Whoever Does Not Respect the Penny is Not Worthy of the Dollar

Whoever Does Not Respect the Penny is Not Worthy of the Dollar

By Nick Giambruno

This definitive sign of a currency collapse is easy to see…

When paper money literally becomes trash.

Maybe you’ve seen images depicting hyperinflation in Germany after World War I. The German government had printed so much money that it became worthless. Technically, German merchants still accepted the currency, but it was impractical to use. It would have required wheelbarrows full of paper money just to buy a loaf of bread.

At the time, no one would bother to pick up money off the ground. It wasn’t worth any more than the other crumpled pieces of paper on the street.

Today, there’s a similar situation in the U.S. When was the last time you saw someone make the effort to pick up a penny off the street? A nickel? A dime?

Walking around New York City recently, I saw pennies, nickels, and dimes just sitting there on busy sidewalks. This happened at least five times in one day. Even homeless people wouldn’t bother to bend over and pick up anything less than a quarter.

The U.S. dollar has become so debased that these coins are essentially pieces of rubbish. They have little to no practical value.

Refusing to Acknowledge the Truth

It costs 1.7 cents to make a penny and 8 cents to make a nickel, according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office. The U.S. government loses tens of millions of dollars every year putting these coins into circulation.

Why is it wasting money and time making coins almost no one uses? Because phasing out the penny and nickel would mean acknowledging currency debasement. And governments never like to do that. It would reveal their incompetence and theft from savers.

This isn’t new or unique to the U.S. For decades, governments around the world have refused to phase out worthless currency denominations. This helps them deny the problem even exists. They refuse to issue currency in higher denominations for the same reason.

Take Argentina, for example. The country has some of the highest inflation in the world. In the last 12 months, the peso has lost over half its value.

I was just in Argentina, and the largest bill there is the 100-peso note, which is worth around $7. It’s not uncommon for Argentinians to pay with large wads of cash at restaurants and stores. The sight would unnerve many Americans, who’ve been trained by the government through the War on Cash to view it as suspicious and dangerous.

For many years, the Argentine government refused to issue larger notes. Fortunately, that’s changing under the recently elected pro-market president Mauricio Macri. His government has promised to introduce 200-, 500-, and 1,000-peso notes in the near future.

This is the opposite of what’s happening in the U.S., where the $100 bill is the largest bill in circulation. That wasn’t always the case. At one point, the U.S. had $500, $1,000, $5,000, and even $10,000 bills. The government eliminated these large bills in 1969 under the pretext of fighting the War on Some Drugs.

The $100 bill has been the largest ever since. But it has far less purchasing power than it did in 1969. Decades of rampant money printing have debased the dollar. Today, a $100 note buys less than a $20 note did in 1969.

Even though the Federal Reserve has devalued the dollar over 80% since 1969, it still refuses to issue notes larger than $100.

Pennies and Nickels Under Sound Money

For perspective, consider what a penny and a nickel would be worth under a sound money system backed by gold. From 1792 to 1934, the price of gold was around $20 per ounce. Under this system, it took around 2,000 pennies to make an ounce of gold. At today’s gold price, a “sound money penny” would be worth about 55 modern pennies. A “sound money nickel” would be worth about $3.

I don’t pick up pennies off the sidewalk. But I would if pennies were backed by gold. If that were to happen, I doubt there would be many pennies sitting on busy New York sidewalks.

Ron Paul said it best when he discussed this issue…

“There is an old German saying that goes, ‘Whoever does not respect the penny is not worthy of the dollar.’ It expresses the sense that those who neglect or ignore the small things cannot be trusted with larger things, and fittingly describes the problems facing both the dollar and our nation today.

Unless Congress puts an end to the Fed’s loose monetary policy and returns to a sound and stable dollar, the issue of U.S. coin composition will be revisited every few years until inflation finally forces coins out of circulation altogether and we are left with only worthless paper.”

There’s an important lesson here.

Politicians and bureaucrats are the biggest threats to your financial security. For years, they’ve been quietly debasing the country’s currency… and inviting a currency catastrophe.

Most people have no idea how bad things can get when a currency collapses… let alone how to prepare.

How will you protect your savings in the event of a currency crisis? This just-released video will show you exactly how. Click here to watch it now.

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10 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
February 23, 2016 7:28 pm

Executive Order 13603 – Obama authorizes SLAVE LABOR on a large scale on American soil.

llpoh
llpoh
February 23, 2016 10:14 pm

I always pick up coins no matter the denomination. Always have, suspect I always will.

What does it take, 2 seconds max to pick up a coin? A penny makes it $18 an hour. Better than nothing. A dime – wowee that is $180 an hour.

One man gathers what another man spills.

Fiatman60
Fiatman60
February 23, 2016 10:37 pm

Canada has already phased out the penny…….. nickels and dimes are on the chopping block next.

And most Canadians applauded the governments move. Blows me away…….

Digby
Digby
  Fiatman60
September 26, 2019 11:17 pm

At least Canada has actual 1- and 2-dollar coins (loonies and toonies) in active circulation, unlike the USA. This is more or less part of the problem described in the article: by refusing to replace the $1 bill with a coin, the US govt. and the Fed also refuse to admit that the problem of inflation exists. Four decades after the introduction of the Susan B. Anthony dollar, USians are still forced to pay machines with stacks of quarters wherever bills can’t be used.
https://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2014/05/saving-money-one-coin-at-time.html

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
February 23, 2016 11:17 pm

I always pick up any coins I come across.

The company I work for rents several suites in a larger industrial park setting. There is a certain company involved in the money business there as well. Quite by accident one night I discovered a quantity of coins in their dumpster when took out the trash. Wondering if it was a one off occurrence I checked it several weeks in a row and it turned out to be a regular, weekly occurrence. These coins are in nice clean bags and all I have to do is cut one corner out and pour them into my hand. I take home $4-$8 a week for 2-3 minutes work. The only reason the coins are in there is pure fucking laziness on the part of the employees who work there.

AC
AC
February 23, 2016 11:31 pm

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I know it’s old, but still . . .

Dis Nigga
Dis Nigga
February 24, 2016 12:02 am

IndenturedServant says: Quite by accident one night I discovered a quantity of coins in their dumpster when took out the trash.

Infester Sicko has been dumpster diving for dollars and you all wonder when the collapse will happen?

Wip
Wip
February 24, 2016 8:30 am

Why is Volker lumped in with the psychopaths?

Wip
Wip
February 24, 2016 8:31 am

Volcker

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contact lenses specially
March 3, 2017 11:50 pm

Great article.