The Federal Reserve - silently robbing you of your purchasing power ever since 1913...
RETWEET if you agree. 
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The Federal Reserve - silently robbing you of your purchasing power ever since 1913...
RETWEET if you agree. 
pic.twitter.com/DoXw2fmKGt
Idiotic ideological nonsense. There's no such thing as unsecured credit with no credit risk.
it is possible a government would fail to repay tokens it can produce at will, but not very likely, which is why sovereign debt in own-currency is general described as credit-risk-free. whether the tokens will have value is a different question, but it is quite rate (though not
quite RARE (though not entirely unheard of) for governments to default on formal debt obligations if their own scrip.
Inflation is a credit risk, and plenty (probably most) have defaulted in that manner. Using the single most powerful country in the world provides a very skewed statistic.
now we are just arguing over definitions. by my (conventional) definition (i wrote the slide to which you object), inflation is NOT credit risk, it is valuation risk. if you want to include valuation risk in your definition of credit risk, ok, but you are not disputing the claim.
You are at this point just confusing your readers with bad propaganda by claiming that a phenomenon roughly under the control of the debtor that can arbitrarily reduce the value of the debt is not a credit risk.
no, i’m not. you attended the talk in which that slide was given, you know that valuation risk was not ignored, but was much discussed in that talk. the slide to which you now object addresses a particular historical claim, tgat the USD has been a poor value store. It has not,
when held in any interest-beating form, without any requirement of holders to assume meaningful credit risk (in the sense of nonrepayment). holders absolutely did, ex ante, assume valuation risk. but that has worked out well for USD holders thus far. if you want to claim that is
If you can't see how using the most powerful country in the world as the single example extremely biased, and how this artificial distinction between "credit risk" and "valuation risk" misleads readers, you are simply spewing propaganda and meaningful conversation is impossible.
i agree that it’s biased! it’s not a general claim about fiat, many of which have failed to hold value! but the claim it is addressing is that USD itself has failed to hold value. looking at the history of USD is not “biased” to address that claim.
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