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Zimbabwe Launches Gold Coins as Legal Tender To Tackle Hyperinflation (sky.com) 103

Zimbabwe has launched new gold coins to be sold to the public in a bid to tackle chronic hyperinflation. From a report: The gold coins - called Mosi-oa-Tunya - will have "liquid asset status", meaning they can be converted to cash, traded locally and internationally, and used for transactions, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe said. People can only trade the coins for cash after holding them for at least 180 days. Zimbabwean economist Prosper Chitambara said: "The government is trying to moderate the very high demand for the US dollar because this high demand is not being matched by supply." According to the International Monetary Fund, inflation in Zimbabwe reached 837% (year on year) in July 2020 and, although tighter fiscal policy helped reduce it to 60.7% by the end of last year, it remains in the high double-digits. This wipes away the value of people's savings - many people saw their savings wiped out by the 5 billion per cent inflation seen in 2008, according to the IMF.
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Zimbabwe Launches Gold Coins as Legal Tender To Tackle Hyperinflation

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  • The mind boggles. And yet, if I understand such things correctly, still not the worst the world has ever seen.

    • by Reiyuki ( 5800436 ) on Wednesday July 27, 2022 @01:44PM (#62738746)
      What's even crazier is that not too long ago Zimbabwe was near parity with USD. Things can unravel WAY faster than we think.
    • Somehow it sounds less impressive to simply say the currency crashed and became worthless.
    • The mind boggles. And yet, if I understand such things correctly, still not the worst the world has ever seen.

      A friend showed me a Zimbawe Billion dollar bill this past weekend. Finally, a way for the common man to enter the ranks of Bezos, et al.

      • The mind boggles. And yet, if I understand such things correctly, still not the worst the world has ever seen.

        A friend showed me a Zimbawe Billion dollar bill this past weekend. Finally, a way for the common man to enter the ranks of Bezos, et al.

        With that and a 10 USD note he could buy a coffee at Starbucks, right?

  • and if I were a Zimbabwean citizen who got a hold of one of these gold coins, what precisely stops me from trading it for US dollars across the border tomorrow instead of after the out-of-someone's-ass waiting period?

    Also...where exactly are they going to get the gold to mint these coins? Very few commodity traders accept itchy and scratchy dollars.

    • The biggest challenge is not selling the coins, but buying them. With a ~$1800 purchase price this is far beyond what a common person in Zimbabwe can afford.

      • They do not need to be 1oz nor do they need to be pure gold. They could contain Electrum or a precious metal alloy. There are lots of options. Also, they could mint bills with vapor deposition tech containing real gold ala Goldbucks. Also, if you are introducing gold, you can just as easily introduce silver in the mix for smaller transactions. You know, how it's been done for thousands of years?
        • That kind of defeats the purpose. The idea of the gold coins is to build in value rather than just try and print and pretend. Less than 1oz makes sense however, just need to be real pure gold otherwise it is just another scam (ie fiat.)

          Note that what happened in Zimbabwe can happen anywhere when you have a government that is not for the people but for themselves. People in Zimbabwe with foreign assets were fine. I am suggesting get some foreign assets if you want to protect yourselves from your local gove
          • That kind of defeats the purpose.

            What defeats what purpose? Using gold and silver as money is fine. It's been done for thousands of years. It doesn't matter what shape you smash it into.

            • No using substitute metals as suggested above that I was replying to. You need to read the conversation to understand my comment.
    • by dvice ( 6309704 )

      > Also...where exactly are they going to get the gold to mint these coins?

      https://miningzimbabwe.com/gol... [miningzimbabwe.com]

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      Wasn't gold supposed to be magical and fix everything because it's not fiat money?
      • by Kremmy ( 793693 )
        That's a religion, the people who think that are religious nutjobs.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Arethan ( 223197 )

        You have that backward. Countries have consistently moved their currencies off gold and onto fiat because it was "supposed to be magical and fix everything".

        The problem with gold-backed currency (Representative Money) is that it impedes the fiscal magic of banks by putting a hard cap on the total money pool - there is not an unlimited quantity of gold on earth and mining does not keep up with the rate of money creation.

        The problem with Fiat Money is that it has no intrinsic value, so it requires a religious

        • You have that backward. Countries have consistently moved their currencies off gold and onto fiat because it was "supposed to be magical and fix everything".

