68Camaro wrote:balz wrote:If we believe in Peak Oil (which is a fact, so we should), then we should consider a very long crisis, so how can we rule out a long and painful 10-20 years deflation?
Instead of me speculating with my answer, let me ask some leading questions for you to think through. Let's start with, what do you think will happen, and when, in our culture, during a prolonged period of flat to negative economic growth, increasing joblessness, rising prices, increased scarcity of good. This starting at a point where we have already been flat to down for more than a decade, where we are more in debt that we can produce as a society in many years, and with people already completely tapped out, nervous, scared. What's going to happen? What first, then what next? Then what after that?
Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote:I say look to Japan. All of that has already happened. Their debt to GDP is right around 200% and they have already liquidated the bad debts and re-capitalized their industries, have they not? There were no riots I am aware of. They had an orderly transition.
Look to Russia. What happened there was the opposite. When the USSR fell, all Soviet satellite countries suddenly were on their own. It was hell at first. Lots of chaos. Everything that could not support itself was liquidated. Now they are re-capitalized and lean and mean. Their bad debt is long gone.
In the end... it 's going to be default, liquidation and then re-capitalization. Better buy LOTS of ammo.
68Camaro wrote:balz wrote:If we believe in Peak Oil (which is a fact, so we should), then we should consider a very long crisis, so how can we rule out a long and painful 10-20 years deflation?
Instead of me speculating with my answer, let me ask some leading questions for you to think through. Let's start with, what do you think will happen, and when, in our culture, during a prolonged period of flat to negative economic growth, increasing joblessness, rising prices, increased scarcity of good. This starting at a point where we have already been flat to down for more than a decade, where we are more in debt that we can produce as a society in many years, and with people already completely tapped out, nervous, scared. What's going to happen? What first, then what next? Then what after that?
neilgin1 wrote:and when you dont KNOW how this will turn out, thats why you turn to a store of wealth, that for millenia has maintained tradeability, silver
balz wrote:Camaro and neilgin what you say makes sense. This is the difficult part for me. I see two scenarios.
First scenario: The States do not want to let public deficit take the economy down and they print as much money as they can to avoid that. We get hyperinflation and PM prices skyrocket. Gold is the best investment. Silver is good too.
Second scenario: The big debtors do not want their fiat money becoming useless as that's how they make their money so they do everything they can to put pressure to avoid any kind of inflation and they live happily with deflation as they have tons of cash. PM prices plummet and those who have cash can make a good deal but those who bought silver at 40/oz are in deep trouble. Bonds are the best investment.
I'd really like to know more about what will happen: HYPERINFLATION or DEFLATION?
68Camaro wrote:Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote:I say look to Japan. All of that has already happened. Their debt to GDP is right around 200% and they have already liquidated the bad debts and re-capitalized their industries, have they not? There were no riots I am aware of. They had an orderly transition.
Look to Russia. What happened there was the opposite. When the USSR fell, all Soviet satellite countries suddenly were on their own. It was hell at first. Lots of chaos. Everything that could not support itself was liquidated. Now they are re-capitalized and lean and mean. Their bad debt is long gone.
In the end... it 's going to be default, liquidation and then re-capitalization. Better buy LOTS of ammo.
Not sure of your point. Japan is Japan - it's not a Western culture, they behave differently, at least on the surface, for a time. We aren't Japan, clearly.
We aren't Eastern Europe/Russia either, but what went down there has ended up "better" (for many), eventually. But not for all. And it was VERY ugly for a long, long time. And continues to be ugly for some - parts of that area aren't yet done with their problems.
Off to bed, enough solving the problems of the world. Whatever happens is way above my pay grade. Interesting times, indeed...
Nickelmeister wrote:balz wrote:Camaro and neilgin what you say makes sense. This is the difficult part for me. I see two scenarios.
First scenario: The States do not want to let public deficit take the economy down and they print as much money as they can to avoid that. We get hyperinflation and PM prices skyrocket. Gold is the best investment. Silver is good too.
Second scenario: The big debtors do not want their fiat money becoming useless as that's how they make their money so they do everything they can to put pressure to avoid any kind of inflation and they live happily with deflation as they have tons of cash. PM prices plummet and those who have cash can make a good deal but those who bought silver at 40/oz are in deep trouble. Bonds are the best investment.
