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Economics 101
- Dollars and Cents: How Money is Made – Lesson
- Supply and Demand: It’s Basic Economics – Lesson
- What Is Credit and How Is It Used? – Lesson
- What is Interest? – Lesson
- Taxation: What is it? – Lesson
- What is GDP? – Lesson
- The Supply Chain Crisis – What Is It? – Lesson
- The Supply Chain Crisis – What Is It? – Quiz
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The U.S. Monetary System
- The Story of the US Dollar – Lesson
- What’s the Deal with the Federal Reserve? – Lesson – VIDEO
- What’s the Deal with the Federal Reserve? – Quiz
- What is the Federal Reserve? – Lesson
- America’s Middle Class is the Best in the World? – Lesson
- National Debt: Will It Continue to Grow? – Lesson
- What’s Eating the US Economy These Days? – Lesson
- What’s Eating the US Economy These Days? – Quiz
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Applied Economics
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Cycles of the Economy
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Economic Systems: Capitalism vs. Socialism
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Talking Trade
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All About Investing
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The Future of Money
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Economy Today
The Story of the US Dollar – Lesson
Where did the dollar come from?
The United States dollar – equal to 100 cents – is the nation’s official currency. It is represented by the $ symbol. Also known as the greenback, the dollar is the most used currency in the world.
A Currency is Born
The US dollar was born with the Coinage Act of 1792, which said a dollar of currency would be equal to as many as 416 grains of silver. A $10 note was worth up to 270 grains of gold. This meant that the value of the dollar would be equal to the value of gold and silver.
Soon after the Federal Reserve (the Fed) was created in 1913, the dollar’s future would change – for better and worse.
The good news for the dollar was that, following the Second World War, it became the top currency in the world. The bad news, according to critics of fiat money – currency backed by nothing – is that paper currency without gold would just keep losing value.
And the US dollar has lost much of its value since getting off gold. Since the birth of the Fed, the dollar has lost 96% of its value – a dollar from today would have been worth less than four cents a century ago.
As Good as Gold
For much of the nation’s history, the US economy relied on a gold standard. This is when a currency is fixed in gold or silver and can be traded at any time for these metals.
In 1933, President Franklin Roosevelt signed an executive order that banned the ownership of gold coins, certificates, and bullion. Citizens were required to sell their gold to the central bank. A year later, Congress approved the Gold Reserve Act that not only outlawed private ownership of gold, but it also let President Roosevelt set the price of a troy ounce of gold to $35. This lowered the dollar’s value.
In 1971, President Richard Nixon ordered the Fed to stop honoring the greenback’s value in gold. Four years later, the White House announced that the US dollar would be taken off the gold standard.
The value of the dollar is now determined using supply and demand compared to other currencies in the foreign exchange market.
Kick a Buck
Will the US dollar lead international markets forever? All the trends suggest that governments and central banks are moving away from the dollar. At the same time, investors have been pouring into the dollar to flee from the great volatility happening worldwide. In the future, it might be the yuan, or it may be a cryptocurrency as the next dominant form of money.
But for now, the dollar is king.