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by naturalethic 4051 days ago
That's fiat money.
4 comments

The part on being enforced by a central government, yes.

But my last line still applies to all money.

That's why when someone mentions the phrase "intrinsic value", they are not seeing the core truth of money.

It's interesting that money is misunderstood by so many people while representing the fundamental fabric of human society.

There is no intrinsic value to anything in this universe, not one that applies to every single organism.

For humans and most life forms, the closest thing that I can think of is food/water/(oxygen for aerobic organism), force of violence, pleasure and time.

Today, most money aren't even in physical circulation. Most of the gold in the world sits in some cold dark vault.

It's literally a video game and the funny thing is, we have enough food and water for everyone in the world already.

Today, most money aren't even in physical circulation. Most of the gold in the world sits in some cold dark vault.

'Gold as money' is still very much in circulation. Even as it sits in CB vaults.

Current fiat monetary systems are not based on 'what the world ow[e]s you'. Money is only a token of a debt an individual or group of individuals has with a legally sanctioned and central bank blessed commercial bank.
At it's core money is merely a concept used to determine deservingness though. It lets us answer the question "does this person deserve X," where X can be providing them services/goods (or not.)

At the moment money is a rather contorted and easily manipulable proxy for deservingness though which is the cause of a lot, if not the majority, of the world's troubles.

There's no technical reason though why we couldn't for example determine deservingness through interpersonal distribution of value; like PageRank but for people.

That's all money. If you're thinking of Bitcoin, the definition still applies other than the part about government backing.
Incorrect.

There's nothing in the phrase "Money is a piece of token that represents favor or debt the world owns to you" which specifies either fiat or specie currency.

There have absolutely been government-issued specie currencies through history. Virtually all have also seen tremendous devaluation. Look up the 94% devaluation (and corresponding inflation) of the silver Roman denarius.

You can't eat gold and its industrial uses are quite limited. Gold is just fiat money that you have to dig out of the ground.
Gold has value for the same reason any money has value - it has strong properties of ideal money.

It is not like fiat currencies in the sense of 'faith' that the scarcity will continue however.

Right now we have some incentives that work to keep fiat currencies scarce, but those forces are not the same as what keeps gold scarce.

Gold is deflationary, which is why people like you fear it.
I don't fear it; I'm amused by people who tell me that fiat currency is going to collapse any day now unlike super-safe gold, but that they will nonetheless be happy to exchange some of their super-safe gold for my soon-to-be-worthless fiat currency. Out of the goodness of their hearts or something.
The dollar has lost roughly 97% of its value (per the Fed's own assessment) since the Federal Reserve was created. And that's a good outcome, we could talk about the ruble, or the real, or the bolivar.

Gold has not lost any value in the last century by comparison.

Gold has plenty of issues, confidence as a store of value is not one of them. By comparison, the global economy is filled constantly with stories, from one country or another, of fiat being demolished through constant inflation / aggressive devaluation.

Countries can drown their citizens via all sorts of schemes involving debt (ala Japan and the Yen), that then become currency devaluation schemes (QE) to debase that debt and chop down the standard of living of its citizens as a stealth move to pay for that debt. Such a thing inherently can't happen with gold.

The Euro zone for example is in the middle of seeing its citizens standards of living chopped down via QE, to debase the vast debt that has been choking off the growth potential of much of Europe since 2007 (the European economy has seen zero net GDP growth since roughly 2007). How many Euro zone citizens understand what the ECB is doing to them exactly? Do they realize that what they're about to suffer, is what Americans went through from 2002 to 2014 as the Fed debased the dollar to try to avoid multiple recessions, leading to a substantial decline in the US standard of living?

If the ECB drops the value of the Euro by 1/3 via QE, that substantially reduces in real terms the standard of living of anyone living on that currency. Gold shields against that abuse.

Trouble is, that for all your dire warnings about the horrible things the ECB might do, the one store of value that actually has dropped in value by a third in recent years is gold (it lost nearly a third between mid 2012 and mid 2013, and its a little lower than that now)

Sure, in the long run, gold holds its value, though it doesn't perform nearly as well as stock markets, or real estate. In the long run, a predictable 2% annual inflation erodes the value of savings, which is why people participating in the dollar economy tend to put their money in bank accounts paying interest rather than burying their cash in vaults,

But it's economically illiterate to pretend that gold price crashes haven't been a far more serious wealth destroyer over the last couple of years than the relatively stable and predictable inflation in developed countries, despite all the predictions that QE was going to make the sky fall in.

> Gold has not lost any value in the last century by comparison.

Not in that artificial timeframe, but surly in many other periods:

* it lost over 65% of its value between 1933 and 1970.

* it lost over 82% of its value between 1980 and 2000.

* it lost about 29% of its value the last two years.

(http://www.macrotrends.net/1333/historical-gold-prices-100-y...)

Gold is a highly speculative asset.

Well, that's the price of gold in USD. Saying that gold has "lost" or "gained" value only works if you hold USD as the frame of reference.

Alternatively, you could invert the graph to say that USD is a highly speculative asset - relative to gold :)

The 97% loss in value of the dollar is brought up again and again as if it's some shocking fact. But that drop happened over a century, and fiat money is not expected to be s long term store of value. So really, that "shocking"drop is a non-issue unless your retirement savings account was a bed mattress.