It is WAY more positive than negative.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on September 06, 2014, 05:26:09 AMIt is WAY more positive than negative.How so
Quote from: IcyWind on September 07, 2014, 11:27:00 AMQuote from: Meta Cognition on September 06, 2014, 05:26:09 AMIt is WAY more positive than negative.How soEconomic growth, free trade, multiculturalism, humanitarianism, transnational action, development of poorer countries, international competition. I could go on and on.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on September 07, 2014, 11:36:13 AMQuote from: IcyWind on September 07, 2014, 11:27:00 AMQuote from: Meta Cognition on September 06, 2014, 05:26:09 AMIt is WAY more positive than negative.How soEconomic growth, free trade, multiculturalism, humanitarianism, transnational action, development of poorer countries, international competition. I could go on and on.Could you not say there is just as many negatives as there are positives?
The biggest one that strikes me from the link is the dangers of reliance of other nations. The Great Depression was partly due to every nation relying on each other and when one economy collapsed (Germany), it created a domino effect that transferred to other countries
Quote from: Kinder_ on September 07, 2014, 12:30:28 PMThe biggest one that strikes me from the link is the dangers of reliance of other nations. The Great Depression was partly due to every nation relying on each other and when one economy collapsed (Germany), it created a domino effect that transferred to other countries"Partly due" only holds if you mean very, very, very marginally. The Great Depression was mainly due - as in, almost completely due - to the gold standard and tight money, which led to a serious loss of liquidity. Now, let me look at those twelve reasons.
The only way the gold standard played a role is that nations suspended it so they can produce more money than they could back with gold. If they were to revert back then their economy would have tanked; that's why a system like gold is the best way to prevent a cloud 9 type of deal where people think they're prosperous when reality is that they are not.On the other hand, America kept it's gold standard during WWI, which led to an economic boom straight afterwards But the Great Depression was due in part of Germany's $10B debt it owed the allies. The allies were dependent on Germany to pay them back and when they tried to pay them back, they resorted to printing money which led to inflation and bombed the world economy
Quote from: Kinder_ on September 07, 2014, 12:53:42 PMThe only way the gold standard played a role is that nations suspended it so they can produce more money than they could back with gold. If they were to revert back then their economy would have tanked; that's why a system like gold is the best way to prevent a cloud 9 type of deal where people think they're prosperous when reality is that they are not.On the other hand, America kept it's gold standard during WWI, which led to an economic boom straight afterwards But the Great Depression was due in part of Germany's $10B debt it owed the allies. The allies were dependent on Germany to pay them back and when they tried to pay them back, they resorted to printing money which led to inflation and bombed the world economyYou started well. The reason the nations suspended the gold standard was because they realised the supply of money was constricted relative to the demand, and suspending the gold standard allowed them inject liquidity into the financial system. It's no surprise that countries recovered pretty much in the order that they suspended the gold standard. Also, gold is not the best system to back money with. Not only is it politically unfeasible, we wouldn't get back many of the benefits from it. There's a big danger it could lead to some pretty horrible deflation. Germany's hyperinflation didn't bomb the world economy, at all. The central bankers just failed to respond to the loss of liquidity and declining NGDP.You can limit the monetary regime without a gold standard.
Take away right-wing meaning and you get a pretty accurate depiction of economics. Everybody, including economists, will have a different opinion and what they think is right. I obviously see the gold standard is good and you think it won't work so really, arguing about it is kinda redundant