If it is backed by gold, how do you get your worth of gold if you need to? Where it stored and who controls it?
If you can't easily, at any time exchange your gold-backed currency to the exact weight of gold it represent without any additional fees or taxes and back - it is not gold-backed currency at all.
The reality is currency is NOT backed by gold, gold IS backed by currency.. Why does anyone want gold? Only because it's redeemable for cash. It's cash value IS it's only value. No one cares that money isn't worth gold, but no one would even want gold if it weren't worth money.
Gold never had inherent value.nit has no more inherent value than cash does.
Agree. Anything could be means of exchange. if it have trust and agreement among users. Gold once was just a utility metal among Natives of Americas and not a currency. There is no any guarantee that it will not become just utility metal again.
I think there are no any substance or objects that have some absolute value as currency and in any circumstances could be means of exchange. Currency is more social phenomena than something absolute.
From the other side currency is just a tool to solve some problem, which is useful as long, as it solves that problem or problem itself exists. It is not very hard to imagine situations when there are no any need for any currency at all, since it is jut not needed or have no any sense, like, IDK, horseshoe in 21 century. If you have some advanced 3D printer working on subatomic level, something like StarTrek replicator, f.e. what is the purpose of currency will be?
You literally don't even know what money is do you? What you think money is, is just a system of promissory notes, and tokens. True money is made out of actual resources, and nothing holds more value, or last longer then metal.
Gold has no inherent value, certainly not an actual resource without the projection of value on it. It is only valuable because it's worth money right now, and historically it's only value was we said it had value.
It literally is not a resource. As someone in this thread pointed out, if you were going to stay on a desert island it would not even make a list of 1000 items to bring along because it has no inherent value.
Wood is literally more useful.
So gold becoming a resource in the 20th century because they finally found a use for it Wich is in computers is why it has been valuable for 12,000 years? I seriously doubt that
Again, gold has just recently become a resource. Historically it's only value has been that we use it to project value on.
It's only value to anyone is that it's worth money. If it didn't have a cash value you wouldn't want it.
Doni think that money is just empty little notes? Absolutely, just like gold it's only value is that we use it to project value on to it. Noether the paper, not the gold that used to back it like 49!years ago have ANY inherent value.
Their value is a circular flow chart. Money has value because 40 years ago it was backed by gold. Gold has value because it's worth money.
If it is backed by gold, how do you get your worth of gold if you need to? Where it stored and who controls it?
If you can't easily, at any time exchange your gold-backed currency to the exact weight of gold it represent without any additional fees or taxes and back - it is not gold-backed currency at all.
The reality is currency is NOT backed by gold, gold IS backed by currency.. Why does anyone want gold? Only because it's redeemable for cash. It's cash value IS it's only value. No one cares that money isn't worth gold, but no one would even want gold if it weren't worth money.
Gold never had inherent value.nit has no more inherent value than cash does.
Agree. Anything could be means of exchange. if it have trust and agreement among users. Gold once was just a utility metal among Natives of Americas and not a currency. There is no any guarantee that it will not become just utility metal again.
I think there are no any substance or objects that have some absolute value as currency and in any circumstances could be means of exchange. Currency is more social phenomena than something absolute.
From the other side currency is just a tool to solve some problem, which is useful as long, as it solves that problem or problem itself exists. It is not very hard to imagine situations when there are no any need for any currency at all, since it is jut not needed or have no any sense, like, IDK, horseshoe in 21 century. If you have some advanced 3D printer working on subatomic level, something like StarTrek replicator, f.e. what is the purpose of currency will be?
You literally don't even know what money is do you? What you think money is, is just a system of promissory notes, and tokens. True money is made out of actual resources, and nothing holds more value, or last longer then metal.
Gold has no inherent value, certainly not an actual resource without the projection of value on it. It is only valuable because it's worth money right now, and historically it's only value was we said it had value.
It literally is not a resource. As someone in this thread pointed out, if you were going to stay on a desert island it would not even make a list of 1000 items to bring along because it has no inherent value.
Wood is literally more useful.
So gold becoming a resource in the 20th century because they finally found a use for it Wich is in computers is why it has been valuable for 12,000 years? I seriously doubt that Again, gold has just recently become a resource. Historically it's only value has been that we use it to project value on.
It's only value to anyone is that it's worth money. If it didn't have a cash value you wouldn't want it.
Doni think that money is just empty little notes? Absolutely, just like gold it's only value is that we use it to project value on to it. Noether the paper, not the gold that used to back it like 49!years ago have ANY inherent value.
Their value is a circular flow chart. Money has value because 40 years ago it was backed by gold. Gold has value because it's worth money.