Will Swiss Voters Go For The Gold?

 | Nov 28, 2014 01:26PM ET

  • Swiss voters to decide on massive central bank Gold purchase Sunday
  • Swiss Peoples' Party claims increased gold holdings will boost economic stability
  • Ballot reflects isolationist, Eurosceptic trends
  • "Truth, like gold, is to be obtained not by its growth, but by washing away from it all that is not gold." — Tolstoy

    This Sunday, Swiss voters will cast their ballots to decide whether the Swiss National Bank should cast its lot with the world’s gold bugs. More precisely, the vote would compel the Alpine nation’s central bank to cease selling any more gold and to instead boost its holdings by up to 20%.
    At the moment, and after an early surge in voter interest, analysts say that they expect the initiative to be unsuccessful. With gold sitting at a four-and-a-half-year low, precious metals traders expect a severe rally in the event that the vote succeeds, but trading remains light on the expectation that a majority of Swiss citizens will reject the proposal.

    More interesting than this specific vote’s probability of success, though, is the reasoning behind its conception. As a political symbol, gold is essentially a proxy for fear – fear of inflation, fear of geopolitical instability and fear of currency manipulation. As a commodity that has maintained a stubborn but abstract (unlike grains or oil, it is not needed for any particular biological or infrastructural reason) value since the dawn of civilisation, gold represents a safe harbour in times of unrest and instability.

    According to Matterhorn Asset Management, a Swiss asset management company that supports the right-wing Swiss Peoples’ Party’s stance on gold, voting No on Sunday’s ballot will mean “Switzerland’s economic policy will be tied to the EU [and] inflation and cost of living will increase dramatically.” If voters choose to embrace the proposal, “Switzerland will remain a strong independent nation not influenced by EU or USA”.

    The battle lines are evidently quite clearly drawn, at least in the minds of Swiss gold bugs. In keeping with Switzerland’s ancient self-definition as a neutral and isolationist nation, the gold vote represents an opportunity to retain Swiss independence from the interests of external empires, particularly those -- like the European Union – whose economic outlooks are both grim-seeming and outside Swiss control.
     
    Leaving the realm of symbol for that of economics, however, it is far from clear that enforcing a giant boost in a country’s gold holdings will necessarily produce the stability and independence that the Swiss Peoples’ Party are seeking. In the United States, where the final link between the dollar’s value and that of gold was severed by president Richard Nixon in 1971, calls for a return to “the gold standard” have been a staple of isolationist political thought ever since.

    Get The News You Want
    Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
    Get The App

    In 2012, following presidential candidate Ron Paul’s repeated calls to end the Federal Reserve system and return to a gold-backed currency, the US Republican Party added a plank to its official platform, which called for an inquiry into this possibility. In response, the IGM Economic Experts Panel conducted a survey of its members, asking them whether a gold-based dollar would improve the lives of ordinary Americans.

    • Many were asked.
    • Zero agreed.