Something for the gold bugs:
	
	<a href="http://www.irvinehousingblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/gold-fiat-money-and-price-stability.pdf">Gold, Fiat Money and Price Stability</a>
	
	A commodity money regime such as the classical gold standard has long been
	associated with long-run price stability. During that era, though, many economists
	worried about instability associated with the gold standard and proposed
	fundamental reforms. Fisher (1934) traces the evolution of the idea of a monetary
	standard based on a price index and describes 28 nineteenth century proposals
	made by legislators and prominent economists.1 Perhaps the most well known is
	the compensated dollar proposal made by Fisher (1913) himself. Since the end of
	the gold standard, many economists have argued that a fiat money regime based
	on credible rules for low inflation could do better than commodity money (see, for
	example, Friedman 1951, 1960). In 1980 that promise was in doubt. High and
	variable inflation was the number one economic problem facing the major
	market-type economies. The U.S. gold commission was given a mandate to
	evaluate a future role for gold in the U.S. monetary system.2 Since then, however,
	it appears that central banks have learned how to maintain low inflation in a fiat
	money system. Many central banks have adopted implicit or explicit inflation
	targets in this new era.