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by fredfoobar 2151 days ago
That, is something I can agree on. The value we put on things like gold comes from our minds, not gold itself.
3 comments

A Yuval Noah Harari quote I quite enjoy:

> Indeed, money is probably the most successful fiction ever invented by humans. Not all people believe in God, or in human rights, or in the United States of America. But everybody believes in money, and everybody believes in the dollar bill. Even Osama bin Laden. He hated American religion, American politics and American culture — but he was quite fond of American dollars. He had no objection to that story.

I think Harari is wrong when he suggested gold is a collective fiction. The first metal humans worked with was gold. This happened 40k years ago. Through gold, humans accumulated knowledge and invented metal technologies. We then progressed through metal ages, e.g., Bronze Age, Iron Age. Gold was an icon of metal technologies. It's not just a fiction.

https://bitflate.org/post/2019/11/29/how-gold-became-money.h...

And paper money really exists as a physical thing and required technological and societal advancement to exist. Currency is an abstracting fiction to make trade easier. Confusingly they are separate in the same way money has no utility in itself but is portable and may easily be exchanged giving it high utility.
I think paper money is a novelty. It's a good invention. It detaches the concept of money from gold. It makes money easily transported. But that can run amok. The Gold Standard was in place to protect societies from detaching too far from physical reality. "Good" paper money should be backed by physical reality. The US has a large gold reserve, education, research, military etc. But we're now at the verge of running amok with paper money.
Nothing to do with ponzi scheme though.

A Ponzi scheme is a form of fraud that lures investors and pays profits to earlier investors with funds from more recent investors.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ponzi_scheme

Isn't that exactly how the price is going up though?
Not when the supply of gold isn't fixed even disregarding relative economic values.

A bit pedantic but even if the value of gold rises from increased demand the fact one can mine it and get in on it means they would have gained from it while being newer. Furthermore it technically takes from the older holders by reducing the demand slightly.

The price is going up for two reasons: 1) fear due to the virus and its economic consequences 2) the USD is falling rapidly.

Gold as a commodity is almost exclusively priced in dollars globally. If the dollar plunges, gold will spike higher accordingly.

US spending being out of control right now (pointing to aggressive dollar debasement as the Fed 'prints' - runs QE infinite to monetize the ever expanding debt) and concerns about the condition of the US economy near-term with the virus, have pummeled the dollar lately.

So the price of gold is up due to the drop in the dollar, and there is a considerable fear premium on gold right now as well (likely to the tune of several hundred dollars). As that fear fades you'll see a drop in gold, from whatever new high it puts in, as in 2011-2016. It'll set a new higher low due to the dollar losing real value it will never recover from the spending spree going on (there is probably going to be $5+ trillion in unexpected spending that will occur over several years due to the virus, which was not baked into the dollar or price of gold previously).

> 1) fear due to the virus and its economic consequences

so, in "lures investors and pays profits to earlier investors with funds from more recent investors", the mechanism of "luring" is fear.

> 2) the USD is falling rapidly

seems to be a part of 1)

> Gold as a commodity is almost exclusively priced in dollars globally. If the dollar plunges, gold will spike higher accordingly

Isn't gold priced by a market? if the market has to move, the people must be willing to pay more dollars (or to say it another way: they have access to cheap dollars). It seems like people are exchanging their cheap dollars for gold, this is the part that doesn't make sense to me.

True, but there are some things that we observe minds tending to value consistently.