Gold is rare, and looks nice and shiny. It's main use has always been in jewellery, and it has only limited industrial/commercial applications.
Does it really deserve to be so highly valued?

So it's only valuable because "everyone else thinks it's valuable".Faithfree wrote:Most of the gold ever mined is gathering dust locked up in bank vaults because it's too valuable to use for making things.
Like banknotes?klr wrote:So it's only valuable because "everyone else thinks it's valuable".Faithfree wrote:Most of the gold ever mined is gathering dust locked up in bank vaults because it's too valuable to use for making things.
And a mite easier to stick up your nose, I'd imagine...Pappa wrote:Cocaine is worth more than gold.
At least has cocaine has a use*. A highly dubious and destructive one, but that's another matter. The point is that people don't buy it to hoard it long-term.Pappa wrote:Cocaine is worth more than gold.
But with today's technologies, that's quite easy to do without using rare or expensive materials. So, back to my opening question ...Thinking Aloud wrote:Everyone wants to make purdy things that don't tarnish. So that's why.
Bank notes (aka negotiable instruments, promissory notes) are in no way comparable to gold, or to any other sort of tangible resource/commodity that has a finite supply determined by nature. The perceived value/reliability of bank notes has to do with a whole range of other factors. Intrinsically, they themselves are quite literally worth only the paper they are printed on, if that. And in the computerised era, wealth is often represented by little more than a few bytes of information on a computer record.Pappa wrote:Like banknotes?klr wrote:So it's only valuable because "everyone else thinks it's valuable".Faithfree wrote:Most of the gold ever mined is gathering dust locked up in bank vaults because it's too valuable to use for making things.
Clinton Huxley wrote:Gold? Always believe in your soul.
That seems to be it. Gold has always been valuable, ergo it's still valuable. But how can something that doesn't get used be so valuable? It's downright silly IMHO.Thinking Aloud wrote:(I wasn't pretending to have a watertight argument. But hey, we've always done it this way, so why change anything now...)
I hereby owe you a thrashing for that.Clinton Huxley wrote:Gold? Always believe in your soul.
Just like virginity...klr wrote: But how can something that doesn't get used be so valuable? It's downright silly IMHO.
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