I'm well aware of the history of how paper money was introduced in Europe.stevecook172001 wrote:I am bound to say, jcw, that I would not personally place my exchange value in e gold with any company. The reason being this just another form of fiat. A "promise to pay" if you like. Little different to the original goldsmiths of old who would store your gold for safe keeping and then issue you with a note that promised to "pay the bearer" of the note. At some point, the goldsmiths realised that there was not likely to be more than 10% of the depositors ask for the their gold back at any one time. They then went on to realise that they could lend out gold in the form of promisory notes alone on the basis that the note could "in theory" be redeemed at any point. As a consequence, people bagan to use these promisory notes as exchange units. Thus, paper fiat was born. Of course, if the depoisitors ever lost confidence in what now amounted to something similar to a modern bank, there would be a bank run. 90% of the depositors were dissapointed, to say the least, to find the bnank didn't actually posess their gold at all.jcw wrote:Here's a short mp3 of a recent interview with GoldMoney.com's CEO James Turk.
They talk about the recent prosecution of the company e-gold over money laundering matters, and the precautions which GoldMoney takes to comply with the law (they're based in Jersey) and safeguard customers' interests.
http://www.kereport.com/DailyRadio/Daily072208.mp3
Eventually, our governments tidied up this problem of the goldsmiths lending money into existence by making it illegal for anyone other than a central bank to issue fiat. Of course, the CB was still playing the same fractionall reserve lending game itself, lending money into existence. But they held a store of gold to act as a fundamental back-up in the eventiuality that the depositors wanted their real money (the gold) back. Following the depression of the thirties and absolutely since the seventies, the paper fiat of the western world has been de-pegged from a gold standard. This means that our paper fiat is now backed by absolutely nothing. Yep...that's right...bugger all!
I see companies offering e gold as a re-invention of the role of the old goldsmith. People are placing their fiat into these companies without seeing the gold in question. The temptation to do a bit of fractional reserve shennanigans must be incredibly high.
Give me real money every time. Physical bullion...
As I've said before GoldMoney provides a service where customers buy allocated gold and silver. The metal belongs to the customer and GoldMoney organizes storage and insurance and a convenient means to buy and sell. The serial numbers of the bars are published.
There is no "promise to pay". The metal belongs to the customer and if they wish, they can take delivery of the metal.
If you say they store less gold and silver than the customers own, you are accusing them of fraud.
You may be unfamiliar with the fact that James Turk is one of the leading anti-paper money contrarians.
The fact that customers can pay each other by transfering ownership (so called digital gold payments) is merely an aside. The primary service is allocated gold and silver.
The use of the term "e-gold" may have misled you.