0114 CAD
May-08
440.5
2,236.2
6,363.0
N/A
6.8552 CNY
May-08
10.6
162.6
211.7
237.3
4.7401 DKK
Feb-08
1,013.4
6,072.7
12,039.9
14,197.4
0.6355 EUR
May-08
139.9
256.6
947.9
949.1
43.200 INR
Jun-08
16.6
39.7
151.9
N/A
9174.3 IDR
May-07
680.1
3,641.4
6,901.6
11,367.9
107.01 JPY
Apr-08
2.7
19.9
80.2
80.2
0.2667 KWD
May-08
38.1
132.0
575.0
606.4
10.310 MXN
Apr-08
8.6
144.3
281.9
N/A
5.1225 NOK
Apr-08
47.4
165.1
283.0
288.2
2.0822 PLN
May-08
153.8
N/A
570.1
N/A
23.412 RUB
Apr-08
19.8
111.6
187.2
224.9
3.7547 SAR
May-08
12.7
52.6
233.9
240.8
1.3607 SGD
Apr-08
13.9
96.2
192.1
235.2
7.7208 ZAR
May-08
56.7
300.7
1,350.1
2,163.5
1000.6 KRW
Apr-08
16.1
222.6
N/A
315.4
6.0088 SEK
Dec-07
35.4
257.3
421.9
609.5
1.0298 CHF
May-08
22.8
45.2
199.7
215.5
1.2228 TRY
Jun-08
7.1
49.4
154.0
189.5
3.6742 AED
Dec-07
99.1
1,990.7
3,291.1
3,882.3
0.5055 GBP
May-08
832.6
1,388.3
7,688.1
13,800.0
1.0000 USD
Jun-08
6.2
43.7
71.9
71.9
2.1522 VEF
May-08

When considering M3, the total global money supply exceeds $60.2 trillion!

Of this amount, the United States, Eurozone and Japan account for $33.1 trillion or 64.4% of the total.

Please note that I've been unable to locate official M3 money supply values for China, Indonesia, Norway, and Russia. For these countries, M2 figures were substituted for M3 in the above figure. As a result, these four countries are underestimated.

Gold vs. Money: M3 Money Supply Growth
Of the selected economic areas the annual increase of M3 ranges from under 1.0% year over year for Japan to nearly 40% for the United Arab Emirates. And it's clear that higher growth rates for money supply do not translate to overall prosperity in the long run.

If it did, humanity would have eliminated poverty long ago. Instead, what occurs is an inflationary boom followed by a recession. A hyperinflationary period may occur should confidence in the currency vanish.
  Continued...
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