Washington debt crisis could overshadow Key visit - News Report.
Don't tell anybody this but it's all a game. It has to be. It can't be real because money isn't. Well, it's real in the sense that we have it. But it's not real in the sense that weather or an albino kiwi or chilblains are real. Money isn't something that exists in its own right. It's just paper we trust, that's all. The only thing about money that matters is that we think it matters. We believe in it. Beyond that, it isn't real.
There was a time when money was a thing of substance. It had a value, an actual value, not one we gave it. Back then, you could drive a horse and cart-full of money into your local bank - assuming the horse was continent - and exchange your notes for an agreed number of gold bars, which you would then take to the hostelry where the publican would shave a few flakes off and give you a firkin of ale.
This was called the Gold Standard and the theory behind it was sublimely simple. If country A had X amount of gold, it could print Y amount of money. If it didn't, it couldn't. And it worked jolly well for centuries. Civilisation blossomed. Trade flourished. Industries boomed. People invented useful things like golf, traction engines and the great opium-based medication, laudanum, which was used by all and sundry to ease the pain of migraines, toothache and death.
Our own Governor Grey was a devoted user. Indeed, it's widely believed that many of his best decisions - like starting the land wars - were made immediately after he'd knocked back a healthy slug of laudanum.