Commodity currency fails because it is rigid. Money is not allowed to be created out of nothing. If a market has no gold and nobody in another market is willing to lend their gold, then you're fucked. There's no way to stimulate trade. Here is an excerpt from wiki's page about the great depression.How can a commodity currency 'fail'?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Depression#Gold_standard
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"Economic studies have indicated that just as the downturn was spread worldwide by the rigidities of the Gold Standard, it was suspending gold convertibility (or devaluing the currency in gold terms) that did most to make recovery possible.[43][44] What policies countries followed after casting off the gold standard, and what results followed varied widely.
Every major currency left the gold standard during the Great Depression."
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When every major country jumps ship on a system, it's probably for a reason.
No I do not agree. The government is able to spend as much money as they want because people are willing to lend it to them. It doesn't matter if it's fiat money or gold money. If guys like me are willing to lend a bar of gold to the government, then the government is still allowed to spend as much as they want. In financial terms, you're lending money to someone when you "buy" their debt. If I give the US government a bar of gold and they give me a piece of paper saying I have a 20 year bond for 1 bar of gold, what they've given me is a note saying that I lent gold to them and that they will pay it back to me on the date printed on the bond.Do you agree that a free market commodity money makes it harder for reckless spending (and thus savings destruction) to occur?
You're completely missing the point. It's not about customers. It's about OSHA and safe work conditions. There is reason to believe that second hand smoke in very large quantities (ie working in a bar) is a safety hazard, so it is regulated the same as one would regulate ammonia or benzene floating in the air. You can't just have an uncontrolled amount of smoke or ammonia in the air and claim that it's ok because it's private property. Safety regulations overrule private property rights.The example that was given had to do with someone's private bar. In the case of a private bar, the customers decide to go there or not.
Terrible logic. We can't do crazy shit like remove fume hoods from chem labs just because some chemists are crazy enough to work without them. Similarly, we can't ignore health risks caused by high amounts of airborne particulates (smoke) just because someone somewhere is willing to work in those conditions.If I agree to go sky-diving, then I agree with the risks it includes.
This doesn't really seem like a problem. If you find gold, the government is able to print money to represent that gold. It would cause inflation, but the amount of inflation would be so small that nobody would even notice.Say I own a gold and silver mine. What would I do with all the gold and silver I mined? Why would I sell it? I'm basically printing money out of the ground... I can't do anything to make it more or less valuable. I could sit on a pile of gold all my life and basically become a king.