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Publications OF THE American Economic Association Vol. XI. No. Pages 331-442. 4. Appreciation and Interest A STUDY OF THE INFIvUENCE OF MONETARY APPRECIATION AND depreciation ON THE RATE OF INTEREST, WITH APPLICATIONS TO THE BIMETALLIC CONTROVERSY AND THE THEORY OF INTEREST. BY IRVING FISHER, Assistant Professor of Political Science in Yale University. AUGUST, 1896. PUBLISHED FOR THE American Economic Association BY The Macmii,lan Company NEW YORK LONDON SWAN SONNENSCHEIN & : Hi ^ta--,.*/api^ CO. Q- 537 Copyright 1896 by American Economic Association PRESS OF Andrus & Church, ithaca, n. y. ^ APPRECIATION AND INTEREST. Digitized by the Internet Arciiive in 2010 with funding from The Library of Congress http://www.archive.org/details/appreciationinteOOfish CONTENTS. Part Thkory. I. PAGE. Chapter li. Introduction. I. Does appreciation necessarily aggravate debts? "just" standard . ... i i §2. Efforts to find a I 3. Invariability of standard not essential I 4. Bearing of the rate of interest on the subject Chapter One year II. 3 .... 3 contracts. I 3. Foreseen and unforeseen appreciation or depreciation, One year contract, numerical illustration Formula connecting interest and appreciation .... §4. Money I I. I 2. Chapter as standard and More than one III. as medium 6 6 8 11 year. I I. Confusion in separating interest and principal I 2. Compound .... 12 interest, five years 12 I3 I 5. General formula payments, seven years General formula I 6. Special case ? 3. I 4. i4 Partial Chapter 16 ^^ • Present value. IV. modes of payment do not aflfect present value, when interest is paid annually and princiredeemed at maturity 19 I I. Different I 2. Illustration I 3. Case of perpetual annuity 21 ^ 4. Formula ^^ pal Chapter I I. § 2. V. Varying rates of appreciation. I 6. Practical application Chapter I I. I 2. I 3. I 4. VI. 24 26 26 28 28 for varying rate of interest I 5. ^ 4. 23 Numerical illustration Average rate of interest Formula Formula Formula ? 3. 20 for average rate of interest for average rate of appreciation Zero and negative interest. Limits to rates of interest and appreciation Effect of hoarding Negative interest possible Investment not necessarily checked by zero interest 3° 3^ 32 . 33 Contents vi Part Chapter VII. II. Facts. Introduction. § I. Objections § 2. Existence of foresight in general Chapter § I. ^ 2. f 3. ? 4. [338 VIII. Gotd 35 36 atid paper. General evidence United States currency and coin bonds Extent of foresight in gold premium Dangers of preceding method Chapter IX. Gotd and 38 39 41 44 stiver. I 2. India "rupee paper" and gold bonds Extent of foresight in Indian exchange §3. Upper ^ 4. Bearing of a rupee debt on Indian finance ? I. Chapter X. limit of gold borrower's loss in Money and England 46 49 . . . 52 commodities. § 5. comparing successive periods Rate of interest as related to high and low prices Rate of interest as related to rising and falling prices in England Rate of interest as related to rising and falling prices in Germany, France, and the United States .... Rate of interest as related to rising and falling prices ^ 6. Measurement of § I. I 2. § 3. § 4. 51 Difficulties in . in silver standard countries foresight for short periods Error of Jevons, Price, and others Measurement of foresight for long periods, in England I 9. Lower limit of borrower's loss in England § 10. Loss on contracts made before 1873, ^'^ England ... §11. Measurement of foresight for long periods, in America, § 12. Theory as to mode of adjusting rate of interest to price movements 54 54 56 60 63 66 I 7. 67 ^ S. 70 I 13. Credit cycles XI. III. The bimetallic § 2. Index numbers ? 3. Bimetallism Bimetallism Fallacy that Bimetallism § 5. ^ 6. Chapter \i. XII. 75 Applications. controversy. §1. Magnitude of debtor's loss § 4. 74 76 Part Chapter 71 73 80 81 could not correct losses 82 would violate contracts 83 we can predict further losses 85 86 to secure stability in standard The theory of interest. "Real" and "nominal" interest, inadequate terms, 88 vn Contents. 339] I 2. An individualistic 90 I 3. Interest varies with length of contract 91 § 4. Multiple theory of interest 91 absolute standard Appe;ndix. is StatisticaIv Data. I 2. Table of interest rates each year in seven countries References to other statistics of the rate of interest I 3. Index numbers of prices and wages § I. . . . . 93 96 98 STATISTICAI. TABLES. Rates of interest realized on United States "coin" and " currency " bonds from dates mentioned to maturity Rates of interest realized on United States "coin" and "currency " bonds from dates mentioned to January i, 1879, 39 42 (date of Resumption) Rates of interest realized on India gold and silver bonds from dates named to maturity or in perpetuity 47 Rates of interest realized on India gold and silver bonds for periods specified 5^ Market rates of interest in seven and low prices London countries, in relation to high ... rates of interest in relation to rising and Berlin rates of interest in relation to rising and falling prices Paris rates of interest in relation to rising and falling prices New York rates of interest in relation to rising 55 falling prices, . . "^ Average bank rates in gold and silver standard countries before and after the breakdown of bimetallism Rates of interest in relation to rising and 65 Number of cases in seven countries favorable and unfavorable to the theory that rising and falling prices are associated respectively with high and low interest prices, New York prices rates of interest in relation to rising wages and incomes for for and 7° and falling 74 long periods Yearly average rates of interest on tries Index numbers for seven countries "money" 66 falling long periods rates of interest in relation to rising and wages 64 falling prices in Cal- Tokyo and Shanghai London market 61 and falling prices and wages cutta, 59 61 in seven coun- 94 99 ; PREFACE. connection between monetary appreciation and the The rate of interest has received very scant attention The omists. has somewhat retarded the progress of economic science and —in particu- the successful interpretation of economic history lar the monetary history of the last twenty years. here put forward were The views first stated in brief before the at Indianapolis, can Economic Association They many from econ- writer has been led to beUeve that this neglect Ameri- December, 1895. differ radically from those expressed by Mr. Giffen and other eminent economists. necessary to make a statistical For this reason it has been examination of all available facts Such a study could not be properly bearing on the subject. conducted without a definite economic theory as a starting The point. idea on which this theory is founded appears to have occurred independently to several writers, of Jacob de Haas, realized its tative form, With To fully to have develop the theory in a quanti- some simple mathematics have been employed. illustrations at each step, it is hoped whom mathematics are distasteful will find few, any, impediments to easy reading. reader, too Amsterdam, seems most Mr. numerical that those to if Jr., of importance. whom on the other hand, may much encumbered by feel that The mathematical the discussions are numerical illustration and detail but these presentations are usually in such a form that they can easily be passed over by those who find them superfluous. The gist of the theory is contained in Chapter II, but its statement would not be complete, nor the apparent objections to it fully answered, without the discussions of Chapters III-VI. X Preface. The names writer is [342 many persons whose who have supplied him greatly indebted to the are mentioned in the text, with important facts and references ; also to Professor Sum- ner for the privilege of consulting his collection of works on banking to Professor ; criticisms to ; Hadley, for valuable suggestions and Mr. Horace White for pointing out the im- portant pamphlet of the eighteenth century mentioned in Chapter I ; tical tables New and to Mr. Sakata for translating several from Japanese. Haven, August, 1896. statis- PART THEORY. I. CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION. §1. The chief issues in the bimetallic controversy center about the question of justice between debtor and creditor. The bimetallic propaganda succeeds just so far as it spreads a belief that an injustice has been done by the adoption of the gold standard, which the re-adoption of bimetallism would correct. The gold question therefore arises, does the appreciation of Are contracting necessarily aggravate debts? parties powerless to forestall the gains or losses of upward if or downward moving currency ? the unit of length were changed and an It is clear that its change were foreknown, contracts would be modified accordingly. Suppose a yard were defined (as once it probably was) to be the length of the king's girdle, and suppose the king Everybody would then know that the to be a child. "yard" would increase with age and a merchant who should agree to deliver i,ooo " yards " ten years hence, would make his terms correspond to his expectations. To alter the mode of measurement does not alter the actual quantities involved but merely the numbers by which they are represented. §2. Hitherto monometallists have usually replied to the argument "gold has appreciated, therefore the debtor American Economic 2 Association. [344 has been robbed " by challenging, not the inference, but Thus the premise. the discussion has been shunted off from economic theory and turned into a controversy over the fact of "appreciation." This controversy has been, to a large extent, a mere war of words, because, by " appreciation " the monometallists No the bimetallists, another. meaning for that parties. The by the fall wages have mean one thing and one has much abused word provided a ^-et acceptable to both bimetallists prove the appreciation of gold in prices. risen, The monometallists reply that and hold that the to progress in the arts. Some fall in prices bimetallists, e. g.^ is due Leonard Courtney,^ accept the distinction between a fall in prices through causes connected with gold and a fall through causes connected with commodities, but most of them assert that a " fall of prices " are synonymous and " appreciation expressions, and that, if " of gold progress cheap- it ought justly to cheapen gold Generally speaking, bimetallists set up the " com- ens other commodities, also. modity standard " and the monometallists, " labor standard." Others attempt to find the "just" standard in "mar- On all sides ginal utility," " total utility," and so forth. is tacitly assumed that a "just" standard must that is, some sense be an " invariable " standard it ; in a when due way to the original loan. " All writers on the subject of money have agreed that uniformity in the value of the circulating medium is an standard such that the principal of the debt should be equivalent in some object greatly to be desired —a currency to should be absolutely invariable in value." " be perfect, Proposals 1 Report of the Indian Currency Committee, 1S93, p. 39; also, Nineteenth Century, April, 1893. ^ Ricardo, "Proposals for an Economic and Secure Curreuc}'," Sees. I, II. Appreciation 345] and Interest. 3 and secure such invariability have been made by many writers. Within the last few years, the problem has become a favorite one and scarcely an issue of to define the economic journals appears without discussions on " The ultimate standard of value," " of deferred payments," " measurement The just standard Has gold appreciated ? " " The money," and kindred sub- of the value of jects.^ §3. It is not prosposed to deny that the terms appreciation and depreciation may have an " absolute " as distinct from a " relative " meaning.^ But such definitions and distinctions can throw no light whatever on the question of justice in contracts. We shall see that a standard to What be perfect need not be invariable. simply that parties their it may is required is shall be dependable^ so that contracting be able to forecast economic future in terms ately as in terms of any other. required elements of all of that standard as accurIf a standard is thus de- pendable, the terms of the contract will be as "just" as they could possibly be under any system. §4. At a later stage the general question of " justice " will Here the effort will be to show that losses due to " appreciation," however defined, will tend to be forestalled. For this, it is not necessary to scale the be discussed. principal of a debt. The principal is not the only or even the chief element in a loan contract. element ^See, e. is the rate of interest. g., the Academy of It is The other an astonishing fact connected discussions in the Annals of the Ameri- and Social Science, 1892-95, and the fournal of Political Economy, 1893-95, by Ross, Merriam, Fetter, Commons, Newcomb, Cummings, Orton and Taylor. * See Chapter XII. can Political A7nerica7i Economic As,sociation. 4 that tlie [346 connection between the rate of interest and ap- preciation has been ahnost completely overlooked, both in economic theory and in bearing upon the bime- its tallic controversy. Of the few writers who have conceived apparentl}^ the earliest this connection, was the anonymous author remarkable pamphlet entitled : " of the A Discourse Concerning the Currencies of the British Plantations in America." Boston, 1740 (Reprinted in the 1857). He writes " Overstone Tracts," : The ArgU7nents current atnongst the Populace in favour of Paper Money, are, I. lu most of the Paper Money Colonies one of the principal Reafirst Emissions was, to prevent Usurers imposing high Interest upon Borrowers, from the Scarcity of Silver Money. sons alledged for their ; It is true, that in all Countries the increased Quantity of Silver, falls the Interest or Use of Money but large Emissions of Paper Money does naturally rise the Interest to make good the sinking Principal for Instance, in the Autumn, A. 1737, Silver was at 26 s. to 27 s. per Ounce, ; : but by a large Rhode Island Emission, it became in Autumn 1739, 29 s. per Oz. this is 7 per Cent. Loss of Principal, therefore the Lender, to save his Principal from sinking, requires 13 per Cent, natural Interest (our legal Interest being 6 per Cent.) for that Year. In Autumn A. 1733, Silver was 22 s. per Oz. by large Emissions it became 27 s. in the Autumn, A. 1734 is 22 per Cent, loss of Principal and the Lender to save his Principal requires 28 per Cent, natural Interest Thus the larger the Emissions, 7iatural Interest befor that Year. ; ; ; comes the higher ; therefore the Advocates for Paper Money (who are generally indigent Men, and Borrowers) ought not to complain, when they hire Money at a dear nominal Rate. If Bills were to depreciate after a certain Rate, Justice might be done to both contracting Parties, by imposing the Loss which the Principal may sustain in any certain Space of Time (the Period of Payment, upon the Interest of a Bond or Price of Goods biit as Depreciations are uncertain, great Confusions in Dealings happen. : John Stuart Mill expresses the same view,^ ^ "Principles of Political single paragraph.] Economy," Book 3, Chapter as do 23, \ 4. [A 347] Appreciation and hiterest. 5 also Jacob de Haas^ and Professor John B. Clark.^ principle which apparently has been independently A dis- covered by each of these economists and quite possibly by others, is likely to be of some importance. It is the object of the present essay to develop the theory in a quantitative form, to bring to current problems, it ^ it to a statistical test, and and to apply to the theory of interest. " AThird Element in the Rate of Interest." Journal of the Royal March, 1889. [A more extended discussion, with Statistical Society, statistics.] 2 " The Gold Standard in the Light of Recent Theory." Political Science Quarterly, September, 1895. [Applied to the current bime- tallic controvers}'.] CHAPTER 11. ONE YEAR contracts/ §1. We must begin by noting the distinction between a foreseen and an nnforeseen change in the value of money. Only the A sudden and unexpected States in 1862, far foresight in be discussed in Part what losses to creditors while equally harmful to debtors. is such matters actually exists will At present we wish to discover will happen, assumiJig this foresight to exist. a debt If II. the United inflation, as in works enormous an unforeseen contraction How former can be forestalled. losses or gains of the is contracted optionally in either of two standards and one of them expected to change with is reference to the other, will the rate of interest be the same in both ? Most certainly not. Only a few months ago the Belmont-Morgan syndicate offered the United States government the alternative of taking some 65 millions at 3/^ in gold or at one knew 3^/^ that this additional ^^ possibility of free silver coinage. If mere the alternatives had been between repayment in gold and actual —repayment in silver, the Every- in "coin." was due to the —not possible additional would certainly have been much more than but interest 3/^ f/c . §2. To fix our ideas, let the two standards be gold and wheat, and, while today a bushel of wheat ' More properly speaking, in place of " one interest interval." "one j^ear " is worth a should be put : Appreciation and Interest. 