?
2/3/2009 1:38:11 PM
from thine ass, thou shall pull thy moneys
2/3/2009 1:40:27 PM
money trees, duh
2/3/2009 1:41:25 PM
No, seriously, we need more of it as a country. We need more, and we need it to have more value.How do we get it? Do we have to sell stuff to other countries?
2/3/2009 1:44:48 PM
2/3/2009 1:47:46 PM
Okay, how do we achieve one of those tasks?
2/3/2009 1:51:12 PM
How is babby formed?
2/3/2009 1:52:23 PM
Well if we have more money (like right now, with the printing presses set to "full blast") then it is worth less. I will also note that by constantly printing money to fix problems, we are shooting ourselves in the foot.[Edited on February 3, 2009 at 1:53 PM. Reason : ]
2/3/2009 1:52:30 PM
that's a consequence of our government living beyond its means.and accomplishing one of those goals is easy--you can just print or destroy money, depending on which one you want.the only way to do both is to increase GDP, and that involves getting your ass to work, America.
2/3/2009 1:55:11 PM
^^I know that printing money is not a good solution. I've gotten that far.But if we can't print it, how do we get more of it?Money doesn't disappear from this country unless it was imaginary to begin with or unless it went to another country...right?So has money disappeared? If so, can we get it back from the other countries? Is the money still here in the US, and people are hoarding it?Where'd all the money go? How do we get it back? Was it imaginary money?^How meaningful a measure is GDP? Why don't we just focus on that all the time?[Edited on February 3, 2009 at 2:01 PM. Reason : sss]
2/3/2009 1:58:27 PM
Well, a lot of our money has gone overseas as we kept buying products from foreign nations. A lot of money was wasted as people bought overpriced products, like houses at the peak of the boom, only to have the final product drop off in value faster than a depreciating car.As for getting more right now without devaluing the currency, that would require getting the economy restarted so people are actually producing something again, hopefully something that has more stable value that where we dumped all our money last time.
2/3/2009 2:05:51 PM
brid, we usually borrow the money from foreign countries/markets, mostly by buying up US bonds.(like this stim, which some say is only the FIRST step...good lord, will be borrowed and will top over a trillion once we pay the interest on the loan.)Where this will become an issue is when other countries will be hurting and not have the capital to invest.. THEN we just start printing it.If you think of the dollar as a share of stock or a rare baseball card. It has a certain value. Now when you create more stock or make a lot more of the baseball cards, the value that you are holding is now a lot less.
2/3/2009 2:09:14 PM
2/3/2009 2:09:55 PM
this comes under the study of Monetary Policyhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monetary_policyI still do not understand it fully, but the basics of our system are governed under the concepts of Fractional-reserve bankinghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fractional-reserve_bankingthis link above even has a section called "Money Creation"[Edited on February 3, 2009 at 2:35 PM. Reason : .]
2/3/2009 2:19:07 PM
i don't understand why gold or jewels are valuable either
2/3/2009 2:22:50 PM
I think you just blew Bridget's mind.
2/3/2009 2:22:51 PM
2/3/2009 2:25:00 PM
gold and jewelery are valuable because they are pretty and rare...by reading the thread I'm getting the idea that BridgetSPK cares more about trade policy than monetary policythis has little to do with "money creation" and more to do with international trade and macro-economics[Edited on February 3, 2009 at 2:32 PM. Reason : .]
2/3/2009 2:27:15 PM
it comes from the trust that each of us puts in it, knowing that when I hand somebody a piece of paper with a 10 on it, I can get 10 dollars worth of goods or services.
2/3/2009 2:37:03 PM
that has about as much meaning as "the color green is green because I think it's green"I know it's people's favorite response to "Why does money have value without the gold standard?", but it is completely shallow.
2/3/2009 2:39:04 PM
it's not shallow. a bit esoteric, and was I being a bit tounge-in-cheek, sure. but it's the truth. When people stop trusting in the value of those peices of paper, then it becomes worthless.
2/3/2009 2:43:38 PM
i've heard the pretty and rare explanation before, but i still don't get how it all started in the first placeguess it has something to do with the inner mechanics of monkey-man
2/3/2009 2:46:34 PM
DO YOU LIKE THE SHINY THINGS!gold is easy stamped and used as a means of currency so...
2/3/2009 2:49:34 PM
yes yes i read all thatit's pretty, it's durable, doesn't tarnish, more portable than the bartering system, you can use it in yo teefsbut i guess you're on to something...it's easier to stamp a king's head on it than a seashell[Edited on February 3, 2009 at 3:00 PM. Reason : +]
2/3/2009 2:56:18 PM
i think part of the trouble is the lack of belief of giving a shit about these things (gold and jewels) with respect to the time period you live injewels and precious metals are not as awesome as your sweet ass ride or kick ass computer system or LCD TVthey seem really kind of boringbut take all those things away and you still need to be able to present your status symbolsin comes glittery gems, fine threads, and precious metals in ages past[Edited on February 3, 2009 at 3:37 PM. Reason : .]
2/3/2009 3:37:34 PM
2/3/2009 3:52:30 PM
"any circulating medium of exchange, including coins, paper money, and demand deposits."The first problem with money is that people come to internet boards or read CNN and then make 6th grade assumptions on what it is without doing any bit of research.
