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<h2><span>Chapter XVIII. Influence Of The Currency On The Exchanges And On Foreign Trade.</span></h2>
<SPAN name="toc226" id="toc226"></SPAN>
<h3><span>§ 1. Variations in the exchange, which originate in the Currency.</span></h3>
<p>
In our inquiry into the laws of international trade,
we commenced with the principles which determine international
exchanges and international values on the hypothesis
of barter. We next showed that the introduction of
money, as a medium of exchange, makes no difference in
the laws of exchanges and of values between country and
country, no more than between individual and individual:
since the precious metals, under the influence of those same
laws, distribute themselves in such proportions among the
different countries of the world as to allow the very same
exchanges to go on, and at the same values, as would be
the case under a system of barter. We lastly considered
how the value of money itself is affected by those alterations
in the state of trade which arise from alterations
either in the demand and supply of commodities or in their
cost of production. It remains to consider the alterations
in the state of trade which originate not in commodities but
in money.</p>
<p>
Gold and silver may vary like other things, though they
are not so likely to vary as other things in their cost of production.
The demand for them in foreign countries may
also vary. It may increase by augmented employment of
the metals for purposes of art and ornament, or because the
increase of production and of transactions has created a
greater amount of business to be done by the circulating
medium. It may diminish, for the opposite reasons; or,
from the extension of the economizing expedients by which
the use of metallic money is partially dispensed with.
These changes act upon the trade between other countries
and the mining countries, and upon the value of the precious
metals, according to the general laws of the value of
imported commodities: which have been set forth in the
previous chapters with sufficient fullness.</p>
<p>
What I propose to examine in the present chapter is not
those circumstances affecting money which alter the permanent
conditions of its value, but the effects produced on international
trade by casual or temporary variations in the
value of money, which have no connection with any causes
affecting its permanent value.</p>
<SPAN name="toc227" id="toc227"></SPAN>
<h3><span>§ 2. Effect of a sudden increase of a metallic Currency, or of the sudden creation of Bank-Notes or other substitutes for Money.</span></h3>
<p>
Let us suppose in any country a circulating medium
purely metallic, and a sudden casual increase made to it; for
example, by bringing into circulation hoards of treasure,
which had been concealed in a previous period of foreign invasion
or internal disorder. The natural effect would be a
rise of prices. This would check exports and encourage imports;
the imports would exceed the exports, the exchanges
would become unfavorable, and a newly acquired stock of
money would diffuse itself over all countries with which the
supposed country carried on trade, and from them, progressively,
through all parts of the commercial world. The
money which thus overflowed would spread itself to an equal
depth over all commercial countries. For it would go on
flowing until the exports and imports again balanced one
another; and this (as no change is supposed in the permanent
circumstances of international demand) could only be
when the money had diffused itself so equally that prices had
risen in the same ratio in all countries, so that the alteration
of price would be for all practical purposes ineffective, and
the exports and imports, though at a higher money valuation,
would be exactly the same as they were originally.
This diminished value of money throughout the world (at
least if the diminution was considerable) would cause a suspension,
or at least a diminution, of the annual supply from
the mines, since the metal would no longer command a value
equivalent to its highest cost of production. The annual
waste would, therefore, not be fully made up, and the usual
causes of destruction would gradually reduce the aggregate
quantity of the precious metals to its former amount; after
which their production would recommence on its former
scale. The discovery of the treasure would thus produce
only temporary effects; namely, a brief disturbance of international
trade until the treasure had disseminated itself
through the world, and then a temporary depression in the
value of the metal below that which corresponds to the cost
of producing or of obtaining it; which depression would
gradually be corrected by a temporarily diminished production
in the producing countries and importation in the importing
countries.</p>
<p>
The same effects which would thus arise from the discovery
of a treasure accompany the process by which bank-notes,
or any of the other substitutes for money, take the place
of the precious metals. Suppose<SPAN id="noteref_282" name="noteref_282" href="#note_282"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">282</span></span></SPAN> that the United States
possessed a currency, wholly metallic, of $200,000,000, and
that suddenly $200,000,000 of bank-notes were sent into circulation.
