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Bitcoin The Almighty Buck

Rise of Cryptocurrencies Can Be Traced To Nixon Abandoning Gold In 1971 (theguardian.com) 231

On August 15, 1971, Richard Nixon announced that the U.S. would no longer exchange dollars held by foreign governments for gold. "Shock waves from Washington's decision to break the link with gold have rippled down the decades," reports The Guardian. "The creation of the euro, the hollowing out of US manufacturing, the arrival of cryptocurrencies and the ability of central banks to print seemingly unlimited quantities of money can all be traced back to August 1971." From the report: In 2019, when he was the governor of the Bank of England, Mark Carney floated the idea of a global digital currency -- backed by a number of central banks -- as a replacement for the dollar. Carney said his plan would help stabilize financial markets unsettled by trade and currency disputes. Were Carney's plan ever to come to fruition it would mark the final stage in the shift from a system where currencies were backed by something tangible -- gold -- to one where they are virtual. It is not hard to see why there are those who feel uneasy about this.

Why? Well, for a start, events of half a century ago led to a rapid increase in currency trading. Foreign exchange markets can be wild and unpredictable places. Governments, as Carney pointed out, try to secure competitive advantage by manipulating their currencies and by protectionist trade policies. One way of doing this is through quantitative easing, the process by which central banks create money though the purchase of bonds. Trillions of dollars, euros, pounds and yen pumped into the global economy over the past decade.

Classical economic theory would suggest that an increase in the money supply of this magnitude should lead to a sharp rise in inflation but that has not happened. At least not yet. Before they became the ultimate speculative play for financial investors, the rationale for cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin was that they represented a hedge against the profligacy of central banks. Tricky Dicky didn't know it in 1971 but 50 years on his decision has led to a world of volatile financial markets, geopolitical tension, inflated asset prices underwritten by low interest rates and QE, and where trust in central banks is starting to wear a bit thin. In the circumstances, it is perhaps easy to understand why governments have decided to hold on to their remaining gold stocks.

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Rise of Cryptocurrencies Can Be Traced To Nixon Abandoning Gold In 1971

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  • by memory_register ( 6248354 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @07:34PM (#61698893)
    and created fiat money, then inflated the hell out of it to favor the rich and powerful. Yeah, I can see why some pissed off programmers would want to build inflation-proof currencies.
    • by S_Stout ( 2725099 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @07:42PM (#61698909)
      And then give themselves 70% of the pre-mined tokens then advertise the shit out of them. Yeah, I can see why anyone would want to do this.
      • by Lisandro ( 799651 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @08:02PM (#61698981)

        Don't forget the part where they then change infrastructure so those with more stake in a currency end up deciding which transactions are valid. Profit!

      • Not every cryptocurrency is 70% premined buddy. Buy bitcoin, that one isn't. Or Monero. Or a lot of them.

        I had more typed out but webpage ate it.

        • by Pseudonym ( 62607 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @11:58PM (#61699599)

          70% is an exaggeration, but the point is solid: Ponzi/pyramid scams favour the early adopters at the expense of everyone else.

          Cryptocurrency is a negative-sum game. By buying it as an investment (because it's no use as a currency), you are betting against anyone who comes in later, hence all the hype, advertising, and cult-like behaviour.

          • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

            Well that's the whole point, be an early adopter instead of ignoring or denouncing these new things that come around.
            You could have bought a few bitcoins for an absolutely trivial amount when it was new, and then just sat on them for a few years. Had they never amounted to anything you'd have lost the price of a cup of coffee. Never gamble what you can't afford to lose.

          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            Cryptocurrency is a negative-sum game. By buying it as an investment (because it's no use as a currency), you are betting against anyone who comes in later, hence all the hype, advertising, and cult-like behaviour.

            Yes, that's the typical point of view of people who don't understand the benefits of a decentralized ecosystem and everything that can be done with Crypto. Do you know that Crypto has the potential to displace Google, Amazon, banks... remove all these powerful entities who act as middlemen to various services, and thereby empower the individual? No, you probably don't, because you only heard about Bitcoin and how that is a ponzi-scheme.

