onsdag 27. juni 2018

Blodgull fra Burkina Faso

av Robert Wood - Sosiolog
Burkina Faso er et mineralrikt land, men verdiene blir sendt ut av landet. Myndighetene får bare fire prosent royalties fra allerede styrtrike kanadiske eiere.

Tusenvis av underbetalte slaver arbeider i gullminer. Hvis de er "heldige" kan de tjene 150 kroner i uka for å risikere livet i arbeidsforhold som var vanlige under den industrielle revolusjon for 200 år siden. Barnarbeide og miljøskader går hånd i hånd. Blodgull fra Burkina Faso

lørdag 9. juni 2018

Feite sølvmynter veier tungt

av Robert Wood - Myntanmelder
Feite sølvmyntsamlere er ekstra lykkelige mennesker. Gleden av å gripe om konsentrert, rent sølv i form av skinnende en-kilo mynter utløser en storm av endorfiner.

En 1 kilo sølvmynt føles bedre i hånden enn 32 små investeringsmynter, på usle 31,1 gram, på bordet. Dessuten er kilo mynten billigere enn tilsvarende mengde sølv i småmynt. Men se det i øynene – en kilo mynter er håpløs upraktiske. Har du en i hver lomme faller buksene av og legger du et par stykker i håndvesken ryker stroppen. Den beste måten å frakte 1-kilos sølvmynter på er med ryggsekk. Kilos mynter kjøper du fordi du samler på kilomynter. De gjør seg bra på hylla og motivet kommer godt fram. Man ser alle detaljer uten å bruke lupe.

Feite australiere
Tavex selger for tiden tre forskjellige 1000 gram mynter produsert av Perth Mint, Australia for 2018. To av dem har typiske australske dyremotiver; en søt koala og en skrikete kookaburra. Den tredje mynten markerer kinesiske Hundens år med en tysk hunderase. Alle tre finnes både som en ounce mynter (31,103 gram) og som 1 kilo mynter.  Pris 09.06.2018.
1 kilo kookaburra NOK 5035.- 1 ounce kookaburra NOK 180.- (Kilopris NOK 5760.-)
1 kilo koala NOK 5035.- 1 ounce koala NOK 180.- (Kilopris NOK 5760.-)
1 kilo Hundens år NOK 5230.- 1 ounce Hundens år NOK 230.- (Kilopris NOK 7360.-)

torsdag 7. juni 2018

The Zen of Terry Pratchett on Gold and Paper


Rincewind selected a cake. He didn’t like to ask about the other stuff.
- You’ve got gold, he said.
- Oh, gold. It is too soft to do much with, said Dibhala.  – It’s all right for pipes and putting on roof s, though.
-Oh . . .  I daresay people in Ankh-Morpork could find a use for some, said Rincewind. His gaze returned to the coins in Dibhala's tray.
A land where gold was as cheap as lead . . .
- What’s that? he said, pointing to a crumpled rectangle half covered with coins.
D.M.H. Dibhala looked down. – It’s this thing we have here, he said, speaking slowly. – Of course, it’s probably all new to you. It’s called mon-ey. It’s a way of carrying around your –
- I meant the bit of paper, said Rincewind.
- So did I, said Dibhala. – That’s a ten-rhinu note.
- What does that mean? said Rincewind.
- Means what it says, said Dibhala. – Means it’s worth ten of these. He held up a gold coin about the size of a rice cake.
- Why’d you want to buy a piece of paper? said Rincewind.
- You don’t buy it, it’s for buying things with, said Dibhala.
Rincewind looked blank.
- You go to a mark-et stall, said Dibhala, getting back into the slow-voice-for-the hard-of –thinking. - And you say: - Good morn-ing, but-cher, how much for those dog noses? And he says: - Three rhinu, shogun. And you say: - I’ve only got a pony, OK? (look, there’s an etch-ing of a pony on it, see, that’s what you get on ten-rhinu notes) and he gives you the dog noses and seven coins in what we call “change”. Now, if you had a monkey, that’s fifty rhinu, he’d say: - Got anything small-ler? And –
- But it’s only a bit of paper! Rincewind wailed.
- It may be a bit of paper to you but it’s ten rice cakes to me, said Dibhala. – What do you foreign bloodsuckers use?  Big stones with holes in them?
Rincewind stared at the paper money.

Ask yourself: Why is gold valuable? Why is paper money valuable? Gold is nothing but a basically useless metal and paper money is…. well paper with some ink on it. Both gold and paper money are valuable as long as you and enough other people believe that the yellow metal and the paper bills are valuable. Paper money live and die, but gold is still valuable no matter what happens.