|
|
|
|
|
by jalapenos
872 days ago
|
|
The following one: simply remove the fiat, and let the market take over again. I.e. the same way commerce was carried out everywhere for approximately forever. It's presumed a gold standard would return in that scenario, but could be something else. I assume this is how it'll end up naturally though. No one will end up willing to take the other country's currency in cross border trade, so that's where hard currency will return. |
|
You should look into what the US financial system was like before the Civil War. It was wild. The government issued gold coins. But most people's day-to-day currency was paper money issued by individual banks. Each bank issued its own notes, with their own design. In theory they were redeemable for gold, but in that era of low/no bank regulation, banks often failed, leaving the currency worthless.
People issued books detailing the design of each of the banknotes and estimates of the solvency of each bank. Counterfeits were a huge problem.
Of course, news traveled more slowly in those days, so the further you got from an issuing bank, the less anyone could trust the notes. If you tried to spend your home bank's notes out of state, you'd get pennies on the dollar.
Seems like an incredibly inefficient system to go back to. And one which still wouldn't stop the federal government from borrowing.