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Peace K 🪙26d ago
That is a very strong statement. What you are saying is that the demand for gold did not change. But how can you determine that? Economists use the price system. But if you look at the dollar price you see that the price went up. The conclusion should be that the demand for gold (golds value) went up. Or maybe the dollar went down? To determine if gold retained it's value you need to o compare it to other products. For a certain basket of goods that cost X grams of gold Y years ago, how much gold do I need now to buy the same basket. The problem is that after a long enough years you can't compare the baskets. In the 70s TV was black and white. In the 1920 transportation was by horse and buggy. My point is that it's not as simple as you put it.
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Jerome Powell 21iQ 40TPW26d ago
It is that simple with gold, which is actually less scarce (more above ground supply) every year by roughly a couple percent. The dollar denominator is being continually debased. Your home is a depreciating asset. The fact that it's worth more fiat currency just means it's depreciating slower than the dollar is being debased.
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Jerome Powell 21iQ 40TPW26d ago
If you want to see some charts of various commodities, etc. priced in gold check the charts on the left column. https://pricedingold.com/
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