If these were issued by bankers, they would be
employed in loans, or in the purchase of securities, and would
therefore create a sudden fall in the rate of interest, which
would probably send a great part of the $200,000,000 of gold
out of the country as capital, to seek a higher rate of interest
elsewhere, before there had been time for any action on prices.
But we will suppose that the notes are not issued by bankers,
or money-lenders of any kind, but by manufacturers, in the
payment of wages and the purchase of materials, or by the
Government [as, e.g., greenbacks] in its ordinary expenses, so
that the whole amount would be rapidly carried into the markets
for commodities. The following would be the natural
order of consequences: All prices would rise greatly. Exportation
would almost cease; importation would be prodigiously
stimulated. A great balance of payments would
become due, the exchanges would turn against the United
States, to the full extent of the cost of exporting money;
and the surplus coin would pour itself rapidly forth, over the
various countries of the world, in the order of their proximity,
geographically and commercially, to the United States.</p>
<span style="font-size: 90%">
A study of Chart </span><SPAN href="#Chart_XIV" class="tei tei-ref"><span style="font-size: 90%">No. XIV</span></SPAN><span style="font-size: 90%"> will show how exactly this
description fits the case of our country, when the rise of prices
stimulated imports of merchandise (see Chart </span><SPAN href="#Chart_XIII" class="tei tei-ref"><span style="font-size: 90%">No. XIII</span></SPAN><span style="font-size: 90%">) in
1862, and sent gold out of the country.
</span>
<p>
The efflux would continue until the currencies of all countries
had come to a level; by which I do not mean, until
money became of the same value everywhere, but until the
differences were only those which existed before, and which
corresponded to permanent differences in the cost of obtaining
it. When the rise of prices had extended itself in an
equal degree to all countries, exports and imports would
everywhere revert to what they were at first, would balance
one another, and the exchanges would return to par. If such
a sum of money as $200,000,000, when spread over the whole
surface of the commercial world, were sufficient to raise the
general level in a perceptible degree, the effect would be of
no long duration. No alteration having occurred in the general
conditions under which the metals were procured, either
in the world at large or in any part of it, the reduced value
would no longer be remunerating, and the supply from the
mines would cease partially or wholly, until the $200,000,000
were absorbed.<SPAN id="noteref_283" name="noteref_283" href="#note_283"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">283</span></span></SPAN></p>
<p>
Effects of another kind, however, will have been produced:
$200,000,000, which formerly existed in the unproductive
form of metallic money, have been converted into
what is, or is capable of becoming, productive capital. This
gain is at first made by the United States at the expense
of other countries, who have taken her superfluity of this
costly and unproductive article off her hands, giving for it an
equivalent value in other commodities. By degrees the loss
is made up to those countries by diminished influx from the
mines, and finally the world has gained a virtual addition
of $200,000,000 to its productive resources. Adam Smith's
illustration, though so well known, deserves for its extreme
aptness to be once more repeated. He compares the substitution
of paper in the room of the precious metals to the construction
of a highway through the air, by which the ground
now occupied by roads would become available for agriculture.
As in that case a portion of the soil, so in this a part
of the accumulated wealth of the country, would be relieved
from a function in which it was only employed in rendering
other soils and capitals productive, and would itself become
applicable to production; the office it previously fulfilled
being equally well discharged by a medium which costs
nothing.</p>
<p>
The value saved to the community by thus dispensing
with metallic money is a clear gain to those who provide the
substitute. They have the use of $200,000,000 of circulating
medium which have cost them only the expense of an
engraver's plate. If they employ this accession to their fortunes
as productive capital, the produce of the country is
increased and the community benefited, as much as by any
other capital of equal amount. Whether it is so employed
or not depends, in some degree, upon the mode of issuing it.
If issued by the Government, and employed in paying off
debt, it would probably become productive capital. The
Government, however, may prefer employing this extraordinary
resource in its ordinary expenses; may squander it uselessly,
or make it a mere temporary substitute for taxation
to an equivalent amount; in which last case the amount is
saved by the tax-payers at large, who either add it to their
capital or spend it as income. When [a part of the] paper
currency is supplied, as in our own country, by banking
companies, the amount is almost wholly turned into productive
capital; for the issuers, being at all times liable to be
called upon to refund the value, are under the strongest inducements
not to squander it, and the only cases in which it
is not forthcoming are cases of fraud or mismanagement. A
banker's profession being that of a money-lender, his issue
of notes is a simple extension of his ordinary occupation.