            Crypto is not just counters on the Internet that go up or down. There is

            • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

              Think again jackass.

              https://www.vox.com/2018/4/24/... [vox.com]
              1. currency whose value can swing 10 percent or more in a single day is useless as a means of payment.
              2. Extreme price volatility also makes bitcoin undesirable as a store of value.
              3. bitcoin has no intrinsic value. It only has value if people think other people will buy it for a higher price

              https://www.yanisvaroufakis.eu... [yanisvaroufakis.eu]
              "Bitcoin’s algorithm specifies that the number of Bitcoins in existence is essentially fixed. (To be more precise
            • by Lordfly ( 590616 )

              Any day now, Crypto will change the world.

              Any.... day.... now....

              The moon crashing into the earth also has the potential to replace banks, google, and facebook. Or unicorns overthrowing the united nations.

              you have no idea how any of modern finance works, and it shows.

              Nothing crypto does solves any problems any real people had. It's a decentralized SQL database that everyone has to waste trillions of megawatts on just to confirm it works right.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      Sorry, but it's impractical to tie our money to precious metals. For one, it encourages mining precious metals above more useful endeavors like building hospitals. Second, countries with more gold, like Russia, would eat our lunch. Third, it would make Keynesian stimuluses harder because it would be harder to control the metal supply. (Anti-Keynesians will find this a good thing, but that's another argument. Either way, you have less control if and when you want it for whatever reason.)

      • There's also simply not enough to go around. Precious metals are called "precious" for a reason.

      • Don't forget that we have more economic activities of species than can be reasonably represented by lumps of metal.
      • Sorry, but it's impractical to tie our money to precious metals.

        Everyone who puts this out goes "well, not enough gold guess we have to go to fiat" which completely ignores the fact that it was silver that was the main metal for currency metal for thousands of years. Copper and bronze have also been used and copper could absolutely be used to make $1 and smaller units.

        For one, it encourages mining precious metals above more useful endeavors like building hospitals.

        We need silver for many medical and manufac

        • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @11:49PM (#61699571) Homepage Journal

          The amount of money in the system really ought to be tied to a single factor -- the amount of stuff that needs to be bought and sold. If your economy doubles in size and you're on the silver standard, you'd better come up with 2x the silver or further growth will be hobbled.

          There are all kinds of ways a central bank can increase or decrease the amount of money in circulation, but the way it creates actual new money is interesting. You can't create a dollar by *printing* one; if you just print a dollar you have no way to get it into circulation. What they do is *loan* virtual dollars to banks; if the bank wants currency it can then use those virtual dollars to buy printed dollars. What makes this interesting is that dollars created this way have in effect an expiration date: the loan maturity date. It's not an irrevocable act like handing someone a pile of dollars in exchange for a certain amount of gold.

          This allows the Fed to expand or contract the money supply to match the needs of the economy over the long term. Ultimately it is the value created by the economy that really matters; currency is just tokens that make exchanging value easy.

          • by vivian ( 156520 )

            Wish I had mod points - this is the most concise and best explanation I have seen for why precious metals are no longer used for the basis of currency.
            I would like to add to it that the reason why there is a target rate of inflation of about 2% is so that there is a disincentive to hoard money. This is done to keep it in circulation instead of stuffed under mattresses or in a hole. If your money was increasing in value - ie. deflating, because say, it was based on gold and the amount of gold wasn't increasi

            • by vyvepe ( 809573 )

              Inflation also encourages inefficient investments. It uses resources and damages environment for something not really needed. It makes bubbles more likely to happen. It is not all good on the inflation side. Though I agree that some small inflation is better than deflation. But 2% is not that small and governments & banks will likely keep it higher than that anyway since it is politically easier for them. And it is questionable whether they will actually decrease money supply when inflation overshoots (

              • by jbengt ( 874751 )
                The problem is that inflation/deflation rates are inherently unstable. If inflation grows, people try to spend money before it loses value, which increases demand and leads to more inflation. If deflation grows, people want to hold on to their money and the economy shrinks, leading to more deflation. There might be a simple balance point, but, like balancing a marble on top of a bowl, if it goes a little bit one way, it will tend to keep going faster in that same direction.
        • Everyone who puts this out goes "well, not enough gold guess we have to go to fiat" which completely ignores the fact that it was silver that was the main metal for currency metal for thousands of years. Copper and bronze have also been used and copper could absolutely be used to make $1 and smaller units.

          So, you are saying we should keep the penny but make it more valuable!

