Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 16.djvu/757

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MONEY
729

teract the loss by wear and exportation,[1] and accordingly regard the metallic supply as fixed in amount until the next change in the conditions of production, which was the result of the discovery of America. Though 1492 is the date of the first landing, yet for some time no important additions were made to the supply of money. The conquest of Mexico (1519) gave opportunities of working the silver mines of that country, while the first mines of Chili and Peru were almost simultaneously

discovered, and in 1545 those of Potosi were laid open.


Table I.—Estimated production of gold and silver from 1493.

Period. No. of
Years.
Amount in Kilos. Value in Millions
of Francs.
Ratio of
Value of
Gold to
Silver.
Gold. Silver. Gold. Silver.
1493–1520 28 162,400 1,316,000 560 292 11·3
1521–1544 24 171,800 2,165,000 592 481 11·2
1545–1580 36 273,000 10,976,000 940 2,439 11·5
1581–1600 20 147,600 8,378,000 508 1,862 11·9
1601–1620 20 170,400 8,458,000 587 1,880 13·0
1621–1640 20 166,000 7,872,000 572 1,749 13·4
1641–1600 20 175,400 7,326,000 604 1,628 13·8
1661–1680 20 185,200 6,740,000 638 1,498 14·7
1681–1700 20 215,300 6,838,000 742 1,520 15·0
1701–1720 20 256,400 7,112,000 883 1,580 15·2
1721–1740 20 381,600 8,624,000 1,314 1,916 15·1
1741–1760 20 492,200 10,663,000 1,695 2,370 14·8
1761–1780 20 414,100 13,055,000 1,426 2,900 14·8
1781–1800 20 355,800 17,581,000 1,226 3,906 15·1
1801–1810 10 177,800 8,942,000 612 1,987 15·6
1811–1820 10 114,400 5,408,000 394 1,202 15·5
1821–1830 10 142,200 4,606,000 490 1,023 15·8
1831–1840 10 202,900 5,964,000 699 1,325 15·7
1841–1850 10 547,600 7,804,000 1,886 1,734 15·8
1851–1855 5 987,600 4,431,000 3,402 985 15·4
1856–1860 5 1,030,000 4,525,000 3,549 1,006 15·3
1861–1865 5 925,600 5,506,000 3,188 1,223 15·4
1866–1870 5 959,500 6,695,000 3,305 1,488 15·6
1871–1875 5 853,400 9,847,000 2,940 2,188 16·0
1876 1 171,700 2,365,000 591 ·5 525 ·5 17·8
1877 1 182,800 2,428,000 629 ·8 539 ·5 17·19
1878 1 183,700 2,603,000 632 ·6 578 ·3 17·96
1879 1 156,900 2,557,000 540 ·3 568 ·2 18·39
1876–1879 4 695,100 9,953,000 2,394 2,211 17·40
1493–1850 358 4,752,100 149,828,000 16,368 33,292 14·05
1851–1879 29 5,451,200 40,957,000 18,778 9,101 15·85
1493–1879 387 10,203,300 190,785,000 35,146 42,393 · ·


