But gold is shiny!
Clearly there is only one solution. Gold paint on the dollar bills!
But gold is shiny!
I value food. But I don't care whether anyone will give me anything in return for it. I don't want to give it away. I want to eat it.
Money is different. If no one else wanted money, it would be useless to me. But if no one else wanted food, I'd still need to eat.
I think a reasonable definition of "intrinsic value" is that it is possesed by things you'd want even if you knew you couldn't trade them away. It's true that people may disagree about it; not everyone wants the same things. But no one would want money if they couldn't trade it for something else.
But gold is shiny!
Cherry-picked currencies. Look at this How about the Phillipine peso? 1969: 3.9/$ 2006 51/$, Hong dollar: 1969 6.06/$ 2006: 7.7/$, Indian rupee: 1969: 7.5/$ 2006: 45/$, and there are more: New Zealand dollars, Thai baht, Italian lira, Australian dollar, British pound, French franc, Canadian dollar. etc, etc...The top graph at this link shows the dollar has been in almost continuous decline against other currencies since 1969. This trend is the result of US policy, so unless that is changed radically, the dollar is very unlikely to recover.
Or the weak dollar itself could even out the trade deficit.To stop the dollar's decline you can raise interest rates. But since the US is so heavily in debt (both government and consumers) that would hurt GDP a lot. Alternatively, you could decrease the trade deficit through higher taxes or import tarrifs. But that would hurt GDP as well. Any other suggestions?
Part of a person's concept of value is personal utility. If I can use it, it holds value for me. If I find I can trade it for something of greater use to me it has value as to trade.I value food. But I don't care whether anyone will give me anything in return for it. I don't want to give it away. I want to eat it.
Money is different. If no one else wanted money, it would be useless to me. But if no one else wanted food, I'd still need to eat.
I think a reasonable definition of "intrinsic value" is that it is possesed by things you'd want even if you knew you couldn't trade them away. It's true that people may disagree about it; not everyone wants the same things. But no one would want money if they couldn't trade it for something else.
Of course there are many currencies that depreciate faster than the dollar. But the fact remains that apart from a few upticks several strong currencies have outperfomed the dollar continuously since 1969. Unless you foresee a radical change in US policy that trend will continue. Which means converting your money to those strong currencies is safer than keeping it in dollars, expecially at low interest rates.Cherry-picked currencies.
The top graph here shows the trade balance showing a deficit since around 1975. Compare it with the previous graph I linked to. During the early nineties the dollar gained against other currencies, this corresponds to a decrease in the trade deficit during the same period. Other than that, the dollar continued to depreciate while the deficit boomed. So I doubt this trend will suddenly reverse.Or the weak dollar itself could even out the trade deficit.
I value food. But I don't care whether anyone will give me anything in return for it. I don't want to give it away. I want to eat it.
Money is different. If no one else wanted money, it would be useless to me. But if no one else wanted food, I'd still need to eat.
I think a reasonable definition of "intrinsic value" is that it is possesed by things you'd want even if you knew you couldn't trade them away. It's true that people may disagree about it; not everyone wants the same things. But no one would want money if they couldn't trade it for something else.
Part of a person's concept of value is personal utility. If I can use it, it holds value for me. If I find I can trade it for something of greater use to me it has value as to trade.
For example, due to carelessness I bought some frozen dinners that have sweet potatoes. I hate sweet potatoes. These dinners are worthless to me as far as any personal use as to consumption goes. However, they do have value as I can trade them to someone, or give them to my secretary which is more or less exchanging them for goodwill.
Not always. Some people collect coins and currency as a hobby. Gold has industrial use. We can use a coin as a binary random number generator, and so on.
Because you have to eat, you place value on food based on that need. A supermarket corporation has no such need, it places value on food as an item for trade to get what it needs, profit for shareholders.
You are going off on a different issue. The only issue I am addressing is that if nobody wants something and nobody has a use for it, it has no value. Period. Whether it be gold, polyester, or the frozen head of Mo Udall.But in the case of your sweet potatoes, your secretary gets utility from it. This is different from a situation where you think it has value because you think your secretary will value it, your secretary thinks it has value because a coworker will value it, and your coworker thinks it has value because he thinks you'll want it. This is not a situation where the potatoes have any real value, there is just the perception of value based on mistaken assumptions. You may even get some good trades for the potatoes for awhile, especially if there is a large office and it takes a while for people to realize the potatoes are just being cycled around and no one really wants them, but the system will eventually fail and someone will be left with sweet potatoes that no one wants. This seems to mimic the behavior of US currency quite well. We see a constant decrease in value.
Yes, if collecting coins was the basis for the US dollar's value then I would say that would be a "real" value, but I doubt that's really what is keeping it's current status afloat and I worry that sometime in the future it may have no value except in it's value as a historical relic.
Yes, if dental and electronic usage was the basis for the gold's value then I would say that would be a "real" value, but I doubt that's really what is keeping it's current status afloat and I worry that sometime in the future it may have no value except in dental and electronic usage.
Of course there are many currencies that depreciate faster than the dollar. But the fact remains that apart from a few upticks several strong currencies have outperfomed the dollar continuously since 1969.
Actually, that's what they loudly thought about. Using euros instead of dollars. 5 Minutes later, the US threatened to invade Iran. Not because of ******** nuclear stuff. No, this is to threaten Iran and Opec into not abandoning the dollar.So why doesn't Iran do just that? Any particular reason why an oil-producing country wouldn't accept euros or yen for that matter?
