I know people out there who have invested a lot in gold under the belief that in the event of like complete societal collapse or hyperinflation, they could use it for purchasing.
I have the hunch it’s a scam, but I haven’t learned enough monetary theory, business, or economics to understand why.


I understand but inflation is actually good for the debt of governments since there’s a surplus of money (they pay on the nominal value) so it’s unlikely they’d have to scrap personal gold in order to function.
Anyway that’s just my two cents and I may be totally wrong. I’m not an economist
I looked up some stuff about Argentina’s financial crisis since you mentioned it before, and it looks like they actually did something a bit like what I’m talking about, directly appropriating the valuable assets they could in an effort to keep being able to function:
There’s some indication that this also applied to financial products:
I can’t specifically confirm this included gold held on paper, but I think it probably would have.
As for the plausibility of this sort of thing happening in the US, in addition to the actions of Roosevelt mentioned by @[email protected], the main trigger for Nixon abandoning the gold convertibility of US dollars was France attempting to physically withdraw the gold they had stored in US banks, which they didn’t want to allow.
Thank you for your clarification, very informative