          Somehow I doubt the wisdom of a plan to adopt a currency entirely of coins.

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • For most of the past 60 years, we've had high deficit spending during periods of economic expansion, and even higher deficit spending during recessions.

        People defended all of that reckless deficit spending as "Keynesian." I concluded that I must be an anti-Keynesian.

        But then I learned that Keynes himself said deficit spending should only happen during recessions -- to be canceled out by budget surpluses during times of economic expansion, so as not to run up a giant national debt [usdebtclock.org].

        Now that makes sense. I g

        • All politicians are Keynesians. . .they just have a habit of governing like we are in a perpetual recession. There are not enough honest Congress Critters to do things like raise taxes or cut spending when things go well to make these things happen. They all know this is how Keynesian economics actually works. Most have Ivy League educations. Most voters, on the other hand, do not understand this and Congress Critters give the people of their district what they want.

          Most of our problems can be traced back t

        • by jlar ( 584848 )

          For most of the past 60 years, we've had high deficit spending during periods of economic expansion, and even higher deficit spending during recessions.

          People defended all of that reckless deficit spending as "Keynesian." I concluded that I must be an anti-Keynesian.

          But then I learned that Keynes himself said deficit spending should only happen during recessions -- to be canceled out by budget surpluses during times of economic expansion, so as not to run up a giant national debt [usdebtclock.org].

          Now that makes sense. I guess I am a Keynesian after all.

          Market failures happen for a number of reasons. One of them being externalities (for example that the company producing a good does not pay for the pollution caused by the production) while others are public goods, market control (e.g. monopolies) and information deficiencies. We normally try to correct these failures using legislation.

          But another less know failure type is "government failures". The problem is that the political system will under no circumstances produce optimal legislation or governance be

        • Yeah, his theories are not well implemented. There's also a flaw in that the idea is for the government to essentially make up for a collapse in consumer spending in order to keep things running until it recovers, but the government doesn't spend money the way a consumer does. It doesn't buy food, clothes, toys or trips to the theater or restaurants, it buys cement, office supplies, guns and labor. Which means that Keynes' idea tends not to work out so well as businesses that supply consumers still colla
      • âLess controlâ is a major feature, not a problem to be solved.

      • Remove Keynesian stimulus, you can ignore that entirely. Even without utilizing any stimulus, the gold standard (like BTC) encourages holding onto the "currency" because supply can never equal growth.

        Basically sticking to a gold, BTC, or similar, standard is regressionist. Such a standard entrenches the rich as a ruling class because it rewards doing absolutely nothing, while still giving excellent wealth increases. Any attempt to move up the socio-economic ladder to the 1% is hobbled by the lack of acce
      • ... Second, countries with more gold, like Russia, would eat our lunch...

        For a while, but then things would settle down. Gold only has a few practical uses; it's mostly a medium of exchange. In that sense, is essentially like crypto or fiat currencies: valuable because everybody agrees it's valuable. Countries with real wealth, whether in natural resources or human capital, would still do better.

        When Spain started bringing in massive amounts of gold from the Americas, they suffered massive inflation. England was disappointed that they weren't finding gold in North America, but i

    • You can't eat gold, so it doesn't have real* value either. Gold's supply is restricted, thus any demand for it will spike the price.

      Inflation of your current doesn't matter too much if you don't insist on keeping your primary assets liquid. If you are willing to move things around, you can focus on investing in assets that hold or increase in value. Or you can shuffle between multiple currencies or commodities in an attempt to surf the volatility. Ultimately you'll invest according to how you wish to manage

      • You can't eat gold, so it doesn't have real* value either.

        You jest, but of course the thing about precious metals is that you can make useful* things out of them beyond merely being perceived as "precious". And just to head off any objections, I have a copy of Encyclopedia Britannica from the 1890s. It describes uranium as an element with no known industrial uses.

        * for some definition of "useful".

      • You can't eat gold, so it doesn't have real* value either. Gold's supply is restricted, thus any demand for it will spike the price.

        There's more to life than food. You wouldn't be reading Slashdot right now if it weren't for gold. You wouldn't be driving your car, and frankly society itself would be set back to the start of the industrial age if we had no gold. It's a critical component for many produces / processes you value in society, and if that society is to endure then gold is intrinsically valuable to it.