349] worth bnt 96 or known that one year hence it will be One hundred dollars (gold standard) be dollar, let it 7 cents. equivalent one hundred bushels (wheat standard) its are borrowed today and are to be repaid with interest in one year. 8 'fo If what , We the rate of interest in the gold standard wheat ? will be the rate in note that the repayment, if $100 but $108, and our problem what end will be the equivalent of this This of the year. 96 cents gold " i dollar " loS dollars Thus i — — ^i- The wheat in at the from the ex- X bushel wheat. " bushels i. 1.04I bushels " i. e., \.o\\\>Vi. e., 112^ bu. 2^ bushels will be equivalent alternative contracts would tl\erefore be the repayment of to $108. solved by finding sum : =«= loS is ^ pected price of wheat, thus Hence in gold, will be, not easily obtained is is 1 1 : \ For 100 dollars borrowed today, 108 dollars are due one year hence. " " " " 112 J bushels " For 100 bushels Hence 8 fo 12^% to Now interest in the gold standard is equivalent wheat standard. change in the two standards may be in the the relative an appreciation of gold relatively to spoken of either as wheat or as a depreciation of We are not compelled to lute" change. wheat relatively to gold. inquire which is the "abso- we speak If in terms of appreciation, say $1 changes in value from i bushel of wheat to 1.04% bushels and hence has appreciated 4}i'/o also say, Our I. while we may wheat has depreciated from ^i to $.g6 or 4^. can be stated in either of two ways If the rate of interest in one standard which depreciates 4 fo will be 12 }4fo by an increase 1 ] results in another, it we The symbol " ; that is, =0= " is 4}^ 8^, then relatively to the a depreciation of of interest of is fo. used for " are equivalent to." 4^ first, is offset American Economic 8 2. If [350 the rate of interest in one standard 12)^ %, in relatively to the first, which appreciates 4 ^-^ /^ that is, an appreciation another, it Association. will be 8 ;% by a decrease of ; is ^ 4 )^ is offset of interest of 4j^ /^. §3. Leaving this we may state numerical case, the problem more generally. Suppose gold is to appreciate relatively wheat a certain known amount in one year. What will be the relation between the rates of interest in the two standards ? Let wheat fall in gold price (or gold rise in wheat price) so that the quantity of gold which would buy one bushel of wheat at the beginning of the year will buy 1 -\- a bushels at the end, a being therefore to the rate of appreciation of gold in terms of wheat. Let the rate of interest in gold be y, and let equivalent Our D D and our problem will dollars or its B bushels. alternative contracts are then For dollars borrowed D-\-D i or " For ^bushels i5 f 5/ or which and in wheat be z, the principal of the loan be make : D { i-\-i) ^ ( i+y) bushels " dollars are + the Z>(i 2) dollars the =g= in one yr. " " " between to find the relation is due i and/, B (1 -]-j) bushels. D At first, dollars " At the end of the year Z> " " Hence " " Z>(i+?) Since Z)(i + i) is the liquidate the debt, number its number equivalent =0= i? i-f rt) (1 ( result, therefore, is this : bu. + /) " of dollars necessary to B {1 + a) (i of bushels necessary to liquidate have already designated Our -B ^ B {\+a) number of + 2) it. is the But we bushels by Appreciation and Interest. 35 1] Bushels. Dollars. At the end of yearZ?(r i which, after B is 9 Buishels. + /) ^ B {\ -^j) = B {\ a) {\ -\- ^ i) canceled, discloses the formula : i+y=(i+«) (i+o or in words The rate of : preciating standard is (3) interest in the (^relatively) de- equal to the sum of three terms^ the rate of interest in the appreciatittg standard., vis.^ the rate of appreciation itself two (2) j=--^^-a-\-ia or (i) and the prodicct of these elemeiits. Thus, to offset appreciation, the rate of interest must be lowered by slightly more than the rate of appreciation/ We may introduce depreciation in a similar manner. Instead of saying, gold appreciates at the rate tively to wheat, rate (f, we may relatively to gold.^ sunk in terms say, «, rela- wheat depreciates at the This means that wheat has of gold in the ratio i to i — ^, and rea- soning similar to the foregoing shows that i4-^ Equations thus (2) and = (i-^)(i+y). (4) may be (4) conveniently combined, : i + « I ^^' i—d' 'Professor Clark, {Political Science Quarterly, September, 1895), i appreciation is offset by less than i reduction of implies that % % But in making his calculation he has failed to "compound." The numerical illustrations of the eighteenth century pamphleteer {supra) are also erroneous. E.g., instead of 28 %, should be 29.32 %. Professor Marshall, (" Principles of Economics," Vol. T, 3rd ed., His example is designed to show p. 674), gives a correct example. the losses from a fluctuating currency and not the effort to offset these losses. He appears, however, to have in mind this effort when he postpones to the next volume the discussion of " the influences which changes in the purchasing power of money do actually exert on the terms on which loans are arranged," (p. 673). ^ The relation between rfandais (i+a) (r— ^) i, which is evident from equation (5) or can be easily shown independently. interest. = ) Amej'icaji Economic Association. lo Since ' — the ratio of the vahie of gold at the end is of the year to its vahie at the wheat), that is, beginning —d I of divergence expressed in gold, is " of $1 amount the " amount (5) as follows The (all in terms of the ratio of divergence of the two stand- ards expressed in wheat, while " [352 is the and since i same + one bushel we may ; the i is put at interest for one year while " of ratio i +7 state equation : ratio of divergence betiveen the standards equals the ratio between their " ainoiints^ This relation perhaps, the simplest is, and upon stress is laid mode it of conceiving the because it brings into prominence the " amount," or ratio of future payment to present loan, a magnitude which in most questions of interest plays a more important role than the rate of in- terest itself/ Equation (5) terms of a or either of i gives the relation between i and From d. and a or of i and d^ and terms either of y' and a or of y' and I + whence ^ -\- a -\- i a -^ I or i in also the value of i in <^, 1 I j =:i / follows the value of/ in terms it, thus — a —d =j — d —j d ^~-^ I : -r a (6) ( 7 In fact, except for convenience in computation, the conception of the rate of interest might well be dispensed with, giving place to the conception of a year's "amount" or "ratio of accumulation." In ^ his "Positive Theory of Capital," Professor Bolim-Bawerk expresses (English Translation, p. 296). We should then speak, not of a 6 rate of interest, but of 1.06 as the " ratio of accumulation." In like manner " rate of appreciation " would give place to " ratio of appreciation." Denoting the ratio of accumulation, i -\- j, by r^ and i ^ by r, and the " ratio of appreciation," i -p a, by />, our the same view. % + theorem becomes simply - r =/>. Appreciation and Interest. 353] It follows that appreciation, preciation, {i. j exceeds i by more than the rate of which in turn is — i^ ay> e.^j II more than the rate of de- d). §4be noted that It is to as a standard of value we have been regarding and not as a medium of money exchange. In either contract the actual liquidation need not be made either in gold or wheat but in some other medium, The speculator who sells wheat " short," as bank notes. really uses wheat as a standard and not necessarily as a medium. In consideration of value received today (which, though reckoned by the speculator in money, may readily be thought of as measured in wheat) he promises to deliver, at a later date, so wheat, it many bushels of being perhaps understood that he need not ually deliver the wheat so long as he delivers alent in money. its act- equiv- This operation, as actually practiced, involves great uncertainties, and therefore occurs as a gambling Moreover transaction. usually paid for in advance. reliable standard, selling it But the if wheat is not wheat were a more " short " in consideration of present advances might be a true method of business borrowing, and would then exactly exemplify the case we have supposed. in form with those In fact, such contracts are identical which would be made under the oft-proposed " multiple standard." CHAPTER III. MORE THAN ONE YEAR. §1. A prominent bimetallist in conversing with the writer on the subject and appreciation, raised the of interest following objection: "Interest and principal are separate ; the one is paid regularly in installments remains to the end ; hence appreciation must in totally different ways. by a uniform reduction in I do not see how see, is and principal." the other it is them possible interest applied to contracts the appreciation of both of different periods to offset interest ; affect This view, as we shall soon from the habit quite erroneous and arises of separating in thought interest and principal. First consider the case in end until the of the for instance, a savings which no term of years. bank which interest is paid Let us suppose, receives $ioo, gold standard, and repays the depositor in five years at 5 ^ there were an alternative compound interest. If standard, say wheat, in terms of appreciate ^ constantly by i ^ which gold is known to per annum, what would be the rate of interest in this standard ? pose for convenience that at first We shall sup- the price of wheat is $1 per bushel. ^ Or what is equivalent, wheat depreciates ygx^ relatively to gold. be understood that there are always these two modes of expressing the relative change of two standards, we shall hereafter adhere to "appreciation." As it will Appreciation and Interest. 355] If the repayment were to from Chapter I, § 3, come 13 in one year, we know that the rate of interest in wheat is given by the formula j^i-{-a-\-ta .05 + .01 +.0005 = = .060^ This result as truly the is series of years as for answer to our problem for a The one year. proof consists simply in separating the contract into several contracts of one year each. Thus, by Chapter II, we know if we deposit today 1 100 or amount in i its equivalent, 100 bushels, year to $105 at 5;^ or its will it equivalent, 106.05 6^^o. We may now regard these equivamounts as withdrawn but immediately redeposited bushels, at alent for Then, with the same rate one year. of interest in gold and the same rate of relative appreciation, we shall obtain the same rate of interest in wheat, so that $105.00 or its equivalent, 106.05 bushels, will or to I110.25 ^t 6-^^. 5^, way each its In this including the last, similar. (i). Chapter Dollars due. D{i i year will be equivalent. The principle employed formula in equivalent, 112.47 bushels at successive pair of " amounts," in § 2 is to resolve the contract The into a series of one year contracts. precisely amount For the first general case we year have, is by II, Bushels due. Bushels due. + i)<^B{i+j)=B{i + a){i-\-i) In the second year the same formula applies except that in place of Z?, the principal in place of B, B (i +/) or is now ^ (i + a) these substitutions in the formula, we (i Z> (i + i). obtain + 2), and Making iV l>[\ A\\<\ similuK aiul sv» vMi. 1\\ §$ J -^ /.\i ,/y , /*(i I aY [i ! i'Y in tlu- thli\l year, Kach i\iv*.l ^^> of the results discloses the priuoiple we began which the debt The most general in is for simplicity with the case allowetl to accmuulate to the end. ease, however, is one in which the re- |x^yn\ents are in installments. Suppose, as in that gold is tively to wheat. oar its the interest in gold § 3, that known A to appreciate i % is 5 and '/c annum per rela- fanner mortgages his land for $i.ckx> then e<jnivaleut, i>ooo bushels of wheat, and agrees to pay annually the interest and such parts of the principal as he can save, tnaking the repayment complete in 7 years. Our problem is to find which will make the that rate of interest in wheat and wheat contracts in gold e<^uivaleut iu every respect. The solution of this problem is precisely the that of § 2, viz., 65^ For. at the end %, of same as one year, the farmer's debt amounts to $1050 or its then equivalent, Let us suppose that he finds himself aUeto pay, not only the ^4nterest>" $50, but also $50 of io6<X50 bushels, the ^' lent of this iu Hence he pay or $100 altogether. ici. 00 bu. principal,' * that is wheat is The equi\^ cart either $ic>o,<x> 101,00 bu, oa $1,050,00, Qu. leavnng 1,060^50 bu., leaving $95aoo 959^ 50 bn. aod, since the ^"amounts" $1,050 and 1,060,50 bu, are e^ilu\^ilent and the deductions; $ioo and ioi,oo bu, are 1 Appreciation and Interest. 557] 15 equivalent, the remainders $950 and 959.50 bu. be equivalent since, 950 with gold appreciating bu., Thus first ; may and, in fact, this becomes worth i ^ i ^ , must also be seen directly $950, originally worth more, or 959.50 bu. the farmer's remaining debt at the end of the year is the same whether measured in wheat or gold and since the same reasoning applies to the second year, third year, etc., the equivalence remains to the end of the contract. It is worth noting here that the $100 payment in gold will be regarded as consisting of half interest principal, and half whereas the equivalent payment in wheat, 101.00 bu., consists of 60.50 bu., interest and 40.50 bu., principal. The may liquidation of the contract during the 7 years be supposed to take place in either of the following equivalent ways : GOLD STANDARD. I Interest. 1 Amount. Paj-ment. At beginning In In I 2 year years " I50.00 47-50 45.00 40.00 34-50 27.50 " 15.00 ':\i "6 "7 ::::. ^1,050.00 997-50 945.00 840.00 724-50 577-50 315-00 |ioo.oo 97-50 145.00 150.00 174-50 277-50 315-00 Prixicipal. |i,ooo.oo 950.00 900.00 800.00 690. 00 550.00 300.00 0.00 WHEAT STANDARD. Interest. Amount. Paj-ment. At beginning In In I 2 "3 "4 '•5 "6 "7 year years " " " " " 60.50 58.05 55 54 49-87 43-44 34-97 19.27 In these two tables ever}- 1,060.50 1,017-55 973-63 874- 1 761.46 61303 337-73 entrs" in 101.00 99.46 149-39 156.09 183.40 294-57 337-73 one is Printripal. 1,000.00 bu. 959-50 " 91S.09 " 824.24 " 718.02 " 57S.06 " 318-46 " 0.00 " equivalent to American Economic i6 Association. [358 the corresponding entry in the other except those in the interest columns. We thus see that the farmer in gold if the interest is, and no better than off if is who contracts a mortgage properly adjusted^ no worse his contract were in a " wheat " standard or a " multiple " standard. §5- The principle involved in ments subtracted from equivalent remainders. 4 § equivalent " We may of the first year we have by amounts The payment the same fractional part of the standards. that equivalent pay- is " in " will leave any year forms " in amount the two designate this fraction at the end y^ the second year the following results by and etc., _/', : END OF FIRST YFAR. f D {\^i) Paym't R'md'r (I-/) Dii^i) . ^ (1+^) f B ^a ^(i+y)= i?(i+/)* Amount. Bushels. Bushels. Dollars. ( i-|./) = (i+z) <^ (i-/) B{i^j = (i-/) B{x^a) (1+/) -^ fB{i-^j) { \ ) ) In like manner the unpaid remainder at the end of the second year can be shown to be Dollars. (I-/') (I-/) and so on D (1+0= * for Bushels. Bushels. (I-/') (I-/) B (i+y)2= (I-/') (I-/) B (i+ar- (1+02 any number yields the formula (i This includes, +/) of years. = (! + «) (i + of course, the case of § payments are made,y^y"', partial Each etc., result again z). i, in which no being then zero. §6. One special case eration. may seem Suppose the to require separate consid- interest alone is annually paid and the principal redeemed at the end, as in the case of a bond not subject to a sinking fund. What correspondence between the two standards is then possible ? The following tables answer this question, the first, for the Appreciation and Interest. 359] case where the wheat gold interest 17 the second, where the interest, annually paid. is TABLE I. Interest. Amount. Payment. 60.50 1,060.50 60.50 1,000.00 1,000.00 1,060.50 0.00 At beginning (Bushels^ In " " I year 2 years. 3 " «' 4 '« " « 5 " 6 << " 7 " " " " " " • . . 8 9 " 10 ' ' ' " " " " " " year 2 years I " 4 '• 5 6 7 . 50.00 49-50 49.01 48.53 48.05 47-57 47.15 46.63 46.17 45-71 ' . . " " " . " 8 g .< " 10 " << . . 59-90 59-31 58.72 58.14 57.56 56.99 56.43 55.87 55.32 960.08 1,000.00 990. 10 980.29 970.58 960.97 951.46 942.04 932.76 923.52 914.37 0.00 (Doll^i's^ ' . 3 ' . At bep^inning In . • 1,050.00 1,039.60 1,029.30 1,019.11 1,009.02 999.03 989.19 979-39 969.69 960.08 TABI,E II. 60.50 61.10 61.72 62.32 62.96 63.59 64.22 64.86 65.51 66.17 1,060.50 1,071.10 1,081.82 1,092.62 1,103.55 1,114-59 1,125.73 1,136.98 1,148.35 1,159.84 50.50 51.00 51.52 52.03 52.55 53-08 53-61 54.14 54.68 1,159.84 1,000.00 1,010.00 1,020.10 1,030.30 1,040.59 1,051.00 1,061.51 1,072.12 1,082.84 1,093.67 0.00 50.00 1,050.00 50.00 1,000.00 1,000.00 1,050.00 0.00 At beginning (Busilels) year 2 years. " " " " " " " " 10 " In " I . "3 "4 "5 "6 "7 "8 "9 . . ' ' ' • . ' • . ' . . . . At beginning (Del lars) In " year 2 years. I "3 "4 "5 "6 "7 "8 "9 " 10 . " " " " " " " " Principal. . . ' ' < • . • . . . . ( . (( 8 America7i Economic Association. 1 From Table I, it will be seen that [360 the case in the wheat standard, in which only the interest is annnally paid and the principal redeemed in ten years is equivain the gold standard to a series of lent, step for step, small partial payments. Thus, instead the annual interest of I50, the sum of paying merely paid the first year is At the end by $9.90. principal and $45.71 of interest, $59.90 reducing the principal due I914.37 of making $960.08 in all, which at that date there is is, of course, precisely equivalent to the 1,060.50 bushels, the final payment On in wheat. the other hand, the case in which the gold interest payments are kept up, corresponds payments less than the annual to a series of interest, so that the un- paid interest accumulated to the end makes the due, 1,159.84 bu., of It is wheat which 1,093.67 bu. are sum then principal. thus clear that the case in which in one standard the interest is paid annually and the principal at the end, can be exactly matched in the other standard either by minute partial payments or minute arrears of interest. Without such partial payments or arrears in one of the standards, the two would not be equivalent step for step. We shall see, however, that they would still be equivalent as a whole. CHAPTER " IV. PRESENT VAI^UE." In practice, of course no such minute partial payments of principal or Any made. tions of even if trifles we minute remissions of interest would be advantages to be derived from such calcula- would not be worth the But trouble. destroy the precise step-for-step equivalence between the wheat and gold tables, The their equivalence as a whole. we do not destroy '•^present values " remain exactly equal. The ordinary definition sum due at a future to " Present value " and " amount " are at interest today will that future date." of the " present value " of a sum which put the given sum at given ' date is amount In fact thus correlative terms. ' " thai we may extend the pre- ceding definition to include the present value of past sums as the accumulated sum put at interest then. The literal meaning of it is This " amount " today of the past " present value " implies that the actual market price today of a future is, We in fact, the case. in theory, for we sum due. need not stop to prove are all familiar with it it in practice. Elaborate tables are constructed on this principle for the practical use of insurance premiums, and companies in calculating their for brokers in determining the compara- tive merits of various bond investments. here concerned with is problem. What we are applying the principle to our " A7ficrican Ecoyiomic Association. 