The French Crime of 1873, or Was the International Gold Standard Really Inevitable?

International monetary economics of the nineteenth century is not my strong point, so does anyone here who knows more about it than me want to comment on Marc Flandreau's "The French Crime of 1873: An Essay on the Emergence of the International Gold Standard", Journal of Economic History, Vol. 56, No. 4 (Dec. 1996)? http://www.econ.tcu.edu/quinn/finhist/readings/Flandreau Crime of 1873.pdf (The "Crime of 1873" was of course a term used by Populists to demonize the US decision to demonetize silver in 1873; Flandreau suggests that there was a far more important blow to bimetallism delivered by France that same year.)

Flandreau rejects four conventional explanations for the emergence of the international gold standard in the 1870's. First, the increased production of silver did not make the gold standard inevitable: "the rise was proportionately much smaller than the one that had affected gold after 1848 without determining dramatic changes." Second, Germany's turn to gold in the early 1870's was not in itself decisive: "France would have been able to buffer the impact of Germany's move to gold so that Germany's reform could not by itself trigger the move away from silver." [1] Third, the argument that silver, being bulkier than gold, was less suitable for international transactions is also dismissed: "it is not true that gold strongly dominated silver as an instrument for international transactions." Fourth, the explanation that the bourgeoisie/creditor class as the dominant class in Europe favored the gold standard as a guaranty of stability reads later developments into the early 1870's: "before 1873 the political support in favor of gold was much less homogeneous than what is commonly believed: as a creditor-debtor opposition, it developed after the emergence of the gold standard, not before."

Indeed, Flandreau argues, "far from being preordained for structural, technological, or political reasons, the making of the gold standard was an accident of history." After 1870, the Franco-Prussian War gave Germany the resources necessary to switch to the gold standard. "It also planned to get rid of its demonetized silver through the agency of France's bimetallic system, which had so far acted as a stabilizer of the international monetary system. The French retaliated in suspending silver coinage in an attempt to block Germany's move to gold. But the bulk of legislation adopted in Germany in the early 1870s prohibited such a reversal, and France's decision only provoked the world's flight away from silver. In other words, the emergence of the gold standard was a blatant failure of international cooperation...

"...The collapse of bimetallism after Germany moved to gold was avoidable provided that France be induced to maintain unlimited silver coinage. Does that mean that there was a French crime of 1873, of much more dramatic consequences than the American one? Indeed, French policymakers seemed to underrate the fact that their actions would undermine the credibility of their commitment to bimetallism. Likewise, they clearly overlooked that their moves, by leading to the demise of silver, would have deflationary consequences. However, this was not perceived by the Germans, either. For had German authorities realized it, they should have stepped back, instead of going further. But in the fight for gold that developed in the early 1870s, staying pegged to gold became a matter of national pride. Thus there was a French crime of 1873, but there was a German crime, too..."

So--assuming Flandreau is right--suppose the French realize that their decision to suspend silver coinage will *not* block Germany's move to gold, and *will* undermine bimetallism internationally--and they decide not to do it? (Of course avoiding the Franco-Prussian War could also avoid the switch to the gold standard, but I would prefer not to use that as the POD, because it would have so many other effects.) Effects on the deflation of 1873-1896? (It should be noted that deflation and depression are not necessarily synonymous. In the US there were serious depressions in 1873- 75 and 1893-96 and some lesser depressions in between, but overall the 1873-96 period was one of economic growth.)

There will also of course be effects on the debate on monetary policy in the US, not just because of the effects of less deflation in Europe on the US economy, but also because a common argument used by opponents of free silver here was that almost all the civilized nations of the earth used the gold standard.

[1] What about the French indemnity to Germany after the Franco-Prussian War? Flandreau writes, "...Was French bimetallism strong enough to buffer Germany's reform? The implicit assumption of the strategical theory is that the transfer of five billion francs in gold from France to Germany combined with the sale on international markets of about two billion francs in silver would have forced the French economy on a de facto silver standard.

"This view, however, is flawed by a number of historical and analytical inaccuracies. Contrary to a common belief, the French indemnity was not paid in specie.26 The French government issued a perpetual bond--the so-called *Rente Thiers*--which was subscribed not only by French investors but by foreigners as well. With the proceeds of that operation, it obtained short-term bills on various places (London, Hamburg, Amsterdam, and so on). The bills were then transferred to Germany. A mere 500 million French francs were paid in specie (of which 250 million was in silver). The German government, on the other hand, used a fraction of the bills (less than one-fifth) to obtain gold.27 Germany was counting on sales of its silver holdings to complete its move to gold. Hence the monetary consequences of the indemnity as a shock on bullion markets were likely to be far more limited than usually suggested." (pp. 873-874)
 
While you could cut off that particular path to an international gold standard, you're going to have trouble delaying it indefinitely. Gold was the inflation hedge in this time period. When you commit to pay back a debt in gold, you're telling your creditors, "You will be paid back in full, guaranteed", in a way that nothing else really could. Great Britain's ability to service its national debt in gold made the pound the international reserve currency in a way very similar to the modern US dollar (which is so for many of the same reasons -- a long term commitment to low, stable inflation which is today delivered by the credibility of the Federal Reserve System and, in the past, would have been delivered by a commitment to redemption in gold). This was vital to the financial prowess of the British government and, subsequently, to the British government's ability to act as a global hegemon and the ability of the British financial system to dominate the world.

