Click here to Skip to main content
15,888,610 members

Welcome to the Lounge

   

For discussing anything related to a software developer's life but is not for programming questions. Got a programming question?

The Lounge is rated Safe For Work. If you're about to post something inappropriate for a shared office environment, then don't post it. No ads, no abuse, and no programming questions. Trolling, (political, climate, religious or whatever) will result in your account being removed.

 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Greg Utas9-Feb-21 11:10
professionalGreg Utas9-Feb-21 11:10 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Eddy Vluggen9-Feb-21 11:49
professionalEddy Vluggen9-Feb-21 11:49 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Gerry Schmitz9-Feb-21 12:18
mveGerry Schmitz9-Feb-21 12:18 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Eddy Vluggen9-Feb-21 12:50
professionalEddy Vluggen9-Feb-21 12:50 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Greg Utas9-Feb-21 12:47
professionalGreg Utas9-Feb-21 12:47 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Eddy Vluggen9-Feb-21 14:01
professionalEddy Vluggen9-Feb-21 14:01 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Greg Utas9-Feb-21 16:10
professionalGreg Utas9-Feb-21 16:10 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Eddy Vluggen9-Feb-21 17:51
professionalEddy Vluggen9-Feb-21 17:51 
Greg Utas wrote:
This has nothing to do with software. It's far more important. Big Grin | :-D
That's relative.

Greg Utas wrote:
Knowing economics isn't necessarily correlated with being rich, though it can help if you don't believe most of the crapola that passes for it these days.
I don't know about economics. And being old, I've no use for being rich; I'm content. That's more than most can claim. And most Gods' don't provide that.

Greg Utas wrote:
They sure did. Back then, gold didn't even have use in electronics or dentistry. It was valued almost entirely for its beauty.
Ehr.. no; as I already explained, the Egyptians discovered they could make the metal paper thin without it rusting. If it was just being looking fancy, you'd be trading pyrite. Fools gold. Or shiny glass shards.

Greg Utas wrote:
And in prisons. Money has two roles: for exchange, and as a store of value. Perishable things don't work as stores of value but can be great for barter.
The circumstance make currency; in prison, tobacco is, or better, weed if you can supply it. Gold has little value there, since there's no one to sell to. Why not, well, they have no use for it. Visit a prison, it works very sobering.

Greg Utas wrote:
Try dividing the Mona Lisa, though we could float shares in it. But which shareholder gets to keep it on display?
Repeating what I said, art has no real value. You name one of the best known pieces of art, famous for it's new way of drawing eyes. But in terms of eggs, it has little value in times of need. Art is only valuable if money available. Right now, money is sloshing, innit? If people forced to spend their hard earned pieces o' eight on art or eggs, what would they choose, and what would that do to the value of "art"? That's why we barbarians dismanteled all those classics.

Greg Utas wrote:
It's all subjective: aggregate supply and demand are just the interplay of individual subjective valuations.
Eh.. "intrinsic" means "not subjective". It means it has value to all, despite your subjective ideas. Your ideas about value don't matter to it. You may dislike eggs, but that doesn't change their real value. You don't have to eat those. You could trade them for their worth, despite your subjective ideas about eggs. But an egg is that; you may subjectively dislike them, but they have an intrinsic value. Depending on supply and demand yes, but they always have some value.

Doesn't matter what those eggs mean to you either. That's subjective again, your opinion, not the worlds'. But the uses we have, as mankind, for eggs, that's not subjective. That's what gives eggs value. That's called "intrinsic". Replace eggs with wood and reread if you still in the woods, if you would.

How much wood would a woodchuck chuck.. sorry, had to, this is getting to serious, and you making me think back. Haven't done so for some time.

Greg Utas wrote:
Here you go astray, but you're in the company of most contemporary "economists". The period of greatest expansion was the 19th century--the gold standard. During that time, prices (outside of wartime) fell by 1%-2% a year as economic expansion outpaced money supply growth. Yet economies boomed.
FA Hayek?[^].

In the 20th, we rose without gold. And a "bit more" than the 19th century. You can call it the biggest expansion (due to taking lands not yours), but we went to the moon on fiat, beat polio, and gave women a vote. We built computers, and took more people out of poverty than ever before. We're more communist than ever, thanks to capitalism. Your turn Smile | :)

Greg Utas wrote:
What we enjoy today is the result of technological progress, not fiat
Funded by what? Yes; debt.

Greg Utas wrote:
And fiat is profoundly unethical
It is! We borrowing from the future. No one will ever repay it; and with Corona, all governments got more validity to borrow more fiat. From ehr.. Dunno who we borrowing from. It's not even money. Private central banks, if I read correct. Means little to me whom we borrowing from. We not repaying.

Greg Utas wrote:
The last remnants of the gold standard ended in 1971 when Nixon abrogated Bretton Woods.
You can complain; but did you save? Governments come and go, and times change. Again, did you save?

Greg Utas wrote:
One effect of monetary expansion is artifically low interest rates. Lower interest rates should mean that people are saving more and are willing to consume less today in return for more later. Businesses see this signal and expand to develop things with longer time horizons. But the signal can be fake, caused by central bank manipulation. If the money supply doesn't keep expanding, the signal gets revealed as a fraud that causes a recession due to malinvestment. This is one of the main causes of business cycles. We now even have negative interest rates on government debt. If this doesn't tell you that something is horribly wrong, I don't know what will.
Low interest rates also means owning a house is cheap. Most of the Dutch own their house; and I don't, idealism. Interest cannot rise anymore, here or your place; it would not be politically acceptable.

