Economist wrote:"It takes very high rates of inflation--rates well up in the double digits that persist for years--before people will stop using the money that is so obviously inflating. And when they do lose faith in the fiction, they do not revert straight to barter. No, they adopt substitute currencies. The substitute currencies in most inflations in history have been gold, silver, or copper specie, often, as during the American Revolution, in the form of coins of foreign countries. What's more, people may not abandon paper altogether: they may turn instead to paper money that has not been overissued."
Friedman, Milton. 1994. "The Mystery of Money" in Money Mischief
Copper Catcher wrote:http://www.imf.org/external/np/pp/eng/2010/041310.pdf
Page 4 list on chart global currency.
I talked about this a long time ago as well in a post on here September 2010:
viewtopic.php?f=17&t=483
Economist wrote:"It takes very high rates of inflation--rates well up in the double digits that persist for years--before people will stop using the money that is so obviously inflating. And when they do lose faith in the fiction, they do not revert straight to barter. No, they adopt substitute currencies. The substitute currencies in most inflations in history have been gold, silver, or copper specie, often, as during the American Revolution, in the form of coins of foreign countries. What's more, people may not abandon paper altogether: they may turn instead to paper money that has not been overissued."
Friedman, Milton. 1994. "The Mystery of Money" in Money Mischief
Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote:Economist wrote:"It takes very high rates of inflation--rates well up in the double digits that persist for years--before people will stop using the money that is so obviously inflating. And when they do lose faith in the fiction, they do not revert straight to barter. No, they adopt substitute currencies. The substitute currencies in most inflations in history have been gold, silver, or copper specie, often, as during the American Revolution, in the form of coins of foreign countries. What's more, people may not abandon paper altogether: they may turn instead to paper money that has not been overissued."
Friedman, Milton. 1994. "The Mystery of Money" in Money Mischief
Man, if you don't jump in right now and hoard it, there will not be any left to find come the double digit inflation we will all see one day.
I vividly remember the last time the prime interest rate was over 20%. Thousands went bankrupt. It took 20 years for things to get back up to the same level of hourly wage for Johnny Paycheck in my region of the country. I think we will see this again, too soon.
balz wrote:Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote:Economist wrote:"It takes very high rates of inflation--rates well up in the double digits that persist for years--before people will stop using the money that is so obviously inflating. And when they do lose faith in the fiction, they do not revert straight to barter. No, they adopt substitute currencies. The substitute currencies in most inflations in history have been gold, silver, or copper specie, often, as during the American Revolution, in the form of coins of foreign countries. What's more, people may not abandon paper altogether: they may turn instead to paper money that has not been overissued."
Friedman, Milton. 1994. "The Mystery of Money" in Money Mischief
Man, if you don't jump in right now and hoard it, there will not be any left to find come the double digit inflation we will all see one day.
I vividly remember the last time the prime interest rate was over 20%. Thousands went bankrupt. It took 20 years for things to get back up to the same level of hourly wage for Johnny Paycheck in my region of the country. I think we will see this again, too soon.
I think you are right. What do you think about copper pennies as a good everyday currency for groceries and everything like it? I mean: people won't trade Ag oz for grocery... that would be like paying with a 1000$ bill today...
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