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Dollar Bubble and Inflation


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2009 Nov 25, 5:00am   24,613 views  110 comments

by patientrenter   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Long time reader, first time poster.

Good video -

http://inflation.us/videos.html

#bubbles

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41   pkennedy   2009 Dec 3, 9:06am  

It doesn't prevent waste, it doesn't prevent debt, it doesn't prevent inflation.

- People can still waste on such projects. Why wouldn't they? They will try and bring as much money home as possible.
- They can still create debt that requires repayment at some time. In fact create a debt, and loot another countries gold reserves to pay it off! If a country can't get out of debt, what better way than to go to war to get out?
- Inflation is still possible. The cost of gas in gold today is far more than it was back in the 1960's. That is inflation.

Your idea is that gold has a higher cost than printing money, but both methods have a value attached to them. One has a better % yield than the other. You're also using $100 bills, why not $1 bills instead? Since we don't print most of the money we use, your comparison is moot anyways.

You're goal is to make the government less corrupt. Gold and the law never did that in the past. There was corruption in the past, there will always be some level of corruption in the future.

42   simchaland   2009 Dec 3, 9:26am  

The gold standard simply represents another round of humanity's cleverness in assigning economic value to random objects that interest us so that we can exchange this shiny stuff for goods and services.

It's the same as paper money.

I fail to see how the gold standard ensures the people's control over the government. The government's of old borrowed to the hilt when currency meant metal coins. They found ways of making war. Inflation still happened in rich countries where there was an ample supply of the metal coins. That follows the laws of supply and demand.

You still have debt with the gold standard. You still have government overspending with a gold standard. And there isn't enough gold in the world at the moment to handle the world's financial needs to keep economies afloat. A return to the gold standard would slow economic activity because it requires delivery of a commodity and security plus freight charges. There are too many people in the world to stretch the supply of gold around the world so that most people prosper. It would create a highly inefficient economy because in an efficient economy goods and services are distributed such that most people get what they need to live. Our current system may not be the most efficient, but it sure is more efficient than returning to an element that doesn't exist in enough quantity to give purchasing power to enough people in the world to keep goods and services flowing.

43   tatupu70   2009 Dec 3, 12:04pm  

@Elvis--

You're not teaching anything. You really need to understand what others are posting.

elvis says

the ability to create unlimited amounts of (worthless) paper money CAUSES inflation

The ability causes nothing. The actual printing can lead to inflation.

Everyone understands what inflation is. And what its effects are. The difference is that we also understand the effects of going on a gold standard as well.

44   wisefool   2009 Dec 3, 12:14pm  

Yes, the USA was on a gold standard untill the 1970s. Do you know why?

I'll tell you why, we have a sports team called the san fransisco '49ers. The USA mined out all of its gold and silver. we mined most of our oil.

It would be idiotic to go to a currency based on a shiny metal only found in 3rd world poopholes. No matter what rationale about how much work it takes to produce it relative to printing a $100 bill.

Natural gas and teraflops are the only reasonable backing for a currency once the world gets tired of hollywood/pro sports teams.

45   nope   2009 Dec 3, 1:55pm  

Nomograph says

Most people store their wealth assets

Most people [who actually have wealth]

Most people have a negative net worth.

46   thomas.wong87   2009 Dec 3, 6:43pm  

elvis says

What is the total cost to mine, and refine an ounce of gold? Maybe $800?

Actually I read its around $500/ounce.

47   Honest Abe   2009 Dec 3, 11:16pm  

Gold is a LIMIT ON GOVERNMENT. Thats the MAIN point. (Well, other than a non-gold currency is unconstitutional).

(gov't CAN paper money for war, it CAN'T print gold for war)

48   simchaland   2009 Dec 4, 9:14am  

It's not money if no one is willing to accept it as payment.

49   Â¥   2009 Dec 5, 3:45am  

Everyone’s wealth is stolen by inflation.

