This particularly dumb idea is from Paul Brodsky and Lee Quaintance of QB Partners.
They suggest: Rather than reducing hours of work, why not have Washington offer to buy gold at $5000 an ounce:
A coordinated global currency  devaluation. The Fed, for example,  tenders for private gold holdings at  $5000/oz and maintains that  bid/offer. As the Fed purchases gold, the  gold flows to the asset side  of its balance sheet. The Fed funds these  gold purchases with  newly-digitized money, which flows to banks in the  form of net new  deposits. This would be a discrete monetary inflation  event  (devaluation) and a simultaneous deleveraging.
Once the Fed  acquires enough gold from  the markets, a gold price peg for the US  dollar is established. Would  this be a gold standard? Yes, if that  nominal exchange value is  maintained in the open market by the Fed. No,  if the Fed decides to  periodically adjust that $5000/oz. level following  the original  exchange. (In fact, tinkering with the official gold price  would be a  pure example of a monetary agent conducting monetary  policy.)
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