It limits the rate of monetary inflation. It is much harder to dig a shiny metal out of the ground than adding more zeros in a computer.
If you're not worried about the long-term consequences of both the fiscal and monetary policy of the United States, I don't know what to say. M2 to the moon.
I don’t really think it does. They could just say this dollar is now worth less gold? Or they could put lengthy restrictions in place for exchanging dollars for gold until it nearly guarantees they’ll never need to produce most of the gold.
Shipping gold is expensive and risky, eventually they’ll start saying, “you own this amount of the gold we have stored safely”. The abstractions find a way…
That said, if the US were in a better financial situation, how would 1-2% inflation (as far as I can tell, this roughly the rate that gold is currently being extracted) lead to people starving in the US?
Obviously, reality is much more complicated, but I just want to understand the reasoning. Assume 0% inflation if you prefer.
2% is a healthy level, which is why it's the Fed's target.
The problem is that pegging a currency to gold does not peg inflation. Inflation will still move around based on other economic factors. You will have just eliminated your best tool for influencing it.
If you needed to adjust a currency pegged to gold, you'd have to get more people working in the mines. Which is either not possible, or a human rights violation.
There's no reason for that. As production improves in efficiency it is natural for things and services to become cheaper. That also means you get more for your money, instead of getting more money. That concept is not too strange for the population to accept.
For a few items in your CPI basket, that's fine. If you have significant deflation across your economy on average, people will start losing their jobs en masse, and zero dollars doesn't buy anything.
Likewise, business revenues will be going down but the investments in capital have already been allocated. Businesses start laying off employees to try to balance the books. Those newly unemployed workers, in turn, now have less money to spend. More businesses find themselves in the red, and it leads to more layoffs.
This is called a deflationary spiral. Basically every period of significant deflation in the past has led to dire economic consequences. You really do not want people to stop spending money.
This sounds like a myth. If the value of your currency is increasing, staying at 0 means you're actually turning a profit, just as making a 10% profit when the inflation is 50% means you're losing money. Inflation is a tax and redistribution of wealth, it's really not more complicated.
Zero isn’t bad. I was explicitly talking about deflation above. The effects of deflation I explained above is not a myth, it is introductory macroeconomics.
Deflationary spirals have happened in the past, but they have stopped since we moved away from the gold standard and we can now intentionally inflate our currency to prevent deflation.
If you have a real business, you're still increasing value in the equation or breaking even. Deflation means you might have to lower wages, but your employees are still getting the same value paid. It means you might have to lower prices, but you're still getting the same value sold. It also means your costs are lowering, so as long as you have a value-adding business you will beat deflation. If not, then you shouldn't be in business.
In today's inflation economy, there are tons of tons of businesses that on paper make a profit, but in reality don't create value because that profit is worth less than the numbers tell. And what's worse: Individuals are becoming poorer and poorer without realizing it, because the nominal value of their pay check might be higher, though the value of the money is probably half of what it was 10 years ago.
And as individuals adapt their lifestyle and spending to circumstances we arrive at the ridiculous situation of today, where most young people after maybe a decade of working and advancing their careers still don't own a home, still don't have any children, and don't dream of splurging on luxurious hobbies.
Thank God there is a huge trend right now with workers of all "collars" saying "fuck it" and doing what they can to change companies, change careers, change cities and change countries to get as much as possible for themselves instead of continuing to be exploited.
This is not something economists disagree upon. All periods of any significant deflation anywhere and at any time were accompanied by economic recession or depression.
If it were just so simple that a “real business” could merely adjust everyone’s wage to balance the books when revenue drop, you would be the world’s most coveted CEO that could save any company.
It ain’t that simple. Businesses make capital expenditures. There’s also often a time gap between incurring costs and incurring revenue.
It makes more sense to me that money should have intrinsic value in and of itself rather than exist as some nebulous digit in a computer that represents nothing but a unit of debt, which is easily and inevitably abused by those with the power to create it from thin air. I don't know if precious metals are the best answer, but money as a commodity makes more sense to me than money as an infinitely dupe-able fiat token with no intrinsic value
You are using a basic understanding of economics then.
