Lets say the world monetary system came crashing down....................................

Do you envision people ever using a silver dime or a 20.00 gold piece as a means of barter should paper money become worthless? Would people crack out their MS 63 PCGS common date Saints and chip off a piece to buy a loaf of bread?
, Are people who hoard precious metals to survive doomesday simply barking up the wrong tree?-----------------------BigE

I'm glad I am a Tree
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My humble opinion...folks who are hoarding precious metals better have a good exit strategy. Eventually the economy is gonna come back...eventually the stock market will be in sustainable upward move...and the gold bugs and metal hoarders are gonna watch profits(or initial investments if bought recently) get chipped away...
I suppose if you gave me enough gold or silver to make a pot, it would be worth something.
2 Cam-Slams!
1 Russ POTD!
You pose an interesting question. I've got to think that gold, silver and platinum are going to be important, but so are guns, ammo, medical supplies, food and water. Depends how bad it gets. In the meantime, hang on to your buillion, and keep your powder dry.
My father-in-law was an extremely wealthy man in pre-War Germany. He saw it all collapse in a short period of time and was forced to trade family jewelry to farmers for food to feed his family. Along with gold and silver coins....jewelry made from precious metals and gems was an accepted means of exchange.
After escaping East Germany with his family and re-establishing his business internationally, he always kept a healthy supply of gold bullion in the safe deposit box so that he could always feed his family if his society experienced financial collapse again.
We've been very blessed to have avoided financial collapse for as many decades as we have. Let's all continue to hope and pray that it never does happen. But if it does.....it would be nice to have some preparation.
<< <i>
After escaping East Germany with his family and re-establishing his business internationally, he always kept a healthy supply of gold bullion in the safe deposit box so that he could always feed his family if his society experienced financial collapse again. >>
I always get a chuckle when gold and silver are touted as a hedge against the effects of a total economic collapse. The real point is that while paper money became virtually worthless, your father in law's gold and silver plummeted in value too - just not as much. What rose in value was that farmer's food. If one believes in the eventual collapse of the monetary system and wants to invest in commodities to protect themselves, screw the stupid gold and silver, ya can't eat metal. Buy pork bellies, wheat, corn, or anything else edible - that's what logic dictates would rise in price under those circumstances.
It's probably inevitable in the long run, but very unlikely in our lifetime. Sure, sock some metal away as insurance, but don't get too carried away.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
You are correct about the relative value of food soaring.....relative to all other assets both paper and hard. However, with precious metals one will be able to buy land, a tractor, temporary food, diesel and seed.
However, there are financial crises where the value of land and food plummet. A good example is the Great Depression. Land prices and food prices plummetted. In fact, there was an oversupply of fresh food during the Great Depression and many farmers destroyed tons of crops in order to try to force prices higher. However, silver and other precious metals retained their value. While we might experience total financial collapse, we are more likely to experience a partial financial collapse similar to the Great Depression.
In a partial collapse, precious metals will retain a huge portion of their value. In a total collapse, precious metals will allow you to purchase the assets necessary to achieve survival.
Therefore IMHO, precious metals represent a solid compromise for the vast majority of urban Americans to hedge against a likely partial financial collapse and a remotely possible total financial collapse.
Good strategy if you think collapse is around the corner. Long term, I don't think I want to stash any pork bellies in my mattress.
(On that last point, my dog, Aki, might disagree.)
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
In Laurel
MD
Just a fist full of Dollars
Revelation 6:6
What do you believe in? Act on your own beliefs. Personally I hope to be long gone by the time it gets here. Let someone else try to eat of loaf of bread while millions starve. I would choke on it.
--------
Howdy from Houston...
Can't keep my eyes
from the circling skies
Tongue tied and twisted
Just an earthbound misfit,
I
">my registry set
<< <i>What rose in value was that farmer's food >>
Like Redfield hoarding food in his basement along with all his silver....
Might not be a bad idea to have some silver and gold.
What that we are supposed to store according to the survivalists? Gold, Guns, Groceries?
Got quoins?
Coulport - Who are "they"?
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
<< <i>Buy pork bellies, wheat, corn, or anything else edible - that's what logic dictates would rise in price under those circumstances.
Good strategy if you think collapse is around the corner. Long term, I don't think I want to stash any pork bellies in my mattress.
(On that last point, my dog, Aki, might disagree.)
ROTFLMAO
BTW, those commodities that were reccommended are pieces of paper also - giving someone the right to take delivery of what ever the piece of paper says - In the type of economic crises contemplated, those pieces of paper might be just as worthless as your paper money. In those circumstances, what we think is valuble may pale in comparison to what is necessary for survival.
“It ain't what you don't know that gets you into trouble. It's what you know for sure that just ain't so.” Mark Twain
Newmismatist
Probably the most valuable thing would be guns 'n ammo to protect your other valuables - blankets, water, shelter, and food.
<< <i>Do you envision people ever using a silver dime or a 20.00 gold piece as a means of barter should paper money become worthless? >>
I remember in the movie "Young Guns" someone made some 12 gauge shotgun shells filled with silver dimes instead of buckshot.
Put that lead to work in a good handgun and food is there for
the taking.
