I think this gold thing might be a little more complicated than it appears.
Having a fixed amount of dollars leaves your currency, and country, vulnerable to speculators who can buy large amounts of the available currency. This is how Soros "broke the bank of england" he shorted the pound, and borrowed pounds to sell for other currencies, lowering the demand for pounds. The central bank of england had to raise interest rates to try to keep demand for pounds high. All in all it wasn't actually that profitable for Soros, he made 1 billion but had to sink 10 billion to do so. If it didn't pay off he was toast.
I'm sure some people here lived through it so would have actual memories of it, and we all know how unreliable "history" is of events like this so I'm all ears as to what it was like at the time. I'm probably in the minority but I think a hard pegged currency, gold or otherwise is a bad idea as it leaves you vulnerable to attack by international bankers and financiers. And things like that tend to get art school dropouts elected.
Anthony Galli's answer to Why did Nixon take the United States off of the gold standard? - Quora
According to this the dollar supply had already exceeded the gold supply, from WW2 (what I assume was most likely war bonds) and was actually trending down slowly towards 1 - 1. It's difficult to find a chart of gold to money supply chart from prior to 1971 but this page seems to support the statements in the above link:
Gold vs. Money Supply - Vaulted
It does seem like the french, always wanting to subvert America, especially in the 70's, were just the first ones to call the US's bluff and demand their gold back causing Nixon to pick one of the 4 options.
The "international money lenders" would have preferred to do nothing of course, interestingly enough Nixon chose to work against them and was then couped by his own intelligence services. Interesting little thread but I'll leave that speculation for Mr. Anticausal.Theoretically, Nixon had four options…
He could do nothing, but Richard Nixon wasn’t about to risk his reelection on the hope that foreign politicians and “international money-lenders” wouldn’t run on the dollar before then.
He could reduce the dollar supply by cutting spending and raising taxes, therefore, worsening an already stagnating economy that was experiencing 6.1% unemployment and 5.9% price inflation, but the Democratic House and Senate would’ve never voted for austerity.
He could just devalue the dollar relative to gold. This was after all what a congressional report had recommended just 10 days prior, but this was quickly ruled out by his advisors because it probably would’ve just precipitated a run as countries would suspect more devaluations to come.
Or he could temporarily end it.
I suspect we are about to see the same thing with the Petrodollar. We may be the equivalent of 1970, everyone knows the gold standard is a lie and a joke, we are just waiting for a country to call it. I wonder if it will be the French again?