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When
was the last time you actually bent down and picked up that penny you
dropped? The U.S. penny is on its way to extinction so it’s time to
bid farewell to the basic coin and share with you an inflationary
“penny for your thoughts”.
The
penny’s composition has changed over the 219 years it has been in
circulation:
From
1787 to 1837 the composition of the penny was pure copper; From 1837 to
1857, the penny was made of bronze (95 percent copper and 5 percent tin
and zinc); From 1857, the penny was 88 percent copper and 12 percent
nickel; The Cent became bronze again (95 percent copper and 5 percent
tin and zinc) in 1864 and stayed that way until 1962; In 1962, the
cent’s zinc content was removed. Then, in 1982, the composition of the
penny was changed to 97.5 percent zinc and only 2.5 percent copper. (This
information was taken from the United States Mint website)
You
may be wondering why the United States
had to switch from a penny that consisted of mostly copper, to one that
is almost all zinc. Well, before 1982 the old copper coin weighed 3.1
grams. 100 coins – or $1.00 worth – weighed 310 grams. Since a pound
is about 453 grams, 100 pennies at 310/453 = .68 pound. Today, at $3.45
a pound for copper, 100 of those 1982 mostly copper pennies are worth
about $2.35.
The
U.S. government, which is in the business of “making money”, has
done a fabulous job of profiting on this coin. Since 1982, they’ve
used an inexpensive copper (zinc) as something of greater value (copper)
in the minting of the penny. With inflation today, even the zinc in the
penny is now worth more than the penny itself. It actually pays to take
your paper money to the bank and exchange it for pennies, then sell them
for scrap. I guess the time has really come to stop making these coins.
But
the real story behind the now-worthless penny is, by far, the surge in
inflation. If the core inflation rate is, indeed, only 2.6 percent, and
the year-over-year increase in the CPI is 4.3 percent, I wish someone
would explain why my household expenses have gone up so much.
Worse
yet, global warming has lead to record heat in the Midwest
and pushed up the cost of wheat to a ten-year high. Fruit is also
shriveling and nuts are getting burned in their shells. It’s so hot,
farm workers can sometimes work only half a day. This hasn’t helped
the cost of food one bit so I’m stocking up before the middle class
figures this out and there’s a mad rush at Costco to buy groceries
cheap, especially cereal.
When
the penny is retired and prices for goods and services are subsequently
“rounded up”- an item that would ordinarily cost $1.97, may cost
$2.00 – expect a little extra pop in inflation. (The Europeans saw a
lot of this rounding up when they turned in their local currencies for
the euro.)
For
as long as I can remember, inflation has been with me, even as a kid
when I bought penny candies. In the 1950’s, my father actually
purchased a brand new modest two-bedroom house in the Midwest for
$11,700 and a new car for $2,500. (Some suites at fancy hotels in
Las
Vegas can charge $2,500 for one night). Inflation also makes planning and saving for retirement a
real issue. Unless you know how long you will live, I have to assume
that the core cost of goods I need will be going up at least 10 to 15
percent in nominal dollars a year.
So,
for the time being, our best recommendation for a long-term inflation
hedge is to own real gold and silver and some I-Bonds in a rainy day
fund. (Thank you, Federal Reserve, for a “fiat monetary
system”.)
In
years past, Americans would hoard dimes, quarters and silver dollars
(before the silver was taken out of them). A silver dollar weighing one
ounce would today be worth $11! Therefore, in the long run, stashing
away zinc pennies may actually make a lot of cents. Any enterprising boy
scout should be able to figure this out.

© 2006 Richard Benson
Specialty Finance Group
Benson's Economic & Market Trends
Editorial
Archive l www.sfgroup.org
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