20 [362 §2. If 5^, a debt of $1,000 is contracted today, interest being the "present value" of by which that debt interest, payments, principal and all is to be liquidated is exactly $1,000.^ Again, the debt's present value, reckoned at a later date than the time of contract, is the " amount " of $1,000 at interest from the time of contract to that date, and this is true, whether or not any Thus ready been paid. of contract are if computed of the debt has al- the present values at the date for the gold and the wheat debts of the last chapter, they will be $1,000 and 1,000 bushels, which are then equivalent. If the present val- ues one year later are taken they are $1,050 and 1060.50 bushels which at that date are also equivalent, gold hav- ing appreciated From these i fo . familiar principles, it follows that the present values of the two debts, reckoned at any date whatever, are identical whether the individual payments correspond or not. to, Thus, to take the case first referred suppose the wheat debt to be discharged as in Table and the gold debt, as in Table The II. I present value, at the date of contract, of the interest and principal, separately computed, will be •? Dollars. Present value of all interest payments " " principal due in 10 years . " If " total . Bushels. . , 386.09 < 444.24 . . 613.91 > 555.76 1000.00 "^ 1000.00 the present values (including " amounts " of past This and the other general theorems on present value are not proved here because their proof is accessible in most treatises on interest, annuities, insurance, etc. See, e.g., the "Encyclopaedia Britannica," " Annuities." The symbol is here used for "is less than the equivalent of for "is more than the equivalent of." and ' < '^ > Appreciatio7i 363] interest) and were computed 5 years would be contract, the items 21 Interest. after the date of the : Bushels. Dollars. < 783-53 > 492-75 Interest Principal 745-5° 1276.28-1341.38 Total We to 595-88 thus see that would be it just as pay the high interest in wheat much a hardship pay the more as to onerous principal in gold, §3- The case of a perpetual annuity consideration. As perpetual annuity is may be given special well known, the present value of a is its " capitalized " value. Thus, if taken at 5 ^ the present value of a perpetual annuity of $50 per annum is $1,000. Applying the same principle to the wheat annuity of 60.50 the rate of interest is , bushels and extending the previous reasoning, we find two annuities are equivalent. At first sight this seems impossible since 6-^ ^ is a higher rate of interest than 5^. This is true in the that the numerical sense, and it is also true that the early pay- ments of 60.50 bushels are actually $50. But reverse more valuable than time (in this case 19 years) the 19th payment of $50 in gold is after a certain is true. The worth 60.40 bushels while the 20th is worth 61.01 bush- the recipient of the wheat annuity has at gold first a slight advantage over the recipient of the disadvantage annuity which ceases and becomes a slight els. That is, after 19 years. §4. To derive the formula for the time at tive values of the two annuities become be z, in wheat,/; rate of interest in gold which the rela- reversed, let the let the two an- : American Economic 22 D i and Bj^ nuities be and B [D ^ at =c= D Associatio7i. [364 their capitalized values being the beginning) and BJ is ber of years in which uable than ' : let x D be the num- as valuable as or more val- Then i. Bushels. Dollars. B j > Di of B j < Di + years, and since we know that in x years, D ^ B {\ ^- a)' and hence Di o- Bt(i ^ a)'] and likewise in + i years, Di B i{\ + cl)""^^ we see that the previous inequalAt end At end of x years, .r - - i - - .r =0= ities ^ become Bushels. At end At end of x years, of ;i; + - i years, Bj Bj Bu.shels. > Bi(i ^ aY < Bi{i <^)-^+ -\- which may be combined in the formula i (i +aK^y <i (i +«)^+ ^<log/^log^ — That is, X log(i+a) log J log Thus, then if 2^.05, a logy Hence x ^_^^_ the integral part of the is I (8) number — log +«) t (I = .01, and hence also/ =.0605, — log z_ 2.7818 — 2.6990 .0828 ~ "~ .0043 + a) .0043 log ( I = ig. : CHAPTER V. VARYING RATES OF INTEREST AND APPRECIATION. §1. we have assumed Hitherto that the appreciation pro- ceeded (during the period of the contract) at a constant percentage rate per annum, and that the rate of interest (in one standard, and consequently in the other) remained The more constant also. general case one in which is these elements are changing. Beginning with a numerical the United States government case, let us offered is suppose that an alternative loan, not in gold or " coin," but in gold or silver. it be known first year, but in lars, that 50 ^ is, We two years worth 150 it ; will appreciate 10 fo Our problem in silver. silver dol- also that in the third and 5^ It is is ^ and respectively. shall suppose that the rate of interest, tract be in gold, is 3 if the con- for each year of the contract. to discover what will be the interest perhaps already evident that different rate for each year. for will be gold will " appreciate," in the second year, relatively to silver fourth years Let that lOO gold dollars will remain at par the If it will be a the contract were made one year only, the rate of interest in silver would also be 3 ^ , since silver remains so far at par with gold. If the contract (or any unpaid part of it) were then newed for a second year, the rate of interest would by formula (3) j = a-\- ai = .03 + .50 + -015 = .545 = 54i% z -\- re- be, American Economic 24 In like manner, Association. we may deduce the rate of interest in each year, with the following results : Gold Silver Appre- Standard. Standard. ciation. ...... istyear 2d year 3d year [366 3% 4ttiyear % 3 0% 3 54^ 50 3 13^ 10 SyVj 3 5 Etc. question arises, can a single " average " rate of The interest be substituted for the We debtor has the option of If, above irregular answer that such an average is series ? not possible arbitrary partial if the payments. were 20^, and the governat any time, it would evidently be for instance, the average ment could pay ofi tempted to refund the debt at the end of the second year, to If, which the lending syndicate would not agree. however, the conditions as to repayment are stipulated an average can easily be computed on the for in advance, principle of present values. Suppose the government agrees extinguish the to debt in four years by paying at the end of successive years 20, 40, 30, and 10 millions (these to include " interest "). The millions, which sums present value of these is therefore the ceived from the syndicate. adding the present values amount is obtained by The payments. present value of 20 millions, due one year hence, ^° 66.321 of the loan re- This sum of several is is = 19.418 millions. 1.03 and of 40 millions, due two years hence, • ~ is = 25.136 millious, (1.03) (1.545) for evidently if this be put at interest for one year at and Appreciation 367] Interest. 25 amount to 40 millions. Likewise the third and fourth payments have present 3^, and the next at 541-% will it values of ^° ,, -. = 16.639 millions r ,, (i.03)(i.545)(i.i33) 5.128 millions. (i.03)(i.545)(i.i33)(i.o8i5) The sum of these four present values is 66.321 mil- Now lions. if we compute the present values of the four payments on the basis of a uniform rate of 20.26% interest, we obtain the same sum, thus r= 16.631 millions (1.2026) 40 27.659 (1.2026^ 30 ( The ^ 2026)'' = 17-250 ^° (r.2026)* = 4-781 " Total, =66.321 " separate present values are here fictitious, that them future payment no one offset 1. of is to is, the actual present selling price of the which it refers, sum each other that their selling price of the whole but the deviations so is the actual present set of future follows from principles already stated payments. that It the debt, 66.321 millions, can be liquidated by precisely the same payments terest is (20, 40, 30 and 10 millions) whether the reckoned separately at or uniformly at 20.26%. 3, 54^, i3to", in- ^^^ ^tot^ In fact the details of the book- keeping in the two cases are : American Economic 26 At 3, 54i i3T^ff. Association. At 20.26% uniformly. StVc^- (In Million.?.) (In Millions.) I'^ter- ^^o„„t Pay- Prin- Inter- ment. cipal. est. Date In I year In 2 years In 3 years In 4 years We 1.99, . 26.33 4-6i . . .75 . 68.31 74-64 39 25 10,00 66.32 48.31 34-64 9-25 0.00 20.00 40.00 30.00 10 00 thus see that 20.26^ [368 Pay- 13-44 12. II 645 1. 68 133^ and S^^^^s in the sense that, by ments will cancel the same debt. It with the arithmetical average, which is cipal. 66.32 59-76 3t-^7 8.32 0.00 20. on 79-76 71.87 38-32 10.00 40.00 30.00 10.00 the "average" of is Prin- Amount. ment. 3, 54^, the same pay- it, not identical is 19.74^. §3- Let ns suppose that the rate of appreciation of one standard in terms of the other first on ; year, also, a.^ to the second year, is a., foreknown to be a^ the the third year, and so be as general as possible, that the rates of interest in both standards are variable, being in the ap- preciating standard i^ the first year, and in the depreciating standard, i., the second, etc., Let the y^, y^, etc. Then, as in we final settlement occur in n years. may regard the contract as equivalent to a series of one- § 2, year contracts successively renewed in whole or in part, the difference being only that the terms are advance. tracts, As all made in equation (2) applies to each of these con- we have I +yx =(! + «,) (! + ?,) (9) To obtain an expression for the average rate of inter- est in either standard, series of payments Z?^, z i. <?., Z>^, . (ory J, „ . . we require a given Z>„ in the gold standard . and Appreciation 369] (or their equivalent B^, iiorjnJ, . l+i, . . 27 in the silver B^^ . present value (I ' + i,) I ( + /J . interest, yjis . ^ (I + Zj (I + tj ^ these of reckoned by the separate rates of payments, ^i^'^2^ B.^^ The aggregate standard). Interest. . . . (I + 4) (or the corresponding expression in terms of j^'sand/'s). Now the " average " rate i same to the of present values 1 +4 (1 ' must be such that ^^ payments set of that ; it is, i^ is + 4)- make will if applied sum the same determined by ' (i + 4r (10) i + 4^(i + 4)(i + 4)^ and is j\^ ^'s and ^(i + 4)(i + /j • (i+?j • determined by the corresponding formula in y 's. This equation has only one real and positive root or value of i ^. can readily be obtained by Horner's It Method/ We age" of ?„ ?„ and shall call z^ • z; . /^^ the "actuarial aver- and of /„ /„ re- /„ . . spectively.^ ' For, h\ substituting for -, 1 1 +4 , etc., the letters x^, In the example of I 2, 20 .ar * I ^^ I+7a + 4 reduces to the Z?, = Z>, = . • , gives o. for .ar^ + ID .ar* + 4> : +D^x^x^ . . . x^. : = 66 321, x= .83155, j\^=^ .2026. "geometrical average " of = D.-, = and the equation becomes + 40 ;r^ + 30 is x I the equation becomes the required root of which when .tr„ etc., the single letter +D^x'^ = D^x^-{-D^x^x^+ D^x + D^x""-^ which, applied to +4 i + 4» + 4) ^^c. i American Economic 28 Association. [37° §5. We may define average rate of appreciation of one tlie two standards in terms of the other as that rate which would connect the two average interest rates if of the the latter were actual (instead of averages of actual) rates. That is, the average appreciation, is a,_^^ ^ given by the equation -^iiJZ^? a or Thus in the example 20.26^ and gold is of .2026 I or 16.76^. 3^ — .0^ + .03 i^ it ^^*^^ = so that r„i, 1676, , This average arithmetical average of be 16.25%, the average silver interest §1, interest «a= (11) is o, 50, not identical with the 10 and 5^s, which would which identical with that rate if uniform would result in four years in the same divergence between silver and gold as was produced by the four successive rates 14.70%. For the ever, the latter 10 and 5/^s; this would be o, 50, statistical method is purposes of Part II., how- adopted for simplicity and is doubtless correct within the limit of error. § It may seem 6. that the subject of this chapter can have no practical application. A government this is not the case. we In Part II shall see that bond, for instance, is a promise to pay a specific series of future sums, the price of the ^ It bond may be proved is that this definition of condition of au average, latter are all equal, or not. the present value of this series and viz., whether a^, satisfies that a^ reduces to z,, i^, etc. {and the general a,, a^, etc., j\.j\, etc.,) be when all the equal Appreciatio7i 37 1] and hiterest. 29 the " interest realized by the investor " as computed by actuaries is nothins: more nor less than the " averao-e " rate of interest in the sense above defined. Of course the investor puts no specific values on the individual yearly rates of interest of which the "interest realized " is the average, but that this interest is attested both of interest is truly an average by the comparative stability of the rate realized on long time bonds as compared with the fluctuations of the rate of interest in the short time money market ( a stability which the rate realized on the bonds does not possess when near maturity^ ) and by the fact that interest realized on a very long bond, say 50 years, is often lower than on a 25 years' bond. This is explainable by the prevailing opinion that interest tends to fall, so that if the 50 years' investment were in two successive bonds of 25 years each, the interest realized in the second would be lower than " actuarial average " of the realized two is in the first. The equal to the interest on the 50 years' bond. abundantly verified by market quotations, as is also the the interest realized to him who buys a bond and sells it again in a short time is even more variable than rates on money. ' This is fact that Thus, if in a fortnight ( in which no interest falls due ) the bond advances y%, the speculator realizes at the rate of about 3% per annum if the rise is %, he realizes over 12%. The investor who holds a bond along time realizes an interest which is an "average " of the oscillating rates of those who speculate during the interim. ; CHAPTER VI. ZERO AND NEGATIVE INTEREST. established the truth and generality of the Having principle limits, y, rt-, ( i + (i <^) + we next z"), any, are imposed on The i. when +/ = i if inquire what the three magnitudes foregoing equation seems to require that, the appreciation rapid, the rate of is sufficiently upward moving standard should be zero Thus if a =j\ the equation gives us i= o. interest in the or negative. iVgain if « >y then z < o. of interest in wheat, is 8 For instance, ^ and if we have tively to wheat 20^/0 per annum, (i + interest in Now Any it + i) which can be possible it ; that $100 the rate is, i -J- rela- .08 := the rate of I clear that negative interest is possessor of than lend — whence i= .10 minus 10 fo gold would be .20) (i if /, gold appreciates is impossible. of gold (or its equivalent in goods would hoard the gold rather That is, the relation z < o is imalso « >/ is impossible. Thus sold for gold) at a loss. and therefore our magnitudes are restricted within certain limits, z viz., >o (12) or, in words, the rate of interest in a money which can be hoarded (without trouble, risk or expense) can never sink below zero and the money itself an expected appreciation (relatively can never undergo to another standard) greater than the rate of interest in that standard. Appreciation and Interest. 