        Sure the current trading price doesn't reflect this value, but that doesn't mean it has no value.

      • You do know that the average human body contains like 0.2mg of Au. Gold is required for vaccines too... it's not just a shiny metal.
    • by Lisandro ( 799651 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @07:56PM (#61698959)

      I'm looking forward to all those opinion pieces, mystified as of why no one will want to spend a currency which is deflationary by design.

    • Gold stopped being the real value of currency the moment fractional banking took over.

      Debt has been the real value of currencies for centuries, the piddling little gold supply determining the value would be the tail wagging the dog.

      • Debt has been the real value of currencies for centuries

        Interestingly insightful way of putting it.
        I've been looking for a way to articulate that to the "The Gubmint is borrowing money from the China!" crowd.

        • Another way to state it is that currency units are tokens of debt, and are used to satisfy debts.

          Money has existed in the form of ledger entries recording debts in international trade since the early Middle Ages (actually this was true even in the Bronze Age Mediterranean - we have the clay documents. They didn't need to ship bags of money between port cities for most trade.

    • Obligatory: https://wtfhappenedin1971.com/ [wtfhappenedin1971.com]
    • by teg ( 97890 )

      and created fiat money, then inflated the hell out of it to favor the rich and powerful. Yeah, I can see why some pissed off programmers would want to build inflation-proof currencies.

      Tying the value of what a country produces to the amount of a precious metal you have [theguardian.com] taken out of one place and is now protecting in another makes no sense.

      A gold standard means that monetary policy and interest rates are set to defend the value of a currency against a metal rather than to reflect economic conditions in the country.

    • The article mixes money with money supply. Those terms are NOT synonyms and cannot be used interchangeably.
    • Why is gold "real value" any more than bitcoin? Both have no to nominal use for anything but hoarding/speculating. I suppose gold is at least useful in electronics manufacturing and bitcoin sparked more blockchain development and related software/hardware projects.

      For that matter, why does gold have "real value" and fiat doesn't. The value of anything is determined what a willing seller will sell for, and a willing buyer will pay for. Buyers/sellers accept fiat has value, so it does. Same with gold. People

    • What gives gold its value? It doesn't corrode and makes a great conductor and radiation shield, but what gives it value as currency? As coinage it works well as it doesn't corrode and can be easily tested for purity (traditionally, with touchstones). But these are all forms of utilitarian value. What gives it exchange value? What makes some amount of gold worth some amount of your time and labor, or some amount of food, or some amount of new cars?

      Fiat. All currency, all money, has value because we

    • by Kisai ( 213879 )

      Unfortunately, Cryptocoins have been nothing but speculation tools.

      Ultimately the problem comes back to "can I trust this", a bit fat "NO". All the same speculators who manipulate the currency markets of course wanted "in" on the cryptocoins, and surprise surprise, nobody wants the cryptocoins when it has solved exactly nothing.

  • by JoeyRox ( 2711699 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @07:43PM (#61698913)
    And just like then, people always try to rationalize and attribute the mania to something else.
    • by Moryath ( 553296 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @08:02PM (#61698979)

      Yeah. I've seen some dumb takes before, but criminal ponzi schemes being "traced" to the end of the metallic standard is one of the dumber things I've ever heard, even by Larry "incompetent" Elliott standards.

      Volatile markets? They were WORSE on the metallic standards. Full-blown economic depressions and the boom-and-bust cycle were the literal norm long before the metallic standard was killed.

      Geopolitical tension? Look at the economic insanity that happened when countries flip-flopped their standards, and started looting other countries for the more 'valuable' metals. [youtube.com]

      Cryptocurrencies have risen because (a) they're not as regulated as penny stocks, but just as easy to pump-and-dump and rip off the gullible with, and (b) they're an easy way for crooks to launder money.

      That's it, that's literally all that cryptocurrencies are good for. They're a drag on society and ought to be abolished.

      • Ya, so much is fucking laughable as hell about this.
        You can look at the shit going on today with a floating dollar and think, "man, this sucks."

        But that's only if you know abso-fucking-lutely nothing about the earlier 2/3rds of the 20th century.
    • Classical economic theory would suggest that an increase in the money supply of this magnitude should lead to a sharp rise in inflation but that has not happened.

      Wrong.

