Prof. Antony Davies: 10 Myths About Inflation

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 26 сер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 560

  • @LearnLiberty
    @LearnLiberty  Рік тому +6

    ‎‍🔥 Watch Prof. Davies' Latest Video: 7 MYTHS ABOUT THE GREAT DEPRESSION - ua-cam.com/video/q4ZMMH6LxXc/v-deo.html ‍🔥

    • @williamgibson6429
      @williamgibson6429 Рік тому

      They don’t say anything about how the rich skip welfare does that make sense to you that the rich get money from government does it make sense to you that the nonprofit is actually a conspiracy to profit the rich and collect money from you everything in this society is now about making the rich richer and the poor poor and they have propaganda people that tell you that a flat tax is the way to go and plunder tax which is what graduated in the tax system up to tax more from the rich and stop taxing the poor which is under $2 million support the plunder tax worldwide billionaires left India they say that the East Indian jeweled class princes are now taking care of the poor in India but if you see piles of bodies burning in India it will be because of Socialism not free enterprise it will be socialism that will destroy America not free enterprise capitalism is what the rich want for themselves and they want you in abject poverty by way of taxing the middle-class out of existence and keeping the poor poor and keeping capitalism for themselves their brainwashing you

    • @williamgibson6429
      @williamgibson6429 Рік тому

      Both political parties are controlled by the rich billionaires the billionaires want socialism for you and all the lower classes and capitalism for them selves corporate schism is a blameless system so that if they do something that hurts other people they don’t take responsibility for causing it problems for other people including his death the alternate problem is Steve Scott free

    • @williamgibson6429
      @williamgibson6429 Рік тому

      Both political parties are controlled by the rich billionaires the billionaires want socialism for you and all the lower classes and capitalism for them selves corporate schism is a blameless system so that if they do something that hurts other people they don’t take responsibility for causing it problems for other people including his death the alternate problem is Steve Scott free

  • @luiscanamarvega
    @luiscanamarvega 2 роки тому +122

    Glad to see this guy is still around. I was introduced to learn liberty many years ago through his videos.

    • @strangelyrepulsive77
      @strangelyrepulsive77 2 роки тому +2

      government debt myths?

    • @rmglover3191
      @rmglover3191 2 роки тому +4

      He has a channel - Words and Numbers - where he posts a weekly video!

    • @thirionj
      @thirionj 2 роки тому +4

      @@rmglover3191 Good to know. Thanks!

  • @JP-vi4ig
    @JP-vi4ig 2 роки тому +156

    We actually can blame the government and the fed for inflation.

    • @user-zu1ix3yq2w
      @user-zu1ix3yq2w 2 роки тому +36

      They printed money. Supply went up. Inflation went up. Fairly simple.

    • @evolassunglasses4673
      @evolassunglasses4673 2 роки тому

      The Fed is now the government.

    • @jakejohn2970
      @jakejohn2970 2 роки тому +15

      Yup. Expansion of the money supply.

    • @Whandj
      @Whandj 2 роки тому +6

      The root is the Electorate

    • @GolDRoger-fx2fp
      @GolDRoger-fx2fp 2 роки тому

      @@user-zu1ix3yq2w Why? How? Who said that? Monetary system is just man-made system not even nature's made. Surely it just a manipulation by the few to steal the remaining money in our pocket.
      It doesn't even follow the law of nature and logic.

  • @daveBit15
    @daveBit15 2 роки тому +10

    Myth 5 is definitely not a myth: inflation, expected or not, is bad.

    • @epsilon3821
      @epsilon3821 2 роки тому

      Same as the presideny one....thought this channel libertarian?

    • @daveBit15
      @daveBit15 2 роки тому

      @@epsilon3821 No, that one's a myth. And yes, it is libertarian.

    • @epsilon3821
      @epsilon3821 4 місяці тому

      @Trainrhys Is english not your first language?

  • @paul-ld9vh
    @paul-ld9vh 2 роки тому +37

    This professor the GOAT of all current economics professionals.

    • @BladeOfLight16
      @BladeOfLight16 2 роки тому +3

      I gotta give that title to Sowell. But Davies is very good nonetheless.

    • @paul-ld9vh
      @paul-ld9vh 2 роки тому +1

      @@BladeOfLight16 Great point! I should have mentioned that. Sowell is the economic OG!

    • @uumlau
      @uumlau Рік тому +2

      @@BladeOfLight16 If I were an economist and someone positively compared me to Sowell, I would be EXTREMELY flattered.

  • @jt5747
    @jt5747 2 роки тому +11

    Never assume that the central banks or government want the best for you, your finances, or your future.

    • @LearnLiberty
      @LearnLiberty  2 роки тому +4

      Agreed!

    • @jt5747
      @jt5747 2 роки тому

      @@finchbevdale2069 I see those 3 classifications as pretty much the same, as they either are an individual, or simply a group of individuals acting together. I expect that most people will act according to what they see as their rational self interest. If their's happens to align with mine, then there is some trust there. For there to be any kind of society at all, there has to be at least some trust. In the case of the groups I mentioned in my comment, an assumption of their desire for my wellbeing is somewhat irrelevant to my trust for them.

  • @fl6stringer
    @fl6stringer 2 роки тому +32

    Good video! My only disagreement here is Russia's effect on oil/gas prices here in the US since they really comprise only maybe 3% of our imports. I'd say that the primary driver of our oil and gas prices here and now are due to the fact that we shut down our own supplies and import more. Now THAT is definitely the direct fault of our current administration.

    • @mack626
      @mack626 2 роки тому +8

      To be fair, the amount of oil we import from Russia doesn’t necessarily mean that much. Almost all of Europe depended on Russian Oil, that is obviously going to have an effect on prices in the US. Supply has been limited world wide so it makes sense that prices would rise for the US, even if we didn’t directly depend on Russian Oil.
      That being said, I agree with you, we were had net exports like two years ago and now we clearly have limited supply even before the whole Russia thing.

    • @LearnLiberty
      @LearnLiberty  2 роки тому +7

      Thanks for your comment! Here is not talking only about 3%, the existing situation between Russia and Ukraine conditioned increase of oil and gas prices in the world. And this influences inflation because the USA is the importer of them.

    • @fl6stringer
      @fl6stringer 2 роки тому +4

      @@LearnLiberty Yes, surely it has exacerbated the situation but we must likewise acknowledge that prices began to rise significantly before the conflict due to the shutdown of our own supplies.

    • @burkean
      @burkean 2 роки тому +1

      @@LearnLiberty Oh, like the way that minimum wage changes can drive inflation even if a small percentage of employees earned minimum wage?

    • @lexpox329
      @lexpox329 2 роки тому

      Oil is also priced in a futures market, so it's not necessarily current supply that matters but what people think the supply will be over the next period. This also means if the us government released new off shore drilling permits the prices would soon go down even though no new oil could be got from those wells for like 5 years. This already happened in 08 when the Bush administration released off shore permits. The price of oil plummeted from 145 a barrel to like 60 a barrel the month following the permits.

