Hey Ramil, I thought a little bit about what you said, and I should say I totally understand (although not share) your point of view. Indeed, if the Russian currency is backed by the natural resources and the US currency is fiat, then exchanging the rubles for USDs may not sound like a good idea. You seem to give up a 'real' thing for an 'imaginary' thing. The natural resources are finite and the USDs are infinite. So, that does not sound like a fair deal. The situation seems even worse because you can't really save USDs as the FRS can produce them at will. Did I get you right? If yes, you should also take a wider look at the situation and realize that the US is not an evil genius, but simply has no choice. The US economy (as much as of many other countries) is run in large by the Monetarists (Monetarism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia). That had happened historically and that approach seems to guide many modern economists today. If you have a currency that's not worth to be passively saved, you would be OBLIGED TO INVEST it. That motivates the set up of the new enterprises and creates more goods and services (=the value) as well as the employment. That generates the government income (=taxes) which officially support the currency. The more business activity is happening, the better the government income is. And what matters to people is that they ultimately can consume those goods and services (=exchange among each other) and nothing else. That's how the US is evading another Great Depression. That's neither casuistry nor sophistry. Any resource-exporting country would dream to sell their resources for the backed currency and not for the fiat currency because it can be accumulated more efficiently. But the goods-producing countries simply have little choice as the shortfall of currency is considered to be one of the major causes of the Great Depression. On the other hand, the resource-exporting countries know the value of their resources (no matter how scarce) is going down in the long run. So, they need to accumulate the value right now or they would lose everything (both the resource and the value as well as making their country sick with the Dutch disease) in the long run. And they know that. So, if the goods-exporting countries would be obliged to pay with the golden standard, their goods production would decline ultimately hurting even the average consumer of the resource-exporting countries. There would be less absolute value - less goods - less comfort for you personally. Nowdays, the stores are stuffed with goods (perhaps being expensive or low quality), but going to the golden standard would effectively eliminate those goods from the stores. There would be lots of seemingly fair money, but the deficit of goods. (Back to the USSR.) And less goods mean less resources would need to be mined. So, less jobs in the resource-exporting countries as well. That's neither casuistry nor sophistry, but the very real conflict of interests with the subsequent military consequences. So, my entire point was: please be aware that by advocating golden currency you actually advocating economic decline for the whole world. Please, try to think it through objectively before you call me a sophist.