      Classical economic theory says that a sufficiently large increase in the money supply will cause inflation, or even hyperinflation -- and that is exactly what we have seen in Venezuela, Zimbabwe, etc.

      Any increase in the money supply that does not cause inflation is, by definition, not sufficiently large to do so.

  • Whew! Good thing the rest of the world didn't. ;-)

  • Misunderstanding (Score:4, Informative)

    by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @07:52PM (#61698941)
    The gold currency was inflexible. Unforgiving. It CAUSED more problems than it solved. If we were still on the gold standard, the 08-09 crisis would have been the second great depression, and the covid lockdowns would have been the third.

    Fiat currency has helped to STABILIZE the world. We would be FAR worse off if we had stayed on the gold standard. WW3 would definitely have happened by now.
    • This. The article is, quite honestly, a mess.

      There's three back-to-back paragraphs where the author identifies QE as the real problem to be solved, wonders why monetary supply increase alone isn't causing a sharp rise in inflation, and then acknowledges how Bitcoin are nothing but "the ultimate speculative play for financial investors."

    • The gold currency was inflexible. Unforgiving. It CAUSED more problems than it solved. If we were still on the gold standard, the 08-09 crisis would have been the second great depression, and the covid lockdowns would have been the third.

      Fiat currency has helped to STABILIZE the world. We would be FAR worse off if we had stayed on the gold standard. WW3 would definitely have happened by now.

      Gold wasn't just inflexible, it was also random since the supply changed based on the success of gold mines.

      If anything, a universe where we were still on the gold standard would have a better argument for cryptocurrency.

      The economic theory of cryptocurrency seems to be "I don't understand the effects of the money supply, therefore central banks can't understand the money supply, therefore a simple rule is superior".

    • It's a conspiracy style of thinking. Too many see leaving the gold standard as a major flaw in modern economies, when actually it was necessary. But the originators of cryptocurrencies often tended to have these sorts of views, armchair ideas of how economics should work.

    • f we were still on the gold standard, the 08-09 crisis would have been the second great depression

      If we were still on the gold standard, the housing market would have never been run the way it was by the banking sector. Thus the 2008 crisis in the mortgage market wouldn't have happened. You also wouldn't have had Blackrock front-running the Fed and buying up hundreds of billions of dollars worth of real estate at inflated prices in 2020 and even right now to keep propping up the values. The stock market was

      • by dryeo ( 100693 )

        OTOH, when on the gold standard, depressions and panics were a regular occurrence.
        There were some pretty big wars too.

      • we fought both world wars without fiat currency.

        That's a pretty asinine statement. You don't need fiat currency for any of its benefits when you ration, centrally plan production, and limit price and wage changes.
  • by tekram ( 8023518 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @07:56PM (#61698951)

    See what TM has to say:

    Tom McClellan
    @McClellanOsc
    19h
    Um, the 50 years before 1971 included the Great Depression, WWII, regime collapse in China, 1946 hyperinflation, payroll withholding (thanks Milton Friedman!) and all manner of other economic maladies. So attribution analysis like this is problematic.

  • Cryptocurrencies are a bet on mooning, that's all they ever are.

    No one is buying cryptocurrencies just to keep pace with inflation, not a single person.

  • by crow ( 16139 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @08:01PM (#61698973) Homepage Journal

    If you print money (figuratively, meaning massive increase in the money supply), you would think this would be inflationary, but that hasn't proven to be the case. The "Quantitative Easing" that the Federal Reserve did was simply buying government bonds with money they just made up, which in the short term is effectively the same as paying for government spending with new money. This hasn't produced significant inflation.

    Why?

    The increase in money supply has not resulted in an increase in demand for products at their existing prices. Now you would think with more money in the economy, more people would want to buy, well, pretty much everything, but there's one fatal flaw in that assumption. It only works that way if the increase in money supply is uniform across the population. But instead, the increase in the money supply is almost entirely absorbed by those who already have the most money. And those people were already consuming all they wanted, so there's no increased demand for goods, and hence, no inflation.

    Or is there?

    What do the people at the top of the economy do with extra money? They invest it. Hence, the increase in the money supply has lead to inflation of investment prices, but those aren't consumer goods, so they're not tracked in the normal Consumer Price Index which is what people normally think of as inflation. Instead, we see stocks shooting up.