He lends the amount to farmers, manufacturers, or dealers,
who employ it in their several businesses. So employed, it
yields, like any other capital, wages of labor, and profits of
stock. The profit is shared between the banker, who receives
interest, and a succession of borrowers, mostly for
short periods, who, after paying the interest, gain a profit in
addition, or a convenience equivalent to profit. The capital
itself in the long run becomes entirely wages, and, when
replaced by the sale of the produce, becomes wages again;
thus affording a perpetual fund, of the value of $200,000,000,
for the maintenance of productive labor, and increasing the
annual produce of the country by all that can be produced
through the means of a capital of that value. To this gain
must be added a further saving to the country, of the annual
supply of the precious metals necessary for repairing the
wear and tear, and other waste, of a metallic currency.</p>
<p>
The substitution, therefore, of paper for the precious
metals should always be carried as far as is consistent with
safety, no greater amount of metallic currency being retained
than is necessary to maintain, both in fact and in
public belief, the convertibility of the paper.</p>
<p>
But since gold wanted for exportation is almost invariably
drawn from the reserves of the banks, and is never likely
to be taken directly from the circulation while the banks
remain solvent, the only advantage which can be obtained
from retaining partially a metallic currency for daily purposes
is, that the banks may occasionally replenish their
reserves from it.</p>
<SPAN name="toc228" id="toc228"></SPAN>
<h3><span>§ 3. Effect of the increase of an inconvertible paper Currency. Real and nominal exchange.</span></h3>
<p>
When metallic money had been entirely superseded
and expelled from circulation, by the substitution of
an equal amount of bank-notes, any attempt to keep a still
further quantity of paper in circulation must, if the notes are
convertible [into gold], be a complete failure.</p>
<span style="font-size: 90%">
This brings up the whole question at issue between the
</span><span class="tei tei-q"><span style="font-size: 90%">“</span><span style="font-size: 90%">Currency Principle</span><span style="font-size: 90%">”</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%"> and the </span><span class="tei tei-q"><span style="font-size: 90%">“</span><span style="font-size: 90%">Banking Principle.</span><span style="font-size: 90%">”</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%"> The
latter, maintained by Fullerton, Wilson, Price, and Tooke
(in his later writings), held that, if notes were convertible, the
value of notes could not differ from the value of the metal
into which they were convertible; while the former, advocated
by Lord Overstone, G. W. Norman, Colonel Torrens, Tooke
(in his earlier writings), and Sir Robert Peel, implied that
even a convertible paper was liable to over-issues. This last
school brought about the Bank Act of 1844.</span><SPAN id="noteref_284" name="noteref_284" href="#note_284"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">284</span></span></SPAN>
<p>
[A] new issue would again set in motion the same train
of consequences by which the gold coin had already been expelled.
The metals would, as before, be required for exportation,
and would be for that purpose demanded from the
banks, to the full extent of the superfluous notes, which thus
could not possibly be retained in circulation. If, indeed, the
notes were inconvertible, there would be no such obstacle to
the increase in their quantity. An inconvertible paper acts in
the same way as a convertible, while there remains any coin
for it to supersede; the difference begins to manifest itself
when all the coin is driven from circulation (except what may
be retained for the convenience of small change), and the
issues still go on increasing. When the paper begins to exceed
in quantity the metallic currency which it superseded,
prices of course rise; things which were worth $25 in metallic
money become worth $30 in inconvertible paper, or
more, as the case may be. But this rise of price will not, as
in the cases before examined, stimulate import and discourage
export. The imports and exports are determined by the
metallic prices of things, not by the paper prices; and it is
only when the paper is exchangeable at pleasure for the
metals that paper prices and metallic prices must correspond.</p>
<p>
Let us suppose that the United States is the country
which has the depreciated paper. Suppose that some American
production could be bought, while the currency was still
metallic, for $25, and sold in England for $27.50, the difference
covering the expense and risk, and affording a profit to
the merchant. On account of the depreciation, this commodity
will now cost in the United States $30, and can not be sold
in England for more than $27.50, and yet it will be exported
as before. Why? Because the $27.50 which the exporter
can get for it in England is not depreciated paper, but gold
or silver; and since in the United States bullion has risen
in the same proportion with other things—if the merchant
