• hexi [they/them]@hexbear.net
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    1 year ago

    The intrinsic value of fiat currency is 0.

    That’s the entire reason reason it’s value is dependent on the amount in circulation. If it has no intrinsic value, then it’s value is dependent upon it rarity and acceptedness.

    Double, halve, quadruple 0 all you want makes no difference.

    It makes all the difference. If it’s only value is in how rare it is to get, then more of it means each dollar is easier to find and it takes actual wealth to get money.

    It’s function and value is as a medium of exchange.

    Yes, which means if suddenly there’s more of it going around, and it has no instrinsic value to act as a “floor” to it’s value, then it will drop in how much you can exchange it for.

    Imagine a copper based currency. If supplies of copper increase, the intrinsic value of copper falls, so the total value of the currency falls. The extrinsic value is not affected.

    That’s not what intrinsic value is. Intrinsic value is the value it has regardless of the rarity or market price. Copper can be used for electronics and other applications, even it is abundant.

    If I buy a widget for $1 and my labor is $2, I can be paid in 2 widgets. The money supply doesn’t change that my labor is 2 widgets. If prices are increased on widgets by a capitalist, then I would expect an increase in my labor price (in dollars), regardless of the money supply, because money has no intrinsic value.

    The fact that is has no intrinsic value is what allows it to drop in price.

    If prices don’t adjust, there will be shortages because more money ey is being spent buying widgets, or other things that take up the same inputs to make widgets (land/labor/raw materials).

    I’ll state again that this difference (capitalists choosing to raise prices vs blaming external factors like “money supply”) is not just pedantic. Capital mentions it few times, the fetishization of money and capital accumulation/hoarding cause this belief that money has a function outside of exchange.

    Except I’m saying it has no intrinsic value and that’s what allows it to lose value.

    You’re acting like there’s some force that would prevent that, despite more money circulating making the money less rare.

    Money is a credit in the economy that allows the holder to demand resources from the economy. If you double the claims to resources, without increasing the resources, you either get shortages or price increases.

    Intrinsic value refers to the inherent worth of something, usually based on its fundamental qualities or attributes. Copper has intrinsic value because it possesses useful properties for various industrial applications, such as electrical conductivity, heat resistance, and corrosion resistance. This value is not dependent on any external factors or perceptions. On the other hand, paper money is not valuable on its own. Its worth is derived from societal consensus and its function as a medium of exchange, making it reliant on people’s faith and confidence in its purchasing power.