Pulling up the tarnished anchor: The end of silver as a global unit of account

Author: Atkeson, Barro, Bordo, Bordo, Eichengreen, Fisher, Flandreau, Flandreau, Frankel, Frieden, Friedman, Friedman, Friedman, Friedman, Gallarotti, Kris James Mitchener, Marc Weidenmier, Meissner, Mitchener, Noyes, Obstfeld, Oppers, Ricardo T. Fernholz, Rockoff, Rockoff, Sargent, Sato, Silverman, Svensson, Velde
Publisher: Elsevier BV

ABOUT BOOK

We use the demise of silver-based standards in the 19th century to explore price dynamics when a commodity-based money ceases to function as a global unit of account. We develop a general equilibrium model of the global economy with gold and silver money. Calibration of the model shows that silver ceased functioning as a global price anchor in the mid-1890s - the price of silver is positively correlated with agricultural commodities through the mid-1890s, but not thereafter. In contrast to Fisher (1911) and Friedman (1990), both of whom predict greater price stability under bimetallism, our model suggests that a global bimetallic system, in which the gold price of silver uctuates, has higher price volatility than a global monometallic system. We confirm this result using agricultural commodity price data for 1870-1913

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