Will the Fed's policies drive us to the socialists' wet-dream of total dependency on the gov't?DeCoster and Englund, from the Mises Institute, discuss it...
6/27/2006 1:44:06 PM
6/27/2006 1:46:36 PM
Explain rather than saying it is done. You just look stupid when you say that.
6/27/2006 2:01:43 PM
i am no defender of the fed's actionsbut damnthis is so dumb it hurts
6/27/2006 3:59:21 PM
First, you'd need to prove we don't work hard and save the way we once did. Second, even if you do this there are many good reasons why Americans would not do so. Savings are kind of like an insurance policy against future bad occurances, such as losing your job or getting too sick to work, as examples of worst case scenarios: Saving made much more sense when the worst case scenario could land you and your family into starvation and homelessness. It makes much less sense nowadays when the worst case scenario has you working at Wal-Mart or on unemployment and disability, safe from the reach of starvation and homelessness. Saving made much more sense when the worst case scenario was also more frequent. Back then workers and businesses were less able to respond to shifts in the economy, thus recessions were deeper and more frequent. Today's unemployment rates are half what they used to be. Finally, it bears mentioning that we are probably saving more than ever, just the percentage of income saved has fallen.
6/27/2006 4:21:09 PM
do you leave your basement much?i dont know anyone who subscribes to a theory of "total dependence". of course, you believe that the existence of the IRS and income taxes represent opressive tyrrany, so there's really no use arguing.
6/27/2006 5:29:38 PM
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6/27/2006 5:56:41 PM
6/27/2006 6:41:04 PM
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6/27/2006 10:22:49 PM
The federal reserve really harms savings. I hate those assholes for providing a steady supply of money so that we can have a good deal of confidence in our future, I wish they would just go away so that I would have to hoard up money in fear of the unpredictable rise and fall of gold prices. [Edited on June 27, 2006 at 10:56 PM. Reason : ]
6/27/2006 10:54:10 PM
^what?
6/27/2006 11:21:25 PM
^Under the current federal reserve system the supply of money generally increases with or slightly outpaces the demand for money, meaning you dont live like a miser (pun intended) and can actually use the shit how you want.What the mises institute and I assume Earthdogg are advocating is the use of a very, very hard gold standard with no central bank what so ever. Since the supply of gold cannot keep up with economic growth or the demand for money, your money will usually experience deflation. This means youre gonna save up the stuff because it is going to be worth more in the future than it is now. It can also experience sharp a rise or fall in price due to events specific to the commodity that would otherwise have nothing to do with the economy.[Edited on June 28, 2006 at 1:02 AM. Reason : ]
6/28/2006 12:58:33 AM
6/28/2006 1:34:47 AM
^^ Both systems are predominantly arbitrary. Instead of the value of your money dropping because of the discovery of a large gold deposit it drops because the FED over-compensated. That said, due to the present-preference of money all human beings must assume their money is going to be worth less to them in the future, even if it garners more goods. If the inflation rate is -1% on a gold standard instead of +1% on a fiat standard the long term difference to you is negligible: interest rates will adjust to meet the demand for capital. You can take your fiat money and buy gold and get that 1% gain, or put it in a mutual fund and get 6%. On a gold standard you can keep your money in gold and get that 1% gain or put it in a mutual fund and get a gain of 6%. __________Nominal____RealStandard___Return____ReturnFiat Cash____0%______-1% (assuming a 1% fiat inflation rate)Fiat Gold____+2%_____+1% (under a fiat money system buying gold)Fiat Saving__+7%_____+6% (under a fiat money system investing in productive enterprise)Gold Cash___0%______+1% (under a gold money system hoarding gold, assuming a 1% deflation rate)Gold Saving_+5%______+6% (under a gold money system investing in productive enterprise)You see, you would be right that a fiat system encourages investment because the net gain to investing is 7% instead of 5%, but since "buying gold" is still an option and it returns 2% leaving you with a relative return of only 5%, on par with savings.
6/28/2006 9:04:41 AM
Congressman Ron Paul from Texas...
