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Strategies & Market Trends : Heinz Blasnik- Views You Can Use

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To: yard_man who wrote (2409)6/11/2003 7:09:57 PM
From: GraceZ  Read Replies (1) of 4905
 
>>Money is just a medium of exchange. If the number and value of exchanges goes up the money supply has to grow in order to provide enough "medium of exchange" to transact.<<

Simply untrue. Beyond being conveniently divisible -- there is no "right amount" of money.

The right amount is the amount that clears the money cost market.

What is important is that the supply be stable without reference to the amount of activity taking place.

Yes. The Friedman Rule. Not the Von Mises extrapolation.

Growth in the formation of real capital (resources that can be reinvested in new or additional production) by no means requires the expansion of the money supply

Growth in capital needs no money representation. Humans can add expansion to capacity without ever going to a bank or spending money. It's called sweat capital. It's merely convenient to go to a bank, not necessary. A strong argument exists that all value is only human sweat capital. No money need be involved, so trivially, no addition to money supply would be needed.

-- one could almost say the reverse -- to the extent that new currency is exchanged for something, but acquired for nothing.

Why do you assume that currency representation of value must be unfair?

More revisionist BS!!

What is being revised?

What is needed for a healthy economy is capital accumulation in concert with the preference of consumers being freely expressed in the marketplace.

Why assume that isn't occurring? What is the evidence that that isn't occurring?

Increasing capital formation and increasing productivity => naturally falling prices. Such naturally falling prices don't impede economic growth

Following that logic eventually everything would be worthless including gold. At worthless there is no incentive for capital formation or productivity. Stagnation sets in = impedes economic growth. QED.

The examples you would cite are all precipitous declines brought about by the inflationary policies beforehand.

Take an example and show how your conclusion follows.

H*ll!! It's going on right now ... the economic contraction we are seeing now (minus government spending) is the symptom of the easy money policy that went before. All avoidable.

Economic contraction? GDP is rising.
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