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20 sats \ 10 replies \ @Undisciplined OP 21 Mar \ parent \ on: The Price of Gold: A Woefully Outmoded Law Needs Updating econ
One way or another, they have to make the different assets they're holding commensurate. There's gold, land, oil, and dollar denominated assets. Somehow they need to get them all in the same terms for accounting purposes.
It comes down to the question: What is the unit of measure? The unit of measure could be anything that is most acceptable by the most people or even, if possible, a universally acceptable commodity. Which would you suggest? Gold and/or silver have been the most acceptable up until now. BTC is not quite as acceptable to most people, yet. Once that question is answered then people can decide the price levels they are willing to pay for goods.
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Whether we like it or not, the dollar is far and away the most widely accepted thing in the world.
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Yes, right at this moment. However, that may soon change upon the discovery of the machines and how they have been operated and by who they have been operated. The money has to be founded on some sort of trust, doesn’t it? If you don’t trust the money, how will you use it? I don’t think that you would use a money you don’t trust.
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It seems like most people don't really care. My guess is that nothing significant comes of this. The dollar is safer and more liquid than the other fiats. Plus, Trump is threatening heavy tariffs on any country that starts moving away from the dollar.
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It seems like most people don't really care. My guess is that nothing significant comes of this.
The case for people losing trust and moving to a different standard is well known. Argentina moved to a dollar standard, El Salvador moved to a BTC standard and on to something else and we moved from a bimetallic standard to the gold standard as a few examples. People really do care when they start trundling along with wheelbarrows full of useless currency! They change quickly and start accepting something that has value to them.
I am not so sure that threatening people or other countries engenders the trust necessary to cooperate. Many people will not consent or comply with threats or at best will only passively-aggressively comply. Is that a good way to do business. I don’t think Trump is really looking for this kind of result.
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I'm certainly not a fan of that threatening approach, but I think Trump is operating under the belief that many regimes literally cannot survive having tariffs levied on their exports to America.
It's a bad long-term strategy, but in the short term global chaos almost always boosts the dollar.