deacon wrote:You have to understand the concept of rigidity. For the purposes of this post I will call it stickiness.
Wages are sticky. If the US dollar deflates (and therefore your purchasing power goes up) you should be paid less. Needless to say, you will be pretty unhappy if your employer cuts your pay. How often should pay be changed? Annually? Monthly? Currently the answer is annually; and generally it will be a raise. However, its not really a raise if it is in line with inflation. They are just paying you the same purchasing power.
The same holds true for most things. A company will not lower the price of an apple, if people are still willing to pay for an apple at previous prices. People will still demand a good even if it is "slightly" more expensive than it should be. What is the value of two cents? Will you rather go hungry than buy an apple that is two cents more expensive than it should be? This also gets into the concept of elasticity of demand (ie. normal, inferior, and luxury goods).
Now lets talk about your other question: "For the love of god how can gold and silver now be cheaper when bought in euros when euro weakness/dollar strength is the supposed cause of the decline in the first place?"
The Euro to Dollar exchange rate is 1 euro = 1.2945 US dollars.
On the website you provided gold is 1228.93 Euros, and 1589.00 Dollars.
1228.93 Euros x 1.2945 Dollars = 1590.84 Dollars
Gold is not cheaper in Euros. It is just about the same price as in Dollars.
deacon wrote:You have to understand the concept of rigidity. For the purposes of this post I will call it stickiness.
Wages are sticky. If the US dollar deflates (and therefore your purchasing power goes up) you should be paid less. Needless to say, you will be pretty unhappy if your employer cuts your pay. How often should pay be changed? Annually? Monthly? Currently the answer is annually; and generally it will be a raise. However, its not really a raise if it is in line with inflation. They are just paying you the same purchasing power.
The same holds true for most things. A company will not lower the price of an apple, if people are still willing to pay for an apple at previous prices. People will still demand a good even if it is "slightly" more expensive than it should be. What is the value of two cents? Will you rather go hungry than buy an apple that is two cents more expensive than it should be? This also gets into the concept of elasticity of demand (ie. normal, inferior, and luxury goods).
Now lets talk about your other question: "For the love of god how can gold and silver now be cheaper when bought in euros when euro weakness/dollar strength is the supposed cause of the decline in the first place?"
The Euro to Dollar exchange rate is 1 euro = 1.2945 US dollars.
On the website you provided gold is 1228.93 Euros, and 1589.00 Dollars.
1228.93 Euros x 1.2945 Dollars = 1590.84 Dollars
Gold is not cheaper in Euros. It is just about the same price as in Dollars.
deacon wrote:You have to understand the concept of rigidity. For the purposes of this post I will call it stickiness.
Wages are sticky. If the US dollar deflates (and therefore your purchasing power goes up) you should be paid less. Needless to say, you will be pretty unhappy if your employer cuts your pay. How often should pay be changed? Annually? Monthly? Currently the answer is annually; and generally it will be a raise. However, its not really a raise if it is in line with inflation. They are just paying you the same purchasing power.
The same holds true for most things. A company will not lower the price of an apple, if people are still willing to pay for an apple at previous prices. People will still demand a good even if it is "slightly" more expensive than it should be. What is the value of two cents? Will you rather go hungry than buy an apple that is two cents more expensive than it should be? This also gets into the concept of elasticity of demand (ie. normal, inferior, and luxury goods).
Now lets talk about your other question: "For the love of god how can gold and silver now be cheaper when bought in euros when euro weakness/dollar strength is the supposed cause of the decline in the first place?"
The Euro to Dollar exchange rate is 1 euro = 1.2945 US dollars.
On the website you provided gold is 1228.93 Euros, and 1589.00 Dollars.
1228.93 Euros x 1.2945 Dollars = 1590.84 Dollars
Gold is not cheaper in Euros. It is just about the same price as in Dollars.
It's simply that the USD is up, which is no surprise.
deacon wrote:Now lets talk about your other question: "For the love of god how can gold and silver now be cheaper when bought in euros when euro weakness/dollar strength is the supposed cause of the decline in the first place?"
The Euro to Dollar exchange rate is 1 euro = 1.2945 US dollars.
On the website you provided gold is 1228.93 Euros, and 1589.00 Dollars.
1228.93 Euros x 1.2945 Dollars = 1590.84 Dollars
Gold is not cheaper in Euros. It is just about the same price as in Dollars.
DebtFreeMe wrote:It's simply that the USD is up, which is no surprise.
But the dollar being up is only relative to other currencies... So if each nation prints a bunch money, but the US prints $1000 dollars less then anyone else, then it will relatively go up, compared to those other currencies, but the price of a relatively fixed commodity, like silver, should still go up in relation to all of those currencies, including the dollar, not down... In the long run this should be true, not so much in the short run where humans can be persuaded that more money printing is actually less, more taxation is actually good, and more laws actually mean a greater amount of freedom...
mflugher wrote:... feel free to be as long winded and detailed as you have time for, I'm here to learn and hopefully I'm not the dumbest guy in the room so someone else might pick something up too
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