

289. The Fiat Standard Lecture 8: Fiat Food
Sep 2, 2025
Discover how fiat money has reshaped the food landscape, leading to disastrous dietary shifts. Learn about the decline of family farms and the rise of industrial agriculture, driven by government policies. Delve into the dangers of processed foods and their links to obesity, reframing it as a sign of malnutrition rather than affluence. Explore the paradox of rising food spending against deteriorating nutrition quality. Uncover the health implications of modern agricultural practices and the vital connection between soil health and our diet.
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Fiat Devalues Food Quality
- Fiat money lowers the quality of food people can afford by constantly devaluing savings and purchasing power.
- This drives substitution toward abundant, cheap industrial food that is calorie-rich but nutrient-poor.
Inflation Changes Farming Incentives
- Fiat enables governments to finance and alter agriculture and dietary policy through inflation-created credit.
- It also raises society's time preference, favoring short-term yield over long-term soil and health.
Get Big Or Get Out
- In 1971 Nixon appointed Earl Butz who told farmers "get big or get out," accelerating consolidation and industrial monoculture.
- Small family farms were replaced by large-scale monocrop operations aimed at low-cost high-volume production.