Deflation connection between gold currency and falling prices

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Although I confess that this isn’t exactly on-trend in the news right now, I’m trying to understand deflation after reading an old post on on the disadvantages of Gold Currency:

>The reason it’s actually bad is because the government can’t mess with the money supply. The supply becomes tied to some shiny metal. Now, if you have a society with 100 people, and 1,000 dollars (each person having 10 dollars), then this is fine. **But in 20 years, those people will have children that will grow up and be part of the economy. But there’s still 1,000 dollars, only for 150 people now. That means each dollar is worth more, which is called deflation.**

***Source –*** u/yellowjacketcoder

The post is now 9 years old, so I thought to make a post on it here as I’m confused on the sentence in bold.

I’m not understanding the point with regards to when 150 people now exist, the same 1,000 dollars are worth more now. I understand that after 20 years, this hypothetical population goes up by 50 to 150. My intuition led me to believe that due to supply-demand economics, the same 1,000 dollars (linked to a fixed exchange rate for X ounces of gold) would be needed by more people so it would be worth more (given the supply of gold is fixed).

However, what didn’t make sense to me is how this would then be linked to the idea of deflation where spending goes down as consumers would think that prices are about to fall further (which they would, in a deflatory economy) etc.

How are the two ideas (the increased demand for the same fixed supply of dollars and the falling prices) linked, if by any means they are? Appreciate any answers as always, community (and sorry if it seems so obvious to anyone – I’ve been struggling to wrap my head around it for years)!

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Anonymous 0 Comments

The prevailing economic thought is that a small amount of inflation is good for the economy. This can all be traced back to the very fundamentals of economic theory which is *trade is the basis of economic prosperity.*

When you work for a paycheck at Taco Bell, you are selling labor (which has value) to your employer. When you spend your paycheck on tacos, you are buying goods (which have value). This exchange of goods and services underpins all economies.

To facilitate this trade, we use a standard currency (dollars) to represent the relative value of these goods and services. Ideally, we want to maximize trade (and thus economic prosperity) so we encourage people to spend or invest their dollars instead of holding onto them. We do this by slightly devaluing the dollar each year through inflation.

Ideally, the price of everything would rise at a consistent rate. Your hourly wages would rise 2% per year, and the price of tacos would rise 2% each year. The relative value between your labor and your taco hasn’t changed, but it does punish the person who is hoarding their dollars under the mattress and *not using them for trade*.

Contrast that with deflation. If your currency becomes MORE valuable each year, then the relative value between your labor and your taco hasn’t changed, but it rewards the person hoarding dollars under their mattress. Why should I spend my dollar on tacos, when I can just keep it under my mattress and buy more tacos next year?

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