    • It balooned debt out of control though. On 2020 alone the US's debt/GDP ratio increased as much as it did on the entire decade before: the US is now part of a short list of countries where this ratio exceeds 100%.

      The problem with the US though, is that both its debt and GDP are, in absolute numbers, massive. Meaning you're one recession away from any of the two sliding, throwing the ratio to shit, and leaving the country with a serious debt crisis to tackle.

    • Subject: Printing money not inflationary

      Body: Investment prices are inflated.

      So... printing money... does create inflation? ...

      I'm not sure what the point of your post is, but let's make this super simple:

      1. Printing excess amounts of money creates inflation. Obviously. That's why the Fed prints excess money; they're explicitly trying to hit an inflation target. It's absurd to say printing money doesn't create inflation.

      2. Inflation is bad for the poor and lower classes. The wealthy who alrea
    • Rich people sucking up all the currency so that normal people can't even efficiently exchange their labor for food is like the textbook thing that an inflationary fiat currency is necessary to prevent. If the fed wasn't pumping out all those extra dollars you bet they would be taken out of the economy, leaving it broken and unable to function.
    • by nagora ( 177841 )

      If you print money (figuratively, meaning massive increase in the money supply), you would think this would be inflationary, but that hasn't proven to be the case. The "Quantitative Easing" that the Federal Reserve did was simply buying government bonds with money they just made up, which in the short term is effectively the same as paying for government spending with new money. This hasn't produced significant inflation.

      Wrong. QE is printing "slow" money which takes time - years - to leak out into the real economy, but it is doing so right now because QE has not proven to be "short-term" at all.

      It has created a asset price bubble which is significant and is a problem. Every central bank in the world is trying, and failing, to find a cure for this before it's too late. Low and negative interest rates were supposed to buy us time and have now become the only way to stop it all imploding but there's no exist strategy and the

    • The increase in money supply has not resulted in an increase in demand for products at their existing prices. ... It only works that way if the increase in money supply is uniform across the population.

      I couldn't agree more. And to prove your point, we now see indeed inflation picking up as consumers spend the pandemic relief money that was dished out so generously in the US. That is aggravated by lower production which has lead to a shortage of goods in some sectors. But this will not lead to pronounced, long-term inflation because both causes will end quickly.

    • There is a lot of inflation. It is not measured by CPI because CPI good basket does not contain assets. The question is whether consumer inflation (CPI) will catch up with asset inflation or asset prices will crash to reach reasonable price-earnings ratios (PE). May be PE will stay miserable for ever.
    • by e3m4n ( 947977 )
      yes, in a way money is like a stock. when you print more, it loses its value but not immediately apparent. Its sort of like issuing more shares of a stock. Ever look at the graphs tracking the cost of a barrel of oil? It seems to match the graph for the value of gold. Yes certain events can cause short term spikes in demand/price but zoom out to pricing over decades. Are the value of the items increasing? Or is it that the dollar is worth less and these items have the same value, it just takes more dollars
  • Only Nixon could abandon the Gold Standard.

  • by Maury Markowitz ( 452832 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @08:20PM (#61699037) Homepage

    "Classical economic theory would suggest that an increase in the money supply of this magnitude should lead to a sharp rise in inflation but that has not happened"

    Gebus what complete BS! Inflation *immediately* began climbing with the end of the gold standard, rising linearly before peaking at over 12%. Energy costs flattened that, but it started climbing again in 1977 to reach over 14% in 1980.

    The highest inflation rates in the last 50 years are all immediately after the ending of the gold standard. What is this person talking about?!

    • Well, Larry Elliott is more like Larry Idiot. He has been writing mind blowingly stupid articles for years. No idea why the Guardian pays him for his crap.

  • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @08:25PM (#61699055)

    ... they can do to stabilize the gold market is to block up that tunnel between the JP Morgan Chase and New York Federal Reserve vaults.

  • "Classical economic theory would suggest that an increase in the money supply of this magnitude should lead to a sharp rise in inflation but that has not happened. At least not yet."

    All of that assumes that the money put into the system stays in the system as liquid cash, moving around under a healthy economy.