373] 31 §2. This flect seem mysterious when we resame cause, viz., hoarding, which prevents from being negative also checks the expected last result will not that the the interest An example rate of appreciation. It is will make a familiar fact that the expected rate of appreciation money) can never be more of real estate (relatively to rapid than the rate of interest (in money). is this clear. faster If the latter the (money) value of land can never advance 5^, annum than 5 ^ per except when that advance is unforeseen. The explanation is certain land values make able to simple. would If it rise were foreknown that 10^, owners would be much by holding as by selling proceeds at 5^. The land would be twice as and investing the This decreases the supply and sends up the price until it is within at least sfooi the expected sellhoarded. ing price one year hence. city lots for speculation It thus happens that holding comes to be regarded as a regular investment from which the same return is to be ex- The pected as from investing in a productive enterprise. same could be said of wheat, cotton, or other speculaHoarding money is but a particular form of tion. "holding for a rise." lessen the rise —not In all cases the process tends to to obliterate it but to to the rate of interest (in the standard in itself is make it equal which the rise measured). In the case of appreciating money we saw that, of the two conditions i~ o and a ^j\ the first was the more obvious, while in the case of appreciating real estate the second was the more obvious. both cases money. we are accustomed We say, The to reason is that in think in terms of " the rate of interest cannot be nega- American Economic 32 " the tive," expected new It [374 estate cannot exceed we have statements implies another. a real rise of the rate of interest," but, as Association. seen, each of these may strike the reader as idea that land speculation presents an actually existinp- case of zero interest. And yet this undoiibt- is we take as our standard an acre of speculative The land speculator is " making money " but not land. " making land." His 100 acres remains 100 acres. We edlv so, if could even imagine all loan contracts translated from still keeping money as 100 " acres " would be liquid- " dollars " into " acres " (though K the mcdiitni). ated one year hence by 100 " acres " and interest would be nil. There is no intrinsic reason why this same zero debt of interest (for absolutely safe loans) be true of in the money, and abundance this might not sometime without implying any change of capital. §3. It is important to emphasize the fact that these limits imposed on the magnitudes i and a come from the possibility of hoarding money without loss. If the money were a perishable commodity, such as fruit, the limit would be pushed into the region One can of negative quantities. imagine a loan based on strawberries or peaches contracted in summer and payable in winter with negative Or, again, interest.^ we may define a " dollar" as con- sisting of a constantly increasing gold.^ If number of grains of the weight doubles yearly, such " dollars" cannot be hoarded without growing fewer with time, and if interest was previously 5 ^ it will now be minus ^iVz^oy for he iCf. 2 who borrows $100 (2580 grains) to-day Bolim-Bawerk, " Positive Theory of Capital," pp. Such a definition for either the gold or silver " 252, 297. pound" in Professor Foxwell's proposal for a " climbing" ratio. is implied s Appreciation a^id Interest. 375] 33 pay back I52.50 (2709 grains) one year hence. Again we find a real example by recurring to land will Since to hold land usually involves paying speculation. upon taxes " acres" is it, the rate of interest in terms of such often, in actual fact, negative. §4. In this connection, an apparent difficulty needs to be explained. mum gold should appreciate up to the maxi- If limit so that the interest rate loans, would not would a capitalist all were zero investment cease ? for safe What object have in investing when he could gain much by hoarding ? Nothing could be more natural than the fallacy here involved and we ought not to be surprised on finding it among the arguments of certain bimetallists. For example, the Free Coinage Convention at Memphis, Tenn., a year ago, adopted the follow- as ing resolution gold means a : " fall The demonetization of either silver or in the prices of commodities, a dimi- nution of the profits of legitimate business, a continuing increase in the burden of debts, with consequent hard times, idle labor and idle capital., the increasing value of money promising a surer rettirn than to an invested oney The capital a hoarded dollar error here contained is the ancient confusion of and money. gold would be of to It is true that a limited^ amount withdrawn and hoarded, but would not check the investment of capital this any more than the similar withdrawal of so much copper. If a hoarded dollar yields a " sure return," a hoarded dollar^ As in the case of land, the hoarding would reach its limit when it had raised the value (marginal utility) of present money up to the present value of future money. Hoarding beyond this point would ' bring 3 loss. American Economic 34 worth of goods as surely Association. [.37^ The possessors of bri?tgs loss. stocks of cotton or grain, machinery or ships, the prices which are of unemployed. falling, A have no disposition keep them to retail dealer fills his store with carpets and gives the wholesale dealer his note for three months. He said to is borrow " money" but he really borrows He may pay carpets. no (money) wholesaler gains by the loan. interest He is and yet the saved a loss in the (money) value of the carpets which he would have incurred had he failed to get rid of them. In terms of may be making 5^. Similar considerations when the loan is negotiated through a third party, carpets he apply and apply in as a bank, investments. ^ that no further treatment of However turned here. point of cent, But the case supposed ble transaction. it seems necessary " money" at no per certain circumstances be a very profitaIt conclusions interest. risk, so highly hypo- or twisted and from whatever view examined, lending may under going is and and the error involved has been so often ex- thetical plained fact to all forms of loans goes without saying that the fore- apply That part of only to market " pure" interest and that part representing commissions or " net" representing for transact- ing the business of lending and borrowing would not disappear. ^E. g. F. A. Walker, "Money.." (New York, 187S), p. 94. PART FACTS. II. CHAPTER VII. INTRODUCTION. No study of the relation between appreciation and inwould be complete without verification by facts. terest In imaginary illustrations, such as those used in Part it is make easy to place ; we but the figures in which are really interest- ed must come from actual market quotations. these alone can I, calculations agree to the last decimal we test Through our assumption that foresight in regard to the appreciation or depreciation of money ac- tually exists. At the how outset the question arises, can a merchant be said to foresee the appreciation of money ? ation inition, Few a subtle conception. is any clear ideas about it. and business Appreci- men have Economists disagree as statisticians as to its to its def- measurement. If you ask a merchant whether he takes account of appreciation, he will say he never thinks a dollar as a dollar. of money, but money of as the of it, that he always regards Other things itself one fixed thing. he is may change in terms accustomed to think But though we do ordinarily regard the value of a dollar as a fixed magnitude, this does not really prevent our taking account of In our daily life we think its changes. of the earth as fixed, but we its rotation whenever we speak During a period of inflation the virtually take account of of sunrise or sunset. ordinary man conceives the premium on gold as a rise of American Economic ^6 gold not a rising sults fall of money. But if [378 he takes account of wages and rising prices he arrives at the same reWe need as if he had thought of falling money. ascribe to the not Association. practical man any knowledge of " absolute " appreciation, but whatever absolute appreciation is, it is included, though unseparated, in the practical man's forecast in terms of money of all the economic elements which concern him prices of his product, — cost of living, wages of his workmen, and so forth. If he expects falling prices and rising wages, as is often the case, he may be said to foresee an appreciation of gold as defined by the ordinary bimetallist and at the same time a depreciation as measured by difficulty of attainment. What is more, he takes account of the relative importance, as affecting himself, of the various changes which he expects, and not of their relative importance in the elaborate averages of the statistician, averages which may emphasize some commodity or some labor whose fluctuations have absolutely no concern for him. His effort is not to predict the index numbers of Sauerbeck or Conrad, but so to foresee his own economic fu- make reasonably correct decisions, and in particular to know what he is about when contracting a loan. If gold appreciates in such a way or in such a sense that ture as to he expects a shrinking margin of profit, he will be cautious about borrowing unless interest falls and this very ; unwillingness to borrow, lessening the " money market," will bring interest explanation of this process is emphasize the broad down. in the Further postponed to Chapter X. Before proceeding to specific to demand statistics, it is important fact that in general, business fore- sight exists and that the accuracy and power of this fore- Appreciation and Interest. 379] sight is greater today than ever before. 37 It is distinguishing marks of modern business. of trade journals and investors' reviews one of the Multitudes have their sole reason for existence in supplying data on which to base Every chance for gain is eagerly watched. active and intelligent speculation is constantly going prediction. An on which, so far as it does not consist and gambling transactions, performs and provident function for society. to believe that foresight, an exception if so, it known reasonable the general rule, has Or, can the academic bimetallist assume himself pos- incapable It is see. which ? he who first practical man's business man to fore- gathers the facts and statistics on must be based. It is he who watches past price movements and notes the slight- forecasts the trend of we which he says the It is the practical est signs of a change. that is Is as applied to falling or rising prices ? sessed of a foresight of is which of fictitious a well And it is in his trade journals find the first discussions of the probable effect of gold discoveries or silver legislation on prices and trade. The theorist can aid in these predictions only by sup- plying or correcting the principles on which they are constructed. CHAPTER VIII. GOLD AND PAPER. §1. General evidence that an expected cliange in the value money has an of effect on the rate tained from several sources. they can sell of interest gold bonds at better terms than currency The very or coin bonds. desire of lenders to insert a gold clause in their contracts is strong proof that they are willing to yield something for ingly shown period, where can be ob- Municipalities often find in California^ it. This was strik- during the war inflation be en- for a time, gold contracts could not forced and in consequence interest rates were very high. During a period true that interest of progressive is paper inflation it is also high even when the contract is drawn on a paper basis. As we shall see at a later stage, this was partially true during the civil war, though its effect was not very pronounced owing to the over sanguine hopes of an early termination of the war and a It was also true during the return to a specie basis. currency troubles in the thirties. Raguet wrote " "In the six months before the suspension of ^2>7i although the amount of the currency was greater than it had ever : been before in the United States, yet the scarcity of money was so great that per month." ence on these It it commanded from would be unsafe facts. to i^o to 3 ^ much infermay be partly found Their significance Bernard Moses, " Legal Tender Notes in California," Quarterly Journal of Economics, October, 1892, p. 15. -" Currency and Banking," (1839), p. 139; alsoSumner, " History; of Banking," (1896), p. 264. ^ 9 2 6 9 , Appreciation a7id Interest. 38 1] or wholly different. But they raise a 39 presumption in favor of the theory here advanced and against the theory that the rate of interest is lowered by inflation of the currency. A definite test must be sought where two standards An are simultaneously used. is excellent case of this kind supplied by two kinds of United States bonds, one From payable in coin and the other in currency. prices which these bonds fetch in the market it is the pos- sible to calculate the interest realized to the investor. The currency bonds known are and as currency sixes mature in 1898 and 1899. The coin bonds selected for comparison are the 4^5 of 1907. The following table gives the rates of interest realized in the two standards together with the premium on gold. RATES OF INTEREST REALIZED FROM DATES MENTIONED TO MATURITy.i Price of Coin. Currency. Coin. Currency. 3-7 3-8 4-5 Gold. Jan., 1870 July. 1870 Jan 187T July, 1871 Jan., 1872 July. 1872 Jan., 1873 July, 1S73 Jan., 1874 July, 1874 Jan., 1875 July, 1875 . . . , Jan., July, Jan., July, Jan., July, 1876 1876 1S77 1877 1878 1878 . . . 6.4 5-8 6.0 5-4 5-3 I 5-8 5-3 50 113. 109.5 56 5-1 4-9 5.0 119. 112. TO 8 113-9 5-7 5-4 5-1 III. 50 "5-3 • 5-0 . 50 5-0 4-9 110.3 T10.7 • 5-1 47 112. 51 4-4 4.4 112. • • • . . 4-7 4-5 . 45 . 4.4 50 . 3.9 4.2 4.4 4-3 4.6 4.4 1 17.0 112.3 107.0 105.4 102.8 TOO. 7 Jan.. 1879 Jan., 1880 Jan., 1 881 Jan., 1882 1SS3 Jan. Jan., T884 May, 1SS5 Jan., t886 Jan., 1887 • • 1 . i 3-3 3-0 • 1 2.9 2.6 \ ^-7 2.6 1 1 2.3 2.3 2.2 2.T Mar. t888 1889 May, 1S90 July, 189T Jan., 1892 Mar. 1S93 Nov. 1894 Aug. ,1895 Aug. 1896 Jan., , , 2.4 i i '-^ 2.8 2.7 2.8 3.2 4.0 3-4 3-5 3-3 2.9 2.7 2.6 2.6 29 2.6 2.6 3-0 3-1 3-1 3-5 3-6 4-3 ^This table has been obtained by the aid of the usual brokers' bond In the case of currency bcir.ds, it was only necessary to deduct accrued interest (if any) from the quoted price and look in the table for the interest which corresponds to the price so found and the num- tables. American Economic 40 ^ Association. The Several points in this table deserve notice. tations for 1894, '95, '96 [382 quo- show a considerably higher rate currency standard than in the coin stand- of interest in the ard as well as a higher rate in both standards than in The difference is between 2.7^ and and between 3.2^ and 4.3^ in 1896. 3.5^ Both the increase and the wedging apart of the two rates previous years. in 1894, are explainable as effects of the free silver proposal and its incorporation (July 1896) A Democratic party. duce the value of returns bly also of those the platform of in free silver law from currency bonds and possi- from coin bonds. inflation has this effect, it ing the period of actual If the mere dread of might be supposed the exact opposite to be true. in gold but that, dur- inflation, the discrimination in favor of coin bonds would be even greater. made 6.4^ the v^^ould certainly re- But we find In 1870 the investor was willing to accept a return of only 5.4^ in currency. This fact becomes intelligible in the light of the theory which has been explained. It meant the hope of resumption. so depreciated there value. It was not Just because paper was was a prospect until of a great rise in its 1878 when the prospect of a further rise disappeared that the relative position of the two rates of interest was reversed. After resumption in 1879 the two remained very nearly equal for several years until recent fears of inflation again produced a divergence. ber of years to maturity. In the case of gold bonds, since the quotait is necessary to divide the quoted price tions are given in currency, by the price of gold in order to obtain their price in gold {i. e., "coin") and then proceed as above indicated. The quotations of prices of bonds and gold are the "opening" prices for the months named and are taken from the Financial Reviezv, 1895, the Commercial and Fitiancial Chronicle, the (New York) Bankers' Magazine and the Bankers' Almanac. After 1SS4, January quotations were not always available. and AppreciatioJi 383] Interest. 41 §3- We have found so how to inquire with the far that the facts agree But theory previously laid down. it is necessary further For agreement. close is this this pur- They pose, the figures just given are of little value. represent the rates of interest realized for the periods be- tween the dates named and the times These mature. As has been explained such bonds. at which the bonds periods are not the same for the two a rate of interest is a sort of average of the rates of interest for the individual Thus, in the foregoing years of the periods in question. table, the rate of interest in currency opposite January, 1870, 1899. is 5.4^. This It is a sort of is the rate realized between 1870 and average of, say, the rate realized be- tween 1870 and 1879 and between 1879 and 1899. As shall see the former was 6.3^ and the latter, 4-5/^. we It is clear that we must seek the rates of interest in the two standards for the same periods. In the follow- ing table the periods selected terminate on Jan. the date of resumption of specie payments. say, to fix our ideas, that the figures represent the rate of interest realized to investors dates mentioned and sell who buy the bonds at the them on January i, 1879 but ; obviously unnecessary to consider the bonds as ac- it is tually either is 1879, i, We may no nevv^ bought or use of terms. in their assets at rise or fall sold, but only as owned. Business men This reckon securities their market prices and if these prices they count themselves as gainers or losers. This gain (or loss) added to the annual interest receipts and properly distributed over the time considered gives the rate of interest realized. 1 .