- Undead Money - CRASH_GURU, 29.09.2004, 12:28
- Re: Undead Money - Auch das wird dottore in seinen Debitimus hineinerklären - JoBar, 29.09.2004, 13:02
- Zombie Money - @dottore: Übersehen oder..? - JoBar, 01.10.2004, 20:17
- Zombie Money: Nur scheinbar"unbacked" - Ecki1, 02.10.2004, 15:24
- Re: Nur scheinbar"unbacked" -- Na ich weiß nicht.. Wo ist denn die Macht die - JoBar, 03.10.2004, 18:55
- Re: Ja eben, dort liegt ja das spekulative Element: - Ecki1, 03.10.2004, 21:31
- Re: Aber genau das blendet doch dottore immer aus!! - JoBar, 03.10.2004, 21:38
- Re: Er spricht immer nur von tatsächlicher Macht, nie von Eventualmacht: - Ecki1, 04.10.2004, 02:07
- Re: Aber genau das blendet doch dottore immer aus!! - JoBar, 03.10.2004, 21:38
- Re: Ja eben, dort liegt ja das spekulative Element: - Ecki1, 03.10.2004, 21:31
- Re: Nur scheinbar"unbacked" -- Na ich weiß nicht.. Wo ist denn die Macht die - JoBar, 03.10.2004, 18:55
- Zombie Money: Nur scheinbar"unbacked" - Ecki1, 02.10.2004, 15:24
- Zombie Money - @dottore: Übersehen oder..? - JoBar, 01.10.2004, 20:17
- Re: Undead Money - Auch das wird dottore in seinen Debitimus hineinerklären - JoBar, 29.09.2004, 13:02
Zombie Money - @dottore: Übersehen oder..?
-->>...
>>After the first Gulf War, Iraq changed its currency from the so-called Swiss Dinar to the more recent Saddam Dinar. When a government changes its fiat currency, it announces a transition period during which the old bills can be brought in and exchanged for the new. After the window closes, the old notes are declared worthless.
>>To no one's surprise, the rebel Kurds did not visit the Iraqi government to make such an exchange. They just kept using the old money. It was familiar, hard to counterfeit, and in its post-fiat status, it was no longer inflationary: that is to say, the relatively fixed supply of notes made the currency a better store of value than the new Saddam dinars being printed (and printed and printed) further south.
>>The Swiss Dinar may have been the first successful post-fiat money.
>>For a brief period after the [US] invasion - the time it took the Occupation Authority to reestablish an Iraqi central bank and start printing new dinars - the old Saddam dinars joined the older Swiss dinars in their post-fiat status. And lo and behold, Saddam's dead dinars rose in value compared to the inflationary dollars of the occupation force.
>>But how can this be? A money backed only by the force of the State is backed by literally nothing in the absence of that state. And yet the dinars continued to change hands.
>>By the end of the year, however, the occupation government was printing new dinars, at first with Saddam still on them (for familiarity), then transitioning into something that resembled the Swiss Dinar (to promote confidence). The brief, unplanned experiment in post-fiat monetary theory was over, but the results were unambiguous: a stable money, even a completely unbacked currency, beats out inflationary government paper in both value and marketability.
>...
>Wetten, dass? [img][/img]
>J

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