  • @NowisEvollovetion
    @NowisEvollovetion 2 роки тому +32

    Inflation is actually a growth in the money supply. And rising prices are an effect of inflation.

    • @AntonyDavies
      @AntonyDavies 2 роки тому +2

      Yes, that was the original definition of inflation (a growth in the money supply). But economics texts haven't used that definition for three quarters of a century now. The definition within economics is, a growth in the average price level. When we need to talk about a growth in the money supply, we simply say, "growth in the money supply."

    • @keesdenheijer7283
      @keesdenheijer7283 2 роки тому +10

      @@AntonyDavies
      Baloney. You cannot inflate prices, you can inflate the amount of currency which causes prices to rise.

    • @homewall744
      @homewall744 2 роки тому +7

      @@AntonyDavies Seems like that was a trick to confuse us. Higher prices due to supply and demand and changes in tastes is just economics. Inflation is higher prices because there are more dollars chasing the same amount of wealth.

    • @Spartan322
      @Spartan322 2 роки тому +5

      @@AntonyDavies Redefining inflation that way instead of creating a definitive phrase to handle specifics is detrimental. It means we create an unnecessary shifting context both over time and with rational definitions between each other. It would've been more optimal for the understanding of the language to be specific when it needs it and to not defer to redefining words unnaturally. It also is a suspicious act redefining existing words like that since intentional definition shifting tends to mean someone is hiding something behind the original definition. Natural language evolution will not generally redefine words in such a way.

    • @AntonyDavies
      @AntonyDavies 2 роки тому +3

      @@Spartan322 I don't disagree. But as the redefinition occurred over 50 years ago, all of modern economic literature has used the definition "an increase in the average price level." There's no confusion among economists as they understand the mechanisms behind the words. But attempting to revert to the old definition causes no end of confusion among non-economists.

  • @spec24
    @spec24 2 роки тому +14

    "...as long as everybody is expecting the inflation..."
    Inflation is ALWAYS a negative.
    And those calculations you refer to are people's time and money that could have been better used on productive things.

    • @scottmcshannon6821
      @scottmcshannon6821 2 роки тому

      many people dont have the power to insist on more money to cover future inflatyon

    • @user-zu1ix3yq2w
      @user-zu1ix3yq2w 2 роки тому

      That's the core of how it works.. Most people don't want to trade their time for future value. That's alright, because inflation is going to steal the value of your time anyway.

    • @Spartan322
      @Spartan322 2 роки тому +3

      Inflation is a natural result of market use, as a money supply inflates, which happens naturally with new bodies introduced into the supply as more revenue enters the market, inflation will naturally happen. (as that's what inflation actually is) The problem has to do with artificial manipulation of this natural phenomenon.

    • @g.l.holdren162
      @g.l.holdren162 2 роки тому

      Thank you!
      The idea that it's neither good nor bad that our work is worth less (especially when wages are negotiated so much less frequently than the price of goods and services) is obscene.

    • @Spartan322
      @Spartan322 2 роки тому +1

      @@g.l.holdren162 Its not obscene, its literally a natural part of the market, people who think even a gold or gold-backed fiat currency doesn't inflate are obscene, what do you think happens when someone generates wealth? It will add money to the money supply which is literally what inflation is, all wealth generation will inflate a currency.

  • @samuelbarrett5701
    @samuelbarrett5701 2 роки тому +15

    Dang, inflation is so bad 10 myths isn't even 10 myths anymore.

    • @LearnLiberty
      @LearnLiberty  2 роки тому +7

      The number of myths suffered inflation 🥁

  • @davidburger9668
    @davidburger9668 Рік тому +5

    Outstanding simple and quick explanation of a lot of economics. This should be mandatory watching for all high school students so they can get at least a basic understanding of basic economics

  • @thecoton6152
    @thecoton6152 2 роки тому +4

    "That's 10 myths before factoring for Inflation."
    This got me a good chuckle. Whoever made that joke deserves a pat on the back.

  • @tiredpappy
    @tiredpappy 2 роки тому +3

    I'm no economist but this makes sense. I just feel bad for the musicians who had to play the same few notes for 29 minutes and 19 seconds.

  • @DanJohnsonAffordableAviation
    @DanJohnsonAffordableAviation 2 роки тому +8

    I appreciated your humorous style plus the clearly and understandably-described subject matter (admission: already an Anthony Davies fan). Well done!

  • @trublgrl
    @trublgrl 2 роки тому +3

    A appreciate Dr. Davies' insight here, but I am left with so fundamental questions: What is the precise relationship between the US federal government and the private Federal Reserve system? Is the Federal Reserve COMPELLED to print enough money to cover the US Congressional budget? Under what authority? Why would a private entity be beholden to the Congress in this way? Is the dilution of the dollar by overprinting solely at the discretion of the Federal Reserve?
    What does an American dollar actually represent?
    I have asked many people who claim to know these questions, and have never gotten a concise answer.
    Thanks for the meaningful content.

    • @AntonyDavies
      @AntonyDavies 2 роки тому +3

      "Is the Federal Reserve COMPELLED to print enough money to cover the US Congressional budget?"
      This is an interesting question. Legally, the Fed is independent and so can alter the money supply as it wishes. Practically, Congress has backed the Fed into a corner. To fight inflation, the Federal Reserve needs to raise interest rates. But, the federal debt has become so large that the federal government can't afford for interest rates to rise because each one percentage point rise in interest rates costs the federal government an additional $300 billion a year in interest expense (for perspective, that's almost one-half of the entire Department of Defense budget).
      So, the Fed now finds itself having to choose between what's good for the people (keeping inflation under control) and what's good for the federal government (and, by extension, the people who rely on the federal government) by constraining its interest expense.

    • @AntonyDavies
      @AntonyDavies 2 роки тому +1

      @@finchbevdale2069 said...
      "The federal reserve is an agent of the treasury..."
      That's incorrect. The two organizations do work together, but they are separate. Treasury is under the Executive branch. The Fed is independent, but was created by, can be dissolved by, and reports to Congress.
      " The government issues the currency. It can't run out of dollars."
      That's incorrect. The Fed, which is (at least nominally) independent of the government issues the currency. The Treasury does the physical printing of the money, but it only does so on the instruction of the Fed. Yes, the Fed can't run out of dollars, but that's irrelevant. What's relevant is the purchasing power of those dollars. And there, the more dollars the Fed prints, the more it erodes the purchasing power of existing dollars.
      "It can cause inflation by buying more stuff than is available in the market and thus bidding up prices over time..."
      That's not inflation, but a change in relative prices. For example, if the money supply is constant and the government starts buying up oil, the price of oil will rise, and the prices of things made with oil (like gasoline) will rise. However, because the money supply is constant, the average price level won't change. That is, people will react to the greater cost of gasoline by cutting back on their purchases of other things. In turn, that will cause the prices of those other things to fall. In the end, what you've done is to alter the price of oil and gas relative to other things, but you haven't altered the average price over all things. The way to do that is to increase the money supply.

