Alfie said:
His idea doesn't make sense from around the 19 minute mark, he suggests releasing coins based on weight... if the silver price falls, used an example of coins maintaining their FACE VALUE, can't have both!
If I'm wrong, then I'm confused
Cheers
Alfie
The idea is that you have two monetary systems operating in parallel with some kind of transparent and officially recognised exchange rate between the two.
For example, the Silver-to-Euro "fix price" for today might be EUR 22.80 / oz and that exchange rate will be good for all transactions occurring today.
That means 1oz of silver is worth EUR 22.80 and EUR 22.80 is worth 1oz of silver. If I buy something from you that costs EUR 30.00 then I could pay you 1oz of silver plus EUR 7.20 in "fiat" Euros and you'd have to accept it because the silver coin is legal tender.
Tomorrow the Silver-to-Euro "fix price" will be different - Euros might be worth more if the price of silver goes down or they might be worth less if the price of silver goes up. Or silver might be more in Euros because the market has sold Euros to buy the USD. Either way, there is always some kind of exchange rate that exists between everything.
Like I mentioned above, South Africa did this decades ago when they introduced the Krugerrand and established a "Gold Standard Lite" monetary system.