CorrectIn the case of the Chinese, it would probably hurt them more than the US, and would mean that their currency would rise substantially against the dollar, which would hurt their export industry.
Er, not watching the video, but from memory, Ron Paul has it half right.So you confirm that, for example, trading Oil in
Euros instead in Dollars (like Saddam did) would
be a huge threat to the Dollar - a threat which
would be big enough to go to war?
And do you agree that Ron Paul is right and this
isn't just fear-mongering: ?
FIAT works better than Gold. With gold, you will run into a currency underrun, i.e. you simply run out of gold to do the trades with. With fiat, this can never happen. If you'd suddenly find a massive amount of gold, you'd have inflation with a gold-based currency. With a FIAT system, this can't happen.So what are the solutions if Gold backing the
Dollar would be too inflexible for a healthy
economy if the FIAT system is a much bigger
threat to the economy since it's able to destroy
the currency - while this isn't the case with
Gold-backed currency ... unless someone invents
a method to produce Gold...![]()
That depends on the central bank. The central bank simply checks prices. Your goal may be, 1% or 2% inflation (if you go below, the economy quickly dies)And how is it possible to "print money out of thin
air"? Who regulates how much money is being
printed - only the private federal reserve? How
stupid is that to give them this power - being
completely independent from Government and
People...![]()
Not long ago, my 8-year-old daughter asked me why we need money. Here's the basic conversation that followed, abbreviated. Please feel free to critique me if I got anything wrong.
Me: Well, if we didn't use money, what would we use?
Nobbette: We could trade stuff.
Me: Ok, so if I'm good at cleaning houses and you're good at making chairs, and I need a chair, you could make me one and I'll clean your house.
Nobbette: Right.
Me: But what if I don't need a chair? What if I need a TV?
Nobbette: Go to the TV guy.
Me: Maybe he doesn't need his house cleaned. Maybe he needs a chair.
Nobbette: Well, I'll give him a chair, and he gives you a TV, and you clean my house.
Me: Excellent. Now, what if you don't need your house cleaned right away? How will you remember that I owe you a house cleaning?
Nobbette: You can write me a note.
Me: Oh, ok. Suppose you decide that instead of getting your house cleaned, you'd rather have a Barbie doll. Do you think it's ok to trade that note for the doll?
Nobbette: Sure.
Me: So, anyone can trade notes that they get right?
Nobbette: Yep.
Me: So let's make the notes all look the same (so that way we don't have to read everyone's handwriting). And to make sure they're official notes, we'll make them out of special paper and ink, and put special drawings on them.
Nobbette: Ok.
Me: And we'll call those notes "money".
Nobbette: Oh!!!
What value has gold? you can't eat it. it doesn't give you warm. The only reason gold is valuable is because of its role in the monetary system. So this is just a convention. The reason gold was chosen for this was basically that it isn't as easily available, the mining process is slow, and there's still enough gold to run an small national economy in 1000 BC.Okay, but I understand how a backed currency has value and I certainly understand how such a currency would be useful in trade, but I don't understand why an unbacked currency is worth anything.
I'm trying to explain to you the quantity theory. Simply put: all the money that is turning over is necessarily going to be as valuable as all the goods that are turning over. It's not circular, its tautological.This is where you lose me and it starts to sound like circular reasoning to me. You're trying to explain where it gets it's value from. You can't start from the assumption that 100 apples is worth 100 coins. Why is 100 apples worth 100 coins, and not 1 coin or 10,000 coins.
Yes, that is the paradoxon of capitalism. Basically, when you invest into a production facility, you reduce scarcity of the product that is produced by the facility. As long as the good is scarce, you will be able to sell it for more than what it costs you to produce it, thus producing a capital income for your investment.This seems like a contridiction in terms to me. If there is more wealth then by definition the economy is doing better. I don't understand why more things that people want would result in less things that people want, though I could certainly understand that increased wealth would lead to increased realization that the dollar is worthless which would further to tank our economy.
However, when the economy is doing good, more people do the same investment. You will no longer be able to sell it for much more than what it costs you to produce as the prices drop due to concurrence. Ultimately, you won't get anything back from your investment. That's the point where people stop investing (or actually, even before that due to the so called Liquidity Preference) and money stops turning around. The turnover rate drops, and the national bank has to increase the money supply (bubble style) to keep the prices from dropping (Deflation)
No, subsidies to corn won't help. That behaviour is called rent-seeking, its when a small group (corn producers / secondary production) lobbies government to increase its profits on the shoulders of the public.* Price floors, if anything, reduce the consumption of corn and such make the problem worse.Well, the way out of such a mess isn't only monetary policy. Government-mandated price floors and subsidies can prop up a single industry or commodity. Corn is the best example.
No, subsidies to corn won't help.
And that's what I disagreed with. Subsidies to corn worsen the overproduction problem. Actually, depending on the exact subsidiary mechanism, subsidies can create it in the first place.I didn't say it would help; I just said it was a way to deal with overproduction that wasn't strictly a monetary policy
Okay, but I understand how a backed currency has value and I certainly understand how such a currency would be useful in trade, but I don't understand why an unbacked currency is worth anything.
This seems like a contridiction in terms to me. If there is more wealth then by definition the economy is doing better. I don't understand why more things that people want would result in less things that people want, though I could certainly understand that increased wealth would lead to increased realization that the dollar is worthless which would further to tank our economy.