  • @karthikboyareddygari568
    @karthikboyareddygari568 2 роки тому +27

    Prof. Davies is always so informative and easy to follow. I'm sure most people didn't know about the beebop tidbit, but I actually didn't know about why there was such a delay in detecting the inflation induced by COVID stimulus.

    • @rmglover3191
      @rmglover3191 2 роки тому +3

      I wondered as well. All that stimulus money, but where was the inflation?
      I saw a video several weeks ago on Patrick Bet-David's channel: Michael Saylor, paton saint of bitcoin. I found his insight on inflation startling. I'm no scholar, and this is only a poor paraphrase of it, but essentially he said the inflation hit the stock market first. When we finally ramped up our goods and services again - then inflation leaked into the marketplace.
      I don't know it it's possible, but I was certainly intrigued

    • @evilapple3427
      @evilapple3427 Рік тому

      Inflation increases when the rate which money is circulated is faster than the rate which goods and services are distributed in the economy. When COVID stimulus enters the economy, while there is an increase in supply of money, the circulation of money decreased because people don't have a way to spent money during lockdown outside of financial instruments. So if you follow CPI, you will see that inflation rate dropped in 2021 after the release of stimulus in 2020. However, after the economy re--opened in 2022, the inflation start to go up. Not to mention governments continue to stimulate the economy to "speed up covid recovery" when opening up the economy and that unfortunately is a direct addition to inflation.

  • @pushing2throttles
    @pushing2throttles 2 роки тому +4

    So "nothing has intrinsic value"... food and water don't? In a pure barter system, eventually someone is trading for food, to eat... so they can survive and that has intrinsic value. I would think.
    Other than this question, I'm standing applauding screaming encore! What a phenomenal lesson! Learned a lot and the professor explained in such a way that makes it easy to understand.

    • @Spartan322
      @Spartan322 2 роки тому +5

      "food and water don't?"
      Subjective value means nothing has intrinsic value, its an agreed upon value based on demand, necessity creates value based on how necessary it is and the willingness for one to pay the price. One person might think of food and water as something easy to achieve in a tropical or temperate environment, say a single cup of water is $0.50 but someone in a desert will treat that same cup of water as worth say a hundread times at $50. This is how we know nothing has intrinsic value as no good or service is valued at the same price in all regards. Subjective value invalidates any concept of intrinsic value economically.

    • @AntonyDavies
      @AntonyDavies 2 роки тому +5

      Thanks for the comments!
      Subjective value doesn't mean that food and water aren't valuable. It means that they are only valuable in as much as they are valuable *to someone.* That is, the value comes from the person's reaction to the product, not from the product itself. For example, once upon a time, whale oil was extremely valuable as a fuel source. The value lay not in the whale oil, but in the benefit people received from using the whale oil. Now that we heat with other things, whale oil is far less valuable - despite the fact that whale oil today is no different than it was 200 years ago. What caused the change in value was us, not the whale oil. The value is subjective, not objective.

    • @claudimc
      @claudimc Рік тому +1

      This is kind of philosophical because it comes down to what it means to have value. Of value to whom? Which by definition makes it subjective.
      When people talk about gold, etc. having intrinsic value, don’t they just mean it has uses outside a means of exchange? Gold does have uses outside a means of exchange which distinguishes it from paper money, even if the term “instrinsic value” is technically wrong. It’s value is still to people, but some its value is in its ability to be used in shiny rings or circuit boards, and some is in its ease of use for exchange.

    • @sprinkle61
      @sprinkle61 Рік тому

      @@claudimc Fiat money has value beyond its use as a medium of exchange, to some extent. It can be used to snort a white substance, and in Weimar Germany people burned it for warmth, or glued it to the wall as wallpaper. Gold has more non money uses, and they are better uses, but most things have more than one use, making their value very subjective to what you are using them for.

    • @sprinkle61
      @sprinkle61 Рік тому

      After the atomic apocalypse, and the Rock people land on Earth to visit the ruins, what intrinsic value will water and food have, if they don't eat or drink it ? All value depends on the one valuing the item, and if they don't value it, then it has no value, because ALL value is subjective.

  • @costrio
    @costrio 2 роки тому +2

    The price of some objects go up but others go down in price, but the caveat is that the size shrinks. A KFC piece of chicken in the 60's was 3 times bigger than today. That's shrinkflation, IMO. BTW, I ate at KFC then and now.

  • @joshhawkins2765
    @joshhawkins2765 2 роки тому +4

    I always look forward to the videos of Prof. Antony Davies. We need more people like him to spread these ideas. I see all these videos and how intelligently he speaks and I'm surprised they don't have like 10M views.

  • @NoAmmo22
    @NoAmmo22 2 роки тому +30

    "Even an economy comprised entirely of saints will experience inflation, if the money supply grows faster than the economy." Real words of wisdom! (2:16)

    • @abstractapproach634
      @abstractapproach634 Рік тому +3

      Eh, mute point. A society of saints (taken as those with knowledge and benevolence) will not print more than than necessary, they would strive for 0 and err on the side of -, so that their money will always be worth as much or more than then as time goes on.
      Also, with the ability to deal with numbers on miniscule orders of magnitude it would not be unreasonable to stay entirely deflationary (eventually people would operate in millimoneys, micromoneys, ect) such of that as a gold standard or mathematical cap.

  • @BladeOfLight16
    @BladeOfLight16 2 роки тому +1

    The computer industry is interesting as an example. One major factor in people's purchasing decisions is obsolescence. A modern computer is almost useless in about 5 years due to a combination hardware improvements and software built with the expectation of greater performing hardware (meaning it need not manage hardware resources as efficiently, sometimes just due to not wanting to invest in performance but also because of creating additional features or fancier graphics). The result is that a computer has a relatively short shelf life, which continually drives people to upgrade if they don't want to be stuck with out of date software (which has its own set of rather large drawbacks).

  • @darthhodges
    @darthhodges 2 роки тому +4

    It could be argued that whether something has intrinsic value has to do with how small the probability is that circumstances will change enough that no one wants it. Outside of things like jewelry gold still has functional value in electronics and metallurgy. I would argue that the chances that gold will be worth nothing in the future is smaller than the chances of the US dollar being worth nothing in the future. But I will concede the point that there isn't any one thing that can't become worthless.

    • @LearnLiberty
      @LearnLiberty  2 роки тому

      But that value you are talking about would be much less than we now attach to it.

  • @fight2flyphoto
    @fight2flyphoto 2 роки тому +5

    I could listen to this dude talk about anything for hours on end.

  • @nicolas84923
    @nicolas84923 2 роки тому +8

    Nice content! The best way to find that balance between saving and living is by investing, this way you get to have your savings intact and then live comfortably of the revenue coming in from your investments.

