You can purchase both gold and silver at any large bank branch...one that comes immediatly to mind is the scotia bank on the Stephen Ave mall...it is past the tellers near the mall entrance....the bullet proof glass gives it away....on a side note...if you do purchase bullion through a financial institution you pay a premium as you dont buy it at the current market price.....you pay slightly more...another option is independant bullion dealers such as Albern coins as well as coin shops...options are stuff like Maple leafs both gold and silver/American double eagles as well as south african krugerands...again you will pay a premium compared to market but slightly less than the banks....the same premium applies when you sell....you are NOT going to get market value as these bullion dealers take a slice for basically being a secure storehouse of precious metals....of course if you had bought say 40 ounces of gold 5-6 years ago when it was less than $300 an ounce you would take little slice off the top and be loving it as gold is well above $1300 right now.Any reccomendations on where to buy real silver?
Royal Canadian Mint sells both Silver bars and coins.Any reccomendations on where to buy real silver?
For inflation, there has to be demand which won't come from a household were at least one breadwinner is unemployed at the moment. Also central bankers know how to combat inflation (they just raise interest rates; see Volcker in early 80s). On the other hand there is no sure way of combating deflation (Japan is an example where they still have deflation/disinflation).anyone who thinks hyperinflation is a concern really doesn't understand economics all that well. The far greater concern is deflation.
I'd be curious to hear the argument for hyper inflation given the current unemployment rate.
No PeaceGuy (clever name btw) has military company shares and this is his attempt at pushing the stock prices up.Soooooo, you are saying I need a bigger gun?
The Federal reserve fund rate has been between 0% and 0.25% for two years now in the meantime the Fed's balance sheet has swollen to over 2 trillion dollars, yet the inflation is falling. The core CPI has been 0.7% annually (data released today).As Nobel laureate Milton Friedman has written extensively, inflation is purely a monetary phenomenon. The way the US has been expanding the money supply would suggest that inflation will have to rear its ugly head sooner or later.
I would suggest that most serious economists do not subscribe to Keynesian theory at all, be it classical, neo, post or whatever prefix you wish to append to it, and the recession if anything further discredits it. The biggest problems currently facing the world's economies are spending and debt.
Bingo! Give this man a cookie!anyone who thinks hyperinflation is a concern really doesn't understand economics all that well. The far greater concern is deflation.
I'd be curious to hear the argument for hyper inflation given the current unemployment rate.
There really isn't inflation in the money supply, it's just that some assume there is by the fact the Fed's introduced a QE2 policy to buy 600B in bonds. But inflation itself is well under control and to a large extent this is designed to ensure a double dip recession doesn't occur and something potentially worse, deflation.It's actually an interesting environment. The average working guy hasn't had a real raise in income since the 70s. And even in the financial sectors where the best incomes were made 80s through 2000, what a person takes home is reduced. And yet there is inflation of the money supply.
We have become a society of the very well off and the ones who are just making it. The people who are living a middle class lifestyle are doing it on credit and the credit is about to run out.
Given the above coupled with a massive supply of counterfit money masquerading as legal tender, I'd have to say we're only seeing the leading edge of the iceburg that's about to sink the ship. Honestly that's a primary reason why I'm actively looking for a liveaboard. It's going to be a very good time to know who your friends are.It's actually an interesting environment. The average working guy hasn't had a real raise in income since the 70s. And even in the financial sectors where the best incomes were made 80s through 2000, what a person takes home is reduced. And yet there is inflation of the money supply.
We have become a society of the very well off and the ones who are just making it. The people who are living a middle class lifestyle are doing it on credit and the credit is about to run out.
Monetarism was discredited in the 80s after Thatcher and Reagan had their turns at destroying their economies.As Nobel laureate Milton Friedman has written extensively, inflation is purely a monetary phenomenon.
I would suggest that most serious economists do not subscribe to Keynesian theory at all