Articles related to Reserve Currency |
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| Sprott Money |
Death Valley Snowballs and Fiat Currencies - Gary Christenson |
Keep it simple!
Snowballs have a short life expectancy in Death Valley.
Fiat currencies, backed by credit and debt, survive longer than
snowballs in Death Valley, but history shows all fiat currencies are
inflated into worthlessness and eventually die.
“U.S. dollars have value only to the extent that they are strictly limited in supply.”
Ben Bernanke on November 21, 2002. But we know the supply of dollars
has grown rapidly since 1971, and especially after the 2008 crisis while
BernaThursday, February 18, 2021 |
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| Frank Shostak |
Why We Now Measure Gold in Dollars — and Not the Other Way Around |
Prior to 1933, the name "dollar" was used to refer to a unit of gold that had a weight of 23.22 grains. Since there are 480 grains in one ounce, this means that the name dollar also stood for 0.048 ounce of gold. This in turn, means that one ounce of gold referred to $20.67.Observe that $20.67 is not the price of one ounce of gold in terms of dollars as popular thinking has it, for there is no such entity as a dollar. Dollar is just a name for 0.048 ounce of gold. On this Rothbard wrote,No one pWednesday, February 10, 2021 |
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| Mike Hewitt - Dollar Daze |
America's Forgotten War Against the Central Banks |
"Let me issue and control a nation's money supply, and I care not who makes
its laws." (Mayer Amschel Rothschild, Founder of Rothschild Banking Dynasty)
Many prominent Americans such as Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and
Andrew Jackson have argued and fought against the central banking polices used
throughout Europe.
A note issued by a central bank, such as the Federal Reserve Note, is bank
currency. These notes are given to the government in exchange for an interest-bearing
gTuesday, January 5, 2021 |
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| Nathan Lewis - New World Economics |
God, Gold and Guns |
We’ve been looking into One Nation Under Gold (2017), by James Ledbetter.
October 2, 2017: One Nation Under Gold (2017), by James Ledbetter
October 14, 2017: One Nation Under Gold #2: The Silliness of the Bretton Woods Years
Now, we will follow Ledbetter’s account of the end of Bretton Woods in 1971, up to the present.
The account of the 1971 devaluation was, following the pattern of this book, long on details but short on insight. It seemed to people at the time that they “had no choice,” thatSaturday, October 24, 2020 |
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| Philip Judge - Anglo Far East |
A Century Unique In All History |
This last century is unique in all of history, as it tells the story of the first time in all of history, that gold has been completely and officially abandoned as the backing for money.
We have said before that maintaining control of the financial systems is the largest single challenge facing the leaders of the world today. This is evidenced in the last two years by the record number of summits and emergency meetings of organizations such as IMF, World Bank, World trade Organization, and the G7. The Plunge Protection Team and Exchange Stabilization Fund have been working overtime, while we have witnessed the setting up and convening of special sub committees of central banks and governmental policy makers, all dedicated to ensuring stability of financial and capitol markets, at all costs.Wednesday, October 21, 2020 |
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| Rob Kirby - Kirby Analytics |
Forensic Examination of the Gold Carry Trade |
Friday, October 16, 2020 |
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| Lew Rockwell |
John Maynard Keynes, Immoralist |
John Maynard Keynes was born in 1883 and died in 1946. Henry Hazlitt was born in 1894, eleven years after Keynes, and lived much longer, until 1993. Their lives and loyalties are a study in contrast, and mostly of choices born of internal conviction, in Hazlitt's case, or lack thereof, Keynes's case.Monday, September 7, 2020 |
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| Russel McDougal - Inv. Daily Edge |
The Ghost of Fort Knox Past - Part I |
The U.S. dollar is “as good as gold,” right? Well, not exactly. Those days and decades are long gone. The U.S. remains in the midst of currency woes and a global credit crisis that refuses to go away. Let’s look into what was once the foundation for the buck - gold bricks in Ft. Knox, Kentucky.Monday, August 31, 2020 |
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| Jeff Clark - Casey Research |
Does Gold Keep up in Hyperinflation |
Inflation is anatural consequence of loose government monetary policy. If those policies get too loose, hyperinflation can occur. As gold investors,we'd like to know if the precious metals would keep pace in this extreme scenario.