• .. American Economic 42 Association. [3S4 RATES OF INTEREST REALIZED FROM DATES MENTIONED TO JAN- UARY I, 1879, (Date of Resumption'). Appreciation of Currency in Gold. Coin. Currency. j i Expected. Actual. January, 1S70. July, 1S70 January, 1871 July, 1S71 January, 1S72 July, 1S72 January, 1873 July. i'S73 January, 1S74. July. 1874 Fanuary, 1875 July, 1875 January, 1876. July, 1876 January, 1877 July, 1 87 7 January, 1878. July, 1878 . . . • . . • ' • . . . . . . . . . a q.i 6.3 .8 2.1 6.2 5-7 •5 1.4 6.7 63 •4 1-3 6.4 5-9 5-7 5-7 5-7 7 1.8 .2 •5 1-3 2 1 .3 .2 2.0 2.8 —.5 2.T 6.2 6.5 6.2 5.6 5-7 6.0 6.1 5-4 5-2 5-5 5.7 8.2 4.8 62 6.0 6 T • 5-8 2.4 5-4 4.2 !6 3-1 1.8 4-9 41 1.2 43 2.4 4.0 2.7 1.4 4.9 3-1 2.5 6.0 2.6 2, 3-5 3.6 2.8 2,1 1.4 Since the figures in this table represent the rales of interest which render the " present value," at the date of purchase, of all the will future benefits to January, 1879, equal to the purchase price, they can be calculated by Horuer's method as indicated in Chapter V. But the method which has been adopted is less laborious, as it ena1)les us to use the bond tallies. It can best be explained by an example. The opening price, January, 1870, of currency 6's was 109)^, and January, 1879, ^^9/i, which require no correction for accrued interest. Our problem is, if a man spends ^109"/^ in 1870 and receives |ii9>< in 1879 with $6 per annum (semi-annually) in the meantime, what rate of interest does he realize? Now it is clear that the answer is the same if all the benefits and sacrifices involyed are doubled or halved or increased or decreased in an}' common ratio. Let us then divide them all by i.icjyiThen I91.3 would be paid in 1870 for |;ioo due in and ^5.02 per annum in the meantime. That is, the interest realized is exactly as if the bond were a 5.02% bond maturing in 1879 and bought at 91.3 in 1870. This can readily be obtained from the bond tables by interpolating between the figures for a 5% and a 5)4% bond purchased at 91.3 and having 9 years to run. For a 5% bond we obtain 6.28%, and for a 5}4% bond, 6.81%. Hence for a 5.02% bond the result is 6,30%, or 6.3%, The third column gives what may 1879, be called the expected rate of appreciation of currency in terms of is, that rate of appreciation which would have made the gold, that Appreciation 385] From this table we and Intej^est. 43 see that the interests realized for the period, January, 1870 to January, 1879, were, in coin, 7.1^, and in currency, 6.3%, which, according to the ( i + <« ), gives a rate of appre( i + z formula i + 7 ) This may be called the " expected apciation of .8%. = preciation That The ". actual rate of appreciation was 2.1%. the estimated appreciation was about two-fifths is, of the appreciation as who Thus those held currency sixes had the better investment. fact it is w^ell known that exchanging gold bonds The really turned out. it many speculators grew for currency bonds rich In by at this time. shows the same misjudgment in July, 1870, table January, 1871, and July, 1871. From then to July, 1874, the outlook for resumption grew gloomy, due no doubt to the strong greenback sentiment. The inflation 1874 actually produced a prospect of negative This bill was vetoed by appreciation, i, e.^ depreciation. bill of December of that year the bill Accordingly for resumption was passed by the Senate. January, 1875, opened with a more hopeful estimate. President Grant, and in The became law on the 14th bill was an immediate which, from then rise in the " on, of January and there expected " appreciation averaged 2%. But during the same period the actual appreciation from the dates named two interest +y= rates equally profitable. + «)• It is obtained from the formula column gives the actual rate of appreciation between the dates mentioned and January i, 1879. This Thus the opening price is calculated from the quoted prices of gold. Hence of gold January, 1870, was 119.9, and January, 1879, ^oocurrency appreciated in nine years in the ratio 100 to 119.9, which is I (i -I- ?) (i The last 2.1% per annum. If the appreciation proceeded uniformly this method would be strictly correct. As it is, a more elaborate method would be required, in accordance with the principles explained in Chapter V, to take account fully of the fluctuations of the annual appreciation. But for our present purposes, and for results worked out to but one decimal place, the simpler method here at the race of adopted is sufficiently correct. American Econoviic 44 Association. [386 to January, 1S79, averaged 3.6%, so that even after the government promised resumption, investors and speculaput implicit confidence in that promise, the tors did not "expected" appreciation being only a well known fact upon It little more than This corresponds half the actual appreciation. that the resumption act to the was then looked as a political manoeuvre, likely to be repealed. should be observed that the method employed to determine the rate of interest realized danger. It correctly is open to oiie represents the rate of interest act- ually realized between tw^o dates, but, unless the later of the two dates is maturity, it does not necessarily repre- sent the rate of interest expected at the investor could not of know first date. in January, 1870, The what the price bonds would be in January, 1879, unless the bonds at that time. To compare, in 1870, the relative matured advantages of coin and currency bonds for the period 1870-79, a forecast was necessary, not only of the relation of currency to gold, but also of the prices of the bonds in 1879. forecast made two These prices in turn depend on a new in 1879. forecast of 1879 It follows that a mistake in this ^^^ embodied in the prices wall affect the rate of interest realized 1879 in the same manner between 1870 and as a mistake of the opposite kind in the forecast of 1870. But in most cases the method given exact. of that year is sufficiently would have been imtwo bonds in can usually be depended upon that any great For, although in 1870 it possible to predict exactly the prices of the 1879, yet it change in price is apt to affect both alike (provided they have approximately the same time to run) and thus Appreciation 387] and Interest. 45 eliminates itself for the most part in the comparison. For this reason it is clearly better to take bonds whose dates of maturity approximately correspond, in order that any abnormal influence in 1879 may affect both than to take, for instance, currency sixes of 1899 and coin bonds of 1881. alike, American Economic 48 From this table it Association. [390 will be seen that the rates realized two standards to investors in bonds of the differed but when the fall of Indian exchange The average difference before 1875 was .2^ slightly until 1875, began. while the average difference since 1875 has been .7^, or more than three times as much. From 1884 exchange fell much more rapidly than be- fore, and the difference in the two rates of interest rose Since accordingly, amounting in one year to i.i^. the two bonds were issued hy the same government, same degree of security, are quoted side by same market and are in fact similar in all important respects except in the standard in which the}- possess the side in the are expressed, the results afford substantial proof that the fall of (after it once began) was discounted Of course investors did not form perfectly exchange in advance. definite estimates of the future fall, but the fear of a predominated in varying degrees over the hope The year 1890 was one of great disturbance in ex- changes, the average for the and for the last six months first six 19.3. months being The of 73.8 to 83.5 for the last six rise in their silver price 17.6 gold price of the silver bonds rose from an average for the months fall of a rise. first six months, but the was only from 100.6 to 103.7, showing that the increase of confidence in the " future was not great and in fact only reduced the disparity in the interest from i.o to .8^. This great rise in exchange and the slight revival in of silver" silver securities occurred simultaneously with the pas- sage of the Sherman act of July, 1890, by which the United States was to purchase four and a half million ounces of silver per month. There can be little doubt that the disturbance was due in some measure to the operation or expected operation of that law. Appreciation 39 1] This is and Interest. 49 not the only case in which the relative prices of rupee paper and gold bonds were probably affected by po- The litical action. smallest difference (since 1874) in the tw^o rates of interest occurs in 1878, which was the year of the Bland act and the first international monetary conference. After the closure of the Indian mints on June 26, 1893, exchange rose from 14.7 to 15.9, the gold price of rupee paper from 62 to 70 and consequently its rupee price from 101.2 to 105.7. § 2. The preceding comparisons serve to establish the in- fluence of the divergence between the standards on the rates of interest, but afford The rates of no measure bonds were the rates realized it and had differed if the bonds were held to The rupee bond had no fixed date maturity. ity of that influence. interest which have been deduced for gold to of matur- be treated as a perpetual annuity, although from such an annuity in being terminable by the government at par on three months' notice. In order to measure the extent to which the ver was allowed for by investors, it is fall of silr necessary to exam- ine the rates realized during specified periods. The lowing table gives the rates realized between the five and the change. last five years of the folfirst period of falling ex- American Economic 50 Associatioii. [392 RATES OF INTEREST REALIZED ON INDIA BONDS FOR PERIODS SPECIFIED.! Appreciation of Gold in Silver. Gold. Estimated. J i a 4.1 3-5 3-6 3-6 .6 4.3 4-5 •9 2.1 4.6 4.8 3.8 3-9 .8 2.6 •9 2.4 4-5 3-7 .8 2.1 Silver. Actual. . 1878-94 1879-95 .... .... .... .... .... Average .... 1875-91 1876-92 1877-93 The taken 1.6 1.8 .7 average estimated appreciation for the periods is .8%, which is slightly more than one the average actual appreciation, 2.1%. third of Perhaps to ob- tain the net estimate of investors as to the fall of ex- change we ought to deduct from the .8% another .\^'/o due to the trouble and expense of obtaining English money for Indian exchange, for before the fall of investors differed extent to which, will be remembered that even exchange began, the by .2%.^ We rates yielded to thus obtain ,7% as the on the average, investors protected themselves against the ' it fall The methods by which the first in silver during the period columu is computed are the same as those explained in the preceding chapter, account being taken of the fact that the price quotations for rupee paper are not "flat," so that no corrections for accrued interest need be applied. For computing the second column a more laborious method was necessary, due to the fact that the quotations are not continuous for the same bond. The earlier ones are for a 4 % bond and the later for a The 3 % bond. buyer of a 4 % bond is regarded as converting it into the 3 % at the current price in 1888, the date of maturity of the earlier bond. As no bond tables apply to such conversions, tables of present values were used and that rate was found by trial (and interpolation) which would make the present value of all benefits equal to the purchase price. ^This probably included besides the brokerage and trouble of obtaining and selling " interest bills ", the risks even at those early dates of a falling or fluctuating exchange. Appreciation 393] The remaining named. ative the to the holders loss to holders of gold world fully foreseen the and fall, of hiterest. implies 1.4%, a rela- rupee paper and a gain bonds. fall of 51 Had the business Indian exchange, rupee paper would have been cheaper or gold bonds dearer than they actually were, or both. The rates of interest two standards during the periods mentioned would have been spread apart ( at most ) i ^/^ ^ realized in the further. §3. The question arises at this point, how is this 1)4 fo to Did investors overestimate silver or underestimate gold most ? There is nothing in the fore- be distributed? going investigation to decide this vexed question. Our purely a differential one. But quantitative result is other sorts of evidence point strongly to the conclusion that the major part of the miscalculation ver So side. effect on was on the sil- far as " demonetization " is concerned, the silver must have been, according to any reason- able view, greater than the effect on gold, and in conse- quence any unforeseen part of these effects would be probably greater in the case of silver than in the case of gold. So far as production is concerned, the disturb- ance in silver was far greater than that in gold either when reckoned absolutely or in proportion to the total masses whose values would be affected. Finally, since the break-down of bimetallism in 1873-4, the world-wide agitation to " rehabilitate silver " has held out a delusive hope which must have acted to give the silver bonds a higher price than they " were worth." The strength of this agitation need scarcely be dwelt on here. expression in many bills It found in Congress which were never passed and in two which were passed, in numerous pro- 1 American Economic 50 Association. [39- RATES OF INTEREST REALIZED ON INDIA BONDS FOR PERIODS SPECIFIED. Appreciation of Gold in Silver. Silver. Gold. Estimated. J z a 4.1 3-5 3-6 3.6 .6 4.3 4-5 Actual. 1875-91 1876-92 1877-93 IS78-94 1879-95 .... .... .... .... 4.6 4.8 3.8 3-9 Average .... 4-5 3-7 .8 2.1 The taken • . . . •9 1.6 1.8 2.1 .8 2.6 •9 2.4 • 7 average estimate4 appreciation for the periods is .8%, which is slightly more than one the average actual appreciation, 2.1%. third of Perhaps to ob- tain the net estimate of investors as to the fall of ex- change we ought to the trouble to deduct and expense for Indian exchange, for it from the .8% another of obtaining will be , i % due English money remembered that even before the fall of exchange began, the rates yielded to investors differed extent to which, We thus obtain .7% as the on the average, investors protected by .2%.^ themselves against the ^ fall in silver The methods by which the first column is during the period computed are the same as those explained in the preceding chapter, account being taken of the fact that the price quotations for rupee paper are not "flat," so that no corrections for accrued interest need be applied. For computing the second column a more laborious method was necessary, due to the fact that the quotations are not continuous for the same bond. The earlier ones are for a 4 % bond and the later for a The 3 % bond. buyer of a 4 % bond is regarded as converting it into the 3 % at the current price in j8S8, the date of maturity of the earlier bond. As no bond tables apply to such conversions, tables of present values were used and that rate was found b}' trial (and interpolation) which would make the present value of all benefits equal to the purchase price. ^This probably included besides the brokerage and trouble of obtaining and selling " interest bills ", the risks even at those early dates of a falling or fluctuating exchange. Appreciation and Interest. 393] The remaining named. ative the holders loss to the to fall, holders world fully foreseen the implies 1.4%, a rela- rupee paper and a gain of gold of 51 Had bonds. fall of the business Indian exchange, rupee paper would have been cheaper or gold bonds dearer The than they actually were, or both. realized in the rates of interest two standards during the periods men- tioned would have been spread apart at ( most ) i ^^ ^ further. §3- The how question arises at this point, is this i}4 fo to Did investors overestimate be distributed? underestimate gold most ? There is silver or nothing in the fore- going investigation to decide this vexed question. Our purely a differential one. But quantitative result is other sorts of evidence point ^t^ongly to the conclusion that the major part of the miscalculation ver So side. effect on was on the sil- far as " demonetization " is concerned, the silver must have been, according to any reason- able view, greater than the effect on gold, and in conse- quence any unforeseen part of these effects would be probably greater in the case of silver than in the case of gold. So far as production is concerned, the disturb- ance in silver was when reckoned far greater than that in gold either absolutely or in proportion to the total masses whose values would be affected. Finally, since the break-down of bimetallism in 1873-4, the world-wide agitation to " rehabilitate silver " has held out a delusive hope which must have acted to give the silver higher price than they " were worth." The this agitation need scarcely be dwelt on here. expression in many bills in bonds a strength of It found Congress which were never passed and in two which were passed, in numerous pro- American Economic 52 posals in Germany, Association. [394 in silver commissions there England, and in three international conferences. further evidence and in If any needed that this agitation contrib- is uted to mislead investors as to the future of silver, it can be found by examining the discussions and mistaken prophecies on silver, contributed to the Economist and other trade journals. would seem extremely improb- It able that these hopes for the " rehabilitation of silver " have acted to depress the price of gold bonds rather than to raise the price of silver bonds. For these reasons it seems likely relative gain or loss, not that, of the lyi'fo more than half represents an That is, the inter- unexpected gain on the gold bonds. est realized be, of on the gold bonds, if higher than it should was not higher by more than Y^'fc If this be true one gold investment it was undoubtedly true of all gold investments and of the whole in This affords therefore, a probable upper limit London. to the debtor's loss in 1874. money market But even if England the miscalculation was for gold as for silver, the Our London for contracts made since twice as great upper limit becomes only i ^. result therefore, is that the average debtor's loss in for contracts made since the fall of silver be- gan, was probably less than y^ ^ and almost certainly less than i ^ per annum. we shall atIn Chapter X tempt A to find a lower limit. great deal has been written on the loss incurred by India in paying her annual interest to England in gold, but little is said of the interest paid at home in silver. Of India's national debt, about ^100,000,000 are in gold and Rx 100,000,000 in rupees. This rupee debt was almost lent and Appreciation 395] all in force Interest. twenty years ago and was then equiva- worth only ^60,mean an added burden of to ^100,000,000, but today The 000,000. it and silver debt may difference gold debt, but may it is mean also it is a lessened burden of by no means impossible as national indebtedness is concerned, India than she would, have been silver 53 if that, so far is better off a bimetallic tie between and gold had been maintained. In this connection it may be worth while to point out a curious oversight in Mr. Elijah Helm's recent book.