From this latter date we may regard the American supply as an influential factor in the matter,[2] and look upon the stock of money as increasing. The annual addition to the store of money has been estimated as £2,100,000 for the period from 1545 to 1600. At this date the Brazilian supply began. The course of distribution of these fresh masses of the precious metals is an interesting point, which has been studied by Mr Cliffe Leslie.[3] The flow of the new supplies was first towards Spain and Portugal, and from thence they passed to the larger commercial centres of the other European countries, the effect being that prices were raised in and about the chief towns, while the value of money in the country districts remained unaltered. The additions to the supply of both gold and silver during the two centuries 1600–1800 continued to be very considerable; but, if Adam Smith's view be correct, the full effect on prices was produced by 1640,[4] and the increased amount of money was from that time counterbalanced by the wider extension of trade.[5] At the commencement of this century, the annual production of gold has been estimated as being from £2,500,000 to £3,000,000. The year 1809 seems to mark an epoch in the production of these metals, since the outbreak of the revolts of the various Spanish dependencies in South America tended to check the usual supply from those countries, and a marked increase in the value of money was the consequence. During the period 1809–1849 the value of gold and silver rose to about two and a half times their former level, notwithstanding fresh discoveries in Asiatic Russia.[6] The annual yield in 1849 was estimated at £8,000,000. The next important date for our present purpose is the year 1848, when the Californian mines were opened, while in 1851 the Australian discoveries took place. By these events an enormous mass of gold was added to the world's supply. The most careful estimates fix the addition during the years 1851–1871 at £500,000,000, or an amount nearly equal to the former stock in existence. The problems raised by this phenomenon have received the most careful study by several distinguished economists,[7] to whose writings those desiring more extensive information may refer. The main features of interest may be briefly summed up. (1) The additional supply was almost entirely of gold, thus tending to produce a distinction between the two principal monetary metals and an alteration in the currency of bimetallic countries. Under this influence France, from being a silver-using, became a gold-using, country. (2) The contemporaneous development of the Continental railway systems, and the partial adoption of free trade, with the consequent facilities for freer circulation of commodities, led to the course of distribution being different from that of the 16th century. The more backward districts were the principal gainers, and a more general equalization of prices combined with a slight elevation in value was the outcome. (3) The increased supply of gold rendered a general currency reform possible, and made the use of a gold monometallic standard appear feasible. The movements for currency reform, as will be seen, all arose after these discoveries. (4) The change in the value of money, which may for the period 1849–1869 be fixed at 20 per cent., enabled a general increase of wages to be carried out, thus improving the condition of the classes living on manual labour. It may be added that the difficulty of tracing the effects of this great addition to the money stock is a most striking proof of the complexity of modern economic development. (5) The last point to be noticed is the very small influence exercised on the value of silver by the new gold.[8] Hardly had the gold discoveries of 1848–1851 ceased to produce a decided effect when new silver mines of unusual fertility came into working. During the period immediately succeeding the gold discoveries the production of silver remained at an annual amount of from £8,000,000 to £9,000,000. This amount suddenly, about 1870, increased to £15,000,000,[9] and remained at that amount for the next five years. More than half of the supply came from new mines opened in Nevada. This increased supply was accompanied by a marked depreciation in the gold price of silver, though the prices of commodities in countries having a silver standard did not rise. The result of the close investigations to which all aspects of the question were subjected was to show that the increased production of silver was only a minor element in causing its depreciation. The policy pursued by various states—viz., (1) Germany and the Scandinavian  




  1. Jacob, i. p. 311.
  2. Adam Smith assumes 1570 as the date when prices were affected in England, Wealth of Nations, p. 88. Humboldt estimated the total production (1492–1545) as being about £17,000,000; but see Table I., which contains Dr Sötbeer's estimates, based on the best available data.
  3. Essays in Pol. and Mor. Phil., Essay xx.
  4. Wealth of Nations, p. 88.
  5. The total production is roughly computed at over £1,200,000,000 for the two centuries 1600–1800; but see Table I. for more precise estimates.
  6. The Russian supply became important after 1823.
  7. The following maybe specially consulted:—Chevalier, Depreciation of Gold (trans. by Cobden); Tooke and Newmarch, Hist. of Prices, vol. vi., pp. 135–236 (Part vii.); article “Precious Metals,” Ency. Brit. (8th Ed.); J. E. Cairnes, Essays in Pol. Econ., pp. 1–165; T. E. C. Leslie, Essays, pp. 264–374; W. S. Jevons, Serious Fall in the Value of Gold.
  8. The price of silver in London rose from 59d. per oz. to 62d. per oz., or 2d. per oz.—that is, only 3 to 4 per cent.
  9. See Report of Select Committee on the Silver Question, 1876; and for another estimate see Table I.