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💡 IDEAS Freely Falling Currencies

The freely floating currency system may have its advantages and disadvantages. However, it has fundamentally changed the way we look at currencies. In doing so, it has created one major obstacle. We now compare currencies with one another to check if they have gained or lost value. This way of measurement is bizarre to say the least!

Currencies are meant to be exchanged for goods. Hence, their value must be measured against the amount of goods that they can buy. Comparing them against one another will provide an extremely misleading image especially when all currencies are falling in value. That is precisely what is happening in the modern world. In this article, we will discuss how comparing currencies against one another presents a completely different image as compared to what the reality is.

All Currencies Have Lost Value in the Past Century
Under the so called freely floating currency regimes, nearly all of the currencies have lost value. The common man may not realize that their money is losing value right while staying in their pockets. In fact, it is even losing value when it is in banks and is earning interest! The interest earned is barely enough to provide a hedge against rising inflation. There is barely any real interest earned. In fact, most people lose money on a real basis when they park their currencies in banks.

The United States dollar has lost over 94% of its value in the past century. Similarly, other major currencies like the Pound sterling have also been in a major decline. This consistent fall in value is unprecedented given the fact that the value of the dollar remained almost unchanged for the century prior to this! That was the period when the dollar was backed by gold and silver i.e. with real value and fiat money was not the predominant monetary system of the world.

The case of the rapid decline in the value of the United States dollar is not unique. Rather all currencies have lost a lot of value in the past few years. This can largely be attributed to the rise of the fiat currency system worldwide and the fact that a floating rate exchange system creates a false impression that some currencies are gaining value whereas other are losing value when in reality everybody is facing a decline. It is the relative measurement which creates this distorted vision. The countries that seem to be appreciating are the ones that are experiencing the least fall in value. However, their value is declining and not rising!

Changed Standard of Measurement
The modern foreign exchange system compares the value of one currency against the value of others. Thus, the value of the dollar is compared against the British pound or any such other currency. Hence, the movements in the dollar are relative to the movement in the pound. In this kind of measurement, both the currency units are variable and hence there is no stable basis to compare against.

So the dollar could be losing value in the real world due to inflation and the case could be same for the British pound as well. However, if the dollar is inflating less than the pound, it will appear as though it is appreciating against the pound! Thus, freely floating currencies end up becoming freely falling currencies. They gain or lose value when compared to one another whereas when it comes to buying goods and services in the real world all of them are have significantly lost purchasing power.

This can be contrasted with the gold standard. The value of gold was considered to be constant and the value of currencies would rise and fall against the gold. Thus, when the currency appreciated against the gold it also appreciated in the real world i.e. less of the currency was required to buy increasing quantities of goods and services. This was the gold standard. As we can see that the alternate system has led all the other currencies into a freefall!

Affects Underlying Economies
The freely falling currency system severely impacts the underlying economies as well. Inflation has become a way of life in the fiat money world! Workers expect their wages to rise more than their productivity. The loss of value that currencies face is considered to be the time value of money! Also, since the freely floating currencies change in value every minute, an obscene amount of resources are spent on predicting its future value. Speculators who add no value to the real world also end up making fortunes!

Thus, from a conservative standpoint, the gold standard was probably the best way in which the monetary system of the world could and should be organized. Currencies were a store of value during the gold standard era whereas in the era of freely floating exchange rates, they have simple become currencies that are freely falling in value!
 
There are many reason why certain currencies could enter the state of a free fall. The fact of the matter remains that a lack of interest of many I investors could also make a currency free fall. However, it is not only the retail traders or the retail market that could lose interest in a specific currency that could lead to a free fall of a specific currency. There could be many other reasons why a currency could enter a free fall zone. Institutional traders generally lose interest In a currency.
 
Unquestionably, the system of freely floating currencies has changed the global financial scene, but it has also brought about some serious difficulties, especially with regard to how we value money. Since currencies were originally intended to be instruments for trading goods and services, their actual value should be represented by their purchasing power rather than just by how much they are worth in relation to other currencies. But in the current system, currencies are continuously compared to one another, which distorts the perception of both currency strength and economic health.The fact that practically all major currencies have drastically lost value over the past century is one of the most startling facts that the general public frequently ignores. Consider the US dollar, which has lost over 94% of its value since the turn of the century. Comparable drops have also been observed in other currencies, such as the British pound. The transition from the gold standard to fiat money systems with floating exchange rates is largely responsible for this sharp decline in purchasing power.The physical assets of gold and silver, which supported currencies under the gold standard, kept their value comparatively constant. A clear standard was established by this system: a currency's appreciation relative to gold actually increased its purchasing power. But now, the value of one currency is compared to another, and both are prone to changes and inflation. Because of this relative system, a currency may seem to be strengthening versus another just because the latter is depreciating more quickly. In practice, both currencies may be depreciating, rendering the "appreciation" worthless in terms of real purchasing power.Wide-ranging effects result from this change in currency valuation from absolute to relative. In fiat money economies, inflation is now a constant companion that degrades living standards and savings. Workers demand ever-increasing paychecks without corresponding increases in productivity because wages frequently fall behind inflation or increase only to keep up with it. Furthermore, enormous amounts of resources are diverted from profitable economic endeavors to currency speculation due to the volatility of exchange rates. Market signals are further distorted by the fact that speculators frequently make large profits without actually adding value to the economy.
Therefore, a "freely falling" system, in which all currencies depreciate over time, albeit at varying rates, is a better way to characterize the floating currency regime. The nations whose currencies appear to "appreciate" are frequently simply those whose depreciation is less severe. This situation distorts the real economic picture and makes financial planning more difficult for both governments and corporations.

Returning to a system similar to the gold standard, according to many financial conservatives, would stabilize and make currency values more transparent. Instead of being merely relative and ever-depreciating instruments, currencies would once again serve as stores of actual value with a set benchmark. Despite its own complications and difficulties, the gold standard kept monetary systems grounded in reality and stopped the unchecked inflation that
 

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