Editor: Casey's Gold & Resource Report
Having worked on his family’s gold claims in C... More
By Jeff Clark, Senior Editor, Casey’s Gold & Resource Report
“A dollar is worth only 70¢ now,” my Dad jabbered as we worked in the backyard. “And they say it’ll only be worth 50¢ in a few years.”
It was the mid-‘70s. I was helping my Dad build a dirt road to our barn and he wasn’t happy. Not about the hard work or humidity, but from what was happening to the dollar. Inflation was starting to kick into high gear, grabbing headlines that even a girl-chasing teenager could understand.
I remember being appalled by the thought of going to the store and having the clerk demand $1.30 for an item marked $1. Knowing what I know now, my thinking wasn’t that far off.
We lived in a small Pennsylvania town just a Sunday drive from where redneck jokes started. The local paper once ran a story of a blue-collar worker in the next county over who had stuffed a tidy wad of dollars into the back of his gun cabinet early in his working life. The money was discovered by the family after his death. While saving money is good, the duck-hunter equivalent of Family Mattress Bank & Trust won’t keep your money from depreciating; the stash of $10s and $20s had lost over half their purchasing power since he’d hidden them some 30 years earlier.
About the same time the gun locker was being lined with legal tender, both of my grandfathers – unbeknownst to me at the time – bought some gold and silver coins for me and likewise stored them away. I inherited one set a few years ago and got the others just last month. And the purchasing power of the coins is still the same as it was 30 years ago.
You can probably recall similar experiences about the dollar and what it was “worth” from your childhood. Even if you can’t, you intuitively know my conclusion is correct: the dollar ain’t worth what it used to be. And gold really does protect the purchasing power of saved wealth.
Happy Anniversary, Fiat Dollar
In August, the U.S. dollar celebrated its 38th anniversary as a fiat currency.
When Roosevelt issued his infamous 1933 presidential diktat, forcing delivery (confiscation) of gold owned by private citizens to the government in exchange for compensation, gold was $20.67/oz. In January 1934, the price was raised to $35/oz and the U.S. government pocketed the difference – and essentially devalued the dollar by 69%.
Yet the dollar remained convertible, and foreign central banks could redeem their dollar reserves for gold. This presented no problem when the U.S. was running trade surpluses and foreigners didn't have many dollars to exchange for gold. But in 1965, France’s President Charles de Gaulle started aggressively exchanging his country’s dollars for gold and loudly encouraged other countries to do likewise. That year U.S. gold holdings fell to a 26-year low.
Several schemes were tried to stop the drain on the U.S.’s hoard, including lifting the price to $42/oz early in 1971, but nothing worked. The run on the dollar did not abate. With the U.S. unable to eliminate its trade deficit, Nixon was faced with the stark reality of another dollar devaluation. He opted instead to close the gold window on August 15, 1971, ending dollar-for-gold convertibility. The dollar was suddenly off the gold standard, and half of U.S. gold holdings had disappeared. The greenback began to “float,” meaning it wasn’t tied to any standard and could be printed at will.
So how’s it done since then?
Fiat = Faulty
The following chart tracks what has happened to the purchasing power of the dollar and gold since the gold standard ended in 1971. After adjusting for inflation, you can plainly see the erosion of a dollar bill, now able to purchase only 18¢ of what it did in 1971, vs. an ounce of gold, which has not only stood up but increased in purchasing power.
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Today, the amount of bubble gum you get for $1 could have been purchased for 18¢ in 1971.
In sharp contrast, you can buy about 3½ times more bubble gum today with the same gold coin you had in 1971.
There are two overriding conclusions from this chart:
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