Sunday, November 27, 2011

"Real Money"

One thing that people often can't seem to accurately grasp, due to years and years of indoctrination, is the concept of what real money means. Nowhere is this lack of grasp more evident than the United States of America. The reasons for this syndrome is years, decades and over a century of dollar dominance.

The truth, which people seem to forget is that every dollar in your pocket is a government-issued currency, backed by the faith of that government. If the government can no longer substantiate the value of the dollar, the paper currency you carry in your pocket, and in all of your accounts, is just that - paper. Not even worth the paper it is printed on.

If the government cuts on its revenue collection, it will have less money in the budget. Government currently spends wildly on elected officials and provides a slew of entitlements (corporate and individual); which forces the Treasury and the Federal Reserve to engage in printing money to cover these expenses. Sounds great, doesn't it? Until you realize that every time money printing occurs, they amount of paper money you have is being devalued.

Over the course of the past three years, since 2008, the United States Treasury has tripled (3x) the amount of  United States dollars in existence. As a result, every dollar in your pocket should now (2011) be worth one third (33%) of what it did in 2008. So how come the prices in most cases didn't increase threefold?

The reason being is that our economy has actually contracted over the course of the past three years. We haven't experienced real economic growth in over three years. We have actually suffered deflation during this period in time. The Federal Reserve officially engaged in Quantitative Easing (printing money) in order to "kick-start" the economy, when in fact the chairman of the Federal Reserve was attempting to prevent a natural, albeit painful, free market correction - deflation.

In a period of deflation, prices and salaries fall resulting in the increase of the dollar's value. Therefore as the Federal Reserve was helping the Treasury print money, the prices and salaries didn't skyrocket threefold, because the economy was suffering a period of deflation.

People who understand this gradual devaluation of the dollar have already rushed to purchase hard assets, whose value isn't dependent on the faith of the United States government. We are talking about foreign property, precious metals (gold, silver), and other things whose value is stable and not dependent on the dollar.

Gold, Silver are "Real Money", because unlike the dollar, their value does not depend upon the United States government, nor any other authority. These precious metals carry value in themselves. In a way the value of Gold and Silver do not change - their pricing in terms of US Dollar changes due to the change of the value of the dollar.

The skyrocketing price of Gold and Silver is a reflection on people's (and governments') speculation on the lack of value of the US Dollar. More individuals are acquiring gold as a safety net against inflation. But it's not just individuals who are acquiring Gold and Silver. China, and the entire Asian region, is buying gold in bulk. Chinese, who own the vast majority of US debt, have a reason to be concerned about the plummeting value of the dollar.

Therefore, they're trading in dollars into "Real Money". What's right for you? Only you can make that decision.