          BS. Countries moved off gold because the amount of gold remains relatively constant yet the value of the economy increases. If counties remained on the gold standard, either the economies would fail to grow or the value of gold would quickly inflate beyond anything sustainable. For a current example of this, look at Bitcoin.

          The problem with Fiat Money is that it has no intrinsic value, so it requires a religious leap of faith that it has a reasonably stable value.

          Learn economics. And the theory of money. Fiat money has no value because it represents an concept called economic value, and the value it represents is set by the economy. If the econo

          • You are wrong on all nearly points. Every Fiat currency in history has failed or is in the process of doing so. It's just a matter of how long it takes while idiots like you tap-dance and hand-wave about some ridiculous "economic theory" that "stabilizes" the value of money. You literally need to learn the first principles of economics, value, price, and supply and demand. Bitcoin is nothing like gold at all. One is a physical element with many intrinsic uses and the other is a pump-and-dump scam in the pr
          • You are the one full of BS. Countries moved off the gold standard due to wanting to tax via inflation. The fixed amount of gold v's increasing value is deflationary which banks and governments hate due to people not wanting to borrow massive amounts of money as deflation makes their loan (effectively) grow so they have to pay it off. Now days you get people (organisations) borrowing massively waiting for the next bail out. When they moved off the gold standard they actually banned buying gold with money. St
            • You do know that gold mining is tremendously inefficient right? For our millennia of history and longer prehistory, there is only two to three olympic pools worth of gold that has ever been mined.

              Are you seriously asking us to believe that the "ongoing mining" and "new gold deposits" could somehow magically account for the global economy, which has exploded in the past 100 years? Especially when the "new gold deposits" are producing gold at, literally, grams per ton of rock?
              • Your comment has no point to it. The amount of gold mined is not relevant other than to point out that the amount of gold is not a static number.

                My point was clear which is related to why and who benefits from inflation which is the key to being off the gold standard. But in taking the currency off the gold standard in 1971 it was the US dollar and other countries currencies were related to the US dollar, and still are so the separation from the gold standard was done by the US and other currencies were
                • Completely relevant. https://www.stlouisfed.org/ope... [stlouisfed.org]

                  And then the Great Depression hit. People hoarded gold instead of depositing it in banks, which created an international gold shortage. Countries around the world basically ran out of supply and were forced off the gold standard.

                  Undersupply of currency causes issues no matter what.

                  Even in "good times", when there's a limited supply of gold, no one wants to spend it. No one wants to invest. Imagine if we were on gold before the iPod came out. Why would Apple go to the trouble of creating the iPod market, leading to the iPhone and iPad, worth trillions of dollars that weren't there before, when they know that only the rich would spend the gold on a luxury-priced item?

                  Gold i

                  • This is like the dumbest view of history ever. People spent money plenty before we went off the gold standard. People spent plenty of gold when that was the currency. No one was forced off the gold standard we went off it in 1971 all currencies in the western world were pegged to gold at that point, that is well after the great depression. You seem to be just making stuff up here.
          • You sir have understood nothing from OP's post.
            You should be eligible to get your economics degree fee refunded

      • by GoTeam ( 5042081 )
        As with most things, it depends on how you use it.
      • Wasn't gold supposed to be magical and fix everything because it's not fiat money?

        Gold is like the second string quarterback on the football team. The most valuable person on the team.

        The problem with Gold is that there just isn't enough of it. Want to see hyperinflation? go back to a true gold standard. Eventually, people will be spending millions of dollars for a molecule of gold. It will end up kinda like crypto.

        The fact that gold has a use is irrelevant, except for the uses which actually require gold. Those will be priced out of existence.

        Fiat is used as a pejorative, but it

        • Fiat is used as a pejorative, but it's a major misunderstanding by those who use it that way. What modern money and control of it is, is acting as a indicator of stability of the government that issues it.

          When managed well, fiat currency is better than gold, because with fiat, the managers can match the money supply to the needs of the economy.

          The drawback to fiat currency is that it's too tempting to abuse it, like Zimbabwe does. In that case, the gold standard is better.

          • Re:Okay... (Score:4, Insightful)

            by CrimsonAvenger ( 580665 ) on Wednesday July 27, 2022 @03:29PM (#62739126)

            The drawback to fiat currency is that it's too tempting to abuse it, like Zimbabwe does.

            Or like the USA. Face it, creating $2.2T because the President wants to look good come election time is, and has always been, a really bad idea.