    That's not what happens now. Instead, most of it is going to Wall Street, being converted into stock value, and inflating stock prices rather than inflating real product prices (or inflating wages, which was the intent of releasing the money in the first place). It supports to the point of suspension the stock market, and the rest of us continue to meager along with the same income we made 15-20 years ago.

    • "Classical economic theory would suggest that an increase in the money supply of this magnitude should lead to a sharp rise in inflation but that has not happened. At least not yet."

      All of that assumes that the money put into the system stays in the system as liquid cash, moving around under a healthy economy.

      That's not what happens now. Instead, most of it is going to Wall Street, being converted into stock value, and inflating stock prices rather than inflating real product prices (or inflating wages, which was the intent of releasing the money in the first place). It supports to the point of suspension the stock market, and the rest of us continue to meager along with the same income we made 15-20 years ago.

      Why would you suspend the stock market?? You just said economic stimulus isn't causing inflation, everyone is apparently flush with cash but it's not being saved under mattresses or in bank accounts because it's going to the markets, the biggest problem according to conservatives is a labor shortage because people have enough money to stay home, job creators are doing so fine even _they'd_ rather invest their extra money in the market than raise wages, the economy is expanding, and the stock market is infl

  • https://wtfhappenedin1971.com/ [wtfhappenedin1971.com]

    Yeah, the gold standard was also a mess that carried it's own problems. But clearly there are significant problems with fiat currencies as well. Especially with the tendency of politicians to deficit spend without any real limits, and inflate the currency to match.

  • Why I too, love to write articles about a subject I don't understand at all. Somehow cryptocurrency is here to... do something. I also said words like "quantitive easing" and "inflation" that I heard grown ups use once and now I can use them too like a grown up. Now give me back my glue I wasn't done smelling that!
  • Gold has never been the "only real" currency. Yes, all through history we had "notes" that can be converted to gold pieces, but actual trade was done on credit, and local shops ran tabs on books. Hard currency rarely changed hands. I am not talking about recent two or three hundred years. This includes middle eastern Muslim traders in the middle ages, or even more ancient civilizations.

    (For that I could recommend the excellent book: Debt: The First 5000 Years)

    The problem arose when the government decided to

  • To be a stable store of value / medium of exchange without hoarding directly useful commodities. Trying to conflate that with different goals like economic stimulus or gaining advantage in trade degrades these important primary functions. People should be able to save for retirement without taking unwanted risks on stock market or buying more real estate then they need. If you must do these other things, create another channel and still give people an option of hard currencies. So far gold may even be bette

  • No, at least not beyond the sense in which all of our modern financial system can so be traced.

    The reason for the rise of cryptocurrencies like bitcoin (both legit and illegit purposes) as well as the interest in creating approved cryptocurrencies like facebook is trying can all be blamed on the passage of overly intrusive know your customer laws for financial services.

    These laws are designed to prevent money laundering, terrorist funding and other bad things. And yes, all those things are bad but the net

  • Really, tying your economic stability to any 'rare' mineral is 'great' until someone comes up with enough to crash the market.
    Either by mining asteroids, or figuring how to get the gold out of sea water (about one gram of gold for every 100 million metric tons of ocean water), there will be a chase as it's scarcity drives the price of it up and up and the more exotic methods of collecting it become financial sound.
    Sounds a lot like Bitcoins, eh?

  • You don't have to like Modern Monetary Theory to admit that it works in practice, as the US has been proving for decades. Speaking of gold buggery, the US never left the gold standard - just moved it to black gold. If the oil market collapses or it stops being mostly traded in USD, then the US might be up a creek. But not because of blockchain, crypto or Bitcoin.

  • by e3m4n ( 947977 ) on Tuesday August 17, 2021 @09:42AM (#61700613)
    Read - The Creature from Jekyll Island, by Edward Griffin. It discusses this and the grand plan dating back to actually just after the great depression. The whole point of inflation is to make our debt worthless after a time. You can keep borrowing and spending and by the time you pay it back its a worthless trinket of value. Do you remember in the 90s when Ron Paul said we should have never left the gold standard? This book explains some of that, the article in discussion seems to shine a light on this too.
  • No, actually the creation of cryptocurrencies can be traced to the first use of shells as wampum...

  • Crypto coin are just gaming token, nothing to do with issues of currency and money. False premise, fallacious conclusion reached. With a false premise you can prove anything.

Air pollution is really making us pay through the nose.

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