Composition of U.S. Currency 1941-1970
July 22, 2012
We will continue our look at the composition of U.S. currency since
1880.
July
15, 2012: The Composition of U.S. Currency 1880-1941
We are basically describing how the U.S. currency went from a rather
varied mix of items to one single monopoly currency issuer, the
Federal Reserve. The postwar period is not as interesting as the
1880-1941 period, but it helps us finish our story.
The source of the data is:
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/docs/publications/bms/1941-1970/section11.pdf
During World War II especially, the number of Federal Reserve Notes
in circulation expanded dramatically, while other forms of currency
basically held even. Why? As was the case during World War I as
well, the Fed was under pressure by the Treasury to maintain
Treasury yields at low, fixed rates. This entailed buying Treasury
bonds with "the printing press," in this case almost literally so.
Federal Reserve Bank notes are apparently notes issued by the
Federal Reserve regional banks, such as the St. Louis Fed. They had
a bit of a burst during WWII, and then died out.
Federal Reserve Notes are the "dollar bills" we use today.
National Bank Notes are notes issued by private commercial banks.
This was organized under a system known as the National Bank System.
There were over three thousand commercial banks issuing their own
bank notes, each one with their own design, all of them linked to
gold of course. This system pretty much died out in the late 1930s.
The notes here are basically collector's items.
United States Notes are the "greenbacks" printed by the U.S.
government during the Civil War. These are basically collector's
items.
Minor coin is non-silver and non-gold coins, basically pennies and
nickels. This expands considerably after 1965, because half dollars,
dimes and quarters, which had been made of 90% silver, were then
produced in base metals. So, minor coin then encompasses all coins.
Subsidiary silver is silver coins in less than a one-dollar
denomination, namely, quarters and dimes. This is combined with
Minor coin after 1965.
Silver Certificates were notes issued by the U.S. government,
redeemable in silver. These were significant for quite a few years
after WWII, and then disappeared when the silver coins went to base
metals. Wikipedia
on Silver Certificates.
Standard Silver Dollars were $1 silver coins, such as Morgan Dollar
and Peace Dollars.
Gold certificates were basically collector's items.
We see that, by the end of this period, the currency consists
entirely of Federal Reserve Notes, base metal coins, and what
amounts to collector's items.