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Serpo
23rd July 2015, 04:58 PM
sarc.........


Fifty Years of Debasing Money – July 23 Marks The 50th Anniversary Of The Coinage Act Of 1965, Which Stripped U.s. Coins Of Silver And Made Legal Tender Out Of Base Metal Slugs. by IWB (http://investmentwatchblog.com/author/admin-2/) · July 23, 2015


The Coinage Act of 1965 marked the end of silver coins, contrary to what LBJ promised.
July 23 marks the 50th anniversary of the Coinage Act of 1965, which stripped U.S. coins of silver and made legal tender out of base metal slugs. It’s an anniversary that comes at an apt time, as Congress considers monetary reform.
This discussion has been quietly taking place in recent months, in the Senate Banking and House Financial Services committees. Rep. Kevin Brady (R., Texas), vice chairman of the Joint Economic Committee, recently reintroduced a proposal for a Centennial Monetary Commission as the Federal Reserve starts its second century.
The anniversary of the 1965 Coinage Act is a reminder of why reform is needed. Speaking (http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=27108)from the White House Rose Garden, President Lyndon B. Johnson called the law he signed a “very rare and historic occasion.” It certainly was; it superseded the coinage act drafted by Alexander Hamilton and passed by Congress in 1792.
The original coinage act established the United States Mint and declared the dollar as the “money of account” for the new republic. It defined the dollar as 3711/4 grains of silver or the equivalent in gold; the penalty for debasing coins struck under the law was death.
When LBJ signed the 1965 act, the value of a dollar was almost exactly the same as it had been in 1792—0.77 ounces of silver. Despite some downs and ups, on average it had been remarkably steady for the long span.
That was because since Hamilton’s day, as the president noted, “our coinage of dimes, and quarters, and half dollars, and dollars have contained 90% silver.” Not any more: The new dimes and quarters would “contain no silver.” Instead they would be “composites, with faces of the same alloy used in our 5-cent piece that is bonded to a core of pure copper.” The new half dollar would have 80% silver on the outside and 19% silver inside.
In the face of a “worldwide shortage of silver,” LBJ said, “the only really prudent course was to reduce our dependence upon silver for making our coins.” Then the president made claims that look, in light of history, laughable.
“Some have asked whether our silver coins will disappear.” He denied it; silver coins would “very definitely” not disappear or “even become rarities.”
The president estimated that the more than 12 billion silver dimes and quarters and half dollars in circulation would “be used side-by-side with our new coins.” He also warned against hoarding silver: “Treasury has a lot of silver on hand, and it can be, and it will be used to keep the price of silver in line with its value in our present silver coin.”
This was a vain boast. The value of the dollar started sinking after the 1965 coinage act, and by 1980 the dollar—so long valued at 0.77 ounces of silver—plunged to 0.02 ounces of silver. Today it is valued at 0.06 ounces of silver.
The pre-1965 silver coins have mostly disappeared from circulation. Misers who try to spend silver or gold coins they have hoarded are subject to a capital-gains tax. Monetary purists, incidentally, prefer to speak of “spending” gold and silver, rather than “selling” it, because gold and silver are the true constitutional money.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/fifty-years-of-debasing-money-1437522237

Ponce
24th July 2015, 09:38 AM
I'll take the "metal slugs" over "paper" any time of the day.......to you, which one is more valuable?.....think.

V

burningleg
24th July 2015, 10:18 AM
I'll take the "metal slugs" over "paper" any time of the day.......to you, which one is more valuable?.....think.

V

Is that a trick question? ;)

madfranks
24th July 2015, 10:35 AM
The coinage act of '65 is the reason why half dollars aren't used hardly ever anymore. Prior to '65, half dollars were as common as quarters, dimes and nickels, commonly spent, commonly given in change. After this act, because the half dollar was the only coin still minted with silver, nobody would spend them (why spend a silver half dollar when the store by law has to accept two clad quarters?). This is a classic example of Gresham's law. So from '65 to '70, people hoarded half dollars and stopped spending them, so even when the half dollar was made all clad in '71 nobody was using them anymore.

monty
24th July 2015, 11:22 AM
The coinage act of '65 is the reason why half dollars aren't used hardly ever anymore. Prior to '65, half dollars were as common as quarters, dimes and nickels, commonly spent, commonly given in change. After this act, because the half dollar was the only coin still minted with silver, nobody would spend them (why spend a silver half dollar when the store by law has to accept two clad quarters?). This is a classic example of Gresham's law. So from '65 to '70, people hoarded half dollars and stopped spending them, so even when the half dollar was made all clad in '71 nobody was using them anymore.


The same thing happened with silver dollars in Nevada. We used silver dollars because of the gambling industry. Native Nevadans didn't particulary like paper dollars. Often they were refered to as Jew flags. After the passage of the '65 coinage act the silver dollars rapidly vanished from circulation just like the half dollars did.

Ponce
24th July 2015, 11:38 AM
One more time......I see regular coins of today becoming very valuable in the future.......I have being collecting them for the past 35 years :) .......remember that I posted this "useful" post hahahhahahahahah.

V