Kurr wrote:To add to the confusion, paper dollars are "private money" (fed reserve notes) and coins are "public money" (United States "Hard Currency") minted and value regulated by congress, as I understand it.
How would that be addressed?
Kurr wrote:wouldn't a 50% de valuation lead to a real world price increase of 4 fold?
I.e if you had 100.00 cash and were going to get a 100.00 widget, and50% de valuation occured, wouldn't you have a 50.00 cash flow while the price of the widget would double to 200.00? Or would it drop to 50.00 "new money"?
horgad wrote:"Wouldn't a stealthy, relatively slower devaluation be far more preferable?"
I can see advantages and disadvantages to both, but I am sure that I am only seeing a small part of it. Anyhow here are a few thoughts.
If you let the current "slow" devaluation continue, people will continue to start to notice and move more and more money outside of the country and/or into stuff like gold. This weakens the dollar, but does not necessarily benefit the Fed and friends. Always, the printers want to take best advantage of being the first to spend their newly printed money.
In other words, they benefit most if its their printing that causes the devaluation and not a public run from the currency. Which is why you always see them talking a strong dollar while the print and devalue. But once the jig is up and people are fleeing despite their strong dollar talk, a quick devaluation might be the best way to go for them. That way they can catch as many savers with their pants down as possible.
So the slow way is good to fool as many people as possible for as long as possible and the quick way is for when too many "fools" start to catch on to the game or something like that.
HoardCopperByTheTon wrote:Gonna get me bags and bags of little brown circular widgets.
beauanderos wrote:I still say the best way to protect against this happening is 1) keep minimal money in the bank, just enough to pay bills 2) keep minimal cash (in the form of currency) outside the banks, 3) keep the greatest proportion of your cash in the form of coins. If, say, there were a 50% devaluation of the dollar... Friday night they announce that when the banks open on Monday you may redeem the current currency for "new dollars" and only have one month to do so, at the rate of $20 old for $10 new, you will instantly lose half of your spending power. But what if your $20 is in pennies? What are they going to replace it with? They can't. It would take years to mint replacement coins. And they can't recall all coins, enforced by threats. How could they determine that you were later using a predevaluation coin vs a postdevaluation coin? If a devaluation occurs, they will be forced to recognize existing coins as having the same fractional purchasing power as they did with the old currency. Thus, you won't make money by keeping coins instead of cash, but you will preserve your purchasing power rather than losing half. Your $20 equals 2,000 cents. If the same one-hundredth of a new dollar is attributed to the old cents, than you will have $20 new money, not $10 as everyone else who has no coins will experience. So don't be so quick to return those skunk boxes and zincs, they may prove handy yet.
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