LOL, half this country doesn't have a penny to their names.

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51   Ryan1781   2009 Dec 5, 4:03am  

All this talk about gold. Come on, let's go back to the really olden days. Everyone should start trading in SALT again. Can it not be said that salt was: (1) a medium of exchange (2) a unit of account (3) a store of value, and (4) used as payment. Arguably, since we need it to survive it can be considered more valuable than gold.

So next time you're in a Target, pull out a bag of salt and see if you can convince the teller to take it as payment. By the same token, try to do the same thing with gold. Let's see how that works out for ya. I suggest you bring your dollars with you, so you can turn around and purchase in dollars.

52   theoakman   2009 Dec 5, 4:10am  

Nomograph says

elvis says

Everyone’s wealth is stolen by inflation.

Incorrect. Your wealth is only stolen by inflation if you store your wealth in currency. Only a fool stores his or her wealth in currency.
Currency is supplied by the government as legal tender for goods and services. Where on earth did you EVER get the idea that it was a place to store wealth? You actually believe that it is the government’s job to provide you with a place to store your wealth? Where does the Constitution say that government must provide you with a place to store your wealth? Just how big and intrusive do you want government to be, and why do you want the government to watch over your personal finances?
Elvis, I think you need to take a little more personal responsibility for your finances and quit looking to the government to hold your money for you. It won’t end well.

53   theoakman   2009 Dec 5, 4:12am  

Nomo, you are wrong. You are conveniently leaving out the fact that people's wages are devalued through inflation. I can protect the wealth I have by investing it. By and large, my wage, and the wages of millions of Americans are paid out in dollars, which are devalued everyday. Do they go up? Sure. Do wages rise along with inflation when the government is debasing the currency? Nope.

54   Honest Abe   2009 Dec 5, 5:37am  

Oakman, try this: go to google, or wikipedia, type in inflation, and read what it says. A mind is a terrible thing to waste.

Also go to: dollar collapse.com Lots of good stuff there.

P.S. Much like the government, my wife has a plan to spend us out of debt.

55   theoakman   2009 Dec 5, 9:04am  

When you print money, in the future, wages never keep up with inflation. They never have in world history. It's already happened. Prices in the past 10 years have easily outpaced wages.

"Nomo is never wrong. Haven’t you figured that out yet?"

A better slogan would be Nomo just never admits he's wrong.

56   tatupu70   2009 Dec 5, 9:37am  

theoakman says

wages never keep up with inflation. They never have in world history. It’s already happened. Prices in the past 10 years have easily outpaced wages.

That statement is so ridiculous as to be funny.

57   theoakman   2009 Dec 5, 9:53am  

"That statement is so ridiculous as to be funny."

Yeah well, when you chop off the first half, you can obviously misconstrue the statement.

58   Â¥   2009 Dec 5, 11:55am  

theoakman says

Prices in the past 10 years have easily outpaced wages.

In my analysis, this is neither here nor there.

At the end of the day, the wage-earner has to pay the bills from income, and I don't know about you but my expenses in order are:

1) Taxes
2) Rent
3) Food
4) Health insurance
5) Energy
6) Stuff

#2, existing housing, has a ZERO cost of production. Rent is a surplus. Taxes, food, insurance, and energy go up, rent will HAVE to go down if wages remain flat.

This is just my general theory, but I strongly suspect rents (and home values) will adjust downwards over the next decade should inflation in other stuff arise. I wouldn't bet my life on it but my experience living in Japan in the 90s (where rent went down in the midst of massive gov't printing) bears it out.

We'll see.

Edit: wut Nomograph sez ^.

59   theoakman   2009 Dec 6, 11:38am  

"If that was the case, a quart of milk would have been beyond reach for the common man years ago."

Totally unsubstantiated. But yes, a gallon of milk will continue to get more expensive

"A median income earner can afford rent, food, a car, clothing, and luxury items. Wages and prices can never be decoupled. Eventually they must equilibrate."

