Gold bug: Difference between revisions

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===Notable gold bugs===
===Notable gold bugs===
* [[Judy Shelton]]<ref name="Judy Shelton Gold Bug">{{cite news | url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/judy-shelton-a-goldbug-who-bends-to-fit-trump-11562242148 | title=Judy Shelton, a Goldbug Who Bends to Fit Trump | newspaper= The Wall Street Journal| date=4 July 2019 | access-date=9 July 2019 | last1=Ip | first1=Greg }}</ref>
* [[Hugh McCulloch]] -27th and 36th [[United States Secretary of the Treasury|U.S. Secretary of the Treasury]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.moaf.org/exhibits/checks_balances/abraham-lincoln/mcculloch|title=Hugh McCulloch|work=Museum of American Finance|access-date=16 September 2025}}</ref>
* [[Judy Shelton]] - Economist<ref name="Judy Shelton Gold Bug">{{cite news | url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/judy-shelton-a-goldbug-who-bends-to-fit-trump-11562242148 | title=Judy Shelton, a Goldbug Who Bends to Fit Trump | newspaper= The Wall Street Journal| date=4 July 2019 | access-date=9 July 2019 | last1=Ip | first1=Greg }}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==

Latest revision as of 22:22, 20 September 2025

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"Gold bug" (sometimes spelled "goldbug") is a term frequently employed in the financial sector and among economists in reference to persons who are extremely bullish on the commodity gold as an investment or a standard for measuring wealth.[1] Depending on the circumstances the term can have one or a combination of closely related and often overlapping themes that extend beyond the support for gold as an investment, including in some cases the use of the term as a pejorative.

Various themes on the term

  • An investor or speculator who is very bullish in buying the commodity gold, or similarly themed financial products such as junior mining companies, gold certificates, bullion ETFs, and other derivative instruments related to precious metals.[1]
  • A person who opposes or criticizes the use of "fiat currency" and supports a return to the use of the gold standard[2] or some other currency system based on the value of gold and other "hard" assets.
  • Someone who considers one commodity, usually gold, "the appropriate measure of wealth, regardless of the quantity of other goods and services that it can buy".[3][4]
  • A person, often with views summarized above, that subscribes to "conspiracy theories" relating to gold & silver, frequently including but not limited to, alleged manipulation of the price of precious metals and the supposed disappearance of gold held by the United States Government at Fort Knox.[5][6] The Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee (GATA) is a small but prominent promoter of such conspiracy theories within the gold bug community.[7] However, such persons are widely dismissed as cranks and their beliefs as fringe by reputable economists, business leaders and government officials.[8][9]

History

The concept, in the second sense, was popularized in the 1896 U.S. presidential election, when William McKinley supporters took to wearing gold lapel pins, gold neckties, and gold headbands in a demonstration of support for gold against the "silver menace".[10]

Notable gold bugs

See also

References

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  2. Gevinson, Alan. Silverites, Populists, and the Movement for Free Silver. Teachinghistory.org, accessed 18 December 2011.
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  10. Mieczkowski, Yanek and Carnes, The Routledge Historical Atlas of Presidential Elections (2001), p.176. Template:ISBN
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