The Resource Standard: A Real-Resource Anchor for Sovereign Currency in the Fiat Era
The Resource Standard: A Real-Resource Anchor for Sovereign Currency in the Fiat Era
24 PagesPosted: 17 Apr 2026
Date Written: January 01, 2026
Abstract
This paper introduces the Resource Standard, a framework in which the value of currency is anchored not to commodities or reserves but to real resources, including human labour, revealing an operational structure implicit in sovereign fiat monetary systems that has not yet been explicitly formalized. Under commodity standards, currency value was expressed in terms of a fixed quantity of gold, and the availability of gold reserves therefore constrained government spending. Fiat currency does not possess intrinsic value; its value is expressed in terms of the goods and services it purchases. The sovereign government is the sole supplier of currency, so the prices paid through government spending introduce the absolute value of the currency. The moment at which sovereign spending assigns prices to labour and goods is therefore the moment at which the value of currency is operationally established. The requirement that taxes be paid in the sovereign currency ensures demand for the currency, but the prices paid in sovereign spending determine what that currency is worth in real terms. Under a fiat monetary system, the effective limit to sovereign spending is therefore not financial but real: the availability of goods and services for sale in the currency, particularly labour. The value of currency in real terms is realized through the production of those goods and services. When available resources remain idle, part of the potential value of currency remains unrealized. Sovereign spending introduces the absolute value of currency, while the deployment of real productive capacity determines the cumulative value realized within the economy. The Resource Standard therefore proposes that the cumulative value of a sovereign currency is maximized when all available real productive capacity, especially labour, is deployed. The paper demonstrates that unemployment, idle capacity, and persistent poverty are violations of this standard, arising from insufficient sovereign spending relative to imposed tax liabilities and private saving preferences. It further introduces the Anchor Mechanism, a governance corollary in which the sovereign temporarily intervenes as a price-setting buyer and seller of essential goods during inflationary episodes, stabilizing the price level without austerity, interest-rate manipulation, or output suppression. By replacing commodity backing with a real-resource anchor, the Resource Standard clarifies the operational foundations of fiat money and establishes full employment as a systemic requirement rather than a discretionary policy choice. The framework provides a coherent basis for price stability, universal employment, and sustained abundance in sovereign currency systems.
Keywords: Sovereign currency, fiat money, price-setting, inflation, unemployment, real resources, monetary theory
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=6510061