Zimbabwe and every other inflationary collapse proved this statement to be entirely false. They only equilibration after the currency that was debased becomes no more and new one is introduced.

60   Â¥   2009 Dec 6, 1:11pm  

theoakman says

Zimbabwe and every other inflationary collapse proved this statement to be entirely false.

Comparing the #1 economy with Zimbabwe or Weimar Germany is NOT constructive towards understanding the dynamics at play here.

I don't have all the answer and I don't even know what questions to ask.

BUT, I do know that Japan 1990-now is a better model of what's going on here than Zimbabwe.

This nation is both immensely wealthy and immensely poor. The next decade is going to be most interesting and I don't think ANYONE on the planet has a single clue as to how it's going to turn out.

61   patientrenter   2009 Dec 6, 1:41pm  

US Constituition Article 1 Section 10

Section 10. No state shall enter into any treaty, alliance, or confederation; grant letters of marque and reprisal; coin money; emit bills of credit; make anything but gold and silver coin a tender in payment of debts; pass any bill of attainder, ex post facto law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts, or grant any title of nobility.

The "US Dollars" are actually Federal Reserve (a private entity) notes.

62   crash-olah   2009 Dec 6, 1:44pm  

patientrenter- THANK YOU for all this info, it's very eye opening!

63   patientrenter   2009 Dec 6, 1:58pm  

Section 10 further states -

No state shall, without the consent of Congress, lay any duty of tonnage, keep troops, or ships of war in time of peace, enter into any agreement or compact with another state, or with a foreign power, or engage in war, unless actually invaded, or in such imminent danger as will not admit of delay

64   simchaland   2009 Dec 7, 9:13am  

US Constituition Article 1 Section 10

Section 10. No state shall enter into any treaty, alliance, or confederation; grant letters of marque and reprisal; coin money; emit bills of credit; make anything but gold and silver coin a tender in payment of debts; pass any bill of attainder, ex post facto law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts, or grant any title of nobility.

OK, do you see the word "state" here? This doesn't proscribe the Federal government from making anything but gold and silver coin a tender in payment of debts.

So, our Federal Reserve system isn't unconstitutional. Only states are prohibited from creating an alternate form of currency. So, try again...

65   simchaland   2009 Dec 7, 9:15am  

Section 10 further states -

No state shall, without the consent of Congress, lay any duty of tonnage, keep troops, or ships of war in time of peace, enter into any agreement or compact with another state, or with a foreign power, or engage in war, unless actually invaded, or in such imminent danger as will not admit of delay

Again, the word here is "state." California cannot do any of these things. The power to do these things rests only with the Federal Government. Article 1 Section 10 is needed to keep these states united in purpose, cause, and action. It gives the Federal Government central planning power because it takes away functions normally reserved for nations away from the states, which aren't individual nations under our Federal Government.

So, what's your point?

66   B.A.C.A.H.   2009 Dec 7, 10:18am  

simchaland,

you wanna cite the Constitution, how about looking up its definition for treason.

"Leaders" finance, including those who don't have any of their own kids serving in Iraq nor Afghanistan, have done a lot to damage our economy, arguably more damage to the economy than Al-Queda has done.

67   nope   2009 Dec 7, 2:23pm  

elvis says

I disagree for the stated reason above: Government can print unlimited amounts of money (having nothing to do with goods and services)…but can’t “print” unlimited amounts of gold.

Gold absolutely can and has been created in a lab, and (like most precious metals) is a byproduct of nuclear reactions. Gold can also be produced from various gold containing materials (say, colloidal gold) which are not included in usual figures for the world supply of "gold".

Aside from that -- gold deposits are found routinely and can give arbitrary wealth to countries that produce nothing but the gold itself.

Now, all natural resources do have inherent value -- gold included -- but giving gold an artificial value that grossly overstates its inherent benefits to society is illogical.