I'd really like to know more about what will happen: HYPERINFLATION or DEFLATION?
Balz - read this: http://fofoa.blogspot.com/2011/04/defla ... ation.html
It is an essay written by the very respected FOFOA which, I believe, provides the definitive answer to your question.
Spend a lot of time on his blog. It is extremely complicated and deep, but you will learn something every time.
balz wrote:Second scenario: The big debtors do not want their fiat money becoming useless as that's how they make their money so they do everything they can to put pressure to avoid any kind of inflation and they live happily with deflation as they have tons of cash. PM prices plummet and those who have cash can make a good deal but those who bought silver at 40/oz are in deep trouble. Bonds are the best investment.
balz wrote:Nickelmeister wrote:Balz - read this: http://fofoa.blogspot.com/2011/04/defla ... ation.html
It is an essay written by the very respected FOFOA which, I believe, provides the definitive answer to your question.
Spend a lot of time on his blog. It is extremely complicated and deep, but you will learn something every time.
Thanks for the link! I'll read it later today!
balz wrote:I've read the URL and I'm not sure I understand it. Very complex. But from what I understand I don't think the author understands the crisis that is to come. I agree with him that inflation is likely in a normal condition, but that crisis will not be anything but normal!
68Camaro wrote:balz wrote:Nickelmeister wrote:Balz - read this: http://fofoa.blogspot.com/2011/04/defla ... ation.html
It is an essay written by the very respected FOFOA which, I believe, provides the definitive answer to your question.
Spend a lot of time on his blog. It is extremely complicated and deep, but you will learn something every time.
Thanks for the link! I'll read it later today!
Ahhh, you gave him the answer to the test! I was trying to make him do his homework!
Seriously, if there is a most likely scenario, I believe it's the one laid out at link above.
68Camaro wrote:balz wrote:I've read the URL and I'm not sure I understand it. Very complex. But from what I understand I don't think the author understands the crisis that is to come. I agree with him that inflation is likely in a normal condition, but that crisis will not be anything but normal!
Read it again, and perhaps some of his other works. He understands...
He is wordy, maybe too much so, but he writes well. To cut to the chase - you wanted the answer to your question, it's hyperinflation, ultimately. (Not that - in my mind, there won't be a little deflation mixed in there, for a time.)
Mossy wrote:We might see a deflation, but it will be expressed in what people think of as "money". The dollar will not be that money.
The various PTB are tying all currencies together so none of them become the alternative money, so no deflation. Not expressed in currency, anyhow. We may end up seeing the use of coins outlawed, or no longer "legal tender", and the government repudiation of the dollar so all debts become payable in some other currency. That worries me.
68Camaro wrote:Now the dollar is backed by nothing. They need more, they print them. A trillion more? No problem. A trillion trillions? No problem. Just print them. What are they worth? Nothing more than the paper they are printed on. (Which is pretty good fancy paper, but not worthwhile for much else.)
68Camaro wrote:A gold standard, by the way, does not prevent either deflation or inflation.
Early in the century we had a period of intense inflation (1916-1920), followed immediately by intense deflation (1921-22), before the Roaring 20s and some quasi-stability that lasted into 1930. The Great Depression was another, but much more significant, deflationary event. Demand went down, wages went down, prices followed. Value of a dollar went up.
The dollar was backed 100% by gold then, recall. They couldn't print more. It, and gold, went up and down together.
Now the dollar is backed by nothing. They need more, they print them. A trillion more? No problem. A trillion trillions? No problem. Just print them. What are they worth? Nothing more than the paper they are printed on. (Which is pretty good fancy paper, but not worthwhile for much else.)
balz wrote:BTW, I just LOVE that FOFOA blog! (What is FOFOA for, BTW?)
I understand what you say... and what he says. But what worries me if that what we will live will be completely different from any other crisis in the past. The periods of deflation didn't last long because the increasing population and cheap energy NEEDED that money.
With Peak Oil, we will experience a decline in human population, maybe one third to two third, depending if one is optimistic or pessimistic. That would be very different from anything that occured in the past.
Wouldn't that decline in population cause massive deflation?
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