    • @hernandezcrespo5110
      @hernandezcrespo5110 2 роки тому +1

      Successful people don't become that way overnight. What most people see at a glance wealth, a great career, purpose is the result of hard work and hustle over time. I pray that anyone who reads this will be successful in life .

    • @antoniopolanco8626
      @antoniopolanco8626 2 роки тому

      You are right, to be a successful person in life requires hard work, being focus and committed

    • @wilfredoramones1900
      @wilfredoramones1900 2 роки тому

      This thing about been successful has to do with working towards your goal and not giving ears or attention to side thoughts

    • @dianalaura8892
      @dianalaura8892 2 роки тому

      I've been thinking of going into some kind of investment like Gold, Stock and Cryptocurrency but I don't know which one is best at the moment

    • @moisesalvarez9858
      @moisesalvarez9858 2 роки тому +1

      I would advice cryptocurrency on my own side it's been very profitable using expert guide and amazing strategies, I call crypto the future but selfishness and greed have prevented many and they ended up suffering huge losses.

  • @lpkojihugzft
    @lpkojihugzft Рік тому +1

    Myth 8: If the weight declined with 10% and the price remained the same that's a 11.1% increase in price.
    I'm just nitpicking, that's a great video.

  • @TXLionHeart
    @TXLionHeart Рік тому +3

    People don't just value gold because its supply is limited; they value it because it is very useful -- in addition to it being very rare.

  • @finlay422
    @finlay422 2 роки тому +4

    gold has industrial uses, so you cant say it only has perceived value

    • @BigBearHostel
      @BigBearHostel Рік тому

      Apparently only 11% of gold produced is used for manufacturing or industrial purposes. If that is true 89% goes toward increasing the supply of gold used as a store of value.

  • @antonlords6
    @antonlords6 2 роки тому +22

    One of the best economists at explaining real life issues.

    • @naughtynat82
      @naughtynat82 2 роки тому

      Lol. I assume you have no idea who Thomas Sowell is.

    • @antonlords6
      @antonlords6 2 роки тому +3

      @@naughtynat82 Actually I do, and I very much enjoy him also.

    • @generalsalami8875
      @generalsalami8875 2 роки тому +3

      @@naughtynat82 one of. Not the

    • @naughtynat82
      @naughtynat82 2 роки тому +1

      @@generalsalami8875 I might have to listen to more of his content. And to be fair there probably are few economists that can explain things in a way the average person can understand so maybe the point is more reasonable that what I first suggested.

    • @Lord_Volkner
      @Lord_Volkner Рік тому

      Apparently, nobody has any idea what inflation is either. It is NOT rising prices. An apparent rise in prices is a consequence of inflation, NOT inflation itself. Inflation is one thing, and one thing only ---> an increase in the supply of money.

  • @LibertarianDave
    @LibertarianDave Рік тому +1

    Love it! Thanks Spike. Well placed sarcasm drives it home, bravo!

  • @AusFirewing
    @AusFirewing 2 роки тому +3

    "Myth 0: Money matters"
    Exactly right, the primary and only function of money is to facilitate commerce. Currency does not have intrinsic value, it is valuable because it performs the functions of money and does it well. We stopped using gold coins because of the portability problem, we may well stop using dollars because of inflation. Even further down the road we might abandon Bitcoin because of a divisibility problem.
    None of this actually matters, so long as there continue to be goods and services people want and a currency available to buy them with.

    • @LearnLiberty
      @LearnLiberty  2 роки тому +1

      Agree with you, but bitcoin doesn't have any divisibility problem.

    • @AusFirewing
      @AusFirewing 2 роки тому

      It will given enough time. Only a fixed amount of Bitcoin can ever be mined, so through attrition the amount in circulation will eventually decrease even as the population increases.
      Will this be the thing that kills Bitcoin? I dunno, it certainly isn't a problem *right now* and it's still an open question whether or not Bitcoin is going to outcompete everything else. I was just trying to make the point that no currency lasts forever.

    • @g.l.holdren162
      @g.l.holdren162 2 роки тому

      @@AusFirewing if divisibility threatens the value of bitcoin, they will simply increase its divisibility. It is possible (worst case) that there is a hard fork, and an offshoot of "bitcoin classic" that still has the divisibility issue, but the vast majority of the network and the value will increase divisibility if necessary.

    • @g.l.holdren162
      @g.l.holdren162 2 роки тому

      @@AusFirewing if bitcoin is to be abandoned, it is far more likely to be because of spendability or privacy issues, or because our grandchildren invent something we can't yet imagine.

  • @stokedfool
    @stokedfool Рік тому +2

    The answer for Myth 7.5 is what I've been reaching for when trying to explain Bitcoin to folks. It's not about intrinsic value. It's about supply restrictions.

    • @prayerjoseph9776
      @prayerjoseph9776 Рік тому +1

      "something has value because a person wants it" smh.

    • @bradleyswann8792
      @bradleyswann8792 8 місяців тому +1

      Yeah, I get what the Professor is trying to say here, but in an apocalyptic situation, food, fuel, and Guns will have more value than Bitcoin. In the current civilized circumstance, Bitcoin can be said to have value, but what can you use Bitcoin to manufacture or what can you do with it when a better Decentralized Ledger comes along? At least with physical metals or commodities, there’s little likelihood of those things completely losing their value to most of humanity.

  • @hermanmunster4949
    @hermanmunster4949 2 роки тому +6

    Excellent presentation with a common-sense approach to explaining inflation economics. Had the Public School System continued to teach Civics, our society would have a better understanding of its causes and effect and be less gullible to the spin of the politicians that fuel the blame on everything other than their spending of money that they don't have causing the Fed to put more dollars in circulation. Ask Venezuela how inflation has been working out for them.

  • @claudimc
    @claudimc Рік тому +1

    Regarding inflation rate not mattering if it’s expected, I remember being taught this and not really grasping it. When inflation is high, it seems like riskier investments have higher real rates of return than low risk. Is that true, or does it only appear that way because we’ve never really been through a period of high inflation where it was expected to stay high for a long period of time?
    If it is true, then inflation rate would matter because it would shift investment incentive from low to high risk, and also be unfortunate for people who have a low tolerance for risk like those with lower income and the elderly.
    This definitely seems to be true in the transition period. We’ve had high inflation for quite a few months now and savings account interest rates (with no term commitment) are only now starting to climb above 2% or so. Is this just because no one believes inflation will stay high? Why does that matter for accounts with no term commitment?

  • @homewall744
    @homewall744 2 роки тому +2

    An increased employer benefit is only good if you make use of the benefit, whereas any increase in wages is sure to benefit you. If you don't need better healthcare, higher life insurance, child care, etc.... all those benefits are wages you don't get while others do.

  • @bb3683
    @bb3683 2 роки тому +1

    Well as far as I know the Fed doesn't print money it can issue bank reserves but those can't move freely unlike money can.

