Kerbouchard
Member
- Joined
- Mar 4, 2008
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No Shortage of Gold, by Austrian economist Hans F. Sennholz
http://www.fee.org/publications/the-freeman/article.asp?aid=6378
A great article, thanks.
Mike
No Shortage of Gold, by Austrian economist Hans F. Sennholz
http://www.fee.org/publications/the-freeman/article.asp?aid=6378
Everything you said is exactly true but deflation is just as bad as inflation. That is exactly why there needs to be an increase in the money supply. Otherwise something will cost 00.00000000000000000000000000000000001 cents. The inflation gold offers is so little it has the effect of price stability. The gold standard is like the equal balance of inflation and deflation, with it, and the free market, it always seems to work out.
As consumers go we should pay off as much personal debt as possible before investing. Any and all disposable income (that which is used on luxuries and other non-essentials) should and would be better used to pay off debt. If you have a credit card charging 13% or an investment which earns say 10% your money "works" harder used to pay off the higher interest rather than put into the 10% investment. Not to mention the time it takes to pay things off, your saving yourself time in a way too. Remember, time is money; since you must spend time to earn money the logic follows. All other things being equal of course such as risk assestment etc...Then and only then should people start to save or invest. There is a thing as "good" debt for such things as loans for an education but loans in the form of credit cards to purchase a blender is a terrible use of money. Items such as those should be paid in full and in cash. Remember cash?
"Everything you said is exactly true but deflation is just as bad as inflation. That is exactly why there needs to be an increase in the money supply. Otherwise something will cost 00.00000000000000000000000000000000001 cents."
Please cite an economic study that says that deflation is as bad as inflation. Inflation causes malinvestment in the market, destroys the incentive for saving and capital formation, impoverishes people on fixed incomes, and destroys the middle class. Inflation is also inevitably used as a political tool that ultimately destroys the currency. Deflation does not do any of these things.
It is true that if you have a constant money supply and the slow but steady growth from honest capital formation, the value of your money will go up. But this actually rewards the kind of conduct that makes the free market productive - savings and investment in the means of production.
I am only aware of two problems with a constant money supply - as prices slide downward, any prices that are held artificially high by law or by labor union activity cause unemployment. The solution there is to prevent government from enacting or assisting wage or price controls.
The other problem, which you mention, is that the unit of money (presumably gold) becomes unmanageably small. This is really not a problem either, because most of that money is going to circulate as warehouse receipts. As long as those warehouse receipts are full reserve, they will be good money. And it will be a thousand years before we have to deal with micrograms or some such. And before that, as another poster pointed out, the market would smoothly adopt a new currency.
Dear Foofighter20X...Things "getting cheaper" is the definition of deflation, in terms of the price level.
Dear Foofighter20X...Things "getting cheaper" is the definition of deflation, in terms of the price level.