
“Once upon a time, most paper currency in the world was backed by gold and directly exchangeable for it. On August 15, 1971, US President Richard Nixon ended the Bretton Woods System (Ghizoni, 1971), in what is now known as ‘The Nixon Shock’, allowing all currencies to float freely, with only the backing of the faith and credit of their issuing sovereign state. This type of currency is known as ‘fiat currency’, i.e., currency that is given value by government decree (Keynes, et al., 1978). This report will not discuss the relative merits and drawbacks of gold-backed currency and fiat-money, only the triple-bottom-line impacts of each.”
http://www.coindesk.com/microscope-real-costs-dollar/
Related posts:
Overstock’s Radical Plan to Reinvent the Stock Market With Bitcoin
Brookings Institution on Colorado Pot Legalization: 'Resounding Success'
Oakland’s creepy new surveillance program
Overstock.com CEO: Steve Cohen Responsible For Corruption That Cost Hundreds Of Thousands Of Jobs
Fund Manager Jeremy Grantham Blasts the Fed
Amazon Launches Its Own Virtual Currency Called Coins
Freedom Train Rolls? Legitimate 'Color' Revolution in Brazil
7 surveillance reforms Obama supported before he became president
Scientist calls for caffeine to be a regulated substance
Food Freedom vs. Regulatory Busybodies
Is Actor Johnny Revilla Stateless?
Bitcoin Foundation Jon Matonis Interview
Glenn Greenwald: U.S. oligarchs focused on military and surveillance state to put down unrest
Google: Gmail users ‘have no legitimate expectation of privacy’
Florida pot grower busted for manufacturing ‘high-end assault rifles’