Doom wrote:Except, I did. Jeesuz, dude, seriously.
Except you didn't - or rather you did it by 'adding' to my quote. And at that point, it's hardly what I said, is it? So yes, I reiterate, find what I actually said, and see if it says what you think it does (it doesn't).
@Gold-backed during Depression
You are being ridiculously obstinant about something remarkably stupid. People turned in their money for gold during the early phases of this, foreign banks did that, and some even bought gold on an open market using their dollars. A half-decade into the Great Depression, they stopped letting people do that. Keyword there is 'INTO,' as in 'already in the midst of,' or 'well after the damage was done,' or 'too fucking late, sorry.'
If the dollar corresponded to some value, ANY value in gold held in reserve somewhere (even though it was only 40%), that is a partial gold-backed economy. That is not a fiat economy. You can seriously google the fucking definitions and see this. If you had any conceptual understanding of how economics works, you would see this. It doesn't even matter if you can exchange or not, as long as that gold exists, is held in reserve, and contributes to the value of the dollar such that the two are linked. Though, exchange is generally held as a 'pure gold-standard' requirement, since it's a way of holding the government to the claim that "the dollar is worth its value in gold." If that's the case, getting the gold equivalent shouldn't cause any problems, so if you're withholding the gold it's implied something is shady is going on.
But in the Great Depression, it wasn't shady - they had a 40% gold standard, and you could for some time literally go in and make the trade. Foreign banks made the trade. Etc, etc. And fiat money, by definition, must be intrinsically without value. If every dollar is mapped to 4/10th's of a dollar in gold, that is not fiat. You are fucking wrong, sorry.
The Great Depression did not happen under a fiat economy, and your insistence that it did is among the stupidest things you've claimed here, and it's something that is demonstrably wrong beyond any reasonable interpretation of history or definitions. And once you realize that, and exclude the Great Depression from the 'fiat economy,' it turns out our fiat economy had much less overall recession than the gold-backed one.
Doom wrote:But you're actually claiming 2 + 2 = 5, and you've been saying it over and over....and you're still wrong, no matter HOW many times you repeat it.
And a 'NO U' to you too. Unfortunately, you're wrong because the definition of fiat economy says so, and I am apparently wrong because "someone who doesn't understand the definition of fiat currency said so on the internet." There's an objective measure here - what fiat currency actually means. You are not using this definition. And you are therefore objectively wrong.
Doom wrote:Already demonstrated. Again, please, reread again. Do I really need to cut and paste, you seem to forget so fast.
No, you really haven't. You will have to make a clear case why someone living at a high quality of life with a small nest egg for emergencies is economically crippled from inflation. "Not being able to save without the savings depreciating minutely in value" is not the definition of "economically crippled." Show me how it's truly ruining them, or don't claim it's ruining them.
Doom wrote:Too bad that's now how people living paycheck to paycheck live. They go from one crisis to the next. When you live this way, a $1000 repair bill on your car is devastating, even though this is a natural part of modern life. A $200 emergency room bill is crushing and means asking Mom for more money, again. Paying an extra $30 a week on gas is backbreaking.
Yes, there are certain problems with the explicit number I provided. Thankfully it's completely arbitrary, and we can increase it. People expecting higher emergencies have bigger nest eggs. If you're pointing out, "our healthcare costs are too high," and "we're too dependent on oil, whose price is controlled by a monopolistic collective," I agree. These are not comments about inflation. There is some reasonable nest egg you can hold, that can be spent and replenished at some rate, held in a manner that has little to no loss from inflation while being easily accessible (a savings account). For me, that happens to be about a thousand. I have good health insurance and live in a big city where public transit is an option - my emergency costs are low. When you depend on a car and have shitty health insurance, your emergency costs are high, and your savings should be higher.
Nevertheless, it totally stands that saving accounts, which are regularly spent from and refilled, do not suffer heavily from inflation. The only assets inflation hurts are the ones that linger for a very long time without being used/added into, and only then if their interest rate is lower than inflation. You can maintain an emergency nest egg in an economy with inflation, even if its interest rate is less than the inflation rate, as long as you SPEND from it quickly enough and REFILL it appropriately.
Doom wrote:Again, you can't seem to grasp this. Even in an interest bearing account, inflation still slurps away constantly. If the interest is above inflation, the slurping isn't as bad...but it's still there. If the interest is below the inflation, the constant slurping is devastating, as shown.
So, then, you think it's a god given right that your money should reproduce to make more money without any work or investment on your part? That it is a requirement that you ALWAYS make a net profit over inflation just by holding money in your hands?
Let's assume that's true, and money should reproduce to make you wealthier - you do fucking realize that when inflation is higher, interest rates can be higher? It literally fucking balances itself. Higher inflation -> higher investment interest rates. Lower inflation -> lower investment interest rates (assuming all other factors remained equal). So no, it slurps away fucking nothing at all. Higher inflation ALLOWS you to have a higher interest rate, such that you make the same ratio of profit as you could have in a 0.0% inflation rate economy.
Doom wrote:Again, simply saying it doesn't make it so.
Then you should stop trying to do that like it means a damn thing. I've refuted pretty much every god damn thing you've said, and your only response has been to repeat yourself.
Doom wrote:
Seriously, you're so far in wtf-land I can't even address the confusion of ideas here. Can anyone tell me what he's trying to say with this? Every interpretation I come up with has it come out as total garbage as an approximation.
Quantumboost basically got it - are you sure we should be talking economics? You're missing some crucial knowledge here.
Inflation causes prices to go up. Following that, if the economy is of equal strength before and after, your wages should go up in pace. This means the variation between what you can get for your money varies only by the compound inflation rate between any two pay raises. This is a largely measurable quantity (average inflation rate * time), so it's effectively the same as getting paid less and less until you get yor next pay raise.