You need to understand economics as the metabolism of a larger organism.
This isn't just a hypothetical argument, it is reality. Let's take the digital device you're reading this with as an example. It's not created by any single craftsman. It is the result of millions of people's work. It is a "metabolite" of a larger organism.
You are a node or cell in a larger thing. Everything you know and can do is largely tailored to this system you're currently in.
Consider you are time-teleported back 10,000 years and come across a tribe of humans. Who would be more valuable to whom? Is your understanding of any of the technologies you presently enjoy sufficient enough to reproduce from scratch? Maybe a couple things, but they would most likely have a lot more to teach you than you'd be able to teach them.
I realize the above is very abstract from monetary policy, but the correct premise needs to be set before digging down.
Once you model economics as the metabolism of a larger entity, money reveals its true nature: to control what activities are performed by / within the organism.
There's no such thing as "intrinsic value" -- there is only a medium of exchange or signaling. This signal should not be tied to any physical thing, as that is inefficient to the state of an economy. There are better ways. Imaginary units are a more powerful tool, as they are not constrained by any physical limits.
You may be upset at how these IU's are currently handled, and rightfully so. The current methodology we have is very primitive. Our experts themselves (head of the Fed, treasury) readily admit this. When they take actions they "think" or "expect" it will have this or that effect. And the levers they pull are also very blunt.
When CBDCs come online, then we will start to realize a better economy. They will allow more granular control of things.
Money is a convenient means of exchange and valuation, I don't see the reason why my membership in society (node or cell in larger organism) should require that means of exchange to be imaginary- and I disagree that intrinsic value does not exist, though it may vary in the eye of the beholder. If I approach this stone-age tribe from your example and attempt to trade with them they will not accept my dollars for their goods- to them my dollars are kindling at best. Very little intrinsic value. But a physical commodity perhaps they would accept because it has some actual real-world use to them. Why should one party trade actual useful goods and services in exchange for imaginary numbers? Wouldn't it make more sense for trade real goods for real goods, provided one party's goods are viable for monetary use and can be reliably used as a means of valuation?
I won't argue that imaginary units of money are a powerful tool, they certainly are. So powerful in fact that there is no human on this earth who can be trusted to administer it without rampant abuse. The history of centralized planned economies speaks for itself, and I don't think further consolidation under CBDCs with more 'granular control' is going to improve its track record. The physical limits that constrain the use of commodities as money are what make it a viable as currency, it's a feature not a bug
Monetary policy is one of the biggest reasons for the success of the world economy over the last century. Without fiat currency it would be impossible and loans would immediately get much more expensive, instantly destroying tech investment for starters.
A century is not a very long time, all things considered- we're all still high on the rush from this constant infusion of free cash, these are the good times. But I wouldn't base my entire outlook on how nice the good times are, there are massive risks involved with setting up a house of cards like this. There's a reason the constitution grants congress the sole authority to coin money, and implies quite clearly that money is to be silver/gold or backed by such. Nobody can be trusted with the authority to expand the money supply at will, unrestrained by the physical constraints of a commodity-based currency, free to print trillions upon trillions with no real oversight. That's how you end up with these ungodly banking cartels with disgusting amounts of political power (and all the corruption and cronyism that entails) while the middle class bears the burden of the feds inflationary practices, which is basically just an insidious form of hidden taxation. I'm not so sure that free money for tech startups is worth all that in the long run.
You're not wrong, and of course there are many more factors than just monetary policy alone that affect the lot of the middle class- But I'll point out that the middle class was much better off 50-60 years ago than it is now, back when fiat wasn't abused to the degree it has been for the past couple decades
In the US perhaps, but every other country also uses fiat and the global middle class has never been stronger. That suggests to me that there is a different, US specific reason for widening inequality.
Money having intrinsic value is nonsense. Money is like a spread sheet. It's net worth is zero.
The value you derive from the spread sheet is that it lets you organize your business or economy.
Slow-moving train wrecks are still train wrecks.