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Gold and Silver are often stated as perfect metals for use as money. Would Platinum and Palladium work?

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Wanderer posted on Tue, Jul 28 2009 9:29 AM

Both Platinum and Palladium are made into coins http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platinum_coin http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palladium_coin

Is there any particular reason Gold and Silver are talked about and those two are excluded?

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Suggested by liberty student

1. I am guessing the reason you hear about gold and silver more is that there is a much broader history of those metals in use.

2. I suspect that true free markets would use platinum or whatever more rare metals, maybe more between banks than in circulation, or using "$1 bills" worth a speck of palladium.

3. I think a free market for currency means whatever commodity could be used in exchange, maybe petro-dollars. Vegetable-oil-dollars would be less likely because of the effort required to warehouse significant values (plus it probably goes rancid and gold doesn't).

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E. R. Olovetto:
1. I am guessing the reason you hear about gold and silver more is that there is a much broader history of those metals in use.

Very true.  In the jewelry trade, platinum never caught on, I suspect partly because it is so expensive, and then because it looks too much like silver to the untrained eye.

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Thanks guys :D

Periodically the tree of liberty must be watered with the blood of tyrants and patriots.

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liberty student:
Very true.  In the jewelry trade, platinum never caught on, I suspect partly because it is so expensive, and then because it looks too much like silver to the untrained eye.

Perhaps platinum will be used as money in a future space-based society.  IIRC, platinum group metals are relatively common (compared to gold and silver) on M-type asteroids, and assuming it retains a generally high market price compared to its mass, it wouldn't take much delta-v to lug large amounts around, compared to the alternatives.

/space cadet rambling Smile

 

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Wanderer replied on Tue, Jul 28 2009 11:00 PM

wombatron:

Perhaps platinum will be used as money in a future space-based society.  IIRC, platinum group metals are relatively common (compared to gold and silver) on M-type asteroids, and assuming it retains a generally high market price compared to its mass, it wouldn't take much delta-v to lug large amounts around, compared to the alternatives.

/space cadet rambling Smile

 

Ooooooh, very interesting, I did not know that...

Periodically the tree of liberty must be watered with the blood of tyrants and patriots.

Thomas Jefferson

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