In my Kingdom , went from $3.05 middle of last week , up to finally , $3.76 yesterday. You feel my pain?
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Naturally I screwed up by not buying my own filling station when I was younger , But, how was I to know? Last I looked though, the one in Gnaw Bone , Indiana was for sale, The also sell a great deal of fish & tenderloins , famous for the tenderloins , but I dunno, never ate one . I found someone to run it, but never bothered looking at the financing...
Then, Salt Creek is not far from there , gold panning there...
I could never get it down , but a tablespoon of sugar will cure most, if you have that . Otherwise, slather yourself in bear grease, do two shots of bourban ,run outside in the cold, half naked, with only your scalping knife and tomahawk( if you do not have those , then do not do it ) and howl where you think the moon may be , beware of Bigfoot though, it will answer you back .
No matter what may occur,do not lose your Tomahawk.Never.
Thanks! I can barely count to potatoe.
That sort of sounds like a formula for compounding an interest rate. I don't think adding a yearly inflation rate to another years inflation rate by compounding it is proper math. I think the key word is add.
Another area in all of this that I have a difference of opinion is one about the thing about a mandate on holding fiat to a certain percentage. Some say it is 2% lately. I've also heard 4%. They seem to think a fiat currency can work thinking this mandate is a yearly sum. Why not monthly?
If I was trying to maintain the value of a fiat I would try and hold the mandate as a plus of minus two percent period. It would have to be held to a standard of weighing it against numerous unregulated commodities. If done correctly it should be able to stand up to competing currencies.
Sure people could try an manipulate where it was set in relation to other items it was being held to. Just the honest working of a monetary system requires many commodities to fall out of favor or rise. Every commodity needs some flexibility to react to the markets. With enough being used as a standard we could end up with a working system of fiat.
I think for simplicity I'm leaving out more of the equation by just mentioning commodities. I'm sure if we worked on it we might come up with other things to weigh against.
I can't say where Mike Mitrosky got his figures but they seem closer to what we have seen on life's road.
http://photos.imageevent.com/stokeyb...rencyvalue.jpg
If they double the money supply by counterfeiting, the dollar becomes worth half as much. You could recreate the same inflation by printing up twenty-six times the money we had at the baseline.
I sort of figure inflation is more like 8%. Here is how.
If you take the $5.00 as a base figure and double it you get $10.00. That is a 100% increase.
If you take the $10.00 as a base figure and double it you get $20.00. That is a 200% increase from the original $5.00.
If you take the $20.00 as a base figure and double it you get $40.00. That is a 300% increase.
If you take the $40.00 as a base figure and double it you get $80.00. That is a 400% increase.
And you still have a ways to go. All of that has happened in about the last 50 years.
So like I say, "I sort of figure inflation is more like 8%."
If you go to a bank website and use a calculator to see what the change is it comes out to over 500% and 10% a year. I figure what is a couple of percentage points like 2% a year; UNLESS IT'S A 2% THAT IS A FLAT-OUT LIE. (And a Lie probably figure like a compound interest rate.)
If there had been any truth to their 2%-a-year inflation the gasoline that was 17 to 25 cents would now be running at about 34 to 50 cents a gallon after fifty years.
http://www.opednews.com/articles/Hap...30131-295.html
I believe an inflation rate is added to the next year from year to year. I don't see it as something you calculate at a compound interest rate.
A 200% increase over $5 is $15. Better leave the math to erowe1.Quote:
Originally Posted by Carson