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by phoxix2
6259 days ago
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So on one hand, no country should ever take its currency's favor status for granted. But if you've ever spent a fraction of your life looking at the rules and regulations behind currency trading by central banks, you'll see two rules everywhere: 1 - Every central bank will trade its own currency. 2 - Every central bank will trade in USD. (Even if they hate the USD with a blinding passion.) The USD is the global standard not because of some diabolical scheme by the US, but rather because it is liquid beyond liquid. EVERYONE IS WILLING TO TRADE IT!! Can the same be said about the Mexican Peso ? Nope, even some of its neighboring central banks are not willing to trade it. |
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So all the countries in continental europe inflated like crazy and got off the gold standard. That left England and America which became the standard. Then England inflated, so it was down to America. America got off the gold in standard in 1971, but there was no one else to go to. America could then inflate its currency essentially taxing all holders of US Dollars, many of which are over seas.
This is the cause of the current economic problem. By removing all ties to gold the FED was able to inflate the currency causing malinvestment & seeking risky returns to stay ahead. The final play out of this is either a tough recession or hyper-inflation; what's going to happen isn't exactly clear -- it depends on how much money they continue to print.