I've given the examples repeatedly. See the post above this one for several examples of currency existing without debt.
The example you used of cashing in a gold certificates would be exchanging the certificates for notes that are already borrowed into existence and thus created from debt....your other example of borrowing fractionally created funds, starting a business then turning a profit and repaying the interest is neglecting the fact that interest was paid back with others notes they also earned, which were also borrowed with interest. Like I said, if I shuffle notes from this account to that account, no debt is incurred....if I send credits to your PayPal I have incurred no debt, I am not arguing that. The credits I use to send to your PayPal were created from debt, but not by me or you.
tokprep said:
I have no idea where you got that implication. A private bank would be a public figure as much as the Federal Reserve, its chairman, or any of the reserve bank presidents would be. If I get paid in notes
You are obviously reading this
http://www.federalreserve.gov/faqs/about_14986.htm
The fed is supposedly a compromise between public and private interests...for the greater good of all......the people running it are appointed not elected you can say we elected them that appointed, but literally half of us didn't, considering half of us don't pay taxes it's not hard to figure out which half voted which way.....
in fact the very purpose of the Fed is to balance private interests of banks and centralized responsibility of government....you are simply implying this balance is in perfect harmony and without error
tokeprep said:
We've been through this before. You cannot assume that increased production automatically should lead to relatively lower prices. In 1913, how much of the American population was still involved in agriculture? 30%? Now it's 3%, and we have three times as many people. You're right that food production has gotten more efficient, but 9 out of 10 farmers got out of the business.
For example, assume that an average farmer produced 100 pounds of food in 1913. If there are 100 people, 30 farmers x 100 pounds = 3,000 pounds of food. There's 30 pounds per person. Now, 100 years later, assume we have 300 people but only 9 farmers, with each farmer producing 1,000 pounds, ten times as much as in 1913. 9 farmers x 1,000 pounds = 9,000 pounds of good. 9,000 pounds / 300 people = 30 pounds per person. Even though food production is 10 times as efficient, the smaller number of farmers produces the same amount of food per person.
If you can mathematically show me that real purchasing power has been reduced, I will happily listen. But you cannot.
It's not an assumption that increased production at a cheaper rate lowers prices in the presence of competition...it is law. In a free market this happens very quickly resulting in ridiculously low prices while maintaining income, wages and buying power.......even in a central planning environment that is anything but free it happens........I can only compete by offering similar quality at lower prices or better quality for the same price...
I wonder how many people lost their jobs due to the invention of the combine harvester......but you cannot deny it made prices cheaper on the retail level for that which was harvested.......this fact is simply left out of your calculations and rationalized as the Fed doing its job when it is the Market that is doing the work.
Your math leaves out crucial details like agriculture being waaaay more than 10 times more productive than it was.....have you any clue that food prices are subsidized to keep prices high so that the farmers wages don't decrease? Have you any clue of why Sugar is not imported into this country??? These factors simply cannot be ignored because they don't fit your simplistic scenario of how you think people lived back then because they are heavy factors.
The data you give for 1913 vs now is a guess at best.....the 1955 example of hourly wage vs hourly wage today at least can be measured with certainty.
tokeprep said:
Depending on when you measure. Bank deposits paying nothing is a new phenomenon unique to the past few years. But that information is readily available and should be reflected in the decisions people make.
Yes depending on when you measure and what you measure against. Indeed if I measure a length of board to cut, I have measured a tape measure vs a length of board.....