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A 1913 silver dollar can still be had for about $25 in current paper dollars. So for the above graph to be correct, the purchasing power of that silver dollar in 1913 must have been considerably above its silver melt value.
This place has the melt value of a Morgan dollar at $18.32:
https://www.ngccoin.com/price-guide/series-detail.aspx?MVDetailID=13&Series=Morgan-Dollar
Composition: 90% Silver
Weight: 26.7300g
The 1929 stock market crash didn't cause the Depression; bank failures did.
Also, a silver dollar traditionally contains approx 24grams of silver, or an ounce and a half
Banks also lost depositors' money, wiping out people who never owned a stock.
I can see you never bought pot on the black market.
Still don't believe the federal government is over-estimating inflation by any means
It's how they've managed to get so far with this covid scam.
Just the French and some others were demanding gold when they balanced their net account with the US. Balancing of accounts were required in the Bretton Woods system to avoid nations wracking up deficits and surpluses lasting more than a year.
"NIXON SLAMMED SHUT THE GOLD WINDOW. I can’t let this week pass without mentioning that August 15 marks the 50th anniversary of President Nixon “closing the gold window,” that is, ending international convertibility of dollars into gold. It killed any pretense to a gold standard and unleashed the era of floating exchange rates among currencies. For the first time in mankind’s history, the entire world was subjected to fiat money without any backing whatever.
The 1945 Bretton Woods Agreement set up a “gold exchange standard" where all currencies had a fixed exchange rate to the US dollar and only the dollar was convertible to gold, and only for central banks. It also guaranteed the deindustrialization of the US, because importers into the US were paid in gold, but domestic producers were paid in depreciating dollars. US manufacturers were doomed to lose their competitive edge, and did.
What had happened? Guns and butter. Through the 1960s the US government under Lyndon Johnson tried to provide guns (the Vietnam War) and butter (the War on Poverty) and inflated the dollar. Every more dollars were printed upon the same pile of gold reserves — actually, a shrinking pile as many countries, notably France and Japan, saw the handwriting on the wall and began cashing in dollars for gold. At some point the US would run short of gold and have to close the gold window.
That point came on Sunday, 15 August, 1971. Nixon interrupted Bonanza on TV to announce the closing of the gold window as a “temporary” measure. Fifty years later, I reckon, it is still temporary.
The rest is open history. By January 1980 gold had shot from $35 an ounce to $850, increasing 24.49 times. With gold today at $1,780, it is 50.86 times the 1971 dollar price. Gold hasn’t changed; a troy ounce of gold still weighs 31.1034 grams but the US dollar has shrunk to 1.96¢ of its 1971 value. Yassir, that Federal Reserve sure knows how to manage a currency. These are the people you are trusting with your wealth when you leave it in dollars, and this is their performance history."