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By Robert Kiyosaki @ Yahoo.com
My poor dad believed in saving money. "A dollar saved is a dollar
earned," he often said.
The problem was he didn't pay attention to changes in
monetary policy.
All his life he saved, not realizing that after 1971 his dollar was no
longer money.
You see, in 1971 President Richard Nixon changed the rules of money.
That year, the U.S. dollar ceased being money and became a
currency. This was one of the most important changes in modern
history, but few people understand why.
Prior to 1971, the U.S. dollar was real money linked to gold and silver,
which is why the U.S. dollar was known as a silver certificate. After
1971, the U.S. dollar became a
Federal Reserve Note
-- an IOU from the
Taking a brief look back at the history of modern money, it's easy to
understand why the 1971 change was so important.
After
As inflation increased, the savings of the middle class was wiped out.
With their savings gone, the middle class demanded new leadership.
Adolf Hitler
was elected Chancellor of Germany in 1933 and, as we know,
World War II
and the murder of millions of Jews followed.
A New System of Money
In the closing days of World War II, the
Bretton Woods System
was put in place to stabilize the world's currencies. This was a
quasi-gold standard, which meant currencies were backed by gold. The
system worked fine until the 1960s when the
In order to stop the loss of gold,
President Nixon
ended the Bretton Woods System in 1971 and the U.S. dollar replaced gold
as the world's currency. Never in the history of the world had one
nation's fiat currency been the world's money.
To better understand this, my rich dad had me look up the following
definitions in the dictionary.
"Fiat
money:
money (as paper money) not convertible into coin or specie of equivalent
value."
The words "not convertible into coin" bothered me. So my rich dad had me
look up the word: "fiat."
"Fiat:
a command or act of will that creates something without or as if without
further effort."
Looking up at my rich dad I asked, "Does this mean money can be created
out of thin air?"
Nodding his head, my rich dad said, "
"That's why savers are losers," he added. "I fought in
Most economists would disagree with my rich dad's correlation between
the loss of savings and Hitler. It may not be an accurate lesson, but
it's one I never forgot.
Between 2000 and 2005 housing prices went through the roof. Oil went
from $10 a barrel in 1997 to over $60 a barrel in 2005. Gold went from
$275 an ounce in 1996 to over $475 an ounce in 2005.
In spite of all these increases in prices, the federal government's
economists say, "Inflation is low. It's under control." They are allowed
to say that because the government is charged with only monitoring
inflation in consumer prices -- not asset prices. The
consumer price index (CPI)
is the pressure gauge the government watches because they want to make
sure the consumer is happy finding bargains at
Wal-Mart, which is easy because
The problem is our dollars return to the
In summary, investors shop for asset bargains, and consumers
shop for consumer bargains and try hard to save money that
is not really money. That is another reason why the rich are
getting richer.
For more on this subject I recommend reading
"The Dollar Crisis"by Richard Duncan. |