Why You Need to Own Gold In 2015 and Beyond
Commodities / Gold and Silver 2015 Jan 02, 2015 - 06:50 PM GMTBy: Submissions
Clint Siegner writes: Debt is a rock, and spending reform is a hard  place. The taxpayers of today and tomorrow are saddled with crushing  obligations. Yet we must watch helplessly as leadership in Washington DC continues  expanding government -- borrowing what they can and simply printing what they  cannot.
Each day more Americans sense a reckoning is  coming. Our government is increasingly insolvent. The unbacked dollar is  certain to be worth less, and it may not survive at all.
The problem is dishonest money. Federal Reserve officials are free to print as many dollars as they wish, completely unaccountable for the purchasing power stolen from your savings.
Honest money in the form of physical gold is  the solution. Gold coins, bars, and rounds represent value that cannot be  inflated away. In the long run, no other asset offers the same track record --  particularly during turbulent times. Families who save using private, portable,  and enduring gold have been passing wealth from one generation to the next for  literally thousands of years.
  Also, during key periods in history,  investments in gold did more than simply hold value; they produced real  profits. We are likely living in the next of these periods now. Inflation is a  worldwide phenomenon forcing entire populations to look for alternatives to the  paper in their wallets. As more and more turn to finite gold, its purchasing power  will rise -- perhaps dramatically -- as people bid more aggressively for  available stocks.
  We’ve seen it before. If history is a guide,  now is a particularly opportune time for wise investors to buy physical gold  coins and bars -- both for protection and profit. To understand why requires  some background.
  Gold is beautiful and rare. Our ancestors  picked up the first golden nuggets thousands of years ago and found themselves  delighted. Virtually everyone wanted some of their own -- a fact not lost on people  seeking to trade. A person with gold to offer could bargain for all manner of  valuable goods. A little of the beautiful metal went a long ways in terms of  buying power. Gold became money -- the preferred medium of exchange when  trading locally and across the world.
  Gold Represents Timeless Value
Gold’s universal appeal across continents  makes the metal extraordinary. But it is gold’s appeal across time that  makes it unique.
People navigate in a world of cycles and  change. Investment manias come and go. Societies move inevitably from relative  peace and prosperity to crisis and war and back again. Governments rise and  fall. In recent centuries these governments began introducing paper currencies  in their ascendance then inflating them away in their decline. Through all of  these cycles, gold remained sought after and highly valued -- making it one of  history’s few constants.
  An anecdote, often told, highlights gold’s  relatively constant value. In 1916, just after the Federal Reserve was  established and before politicians decoupled the U.S. dollar from gold, a man  with a $20 bill or a $20 “Double Eagle” gold piece (containing very close to 1  ounce of gold) could walk into a men’s clothier and buy a fine suit, shirt,  belt, shoes, socks, and a tie with either the bill or the  coin. Today, the gold coin will still buy the same thing. But the $20 bill may  not even be enough to purchase a belt.
This constancy is the reason politicians and  bankers, the purveyors of fiat currency, began a concerted effort to  divorce gold psychologically from its role as money. It is hard to  maintain the illusion of value in a paper currency with gold acting as a foil.  John Maynard Keynes, the British economist most admired by the advocates of big  government and unlimited borrowing, declared the gold standard a “barbarous  relic” in 1924.
  A few generations later, bureaucrats talk  about sophisticated monetary tools which supposedly render gold irrelevant.  Ultimately, the talking will fail. It doesn’t change the true nature of gold,  nor the true nature of the paper they want you to use as money.
  Paper currency is supported only by confidence  -- its value resides exclusively in people’s minds. Intrinsically, the bills we  all carry are simply colored bits of paper whose supply is limitless. They are  designed and managed by officials to lose value over time -- a stealthy tax  benefiting politicians and those they favor, to the detriment of ordinary  earners and savers. That is why governments inevitably get larger while the  value of the currency they issue inexorably declines. It is the ultimate  confidence game.
  Paper Money Is Losing Credibility by the Day
  But the essential trust in fiat currencies is  beginning to fade. People look aghast at the “debt clock” in Times Square now  surpassing $18 trillion. Their minds are boggled at the trillions of new  dollars created by the Fed via extraordinary maneuvers such as Quantitative  Easing. Today, there are real questions about the solvency of the U.S.  government, and the value of the scrip issued on its behalf.
  Meanwhile, gold is reasserting  itself. Citizens  in places like Venezuela, Holland, and Germany are clamoring for the  repatriation of gold reserves stored outside of their borders. Perhaps most  telling, we find the same central bankers who publicly denigrate gold quietly  adding bars to the stockpiles held in their nations’ vaults... stockpiles most  of them somehow never quite got around to liquidating.
  Despite all this, today most Americans still  do not own gold bullion. We are conditioned by Wall Street to focus on  conventional assets -- stocks, bonds, money markets, and mutual funds. Less  than 2% of people in the U.S. own any physical bullion according to most  estimates. Even fewer hold a position significant enough to provide a  meaningful defense against inflation.
  Roughly 10% of the population owned gold or  silver in 1980 -- the end of the last bull market in metals. Decades before  that, everyone carried some in their pockets. The current cycle moved the  entire world into fiat currencies and away from money backed by gold. When will  this cycle reverse -- perhaps suddenly -- and gold ownership return to vogue?  What will happen to the gold  price when  masses of cynical people tire of holding dishonest money and look for an  incorruptible alternative?
  Smart investors aren’t waiting to find out.  Every day more Americas buy their first physical gold coins or bars, no matter  what the financial elite say about it.
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  Clint  Siegner is a Director at Money Metals Exchange, perhaps the nation's fastest-growing dealer of  low-premium precious metals coins, rounds, and bars. Siegner, a graduate of  Linfield College in Oregon, puts his experience in business management along  with his passion for personal liberty, limited government, and honest money  into the development of Money Metals' brand and reach. This includes writing  extensively on the bullion markets and their intersection with policy and world  affairs.
© 2014 Clint  Siegner  - All Rights Reserved 
  
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