Camelot
Forum AdministratorPSA & PSA/DNA ForumModerator@collectors.com | p 800.325.1121 | PSAcard.com
Guns, dry groceries, and other basic consumables will be needed.
Having silver and gold coins won't hurt ya. If they become worthless only your six shooter is gonna work. Gold stocks went up a factor of 6 during the last depression. Gold did ok too holding its own. Real estate plummeted too.
roadrunner
comes from factories and most people specialize to such a degree that they don't have the
skills to function in an economy which no longer provides the basic necessities. There are far too
many people to live off the land today in any case.
Any way you look at this there would be no value to precious metals and great upheaval.
Fortunately such a scenario is highly unlikely, and more importantly, becoming less likely with time.
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That is actually happening now, in today's world.
PM could also be used to pay taxes on land.
Was curious if anyone has any input - what would this situation with economy do to government bonds?
monsterman
out of rockets ...out of bullets...switching to harsh language
I personally think a balanced approach of storing some water, canned tuna and vegetables, a couple of silver coin bags and a few gold coins, some bullets and a rifle with a mortgage (or better yet no moprtage) that is prepaid a few months might give you the best chance of riding out a crisis.
No one approach works best since we never know what kind of financial crisis we will ever face.
In August 1971, when Richard Nixon took the US off the international gold standard, I was in Cape Breton Nova Scotia, Canada on a bike (non motorized kind). Our US dollars were suddenly worthless. Canadian banks refused to exchange them into Canadian $. We ran out of Canadian in 2 days. We were literally BEGGING for American tourists to exchange a dollar here and a dollar there from US to Canadian so we could literally eat.
I remember having to scrounge literally for food. It was the most frightening experience I ever went through. It lasted one week before things calmed down. I never forgot.
I was entering College the end of August 1971 and ended up taking 27 hours of economics, and an additional 60 hours of other business courses searching for the answer why. It has shaped me since.
Let me tell you this. Monetary systems only work as long as citizens have faith in their governments promise to pay. When all they do is to promise top pay with more promises to pay as the US has been trying to convince us for the last 30 plus years then we all begin to wake up and smell a rat.
Quite frankly, our country's glory days are nearly over. It is rare for any county to reign economically for more than 100 years. Our time is nearly up. We will soon fall back to the rest of the pack.
Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry
Secondly what good is a greenhouse if it can't be defended with a gun meaning it can be gunned down. Better to have an underground fallout shelter equipped with generators and an underground greenhouse powered by the earth's core lava supply.
<< <i>A panic today would be far different than anything which has occured in the past. Food today
comes from factories and most people specialize to such a degree that they don't have the
skills to function in an economy which no longer provides the basic necessities. There are far too
many people to live off the land today in any case.
Any way you look at this there would be no value to precious metals and great upheaval.
Fortunately such a scenario is highly unlikely, and more importantly, becoming less likely with time. >>
I think the chances are actually becoming more likely.
We are not just a petroleum-based economy. We are a petroleum-based CIVILIZATION.
No Petroleum = No Civilization
It is absolutely critical that the Earth's human population stop growing. If we don't manage it ourselves, Mother Nature will do it for us - and when she gets involved, things can get very messy.
Of course, this is a difficult problem. Everyone is always striving for "economic growth". And what is "economic growth" ultimately ? I define it as the ability of the Earth to sustain more people. Our Economic growth engine is primarily a mechanism for rewarding those who find ways for the planet to support more people.
But to answer the original question -
Barring a nuclear detonation on Wall Street (literally), any economic "collapse" would play itself out over a span of months, not hours or days. The trigger for any such collapse, should one occur, would have to be due to a currency crisis where people loose complete faith in the currency. Americans are unaccostomed to this type of situation because it has never happened here. Many foreigners, on the other hand, have experienced one. And they are much more willing to accept gold or silver than Americans would. In fact, in many parts of the world, gold and silver are still the MOST preferred currency.
Should an economic meltdown occur, demand for precious metals would increase rapidly as all of the holders of US dollars across the globe would be trying to cash them in for something of permanent value.
In essence, that is what was happening during the Great Depression. Foreigners were cashing in their dollars for gold. US gold reservers dropped at an alarming rate until Roosevelt "confiscated" gold in 1933. The confiscation was necessary because the US governemnt owed gold that it didn't have. The price of gold actually went UP during the Great Depression.
If things got really bad, then a loaf of bread would be the most valuable thing around. I could see the world end up in sort of a "Soylent Green" worst-case scenario. But I don't believe it would ever come to anything like that.
The worst scenario that I think could actually unfold is a bout of "hyper-stagflation", where everyone earns less, and the price (in paper dollars) of day-to-day essential items goes through the roof. But precious metals would maintain their purchasing power in this situation. Basically, a lower standard of living across the board brought on by the depletion of cheap energy (petroleum).
The US dollar is "managed" by central banks in a prolonged (but controlled) slide. Eventually the global economy rebalances (the US trade deficit delines substantially, and jobs stop leaving the country).
Alternative energy sources (such as workable "cold fusion") emerge to take up the gap left by dwindlng petroleum supplies. Human population stabilizes at current levels.
In this scenario, precious metals also perform well, especially those used in alternative energy technologies (silver, platinum, and palladium).