eltigrechico:

lizzywolfswood:

eltigrechico:

The minimum wage in 1955 was $1.00/hr.

That would be four quarters, back when quarters were made with silver. The melt value of those four quarters (in today’s money) is about $20.

gee I wish this had a source..

you can literally google every aspect of this post.

1995 minimum wage, silver content in US quarters pre-1964, spot price of silver

These are not hard pieces of information to find. Not everything needs to be injected directly into your thick skull from somebody else in order for you to know about it.

I mean honestly. Are you that fucking dumb?

I hate lazy people who want a source for everything as if Google doesn’t exist on your computer, phone, playstation and tv. 

All of the info in the world, right there at your fingertips and you are too lazy to search or to comfortable with your skepticism that you refuse to do so. 

Someone yesterday asked me “If IP law hurts individuals, why isn’t there anything written about it?” I wanted to cut my neck with a pencil, pull my brains out with a toothpick and jam them down my throat so I could suffocate to death.

Minimum Wage in 1955 to 1956: $1/hour (via Dept of Labor) 

Price of an ounce of Silver in 1955: $0.95/ounce (via The Silver Institute)

What $1 in 1955 is worth in 2013 dollars: $8.23 (via Bureau of Labor Statistics)

Price of an ounce of Silver in 2013 (3/28/13): $28.82 (via MonEx)

The US dollar literally lost $20.59 or 71.4% of it’s value since 1955 due to inflation. 

Next time don’t be so damn lazy. 

You’re welcome,
Sha

Is the Fed Lying About Its Gold? Mark Thornton talks to Lew Rockwell about monetary tsunamis. 

Inflation is knocking at the door of the economy. Have you recession-proofed yourself yet? Time to seriously think about getting into BitCoin, Gold, Silver and other commodities that don’t deal with the Dollar, the Treasury or any other highly vulnerable assets. 

ArtistLew Rockwell, Mark Thornton
TitleIs the Fed Lying About Its Gold? Mark Thornton talks to Lew Rockwell about monetary tsunamis.
AlbumLewRockwell.com
[T]hough the wages of the workman are commonly paid to him in money, his real revenue, like that of all other men, consists, not in the money, but in the money’s worth; not in the metal pieces, but in what can be got for them — Adam Smith (via freemarketliberal)

economistsdoitwithmodels:

The Stand-Up Economist (yes, that’s a thing) did a bit at the annual meeting of the American Economic Association a few weeks ago entitled “Hyperinflation in Hell.” I thought it was pretty good in person, so hopefully the video came out okay. I also like that I got to feel like I learned something, because I was unfamiliar with the concept of Joss paper.

> Gross Death Product

> per de-capita

LOL. 

(via libertarians-and-stoya-deactiva)

moralanarchism:

Hans-Hermann Hoppe On How To Blow Away Paul Krugman


Boom.

Keynesian theory destroyed in less than 60 seconds by Hans-Hermann Hoppe.

libertarians-and-stoya:

samcapener:

Shahe Writes…: Inflation exists on a gold standard.

sugashane:

libertarians-and-stoya:

Inflation exists on a gold standard.

YES!

Even on a gold standard, you can print more notes that represent each asset of gold.

Even if you made gold coins, you can still maintain the same amount of pure gold (by content) and mix in other metals into each coin…

If I may defend the gold standard, (although I am hardly a worthy representative) the inflation that is suffered may not be an issue as inflation isn’t too harmful in the long run, (as far as I know at least), and if it only happens in small amounts, then perhaps that would be the benefit to the gold standard? From what I understand the danger of inflation is that initially it hurts a certain group of people, hurting the economic system before it balances out. Thus if inflation only occurs when a group collects and mints more gold, wouldn’t this be a rare enough occurrence to be insignificant?

The problem with inflation comes from unexpected increases in inflation.  The name of the game with inflation is expectations.

And fiat currency has a stable inflation rate in the long run, so long as the inflation rate stays within expectations (as inflation itself can be a self-fulfilling prophecy; if people expect inflation to be X they’ll write in price increases of X in their contracts and prices will increase by X).

So inflation doesn’t hurt the economy per se - only if the inflation is unexpected.

Note: I think inflation’s effect on deterring savings is negligible with an inflation rate of 2%.  There is, of course, the hidden tax of inflation, but that’s why I think we should embrace the Friedman rule or CPI targeting.

We’re all talking about monetary inflation (from increased liquidity/money supply) right? Just making sure.

I think that inflation itself is a gimmick, especially if you have a monetary system who’s value is tied to production/confidence and not to a particular asset, like gold. 

Inflation in the short term doesn’t really hurt anyone but it sure does benefit those who get their hands on the money first. They are able to use money that most aren’t (physically) aware exists yet. (Even if you have knowledge of the money being circulated, until the increased liquidity impacts your own spending, it’s moot).

Once that money has a chance to enter the market and people are spending more and more willing to pay higher prices, that’s where short term inflation has an impact. But this usually doesn’t last too long.

What happens is that businesses get to spend cheap money to increase production or expand or whatever and now that people can afford to spend more, businesses can charge more. Businesses increase prices since demand is up and ability to ask for those prices is possible. The reaction of increased prices is, eventually, a demand for increased wages, until the equilibrium is found once again. The negative impact on the majority of people is minimal to null in the short term and the positive impact on businesses can easily be seen. 

In the long run, there is a major negative impact, even with expected inflation levels. If I earn $1,000 today and put it in a safe, I most likely won’t have equal value 10, 20, or 30 years down the line, even at a 1% rate of inflation (very low), my money with devalue 10%, 20% and 30% respectively.

Even if I put the money in the bank in an interest baring account, Inflation, even when expected, usually outpaces interest rate returns, slowing down my losses but not stopping them. 

Now, as I was saying before, the reason I think inflation is a gimmick is because the money supply is said to be increased to meet demand. But if there is more demand and static or less supply, economics tells us that the value/price will increase. Deflation is a good thing.

If this creates a physical shortage, don’t print more bills, remove large bills and print smaller bills. (Remove 1 $100 note and introduce 100 $1 notes). Fractionally swap the value of notes without increasing the overall value in circulation. 

This prevents the ill-effects of long-term inflation. Your $1,000 earned 10 years ago not only won’t lose value, it will increase in value. 

The reason we don’t have this system is because the system is built and run by the same banks who benefit from money introduction, like QE3. If we took my approach, these banks would never have those short-burst moments to increase profitability through. 

This wasn’t a really good write-up, but this is why I think inflation is a gimmick. 

(via libertarians-and-stoya-deactiva)

Inflation exists on a gold standard.

libertarians-and-stoya:

Inflation exists on a gold standard.

YES! 

Even on a gold standard, you can print more notes that represent each asset of gold. 

Even if you made gold coins, you can still maintain the same amount of pure gold (by content) and mix in other metals into each coin to create more currency with the same amount of valuable assets backing it. 

This is the one thing I think most Austrians that want a ‘Gold Standard’ don’t understand.

BUT I will say that having an asset backed currency makes it harder to just print more money without the people noticing because they actually have a tangible asset by which to measure the value of their currency on.

Right now, we measure inflation based on hundreds of items, which helps the masses ignore or even forget about the fact that their money buys less. They just assume costs have gone up and move on. 

(via libertarians-and-stoya-deactiva)

eEconomics: Trillion Dollar Coin

“EVERYONE is insane!”

Accurate. 

60 Second Adventures in Economics (All 6 Clips)