Monday With regard to the quantification of a good’s value, with what is it measured? How is the subjective value of a good expressed? Well, with money of course; one of the jobs of money in the marketplace is to measure value. For most of the 20th century and at the beginning of the 21st century, the marketplace has used fiat debt notes, otherwise known … [Read more...]
Bitcoin or Goats
Tuesday I listened to a speaker a few days ago explain that Gold was money because it was ‘the most marketable good’ (the preferred trading good in the marketplace). He then explained that silver was what was actually used as most people didn’t own Gold and it was too valuable for marketplace trades. If Menger’s theory that money is so by virtue of the fact that it is … [Read more...]
Money is Not a Good
Thursday “For example, money is not consumed after a transaction, but goods such as pork bellies and copper ingots are. Money is not directly comparable to goods.” Keith Weiner One of the tenets of Dawn of Gold is that goods* and money** are different. Money is not the most marketable good. Money is not, never was and cannot be a good. Prior to 1500BC, … [Read more...]
What is Money?
Wednesday I studied economics for three years (2007 -2010). What intrigued me most was that in a room full of students, some of them very bright, none of them could plausibly define money, not even my Professor. Economics is a coarse instrument without the lubricant of money. How could a whole subject evolve around a core concept that everyone and his dog … [Read more...]
Money is not a Good
Friday I just read a piece on the monetary metals by a writer that I hugely respect. In this rare instance, he is wrong. He describes Gold as a good with a declining marginal utility. Many important new understandings emerged from Dawn of Gold. One of them (Chapter 8 – The Measure and the Measured) was that money is not a good. The logic is quite conclusive. Menger’s … [Read more...]