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Comment by TeMPOraL

2 years ago

> Only if the process was commonly known.

It doesn't matter - even if you're the only one to know the trick, once you start dumping large amounts of gold on the market, its price will start to go down. Gold isn't something that gets easily used up, so the more of it is in circulation, the cheaper it gets.

Steady state thinking. Of course gold would become cheaper, sure. But you will have bought all the actual productive assets first!

This is the same trick economists play when saying "inflation doesn't matter". It doesn't in the steady state, but in the meanwhile, I printed the money and gave it to my friends, who do you think is going to end up owning all the hard assets?

  • In that time "ownership" of assets was a highly fluid concept. Kings nominally owned all the assets already, and as more than a few discovered, loose is the head that wears the crown.

It's still working for diamonds.

  • Yeah, human psychology is the real philosopher's stone, huh? Make people feel like it's valuable and it becomes as such. If Graber's work is to be trusted the review of the development of gold as a token of exchange has little to do with its innate properties, and more to do with the fact that the state institutions demanded taxes be paid in said tokens.

    Intriguing.