"inflation is inevitable."
Why? Please explain your reasoning for why it is inevitable.
I, personally, don't think inflation is inevitable. Prices need not always keep going up. Population - the growth of which is what ultimately drives inflation - can decline - take Japan as an example:
http://www.google.ca/publicdata/explore?ds=d5bncppjof8f9_&met_y=sp_pop_grow&idim=country:JPN&dl=en&hl=en&q=population+growth+japan
"2: Let me reiterate this: What that old man is doing... is a bad thing! It's the very reason why we're having trouble getting out of this economic downturn. "
How could you say saving money is bad? How could that be? Better would be to say that inflation is bad.
"that old man would be reminded constantly that inflation is a real thing"
The fact is not everyone does, and even for those who do, there is nothing they can do about it because they are poor and or middle class and have no way to invest to hedge inflation losses.
"Am I supposed to feel sorry for him if he held all his savings in pokemon cards? "
Zarf, show some sensitivity and awareness, will you? Most people don't even have savings to invest in pokemon cards.
re: fiat currency
Back currencies result in the situation where "changes in one good affect the price of the other good in ways contrary to its intent."
You can say the same about fiat currencies, where changes in one currency affect the price of the other contrary to its intent.
"without fiat currency, you're engaging in product bundling: people who want to buy one asset are forced to buy the other."
At least backed currencies can always be redeemed for the commodity it is backed by and at least that commodity has some sort of inherent USEFULNESS.
"If you went to a decent mutual fund and told them you wanted your assets to overcome inflation"
lol
We're talking about how investors have resorted to liquidizing to cash holdings, and you're saying we should invest in mutual funds?
"Many researchers have suggested that the most effective way for investors to raise the returns they earn from mutual funds is to reduce the fees that they pay. They suggest that investors look for no-load funds with low expense ratios."
http://www.techtradersystem.com/frame.asp?url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutual_fund&title=Mutual%fund%-%Wikipedia,%the%free%encyclopedia&desc=A%mutual%fund%is%a%professionally%managed%type%of%collective%investment%scheme%that%pools%money%from%many%investors%to%buy%stocks,%bonds,%short-term%money%market%...
And how are the indexes doing?
http://www.google.ca/finance?q=INDEXNASDAQ%3ANDX&hl=en
Zarf: If you are paying a 2% fee on the principal when you invest it, on top of a 1% MER each year, and the average 10 year annual return is 4% / year, inflation is 3%, and gains you are making are taxed at 100% your marginal tax rate of, oh, let's say 40%, AND after 10 years, the currency you trade in has diminished in value by 20% relative to other world currencies, over that 10 year period, would you have even made anything at all?
Edit: Oh, and let's add to the bill the 10 years of interest on the mortgage debt that he could have otherwise have paid off with the money he initially invested in the mutual fund.