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by User23
1689 days ago
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By that time, gold redemptions were mainly available only to foreign entities. Unlike all other forms of money[1], only US federal government spending, in cooperation with the Fed, could create new reserves[2]. That there were too many reserves in foreign hands chasing $35 an ounce gold could only be the result of US federal spending. Therefore while foreign demand was the proximate cause, it was definitely a downstream consequence. The size of the US government's outstanding liabilities at the time isn't relevant, what affects prices is money flows, not stocks. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_supply#United_States [2] Back then the Fed wasn't willing to just expand its own balance sheet significantly on its own initiative as it is now. |
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