jeff f
New Member
hunger never looked so good. michelle is probably jumping for joy as she chows down on some more ribs....Think of all the beautiful skinny people who won't have as many health problems now? Inflation I never knew ya!
hunger never looked so good. michelle is probably jumping for joy as she chows down on some more ribs....Think of all the beautiful skinny people who won't have as many health problems now? Inflation I never knew ya!
I don't have much Gold.. but I have enough that I would be alright. peace.
The barter system will always serve as a form of currency. If you posess a valuable skill then you will never go hungry..........and columbian definitely counts!does columbian count? if so i am rich!
History.If gold is just a useless rock and the USD is just useless paper, than doesn't that make gold just as fiat as the USD when used as a currency? I mean, in the event modern fiat currency fails gold loses it's perceived value as well, right? Say gold is $1500 an ounce but $1500 isn't worth anything... what's to say gold is worth anything?
The post drips with sarcasm, I figured you would have figured that out when I said it was a good idea to sell your gold to those scam artists.If gold is just a useless rock and the USD is just useless paper, than doesn't that make gold just as fiat as the USD when used as a currency? I mean, in the event modern fiat currency fails gold loses it's perceived value as well, right? Say gold is $1500 an ounce but $1500 isn't worth anything... what's to say gold is worth anything?
Say you make $10 an hour and bread costs $1. you pay 1/10 of an hours labor to pay for it. Say tomorrow bread now costs $2, the price of gold has also doubled, but you still make $10 an hour, the next day bread cost $4 and gold has once again doubled in price. You still make $10 an hour. a week later Bread costs $100, gold is up 1000% and you still make $10.It was a bit sarcastic.
What about this:
Say I make $10 an hour and bread costs $1 a loaf. What difference does it make if that $10 is payed in paper or gold or anything else as long as it costs me 1/10th of an hour of labor to buy a loaf of bread? Seems to me only actual useful assets(food, land, energy, labor) have any real value. I see your point that gold stands to be a good form of currency but even then, gold's value is determined by how much confidence we have in it's worth, right? If it's value is just determined by how many Euro's or w/e other foreign currency is stable in the event the USD falls than isn't it's value still determined by our confidence in a fiat currency? Just seems flawed IMHO. Doesn't seem to make any difference what currency we use as long as real commodities like labor can be traded for food and shelter.
See, what you're describing just isn't happening and wont be happening in the near future at the very least. Sure, bread costs a dollar the first day, maybe $2 the next day but at some point demand wont keep up with the price increases and downward pressure will come into play on said prices... They do not continue to rise into infinity as you suggest. What good is having a supply of 100 loaves at $4 a peice when you can't sell it? Supply and demand matter you know, and the laws of S&D say prices will always hit a ceiling at some point. Many economists and investors are looking at the recent crude oil prices and concluding that we've hit that ceiling... the most recent EIA report supports this assertion. Recent market movements support this assertion.Say you make $10 an hour and bread costs $1. you pay 1/10 of an hours labor to pay for it. Say tomorrow bread now costs $2, the price of gold has also doubled, but you still make $10 an hour, the next day bread cost $4 and gold has once again doubled in price. You still make $10 an hour. a week later Bread costs $100, gold is up 1000% and you still make $10.
Gold is the most stable asset in the entire world mame, it holds its purchasing power through thick and thin.
Go ahead and tell the bank you will now be paying off your loan in either labor hours or gold, no longer currency. See which one they choose to be paid in.
Wrong, there is unlimited demand that never goes away for food, its not an optional thing for 100% of the population. If there is 1 loaf and 100 starving people you can bet that the fella with the most to trade for that loaf will be the one who eats and lives.See, what you're describing just isn't happening and wont be happening in the near future at the very least. Sure, bread costs a dollar the first day, maybe $2 the next day but at some point demand wont keep up with the price increases and downward pressure will come into play on said prices... They do not continue to rise into infinity as you suggest. What good is having a supply of 100 loaves at $4 a peice when you can't sell it? Supply and demand matter you know, and the laws of S&D say prices will always hit a ceiling at some point. Many economists and investors are looking at the recent crude oil prices and concluding that we've hit that ceiling... the most recent EIA report supports this assertion. Recent market movements support this assertion.
Just one problem,Wrong, there is unlimited demand that never goes away for food, its not an optional thing for 100% of the population. If there is 1 loaf and 100 starving people you can bet that the fella with the most to trade for that loaf will be the one who eats and lives.
thats funny thing you said about price ceilings, did you know that in 2001 in Zimbabwe you could buy a dozen eggs for $1, but 6 years later an egg cost $300 BILLION, or .1 g of Gold. A loaf of bread cost $1 TRILLION or 1/2gram of gold.
When you say NEAR future you mean what exactly? a day? 3? 20 years, 2 millennium?
It doesn't, actually, but you wouldn't believe how often people who claim to follow Austrian economics are constantly ignoring demand side as if supply is all that matters. Your posts mostly assume demand for food stays constant but it really doesn't and can't as long as wages dont rise with prices. The reason Zimbabwe ran into this situation is because they were pursuing expansionary monetary policy (printing money!) beyond their NAIRU (which at the time was over 90%) because they thought that their NAIRU was much lower. The result was people's wages were increasing along with prices(so fast that workers were being paid daily so they could spend their money before it lost it's worth), and hyperinflation took hold. In our situation, wages haven't risen at all and we remain above our NAIRU (~6% unemployment rate). Until that point, wages wont increase even as prices do increase and it stops the whole scenario due to supply&demand - market clearing. This is one of the major flaws in the "hyperinflation is inevitable" argument... It completely ignores these principles.Of course demand matters, where did you ever get the idea that Austrian Economics says it doesn't? If no one will buy your product it really doesn't matter what the price is, but like I said food is not an option for anyone. If your theory were to be correct prices should now be lower than they were 20 years ago, but they aren't. A big mac costs like $4 now, I remember when they were $.30. So tell me Mame, what has caused the price of the big mac to rise so much? Demand? Supply? McDonald's speculators? Perhaps the supply of the sesame seed bun has been in decline for the last 20 years? Perhaps we no longer have as much hamburger? Lettuce, pickles? What exactly caused this huge 10 fold price increase?
Sounds like the ultimate game of rock, paper, scissors is brewing... Hehe dead people... I always think of the freaky dead guy on a stick a certain present day cult follows... Reality is better than anything Wes Craven could ever come up with...Yep cash for gold will give you almost $700 for every ounce of gold you send them. Never mind the fact that gold sells for $1500 an ounce. Who wouldn't want to trade in a useless piece of shiny rock for super valuable green paper with old dead people images on it?
adjust for inflation. If you make $70,000 now its the same as making $54,000 ten years ago. 30% difference, graph shows 20%. Discrepancy of 10%, or in other words, we are making 10% less than we did 10 years ago.This can't be right,
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looks like wages and prices are rising at about the same rate over the long term.