^ In Chapter XVI he proposes the conversion rupee debt into a 3^ of the 4^ gold debt and, assuming very plausibly that the gold bonds could be sold for 99, shows that so long as exchange remained at there would be an annual saving This 160,000. is present level, its of interest oi Rs correct enough, but he next attempts show that if exchange should gradually fall there would continue to be a saving until it should sink to to This ioj4d. is entirely erroneous. It takes account only of the annual interest and not of the deferred principal which if in gold, grows progressively onerous in terms of silver. It is odd that a bimetallist who portrays so vividly the evils to the debtor from an appreciating gold principal should have found himself in the position of deliberately advising a debtor to adopt that standard to lessen his burden of interest. In the same year that Mr. Helm's book was written, the Indian Government converted its 4^ rupee debt, not into gold, but into another rupee debt at S}4 1 "The Joint Standard," fo. (London and New York, 1894.) CHAPTER X. MONEY AND COMMODITIES. §1. In attempting to apply our theory to periods of rising and we falling prices, met by the are that difficulty comparison can only be made between successive periods. We can learn what the rate 1873, ^^^ "^^ cannot of interest know what has been since would have been it bimetallism had been extended or if if the world's cur- rency had been so expanded as to have prevented the Without this missing term difficult to measure the influence fall of prices. son, it is of compariof the pro- such there has been, upon gressive scarcity of gold, if the rate of interest. does not answer the to 1873. No two can say they rates of interest before purpose and after periods are so alike industrially that differ Other standard. " value of It compare the merely we only in the state of the monetary influences innumerable money" on the money market. affect the Individual quotations at different times on the same market vary from one half of one per cent, to fifty per cent, while yearly averages vary from one to seven per cent. can never wholly eliminate all partial elimination is possible only for periods of several years each. culties however, certain We causes but one, and even by taking averages In spite of these general conclusions diffi- can be established. §2. Our main problem is not concerned with high and low prices but with rising or falling prices. But we 1 and Appreciation 397] Interest. 55 note in passing an important generalization in regard to price levels and the rate of interest. Shall we associate high interest with high prices or with low prices ? To answer this question the following table is constructed. Two The rates of interest are given for each decade. MARKET RATES OF INTEREST IX RELATION TO HIGH AND LOW PRICES.i 1824 to 1832 to 1842 to 1852 to 1862 to 1872 to 1851 I86I 1841 1881 1831 1871 : London, " High prices Low prices . incl. incl. incL incl. incl. 13.8 4.4 3.2 3-6 2.6 5-4 3-0 5-1 2.6 3-7 2.5 30 2 9-1 7.4 6.7 7.0 5-1 5-3 5.1 4.6 3-4 3-7 3-2 3-3 2.7 4.1 2.6 2.6 T, ; New York, High prices " Low prices .... . Berlin, " Paris, " ^ Calcutta, " High High . . . .... i . Tokyo, High " Low * Shanghai, High prices prices prices . . .... Low prices 2.5 2.4 prices Low prices ' " 91 . prices Low prices High . prices Low prices 1882 to 1891 incl. incl. ; 6,2 5-6 5-4 12.3 12.0 lO.I 6.2 10. ' ; i . . . ; . . ! . . 1 . . i 6.0 5-7 ^ This table is constructed from the data given in the Appendix. For New York, the rates for the first decade are averaged from the column in the Appendix headed "60 days," and are not to be compared with those for the remaining decades, which are averaged from the column headed " Prime two name 60 days." The index numbers of prices which have been employed are those of Jevons (1S24-51) and Sauerbeck (1S52-91) for England, Soetbeer and Heinz for Germany, the Aldrich Senate report for the United States and France, and the Japanese report for India, Japan and China. (See Appendix, The table ends in 1S91 because there are no index numbers for \ 3). the United States since that year. 2 For Calcutta the "market" bank of Bengal is employed, no The first column is for 1873-81 inthe reason that no index number for 1872 is rate for the rate being available. stead of 1S72-81, for available. * For Tokyo the first column is for 1S73-81 for the same reason. 1S85-93 instead of 1S82-91, for the reason that the available rates begin in 1885 and the index numbers end * For Shanghai the period in 1893. is American Economic 56 first, opposite " Associatio7i. high prices," is [398 the average rate for those years of the decade whose price levels, as shown by an index number, were above the average price level whole decade the second is the average rate for for the ; the years whose prices were below the general average. Of the 21 comparisons contained in this table, 17 show higher rates for high-price years than for low-price years, one shows the opposite condition and three show As equal rates in the two cases. years for London, 40 for New the table covers 68 York, 30 for Berlin, 20 for Paris, 19 each for Calcutta and Tokyo, and 9 for Shanghai, or 205 years in the aggregate, the result may be accepted with great confidence that high and low prices are usually associated with high and low interest respectively. There are two probable reasons for this connection. One is that high general prices usually mean scarcity of capital rather than abundance of money, while low prices generally money. mean abundance on the relation wheat ^ ; of not scarcity of capital, This corresponds to the observations of Jevons of the rate of discount to the price of the other reason is connected with periods of speculation and depression and will be discussed in § 12. §3. The est relation of high or low |)rices to must not be confused with the the rate of inter- relation of rising or falling prices to the rate of interest ", to which vv e now turn. ^ "Investigations in Currency and Finance," (1884), p. XIV. de Haas appears to have fallen into this confusion both in his criticism of Jevons and in his treatment of statistics. See "A third ^ element in the rate of interest," Journal of the Royal Statistical March, 1889. Society, Appreciation and Interest. 399] 57 was predicted by Mr. Gibbs/ formerly a director of the Bank of England, and by other eminent bimetallists that the progressive scarcity of gold would raise the rate It Such a scarcity makes money market, and the banks, each of interest. a stringency in the struggling to attract reserves from the others, will raise their rates. prophecy, however, has not been when Mr. Gibbs made his prediction mously. Some This Scarcely had fulfilled. the rate fell enor- monometallists have argued from this fact that there has been no appreciation of gold But the ^. theory that appreciation raises interest has been confi- dently afiirmed on both sides and has even received the stamp ' of approval of Mr. Giffen.^ "The It is, however, utterly Bimetallic Controversy," (London, 18S6), pp. 19, 231, 245-8-9, 3732 Report of the Gold and Silver Commission, (1888), p. 120; also Professor Laughlin in Quarterly Journal of Economics, Vol. i., p. 344. " The years oi fall3 " Essays in Finance," (2d series, 1886), p. 70. ing prices and rising prices also correspond as a rule with those years in which high rates and low reserves, and low rates and high reserves are combined." This (so far as prices and interest are concerned) is not only the exact opposite of the truth but it is flatly contradicted by the few figures which Mr. Giflfen himself brings forward. Of these in years like 1865 and 1866 with which the Table he says " begins, there is an obvious connection between the low reserve and high rate of discount of those years and the high Index No., leading in the following [!] years 1867-71 to a simultaneous fall in the Index " " He adds the low No. and the rates of discount prices rather succeed the high discount rates than exactly correspond " Coming to the recent period of gold contraction, he says " Turning to the rate of discount, we find the facts once more in correspondence. What we find first is a striking disturbance of the : . . . . . : . . : . money market at the riod of rising prices begins." writes: maximum and high Of the period 1875-79 "With period of high prices, 1871-73 [a pewhen the contraction of gold interest], (falling prices and low interest), he minimum average monthly rate of 2 per cent in following maximum monthly rates were nevertheless a each year, the "In the present year (1885) touched, viz" [4^, 4f, 4f, sf, 4^ %s]. when with dull trade and low prices the reserve should be full and : discount rates low, we find that with a minimum of 2 per cent, there is again to be a comparatively high maximum (4 %) within the year." American 58 at variance with bank reserve abnndantly is Ecoyiornic Associatio7i. [400 Tliat an abnormally high or low facts. correlated with low and high interest is theory and verified in practice.' justified in But the normal bank reserve itself shrinks with a shrinkage of gold and in consequence the inference that a contraction of the general gold supply will raise interest is fallacious.^ When prices are rising or falling, ing or appreciating relatively to money is depreciat- commodities. Our theory would therefore require high or low interest ac- cording as prices are rising or falling, provided sume that the rate of interest in the justified commodity stand- only in case the two periods were eco- nomically alike in all respects except in the expansion or contraction of credit and currency. "To sum up — what as- This assumption would be thor- ard should not vary. oughly we In the following have to say of the recent discount rates is that while there has been an undoubted fall in recent years, corresponding to the abundance of capital, yet the market has been fevered by the " demands on the reserve "The monetary history of recent years has accordingly been very like what was to be expected on the theory above set forth, assuming a contraction of gold to have occurred, finally the money market has been irritable and feverish in a remarkable manner during the period of contraction." Thus, beginning with a statement that years of falling and rising prices correspond to years of high and low interest, Mr. Giffen cites facts which show that the opposite is true, but proceeds complacently to compare I . . . . the rates of periods of rising (or falling) prices with the prices of the succeeding period of falling (or rising) prices. As the period of falling prices in which he writes is unfinished, he can onl}- say of it that the "money market has been irritable and feverish in a remarkable manner." Another monometallist, Clarmont Daniell, objects to bimetallism for India on the ground that it would deplete India of silver and raise the rate of interest. ( "The Bimetallic Controversy," p. 257). On this point see \ 5. "Essays," ibid., or the diagrams in Clare's " Money-Market Primer," L,ondon, 1891 also F. M. Taylor, "Do we want an Elastic Currency," Political Science Quarterly, March, 1S96, ^See, ^. ^., Giffen's ; pp. 133-157^ See, however, § 12, note. Appreciation 40i] and Interest. 59 London the periods are selected to correspond with the main movements of prices. Thus the period 1826-29 was a period of falling prices so that money ap- table for preciated in terms of commodities at the average rate of \.2fo per annum. This by the figure +4.2. so that cated money fell at is indicated in the third column In the period 1836-39 prices rose the rate of 2.3^ per annum, indi- — 2.3. by I^ONDON RATES OF INTEREST IN REIyATlON TO RISING AND FAI,I,ING PRICES.i Appreciation of Bank. Market. Money in Commodities, virtual Interest m Commodities. (Market.) a i 1826 — 29 • • 1830—35 1836—39 1840—44 1845—47 1848—52 1853—57 1858—64 1865—70 1871—73 1874—79 1880—87 1888—90 1891—95 4.4 4.0 4-7 4.2 3-7 2.9 3-5 3-2 4.2 4.1 5-3 4.2 3.6 3-7 2.7 2.6 2.9 4.4 3-8 3-9 3.2 3-3 3-8 2.6 Mean Variation, •5 3-5 4.2 2-5 1.6 7 J 4-4.2 0.0 7.8 3-2 —2.3 +5.9 9.6 + 1.2 37 —2.4 2.8 + 1.1 4-7 —6.2 —2.7 -f4-3 7-1 6.5 1-5 —3-0 —3-0 +3-8 —1.4 +3.8 1.8 I.I I.I 5-5 2.6 constructed from the data in the Appendix. The based on index numbers, (Jevons' for 1826-52, and Sauerbeck's for the remaining years). The index numbers for two dates, as 1826 and 1829, being given, their inverse ratio gives the relaFrom these tive value of money (in commodities), at those two dates. Theoit is easy to calculate the average annual change in its value. retically, since the loans here included run usually, perhaps 30 to 90 days, the quotations averaged should begin at the first of the two dates, and cease, say, 60 days before the second. But the index numbers are not always for definite points of time, nor can the interest quotations be subjected to such minute corrections without an immense expenditure of labor. Hence, the method adopted has been to average the ^ This table third column is is rates for all the years of a period, e.g., for the four years, 1S26-29, while the "appreciation" is reckoned between those dates, and thus is an average for only three years. If the index numbers repre- American Economic 6o If this table be Association. [402 exaiiiiiied in successive periods, it will be found, in eleven out of thirteen sequences for bank and in ten out rates terest is market of thirteen for high or low according prices are rising or falling. to the Attention rates, that in- degree in which is called particu- 1S53-57 during which prices rose larly to the period very fast simultaneously with and presumably because of the great gold production. The market rate of in- averaged 5.3/^ which was far higher, not only than in any subsequent, but also than in any previous terest period, although it was less abundant by various writers, tivity can scarcely be supposed that capital This ^ and and speculation. fact has is been commented upon usually attributed to trade ac- Such a reason, however, is not really explanatory unless the reason for the speculation also given. is The theory here offerred, that the high rate represent- ed an effort to offset the depreciation of money, not only affords a complete explanation but in connection with another fact soon to be noted, explains the trade activity also. §4- The following table for Berlin displays the same con- nection between price movements and interest. sent the price levels at the middle of 1826 and of 1829, then the average interest rates ought in theory to include only the last six months of 1826, and the first four months of 1829. But it seems better to include much both ends, than to omit the averages for 1826 and 1829 is the more valuable the greater the number of terms included. The method adopted also seems better than omitting either otie of the extreme years, partly for the reason just given, and partly because both years usually belong too at altogether, for the reason that an average to the same economic movement. E.g., Sir Louis Mallet. Note to Report of Gold and Silver Commission, ( 1888) p. 120; andjevons' " Investigations in Currency and Finance," (1884) p. 95. The latter will be again referred to. ^ 2 . Appreciation 403] and 61 Interest. BERLIN RATES OF INTEREST IN REI.ATION TO RISING AND FALLING PRICES. 1 Appreciation of Virtural Virtual Interest in Interest in Bank. Market Money in 1851-52 1853-57 1858-64, 1865-70 1871-73 1874-79 1880-83 1884-88 1889-91 1892-95 Mean 4.0 4-7 4-3 Commodities. ities. ities. (Bank.) (Market.) a h J2 -1-5 -3-3 4.0 43 3-4 3-6 4.0 3-4 2.5 1.4 -4 4.0 —0.2 I +3.I —0.1 +2.9 —1.4 +5-2 3-2 3-1 2.2 • 1.2 2.0 0.0 4.1 variation, 1858-91 2.4 — 2.2 3-7' 4-7 4-5 4-3 Commod- Commod- 6.4 3-3 5-5 1-7 7-5 2.1 4 In the foregoing table the relation is observed in six out of nine sequences for bank rates (one being neutral) and in six out of seven for market rates. For France, index numbers covering a wide range of Using those given in the Al- articles are not available. drich report for sixteen articles, we have : PARIS RATES OF INTEREST IN RELATION TO RISING AND FALLING PRICES. Appreciation in Bank. Commodities. 1861-64. 1865-70 1871-73. 1874-79 1880-86. 1887-90. 1891-95 . , 5-1 + 3-6 3-2 5-3 3-1 3-2 3-1 2.6 46^ 2.6 2.8 2.6 - 4.5 + 43 + 2.3 — 5-1 2.0 1 This table is constructed from the data in the Appendix. The average in the second column, marked (i), is for the years 1861-64, not 1858-64. The "appreciation" is calculated from the figures of Soetbeer and Heinz, as given in the Aldrich report. 2 This table is constructed from the data in the Appendix. The average in the second column marked (2) is for the years 1872-73, not 1871-73. 62 A?}!C7'ica?i Economic Association. Here the law is observed for bank rates and three out in five out of six sequences of four for has been very similar in England, New York we have FAI^IvING PRICES IN RELATION TO RISING g-0 a C-I3 0-° ^ gv§ •3 >.2 rt Mean a I 5.0 5-9 5-4 7-4 8.4 8.4 a -3-8 +b.4 —20.2 • . . . . . . . • • • • 5-4 +7.9 +0.6 . . 5-1 2 . . 4.6 . OJ i!^? .9 2 a 6.8 -h4.7 7-5 5-1 . ii.. (J a s •i^.§i^' 15^ 3'-'— — J -I.I > y — I.O -7 14-3 -9-3 -13-5 -05 8.0 5-1 13-5 4-3-2 b-z — I4.S -1.7 12.6 7-9 —3-1 7.0 85 13-4 6.0 —2.0 -1-3 4-9 3-3 3-7 3-8 2.1 . varia- tion, '66-91 We .6 find here the same association of appreciation interest in all of the three sequences for call two ,U! u < t 0] — 1-1 ii'-S" s a days 9.2 AND in I.S CO:? Call. 6.2 : AND WAGES.2 i 60 Germany and France. the following table NEW YORK RATES OF INTEREST 1849-57 1858-60 1861-65 1866-74 1875-79 1880-84 1885-91 1892-95 market rates/ be noted that the course of prices and interest It will For [404 of the three cases for and loans, in 60 days paper (the third being neutral) and in three of the five cases for " prime " paper.