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#89 | |||||
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22×3×641 Posts |
Some comments on that analysis:
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#90 |
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Bamboozled!
"πΊππ·π·π"
May 2003
Down not across
22·5·72·11 Posts |
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#91 |
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Mar 2010
26·3 Posts |
Recent events indicate that 60% levy tax for deposits in Cyprus banks is very improbable. It will be much smaller or there will not be any tax at all. I wrote about it before expressing doubts about it. Moreover, deposits are not frozen so every day amount of deposits is melting down.
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#92 |
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Aug 2003
Snicker, AL
7×137 Posts |
http://thecontributor.com/opinion/co...trayal-america
Worth reading to see where the profits and taxes are actually being made and paid. Corporate profits are at record high levels, but taxes are paid in Caribbean tax havens. The UK has Starbucks using all the profits to purchase arbitrarily inflated coffee beans effectively moving the profits from the UK to a Dutch subsidiary. Similar manipulations are used by most large corporations. DarJones |
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#93 | |
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22·3·641 Posts |
"The 37 Percent Mystery: Where Did All the Workers Go?"
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/...ers-go/274786/ Quote:
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#94 |
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Romulan Interpreter
Jun 2011
Thailand
72·197 Posts |
Is anyone riding the bitcoin rally?
Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2013-04-11 at 18:57 Reason: I presume by 'is' you mean 'was' ... and if by 'riding' you mean "laughing at", count me in |
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#95 |
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Tribal Bullet
Oct 2004
3·1,181 Posts |
Mass dumping of gold for bitcoins?
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#96 |
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
769210 Posts |
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#97 |
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Aug 2003
Snicker, AL
7·137 Posts |
Any currency is a medium of exchange. It allows me to sell tomato seed (which I produce) converting to currency, then use the currency to purchase food to eat. When we work at a job, we are converting our labor to currency which is then used to provide the necessities we need to live. The currency is therefore just a medium of exchange.
When a currency is linked to a specific item such as gold, then the currency fluctuates in parallel with the underlying linked item. This results in disparities when I convert my product into currency and then use the currency to purchase supplies. In other words, if we were on a gold standard, then I might have converted my tomato seed into gold at $1600 per ounce, then purchase something today when gold is at $1300 per ounce. In effect, I would have lost @18% of the value of my product. This illustrates the losses that can be incurred with conversion from goods to currency to goods. Why is this important? Well, any effort to create an arbitrary currency such as bitcoin has to be denominated in terms of the value it can be used to purchase. When the bitcoins fluctuate in value, there will be gains and losses in currency conversion. This instability leads to hedging of positions by either deliberately holding currency or else deliberately holding goods, depending on whether you anticipate a rise in value of the currency or a rise in value of the goods. I read a book by Robert Heinlein years ago that suggested using wheat as the underlying good to which currency should be tied. The logic is that wheat is a fundamental good required for life since it is a food that most people eat. The currency was called "wheat dollars". One wheat dollar could be used to purchase one bushel of wheat. The problem with this economy would be that the price of wheat could never fluctuate but the cost of inputs to produce the wheat could rise or fall. Sooner or later, the economy would destabilize and lead to either overproduction or underproduction of wheat. From studying various currency systems, it is obvious that none of them are good for the average person. The objective of the currency issuer always conflicts with the objectives of the currency user. The economy always requires that a certain amount of goods and services produced must be destroyed in order to maintain currency stability. The productive capacity of an economy is bounded by the fluctuations of the currency. Just some thoughts on currency and markets for a Monday evening. DarJones |
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#98 | |
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"Mike"
Aug 2002
2×23×179 Posts |
Quote:
(We had a jar full of them when we were little.) Anytime we hear a word like "wheat" we have to link to this: http://www.mersenneforum.org/showthread.php?p=320962 #2
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#99 |
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"Gang aft agley"
Sep 2002
2·1,877 Posts |
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