68   theoakman   2009 Dec 8, 4:47am  

"Gold absolutely can and has been created in a lab, and (like most precious metals) is a byproduct of nuclear reactions. Gold can also be produced from various gold containing materials (say, colloidal gold) which are not included in usual figures for the world supply of “gold”."

Ok, well the amount of money that you have to put in to create a gold atom is in the tens of billions of dollars. From that, you get a few gold atoms. 1 problem...the starting atoms were platinum. You are already operating at a loss. You aren't making a case for the devaluation of gold.

69   pkennedy   2009 Dec 9, 3:52am  

Actually, the euro should be going through some of these tests within the next few years. We should see how it's going to play out in countries like Italy. They can no longer devalue their money because the Euro. The Euro in that sense is the same as gold. They can't print more, so they need to dig themselves out. We'll see how they do it! And see if it's a better path than the one we're on!

70   pkennedy   2009 Dec 9, 7:59am  

s&p is made up of market leaders, who should represent what the s&p stands for. Over time, it would be expect if you were buying into A, and it went down, that you would be shifting your wealth into a better company. Simply look at warren buffet. He's done exceptionally well. Stocks work, they can go to zero unlike gold.

Holding gold for 40 years, even though 20 of those are good isn't great. Sure we lost a decade in housing, but over the last 40 years, it's probably been a fantastic investment. 40 years of stocks, again pretty good. 40 years is a long time. I'm guessing gold would have been the worst. of these.

71   theoakman   2009 Dec 9, 8:22am  

"Holding gold for 40 years, even though 20 of those are good isn’t great. Sure we lost a decade in housing, but over the last 40 years, it’s probably been a fantastic investment. 40 years of stocks, again pretty good. 40 years is a long time. I’m guessing gold would have been the worst. of these."

You sure about that one? Gold was $35 an oz 40 years ago. It's gained 3200% since then. The Dow was 667 at around the same time.

72   tatupu70   2009 Dec 9, 9:17am  

thunderlips11 says

Nomo - CNBC, Money Magazine, Fidelity Investments, the Wall Street Journal, etc. etc. etc. are mostly interested in selling you stocks, the occasional bond, and other paper investments… NAR always pumps up Housing

I think that's the point. You obviously aren't going to go buy a house because the NAR says "it's a great time to buy", just as you shouldn't believe what a website says that's devoted to selling you gold...
thunderlips11 says

The Stock Market is like a teacher who throws out all your failing grades and only counts the passing ones

Not really--you are describing survivorship bias which is really more applicable to mutual funds. The S&P 500 does alter it's portfolio based on market cap, but it doesn't throw away the results of the delisted stocks. If Montgomery Ward was in the S&P 500 in 1970, the results for 1970 reflect the gain or loss of it. So, it doesn't throw out any failing grades.... Anyone can match the S&P 500 results simply by buying those stocks and adjusting their portfolio whenever the index does.

73   StillLooking   2009 Dec 9, 12:26pm  

One point seems clear to me anyway.

Gold is a much better investment today than housing. The government is in hyperdrive manipulating the housing market higher. The government cannot continue like this and housing must fall in relation to gold.

74   thomas.wong87   2009 Dec 9, 2:09pm  

thunderlips11 says

In the past 40 years, it’s about 2 good decades for gold, and 2 for stocks. 50%/50%. That’s a lot different than the dominant financial media’s take on stocks v. gold.

Its not an investment. Its speculation on price. Stocks can pay dividends which provide income stream during retirement which is why its wiser to hold stock. Whats the annual cash dividend from holding gold ?

75   StillLooking   2009 Dec 9, 11:21pm  

thomas.wong87 says

thunderlips11 says


In the past 40 years, it’s about 2 good decades for gold, and 2 for stocks. 50%/50%. That’s a lot different than the dominant financial media’s take on stocks v. gold.

Its not an investment. Its speculation on price. Stocks can pay dividends which provide income stream during retirement which is why its wiser to hold stock. Whats the annual cash dividend from holding gold ?

