I don't understand what you are saying. Yes, wealth has been created, that is false wealth generated by a fiat currency system which has caused the false belief of a prosperous currency!
I'm just gonna stop you right there. "False wealth."

Yeah, lord knows last time I tried to spend my worthless "fake money" made out of paper, I was told it wasn't real so I couldn't buy anything.
And my car and everything in my apartment just went *poof* because it realized it was purchased with "fake" money.
You seem to have a very, very basic understanding of the nature of fiat money and how it works. And as they say, a
little knowledge can be a dangerous thing. Case in point.
I think he's talking about a false sense of wealth, but i'm not sure. The problem is that you belittle peole when trying to make a point. Your simplifying both of our points to make us look like shit and it's not so black and white as you are attempting to make is.
Fiat money is defined as:money not redeemable for any comodity; it's status as money is conferred innitially by government, but eventually by common experience. It is money created by the government and says, hey, this is money now. It's only money because they say it is. It is backed by nothing other than faith.
The fact of the matter is we all pretend to be experts of everything that is dicussed on this website. Most people are only experts at one or maybe two things. Out of all of those people most of them are not experts, but just pretty good or mediocre. Your right, I don't know you and I don't know how much you know about the economy. You certainly don't know everything, nobody does. We all know what we've read and been taugh in school or watch on tv. I challenge anyone to remember every little detail that they learned in school. I challenge anyone to remember everything they learned from a year ago. I've been studying the Civil War for two semesters in a row and I don't remember everything I learned. I can retain most, but not all. We are all going on what we do know. I think it's shitty to try and belittle people or make them feel stupid just because they are not an expert.
The point of this thread, unless I missed it, is whether or not a gold-backed currency system is superior to fiat currency. Ample evidence has been presented in this thread to demonstrate the shortcomings of backed currency.
The reason commodity-backed currency looks attractive is because you can redeem it for said commodity and because the supply is inherently limited, therefore controlling inflation to some degree.
But there are very obvious flaws, too, as others have explained. If there is a sudden increase in the backing commodity's supply, it instantly devalues your currency. Likewise, if the commodity has a supply shortage, you severely disrupt the ability to move money around which translates into an economic slowdown.
Fiat currency has the benefit of allowing supply to be tightly controlled, as we do in the US. If you control supply, then inflation isn't a huge concern--you contract the supply when you want to slow down or reverse devaluation of your currency. It doesn't wind up being tied to the availability of some commodity, which is often outside the control of the body issuing the currency.
It's unfair to say fiat currency isn't backed by anything. It's not backed by anything
tangible, but it is backed by the full faith and credit of the issuing government. In other words, its value is determined by the stability of the issuing government and prevailing confidence in the strength of their economic fundamentals.
Economies are driven very much by perception so it makes a great amount of sense for currency to be driven by similar parameters.
I don't think I'm any kind of economics expert. I listen to people with a lot more expertise than I have. I do quite a bit of reading on this subject. I find it fascinating. There was even a time when I thought a gold-backed currency would be a wise choice, and then I did my own research into it and found all the reasons it was abandoned and the benefits of fiat currency.
Our current system is hardly perfect--I haven't seen anyone claim that it is. No system will be, unless and until we manage to eliminate scarcity and don't require an economic system based on it. For the time being, fiat currency is the best mechanism we've found.
There are certainly ways we can improve the existing system, and many have been brought up in this thread. But from everything I have read, I believe it would be overkill and counterproductive to go back to gold.
I was originally dismissive of your posts because you came in here acting as if you'd discovered some profound truth, that all our problems would be solved if we'd just wise up and go back to gold. People like easy answers, both giving them and hearing them. "If we just do this
one thing everything will be great!" But the world doesn't work that way. There may be benefits to going back to gold but there are also many disadvantages and risks, and as far as I'm concerned it doesn't offer enough advantages over fiat currency. Prevailing economic thought agrees with this conclusion.
At some point we will no doubt find and latch onto another system, and hopefully it will be better. But that means we should be looking forward, not backward.