          • Zimbabwe has a double-whammy because the US dollar is being used for almost all transactions. Zimbabwe can't match the money supply to the needs of the economy because the money supply is entirely determined by current account surplus or deficits. Using another country's fiat currency is the worst of both worlds. And that typically only happens after a country's own currency has been so poorly mismanaged.
          • "The drawback to fiat currency is that it's too tempting to abuse it, like Zimbabwe does. In that case, the gold standard is better."

            This is not actually a problem unique to fiat currency. Specie can also cause abrupt changes in monetary supply.

            The Spanish Empire extracted so much silver from their New World mines that they caused inflation throughout Europe. This led to the bankruptcy of Spain and the abdication of Charles V, dividing the Spanish and Austrian Habsburgs.

            • Yeap. Similarly when the cyanide gold purification process was discovered in the late 1800s. The difference is that fiat currency can be infinitely inflated.

      • There are a lot of different opinions and definitions of what money actually is. But here's my take on why gold in particular has been used as money.

        In ancient times gold was attractive for use as jewelry and rare, so it had value in the minds of people. Since it was also durable, portable, and hard to counterfeit. and also easy to divide and measure in precise quantities, it started getting used as money. Tradition did the rest.

        This is, in a way, how money got invented. And money's qualities are partly

        • by HiThere ( 15173 )

          That's part of it. It ignores the role of the government, Darius treasury department in this case, of establishing a standard of purity, and also that many other things, like bronze, have also been used as monetary materials. (I'd say metals, but there have been cases when, e.g., wood, was used as a monetary material.) These were ALL fiat currencies, including Darius' gold ingots.

          OTOH, there's the case of the silver miner in Nevada who "counterfeited" silver dollars. The treasury department investigated

    • What stops you is the realization that there is only about one atom of gold in the coin?
  • by Dan East ( 318230 ) on Wednesday July 27, 2022 @01:33PM (#62738708) Journal

    I don't understand what this is supposed to accomplish. They aren't saying that the Zimbabwe dollar will be backed by gold, but literally making gold into currency. Thus the coin has intrinsic value which has nothing to do with the Zimbabwe dollar. So both the buying and selling price of the coin in Zimbabwe dollars will be based on the current value of the Zimbabwe dollar at the time it is bought or sold. That doesn't seem to accomplish anything at all.

    • Yeah, it sort of seems like the government is saying, "we can't trust ourselves to stop printing so much money so let's just go back to trading gold."
    • by Anil ( 7001 )

      I think there is value here, but how small will their gold coins be if regular workers are going to access them?

      Turn their ZDollar into gold today, so that in 180+ days they will have value not effected by inflation. A way to save in another currency not in a ZDollar bank account; where the ZDollar bank account will become worthless.

      Also a way to change their currency that doesn't involve buying and holding big physical items (real estate/etc).

      Might be better to give them a way to access currency exchange

      • I think there is value here, but how small will their gold coins be if regular workers are going to access them?

        Turn their ZDollar into gold today, so that in 180+ days they will have value not effected by inflation.

        Hmm - Gold is not affected by inflation?

    • I don't see this helping the economy, except for maybe more foreign money coming in to buy the coins... but it doens't help improve the value of the currency.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Oh, you don't see this helping? Well, that certainly changes everything ::eyeroll::

        Do you think you're an expect on economics now, Apple shill?

        it doens't help improve the value of the currency

        That's not what it's for, dumbass. The idea is that it's a safer way for them to store wealth. Inflation wipes out debt, but it also wipes out savings. Ben Franklin was wrong about that penny saved bullshit. Gold might not be the best place to store wealth, despite what Glenn Beck told you, but it's better than a rapidly inflating currency.

        Alice and Bob each hav

    • I don't understand what this is supposed to accomplish.

      It's likely a sign of a government that is insolvent, making a last-ditch effort to hold things together by tricking people. (Note that inflation is also an attempt to hold things together by tricking people.)

    • Don't think anyone would trust them to maintain a gold reserve. Seems like it's an alternative to buying paper dollars with Zimbabwe dollars, which is probably pretty difficult. They could sell gold for dollars, but might as well just use the gold, though I wouldn't trust the coins to be pure
      • by HiThere ( 15173 )

        I wouldn't trust the gold to be visible without a microscope. You'd need to look carefully to see a US dollar's worth of gold. As of today gold is US$1,720.00/ounce.

    • I think its supposed to provide inflation resistant form of keeping money for the rich, so that they grab less paper USD from local market and thus helping with foreign currency deficit.

