Dr. Hess wrote:
So, add up the inflation in the past 10 years, come up with an average rate, say, 10% just to ball park it, and, using the Rule of 77, your money doubles (or halves) in 7.7 years at 10%, so, yeah, I'm sticking by my 100% inflation in the last 10 years.
One more post to reply to you- if you don't want to post your sources, that's fine- I'm pretty sure I would not want to read them anyway, and here's why.
Lets assume that your numbers are close to reality. Last time we had inflation near 10% sustained, the result was massive lines at food shelters, going around the corner, and a rather impressive depression. A huge percentage of the US would be struggling to eat, let alone have shelter or transportation. No way that one could afford luxuries like entertainment or technology- all personal income would have to go to basic survivial.
But we all know that's not the case.
instead of not enough food, the headlines tell us that obesity is a huge problem. So food isn't that hard to get.
Home sales are going up, and just a post above we think it's odd that so many people are buying much bigger homes than their parents.
The auto industry is on track to sell 15,000,000 cars this year. If we were that bad off, how is that possible?
Stadiums continue to be filled for sporting events. Even with higher ticket prices. That tells me that a lot of people have a lot of expendable income.
People travel a lot- there was a thread here complaining about overcrowding on airplanes. Which is a combination of work + pleasure- both of which indicate some good money going around. Every cruise we go on is more filled than the last, and the cruise industry is ADDING capacity, not taking it out.
Lots of technology is being sold- to have threads complaing about Windows8 and iTunes tells me that a lot of computers are being sold as well as iThings and the Adroid things since people like to have both sides.
And for our family- both of us have had nominal raises, sort of (the wife hasn't gotten a raise for a few years). And somehow we travel a LOT more than we have, plan on getting a new car this month, eat prepared food (not cooking it), buy craft beer (more expensive than bud), etc etc. All of that and we have increased the amount of money we save for retirement. None of that would be possible if 10% inflation was real.
So observing reality, it's incredibly tough to belive that the "real" inflation was 10%. 3% seems much more realistic.
How that relates to the gold standard? Gold is only worth what someone will pay for a pretty metal that has some limited industrial usage. That does not appear to be a decent way to determine value of other stuff, especially since people find more of it every day. And, like diamonds, good industry can corner the market of finding it, thus manipulating it's value. We don't need the value of our dollar being linked to a company slimiar to Debeers.
If you want to be pessimistic,and upset about reality- fine by me. But I don't see any real evidence that I should follow suit.