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Additional resources for earning interest in gold

9 responses to “Asset Inflation vs. Consumer Goods Inflation, Report 1 Sep”

  1. My daughter pays off her credit cards to maintain her ability to buy. What enables her to “buy” is her credit rating not her income and she is acutely aware of that. Do wealthy people need to worry about their credit score or can they live off their wealth (assets)?
    As a rich person undergoing gradual impoverishment from lower and lower interest rates, I share your concern about “yield purchasing power”. The last 15 years of an improving 401-K has actually left me poorer in this regard. If at age 52 I had $350,000 at 6% and now at 66 have $1 million at 1.5%, it is probably demonstrable that I am a poor investor. I do not have assets (such as apartments) that deliver a better return. Thus the former 2004 condition generated $21,000/yr with somewhat lower prices and now a million generates $15,000/yr with somewhat higher “prices”.
    My gold and silver bought from 2004 to 2007 is now higher and that is a satisfaction but it is not related to a pension payment. I am envious of pensioners that do not realize the huge benefit that a 1/2 of final salary payment for the rest of your life is. They worked 30 years earning an average $80,000 which totals $2.4 million but now receive $40,000 which would require a nest egg at 1.5% of $2.6 million to deliver. They would have had to save ALL their income for 30 years to generate that return! And there is not a one that thinks they didn’t “earn” it….

  2. drew, don’t be too envious of those with pensions. In the first place, most of the public, and many of the private pensions are grossly underfunded and may fail or get reduced in the near future. Secondly, most of them are not indexed (adequately) for inflation, so if we get a ’70’s style period of inflation, you will feel much better about owning gold and silver than having a pension. The problem with planning and investing for retirement is that you have to predict up to 25+ years of future economic activity, not to mention how long you will live!. Be thankful that you are relatively rich and can probably adjust your lifestyle, depending on what happens.

  3. “…The mean, as you can see from this graph is just over 60….”

    That’s quite a reach. Maybe the mean of the last 20 years is around 60. How about the 20th century mean at ~ 47? What about the 1792 – 2019 mean at ~34?

  4. “And every regulator, litigator, and taxinater is constantly working to add useless ingredients and drive up costs.”

    Though I agree with the “drive up costs” part I don’t agree with the “useless” part. Good Regulation prevents evil doers from easily committing harm. Good Litigation prevents producers from trying to externalize their costs. Good Taxes prevent oligarchs from corrupting markets and government in general. On may argue that today there is less Good regulation, litigation, and tax than in the past, but that is not proof that these things are absolutely useless. That would be like arguing that because many of the knives you encounter are dull that all knives are useless. Knives are useful, sharp ones more so that dull ones.

    • The debate over regulation is an important one. Suffice to say I am a believer in the Rule of Law, i.e. you cannot steal, kill, lie, cheat, etc. But not of prior restraint regulation.

      But that aside, the point of the concept of useless ingredients is that the customer does not know and does not care about the giant ADA-compliant bathroom at the dairy barn. He cares only that the price of milk went up. Which he calls “inflation” but is not monetary.

  5. Keith,

    Once again, an excellent article.

    Q: What is the worth of a monetary paradigm?
    A: About 20 cents. “A pair of dimes!”

    I think of three manifestations of inflation: 1. Rising consumer prices; 2. Rising asset prices; and/or 3. Rising trade deficit. In the third manifestation, the US exports USD and imports goods.

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