If we're headed into a recession, it seems like that ought to be good news for our hobby, no? What do you folks think?
Historically, when there's a recession, people break open their piggy banks and take their coins to the local bank for deposit. This huge influx in the coin supply then causes the US mint to not need to make many new coins, and you can see the incredibly low mintage numbers in the early 1930's (great depression) and in 2009 (great recession).
I'd think this should mean a few things:
1) Huge decrease in the number of uncirculated boxes of pennies. Over the past year, roughly 50% of the penny boxes I get from my banks end up being shiny uncirculated zinc. If that number plunges, it'll make my hobby so much easier.
2) A fair amount of copper being put back into circulation. Americans have their coin jars that have been sitting for years and years, and those jars are filled with coins that accumulated during time when the proportion of copper in circulation was higher than it is today.
3) Some oldies get put back into circulation. Some of those coin jars in people's houses are actually quite old! Not just old wheaties... I'd expect silver pickers to have a higher proportion of hits if we hit a serious recession.
Anyways, "silver lining" in every cloud...