^ This is with reference to commodities. We true in reference to wages. periods that interest in which wages is The same holds find in the successive high or low according to the degree rise or fall. This is true in each of the three sequences for call loans, in two of the three for 60 days paper and in three of the four, for " prime " paper. ^Assuming that prices '^ This table is fell, 1891-95. constructed from the data in the Appendix. rates of appreciation are calculated and wages 3 from Falkner's figures in the Aldrich Report. Assuming that prices fell, 1892-95. The for prices Appreciatio7i 405] and Interest. 63 Perhaps the most remarkable fact in this table is low rate for 1875-79. '^he average which is the next but lowest in the table, the extremely is 5. 1 /^ being lowest the 4.6% for The 1892-95. extra- ordinary change in interest rates beginning in 1875 has been observed before but its connection with the ; resumption act (as it seems to the writer) has been mis- Thus William Brough referring to that act The mere announcement of our intention to put our money on a sound metallic basis had brought construed, says ^ : " capital to us in such not only made reduced. . . . easy, This abundance that the resumption was but the normal rate of interest was remarkable reduction . . ex- is plainable only on the ground of a large influx of foreign capital." a still But this explanation would naturally require lower rate of interest after resumption had been As the facts are the opposite, there room for doubt that the rate of interest was simply accommodating itself in some degree to the rapid accomplished. seems little appreciation involved in a return to specie payments. §5- The preceding statistics Index numbers countries. apply to gold standard for silver standard countries are not available prior to 1873. It is, however, a priori probable that the relative price movements in gold and silver standard countries before and after the rupture of tie in 1874 presented a strong antithesis. This event marked a change in gold standard countries the bimetallic from rising to falling prices, while in silver standard countries prices began to in silver countries 1 " Natural Law of rise. Unless, therefore, prices had been rising previous Mouey," (New York, to 1874, 1894), p. 124. and 1 American Economic 64 Associatio7i. [406 must rising very fast indeed, the antithesis referred to have existed. It is, inquire whether the much consequently, of fall in the rate interest to which of interest was so marked for gold countries was shared in equal degree by silver countries. The following table for periods of five years before and after the silver and gold standards began to diverge, throws some light on this problem. AVERAGE BANK RATES IN GOI^D AND SILVER STANDARD COUNTRIES BEFORE AND AFTER THE BREAKDOWN OF BIMETAI^USM.! ^ W u^ Tl u) a lU .9" u fi, 1870-74. 1875-79- 5-1 b.5 . • While the firm our m fi 16.4 14.6 10.6 9.2 3-7 3-0 In theory. all it rose, It is ^Tbis table this fall is < 7-5 5-1 10.7 5-2 3-y 10. go to confell was this in spite of the England and other gold true that in Japan and China the rates was much the only influence at Bank < silver countries and less countries, whereas we should expect if 4.9 2.9 ^5 > u -^ % gold countries the rate flow of capital to India from But 4-5 4.2 exchange with broken, while in India fell. &< results are not conclusive, they after the par of countries. cd m hT tn i! _« a tJ a 3 MO a 3 iH 11 "" t! it than in the gold to be much greater work were the migration of constructed from the data given in the Appendix. than market rates, as the latter are not rates are selected rather available for Calcutta rates for " prime two and Shanghai. For name 60 days paper " New York, however, the Although are employed. the United States and Japan were on a paper basis at the periods given, the premium on gold in the one case and silver in the other moved in opposite directions, affording, therefore, as great or greater antithesis than if the standards had been simply gold and silver. For the American premium see Chapter VIII, § 2 for the Japanese, see ; Appendix, \ 3, note. Appreciation 407] and Interest. 65 Such extraordinary rates as ruled in China and the '70's must have been extremely sensitive to capital. Japan in the influence of an influx of capital. British investment in Japan or much less Even though China may have been than in India, we should expect to reduce the native rate of interest to its tendency be more effective was 10^ or 15 ^ than where it was 5 ^. An added reason for a fall in rates in Shanghai and Tokyo is the narrowness of the areas affected by foreign capital, which, having little opportunity to penetrate where that rate inland, tends to glut the Turning ports. which index numbers are to the period for we have available, market in the open the following table for India, Japan and China. RATBS OF INT:EREST IN R^I/ATION TO RISING AND FAI^LING PRICES IN CAI,CUTTA, TOKYO AND SHANGHAI.i Appreciation in Bank. Market. Commodities. Calcutta .... 1873-75 1876-78 1879-85 1886-89 1890-93 Tokyo Shanghai. . Here we . . find +2.6 5-3 6.8 — II.O +3-8 -2.6 -4-7 5-9 6.0 4-3 1873-77 1878-81 1882-86 1887-93 14.0 16.3 12.8 12.0 12.2 10.3 9-3 9-4 1874-81 1882-88 1889-93 91 7-5 7.0 —0.2 -13-3 +10.4 -2.8 -1-4 +1.3 -0.9 5.8^ 5-8 our theory confirmed in three out of four cases for India, two out of three for bank rates in Japan, and two out of three for market rates, one out of two for market bank 'This table The rates in China, while the one case for rates is neutral. entry is constructed from the data given in the Appendix. (i) is for 1885-88, not 1882-88. marked American Economic 66 Summarizing the ined, we We . . exam- and 16 unfavorable, theory, distributed as follows . [408 cases for the seven countries find 57 favorable, Favorable Unfavorable Association. to our Japan. China. Total : United Eng- Ger- land. many. France. .States. India. 21 12 8 8 3 4 I 5 3 2 2 I 2 I therefore 57 16 conclude with great confidence that, " other things being equal," the rate of interest is when prices are rising We terest and low when prices are high falling. turn next to the question hozv far the rate of in- has been adjusted to price movements. mula (1 + /)=(! + 2 )(i +'^) form for present purposes, / its « + ^/+ or The for- more convenient ia., enables us to calculate the rate of interest in the commodity standard which was equivalent to the money interest paid in each Thus in London for 1826-29 the rate of interperiod. est ( z ) in money was 3.5 %, but money was appreciating relatively to commodities 4.2 ^ « ( ), so that the interest actually paid in terms of commodities (z. commodities averaged by Jevons) was /= + .035 X .042 = 7.8^. It will ^., the forty .035 + .042 be seen from the table § 3 that the virtual rate of interest paid in commodities usually varies inversely with the rate paid in money. in For 1853-57, money interest was 5.3% and for 1891-95, 1.6^ but commodity interest for 1853-57 was 2.8^ and Moreover commodity interest flucfor 1891-95, 5.5^. tuated much more than money tion from the average being for for commodity —indeed interest, 2.6^. interest, the varia- money interest .7 ^, and All these facts suggest, practically demonstrate was not adequately adjusted. mean — that It is money interest of course not to be Appreciation arid Interest. 409] assumed that commodity interest 67 ought to be invariable, but we can be practically certain that its variations ought not to be three and a half times the variations in money Such fluctuations must mean that the price movements were inadequately predicted. If any doubts were possible on this point they must disappear when we find that for 1871-73 commodity interest was minus 2.7^. Money lenders would have been better off had they simply bought commodities in 1871 and held them till 1873. Such losses are especially apt to appear in Thus if we take the period 1824-25, we short periods. market rate was Z-l%i ^^^ '^^te of apprecifind that the ation was minus 14.5% and the virtual rate of interest in commodities minus 11. 2,%. The same observations apply to the rates at Berlin, interest. Paris, New York, Calcutta, Tokyo and Shanghai. New York during the inflation period modity interest sank fo , though the only -3. 1 fo . to the fabulously 1861-65, com- low figure of -14.8 rate of interest in the labor standard was This shows in a striking way how thor- oughly the greenback inflation upset culations. In This fact all business cal- has generally been recognized, though probably underestimated. It is amply confirmed by examining the predictions as to the termination of the war and the reduction of the gold premium which were recorded from month to month in the " Notes on the Money Market " in the ( New York ) Banker's Magazine. In all riods of paper probability money this inflation. is always true of pe- Our tables show it for the Japanese inflation of 1878-81. §7 We can now understand why a high rate of interest need not retard trade nor a low rate stimulate it. These American Economic 68 facts have puzzled many Association. [410 For instance,' writers. " Public inquiry has been of late strongly directed to the reasons low rate for the very upon loanable of interest in the year 1875, the more capital especially as ten years ago the very high rates then prevailing created equal surprise. " Again,^ " The such and effect of changes effected during the last many more twenty years or so, is seen in a general increase in wealth and of mercantile industry and Thus only can be explained the money profits. extraordinary high rate at which the interest of has in the During 1854-57 last ten years often stood. the rate of interest was only for a few months below For more than half 5 fc but for many months above it. a year it stood at 6 and 7^, and in the end of 1857 it , remained two months for nearly 1861, interest rose to 6 and \o%. at 8^, and Again, in all this, to the S2ir- prise of the elder generation.^ without the general stop- page of the breach trade., of credit., and the flood of bankruptcy., which has hitherto attended such rates of interest. ital It is certainly we should extended field for its were these rates high don rates we not to increasing scarcity of cap- attribute such rates, but rather to a greatly find profitable ? If we employment. But ^ turn to our table for Lon- the average that " market rate for 1853-57 ^o^s appear to be the highest in the table but, unmasking it of the money element, we find equivalent to a commodity interest of 2.8^. it This is is i.o^ lower than the average for the whole period, 1826 Should we be surprised that industry did not lan- -95. guish ? 'Robert Baxter, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, June, 1S76. '^Jevons, " Investigations, " p. 95. The italics are the present writer's. ^This view had also been expressed by tory of Prices ", Vol. V, p. 345. TookeandNewmarch, " His- 41 Appreciation and 1] Bonamy Professor interest rates says associated with " : 69 Price^ writing at a time of very low Everyone remembers the agitations 7^, the apprehension of Inte^'est. trepidation of merchants, the in business. losses ... how happy moderate rate could be reckoned on as steady, would everyone have been and feelings today? . ! . Yet what are the . . . accommodation so necessary Alas . no such sounds meet our ! mercial depression is facts Is every merchant, every manu- facturer rejoicing in the pleasant terms on tains the only a If which he ob- for his business ? ears. . Com- . . the universal cry, depression prob- ably unprecedented in duration in the annals of trade, except under the disturbing action of a prolonged war. In the export figures, the writer any signs still fails to see Both of the long-looked-for revival of trade. quantities and values continue to shrink in all save a few What The explajta- ation will certainly not be found in gold nor in any form cases. . . . then is the cause of currency whatever. . anything so ridiculous. one only : % ! It . nor has anyoize That cause said one and is London table we find, however, commodity rate of interest was to our that for 1874-79 the 7. 1 . . over spending. " we turn back If . . ? would be astonishing if trade did not shrink under such a burden. All these writers mistook high or low nominal interest for high or low he names as the for 1814-37, est. " This and effect, 1" One per real interest. Tooke apparently did In his " History of Prices the same. is vol. ii, p. 349, last of six reasons for the fall of prices "a reduction but ", in the general rate of inter- probabl}^ not only an inversion of cause also, when the veil of money cent ", Contemporary Review, April, 1877. are the present -writer's. is thrown The italics American Economic 70 off, 1826-29 was 7.8%. all It [412 The commodity a mis-statement of fact. and Jevons Association. interest for Avould seem that Tooke, Price, overlooked the fact that interest, unlike an instantaneous but essentially a time phe- prices, is not nomenon. §8. In order to make our following table results as certain as possible, the formed in which the longer price is movements are selected. ten, twelve, and twenty-one years respectively. LONDOISr MARKET RATES OF INTEREST IN REI^ATION TO RISING ANT) FALLING PRICES, WAGES, Market interest. Apprecia- Virtual tion of interest ities. ities. a / AND Apprecia- Apprecia- Virtual + 1.2 a 1826-35 1853-64 1874-95 3-4 4.6 1860-74 1874-91 4.0 — 2.1 2.7 0.0 -0.9 -1-2.4 2.4 accidental find that causes a Virtual interest interest in in Labor. Income. y J 1.8 1.4 2.5 4.6 3-7 4-9 In averages covering so We INCOMES.i tion of tion of Money in in in Money in Commod- commod- Money Labor. Income. i that three periods, of It consists of many -2.5 —0.2 years, 2.7 we may be are almost wholly during the period of rising sure eliminated. prices, 1853-64, the average rate of interest was 2.2^ above the average for the subsequent period of falling prices, 1874-95, 1.2^ higher than 1826-35. The and in the former period of falling prices, rates in the commodity standard how- ever vary in the inverse order, the highest interest being for 1874-95 and the lowest for 1853-64. It is a noteworthy fact, in strong contrast with what we have found The rates of appreciations in labor and income are based on Changes in average wages in the United Kingdom between i860 and 1 89 1," by A. L,. Bowley, in the Journal of the Royal Statistical ' " Society, June, 1895. Appreciatio7i 413] and true of sliort periods, that the table of long periods is Interest. commodity less variable^ 71 interest in this than the money Thus the adjustment of (money) interest long price movements is more perfect than to short. interest. to §9. The how the English commodities and labor are con- foregoing table shows exactly borrower has fared so far as During 1853-64 he paid 2^-1% in commodities but during 1874-95 he had to pay 4.9%, an increase of cerned. 1.2%. In the labor standard, during 1860-74, he paid 1.8%, and during 1874-91, 2.7%, showing an increase of .9%, while in the income standard the rates were 1.4%, and 2.5% respectively, showing an increase of 1.1%. Now it is quite conceivable that commodity interest should normally be high during the latter period, if this shown to be one economic progress.^ That this was period can be of unusually rapid in fact the case has The mean variation for the three money rates is easily seen to be .8% and for the commodity rates only .5%. The two "labor" and " income" rates differ by .9 and 1.1% while the money rates differ by 1.3/3- In the New York table which follows, the money rates differ by 3.0% and the commodity rates by 3.2%, but the labor rates by only 2.2%. ^ For when the future seems a time of relative plenty, future goods be discounted at a high rate and profits measured in commodiContrariwise during a period of progressive ties may be large. These theories scarcity commodity interest may be normally low. '-^ may may seem but only when the fundaoverlooked between a period of plenty and a period of progressive plenty, and between a period of scarcity and a During stationary scarcity and period of progressive scarcity. stationary plenty, normal commodity interest may be high and low respectively. But during the transition from scarcity to plenty instead of running through the intermediate rates, commodity interest may be normally higher than in either of the extreme states. This differ strikingly from is a case in which " dynamic" economics to conflict with current opinion mental distinction is "static" economics. ; American Economic 72 Association. [414 been pretty thoroughly established by the admirable and others, and by the wages compiled by Falkner ^ and Bowley." researches of David A. Wells statistics of ^ " labor But these considerations can scarcely apply to interest" or " income interest." A man who borrowed the equivalent of a hundred days' income during 1860-74 could pay it back in a year with the equivalent of 101.4 days' income, while during 1874-91, for a similar loan he must return 102.5 days' income. what we should expect of the opposite gain or loss before 1874. of this comparative 1860-74. If may well be that part half .5% or .6%, division this gain, this to during as loss quite is there arbitrary conclusion that the borrower's loss was at least the seems Yz'^/o total if when we reasonable comparative But even 1.1%, was loss, we suppose consider that itself tion which, in view of minimum. a all latter, (a reasonable monometallists) we claims of all (English) debtor's loss since 1874 of IX we supposi- the facts, must be within the minimum Combining the the the debtor's gain during the former pferiod twice his loss during the results just given still have a ^%. with those of Chap- see that the average loss to English borrowers during the ' 1.1% 1874-91 represents a gain ascribe half, Although 1874-91. It loss for we remains the other ter prog- at least borrower's loss since 1874, compm^ed with his as the for is as the influence of seems safe to ascribe It therefore ress. This fall of prices since 1874-75 probably lies be- " Recent Economic Changes," These (New York, 1890). taken in connection with price statistics, show that commodity wages, i. e., money wages divided by the index number of prices (z£/Ao/(?5a/^ unfortunately), rose in England during 1860-74 at the rate of 1.8% per annum and during 1874-91 at the rate of 2.2%, while in America for 1849-57 they fell 2.7% per annum and ^ Lac. cit. for 1875-91, rose statistics, 2.4% per annum. Appreciation and Interest. 