  • @FloridaDeere
    @FloridaDeere 2 роки тому +4

    I love there micro lectures from Pro Davies, always good and full of facts and history. Glad to see him back.

    • @LearnLiberty
      @LearnLiberty  2 роки тому

      Glad it was helpful!

    • @ChasePhifer-hj3wl
      @ChasePhifer-hj3wl 8 місяців тому

      If only each class was like this. 5-10 minutes on a specific topic, go next class. College would be much cheaper and students would have much more free time

  • @samuelkacer4997
    @samuelkacer4997 2 роки тому +4

    another amazing episode with prof Anthony Davies. Great job on this one!

    • @LearnLiberty
      @LearnLiberty  2 роки тому

      Samuel, glad you enjoyed it!

    • @Lord_Volkner
      @Lord_Volkner Рік тому

      If you want to be lied to about what inflation is, this is the place to be.

    • @samuelkacer4997
      @samuelkacer4997 Рік тому

      @@Lord_Volkner You've added nothing of substence here

  • @jt5747
    @jt5747 2 роки тому +4

    Inflation happens because the money supply increases faster than the economy, and nobody is to blame.....

    • @homewall744
      @homewall744 2 роки тому +4

      Except those who increase the money supply faster than the economy, and that's the Fed.

    • @jt5747
      @jt5747 2 роки тому +1

      @@homewall744 and our Congress who gave them, and continues to give them, that ability.

  • @ChadDuckboy001
    @ChadDuckboy001 2 роки тому +2

    Prof. Antony Davies Is the best!

  • @yusakuzgun2824
    @yusakuzgun2824 2 роки тому +3

    How come parties are not to blame when they print excessive amounts of money? WTF? Are you making fun of our IQ? How?

    • @LearnLiberty
      @LearnLiberty  2 роки тому +3

      its the system man

    • @AntonyDavies
      @AntonyDavies 2 роки тому +4

      Inflation (and deficits) are about the same under both parties. So, parties aren't the answer. A major component of the answer is a federal government that has broken through its original Constitutional constraints.

  • @SaveTheRbtz
    @SaveTheRbtz 2 роки тому +1

    Great content! I wish you would have a better webcam. Maybe you should not wait for half a year to buy a better one!
    UPDATE: maybe, it's not a webcam but the recording method. Please, consider writing a local version with something like OBS (Open Broadcaster Software) and then doing editing based on it.

    • @LearnLiberty
      @LearnLiberty  2 роки тому +1

      It’s on us. The recording method wasn’t the best

    • @whatsup3519
      @whatsup3519 2 роки тому

      @@LearnLiberty I have a question. In health care. What if someone had car accidents ,and was unconsciousness? In that case u won't Shop around looking for best treatment instead u look at near hospital. And they price will charge u higher, because u can't able to refuse treatment it in that situation,or u won't negotiate with hospital. In that case does free market in health care work? Could you please answer my question

    • @LearnLiberty
      @LearnLiberty  2 роки тому

      Haven’t you asked this like in four other videos?

    • @SaveTheRbtz
      @SaveTheRbtz 2 роки тому

      @@LearnLiberty Seems like you have an unsatisfied need here: people want to ask questions and be able to vote on new video topics. At this point you can consider creating a Slack/Dsicord community (maybe gate it by paid UA-cam's channel membership to pay community maintenance costs.)

    • @whatsup3519
      @whatsup3519 2 роки тому

      @@LearnLiberty I desperate for the answer. Because my socialist friends always winning on debate using this argument. U don't understand how much pain it's to be alone as a free market supporters in a group of entire socialist friends. So I unsubscribed this channel .

  • @CB-vt3mx
    @CB-vt3mx 2 роки тому +2

    CPI does NOT measure "inflation", it measures the EFFECT of inflation. But; it also measures the effect of actual shortages. Inflation occurs ONLY to currency. Inflation, is the devaluation of your currency by the GOVERNMENT. As Milton Friedman once presciently told us: "inflation is created in only one place--Washington DC". That even the esteemed Antony Davies does not understand inflation is bad.

    • @LearnLiberty
      @LearnLiberty  2 роки тому

      Inflation is not bad or good, this high inflation is bad.

  • @macsnafu
    @macsnafu 5 місяців тому +1

    More people need to see this vidoe, LOTS more people! So many fallacies busted. Even today, too many people think corporate greed is the cause of price inflation, and some politicians are encouraging this belief. So yes, we CAN blame politicians for inflation, or at least for misinforming people about inflation. And of course, it took both Congress and the president to create the Federal Reserve Bank in the first place, back in 1913.
    And an especially good point about whether or not money matters. While it obviously does, because monetary inflation leads to price inflation, what I like to say is that wealth is not money, but goods and services. Money is simply a tool we use to exchange goods and services. Changes in the monetary supply are simply affecting the use of that tool, and the relative value of goods and services. But yeah, value is always a subjective phenomenon; people place value on things, there is no intrinsic value in anything. Not even things humans truly need like food and water. Humans simply place high value on food and water because we need them. But the relative values of different types of food can change dramatically under different circumstances.

  • @kevinwilliams6889
    @kevinwilliams6889 2 роки тому +12

    Show this video to all of your friends. This should be common knowledge, but it isn't.

    • @LearnLiberty
      @LearnLiberty  2 роки тому +6

      Please share with ALL your friends ;)

    • @whatsup3519
      @whatsup3519 2 роки тому

      @@LearnLiberty I have a question. In health care. What if someone had car accidents ,and was unconsciousness? In that case u won't Shop around looking for best treatment instead u look at near hospital. And they price will charge u higher, because u can't able to refuse treatment it in that situation,or u won't negotiate with hospital. In that case does free market in health care work? Could you please answer my question

    • @Spartan322
      @Spartan322 2 роки тому +1

      @@whatsup3519 Insurance is one the many metrics the free market developed to eliminate the concept of "inelastic demand" naturally. (the concept of inelastic demand is actually fallacious because its hinged on the belief that said demand can't be account for as if we're not allowed to think for the future which is utter nonsense) It doesn't need to be accounted for outside of the market itself but the government has been heavily involved in regulating, subsidizing, and otherwise interfering in the healthcare market and most especially in insurance that it is impossible for competition in said market to take place. It doesn't help that they have in all practicality banned any capability of "indie" insurances including altruistic, community, or other small time insurance provisions.

  • @user-zo2lh4cu9f
    @user-zo2lh4cu9f 11 місяців тому

    Loved the car in the traffic analysis, well portraited and understoodable.

  • @dancerjim
    @dancerjim 3 місяці тому

    Great job explaining a complex subject

  • @clarestucki5151
    @clarestucki5151 Рік тому +1

    The original (and true) definition of the word "inflation" was "An unwarranted increase in the money supply, leading to increasing price levels". That was understood as raising the ratio of money in circulation to amount of goods and services in the marketplace (GDP). Revising that definition to "rising prices' led to mass ignorance and misunderstanding.