Doom wrote:Not everyone gets annual COL increases, though, assuming the measurements are accurate. In fact, the vast majority of people don't. Even minimum wage doesn't increase every year.
And that accurately reflects the fact that our economy is getting weaker because we do less and less useful shit. It's pretty hard to maintain any economy, gold or fiat, when your major export is 'jobs.' That, and corporations are getting greedier (worker wages stay flat, high-level execute pay spikes ridiculousy, corporate profits spike ridiculously). Again, this isn't actually inflation-related. This is a problem with the fact that overpopulation massively cheapens labor costs, and our society encourages a growing wealth divide. These problems would exist if we were gold-backed. Well, that's not completely true - these problems end a lot faster in gold-backed economies, because countries actually have an incentive to cash you in and take your gold (because gold is valuable, whereas cashing in a fiat debt is likely to ruin that debt and shutdown very profitable trade relations, because your trading partner's economy just collapsed when you asked for everything he owned). So, yeah, if we were gold-backed we probably wouldn't exist right now.
Doom wrote:Again, you're confused. It's not the meat rotting, it's a guy coming in and eating the meat against my wishes, that's the problem.
I agree, taxes are bad. Oh wait, we're talking about inflation - it's hard to tell
because that argument applies equally well to both.
Doom wrote:No; I've shown in detail the immense flaws and risks of fiat economies, highlighting how much they harm human beings. You maintain sacrificing human beings is acceptible for the good of the economy.
And I've shown you how you can have your cake and eat it too. No one needs to be sacrificed. At all. And in exchange, you get a stronger economy (and you really haven't refuted this at all, except a hilarious 'million-dollar grain of sand BS example').
Doom wrote:Still counts, though, since inflation rates are just averages. Some things will be higher than the average, by definition, and these will wipe people out. And so, shown again how bad inflation is, being mathematically certain to destroy people.
Yeah, that's not the definition of inflation. Inflation is MEASURED as an average, because the best we can do is guess. There is a 'true' value of inflation, it's just that it's hidden in such a complex system of equations that there is absolutely NO way to tell what the true value of inflation is. So we take the price change over an average of a bunch of things, and we HOPE the volatility of all the markets balances out and gives us the real inflation.
In an ideal world, where inflation was the ONLY effect, everything would go up by the inflation rate. When things go up by different rates, what you're actually experiencing is inflation + other shit. Like the volatility of certain markets, or perhaps industry revolutionizing production techniques, or simple corporate greed/price-hiking. The medical industry is not experiencing 'only inflation.' They're experiencing very little inflation, and a whole lot of 'other shit.' You can't blame other shit on inflation anymore than a farmer can blame the weather on inflation. Both affect the price of his good, from two different sources.
Doom wrote:
Again with the wonderful, beautiful theory that hasn't happened yet, while complete ignoring of reality and mathematics.
Except in the countries where it has, which would be nearly every other developed country in the world. So yes, except for all the places that handle healthcare well, you can't handle healthcare well.
Doom wrote:Yes it's a form of theft, as shown. Rationalizing that other things are theft doesn't change your argument here. Two wrongs don't make a right (even if the latter isn't necessarily a wrong).
So inflation is theft because it takes money against your will. Taxes also take money against your will, so it must be theft. Inflation being theft makes inflation bad. Taxes being theft must also make taxes bad. We should get rid of inflation because it is bad. We should also get rid of taxes, because they are bad.
Are you prepared to say taxes, like inflation, must be stopped? If so, you are a nutjob, and you scare me. If no, then you're violating your own argument. Which is fine with me - if you want to invalidate your position on your own, that makes my job a lot easier.
Doom wrote:
Yes, as shown. No matter what medium you're saving in, no matter what the return rate, the actual rate is reduced via inflation. Do you understand this? Let's go over it carefully, because you'll need to know this in the real world:
Except your return rates can be higher when the inflation rate is higher, leading to (all other factors being equal) identical profit.
I.e., in a 0.0% inflation economy, you get an 8% return. In a 2.0% inflation economy, you get a 10% return (and you're right, let's ignore the actual mathematics of that - adding interest rates is a little more complex than that). Inflation actually increases your rate of return, then it takes that increase away, resulting in no net change.
Doom wrote:Yes, as shown. It sucks the wealth out of people, leaving them without savings and vulnerable to the slightest unfortunate event.
Except I've shown why this doesn't happen. Turns out you can save when inflation exists! Yay!
Doom wrote:It destroys producers, who cannot determine a profitable price to charge for their product because they can't know what the currency is actually worth.
Except they can and do, and they make shit tons of money doing so. This is an argument against 'hyper-inflation,' where the changes in currency value change rapidly and in leaps and bounds. With moderate inflation, prices need only be updated every few months or even years. Unless you think producers have trouble selling goods to Americans? I wasn't aware I was at a lack of shit to buy.
Doom wrote:countries use the printing press to cover deficit spending leading to massive debts at the soveriegn level
Wow! Running a debt is bad? Hey, there's good news - fiat economies don't have to run debts anymore than gold economies. It just turns out they can handle debts better (trying to recall the debt will immediately make the debt less valuable, meaning recalling the debt is a dumb idea, so nobody does it like that - in gold economies, cashing in your debt means getting gold, which is valuable).
So once again you've shown that we're doing something stupid, you just haven't shown inflation is that stupid thing.
You are very good at making the wrong arguments.
Doom wrote:At best, this shows that theft is morally equivalent to a form of contract violation. Eh, I'll leave that to the philosophers.
Except the contract in the example is written such that it depreciates in value over the year. (You're seeing it ahead of time). There's no violation of anything - it's plain as day. Nobody is being told, "we don't have inflation! Inflation is 0.0%!"