American Revolution Hyperinflation
On 22 June 1775 the First Continental
Congress, struggling to finance the Revolutionary War effort without power to
tax or borrow, authorized the issuance of $2 million in bills of credit. These
bills of credit, soon to be known as continentals, were issued with the
understanding that individual states would redeem them according to an
apportionment based upon population. The Congress had considered, but rejected,
another option that would have assessed to each state a sum of money to be
raised by the issuance of state notes on the authority of each state government.
Congress issued an additional $4 million in bills of credit
before the year was out. These were scheduled for redemption between the years
1779 and 1986, and, contrary to a suggestion from Benjamin Franklin, paid no
interest. The plan for each bill of credit to bear the signature of two members
of Congress fell by the wayside, and Congress hired 28 individuals to sign the
bills. Congress continued to run the presses, authorizing the issuance of
$241,552,780 in bills of credit before voting to limit circulation to $200
million in bills of credit toward the end of 1779. After 1779 Congress ceased
the issuance of bills of credit (continentals).
Although the states shied away from levying taxes to redeem continentals, they complied with the request from Congress to declare continentals legal tender. To reinforce the state action, Congress passed resolutions to shame people into accepting continentals in payment for goods. After hearing of one instance of an individual refusing to accept continentals, Congress resolved (23 November 1775): “That if any person shall hereafter be so lost to all virtue and regard for his country as to refuse, such person shall be deemed an enemy of his country.” Until the end of 1776 price inflation remained relatively tame, but then inflation began to gather momentum, becoming runaway in 1779 when the ratio of continentals to specie in face value increased from 8:1 to 38:1.
In December 1776 the New England states held a price convention in Providence, Rhode Island, that called for less paper money and more taxation, and that developed a recommended set of prices for farm labor, wheat, corn, rum, and wool. The New England states enacted these price recommendations into law and Congress urged other states to do the same. Congress also gave its blessing for states to assume the authority to confiscate hoarded goods. Citizens held mass meetings denouncing price increases, and irate women raided shops that reportedly were hoarding goods. Merchants had to defend themselves in court. Philadelphia protesters hanged
in effigy a specie dollar to protest dealers refusing to accept
paper money.
After 1779 the depreciation of continentals continued, raising to 100 to 1 the face value ratio of continentals to specie by January 1781. The ratio of 100 to 1 became the official ratio at which Congress converted continentals into interest-bearing, long-term bonds under the funding act of 1790.
The experience of the continentals became a lesson in the evolution of paper money—a lesson that had to be relearned many times. The issuance of inconvertible paper money became the accepted practice worldwide as governments learned to maintain its value by restricting its supply.
No comments:
Post a Comment