    • Plausible deniability for pocketing some money, the insiders have preferential access to the coins and they are priced to allow them to make a profit.

      Plain old corruption can get you in trouble once you want to spend it abroad.

  • by williamyf ( 227051 ) on Wednesday July 27, 2022 @01:34PM (#62738714)

    Falsifying gold coins is not that hard, there are three ways to do it:

    An inner shell of lead, surrounded by a thin coat of gold to provide reactivity to gold detecting chemicals.

    If you are brazen, an inner shell of lead, surrounded by a thin layer of Pyrite (fool's gold) to give the apearance.

    If you want to be extra-delicate, an inner shell of tungsten, surrounded by a thin layer of gold, to not only give the propper chemical reactions, but also to make it extra difficult to detect falsifications by use of X-rays.

    Getting the molds is not too diffiicult, either by crook (bribing someone at the mint), or by ingenuity (making your own), more so with modern tools, that even small organized crime gangs can easily get. Getting the raw materials and the fab equipment is not hard either.

    Certainly is harder than falsifying papaer bills, but doable, and in a country like zimbawe, ripe for abuse.

    • by Mal-2 ( 675116 )

      Would that pass being tossed on a scale though? Gold has a density of 19.42 g/cm^3, while lead is "only" 11.34 g/cm^3. If it were the other way around it would be simple enough to include lighter filler metals in the alloy, but elements more dense than gold are also quite a bit more expensive than gold.

      • Tungsten would pass on a scale, but perhaps an electrical resistance test at home can detect it. Tungsten also has this unique property of glowing, and in a dark room the light might shine through the outer gold.
        • by Mal-2 ( 675116 )

          Tungsten is also hard. You can often bend gold with your bare hands, and lead would put up a similar amount of resistance and show a similar amount of plasticity. But tungsten most certainly would not. So you could probably just bite a coin and detect tungsten.

      • by AnotherBlackHat ( 265897 ) on Wednesday July 27, 2022 @03:09PM (#62739060) Homepage

        According to my 66th edition of The Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, Gold has a density of 19.31, lead has a density of 11.34 and Tungsten has a density of 19.35.

        A gold plated lead coin probably wouldn't even pass a "heft" test from a human familiar with gold coins, much less a scale.

        A gold plated tungsten-alloy could probably be made with exactly the same density as whatever alloy the gold coin in question is, but it would be extremely difficult to make a coin that had the right density, sounded right when you dropped on a hard surface, and had the same dielectric constant -- all things easy to measure cheaply.
        I wouldn't be surprised if a plastic beam balance with a coin-sized slot cut into it became as ubiquitous as those counterfeit detecting pens.

        But then, I've seen counterfeit bills that were so bad that one wonders how anyone could be fooled by them, so I'm sure counterfeit gold coins will be made too.

        • by dryeo ( 100693 )

          Back when Sovereigns were commonly used, shop keepers etc did have simple scales with slots and diameters to cover half and full Sovereigns.
          Not so much for counterfeits, which were easy to spot, as for light coinage. Gold is pretty shitty as circulating money, it wears quick and people will clip it (remove a bit from the rim). At that the British mint was continuously taking worn light coins and melting them down for new ones of the correct weight.
          https://duckduckgo.com/?q=Sove... [duckduckgo.com]

    • by Anonymous Coward

      An inner shell of lead, surrounded by a thin coat of gold to provide reactivity to gold detecting chemicals.

      Not likely to work. Have you ever felt the weight of lead vs gold? Sure, lead is heavy, but for a given volume, gold is WAY heavier.

      If you are brazen, an inner shell of lead, surrounded by a thin layer of Pyrite (fool's gold) to give the apearance.

      LOL. Are you serious? Pyrite doesn't even look the right color to be gold. It's shiny and that's about as good as it gets. Only people who have never seen a genuine gold bar are going to take a look at pyrite and wonder if it's gold.

      If you want to be extra-delicate, an inner shell of tungsten, surrounded by a thin layer of gold, to not only give the propper chemical reactions, but also to make it extra difficult to detect falsifications by use of X-rays.

      Won't pass the bite test. Gold is a pretty soft metal. Tungsten is incredibly hard.

    • Each one of those cases can be detected in a few seconds by banging two coins against each-other.

      The 'ping test' works for both gold and silver coinage, and a trained ear can often determine purity from the sound quality alone.

      • I'm sure there's a legitimate case to be made here, but I would not personally base any significant decision on this evaluation. "Trained ears" can age and get tinitus. Frequency detection is impacted by, among other things, blood pressure.

