OneBiteAtATime wrote:I've been trying to figure out something STABLE to measure gold and silver against. The euro is going to collapse first, which is going to make the dollar temporarily strong. During the termoil of the next several months or years, PM's will fluxuate vs. the dollar like crazy. I need some measure other than the dollar, euro, yen, yuan or anything fiat. Possibly I can measure silver vs. gold and vice versa, or PM vs. land, but land will be measured by FRN for some time. What is an accurate measure?
I've heard that in Jesus' day, a piece of silver (roughly the size of a modern american dime) was the pay for an average man's day of labor. This seems like a decent measure. Not necessarily the same at this point, but a good measuring stick, nonetheless.
What are some other good measures? A meal? A cord of firewood (nod to neilgin)? A loaf of bread? A gallon of clean water?
What do you say?
shinnosuke wrote:Check out this article on Zero Hedge. Some good thinking and good follow up comments about how to start over once the fiat dollar is officially declared defunct.
http://www.zerohedge.com/contributed/can-we-build-our-own-economy-ground
silverflake wrote:Hey guys, it kind of struck me that we are looking at this backward. Everyone in this thread seems to be looking for something stable to measure gold and silver against. But that's what the gold and silver are for. It's the PM/s that are the stable commodity to measure the other unstable papers against, beit the dollar, the euro the dow etc. Measuring against a time value (a days labor etc.) is interesting and has some merit. But don't waste your time worrying about paper measure vs. the PM's. Anything else is a wasting asset because of the constant inflation of fiat currencies. Take a look at a chart of gold vs. the dow. Sad and scary. Also, if 'they' ever wanted to revalue the dollar and make it a money with integrity by putting it on a gold standard, the best thing the economists could do would be, instead of labeling a currency as "One Dollar (the currency name) backed by 1/1900th ounce of Gold", relabel the new currency as straight Gold. In other words, have the new monetary unit as a 1/1000th ounce unit, a 1/100th ounce unit, a 1/10th etc. So when you pull a piece of paper out of your wallet, on the face of it and in each corner it says [certain portion of gold] instead of 'One dollar' etc. Then they are forced to keep that monetary unit at the listed amount of gold (can't be infalted).
Another Silverflake 2 cents worth (copper).
silverflake wrote:Hey guys, it kind of struck me that we are looking at this backward. Everyone in this thread seems to be looking for something stable to measure gold and silver against. But that's what the gold and silver are for.
Rodebaugh wrote:I'd trade a silver quarter for a restaurant quality Bacon Cheeseburger, Fries, and Ice tea.
Lemon Thrower wrote:this is not something i worry about, but you are on the right track. I try to train myself to think of other things in ounces or grams of Pms, and the pms themselves i stop watching the prices in dollars and just watch the GSR.
as for the price of pm's in soemthign else, probably the best is in oil.
holding gold or silver is really dis-investment. you are out of stocks and into money. we are just conditioned to think of fiat dollars as money, and gold as somthing else, so thinking of gold as money or cash and not an investment is not natural.
Rodebaugh wrote:I'd trade a silver quarter for a restaurant quality Bacon Cheeseburger, Fries, and Ice tea.
Mossy wrote:"Koku": The amount of rice one person eats per year. 330# or 150Kg. That's about as basic a measure as it gets.
Per Wiki: Gresham's law is an economic principle "which states that when government compulsorily overvalues one money and undervalues another, the undervalued money will leave the country or disappear from circulation into hoards, while the overvalued money will flood into circulation."[1] It is commonly stated as: "Bad money drives out good", but is more accurately stated: "Bad money drives out good if their exchange rate is set by law."
PMs are not set by law. Yet.
Mossy wrote:"Koku": The amount of rice one person eats per year. 330# or 150Kg. That's about as basic a measure as it gets.
Per Wiki: Gresham's law is an economic principle "which states that when government compulsorily overvalues one money and undervalues another, the undervalued money will leave the country or disappear from circulation into hoards, while the overvalued money will flood into circulation."[1] It is commonly stated as: "Bad money drives out good", but is more accurately stated: "Bad money drives out good if their exchange rate is set by law."
PMs are not set by law. Yet.
neilgin1 wrote:Mossy wrote:"Koku": The amount of rice one person eats per year. 330# or 150Kg. That's about as basic a measure as it gets.
Per Wiki: Gresham's law is an economic principle "which states that when government compulsorily overvalues one money and undervalues another, the undervalued money will leave the country or disappear from circulation into hoards, while the overvalued money will flood into circulation."[1] It is commonly stated as: "Bad money drives out good", but is more accurately stated: "Bad money drives out good if their exchange rate is set by law."
PMs are not set by law. Yet.
Shin-san, Mossy, how many toz to a koku?....a 20 lb bag of the short grain rice i like costs, 17 to 21 the 25 lb bag, i rather have rice than wheat, (and i do! lol)...so thats 270 paper...now..so NOW thats a koku equals 6 ASES...okay far enough, i say a koku is TWO ASE's.
but the round eyes will never go for that, have to be wheat. flour goes bad quick, wheat berry's, a 50 lb, 5 gallon costs a titch more than an ASE in paper, $50.
shinnosuke wrote:Japanese sticky rice is the best.
I want to store a few koku, but Mrs. shinnosuke says taste and nutrition will be sacrificed...so I don't have permission, yet. May do something anyway and ask for forgiveness later.
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