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The U.S. Mint apparently is producing a brass/manganese- clad copper $1 coin called the "American Innovation dollars".[1]

You could try that.

[1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Innovation_dollars




Dunno, I hear they're planning a big dilution soon. https://www.axios.com/trillion-dollar-platinum-coin-mint-jan...


Increase in supply is not inflation. It’s quite unlikely to cause any actual measurable dilution. But let’s pretend for a second. Given that all major stable coins are pegged to or benchmarked against the dollar, any inflation in the dollar would carry over into stable coins 1:1 so the remark would be a nonsequitur.


The way it's supposed to work is you then fall back on the intrinsic value of the copper. That's the 'coin' part of what the 'Mint' does.


Nah, as soon as inflation makes it profitable to melt coins, they make melting coins illegal.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penny_(United_States_coin)#Num...


Older US pennies (pre-1982) have copper worth much more than 1 cent now, newer ones are basically zinc.

On the flip side, a US mint $50 piece is actually well over $2000 of gold [https://catalog.usmint.gov/american-eagle-2021-one-ounce-gol...]

The imprimature of the US mint is what makes these coins now.


And where do I get a coin made of copper?




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