        • It's fairly obvious when you hear the accoustics side-by-side. Gold and silver will ring like a tuning fork, often for several seconds, while forgeries will sound flat and tend to 'thump' rather than ring (especially lead). Of course if your ears weren't up-to-spec you could always record it and look at the FFT of the result.
    • Falsifying gold coins is not that hard, there are three ways to do it:

      An inner shell of lead, surrounded by a thin coat of gold to provide reactivity to gold detecting chemicals.

      If you are brazen, an inner shell of lead, surrounded by a thin layer of Pyrite (fool's gold) to give the apearance.

      If you want to be extra-delicate, an inner shell of tungsten, surrounded by a thin layer of gold, to not only give the propper chemical reactions, but also to make it extra difficult to detect falsifications by use of X-rays.

      Getting the molds is not too diffiicult, either by crook (bribing someone at the mint), or by ingenuity (making your own), more so with modern tools, that even small organized crime gangs can easily get. Getting the raw materials and the fab equipment is not hard either.

      Certainly is harder than falsifying papaer bills, but doable, and in a country like zimbawe, ripe for abuse.

      And which of these would pass the ancient test of biting the coin and attempting to bend it against your teeth?

      • Falsifying gold coins is not that hard, there are three ways to do it:

        An inner shell of lead, surrounded by a thin coat of gold to provide reactivity to gold detecting chemicals.

        If you are brazen, an inner shell of lead, surrounded by a thin layer of Pyrite (fool's gold) to give the apearance.

        If you want to be extra-delicate, an inner shell of tungsten, surrounded by a thin layer of gold, to not only give the propper chemical reactions, but also to make it extra difficult to detect falsifications by use of X-rays.

        Getting the molds is not too diffiicult, either by crook (bribing someone at the mint), or by ingenuity (making your own), more so with modern tools, that even small organized crime gangs can easily get. Getting the raw materials and the fab equipment is not hard either.

        Certainly is harder than falsifying papaer bills, but doable, and in a country like zimbawe, ripe for abuse.

        And which of these would pass the ancient test of biting the coin and attempting to bend it against your teeth?

        If your thin outer layer of gold is thick enough (pun intended), all the methods work.

        • by q4Fry ( 1322209 )

          Except pyrite, which is more brittle than gold and won't yield to the teeth the same way.

          I am less out-of-my-ass confident that the tungsten shell and interestingly this chart of density and cost [researchgate.net] for materials suggests that tungsten is denser than gold, so you could make up for the lead's under-spec density with tungsten. Who knows whether the acoustics match, though?

          This is fun and all, but the "Is it really a piece of Zimbabwean gold currency?" question is moot as soon as their inflation inevitably makes

    • Falsifying gold coins is not that hard

      While that is true, there are several really effective ways to check:

      1) Ping test. This may sound odd, but it's actually quite good - gold (and silver) have a very specific resonance that can be detected either by ear, or even by applications. If you introduce other metals anywhere, it just does not resonate the same.

      2) Weight/Size. Even a cheap scale can be accurate enough to see if a coin weighs exactly what a real coin should weigh, and cheap calipers can confirm

      • Didn't a famous old greek person do number 3 for some king or something millennia ago?
        • Not only was specific gravity discovered by Archimedes [nde-ed.org], but supposedly the discovery of such is also the origin of the widely used term "Eureka!" (though it's just "I have found it!" in Greek).

          • by PPH ( 736903 )

            Be thankful for the invention of the light bulb. Or our symbol for sudden inspiration would be a naked old guy jumping out of a bathtub.

    • Hmm you got me thinking. Get really fine sand or silt (the finer the better), press the actual coin on the silt/sand to impress the details. Vacuum cast it (to prevent bubbles) use the positive cast to create a negative, ..., Profit!
    • What happens if you bite one?
    • by nagora ( 177841 )

      That's a lot of work to make something that is far, far too light to fool anyone.

    • by narcc ( 412956 )

      Falsifying gold coins is not that hard

      I challenge you to make one, then try doing it for less than the cost of a real coin. This isn't something the average Joe is going to do in his garage. It takes a lot of specialized knowledge and skill and it's still very high-risk.

      It's actually pretty easy to detect fake gold coins, or fake gold anything. We tell children the story of Archimedes, for goodness sake. This is a long-solved problem.