6/28/2006 10:41:22 AM
Our economy is too prone to inflation, and we've done nothing to combat it. Eliminating the Federal Reserve would work, but it would create an economy prone to depressions instead. In other news, big surprise that Austrian Economists hate Keynesian Economists. Gee nobody knew that.[Edited on June 28, 2006 at 11:31 AM. Reason : fun things]
6/28/2006 11:10:21 AM
^ You didn't read what I wrote, didn't refute or even respond to any of the tennets, yet you restate the same that I responded to. Any world is prone to "depressions" in so far as it suffers from monetary collapses. A Hard-Gold Standard world is not capable of suffering a currency collapse, Gold will always be scarce and have value. Between the introduction of the hard-gold standard the 1870s and it's desolution in 1914 there was not one widespread currency collapse or banking collapse, both of which were common in the decades prior. A Fiat Standard world, as existed since 1914, is capable of suffering a currency collapse if the currency becomes worthless (people refuse to accept it) and a banking collapse if currency becomes too scarce to satisfy deposits, such as in 1931.
6/28/2006 12:30:13 PM
6/28/2006 2:26:36 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiat_moneyIn economics, fiat currency or fiat money is money whose purchasing power derives from a declaratory fiat of the government issuing it. It is often associated with paper money unbacked by fixed assets, issued without the promise of redemption in some other form, and accepted by tradition or social convention. Fiat money is called fiduciary money in many languages.
6/28/2006 2:37:50 PM
We call them federal reserve notes. 'Fiat' is just a matter of issue framing, along with calling inflation/deflation 'currency collapse', which is a tenuous assumption at best. A true collapse would require worthless money, or depleted money, which may or may not be possible depending on the FR system, and can still be possible in a Gold Standard system.
6/28/2006 3:04:33 PM
^^I know what it is, I'm saying it's an inaccurate description. If money was truly valued by government fiat, there'd be no point in having things like floating exchange rates with foreign currencies. Money is ultimately valued dynamically by the market, regardless of what the government says it's worth...
6/28/2006 3:22:55 PM
The market is how we determine the value relative to other things, yes, and that is true regardless of what you are talking about: Gold, slips of paper, Gold backed slips of paper, etc. The reason people accept these slips of paper is because Congress decreed that these are in fact money and we expect all taxes to be paid in dollars.
6/28/2006 4:46:28 PM
btttdidnt want to make a new thread...just had a quick question on how the us economy works
8/8/2006 1:21:41 PM
^ Not saying we're in stagflation yet. But here's an example of what you describe and explains it:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stagflation
8/8/2006 3:51:30 PM
^^ Inflation and economic growth are only indirectly linked. "Inflation" is caused by money creation such as when the FED runs the presses or if banks step up their lending, recycling money at a faster rate. Strong economic growth can increase financial confidence and engender banks to loan more readily, causing inflation. Also, as banks loan more readily the cash-on-hand drops which means the bank is more likely to need an overnight loan from the FED which means the FED is more likely to run the presses. But I think the main issue right now is the FED running the presses. Last year the FED was still increasing the money supply by 8% a year. Luckily, almost all of this was being sequestered either overseas or inside domestic firms, safely out of reach of product markets. Nevertheless, it was inevitable that this money would turn up as inflation, we just hope that by then the economy will be sufficiently robust to allow for reduced money creation, such as 4%, in effect draining it back into the vaults through higher interest rates. [Edited on August 8, 2006 at 4:23 PM. Reason : .,.]
8/8/2006 4:21:42 PM
8/8/2006 8:22:31 PM
8/8/2006 11:58:29 PM
I've got two words for this thread: spiraling depression.The gold standard simply doesn't allow for growth. If you really want a standard for currency, why gold? Why not gasoline or vagina? Fiat currencies foster trade, standardized currencies foster depression, it just seems silly to me to base our wealth in shiny rocks.
8/9/2006 12:20:22 AM
raarrrr socialists
8/9/2006 12:37:23 AM
8/9/2006 12:44:04 AM
8/9/2006 1:16:10 AM
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8/9/2006 12:25:51 PM
Here's a good presentation on the gold standard from j. Bradford Delong:http://www.j-bradford-delong.net/politics/whynotthegoldstandard.htmlHere's the part on the great depression:
8/9/2006 1:06:30 PM
8/9/2006 1:49:56 PM
8/9/2006 2:26:14 PM
^i have a question i asked in another thread like yesterdayso why doesnt the government take control of the oil...then all the money we make from the oil could be used by the governmentseems like an easy way for a country to get really strong and wealthy
8/9/2006 2:39:01 PM
Because that oil is privately owned, it was bought and paid for. To just take it without compensation would be a violation of the owner's human rights, civil rights, and constitutional rights.
8/9/2006 4:27:38 PM
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8/9/2006 8:40:22 PM
^I was refering more to medicine.
8/9/2006 8:48:11 PM
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8/10/2006 12:47:02 AM
.[Edited on August 10, 2006 at 1:21 AM. Reason : DOH]
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8/10/2006 2:47:14 AM