At present all investments are so starved for yield that the dividend does not really matter. Gold will hold value with interests rates this low. It is the value of the dollar that is at risk. When interest rates get towards 20%, that is the time to sell gold and silver. And if the government keeps acting this recklessly I suspect we will get there.

76   tatupu70   2009 Dec 10, 6:24am  

thunderlips11 says

So If I brought the S&P 500, one of each stock, commission free, in 1970, and sold it in 2000, Montgomery Ward and NY Penn Central would have been part of it - and worth $0. They wouldn’t have been replaced by anything since you brought the 1970 index and held it for 30 years with no adjustment. No rotation - when a company fails, it’s $0 and replaced with nothing. Media reporting doesn’t take that into account.

They don't take it into account because it wasn't part of the index after it was sold. They are reporting the index. But, you can look at the Wilshire 5000 or other total stock market indexes if you want a more representative result of the entire market. Those numbers are readily available....

77   tatupu70   2009 Dec 10, 6:28am  

No problem-but after 1970 you no longer have the index then. You have a bunch of stocks that were in the index in 1970....

78   tatupu70   2009 Dec 10, 6:34am  

thunderlips11 says

Okay, so if I drop the Detroit Tigers from MLB every year their standings fall below .400, replace them with the best Minor League team, and then give the average performance of all teams in MLB, isn’t that a misleading statistic?

No. Because you don't use any minor league stats. You only use the stats of the new team once it enters the major league. So the stats of Detroit stay in the calculations for every year it was in the majors. Regardless of what the team names or city affiliations are, anything that takes place in the major leagues gets reported as major league stats.

Just like the S&P 500. It is billed as the top 500 companies--so as companies grow or shrink it is only natural that the index will adjust. It doesn't mean it will be the top 500 performing stocks--it never is. Just that it represents large cap stocks...

79   tatupu70   2009 Dec 10, 6:38am  

OK--not sure I understand how it relates to a failing grade, but you're right about not including fees. Although nowadays with $12.95 commissions, I'm not sure it will make a whole lot of difference in the returns. Taxes, however, now that's a different story.

80   pkennedy   2009 Dec 10, 7:34am  

Picking gold prices when they're at their lows, is like picking stock prices when they're at their lows and comparing with them at their highs. Pick gold in the late 1970's and compare it with gold prices in 2000. Then compare stocks for that time period.

Picking microsoft when it was in the 1980's price range would be great, better if you picked it at it's very lowest low. Using the gains on that stock to compare with it's current trading, would show great results too. Way better than gold.

Gold is great if you pick it up at the lows. Today it's not at the lows, it's at all time highs. Saying now is a great time to buy, is like saying look at gold in late 70's when it was $800 oz! When it was $35oz it was good. By $800oz? A gain of 50% from 1980-2010 is horrible investment!

With any investment, you should watch it. Even if it's gold. If you're watching a stock tank, you shouldn't be involved in it. You should change your investments at that point. Granted holding gold is much easier, as there aren't any options with it. It can't go to 0. There is only "gold", not 9000 stocks to pick from. You have no options other than to buy or sell it. Once you do that, you're "out" of that game, and need to invest somewhere else. Sell a stock and you can jump right back in with another stock.

One reason I say buying a house is good for most people as a retirement investment, is that it won't go to 0. Like gold. It's done pretty well over the past few thousand years, like gold. It doesn't require major money management skills to keep it from going to 0, like gold.

Bonuses for owning land? It pays "dividends" after 30 years -- no rent, gold doesn't. Once you sell all of your gold, you're done, you're rent payment still needs to go out every month though. It can't be liquidated easily, gold can be. Why is that good? Well the sheer number of cons and get rich schemes are shut down when you can't get to that money easily. (That barrier has been brought down a bit with all the re-financing available, but it's still a small wall to climb over for most people.)

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