Hyperinflation is an extremely rapid period of inflation, but when does inflation (which can be manageable) cross the line and become out-of-control hyperinflation? PhilipCagan, one of the very first researchers of this phenomenon, defines hyperinflation as "an inflation rate of 50% or more in a single month, "something largely inconceivable to the average investor.Wednesday, August 19, 2020 |
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| Nick Barisheff - BMSINC |
August 15, 1971: Inflation Unleashed |
The general public, the media and most financial observers were largely unaware of the momentous event that took place on August 15, 1971. However, the implications of that event have had an enormous impact on global financial conditions ever since. On that date, US President Richard Nixon “closed the gold window”. In essence, this meant the US would no longer honour the Bretton Woods Agreement of 1944, whichSaturday, August 15, 2020 |
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| Nathan Lewis - New World Economics |
Devaluations of the 1930s Don't Justify Today's Funny Money Excess |
Without question, the Great Depression was a time when the political
consensus moved from a Classical “hard money” approach towards a
Mercantilist “soft money” approach — leading, ultimately, to today’s
“print until the pain goes away” reaction. Actually, this trend had
started in the later 19th century, and was not fully expressed until
the 1970s – an evolution stretching over a hundred years or more.
But, the experience of the Great Depression period of the 1930s
stMonday, June 22, 2020 |
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| Hugo Salinas Price - Plata.com |
Copernicus, Galileo and Gold. Part I |
We are deceived when we consent to think about the “price of gold”. At the very outset of our thoughts regarding gold, we are wrong, just as astronomers prior to Copernicus were wrong in thinking about the solar system as geo-centric, with the Sun, Moon and planets describing perfect circles around Earth. Gold is - to follow the astronomical simile - the center of the monetary universe, and the planets - the currencies - circle the Sun, which represents gold.
The correct starting point isTuesday, June 9, 2020 |
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| Nathan Lewis - New World Economics |
The Bank of England, 1844-1913 2: The Banking Department |
We are continuing our look at the Bank of England during the period
1844-1913. In 1844, the Bank fell under a new regulation and
reorganization, in which it was separated into two entities, the
Issue Department and the Banking Department. The Issue Department
was solely responsible for paper banknotes, and operated a system
very similar to the "Making Change" or currency-board type system we
looked at earlier.
April
14, 2013: The Bank of England, 1844-1Tuesday, May 5, 2020 |
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| FoFOA |
All Paper is STILL a short position on gold |
The gold derivatives pyramid is a vigorous free market creature. It cannot be put down with a simple declaration that the paper is no longer redeemable in gold, as governments did with currency. It is a short selling scheme that has become a trap from which few short sellers will escapeFriday, April 17, 2020 |
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| Chris Powell - GATA |
State Dept. memo explains U.S. policy to drive gold out of financial system |
A long memorandum written in March 1974 by a U.S. State Department official for Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and copied to future Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, then the Treasury Department's undersecretary for monetary affairs, describes the desire of the United States and its options to prevent European countries from increasing the use of gold in the international financial system.
The memo, titled "Gold and the Monetary System: Potential U.S.-E.C. Conflict," was recently discovWednesday, April 15, 2020 |
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| Philip Judge - Anglo Far East |
Short Run Economics |
It was the famous British economist John Maynard Keynes who said, "in the long run we are all dead". While now he may well be, his philosophy and economics are alive and well, havingSunday, April 12, 2020 |
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| Mike Hewitt - Dollar Daze |
America's Forgotten War Against the Central Banks |
In order to pay debts incurred from the Seven Years War with France, King George III of England sought to heavily tax the colonies in America. In 1742, the British Resumption Act required that taxes and other debts be paid in gold.Saturday, April 11, 2020 |
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| Mickey Fulp - Mercenary Geologist |
Gold, Silver, and the US Dollar: 1792-1971 |
In today's musing, I review the history of gold, silver, and fiat currency as money in the United States of America. I document how various wars, panics and depressions, Congressional acts, and executive orders have affected the US dollar prices of precious metals and resulting gold-silver ratios.This musing covers the period from 1792 when the United States government first established a national currency backed by gold and silver untilMonday, April 6, 2020 |
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| Andy Hoffman - Miles Franklin |
Hypersonic weapons and your standard of living… |
Do you believe there is any coincidence the Russians first, followed by the Chinese … announced “hypersonic weapons”? I ask this question for several reasons and will come to a conclusion at the end but for now, with the rollout of the “petro-yuan” set for March 26 is there any coincidence we find out about these weapons now?
We were even offered proof over the weekend of successful tests. If that were not enough, what heck is this? Please take the two minutes to watch the video, these are seasoSaturday, March 17, 2018 |
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| Chris Powell - GATA |
Monetary Metals' Weiner responds but answers nothing |
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1p ET Wednesday, March 14, 2018
Keith Weiner of Monetary Metals, whose recent commentary, "Super-Duper-Irrational Exuberance" was disputed by your secretary/treasurer yesterday --
http://www.gata.org/node/18102
-- today responds to the criticism but answers nothing about it.
In his "Open Letter to GATA," posted at GoldSeek here --
http://news.goldseek.com/GoldSeek/1521038153.php
-- Weiner continues to ignore all the documentation GATA has collected over nearly 20 years to show that centraWednesday, March 14, 2018 |
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