Inconvertible Paper Standard
An inconvertible paper standard is a monetary standard based
on paper money, either bank notes or government currency that cannot be
converted into any commodity or precious metal at an official rate.
Inconvertible paper money is called fiat money and it bears a face value that
may or may not be expressed in metallic terms.
The inconvertible paper standard evolved directly from precious metal
standards. Originally paper money circulated as something resembling warehouse
receipts representing titles to ownership of gold or silver safely secured with
a goldsmith or bank. Exchanging titles of ownership was less risky and costly
than physically transporting precious metals. From those warehouse receipts
evolved bank notes, ancestors to the contemporary Federal Reserve Notes and other bank notes of modern central banks.
War and other national emergencies often forced governments to put heavy
claims on domestic gold and silver reserves, and in turn governments granted
banks the privilege to suspend convertibility of bank notes into precious metal.
England suspended convertibility during the Napoleonic Wars and the United
States suspended convertibility during the War of 1812 and the Civil War.
Suspended convertibility was invariably attended with some currency
depreciation, but often the patriotic fervor of war helped maintain some
monetary order. Government assurances of return to convertibility at war’s end
also helped protect currency values from a wave of inflation.
Two famous cases of paper money fiascoes occurred toward the end of the
eighteenth century, the hyperinflations of the American and French Revolutions.
France had already had one paper money disaster early in the eighteenth century
with the episode of John Law’s bank. The memory of these episodes acted as a
constant reminder of the monetary insanity lurking beneath the surface of an
inconvertible paper money standard, and encouraged governments to accept
inconvertibility only as a temporary measure.
Between 1866 and 1881 Italy apparently made good use of inconvertible paper
money to assist in the financing of economic development. The episode was called
Il Corso Forzoso, or “forced currency,” and it was accompanied by a
modest depreciation of the lira of 10 to 16 percent. Nevertheless a new
government felt the need to promise a return to convertibility, which was
accomplished in 1881.
By the beginning of World War I the world was on a gold standard. Countries
banned the export of gold, suspending convertibility for international trade,
and the right of domestic convertibility was rarely exercised. At the end of the
war returning to an international gold standard became an important goal of the
world’s major trading partners.
The world was on a gold standard in the early 1930s when worldwide depression
shook the foundations of the international monetary system. It was during this
era that inconvertible paper standards became virtually universal among the
world’s major trading partners. These countries went on inconvertible paper
standards for domestic purposes but remained on a gold bullion standard for
international purposes. In the United States private citizens could no longer
convert dollars into gold, and private ownership of gold for anything but
industrial purposes was illegal. The United States and other countries continued
to redeem domestic currency into gold at the request of foreign central banks.
After 1971 the world’s major trading partners went on inconvertible paper
standards for international as well as domestic purposes, severing the last ties
with convertibility.
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