by ReverseEngineer » Thu 11 Sep 2008, 11:36:40
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', ' ') Maybe you're bored or lonely? I do not know? But I think you should preach less and learn more about finance and economics yourself! God Bless.
I'll work on being less preachy. Far as boredom and loneliness goes, when you live alone you have a lot of spare time on your hands to write. Anyhow, plenty of others here write plenty, whether its out of boredom or loneliness I have no idea, I'm just trying to catch up in post numbers
On the question of the relative value of financial assets versus physical assets, you run into the problem of ownership and meaning. If the bank which issued you a mortgage has gone bankrupt, who owns the property? Does it revert to the government which assumes the mortgage? Who owns it then if the government goes bankrupt? What is the value of real property if it intrinsically loses its value, the house nobody will buy, the auto plant which is obsolete, the road structure too expensive to maintain? Which asset here do you try to hold onto, and why?
In the end, what has real value left sorts itself out, but as you have bankruptcy after bankruptcy in banking, construction, shipping etc, it becomes quite hard determine who owns what and the currency itself loses meaning for identifying the ownership or as a means to trade ownership. So eventually you devolve down into a power struggle for taking ownership over whatever it is that is left with some real value and start the process over again.
Now, about the only thing I think we all might agree has real value is food, so ownership of a farm on which to produce food would seem like a good investment. However, if production of the food on the land requires oil on a mechanized farm and the oil is too scarce, as a business it is not a good investment. It might provide enough for you and your family farmed by hand and animals, but there will be a power struggle to keep that land and those animals against others who do not have any land. You only own this so long as you can keep it.
How will Health Care be paid for? Like the road system, the Health care system we had cannot be paid for no matter what you based the currency on, Gold, Silver, Oil whatever. It is intrinsically too expensive to maintain.
I am going to apologize for being over the top and preachy as a result of my boredom and loneliness. However, I also have been looking here for some new insight into how the monetary system might be kept afloat and how you could continue to trade when so many things we once thought had real value like a Hummer or a Suburban Home have lost intrinsic value. If you bought them outright, you basically have a hunk of junk on your hands. If you bought them on credit, whoever loaned you the money can repo them and now has a hunk of junk on their hands. I don't see where anyone makes any real money when so many of the "things" we once thought held value don't have value anymore, and when so much investment of time and energy essentially went to waste in building them. If you can explain how this is possible by trading one currency against another, or buying silver or gold or any other investment strategy, I am interested to hear what it is.
Reverse Engineer