MacG wrote:stevecook172001 wrote:MacG wrote:
Nops. Gold is not a "store of value". At least not by any physical laws. True value is found in stuff you need to survive and thrive - food, clothes, shelter, tools, knowledge etc.
It's extremely arrogant to believe that you will be able to have access to the result of other peoples work simply by owning gold.
If gold was mined only for dental repair and electric contacts, I would not have the same problem with the earth-raping. My main argument is that the majority of the gold is mined for perverse reasons.
Have you thought this all the way through?
The
only kind of society that is possible without money is an extremely primitive hunter-gather one of no more than a few hundred individuals who are all basically plying the same "trade" in life. Namely, hunting and gathering. That being the case, there would be a very limited number of commodities that people will need to exchange. So, I guess, the necessary conincident of wants would be just about possible for direct barter to suffice.
Or to put it another way.
The stoneage
If that's what you would like to see, then money is completely irrelevant and uneccessary.
If that is not what you wish to see, the you simply
must accept the necessity for money to exist.
Once you have accepted the above, you need to say what commodity you think will have the most desirable qualities to be used as a universally agreed store of exchange value.
I have yet to hear an argument that beats gold
However, I am all ears.....
Yo are consequently putting words in my mouth I have never uttered, and its a bit annoying. You are *not* all ears, that's just some form of rhetoric.
Fair enough
Please explain which part of what I have said is "putting words into your mouth"
Also, please explain how you see a civilisation working without the necessity of at least
some commodity being used as a universal unit of exchange.
I ask the above, not becasue they are words you have used. Rather, because I see them as being inevitable and extremely important questions that arise from your seeing a universal store of exchagne as being either uneccesary or even a bad thing. The fact that it is gold happens to be an arbitary function of geology. So, I am assuming you are not objecting to gold because it is gold. Rather, you are objecting to the very notion that
any commodity should be used in this monetary way.
I wouldn't wish for you to think I had put words in your mouth with that last question. So, just to clarify, I have based it on the following:
Nops. Gold is not a "store of value". At least not by any physical laws. True value is found in stuff you need to survive and thrive - food, clothes, shelter, tools, knowledge etc.
It's extremely arrogant to believe that you will be able to have access to the result of other peoples work simply by owning gold.
I would, perhaps, also add the following:
Assume the following scenareo:
You have some chickens
Someone else has a goat
You want a goat
He does not want chickens
He
does want wheat
You know someone who lives many miles away who has some wheat
The man with the wheat wants chickens
You travel to him and exchange your chickens for wheat
You travel back with your "stored" exchange value in the wheat
You exchange the wheat for the goat
In the above scenareo, wheat has been used as "money"
Now.....you may argue that this is as it should be. The only commodities that should be used to store exchange value are useful ones.
However, such an argument would be a mistake.
The
whole point of money is that it should be
useless
If it isn't, you will constantly be suffering with monetary deflation and severely fluctuating exchange rates because of the "money" being siphoned off to do other work
It is gold's relative uselessness in all other respects that makes it useful as money
Also, the commodity being used as money should not be easy to inflate. I could, in the above scenareo, grow myself a few acreas of wheat and become a millionaire overnight. It would do me no good of course, since the supply would have been greatly inflated and so the exchange value would drop.
It is gold's relative scarcity that makes it useful as money
Finally, the commodity being used as money should not degrade easily. If all of my wheat becomes rotten, there is the problem, once again, of deflation of supply and the consequent effect this will have on the exchange rate predicatbility
It is golds lack of degradability that makes it useful as money