What Has Government Done to Our Money? Private Coinage
What Has Government Done to Our Money?
by Murray N. Rothbard
II. Money in a Free Society
7. Private Coinage
The idea of private coinage seems so strange today that it is
worth examining carefully. We are used to thinking of coinage as
a "necessity of sovereignty." Yet, after all, we are not
wedded to a "royal prerogative," and it is the American
concept that sovereignty rests, not in government, but in the
people.
How would private coinage work. In the same way, we have said, as
any other business. Each minter would produce whatever size or
shape of coin is most pleasing to his customers. The price would
be set by the free competition of the market.
The standard objection is that it would be too much trouble to
weigh or assay bits of gold at every transaction. But what is
there to prevent private minters from stamping the coin and
guaranteeing its weight and fineness? Private minters can
guarantee a coin at least as well as a government mint. Unbraided
bits of metal would not be accepted as coin. People would use the
coins of those minters with the best reputation for good quality
of product. We have seen that this is precisely how the
"dollar" became prominent--as a competitive silver
coin.
Opponents of private coinage charge that fraud would run rampant.
Yet, these same opponents would trust government to provide the
coinage. But if government is to be trusted at all, then surely,
with private coinage, government could at least be trusted to
prevent or punish fraud. It is usually assumed that the
prevention or punishment of fraud, theft, or other crimes is the
real justification for government. But if government cannot
apprehend the criminal when private coinage is relied upon, what
hope is there for a reliable coinage when the integrity of the
private market place operators is discarded in favor of a
government monopoly of coinage If government cannot be trusted
to ferret out the occasional villain in the free market in coin,
why can government be trusted when it finds itself in a position
of total control over money and may abase coin, counterfeit coin,
or otherwise with full legal sanction perform as the sole villain
in the market place It is surely folly to say that government
must socialize all property in order to prevent anyone from
stealing property. Yet the reasoning behind abolition of private
coinage is the same.
Moreover, all modern business is built on guarantees of
standards. The drug store sells an eight ounce bottle of
medicine; the meat packer sells a pound of beef. The buyer
expects these guarantees to be accurate, and they are. And think
of the thousands upon thousands of specialized, vital industrial
373 products that must meet very narrow standards and
specifications. The buyer of a 1/2 inch bolt must get a 1/2 inch
bolt and not a mere 3/8 inch.
Yet, business has not broken down. Few people suggest that the
government must nationalize the machine-tool industry as part of
its job of defending standards against fraud. The modern market
economy contains an infinite number of intricate exchanges, most
depending on definite standards of quantity and quality. But
fraud is at a minimum, and that minimum, at least in theory, may
be persecuted. So it would be if there were private coinage. We
can be sure that a minter's customers, and his competitors, would
be keenly alert to any possible fraud in the weight or fineness
of his coins. [7]
Champions of the government's coinage monopoly have claimed that
money is different from all other commodities, because
"Gresham's Law" proves that "bad money drives out
good" from circulation. Hence, the free market cannot be
trusted to serve the public in supplying good money. But this
formulation rests on a misinterpretation of Gresham`s famous law.
The law really says that "money overvalued artificially by
government will drive out of circulation artificially undervalued
money." Suppose, for example, there are one-ounce gold coins
in circulation. After a few years of wear and tear, let us say
that some coins weigh only .9 ounces. Obviously, on the free
market, the worn coins would circulate at only ninety percent of
the value of the full-bodied coins, and the nominal face-value of
the former would have to be repudiated. [8] If anything, it
will be the "bad" coins that will be driven from the
market. But suppose the government decrees that everyone must
treat the worn coins as equal to new, fresh coins, and must
accept them equally in payment of debts. What has the government
really done It has imposed price control by coercion on
the "exchange rate" between the two types of coin. By
insisting on the par-ratio when the worn coins should exchange at
ten percent discount, it artificially overvalues the worn
coins and undervalues new coins. Consequently, everyone
will circulate the worn coins, and hoard or export the new.
"Bad money drives out good money," then, not on
the free market, but as the direct result of governmental
intervention in the market.
Despite never-ending harassment by governments, making conditions
highly precarious, private coins have flourished many times in
history. True to the virtual law that all innovations come from
free individuals and not the state, the first coins were minted
by private individuals and goldsmiths. In fact, when the
government first began to monopolize the coinage, the royal coins
bore the guarantees of private bankers, whom the public trusted
far more, apparently, than they did the government. Privately-minted gold coins circulated in California as late as 1848. [9]
[7]
See Herbert Spencer, Social Statics (New York: D.
Appleton & Co.) 1890, p. 438.
[8]
To meet the problem of wear-and-tear, private coiners
might either set a time limit on their stamped guarantees of
weight, or agree to recoin anew, either at the original or at the
lower weight. We may note that in the free economy there will not
be the compulsory standardization of coins that prevails when
government monopolies direct the coinage.
[9]
For historical examples of private coinage, see B.W.
Barnard, "The use of Private Tokens for Money in the United
States," Quarterly Journal of Economics (1916-17), pp.
617-26; Charles A. Conant, The Principles of Money and
Banking (New York: Harper Bros., 1905) I, 127-32; Lysander
Spooner, A Letter to Grover Cleveland (Boston: B.R.
Tucker, 1886) p. 79; and J. Laurence Laughlin, A New
Exposition of Money, Credit and Prices (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1931) I, 47-51. On Coinage, also see Mises, op.
cit., pp. 65-67; and Edwin Cannan, Money 8th Ed. (London:
Staples Press, Ltd., 1935) p. 33 ff.
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