Art Vandelay said:So they give the dollars to other Indians. That doesn't answer my question. What do these Indians do with the dollars?
Mostly give them to other Indians. They don't have to return to the American economy like they do now.
That's simply an argumentum ad populum: "people in Ithaca think that separate currencies stop capital flight, therefore it does". Sorry, not much of an argument.
Then I'd like for you to explain what it means for the value of a dollar to be backed by gold, if a dollar can be redeemed for only a small portion of that value. According to that logic, dollars are already backed by gold. Go to any bank in the nation and ask whether you can turn in a thousand dollars in exchange for a gram of gold. I'm sure they'll agree.
Try it and see. The only way you can get gold for your dollars now is in the commodities market, where the price of gold fluctuates. FDR actually made what you're saying illegal in 1933.
What you are proposing is a completely vapid meaning of "backed" by gold. Only part of the value would be backed by gold, and on top of that, that portion wouldn't even be guaranteed.
The value of the dollar would be defined as a certain weight of gold, and that would be guaranteed. You're not reading.
The whole point of being backed by gold is that one can turn in money at any time for gold. If the formula is total gold/money needed, then any inflation would cause the "money needed" portion of the equation to go up,
There wouldn't be inflation! We didn't have inflation in this country as long as the dollar was tied to a specific weight of gold. Abraham Lincoln used a dollar that had the same value as the one George Washington used.
Please learn what you're talking about.