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Some Thoughts on Numismatics
and Changing Times
By
Q. David Bowers
Numismatic Perspective
Quite
a few years ago a numismatic magazine published an article by me,
stating that I was an "economist from Columbia University".
This looked nice in print, but wasn't true. I sent the editor a correction
at which time he said that he had "heard this somewhere".
In actuality, I love economics and economic theory, have studied
(via my library) the subject intensely, and at Penn State in 1960
earned a degree in Finance.
To
me the combination of numismatics, economics and finance is a
dynamic one. It is also quite useful in planning. This led me on
the path to research the history of the coin market, leading to a
series of articles on coin price and popularity cycles, first published
in the early 1960s, and since then revised and expanded. In my latest
book, published by Whitman, An
Expert's Guide to Collecting and Investing in Coins, you
will find a lot of
significant and interesting (hopefully) information on coin market
cycles, with some general background given on other things.
Economics
has been called the dismal science by some, and it may be. This one
element of American and worldwide life can neither be predicted with
accuracy nor understood clearly. I believe all of us were amazed
during the Jimmy Carter administration in the 1970s when, in defiance
of all standard economic theories, we had double-digit interest rates
and double-digit inflation at the same time. High interest rates
are supposed to dampen inflation and, hopefully, make it go away!
All bets were off, all rules were broken. Then we had Ronald Reagan's "trickle
down" theory, called Reaganomics by some. No matter how it was viewed,
it did straighten up the American economy, which seemed in dire peril
and about to crash completely.
Today
in 2005 we have interest rates being hiked by the Federal Reserve
System (recently to 4%, the highest in four years, but still far
below the levels of earlier decades), a real estate bubble that everyone
predicts is about to pop, and rising costs everywhere, My
own view is that interest rates will continue to rise, due to general
worldwide prosperity as well as domestic prosperity, the latter encouraged
by what many consider to be reckless spending and vast sums of government
money thrown around, often without what the business sector considers
to be effective management or oversight. I do not mean to be political,
and we all have our opinions, so I'll stop here. However, perhaps
being a transplanted Yankee, my feeling is that if you want to spend
a dollar, it's good to have a dollar in the bank.
As to what the current
American economic milieu means for numismatics, the coin market has
been there, done that in various mutations over a long time, As I see
it, increased inflation will bring with it increased costs of living
and everything else.
Speculators
in real estate property not being used for office space or actual
residence will have their fingers burned- nothing new or unexpected-
the same thing happened to dot.com stock investors in 2000. Remember
those television scenes in which leading brokerage companies would
give naive but well-to-do people desks so they could trade all day?
That is, until their money ran out. Just like a casino.
Cost
of services will rise, including transportation, energy, interest,
medical care, and more. At the same time I do not see a corresponding
cost in real take-home income. Companies are trying to cut costs
everywhere- cutting medical benefits, reducing overtime, hiring cheaper
labor, outsourcing, buying goods in third-world countries, and so
on. The idea of using your home to borrow money from some distant
television advertiser to "consolidate your debts" or to enjoy life
more will come to an abrupt end, as anyone who had taken out an adjustable
rate mortgage will find a particular squeeze: more interest to pay,
but less income from which to pay it.
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