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Author Topic: Parity watch -> Who's next?  (Read 68147 times)
Hunyadi
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June 13, 2016, 11:29:01 AM
 #281

77. Estonia



They have euro. Am I missing something?

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Elwar
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June 13, 2016, 11:29:26 AM
Last edit: December 23, 2016, 12:26:01 AM by Elwar
 #282

76. Guatemala


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June 13, 2016, 11:31:11 AM
 #283


They have euro. Am I missing something?

https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2214rank.html

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June 13, 2016, 11:33:51 AM
 #284


Ok, thanks!

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June 13, 2016, 12:02:14 PM
 #285


It is an interesting question. I saw other EU countries on the CIA list also, like France, germany, etc and wondered how they calculate that since the European Union has it's own M1 (euros) also ... I wonder if the member banks have an allotment of their own money stock that they get to manage separately from their 'euro' stock?

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June 14, 2016, 07:38:58 PM
 #286


It is an interesting question. I saw other EU countries on the CIA list also, like France, germany, etc and wondered how they calculate that since the European Union has it's own M1 (euros) also ... I wonder if the member banks have an allotment of their own money stock that they get to manage separately from their 'euro' stock?

i think every euro member still has an operating central bank and they are printing "their" €. but they are not independent, they are under EZB supervision. frankfurt tells them what to do. i can recall that there are ways to differentiate between an italian € note and a dutch € note for example.   
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June 15, 2016, 09:27:56 PM
 #287

i can recall that there are ways to differentiate between an italian € note and a dutch € note for example.   

last digit of the serial number, I think. I remember a time (couple years ago when the greek crisis started) when some people were actually preferrably spending "greek" 50 euro bills (with serial-numbers ending in "Y", I think) to spending other bills. There goes fungibility, I guess Wink

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June 15, 2016, 10:46:03 PM
 #288

Quote from: marcusofaugustus
It is an interesting question. I saw other EU countries on the CIA list also, like France, germany, etc and wondered how they calculate that since the European Union has it's own M1 (euros) also ... I wonder if the member banks have an allotment of their own money stock that they get to manage separately from their 'euro' stock?

i think every euro member still has an operating central bank and they are printing "their" €. but they are not independent, they are under EZB supervision. frankfurt tells them what to do. i can recall that there are ways to differentiate between an italian € note and a dutch € note for example.  

The whole currency union concept is somewhat of a dubious implementation, driven by a bizarre form of pragmatism, in fairness. It's not just the cash portion of the money supply that is separate, the commercial banks in each Euro member state are also partitioned from each other, so there's actually a fair amount of friction between these conditionally integrated pools of Euro currency. It amounts to more de facto serfdom for the wage-slaves of the Euro area, as the ordinary everyday individual has little opportunity to take advantage of the common market using the Euro: several countries have laws banning more than a few thousand Euros of cash, opening bank accounts in countries with the more stable banking systems is not easy for non-citizens (hurray for the single market!), and cross border transfers from one Euro account to another with SEPA are still treated as foreign transfers from a legal/regulatory perspective.

It's almost as if trying to shoe-horn a single currency into an area with multiple established currencies is totally unnatural..... Grin

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June 16, 2016, 06:25:25 AM
 #289

Quote from: marcusofaugustus
It is an interesting question. I saw other EU countries on the CIA list also, like France, germany, etc and wondered how they calculate that since the European Union has it's own M1 (euros) also ... I wonder if the member banks have an allotment of their own money stock that they get to manage separately from their 'euro' stock?

i think every euro member still has an operating central bank and they are printing "their" €. but they are not independent, they are under EZB supervision. frankfurt tells them what to do. i can recall that there are ways to differentiate between an italian € note and a dutch € note for example.  

The whole currency union concept is somewhat of a dubious implementation, driven by a bizarre form of pragmatism, in fairness. It's not just the cash portion of the money supply that is separate, the commercial banks in each Euro member state are also partitioned from each other, so there's actually a fair amount of friction between these conditionally integrated pools of Euro currency. It amounts to more de facto serfdom for the wage-slaves of the Euro area, as the ordinary everyday individual has little opportunity to take advantage of the common market using the Euro: several countries have laws banning more than a few thousand Euros of cash, opening bank accounts in countries with the more stable banking systems is not easy for non-citizens (hurray for the single market!), and cross border transfers from one Euro account to another with SEPA are still treated as foreign transfers from a legal/regulatory perspective.