That's the problem of fiat; it is depending on politics. We have negative interest for millionaires, who don't save but invest - that's a non-problem. Millionaires with a saving account don't exist. They invest, buy gold, BC, art, "fine" wine, but don't put money in something that can fail like a "bank". And banks fail, as they proven. And even for the little saver, they were saved; government dictates to print, not to fail.

Greg Utas wrote:
One effect of monetary expansion is artifically low interest rates. Lower interest rates should mean that people are saving more and are willing to consume less today in return for more later
That's economic bullshit. People don't have that choice in general. We work to pay the bills, not to save. Most of us not busy with the idea whether money generates more as savings in interest; we paying bills, and lots of us live paycheck to paycheck. We not checking interest-rates day by day, we just trying to survive. Those economic ideas fancy is we all had access to capital. We don't. And that's where that theory of lower interest rate meaning more saving breaks down. We have nothing to save. We prioritizing what bills to pay, disregarding interest.

Keynes is a fool.

Round 2[^]

Greg Utas wrote:
The fiat system is perpetuated by sycophants for central banks and governments, who want the privilege to conjure money and direct it towards pet projects and special interests. Do you think anyone would accept this shite given a choice? That should tell you all that you need to know.
I told you before, I'm a silver-bug. All fiat currencies in history, ever, failed. So, in theory.. Prolly not in my lifetime, but I am not saving for me. I got all I need already.

And fiat granted us a great expansion. Yes, someone needs to pay those debts, in theory; but there's not enough real resources to do so. Not even if you combine gold, silver, wood and eggs. We spent more than there is. Youth don't realize, but they'd rise if they knew what we did. If they'd realize, the world would be in real trouble.

And I can place it here, they too busy doing tik-tok, or something like that. Fiat was our way of spending gold (resources if you want) we didn't have as a generation. It caused an expansion, and our governments want to keep that going and they will, because no one wants to say to pensioners and the largest voting group in each country that we borrowed too much. We'll just print more. Prices will go up, not because things more expensive, but money worth less. It's called inflation. And it nothing new; people don't care. And Europe now supporting wars to get people here, we need workers. And if more people in general, than we need more money to keep the price levels the same. And that's what the European Central Bank promised, innit?

Stable prices.

..and as I said, I'm a silver bug. Now you know why. And all delivered, none of that paper-owned sh*t.

You mistake me for someone who must be pro or contra. I'm neither, have no pieces on the board. And my little savings are on a trend that is more than 30 years old. More than 600 years old, to be conservative.

Profiting? Yes. You look up yourself what the "profit" on gold is. It has not become more valuable, because for each new idea where to use it, we found new mines. We running out of both. The value of the resource is not changing, the value of money is.
Bastard Programmer from Hell Suspicious | :suss:
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.

GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Greg Utas10-Feb-21 2:10
professionalGreg Utas10-Feb-21 2:10 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Eddy Vluggen10-Feb-21 16:05
professionalEddy Vluggen10-Feb-21 16:05 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Greg Utas11-Feb-21 1:05
professionalGreg Utas11-Feb-21 1:05 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Jörgen Andersson9-Feb-21 19:48
professionalJörgen Andersson9-Feb-21 19:48 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Eddy Vluggen10-Feb-21 15:52
professionalEddy Vluggen10-Feb-21 15:52 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Jörgen Andersson10-Feb-21 22:16
professionalJörgen Andersson10-Feb-21 22:16 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Eddy Vluggen10-Feb-21 22:35
professionalEddy Vluggen10-Feb-21 22:35 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
W Balboos, GHB10-Feb-21 3:34
W Balboos, GHB10-Feb-21 3:34 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Gerry Schmitz10-Feb-21 4:07
mveGerry Schmitz10-Feb-21 4:07 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
W Balboos, GHB10-Feb-21 4:24
W Balboos, GHB10-Feb-21 4:24 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Eddy Vluggen10-Feb-21 16:21
professionalEddy Vluggen10-Feb-21 16:21 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
W Balboos, GHB11-Feb-21 0:52
W Balboos, GHB11-Feb-21 0:52 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Eddy Vluggen11-Feb-21 2:13
professionalEddy Vluggen11-Feb-21 2:13 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
W Balboos, GHB11-Feb-21 3:03
W Balboos, GHB11-Feb-21 3:03 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Eddy Vluggen11-Feb-21 10:55
professionalEddy Vluggen11-Feb-21 10:55 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
5teveH9-Feb-21 22:18
5teveH9-Feb-21 22:18 
GeneralRe: Currency Pin
Gerry Schmitz10-Feb-21 3:18
mveGerry Schmitz10-Feb-21 3:18 

General General    News News    Suggestion Suggestion    Question Question    Bug Bug    Answer Answer    Joke Joke    Praise Praise    Rant Rant    Admin Admin   

Use Ctrl+Left/Right to switch messages, Ctrl+Up/Down to switch threads, Ctrl+Shift+Left/Right to switch pages.