      You could try shaving a little bit from a lot of coins, which I understand used to be pretty common and one

      • by dryeo ( 100693 )

        Clipping used to be pretty common, both silver and gold coins. Might only be a couple of pennies of gold but a penny was a lot more money then.
        Shop keepers used things like https://duckduckgo.com/?q=Sove... [duckduckgo.com] and it was considered treason which came with a painful death sentence.
        Also remember that gold coins wear pretty quick so even without clipping you had to watch for light coins.

      • Falsifying gold coins is not that hard

        I challenge you to make one, then try doing it for less than the cost of a real coin. This isn't something the average Joe is going to do in his garage. It takes a lot of specialized knowledge and skill and it's still very high-risk.

        I am not part of any "small organized crime gangs" (you seem to have not read that part of the original post), so no. I, by my lonesome, can not make one.

        It's actually pretty easy to detect fake gold coins, or fake gold anything. We tell children the story of Archimedes, for goodness sake. This is a long-solved problem.

        Tell that to the average Zimbabwe citizen:
        Education expenditures
        3.6% of GDP (2018 est.)
        country comparison to the world: 122
        School life expectancy (primary to tertiary education)
        total: 11 years

        https://www.cia.gov/the-world-... [cia.gov]

        You could try shaving a little bit from a lot of coins, which I understand used to be pretty common and one of the reasons coins that some coins have ridges along edge, but this isn't easy either. Shave too much and you're caught, shave too little and it's not worth the effort. You also need a lot of coins to make just one new one. If you try to pass a bunch of shaved coins at once, which you'd want to do, the difference in weight will get you caught. Still, good luck trying to mint a new coin from your shavings! It's not an easy, so I'd expect any cheater to do something simpler, like make jewelry.

        That's why small organized crime groups buy gold and tungsten, and make falsified coins, instead of shaving.

        You can be sure that any country that's using gold coins will figure out not just ways to cheat, but how to catch cheaters very quickly.

        I agree 100%, but I am n

    • The lead idea is stupid. Lead is lighter than gold, so even Archimedes was able to detect that cheap trick 2500 years ago. Our ancestors have been trading with gold for millennia and you think it's recent to try to fake it? Tungsten is the only economically viable substitute, but it lacks the electrical properties of gold meaning it would be discovered simply by using a device that can check for conductivity at multiple points on the coin. In other words, since tungsten is the only metal cheaper than gold t

    • I think that would end rather poorly for the counterfeiter. As in machete justice.

  • ... the Federal Reserve's not going to like that.
  • ...bought off Ebay before they became such collectors items that Chinese printers began selling counterfeits. It is a fantastic and tangible object lesson in economics, along with the hyperinflation of German Deutschmarks of the early 1920's and of Venezuela from 2017-2021. The broad principles of economics are not that difficult, however government corruption is a tough nut to crack.
  • This is obviously the crucial missing piece from Zimbabwe's economy. All those people that have trouble conducting transactions because they don't have coins in their pockets worth a thousand dollars. Was gold not valuable before the government decided to back it?
  • 1) shortening of planning horizons - if you don't know what prices will be in the future you can't plan a business. You can't invest in the economy because you don't know what the value of the money will be in a year.
    2) wasted resources negotiating - companies constantly have to haggle new prices. 60% inflation in a business with a 5% margin means setting new prices at least every 2 weeks (when prices change by 2.5%)
    3) need for immediate payment - If we negotiate a price, you need to complete payment
  • by Sloppy ( 14984 ) on Wednesday July 27, 2022 @02:00PM (#62738816) Homepage Journal

    Oh great, now they're hyping gold. Put all your money into gold, and then realize how many supernovas and neutron star collisions are out there, nucleosynthesizing it (while also killing everybody within many AU). By the time governments outlaw supernovas, the price of stars will have doubled.

    Just Say No to this bandwagon.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The gold standard is a special case of a "currency board". This is where an independent bank is empowered in some way to fix the money supply. Currency boards, in some fashion, are how hyperinflation ends.

    There are ideologues who claim that the mere existence of fiat currency causes hyperinflation, but this isn't the case. It's when the currency board (discipline) is broken that hyperinflation ensues. In can be caused by any number of things, usually war or politics but it's the breaking of fiscal dis

    • Gold doesn't generate interest. If they were to convert fully to a gold backed currency, it would be closer to dollarization except less practical and requiring more trust that the gold certificates actually represent real gold.

  • It would be hilarious if the one country on earth with a gold backed currency was Zimbabwe.

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