Tahuti
Writing Deity
- Joined
- Nov 17, 2005
- Messages
- 9,492
Indeed do real debts increase during deflation, but again, an economy using the Gold-Standard would work very differently than today's economy, as people would avoid debts wherever possible.What happens with deflation is not an increase in purchasing power. It is a falling of wages. Debts are in nominal (constant) dollars. If you have $100 in income, and $25 in debt payments, what happens when your wage falls to $90? $80? $70? The debt to income ratio goes way up. And that means a lot more people default on debt. And that means that a lot of banks stop lending money. And that means that a lot of companies go out of business and a lot of people lose their jobs.
I'm not saying it was great, but as you pointed in short, I said there was no better alternative. Once institutions such as a Central Bank were conceived, fiat-money would be able to keep most of it's value without having to lead to Zimbabwe style hyperinflation, and thus Metallic standards became obsolete.Yet it kept coming back, not because it was any good, but because there wasn't any alternative.
Gold as money is an exercise in ignorance and absence of alternatives. Once you know better, once you have other choices, gold can't be justified.