brings the gold or silver to the United States, he can sell his
$27.50 [in coin] for $33 [in paper], and obtain as before 10
per cent for profit and expenses.</p>
<p>
It thus appears that a depreciation of the currency does
not affect the foreign trade of the country: this is carried
on precisely as if the currency maintained its value. But,
though the trade is not affected, the exchanges are. When
the imports and exports are in equilibrium, the exchange, in
a metallic currency, would be at par; a bill on England for
the equivalent of $25 would be worth $25. But $25, or the
quantity of gold contained in them, having come to be
worth in the United States $30, it follows that a bill on
England for $25 will be worth $30. When, therefore, the
<em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">real</span></em> exchange is at par, there will be a <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">nominal</span></em> exchange
against the country of as much per cent as the amount of
the depreciation. If the currency is depreciated 10, 15, or
20 per cent, then in whatever way the real exchange, arising
from the variations of international debts and credits, may
vary, the quoted exchange will always differ 10, 15, or 20
per cent from it. However high this nominal premium may
be, it has no tendency to send gold out of the country for
the purpose of drawing a bill against it and profiting by the
premium; because the gold so sent must be procured, not
from the banks and at par, as in the case of a convertible
currency, but in the market, at an advance of price equal
to the premium. In such cases, instead of saying that the
exchange is unfavorable, it would be a more correct representation
to say that the par has altered, since there is now
required a larger quantity of American currency to be
equivalent to the same quantity of foreign. The exchanges,
however, continue to be computed according to the metallic
par. The quoted exchanges, therefore, when there is a depreciated
currency, are compounded of two elements or factors:
(1) the real exchange, which follows the variations of
international payments, and (2) the nominal exchange, which
varies with the depreciation of the currency, but which,
while there is any depreciation at all, must always be unfavorable.
Since the amount of depreciation is exactly measured
by the degree in which the market price of bullion
exceeds the mint valuation, we have a sure criterion to determine
what portion of the quoted exchange, being referable
to depreciation, may be struck off as nominal, the result
so corrected expressing the real exchange.</p>
<p>
The same disturbance of the exchanges and of international
trade which is produced by an increased issue of convertible
bank-notes is in like manner produced by those extensions
of credit which, as was so fully shown in a preceding
chapter, have the same effect on prices as an increase of
the currency. Whenever circumstances have given such an
impulse to the spirit of speculation as to occasion a great increase
of purchases on credit, money prices rise, just as much as
they would have risen if each person who so buys on credit had
bought with money. All the effects, therefore, must be similar.
As a consequence of high prices, exportation is checked
and importation stimulated; though in fact the increase of
importation seldom waits for the rise of prices which is the
consequence of speculation, inasmuch as some of the great articles
of import are usually among the things in which speculative
overtrading first shows itself. There is, therefore, in
such periods, usually a great excess of imports over exports;
and, when the time comes at which these must be paid for,
the exchanges become unfavorable and gold flows out of the
country. This efflux of gold takes effect on prices [by withdrawing
gold from the reserves of the banks, and so by stopping
loans and the use of credit, or purchasing power]: its
effect is to make them recoil downward. The recoil once begun,
generally becomes a total rout, and the unusual extension
of credit is rapidly exchanged for an unusual contraction
of it. Accordingly, when credit has been imprudently
stretched, and the speculative spirit carried to excess, the turn
of the exchanges and consequent pressure on the banks to
obtain gold for exportation are generally the proximate cause
of the catastrophe.</p>
<span style="font-size: 90%">
A glance at Chart </span><SPAN href="#Chart_XIII" class="tei tei-ref"><span style="font-size: 90%">No. XIII</span></SPAN><span style="font-size: 90%"> will give illustration to the
situation here described. After the war, and until 1873, while
the United States was under the influence of high prices and a
speculation which has been seldom equaled in our history, the
resulting great excess of imports became very striking. It
was an unhealthy and abnormal condition of trade. The sudden
reversal of the trade by the crisis in 1873 is equally striking,
and, as prices fell, exports began to increase. The effect
on international trade of a collapse of credit is thus clearly
marked by the lines on the chart.
</span>
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