This article is from 1997 and is still worth reading today, as it will help you understand the realtionship between gold, US dollar and inflation. 
Introduction
Gold has been a poor investment for many years.  This  is a statement which is almost universally accepted in today's world,  but one which is only partially true.  The truth is that gold has been a  very poor investment when measured in US dollars, but has generally  proven to be a sound investment when measured in terms of almost any  other national currency.  The Indians and the Chinese, the world's  largest buyers of gold, have seen the value of their gold investments  increase by approximately 200% over the last decade.  Due to a collapse  in their national currencies, South East Asians and Koreans have also  seen the value of owning gold . 
The US dollar reached a cyclical low in April 1995,  from which it has risen over 50% against the Yen and 30% against the  Deutsche Mark .  This means that German and Japanese investors who  exchanged their national currency for gold in April 95 would now be  showing a profit on their investment, despite a 21% decrease in the US  dollar gold price over the same period.
What we have witnessed over the past 2.5 years is a  massive shift of investment capital into the US dollar from all other  currencies, including gold.   Investors around the world have placed  enormous faith in the US dollar and, therefore, in the US economic,  financial and political system which supports the dollar.   Gold has  been a victim of this flight to the US dollar, although it has fared  better than many of the government controlled forms of money.
With the US dollar continuing to strengthen as  capital flees from EMU-generated uncertainty in Europe and debt-based  currency crises throughout Asia, why should anyone invest in gold ?    Why not just invest in US dollars and US dollar denominated assets ?    In my opinion, there are only two reasons to invest in gold.
Reason # 1 To Own Gold
Many supporters of gold continue to put forward the  argument that Central Banks are controlling the gold price.   The reason  for the popularity of this argument appears to be the misconception  that the demand for gold exceeds the supply of gold.   After all, if the  demand for something does exceed its supply by a substantial amount and  for a long time, and the price goes down, then it is logical to assume  that there must be dark forces at work to manufacture this unreal  situation.   The problem is, whenever you start from an incorrect  premise and then develop your arguments based on flawless logic, you  must necessarily arrive at the wrong conclusion.
Perhaps it is hard for goldbugs to accept that gold  is a genuinely unpopular investment at the moment when compared to the  all-conquering US dollar.   However, the fact is that net CB sales of  gold over the past few years have been small.   Gold loans by CBs have  probably had some effect, but the over-riding factor is that private  investment demand for gold has reached its lowest point since 1971.    Until there is an increase in this demand then the above-ground stock of  monetary gold, more than 60% of which is held in private hands, will be  an available source of supply.
Just as it is wrong to think that the supposed annual  deficit in gold supply (the difference between newly mined supply and  commercial demand) will lead to a higher gold price, it is equally wrong  to think that the above-ground stock held by the CBs is necessarily  sufficient to meet demand for many years to come.   Trillions of dollars  of investment capital is moving around the world each day searching out  stability or protection or investment returns.  If  confidence in financial assets and government controlled currencies was  to significantly reduce, then the total gold reserves of all CBs (worth  320 billion dollars at current gold prices) could be absorbed in an  instant by private investors.
Government controlled currencies are liabilities of  the monetary agents and are backed by debt.   Their value is hence based  on the level of confidence in the financial and political systems and  their rates of exchange tend to oscillate daily based on changes in this  confidence level.  For example, if  doubt arises regarding the quality of the debt which provides the asset  backing for a currency, then capital will shift from that currency into  an alternative investment.   Gold, a tangible asset which has been  valued as a store of wealth for thousands of years, provides an ideal  alternative.
Those who are advocating the CB conspiracy theories are failing to appreciate a very important point :   The primary reason to own gold as an investment is because it is not controlled by central banks and governments.
Reason # 2 To Own Gold
The second reason to own gold is a corollary of the  first.   The debt which forms the asset backing of a national currency  can be split into two groups  -  private debt and government debt.   The  quality of private debt will reduce if the cashflow of the borrowers is  insufficient to meet the repayments and /or the value of the underlying  security for the loan (real estate, shares, etc) becomes less than the  amount of the loan.   This is the situation which Japan has faced since  1990 (lending based on collateral rather than cashflow followed by a  substantial reduction in asset values has resulted in huge,  non-performing private debts).   Large scale defaults on private debts  will force asset sales, pushing down asset values even further, and stop  new investment .  Liquidity will thus be removed from the system and  interest rates will fall to a point where investment once again becomes  feasible.   The process is self correcting unless, of course, the  government tries to help.
A different set of rules, however, apply to  government debt .   These rules can begin to be understood by first  reading the following explanation of central bank powers taken from a  speech given by Alan Greenspan in January of this year :
"Central banks can issue currency, a  non-interest-bearing claim on the government, effectively without limit.  They can discount loans and other assets of banks or other private  depository institutions, thereby converting potentially illiquid private  assets into riskless claims on the government in the form of deposits  at the central bank.   That all of these claims on government are  readily accepted reflects the fact that a government cannot become  insolvent with respect to obligations in its own currency."
As Greenspan points out, a government can never run out of its own currency. Therefore, the cashflow of a government will never be insufficient to service its internal debt. It can simply create as much money as it needs through the issue of new debt. It should also be noted that governments never have to concern themselves with the value of the assets used as security against their loans, because there are none. The asset which backs all government debt is the full faith and credit of the government.
A problem for a country occurs when new money is created at a consistently greater rate than the increase in the supply of tangible assets, resulting in rising prices, reduced demand for financial assets, and increasing interest rates. This situation arises as greater and greater levels of debt are needed to sustain a stock market or real estate bubble, or to pay for government/business expansion, or simply to service the repayments on existing debt (both private and government). 
Throughout history people have accumulated precious metals to defend their wealth from destruction as every form of paper currency ever created has been devalued through inflation. This is the second reason to own gold :
Gold is the only form of money which has maintained its purchasing power over a long period of time
Continue reading: Gold Versus The Dollar (Part Two)
 

 
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