Those who suffered the most in 1929-1939 were those who were in debt. I think we can agree it pays to have no debt and some coin when and if something like that happens again. So having some gold, silver, platinum, etc isn't a terrible idea. In moderation. My opinion is there is no guarantee that precious metals will be a viable currency for the average schlub. Or predicting what it will be worth. All securities (stocks) didn't become worthless in 1929. Joe Kennedy made his colossal family fortune investing in stocks that were undervalued after the markets crashed.
Hopefully none of us here find out which philosophy is right or wrong.
This.
This reminds me of Cooper writing about his young life. His class was given an assignment to describe how the Depression had affected each of their lives. He was the odd man out at school in that his home life was largely unaffected and his family did not suffer. The picture he painted was that while his family was not extravagantly wealthy, they were what would later be described as upper middle class.
They had domestic staff at home. His father worked for a bank as a real estate appraiser. His family vacationed in Europe at the height of the Depression. The bank his father worked for would refuse his request for extended vacation, so he would resign, take his family on vacation, and the bank would re-hire him when he returned. This sounded to me like it was pre-arranged to circumvent bank policy, as it would be considered lunacy to quit a job like that during the Depression. When he was in his late teens, his father took him on a guided hunt into Canada.
This contrasted sharply to the stories I heard growing up.
The plant my grandfather worked at as a printer was founded by a kindly South American immigrant who knew hardship firsthand. Instead of laying off half his workforce when things got tough, he retained them all on a 20 hour per week schedule, so all his employees at least made enough to eat and survive.
No car. Gramps walked to work. Took his lunch with him. He turned his paycheck over to my grandmother and she was the family bean counter. Paid the rent, bought the groceries, and saved what little they could in case it got worse. And it was like this until the Depression ended.
So, the lessons they drilled into me as a child about staying out of debt were based on experience, and while my peers didn't hesitate to finance cars and boats and trucks, I saved and paid cash. Never bought a new car because it would mean financing it and when you see how fast a new car depreciates, you will wonder why anyone is willing to buy new.
When I worked at the car dealership, I saw more than once some young new car buyer that financed the car through FMC or GMAC under one of the "No money down, 90 days until the first payment" schemes designed to lure the unknowing. A few times these people would wreck the car and at first were happy to hear that the car was totaled, being under the impression that the insurance money would be enough to replace the car. Many tears and long faces when the hand of depreciation bitch slapped them when they were told that not only was that not happening, but they still owed money to the bank.
Rant over.
