What Has Government Done to Our Money? Debasement
What Has Government Done to Our Money?
Murray N. Rothbard
III.
Government Meddling With Money
4. Debasement
Debasement was the State's method of counterfeiting the very
coins it had banned private firms from making in the name of
vigorous protection of the monetary standard. Sometimes, the
government committed simple fraud, secretly diluting gold with a
base alloy, making shortweight coins. More characteristically,
the mint melted and recoined all the coins of the realm, giving
the subjects back the same number of "pounds" or
"marks," but of a lighter weight. The leftover ounces of
gold or silver were pocketed by the King and used to pay his
expenses. In that way, government continually juggled and
redefined the very standard it was pledged to protect. The
profits of debasement were haughtily claimed as
"seniorage" by the rulers.
Rapid and severe debasement was a hallmark of the Middle Ages, in
almost every country in Europe. Thus, in 1200 A.D., the French
livre tournois was defined at ninety-eight grams of fine
silver; by 1600 A.D. it signified only eleven grams. A striking
case is the dinar, a coin of the Saracens in Spain. The
dinar originally consisted of sixty-five gold grains, when
first coined at the end of the seventh century. The Saracens were
notably sound in monetary matters, and by the middle of the
twelfth century, the dinar was still sixty grains. At that
point, the Christian kings conquered Spain, and by the early
thirteenth century, the dinar (now called maravedi)
was reduced to fourteen grains. Soon the gold coin was too light
to circulate, and it was converted into a silver coin
weighing twenty-six grains of silver. This, too, was debased, and
by the mid-fifteenth century, the maravedi was only 1.5
silver grains, and again too small to circulate. [7]
[7]
On debasement, see Elgin Groseclose, Money and Man
(New York: Frederick Ungar, 1961), pp. 57-76.
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