Once someone decides to make a serious challenge to the British, that's going to involve making a firm commitment to gold. In order to lower the price of gold the government faces as much as possible, that government is going to have to increase its gold take from a given tax level as much as possible, which means not taking other forms of payment to cover tax obligations anymore and increasing private gold holdings as much as possible by drastically increasing the demand for gold to satisfy cash balance demands -- ie., demonetizing everything else but gold and financial instruments backed by gold.

A world where bimetallism survives is a world where no one ever tries to challenge London as the world's financial capital and the Bank of England as THE market maker for the world's financial markets (and British capital as the ultimate source of investment and credit for the whole globe). This circumstance is unthinkable in the long run as the British economy continues to decline relative to the economies of other nations. Eventually the Germans or the Americans or even the Russians or the Chinese (depending on how far out we're imagining Pax Britannia to be stretched IATL) is going to decide it wants in on the ability to supply capital to the entire planet at a vanishingly low cost.

This is, by the way, the way you can tell when you should be dumping dollar holdings in the modern day: When the Chinese central bank commits to beating the dollar in terms of stability. When that happens, the dollar's status as global reserve currency will start to slip and there's essentially zero chance the US government notices its checkbook has run empty and discovers fiscal discipline before dollar inflation runs out of control.
 
This is, by the way, the way you can tell when you should be dumping dollar holdings in the modern day: When the Chinese central bank commits to beating the dollar in terms of stability. When that happens, the dollar's status as global reserve currency will start to slip and there's essentially zero chance the US government notices its checkbook has run empty and discovers fiscal discipline before dollar inflation runs out of control.
Excuse me?

FY 2015*: $564 bln
FY 2014*: $649 bln
FY 2013: $680 bln
FY 2012: $1,087 bln
FY 2011: $1,300 bln
FY 2010: $1,294 bln

Bush Deficits
FY 2009†: $1,413 bln
FY 2008: $458 bln
FY 2007: $161 bln
FY 2006: $248 bln
FY 2005: $318

The US has been biting the bullet and improving for Obama's entire term. Is there a long way to go? Yes. Making cheap shots? not helpful.
 

CalBear

Moderator
Donor
Monthly Donor
While you could cut off that particular path to an international gold standard, you're going to have trouble delaying it indefinitely. Gold was the inflation hedge in this time period. When you commit to pay back a debt in gold, you're telling your creditors, "You will be paid back in full, guaranteed", in a way that nothing else really could. Great Britain's ability to service its national debt in gold made the pound the international reserve currency in a way very similar to the modern US dollar (which is so for many of the same reasons -- a long term commitment to low, stable inflation which is today delivered by the credibility of the Federal Reserve System and, in the past, would have been delivered by a commitment to redemption in gold). This was vital to the financial prowess of the British government and, subsequently, to the British government's ability to act as a global hegemon and the ability of the British financial system to dominate the world.

Once someone decides to make a serious challenge to the British, that's going to involve making a firm commitment to gold. In order to lower the price of gold the government faces as much as possible, that government is going to have to increase its gold take from a given tax level as much as possible, which means not taking other forms of payment to cover tax obligations anymore and increasing private gold holdings as much as possible by drastically increasing the demand for gold to satisfy cash balance demands -- ie., demonetizing everything else but gold and financial instruments backed by gold.

A world where bimetallism survives is a world where no one ever tries to challenge London as the world's financial capital and the Bank of England as THE market maker for the world's financial markets (and British capital as the ultimate source of investment and credit for the whole globe). This circumstance is unthinkable in the long run as the British economy continues to decline relative to the economies of other nations. Eventually the Germans or the Americans or even the Russians or the Chinese (depending on how far out we're imagining Pax Britannia to be stretched IATL) is going to decide it wants in on the ability to supply capital to the entire planet at a vanishingly low cost.

This is, by the way, the way you can tell when you should be dumping dollar holdings in the modern day: When the Chinese central bank commits to beating the dollar in terms of stability. When that happens, the dollar's status as global reserve currency will start to slip and there's essentially zero chance the US government notices its checkbook has run empty and discovers fiscal discipline before dollar inflation runs out of control.

Pre 1900 remember?

Current politics goes into Chat down at the bottom of the main page.
 
Excuse me?



The US has been biting the bullet and improving for Obama's entire term. Is there a long way to go? Yes. Making cheap shots? not helpful.

Not a cheap shot, analysis. US public debt hasn't decreased since Eisenhower and that's no accident.

But Calbear is right, I'm sorry, let's stick to the topic.
 
I understand that promises to pay, backed with bullion, are the hard core standard of stability. But why is gold better than silver?

After various nations went onto the gold standard in the 19th century, of course it became 'the gold standard'. But before that? As long as several major nations maintain a silver standard, why should payment in sliver (if you want bullion) be worse than gold?
 
The global supply of silver was less predictable year over year than the global supply of gold. New strikes were made more frequently and, more importantly, had a greater impact on the overall supply. Other things equal, the price of gold would be more stable than the price of silver in the long run, less prone to unexpected inflation.
 

Faeelin

Banned
The global supply of silver was less predictable year over year than the global supply of gold. New strikes were made more frequently and, more importantly, had a greater impact on the overall supply. Other things equal, the price of gold would be more stable than the price of silver in the long run, less prone to unexpected inflation.

In theory, but the 1890s saw that wasn't true, right? South Africa, Australia, and the Klondike all came online during that period.

It's an interesting thought. The Gold Standard was tied to the Long Depression, which is in turn associated with the rise of far right extremism in Germany and Europe. Absent the economic downturn, would people have been less likely to embrace social darwinism? Hrm.
 
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