CogWheeler
Member
- Joined
- Jan 25, 2012
- Messages
- 24
Thanks for the replies.
Paul did not elaborate on how, or if, he would adjust a peg in the posted video. And, thanks, rwpi, with a peg I suppose it would be possible to continue the central bank (they did it within the Bretton Woods framework). So, can we stick with going back to gold, then, as the topic?
The part of the video that hit best was Paul saying he once got into it with Bernanke by saying "Is gold money?", whereupon Bernanke answered "absolutely not". Therein lies the religion in all of this.
Gold is a fungible, exchangeable, commodity. I'm not insensitive to the constitution, but for its function, so too could be printed paper. Why support printed paper over a finite resource, is what I ask?
The exercise I keep getting into with people is working capital, or the sum that must grow as business activity grows, that gets dipped into and replenished as business transactions get larger with a firm. Many businesses go insolvent for lack of working capital growth, and the same can happen to a country without monetary growth. So, I'm trying understand how one answers the need to grow employment and economic activity with a fixed amount of currency?
Do we move the peg, or slow potential economic activity and employment as interest rates necessarily rise, with the depletion of loanable funds, or liquidity?
I don't see a gold standard working without a peg that moves, and irresponsible control of that peg simply gets us back to where we are. Perhaps he's gone over this, too.
BTW, Kudlow called Volcker a "gold guy", when he practically championed the opposite.
Paul did not elaborate on how, or if, he would adjust a peg in the posted video. And, thanks, rwpi, with a peg I suppose it would be possible to continue the central bank (they did it within the Bretton Woods framework). So, can we stick with going back to gold, then, as the topic?
The part of the video that hit best was Paul saying he once got into it with Bernanke by saying "Is gold money?", whereupon Bernanke answered "absolutely not". Therein lies the religion in all of this.
Gold is a fungible, exchangeable, commodity. I'm not insensitive to the constitution, but for its function, so too could be printed paper. Why support printed paper over a finite resource, is what I ask?
The exercise I keep getting into with people is working capital, or the sum that must grow as business activity grows, that gets dipped into and replenished as business transactions get larger with a firm. Many businesses go insolvent for lack of working capital growth, and the same can happen to a country without monetary growth. So, I'm trying understand how one answers the need to grow employment and economic activity with a fixed amount of currency?
Do we move the peg, or slow potential economic activity and employment as interest rates necessarily rise, with the depletion of loanable funds, or liquidity?
I don't see a gold standard working without a peg that moves, and irresponsible control of that peg simply gets us back to where we are. Perhaps he's gone over this, too.
BTW, Kudlow called Volcker a "gold guy", when he practically championed the opposite.
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