Hi @Eli1
You might want to leave the explaining to the poster. Bread was 13¢ a loaf in 1950. By 1960 it had crept up to 22¢/loaf. So, you're going to have to go back a bit further than 1970 to explain how there wasn't any inflation before an event that happened in the 70's. But thanks for your input and just know that changing the standard from hard gold to fiat has nothing to do with inflation. Inflation is a result of wage increases and costs of production. Everybody like a raise once in a while. In my 20 years with Bellsouth it was guaranteed in the workman's contract.
In 1950 SS benefits were $69/month. By 1960 that same benefit was $81.73. Explain to me again how there wasn't any inflation, which any economist will show you is a direct relation to wage and cost increases, before we made some change to our money in 1970.
God bless you,
Ted
You might want to leave the explaining to the poster. Bread was 13¢ a loaf in 1950. By 1960 it had crept up to 22¢/loaf. So, you're going to have to go back a bit further than 1970 to explain how there wasn't any inflation before an event that happened in the 70's. But thanks for your input and just know that changing the standard from hard gold to fiat has nothing to do with inflation. Inflation is a result of wage increases and costs of production. Everybody like a raise once in a while. In my 20 years with Bellsouth it was guaranteed in the workman's contract.
In 1950 SS benefits were $69/month. By 1960 that same benefit was $81.73. Explain to me again how there wasn't any inflation, which any economist will show you is a direct relation to wage and cost increases, before we made some change to our money in 1970.
God bless you,
Ted
An ounce of gold as a months wages for someone a thousand years ago, a hundred years ago or today would be considered a very fair and just wage.
Meanwhile in the US $40 for an ounce of gold in the 1970s compared with $2,500 an ounce today shows how absurd it is to use a Fiat currency as a measure of value. The US is not alone, fiat currencies are the joke of human history. Germany, Venezuela, Argentina, Mexico, etc. So no, in and of itself fiat currencies do not equate to inflation. But Fiat currency takes the locks off the currency so that those in power can rob people blind by simply printing money and that is what they will always do. No exceptions.
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