In mid August, Twitter Founder and CEO Jack Dorsey tweeted a strange hashtag: #WTFHappenedin1971.
— jack⚡️ (@jack) August 15, 2021
A few weeks later, Edward Snowden, the CIA subcontractor turned whistleblower who revealed the NSA’s unlawful mass surveillance program, shared a similar post.
It’s unclear if Dorsey and Snowden have similar ideological views, but it’s clear both men are seeking answers to the same question (or prompting others to look themselves): what in the world happened in 1971?— Edward Snowden (@Snowden) September 7, 2021
WTF Happened in 1971?
For those who aren’t aware, there is an entire website dedicated to that question: wtfhappenedin1971.com/.
The first thing that becomes apparent is that something happened in 1971. This fact is made clear by a series of charts, all based on government data, that show various odd economic trends began in that year.
Income inequality, for example, began to get much worse.
Income equality took some weird turns in 1971.#wtfhappenedin1971 pic.twitter.com/QoO7h75uuX
— Jon Miltimore (@miltimore79) September 23, 2021
Wages, which had tracked closely with productivity and GDP growth for decades, began to lag productivity and economic growth (badly).
Real wages had closely tracked with GDP and productivity for decades in the US, and then … #wtfhappenedin1971 pic.twitter.com/xeOzohu1gh
— Jon Miltimore (@miltimore79) September 23, 2021
Inflation soared, growing at a faster rate than at any period in the previous century.
The increase in inflation since 1971 is … wow. #wtfhappenedin1971 pic.twitter.com/DHi0tUCJBK
— Jon Miltimore (@miltimore79) September 23, 2021
The income gap between black and white Americans, which had been closing rapidly since 1950, all but stopped closing.
The income gap between black and white Americans, which had been closing rapidly since 1950, all but stopped closing in the early 1970s.#wtfhappenedin1971 pic.twitter.com/dlpWeOgvhO
— Jon Miltimore (@miltimore79) September 23, 2021
These are just a few of the economic graphs one will find on wtfhappenedin1971.com. So the question remains: what the heck happened?
FDR, Nixon, and the Gold Standard
For years, I was always bored to death when I’d hear discussions about the gold standard. Monetary policy wasn’t just dull, but confusing. Some people blamed Nixon for taking the US off the gold standard; others would say, “No, no. It was FDR.”So who was it? And what is “the gold standard,” anyway?
The gold standard is simply a monetary system that links the value of paper money to gold. The system, which was implemented in the US in 1834, set the price of gold at $20.67 per ounce, where it stayed until the early 1930s. In the 1870s, other countries followed suit, ushering in the Golden Age of gold (pardon the pun) and a period of great prosperity.
“The period from 1880 to 1914 is known as the classical gold standard. During that time, the majority of countries adhered (in varying degrees) to gold,” writes Michael D. Bordo at EconLib. “It was also a period of unprecedented economic growth with relatively free trade in goods, labor, and capital.”
The period’s end—1914—came with the beginning of World War I, when many nations turned to inflationary finance to pay for the bloodiest war in human history (at the time). From 1925 to 1931 a new gold era began with the Gold Exchange Standard, but it didn’t last long.
“This version broke down in 1931 following Britain’s departure from gold in the face of massive gold and capital outflows,” Bordo explains. “In 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt nationalized gold owned by private citizens and abrogated contracts in which payment was specified in gold.”
FDR’s order—Executive Order 6102—forbade “the hoarding of gold coin, gold bullion, and gold certificates within the continental United States.” Not only would individuals not be able to redeem their paper notes for gold under the order, but private ownership of gold coins and bullion was made illegal. (This unpopular law was repealed in 1974.)







