| You are making a lot of interesting arguments. Thanks! > In nature you can't retire because you can't save up labor That is true. What I can do, I guess, is ensure that I will have what I want in the future. If I don't know what I want, then I want to buy a small piece of everything (index funds). > are better for retirement because they're riskier. From the very article you linked: "Having no earnings and paying no coupons, rents or dividends, but instead representing stake in an entirely new monetary system of questionable potential, cryptocurrencies are undoubtedly the highest risk investment known to man." Of course, here it seems Wikipedia is a bit opinionated, and gambling would be an even higher risk investment. But at that point I'm sure the risk-return relationship would break down. The Kelly criterion is the optimal to size up how much risk to take over time. If there's even the slightest chance that losing a bet/investment will leave you with zero wealth, then you may not place all your wealth on that bet. > Saving money/retiring in this way is kind of parasitic. As some people save, others spend. As I mentioned with "Die with Zero", I will spend all my money eventually. If people do not synchronize their spending with the rest of the economy, the effects will average out, and one individual does not matter. Unfortunately, people tend to buy high and sell low, going on trends. And I've noticed both national and cryptocurrencies go through this - albeit with the interest rate mechanism, national currencies don't drop 80-90% from time to time. > A fixed money supply doesn't make sense on a planet with an increasing population that all want to use your money because of how awesome the US financial empire is. The world population is growing at around 1% per year, yet the money supply in the majority of countries grew by 13% (median): https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/FM.LBL.BMNY.ZG?most_rec... The US, China and India are all above 10%. > There was a Great Depression where people stopped being able to do that, you know. You are right. I was exaggerating, because a bit of deflation doesn't hurt. Sever deflation does - as we're seeing right now in China also. > It's not good to think about "the government spending beyond its means" as if it was a household. And why not? Incurring debt will only impoverish future members of the "family". As interest rates rose, interest payments are about to exceed the military budget: https://edition.cnn.com/2022/11/01/economy/inflation-fed-deb... As the population growth slows, or capital reaches diminishing returns as some other finite resource is depleted, it is only responsible to think of the economy as a household, and the money as a reflection of real, existing goods and services, rather than future ones, because future ones might not exist, and debt will become less "productive". I distinguish between "productivity" of a debt and its yield. Taking on debt means signing up to pay future interest. But the resources you receive in exchange might make it worth paying interest, or might not. This is what I call "productivity" for lack of a better vocabulary. And interest rates or yields are orthogonal to this. > The government's the one that invented the money in the first place. The government merely partly captured the monetary velocity multiplier effect caused by fractional reserve. Fractional reserve was invented by private banks, which create most of the money supply. In spite of their enormous power, and the enormous profits in fees and interest as a result of money creation, banks still go bankrupt by abusing their power, requiring bail-outs (with public money) or bail-ins (with depositors' money). One such bail-out was immortalized in Bitcoin's first block ("The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks"). Khan Academy has a great course on fractional reserve: https://www.khanacademy.org/economics-finance-domain/macroec... > And not only did the US fail to get inflation despite best efforts from ~1980-2020 In 1980-2020, the CPI went from 82.4 to 258.8, or a ~3.14-fold increase, or a 3.14^(1/40) ~= 2.9% compounded average growth rate. That is not failure to get inflation, it is overinflating by 45% compared to the 2% objective. What we are seeing now (>10% inflation) is the result of irresponsible pandemic government budgets being mopped-up by the central banks. By the way, PPP cost $170,000 to $257,000 per retained job-year. I bet employees on payroll during the pandemic were not paid that much. https://www.investopedia.com/where-ppp-money-went-5216725 |