In Venezuela's crisis, the bolívar devalued so severely that its calorific value when burned for fuel exceeded its purchasing power. This illustrates the complete collapse of a currency's function as a store of value and medium of exchange.
Holding cash is a losing strategy because governments consistently respond to economic crises by printing money. This devalues savings, effectively forcing individuals to invest in assets like stocks simply to protect their purchasing power against inflation.
The recent unrest originated with merchants in Tehran's Grand Bazaar, a group that prioritizes stability. Their protests highlight the crisis's economic roots: inability to access hard currency for imports, rampant inflation, and collapsing consumer demand, making business untenable for even multi-million dollar traders.
When local currency collapses, companies in places like Venezuela must shift focus from core operations to creatively exporting anything possible (like salt or pallets) just to secure hard currency for essential imports like spare parts.
Having lived through hyperinflation where money became a meaningless number, the real store of value is owning productive assets. A portfolio of quality businesses that provide real goods and services offers tangible protection that fiat currency cannot, as these businesses can adapt and reprice.
The silver crisis, where paper claims became worthless without physical backing, is a direct analogy for the US dollar. Its value relies solely on global confidence, which is eroding due to massive national debt. This makes the dollar the ultimate fragile “paper asset,” susceptible to a similar rapid loss of trust.
Instead of officially defaulting on unpayable promises like Social Security, governments opt for massive inflation. This devalues the currency so severely that while citizens receive their checks, the money's purchasing power is destroyed, rendering the benefits worthless without an explicit, unpopular cut.
Economic uncertainty and anxiety are the root causes of political violence. When governments devalue currency through inflation and amass huge debts, they create the stressful conditions that history shows consistently lead to civil unrest.
The word "inflation" is a deliberately implanted euphemism that makes monetary debasement sound like positive growth. The reality is that money is depreciating and its purchasing power is being stolen. Reframing it as "monetary depreciation" reveals the true, negative nature of the process and shifts public perception from a necessary evil to outright theft.
The decline of the US dollar won't result in a simple replacement by the Chinese Yuan. Instead, its core functions are fracturing: 'store of value' is shifting to gold and Bitcoin, while 'medium of exchange' is moving to a multi-polar system of local currencies like the rupee and yuan.
In an environment dominated by government debt and money printing, holding cash is not a neutral act of saving; it's direct exposure to inflation. As the government devalues the currency to manage its interest payments, the purchasing power of cash diminishes. The priority must shift from simply saving to owning productive or scarce assets as a defense.