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Home » Tucker Carlson Show: w/ Peter Schiff on Gold (Transcript)

Tucker Carlson Show: w/ Peter Schiff on Gold (Transcript)

Editor’s Notes: In this deep-dive interview, Tucker Carlson sits down with economist Peter Schiff to discuss why gold is outperforming the S&P 500 and how the government is working to keep you from noticing. Schiff provides a provocative analysis of inflation, the Federal Reserve’s debt monetization, and the potential for a global shift away from the dollar standard. He also offers a sharp critique of Bitcoin while explaining the benefits of tokenized gold as a modern medium of exchange. Together, they explore the systemic risks facing the U.S. economy and offer practical advice on how to navigate the pitfalls of the precious metals market.  (January 26, 2026)

TRANSCRIPT:

Peter Schiff’s First Gold Purchase

TUCKER CARLSON: Peter Schiff, thank you for doing this. So when did you personally first start buying gold? Physical gold?

PETER SCHIFF: Well, you know, ironically, the first time I bought gold was when I got bar mitzvahed. That was when I was 13 years old. This was in the 70s when the original gold bull market was happening. So I got my bar mitzvah money because of my father. I bought gold and I ended up selling it coincidentally near the highs in 1980.

That’s because gold went from $35 an ounce in 1970 to $850 in 1980. So in the middle of that run, I probably got bar mitzvahed in 1975 or 1976. I took my bar mitzvah money and I bought gold. Then I sold it to buy my first car when I was a senior in high school. It was an MGB convertible.

TUCKER CARLSON: Nice.

PETER SCHIFF: Yeah. Although it broke down all the time and I bought it as a stick shift. I didn’t even know how to drive a stick. But I wanted that car. So I had to figure it out as I was going along.

So I happened to get out of gold near the highs. Because then gold went into a 20-year bear market. From 1980 when gold hit $800, it bottomed out at $250 in 1999, 2000. But that’s about when I started recommending it.

Recommending Gold as a Stockbroker

So I got into the brokerage business in the 1990s and I was a stockbroker, but I also wanted my clients to own gold. I wasn’t in the gold business at the time, but I believed that everybody should have some of their portfolio in gold. And so that’s when I started recommending it.

And it’s outperformed by a pretty big margin the S&P 500, Dow Jones, going back to the beginning of this century, 2000, 2001. If you were to price the Dow in terms of gold, it’s down about 70%. I mean, so there’s an illusion that we have all this prosperity because in the year 2000 the Dow was about 10,000 and now it’s almost 50,000. So that’s a big gain when you price it in dollars that have lost a lot of their purchasing power.

But when you price it in gold and realize that gold was $300 back then and now it’s $2,800, the gold it took—I think 45 ounces of gold to buy the Dow—and I forget what it is now, maybe 16 or 13. You can buy a lot more of the Dow now than you could back then.

The Illusion of Stock Market Gains

So what that shows you is that the gain in the stock market is inflation. It’s not real value that’s been created in the market. We’ve just destroyed the value of the currency that we use to price things in. And so you need more dollars to buy stocks, but you don’t need more gold. You could buy stocks with a lot less gold because gold is real money. Government can’t just create gold. They can’t create inflation and create gold out of thin air like they do Federal Reserve notes, paper dollars.

Originally, the dollar in 1792 was defined as a weight of gold. I mean, that’s really what the dollar was. It was a specific quantity of gold or silver. And for a long time until 1913, when we got the Federal Reserve, we were pretty much just using gold and silver as money.

The History of the Gold Standard

And even when the Federal Reserve was created, all the Federal Reserve notes were redeemable in lawful money and gold. And gold was money up until 1971. And even though Americans couldn’t redeem their Federal Reserve notes, which we call dollars, they couldn’t redeem them for gold, foreign governments could.

And foreign governments held a lot of gold as dollars, as a reserve. But they did that because they knew that those dollars were not only backed by gold, but convertible on demand into gold. And so we were on a gold standard even through the dollar, up until 1971.

But once we defaulted and the US government reneged on its commitments to pay gold for its notes, that’s when the real inflation started. That’s when we really started printing a lot of money. And that’s why you had the big price increases of the 1970s.

The Oil Crisis and Inflation of the 1970s

And it wasn’t the Arabs that were just jacking up their oil prices, because oil went from $3 a barrel to $40 a barrel. But it wasn’t that oil was getting more expensive. It’s just that we used to pay for our oil with gold, and we started paying for it with paper.

But all that money, we printed it in the 60s for the War on Poverty, the Great Society, the Vietnam War. We ran these big deficits, which were small by today’s standards, but they were big back then, and they were financed with inflation. And we saw the consequences in the 1970s.

And we may have had a real dollar crisis because the dollar lost about two-thirds of its value during that decade against other currencies like the Swiss franc, the euro, the Japanese yen.