Gold and What Moves it.
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Reasons Not To Buy Gold?

Reasons Not To Buy Gold? | Gold and What Moves it. | Scoop.it
Mark Hulbert wrote a shockingly inept article for Barron's online which expressed reasons not to own gold: 5 Reasons Not To Buy Gold.

 

... Now, onto the primary reason to buy gold: it's a time-tested hedge against rampant Government-motivated fiat currency devaluation. Let's use the U.S. dollar since we live in this country and buy goods denominated in dollars. The U.S. dollar index hit 121 in mid-2001.Currently, it's hovering around the 80 level. That's a 33.8% decline in the value of the U.S. dollar relative to currencies that make up the index. At the same time, the price of gold in mid-2001 was $270 per ounce. It's currently $1650 per ounce. That's a 611% appreciation in price vs. the U.S. dollar. In other words, the U.S. dollar has lost 83% of its purchasing power relative to gold. That's a remarkable fact and one that gets no mention anywhere in the mainstream media. ...

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oftwominds-Charles Hugh Smith: Misunderstanding Austerity, Stimulus and Demand

oftwominds-Charles Hugh Smith: Misunderstanding Austerity, Stimulus and Demand | Gold and What Moves it. | Scoop.it

Keynesian policy requires an expansionist Central State and Bank bent on imposing central planning on every level of the economy. Keynesians are natural partners with the neofeudal financial Aristocracy which benefits so enormously from Keynesian print-borrow-blow policies.


Here is the standard Keynesian cargo-cult analysis of our economic woes:
1. The problem is a lack of aggregate demand, i.e. people buying stuff and services.2. As a result, the economy is running below capacity, i.e. economic output is below potential.3. The solution is fiscal and monetary stimulus, i.e. the Central State borrowing and spending trillions on politically directed programs and the Federal Reserve printing and injecting trillions of "free money" dollars into the financial sector to boost borrowing and lending. The cargo-cult program has failed for a number of fundamental reasons. Let's illuminate these reasons with a few thought experiments. 1. If we borrow or print $1 trillion and bury it in the ground, how much demand does it create? Answer: none, of course; it just sits there, utterly inactive. The Fed has printed around $2 trillion and made huge sums available to the financial sector at 0% interest. Most of the funds are sitting in the Fed as reserves, doing nothing except earning interest for the banks who borrowed it at 0%. ...
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