Here's a fascinating look at how currency composition and purchasing power have shifted over decades. Back before 1965, U.S. quarters packed serious metal—90% silver and 10% copper. Each coin weighed 6.25 grams with roughly 5.63 grams of pure silver inside. That means you'd need just 5.5 of those pre-1965 quarters to have a full ounce of silver, which trades around $76 today. Meanwhile, the minimum wage in 1965 stood at $1.25 per hour. Fast forward to now, and the contrast becomes pretty striking. It's a useful lens for understanding how both currency composition and real purchasing power have evolved—something worth considering when evaluating different stores of value across time periods.

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NestedFoxvip
· 5h ago
Oh my God, in 1965, an hour was only $1.25, and now I can't even buy a burger... This is just outrageous.
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TokenDustCollectorvip
· 5h ago
Wow, really? In 1965, you could buy so much silver with just $1.25 an hour? Now cryptocurrencies are all just paper.
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BearMarketSurvivorvip
· 5h ago
Oh wow, this is the real enlightenment in the crypto world. Physical assets are never surprising.
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StableGeniusvip
· 5h ago
tbh the silver standard era is always where people get romantic about "real money" but empirically speaking, wages haven't kept pace anyway so does the metal composition even matter at that point... actually nevermind, $1.25/hr in 1965 silver purchasing power vs today's minimum wage is a mathematical proof of how fundamentally broken the whole system became
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GasOptimizervip
· 5h ago
Damn, it's really uncomfortable when this data is pulled out. Earning $1.25/hour in 1965, now nothing is enough to buy anything, but back then 5.5 coins were just one ounce of silver... Calculating it, the hourly wage at that time, when converted to silver, could buy about 14 ounces. And now? Don't even say it, we all know the answer.
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LuckyBlindCatvip
· 5h ago
Damn, cryptocurrencies these days are really just air. Coins used to be exchangeable for money.
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MetaMaximalistvip
· 5h ago
ngl this is exactly why i've been banging on about hard assets and protocol sustainability for years... people sleep on the inflation mechanics but it's literally the whole thesis. pre-65 quarters hit different fr
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