From Thaler to Dollar
A short history of the silver Thaler and the devalued, gold-less Dollar it's become...
SOME PEOPLE say that the US Dollar's days are numbered, writes
private-wealth manager Nathan Lewis
of New World Economics at the Huffington
Post.
Maybe so. Let's look at the Dollar's long history, and see how we got to where we are
today.
The "Dollar" originated in the city of Joachimsthal in Bavaria (now Germany). Beginning in
1518, silver from the mines
near Joachimsthal was minted into silver "thalers", with a standardized weight of 29.2 grams. ("Thal"
means "valley" in
German.)
Eventually, governments throughout Europe adopted this standardized
coin for commerce. The silver
came from many locations, and many different governments produced the coins, but they were all basically
identical. Europe was on a
"Dollar standard"...

European "thaler" coins from the 16th-18th centuries are shown here, with a modern US quarter for
comparison.
The Spanish silver Dollar emerged from the rich mines of the Spanish colonies of the New World,
particularly Mexico. The Spanish
Dollar became the most common coin in the American colonies, although silver dollars from throughout
Europe also
circulated.
In 1792, after the American Revolution, Congress adopted the
European "thaler" or dollar as the
standard in the new United States. They were following standard practice throughout Europe. The US
Dollar was just a bit lighter than
the original thaler, at 27.0 grams of silver.
In those days, gold and silver
traded at a ratio that hardly
varied over centuries. It was known as a "bimetallic" system. About 15 or 16 ounces of silver had the
same value as an ounce of gold.
Thus, the silver "thaler" system was also, in a sense, a gold system.
In time,
gold became the central
monetary basis rather than silver. Britain went to a "monometallic" (gold-only) system in 1816. The
United States effectively put gold
on top in 1834, although British-style monometallism was not wholly adopted until 1900. The Coinage Act
of 1834 set the value of the
US Dollar at $20.67/ounce of gold, or 1/20.67th of an ounce. This works out to 1.5048 grams of
gold.
Thus, we
see that the "dollar" as roughly 1.5048 grams of gold, or $20.67/ounce, has a history that dates back to
the early 16th century and
encompassed all of Europe. The "dollar" was an unchanging unit of account for 415 years, until
1933.
During
this time, there were many experiments with floating, paper currencies. The US colonies had a wave of
hyperinflation in the 1740s, and
again in the 1780s. There was another round of currency devaluation during the Civil War. However, after
the smoke cleared, they
returned again and again to the stable gold Dollar.
The first permanent
devaluation of the US Dollar took
place during the Great Depression. In 1933, the Dollar's value was reduced to $35 per ounce, or 1/35th
an ounce of gold (0.8887
grams). The introduction of floating currencies in 1971 was then something of an accident. It was an
unplanned consequence of Richard
Nixon's "easy money" policies of 1970. It was supposed to be temporary. As we can see now, however, it
was one of the biggest changes
to Western civilization in the past 500 years.
The Dollar soon lost about 90%
of its value, and stabilized
around $350 per ounce in the 1980s and 1990s. This period of crude stability has been called the "Great
Moderation" by some
economists. But this "Great Moderation" period
has apparently ended. We are now in a new period of currency deterioration, whose final outcome remains
to be seen.

Capitalism, as we know it, was based on
the foundation of the stable Dollar. I am sure that, in time, the floating-currency system in place
since the Nixon days will be seen
as an abomination. I argued in my book Gold: the Once and Future Money that a return to the
original foundations of
capitalism is a historical certainty. The only real question is the timing.
Russia, China and other
forward-thinking nations are already preparing for the system that will replace the dollar. At a G8
meeting in July 2009, Russian
President Dmitry Medvedev held up a half-ounce Gold Bullion coin and said it was an example of a
"unified future world
currency."
Americans, as usual, were completely oblivious. However, I guarantee
the point was not lost on
leaders elsewhere in the world.
Ready to Buy Gold
today...?











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