It's almost as if trying to shoe-horn a single currency into an area with multiple established currencies is totally unnatural..... Grin

well said. i have to add though, that it ended a centuries long fuck up for every traveller crossing borders (in europe, the next border is just around the corner) when you wanted to travel from the netherlands to italy you had to convert your gulden into dmarks, swissfrancs/austrian schilling (depends how you crossed the alps) and italian lira. you got robbed by kiosk exchanges every time you needed to change, you never really knew how much to change, if you changed too much, you got robbed again converting it all back to your dutch gulden. we are talking about one little trip of less than 1000 miles. what a clusterfuck that was.
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June 16, 2016, 09:47:12 AM
 #290

well said. i have to add though, that it ended a centuries long fuck up for every traveller crossing borders (in europe, the next border is just around the corner) when you wanted to travel from the netherlands to italy you had to convert your gulden into dmarks, swissfrancs/austrian schilling (depends how you crossed the alps) and italian lira. you got robbed by kiosk exchanges every time you needed to change, you never really knew how much to change, if you changed too much, you got robbed again converting it all back to your dutch gulden. we are talking about one little trip of less than 1000 miles. what a clusterfuck that was.

I wonder how far back in time you have to go to find people travelling the countries (kingdoms?) of Europe with raw gold or silver bullion in their pockets to solve that problem? It seems odd that such a ubiquitous institution as precious-metals-as-money could be stifled so effectively without electronic banking acting as a gatekeeper.

I mean, before WW1, it was possible to travel Europe without a passport of any kind quite far into the East or South unimpeded, and no Shengen agreement or United States of Europe was required! Could it be that simple freedom to choose is the most powerful universal system there is! It's cheaper and more effective than federalsim/statism at playing the same ostensible role.

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June 16, 2016, 11:29:02 AM
 #291

75. ETHIOPIA  M1 ~$11.5 billion


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June 16, 2016, 11:41:09 AM
 #292

well said. i have to add though, that it ended a centuries long fuck up for every traveller crossing borders (in europe, the next border is just around the corner) when you wanted to travel from the netherlands to italy you had to convert your gulden into dmarks, swissfrancs/austrian schilling (depends how you crossed the alps) and italian lira. you got robbed by kiosk exchanges every time you needed to change, you never really knew how much to change, if you changed too much, you got robbed again converting it all back to your dutch gulden. we are talking about one little trip of less than 1000 miles. what a clusterfuck that was.

I wonder how far back in time you have to go to find people travelling the countries (kingdoms?) of Europe with raw gold or silver bullion in their pockets to solve that problem? It seems odd that such a ubiquitous institution as precious-metals-as-money could be stifled so effectively without electronic banking acting as a gatekeeper.

I mean, before WW1, it was possible to travel Europe without a passport of any kind quite far into the East or South unimpeded, and no Shengen agreement or United States of Europe was required! Could it be that simple freedom to choose is the most powerful universal system there is! It's cheaper and more effective than federalsim/statism at playing the same ostensible role.

correct. there was a rather liberal time before ww1.
before germany "deutsches reich" was formed 1871 you couldn´t even travel from hesse to bavaria without approval from government. even the right to travel for the traveling journeymen that was in place since medivial times was taken in the first half of the 19th century Tongue
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June 16, 2016, 11:13:52 PM
 #293

74. Slovenia

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June 16, 2016, 11:17:36 PM
 #294

73. Malta

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October 26, 2016, 06:25:26 PM
 #295

How's this effort going? Who's brave enough to hit the CIA website to find out if we're beating Malta yet? (not me... Cheesy)

I did a quick estimate, and it seems like hitting the all-time-high market cap of $14 billion will occur at around $900 market price with today's Bitcoin M1 supply; surely Malta is roadkill by now?!

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October 27, 2016, 12:43:48 AM
 #296

How's this effort going? Who's brave enough to hit the CIA website to find out if we're beating Malta yet? (not me... Cheesy)
Weird you say that, i hit that cia link and my VPN crashed ...

Quote
I did a quick estimate, and it seems like hitting the all-time-high market cap of $14 billion will occur at around $900 market price with today's Bitcoin M1 supply; surely Malta is roadkill by now?!

Nup we dropped back down to between Slovenia and Estonia ... I have a feeling we won't be there long however.

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October 27, 2016, 12:58:19 PM
 #297

Nup we dropped back down to between Slovenia and Estonia ... I have a feeling we won't be there long however.

Oh dear, I'm too eager for "something to happen" lol. I share your sense we don't have that long though, similarly to how you say "halving's not over yet". Also, interesting that Malta is so high on the list for somewhere so small... I did hear somewhere recently that Malta has a long history in the espionage world, I wonder if that has anything to do with it. Cheesy

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December 23, 2016, 12:28:58 AM
 #298

72. Burma


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December 23, 2016, 08:48:30 PM
 #299

71. Jordan

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December 23, 2016, 08:50:20 PM
 #300

70. Oman

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