bobevenson wrote:FlashDangerpants wrote:bobevenson wrote:Since money is a medium of exchange, the question is, the exchange of what?
Services, time, skills and labor.
When you go to work and exchange your labor for money, you probably aren't selling property.
Almost none of the money you receive is for property you have sold unless you own a shop, which most of us do not.
Money is a medium of exchange of property, which includes labor that is incorporated into property or labor such as a concert that is property with a shelf life of zero.
So you need enough money to represent the full market value of every object
Even though that value changes when the object is made more valuable through work, or it just becomes more valuable through demand.
And now you are accounting for services as objects of value which is immediately consumed and destroyed.
So those service objects require you to print new money too, as they cannot be paid for using the money you printed to cover the value of real objects.
You are describing an impossible project that fails to meet its basic obligation to control prices. If you want inflation to stop, you have to make it illegal for workers to get pay rises and for producers to increase their prices. A house has to be sold for exactly the price it was bought at, and improving objects to make them more valuable must be illegal too.