Students helping students, join us in improving Bored of Studies by donating and supporting future students!
Probabilistically, a small number of people will always accurately pick future market outcomes.zstar said:Peter Schiff was Ron Paul's economic adviser.
He comes from the same economic school of thought as him.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LfascZSTU4o (funny argument he had in 2006)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4n3g5lUgkWk (talking about dollar collapse)
He has some fantastic analogies he uses.
Um, you'd rather we didn't have a central bank?youBROKEmyLIFE said:Yeah because Central Banks are such a part of a 'free market'. gggggggREEEENNNSPAN
Actually, now is the perfect time to invest. As Warren Buffet puts it - be worried when others are greedy, be greedy when others are worried.HalcyonSky said:the market will rally today, im putting all my money into it. I'm going to be rich!
You're honestly comparing the current global economy to that of the 1800's and saying it would work better if reverted back to their system?zstar said:You could eliminate central banking.
The Federal Reserve was the result of 12 banking families who tried to lobby congress to pass the Federal Reserve act and many of their moles infiltrated the Democrat party.
America did fine for hundreds of years before the Federal Reserve and past American presidents warned repeatedly against central bankers. In the 1800's their was a central bank before the Fed that was taken out of business.
So the U.S has quite a history of warring against these types of people but it seems every once in while they come back and in 1913 the finally succeeded in passing the Federal Reserve Act, Ironically as soon as they took power the world experienced Depressions, World wars and political, social and economic shifts unlike any other in modern history.
None of that little tirade was an argument or justification for removing central banks in modern day society.zstar said:You could eliminate central banking.
The Federal Reserve was the result of 12 banking families who tried to lobby congress to pass the Federal Reserve act and many of their moles infiltrated the Democrat party.
America did fine for hundreds of years before the Federal Reserve and past American presidents warned repeatedly against central bankers. In the 1800's their was a central bank before the Fed that was taken out of business.
So the U.S has quite a history of warring against these types of people but it seems every once in while they come back and in 1913 the finally succeeded in passing the Federal Reserve Act, Ironically as soon as they took power the world experienced Depressions, World wars and political, social and economic shifts unlike any other in modern history.
The actions of central banks tend to have the greatest negative impact on the poorest people in society because they exist to devalue their money.Trefoil said:None of that little tirade was an argument or justification for removing central banks in modern day society.
Edit: and lol @ your inability to distinguish correlation and causation.
But they do have relative value, something which will never disappear unless humanity itself does.JFK said:It's cool though cos money has no inherent value.
Neither does gold.![]()
Cool. Evidence?youBROKEmyLIFE said:The actions of central banks tend to have the greatest negative impact on the poorest people in society because they exist to devalue their money.
Yeah but you can't fuckin print gold you unscrupulous bastardJFK said:It's cool though cos money has no inherent value.
Neither does gold.![]()
I don't doubt the mathematics of his idealised systems. I'm sure his work was very helpful to economics. But you simply cannot take it in isolation and say "See, this means central banks are bad."youBROKEmyLIFE said:@Slidey: Hayek won a nobel prize for it
False. This is the mistake too many laissez faire champions make. Just because the current system is not perfect doesn't mean that a perfect solution exists. It may well be (and is likely) that we are in fact at or near optimal equilibrium with a central bank and we'll never have a 'perfectly' stable system.EDIT: They obviously don't provide stability otherwise we wouldn't be going through a recession![]()
wikipedia said:Under certain idealized conditions, it can be shown that a system of free markets will lead to a Pareto efficient outcome. This is called the first welfare theorem. It was first demonstrated mathematically by economists Kenneth Arrow and Gerard Debreu. However, the result does not rigorously establish welfare results for real economies because of the restrictive assumptions necessary for the proof (markets exist for all possible goods, all markets are in full equilibrium, markets are perfectly competitive, transaction costs are negligible, there must be no externalities, and market participants must have perfect information). Moreover, it has since been demonstrated mathematically that, in the absence of perfect competition or complete markets, outcomes will always be Pareto inefficient (the Greenwald-Stiglitz Theorem).
I don't think so, no. They should have insured secondary insurance and super as well to begin with, but the move itself was good economic foresight (assuming you believe markets should be stabilised), and I believe time well tell how it pans out.EDIT1: Ruddkip jumped the shark with guaranteeing any money in Australia, forever?