2/3/2009 4:20:38 PM
Even in this thread I'm pretty sure the issue is being overcomplicated.The answer to the first question is that money comes from making something valuable in terms of goods or services. Whether or not something is valuable is determined by whether or not people will pay for it. How valuable it is is determined by how much people are willing to pay for it.Of course, that system really only works well when consumers have good knowledge of available products -- ideally a perfect knowledge, but "ideal" generally implies "better, but unrealistic." Without that knowledge, people get defrauded, thinking they're buying something with X value when really they're getting something lesser. A lot of our recent economic processes came about from just that problem -- people were buying things they thought were more stable, more valuable than they really were. In all likelihood, they were fooling themselves just as they were being fooled; nonetheless, the problem was flawed knowledge.The point of this part of my rant is that we, as a country, need to shift more towards producing things of actual (rather than pretend) value.
2/3/2009 4:41:25 PM
^ regarding #2, what industries are we suitable for?There's no industry that the US can be the exclusive top-dog for more than 2 decades, if that.I think the US has the highest creativity:technical expertise ratio, meaning companies like Microsoft and Apple are always going to be at home in the US, but you have western Europe coming up quickly in this area (the most amazing hacks always come out of Russia or Iceland nowadays, no Americans). And this industry doesn't rely on mass quantities of people, due to how computers work.I can't see how we can possibly maintain our standard of living without using an iron fist to keep the rest of the world down, resorting to socialism (which is itself somewhat unstable in a vacuum), or making sure the rest of the world is able to increase their standard of living enough that there is not a huge difference between manufacturing it here or manufacturing it there.
2/3/2009 5:30:14 PM
money is a conduit/placeholder for value:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EmxYZviAwak
2/3/2009 5:50:47 PM
2/3/2009 7:22:37 PM
^ Until i melt my gold coin down and dilute it with nickel. The pimply faced clerk at Best Buy will not know the difference between my 21 carat gold coin and my 16 carat gold coin.
2/3/2009 7:59:09 PM
Money, even gold, isn't a "thing" really. It is a means of measuring value.Without adding value, you can't increase long-term wealth. Period.[Edited on February 3, 2009 at 8:37 PM. Reason : so what Grumpy and ssjamind said.]
2/3/2009 8:33:01 PM
2/3/2009 10:33:28 PM
^I think he's trying to say that they'd be too easy to counterfeit... though I'm sure someone would think of measures to avoid that sort of thing. At first glance you'd think inked green slips of paper would be easy to reproduce, too, if you didn't live in a world that uses them constantly.[Edited on February 3, 2009 at 10:40 PM. Reason : .]
2/3/2009 10:40:30 PM
For all practical purposes, credit is money. So, money comes from loans made by entities that only have to keep fractional reserves.Whatever the gov physically prints is a minor source. What the gov loans is a major source. What private banks loan is a big source.[Edited on February 3, 2009 at 11:21 PM. Reason : .]
2/3/2009 11:19:14 PM
2/3/2009 11:34:37 PM
2/4/2009 12:46:30 AM
There's not enough gold in the entire world x100 to cover the net worth of the United States alone, let alone other countries. The government then would have to arbitrarily set a value for gold, as it did under the Gold standard.Even if this economy further tanks for another two years and shrinks at 10 or even 15% during that time, it will still generate more wealth then all the aggregate years of economic growth under the gold standard.
2/4/2009 2:01:24 AM
buh
2/4/2009 2:11:31 AM
I vote we move to the golem standard.
2/4/2009 3:30:22 AM
2/4/2009 8:43:12 AM
also, this is on point:
2/4/2009 11:23:06 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7o1fvZIF4oM&feature=related
2/4/2009 4:24:39 PM
2/4/2009 4:54:10 PM
China may be special, but there's nothing worthwhile to be done about it. Anything punitive we do to them would cost Americans money in higher costs, and might encourage the Chinese to punish us right back, further hurting us.Still, China is a market for many American goods, and that market is so enormous that it's still good for us even after all the chicoms meddling.
2/4/2009 9:07:14 PM
2/4/2009 11:00:45 PM
Price controls are bad. Government imposed price controls are always bad, whatever the price being set. As such, why are you advocating the Government impose price controls on the price of gold? It doesn't work. Sure, you claim to have a history of a working gold standard, but look closer: that same era is chock full of severe depressions due to the artificial pegging of two unrelated commodies: gold and cash. What we have now is better. Everything has a price, even money, and everyone understands what that means. There is no lie in the value of dollar, 1/904th of an ounce of gold. Calling the police whenever I try to sell a dollar for 1/905th of an ounce of gold would not make things better. If you wish to use gold as your medium of exchange that is fine and even legal right now; just be sure to keep records and pay your taxes in dollars. But stop advocating for the regulation of gold markets.
2/4/2009 11:14:50 PM
2/4/2009 11:44:44 PM
It is both easier to acquire and pass off fake gold as real gold, than fake money as real money.I can't believe you're seriously (maybe you're not serious?) pining for a gold standard.
2/4/2009 11:56:10 PM