  • @birdwatcher101gbh
    @birdwatcher101gbh 2 роки тому +1

    At the outset he says that the rise in price of one thing or another is not "inflation" and explains why in plain terms. Then he says that "inflation" is the "rise in the average price level." But is that correct? Or is it more accurate to say that "inflation" is the decline in the value of money, and that the rise in the average price level is the MEASURE of the inflation rate?

  • @isaachoffman6450
    @isaachoffman6450 2 роки тому +1

    On Friedman's proposal--increasing money supply in step with real economic growth--I have two questions: who gets the money first (Cantillon)? If the economy shrinks in real terms, how can the correct amount of money be removed from the economy, and who will it be taken from?

    • @AntonyDavies
      @AntonyDavies 2 роки тому

      Good question. In practice, the government gets it first. That means that the government gets to spend the new dollars before the ensuing inflation eats away at their value.

  • @sitarama2410
    @sitarama2410 2 роки тому +1

    so educational, great stuff... i keep seeking for more hehehheh

  • @fjohnson9749
    @fjohnson9749 5 днів тому

    Fantastic info, thank you

  • @istvanmeissler2238
    @istvanmeissler2238 Рік тому +1

    The prof is wrong about one thing. If an individual has the power to raise the cost of all energy by some factor, that will affect the price of everything because energy is a universal input. If the rise comes via a tax, then the tax offers some compensating balance. If the rise is due to regulation and the denial of permits to operate, then there will be a rise in all prices with no compensating balance. This activity will cause an increase in all goods and services regardless of an increase in the money supply. Eventually however, barring an increase in money supply, some goods and services will deflate as they are seen as expendable in order to fund the basic necessities of life. Stagflation and business closures follow.

  • @johnadan3509
    @johnadan3509 Рік тому +1

    Thanks 🙏 for the information 👍 your are awesome professor 👏

  • @john_djr
    @john_djr 2 роки тому +2

    More people need to see this.

  • @Rob-fx2dw
    @Rob-fx2dw 9 місяців тому

    Very good observations and explanation of the situation during covid. It is pity more politicians do not take notice of this understanding of inflation in the economy by realising that the increased money supply does not always show as inflation due the lack of understanding of how inflation is currently measured and not noticed.

  • @robhaythorne4464
    @robhaythorne4464 Рік тому

    I have very much enjoyed Prof. Davies vids so far. Looking forward to more. Here's a suggestion. How about one to examine the craziness of Modern Monetary Theory?

  • @timothysmith4343
    @timothysmith4343 Рік тому

    Saving during deflationary periods has a positive effect just like in tamed inflationary periods. The saver likely will earn less interest, but also the dollar strengthens/purchasing power increases giving the saver a tax free increase in purchasing power. Businesses also get to borrow at a lower rate of interest and liquidity is not needed by the Federal Reserve. All input prices likely will be favorable than they otherwise would be.

  • @spec24
    @spec24 2 роки тому +2

    Since we need water to live, wouldn't you say that water has intrinsic value? Seems like water, by definition, is intrinsic.

    • @darthhodges
      @darthhodges 2 роки тому

      How about air (specifically oxygen)? You need it to live, but how much are you willing to pay for it right now? It is so plentiful and available that you probably wouldn't pay anything. It's not about utility, it's about circumstantial need. You could rephrase his argument to be that there isn't any one thing where circumstances couldn't render it unsellable.

    • @spec24
      @spec24 2 роки тому

      @@darthhodges I don't know that that rephrasing is what he is stating. Intrinsic value literally means that it is inherent value - it's monetary worth, which is in essence what you are arguing (unsellable) is not part of the equation. Intrinsic value is value regardless of what is is currently traded at... either now, in the future, or at some mythical point where something would render it unsellable.
      According to Investopedia: Intrinsic value is a measure of what an asset is worth. This measure is arrived at by means of an objective calculation or complex financial model, rather than using the currently trading market price of that asset.
      Water and oxygen, I maintain, has intrinsic value because you CAN use an objective calculation: the fact that you die without it.

    • @spec24
      @spec24 2 роки тому +1

      @@darthhodges ...indeed it is about utility. That's what gives it intrinsic value.

    • @AntonyDavies
      @AntonyDavies 2 роки тому +2

      The phrase, "we need water to live" indicates that water's value is subjective, not intrinsic. That is, water has value *to you.* It's your need that makes water valuable.

    • @bradleyswann8792
      @bradleyswann8792 8 місяців тому +1

      @@AntonyDavies this is slightly a disingenuous framing. Unless humanity becomes able to live without water, Water will forever have some level of high value to enough of the population that it can be functionally said to have intrinsic value. Some people will always value it more or less due to their specific situation, but all humans will value water at some relatively high level. And then further down the needs to wants pyramid, you’d see food, shelter, Female eggs, ect. Because of what humans are and the likelihood that what we are will not change any time soon, certain things that are valuable today will still be valuable thousands of years from now. So technically you are correct that value is inherently subjective, but because humans are so similar, our subjective value for things is generally bounded to a slice of reality that doesn’t functionally change for long periods of time.

  • @Boristien405
    @Boristien405 2 роки тому +1

    Really like Prof. Davies. Wasn't he a professor at St. Louis or was that someone else? It's been a while.

    • @AntonyDavies
      @AntonyDavies 2 роки тому +2

      West Virginia University, then Duquesne University.

  • @costrio
    @costrio 2 роки тому +1

    Coming up, this will be my second bout with "double-digit" inflation. I don't think it will stop at 8.4%. It's not a tap or a light switch that can be turned off, in a snap. It takes time and the delays cause suffering. Previously we were told that governments were trying to avoid inflation but now they can blame it on a dis-ease? "The rich get rich(er) and the poor get poorer." (Ain't We Got Fun - a song of the 50's cartoon era, FYI. BTW, it's a cool song along similar lines to the anti-Great Depression Song -- "Putting on the Ritz" by Irving Berlin." Both songs are somewhat sarcastic and fit the upcoming Recession perfectly, IMO.

  • @kiljaeden5405
    @kiljaeden5405 Рік тому

    Prof David is a *Top G*

  • @lights473
    @lights473 2 роки тому +1

    Woah I never thought of myth 6. That's insane. This is even more reason to avoid the federal reserve centrally planning on fixing our economy because they could very well be doing more harm than good if it takes a long time to even "know" if there's inflation

  • @ikeikeforty
    @ikeikeforty 2 роки тому +2

    Any chance you can convince him to do an entire video on modern monetary theory??

    • @ChasePhifer-hj3wl
      @ChasePhifer-hj3wl 8 місяців тому

      Would like to see this. While Japan didn't employ MMT, they did QE quite a lot. And deflation was the result from all the "money printing." It's more complicated than money supply (libertarian) or corporate greed (progressives). To quote a certain person: "only sith deal in absolutes."

