The value of minerals is based on their scarcity (or companies agreeing to price-fix *cough* diamonds *cough* ). If Superman brought a large chunk of gold back to Earth, it would upset the market value of gold, thus devaluing the chunk he found as well as all gold on the planet.
You can’t just “print money.” That’s how you get hyperinflation. Same goes for rare earth minerals; bring home more and the value for all of them globally is reduced, creating a hyperinflation of minerals.
If Superman brought home a large enough chunk of gold, he could essentially crash the gold market and then it would be a practically useless shiny rock. He couldn’t even buy bread with it.
It would still be extremely valuable, though. You would absolutely still buy bread with it especially before you sold it all off
And an abundance of certain minerals means that more applications become possible from them. For example, silver is a better conductor than copper. If Superman hauled back a fuckton of silver then maybe we’d switch over to silver wires, increasing demand for silver still, reducing the price loss, as well as adding efficiencies to wiring
If Superman brought a large chunk of gold back to Earth, it would upset the market value of gold, thus devaluing the chunk he found as well as all gold on the planet.
ok, so just bring back the right quantity of gold so it doesn’t crash the gold economy. I’m pretty sure superman can manage bringing back 1 million dollars worth of gold from wherever instead of 1 squillion
The current gold market is valued at 34.243 trillion dollars.
I don’t know the scope of the damage here but lets assume it costs 50 billion to repair. That would be about 353 tons (US) of gold using current prices. The cost of this represents approximately 0.14% of the current global gold market.
The value of minerals is based on their scarcity (or companies agreeing to price-fix *cough* diamonds *cough* ). If Superman brought a large chunk of gold back to Earth, it would upset the market value of gold, thus devaluing the chunk he found as well as all gold on the planet.
You can’t just “print money.” That’s how you get hyperinflation. Same goes for rare earth minerals; bring home more and the value for all of them globally is reduced, creating a hyperinflation of minerals.
If Superman brought home a large enough chunk of gold, he could essentially crash the gold market and then it would be a practically useless shiny rock. He couldn’t even buy bread with it.
It would still be extremely valuable, though. You would absolutely still buy bread with it especially before you sold it all off
And an abundance of certain minerals means that more applications become possible from them. For example, silver is a better conductor than copper. If Superman hauled back a fuckton of silver then maybe we’d switch over to silver wires, increasing demand for silver still, reducing the price loss, as well as adding efficiencies to wiring
ok, so just bring back the right quantity of gold so it doesn’t crash the gold economy. I’m pretty sure superman can manage bringing back 1 million dollars worth of gold from wherever instead of 1 squillion
Superman is paid in trillions by the gold and rare earth lobby to never do that exact thing.
The current gold market is valued at 34.243 trillion dollars.
I don’t know the scope of the damage here but lets assume it costs 50 billion to repair. That would be about 353 tons (US) of gold using current prices. The cost of this represents approximately 0.14% of the current global gold market.