  • @crawkn
    @crawkn Рік тому

    There is a fundamental flaw in the assumptions here about taxation and government spending. It's true that the government _can_ and often _does_ spend money on things that consumers don't want. But that's not a given. The government could, for example, provide affordable housing, which the industry refuses to produce due to low profit margins. Consumers want this, and the private sector is not providing it. The government spends a great deal of money subsidizing many things that consumers buy and use regularly, like food, fuel, transportation and green space, and we don't have too much of those things. There are many useful things that will simply never be provided if the government doesn't provide them, and not because they aren't wanted or needed.

  • @SIEACharity
    @SIEACharity Рік тому +1

    Incomplete coverage of causes of inflation because Prof A. Davies ignored the contribution of banks to increase money supply of cheap money over the last ten years. Otherwise it is very good video. Written by Dr. Issam Ghannam of SIEA

  • @TheLocoUnion
    @TheLocoUnion 3 місяці тому

    Thanks!

  • @spec24
    @spec24 2 роки тому +1

    That's the new definition. As Friedman states, inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon. Inflation used to mean an INFLATION of the money supply. Somehow it got mixed up with a rise in prices.
    All things being equal, you can't have a rise in the average price of goods and services. The money being spent on the increase cost of some goods means there's less money to spend on the cost of goods elsewhere. This means that some goods will have to drop in price (or never be produced).

    • @DrAnac-qh5dc
      @DrAnac-qh5dc 2 роки тому

      You forgot the rest of the quote from Friedman "It's always and everywhere, A RESULT OF TOO MUCH MONEY, of a more rapid increase in the quantity of money than an output. Moreover, in the modern era, the important next step is to recognize that today, governments control the quantity of money. So that as a result, INFLATION IN THE UNITED STATES IS MADE IN WASHINGTON AND NOWHERE ELSE."

    • @DrAnac-qh5dc
      @DrAnac-qh5dc 2 роки тому

      Prof Davies says that the inflation is caused by the expanded money supply at least 3-4 times in this video.

    • @AntonyDavies
      @AntonyDavies 2 роки тому

      The new definition has been around since circa 1950. There's no confusion here. When economists want to talk about growth in the money supply, we say, "growth in the money supply." When we want to talk about a rise in the average price level, we say "inflation."

  • @andymilic4093
    @andymilic4093 2 роки тому +1

    Reality- artificially low interest % rates must rise to knock down inflation % ,we need to see a solid 7-9% interest rate for several years to make things right

  • @johnd.5601
    @johnd.5601 Рік тому +1

    The Fed gives us the definition of inflation and what is causing it. Then traders and investors suffer the consequences of not understand. The lag problem is the difficult part of trading because it feels like you're trading a fake market. Really love you video thank you for sharing.

  • @crawkn
    @crawkn Рік тому

    The primary reason raising the minimum wage is not inflationary is that giving people living in poverty adequate income to afford the basic necessities and rudimentary comforts of life, which they previously weren't buying, adds to aggregate demand. So aggregate supply must increase to supply those goods and services, growing the economy. We need to lose the false construct that giving to one necessarily means taking from another. If we are doing everything right, the pie is continually growing.

  • @nmmeswey3584
    @nmmeswey3584 2 роки тому +1

    Myth 10.0.1
    - "There are only 10 myths about inflation"

  • @Nikwunu
    @Nikwunu Рік тому +1

    inflation can also be caused by shortage of goods while the quantity of currency remains the same.

  • @qhack
    @qhack 2 роки тому +1

    I do have to disagree on one point. Saying that the cost of fuel is not inflation but a single good or service, while true in one aspect, is completely misleading. Literally every good and service is tied to fossil fuels is some aspect. Even if just passively. Having a policy that causes the rise in the price of fuel will cause inflation. I doubt you could name any other commodity that has this effect, so it's easy to claim otherwise.

  • @DetectiveStablerSVU
    @DetectiveStablerSVU Рік тому

    That last one is a fantastic tidbit

  • @johnd.5601
    @johnd.5601 Рік тому

    For myth 10 , I have a question. Is inflation in part an acceleration of money?
    One of the issues I have is 0DTE options and vix1d. The thing is when I think about basil 3 and when 0DTE options started trading, it matches up perfectly with inflation. I'm using the vix1d as a proxy to the 0DTE options. If options are offering leverage = to 100 shares couldn't that accelerate money. Every day those options are moving large quantities of borrowed money. Couldn't those 0DTE options cause the acceleration of money?

  • @stevedavenport1202
    @stevedavenport1202 Рік тому

    If the president is not responsible for inflation, then I need to remove all of those Joe Biden stickers I have been putting on gas pumps....🤣

  • @edwardmclaughlin7935
    @edwardmclaughlin7935 Місяць тому

    Brilliant.

  • @sesh7357
    @sesh7357 Рік тому

    This prof is amazing. Didn't have any teacher like him when I was studying macro economics in college

    • @Lord_Volkner
      @Lord_Volkner Рік тому

      ... except that he lied to you in his very first sentence. Inflation is NOT "a rise in the average price level." They tell this lie so that idiots will believe that inflation is caused by greedy evil capitalist businesses raising prices rather than the government printing more money.
      A rise in the average price level is a consequence of inflation, but NOT inflation.
      Inflation is one thing, and one thing only ---> an increase in the supply of money (a.k.a. printing more money.)

  • @scasey1960
    @scasey1960 Рік тому +1

    How is this just not raising prices to recoup losses during the pandemic?

  • @jonahansen
    @jonahansen Рік тому

    Thanks for this video. It's the only one with a theoretical foundation, and that explains how it works.

  • @sitarama2410
    @sitarama2410 2 роки тому

    hello, can someone clarify, hypothetically, under a gold standard, if we've mined all the gold, then new cash cannot come into existence, in such a case, we change it to another mineral? what happens?

  • @miguelp
    @miguelp Рік тому

    Good choice of music… and content 😊

  • @fps6612
    @fps6612 2 роки тому +1

    Excelente my brother!! 👍👌

  • @kylewatson5133
    @kylewatson5133 2 роки тому +2

    Increasing the money supply puts you in a higher tax bracket.

  • @benruby5269
    @benruby5269 2 роки тому +2

    I thought the CPI was done differently before the 70s 80s inflation period.

  • @paulastrawser3363
    @paulastrawser3363 Рік тому +1

    Isn't inflation measured differently than it was in the 70"s? Wouldn't inflation be higher than what we are seeing if we measured it the same as the 70's?

  • @scottmcshannon6821
    @scottmcshannon6821 2 роки тому +2

    ive always thought that the stock market has no connection with reality, covid was the latest sign but there have been many other signs that the stock market and the economy are not in the same reality.

    • @homewall744
      @homewall744 2 роки тому

      Stock markets reflect interest in equities in businesses. The "economy" certainly includes that, but it's mostly about real products and services people want to trade. The video has a good explanation of how the newly created dollars (4 years worth at once) didn't inflate goods/service because the pandemic killed those off by force, and so they were directed towards equities.

  • @crawkn
    @crawkn Рік тому

    The problem with saying Russia is _only_ responsible for a rise in energy prices ignores the fact that fossil fuels are the primary input for almost all commerce. Imagine the state of any economy which must pay more for transportation of goods and labor, power for production, fertilizer for crops, etc. The effect of restricting energy supplies is across-the-board inflationary pressure. When the price of enough individual products rises, it causes a rise in average prices as well, that's just basic math.

  • @harleyb.birdwhisperer
    @harleyb.birdwhisperer Рік тому

    Just as the increase of the price of a single good (oil)is not inflation, the decrease of the price of a single good (electronics) is not deflation. Another problem is that GDP is not steady when you’re taking hits from hurricanes and wildfires. Not sure how cleaning out Armories and sending the stuff to Ukraine is accounted for, either. If Biden pledges a billion, is that for depreciated book values, or new list? Great content and wonderful delivery. Thanks.

  • @timothysmith4343
    @timothysmith4343 Рік тому

    Would it be better to grow the money supply at the rate of gdp or at the productivity increase rate? Simply sending or outsourcing functions offshore does not increase productivity though it likely decreases company costs. How should that be handled in considering monetary policy?

  • @adcaptandumvulgus4252
    @adcaptandumvulgus4252 Рік тому +1

    Yeah it's also important because gold can be actually used for something useful and industry whereas Fiat currency I guess you could make wallpaper out of it that's something useful...

  • @neerajwa
    @neerajwa 2 роки тому

    My eight year old computer is combating inflation better than the economists. It prevents me from buying another one.

  • @tugginalong
    @tugginalong Рік тому

    Pricing of household goods are increasing at phenomenal rates. It’s weekly.
    Eggs went from .49 a dozen to 3.29 at Aldi’s
    Wages aren’t moving fast enough either.
    I know that I’m my life, the economy experienced significant struggles during the Carter, Obama, and Biden administrations.

  • @kichigaisensei
    @kichigaisensei Рік тому

    Increasing the minimum wage doesn't just increase the cost of goods and services produced by minimum wage workers. It also increases the prices of everything minimum wage workers buy. No more good and services are produced, but now more people have the money to pay for them. This applies to rents, food, gym shoes, everything. Either that, or it causes unemployment among unskilled workers when employers decide that the cost of the wage is too high compared to the value of the work. Gold does have intrinsic value. It has a multitude of uses beyond simply being a currency. The paper dollars are printed on (or the digital bits in a computer) have no use at all beyond as a medium of exchange. Gold has never been worth zero. Many fiat currencies have been worth zero. The US dollar has lost 95% of it's value since the gold standard was jettisoned.

  • @kylewatson5133
    @kylewatson5133 2 роки тому +1

    "Gold doesn't have intrinsic value any more than paper dollars have intrinsic value" -Davies
    "Can you wear your paper dollars or craft your paper dollars into fine jewelry? Can you use your paper dollars inside electronics that are then used to send people to space? -Peter Schiff

    • @burkean
      @burkean 2 роки тому +3

      Yes, I think Davies was wrong to say that gold has NO intrinsic value. OTOH, it is probably true that gold's intrinsic value is not equal to its market value.

  • @rafaelgomes3054
    @rafaelgomes3054 Рік тому

    Big fan here. BUT, when we talking about WHAT is inflation, I think it is deceptive to explain inflation by HOW we measure it.
    Inflation is the printing of money by the government which devalues the money, making prices go up. (This is the Austrian perspective, which is the only one who makes sense).
    But if tomorrow everyone doubled their wants, demand would double and so prices would double. Is this inflation? No. This is just the normal response of the market.
    Now, this is unlikely to actually happen, but it doesn't change the fact that it is not what we're talking about here.
    When government prints money, you're more likely to see price changes across the board, which makes sense, cause now you have more money chasing the "same" amount of goods.
    That's why we MEASURE inflation as the general rise in prices, but that is not what inflation IS!

  • @petersamantharadisich6095
    @petersamantharadisich6095 Рік тому

    I hear you say that "money doesn't matter"....so....why do all governments insist that only they can issue their national currency, and the citizens of that country cannot? "money" sounds like something that matters to me....

  • @danielreardon6453
    @danielreardon6453 2 роки тому +1

    What a Legend

  • @BubbaShaffer
    @BubbaShaffer 2 роки тому +3

    Why even grow the money supply at all. Become an Austrian economist and all the answers are easy. Sound money is the best way. Because of the FED policies we have war. Because if the government had to collect taxes to fund the warfare state there would not be a warfare or welfare state. This professor is about half correct. Enjoyed it just the same.

    • @homewall744
      @homewall744 2 роки тому

      If you don't grow the money supply to match the growth in wealth, you'd end up with deflation, which is nasty like inflation. People are more likely to hold off buying now if they believe it will take fewer dollars if they wait. Inflation is mistakenly thought to be good because it causes you to buy now as your dollar in your pocket will be worth less in the future. Both cause people to err in normal free trade because they are playing variations in the value of the currency.

    • @aminuabdulmanaf4434
      @aminuabdulmanaf4434 2 роки тому +2

      @@homewall744 there's a difference between sudden credit deflation and gradual price deflation over a long period, isn't there? As an example computer storage is getting cheaper and cheaper yet no one waits till the next 10 years for a "better" deal.

    • @BubbaShaffer
      @BubbaShaffer 2 роки тому

      @@homewall744 This topic was troubling for me many years back also. But after much studying the Austrian school of Econ I have found that sound money with no inflation of the money supply is best. I suggest that you may want to read Mises or Rothbard on these subjects. Deflation is not bad at all, basically your current dollars will purchase more. If you had a fixed money supply and a person or institution would "hoard" their money then all capital and consumer goods would become cheaper meaning you could buy/invest more with the same amount of money you already have. This is why gold is a great 'money" (money meaning the medium of exchange) because there is a almost finite supply, true you can mine more but that would cost you capital. this is why the concept of Bitcoin is great because the supply is limited to 21 million. Inflating the money supply is like debasing or clipping coins in the old days. The inflation which is a tax is collected by the reduction in purchasing power of the cash you currently hold. It is also how politicians fund what ever it is that they desire i.e. war, welfare, social programs, medical industrial complex, etc. Please take the time to read a few of the scholars I mentioned and what helped me is to read a bit on econ history. thank you for replying to my comment. Bubba Shaffer

  • @eugenioochoa6872
    @eugenioochoa6872 Рік тому

    Interesting topic and I enjoy this video. I would like to challenge you on something with regards to wealth and things getting financially better for most. In the seventies when I grew up one of my parents worked and we enjoyed many of the comforts that most provide today but with two parents working who are both heavily leveraged.