415] tween and yi'^/o ^% and almost certainly between The former and 1%. y^± yi% 73 and the latter, result ^ d= may be stated ]A,^o thus, We may therefore >^%. say with considerable confidence that the average debt- England or's loss in for contracts made since 1874-75, annum with has been two-thirds of one per cent, per possible error of one-third of one per cent. a In other words, the average debtor's loss could have been cor- by a reduction rected from in the rate of interest of one-third of one per cent, to one per cent. § 10. For contracts made before 1874, but continued to the 1874, must have been greater. present, the loss, since We may therefore accept the former lower limit we or, to be safe, 5^ estimate of To %. ^% an upper find as a limit, recur to the fact that India gold bonds purchased prior to 1875 yielded very nearly ^ % more interest than Since the average subsequent to that date. we have estimated that the average from 1875 was at most i % too high, the average for periods beginning before but ending after 1875, must have been at most i ^% too high, can scarcely be claimed that the rate of interest for the part of the term of the bonds previous to 1875 ought to have been lower than that for the part subsequent to for it We that date. tracts made therefore conclude that, for English con- before 1874-75, the debtor's loss since 1874- 75 has been between ^% and i>^%, i- <?., i d= ^%. which were made prior It follows that for contracts to 1874-75 but subsequently converted or continued at a lower rate of I d= ^ >^% d= >^ % per interest, annum the to since that date. the loss date since of 1874-75 was and conversion American Economic 74 It Association. [416 should be observed that the foregoing calculations are based on public prices of bonds and rates on money. on private loans and farm mortgages, although Interest influenced market, is by the same causes which affect the money less flexible and the debtor's losses or gains ^ in these cases are doubtless somewhat greater. §11. The New following table gives the long time averages for The war York. period period of rising prices is is omitted and a nine years' compared with a seventeen years' period of falling prices. OF INTEREST IN REI.ATION TO RISING AND FALLING PRICES AND WAGES. NEW YORK RATES Appreciation Appreciation Interest Prime Two name 1849 - 57 1875-91 money of 60 days. jcommodities. i a\ • 8.2^ . 5-2 of money in | labor. -3-8 +2.0 Virtual Interest Virtual Interest in commodities. labor. j\ h -I.I 4.1 7.0 -0.4 7-3 4.8 We find for 1849-57 and 1875-91 that the money rates were 8.2 and 5.2%, the commodity rates 4.1 and '].'^%^ We see therefore, but the labor rates 7.0 and 4.8%. that in terms of labor, loans in America have actually This been easier during 1875-91 than during 1849-57. fact suggests the conclusion that the debtor's loss in America has not been ^ See Appendix, \ 2, 4th as great as in England. This, if title. "prime" paper) but i.o has been deducted from this average in order that it may be properly compared with the average of Robbins' figures for 1S75-91. The correction is based on the fact that i.o was the average excess of Elliott's figures over Robbins' during the fifteen years, '^The average of Elliott's figures (which are not for is 9.2, 1860-74. See Appendix. Appreciation and Interest. 417] true, may be due to a more rapid 75 rate of progress in the United States/ § 12. Four general (i) have now been established facts : prices are directly correlated with High and low of interest (2) Rising and falling and wages are directly correlated with high and low rates of interest (3) The adjustment of interest to price (or wage) movements is inadequate (4) This ad- high and low rates ; prices ; ; justment more nearly adequate is for long than for short periods. These facts are capable of a pressing the takes place. common explanation ex- manner in which the adjustment referred to Suppose an upward movement of prices Business profits (measured in money) will begins. rise, for profits are the difference between gross income and expense, and rise. if both these rise, their difference will also Borrowers can now afford to pay higher " money interest." If, however, only a few persons see interest will not be fully adjusted realize an extra margin of charges. This raises ^ profit after an expectation ^ See page 72, note the deducting interest of a similar profit in the future and this expectation, acting on the loans, will raise the rate of interest. this, and borrowers will If demand the rise for is still 2. seems scarcely necessary to add as an independent cause of maladjustment the accumulation (or in the opposite case, depletion) of bank reserves, for this is but another symptom of mal-adjustment due ^ It to imperfect foresight. An increase of gold supply, as in 1852-53 Tooke and Newmarch, "History of Prices," vol. V, p. 345) may first find its way into the loan market instead of into circulation. (see But if foresight were perfect, this would not happen, or if it did happen, borrowers would immediately take it out (or increase the liabilities against it) to avail themselves of the double advantage of low interest and high prospective profits from the rise of prices about to follow. American Economic 76 Association. [418 inadequate the process trial is repeated and thus by continual and error the rate approaches the true adjustment When a fall Money pear. pay the old they still of prices begins, the reverse effects ap- Borrowers cannot afford to profits fall. rates of interest. attempt to do If, through miscalculation this, it will cut into their real Discouraged thus for the future, they will then bid lower rates. profits. Since at the beginning of an upward price movement, the rate of interest is downward movement too low, and at the beginning of a it is too high,^ we can understand not only that the averages for the whole periods are imperfectly adjusted but that the delay in the adjustment leaves a relatively low interest at the beginning of an ascent of prices and a relatively high interest at the be- ginning of a descent. least, This would explain, in part at the association of high and low prices with high and low interest.^ The fact that the adjustment is more perfect for long periods than for short, seems to be be- cause in short periods, the years of non-adjustment at the beginning occupy a larger relative part of the whole period. § What 13- has been said bears directly on the theory of "credit cycles." In the view here presented periods of speculation and depression are the result of ifiequality of foresight. price in the If all persons underestimated a rise of same degree, the non-adjustment of interest would merely produce a transfer of wealth from lender to borrower. It would not influence the volume of loans (except so far as the diversion of income from one person to another would ' -" These facts Cf. I 2. may be verified itself have indirect effects, from the tables in the Appendix. such and Appreciatio7i 419] Interest. 77 Under such circumstances the as bankruptcy). rate of would be below the normal, but as no one knows no borrower borrows more and no lender lends less interest it, because of it. In the actual world, however, foresight very unequally distributed. Only a few persons have the faculty of always " coming out where they look." is Now it is rowing precisely these persons class. who make up the bor- Just because of their superior foresight them the management of they who become "captains of industry." society delegates to It is capital. Their share consists of profits (or losses) while others lend them commuted capital and receive interest or happens that when prices are It therefore rowers are more apt to see while the borrower is it profits/ rising, bor- than lenders. Hence, willing to pay a higher interest than before for the same loan, lenders are willing to loan the same " amount for the demand schedule schedule " " remains ^ same will rise interest. while That the comparatively unchanged. will of course raise the rate of interest. But cause an increase of loans and investments.^ stitutes part of the stimulation to business metallists so much " it is, the supply This will also This con- which bi- admire. When prices fall, borrowers see that they cannot employ " money" productively except on easier terms, but why the terms should be made easier. In consequence " entrepreneurs" borrow less, enterprise lenders do not see Hadley, " Interest and Profits," Annals of the American Acadeof Political and Social Science November, 1893; also "Economics," (New York, 1896), pp. 116, 269. ^ my , ^Marshall, "Principles," Vol. i, (3rded.) p. 171. and the corresponding statement in the next paragraph are borne out by facts appears to be confirmed, so far as bank loans and discounts are concerned, by Sumner, "History of Banking in the United States," (New York, 1896) and Juglar, " Crises commer^ That ciales," this (Paris, 1889). . American Economic 78 Association. languishes and, though interest decrease in demand, it falls does not fall [420 in consequence of enough to keep the demand from decreasing/ If lenders, as a class, were possessed of greater fore- sight than borrowers, we should find trade languishing during rising prices and stimulated during falling prices. In the former case lenders would require high interest for fear, as in 1871-73, they were lending at a loss of real wealth, while borrowers parently high rates charged would be ; afraid of the ap- and in the reverse case lenders would be eager to reap the benefits of an appreciating standard while borrowers, deceived by the appar- ently low rates, would rush in to profit by them. We see therefore, that while imperfection of foresight transfers wealth from creditor to debtor or the reverse, inequality of foresight produces over-investment during rising prices and relative stagnation during falling prices. In the former case society much wealth processes " the rule. is tion ^ which President low is . . ^ is trapped into devoting too to productive uses and in " long production while in the contrary case under-in vestment It does not seem possible to decide the ques- of the Andrews not because two in evils is the greater. "An Honest Dollar," money is abundant p. 3, ^ writes : "Interest as before, but because not, its scarcity having induced fall of prices and so paralysis it is in in- But it should be added, the cause of the fall of interest primarily the expectatio7i of small profits. Cf. infra. dustry." - is Professor Bohm-Bawerk, (" Positive Theory of Capital, " p. 335), " Now the constant presence of the agio on present goods is writes : on the tendency to extend the production peExtensions which would be harmful as regards social provision are thus made economically impossible. " During rising prices this drag presses too lightly and during falling prices too heavily. like a self-acting drag riod. ^ Bimetallists usually claim that falling prices are the greater evil For arguments on both sides see Professor Marshall's evidence, Report on Depression of Trade, (1886), p. 422. Appreciation 42 1] It is believed that and Interest. 79 the foregoing theories correspond closely with observed facts as to business stimulation and depression, volume of loans, etc., but it is not pro- posed here to enter upon a special statement of them/ Nor is this the place to treat fully the reaction on prices But themselves. it can scarcely be doubted that the mal-adjustment of interest whole movement. fully the distinction terest, says : ^ " is a central feature in the Professor Marshall, who recognizes between money and commodity When we come in- to discuss the causes of alternating periods of inflation and depression of com- mercial activity, we shall find that they are intimately connected with those variations in the real rate of inter- which are caused by changes in the purchasing of money. For when prices are likely to rise, business is inflated, and is managed recklessly and wastefully those working on borrowed capital pay back less real value than they borrowed, and enrich themselves at the expense of the community. When afterwards credit is shaken and prices begin to fall, everyone wants to get rid of commodities and get hold of money which is rapidly rising in value this makes prices fall all the faster, and the further fall makes credit shrink even more, and est power ; ; thus for a long time prices fall because prices have fallen." We would follow if add that these effects of credit could not the interest rate were perfectly adjusted. terest, rather than credit, In- appears as the chief independ- ent variable, objectively speaking, though behind it all imperfection of foresight. is ^See Report on Depression of Trade, 1886; and Report of the Gold and Silver Commission, 1888. 2 " Principles of Economics ", Vol. I, (3rd ed., 1S95), p. 674. PART III. APPLICATIONS. CHAPTER XL THE BIMETALLIC CONTROVERSY. §1. all the arguments and against bimetallism, but merely to outline the It is for not the purpose here to follow bearing of the foregoing theories and facts upon some of those arguments. We have seen in theory and in practice that the of interest has tended changing value to accommodate money. of itself to rate the It follows that it is quite er- roneous to obtain the amount of the debtor's or creditor's by merely reckoning the effect of appreciation depreciation on \}i\^ principal of the debt. loss And yet, after all allowances are made, it is or true that there remains a net loss alternating between debtors and creditors according to the varying tides of credit prices. During the that the debtor probably twenty years ^ + ^% less in this country. When per annum This in England and loss is not inconsid- looked at in the aggregate very large indeed. The minimum net public and private in the United States billions,^ has happened it We have estimated was on the losing side. his average loss at erable. last and is it appears indebtedness given at 20 ^% on which would amount to 130 millions But when we compare this with the aggre- per annum. ' G. K. Holmes, Bulletin of the Department of Labor, November, 1895, p. 48. Appreciation and Interest. 423] 81 gate principal involved or with the 14 odd billions ^ of an- nual product, does not seem capable of the deep social it harm attributed to In fact it. it is aggregates except in consider always misleading to comparison with each other. Applied to an ordinary two months' loan $1,000, %% amounts to one dollar. In of New York city ^^ the up-town banks often charge a rate more than higher than that of the down-town banks without driving away customers. § 2. The ordinary estimates of the debtor's loss are based on From Sauerbeck's tables it appears that between 1873 ^^^ ^895 money appreciated in terms of the index numbers. commodities selected, 79.0%, which is at therateof 2.7% per annum. This is from three to eight times as much as the estimate we have made. The error of the ordinary calculation does not consist simply in neglecting the The matter of interest. use of index numbers subject to fatal objection.^ statistics When is itself unchecked by other Not only do we the number of com- they are very misleading. reach different results according to modities and the method of averaging,^ but the very best methods fail to give a trustworthy measure of ordinary domestic purchasing power, both because they are based on wholesale instead and because they house rent and for labor and of retail prices ignore expenditure for domestic service, which, in the family budgets of those who borrow and ^ lend, must form a very large item. Edward Atkinson, Engineering Magazine, December, 1895. though we have used index numbers to determine " commodity interest, "^we have not employed them to ^ The reader is reminded estimate the debtor's that, loss. ^See articles by Edgeworth, Sauerbeck and Pierson in the ^co«o w«^ Journal, March, June, and September, 1895, and March, 1896. American Economic 82 Moreover to Association. [424 know the purchasing power of a dollar does know the " subjective value" or marThe number of dollars at comof money. money incomes) must also be considered. not enable us to ginal utility mand ( ^., And even were our knowledge complete as to the marginal utility of money as well as its purchasing power, we should be as far as ever from solving the problem of the debtor's loss. The question is not one /. of appreciation of gold relatively to labor or any other standard. It commodities or to as is, we have seen, exclusively a question of foresight and of the degree of adaptation of the rate of interest. §3It scarcely can only needs to be pointed out that bimetallism unpaid debts. affect clearly recognize the fact that the We should therefore most of the loss which debtors have suffered since 1873 has already passed be- yond the reach of remedy. Of the residuum the vary with the duration of the debt. On losses debts three years old the loss in England cent., is probably about two per on those six years old about four per cent., and so on. Moreover, on debts contracted before the fall of prices began, the annual rate of loss was greater, being probably, as we have ever, including i ± /^%. Most such debts, howeven national debts, have received part seen, of the benefit of low interest through extensive con- versions. Now bimetallism, if adopted, so far from rectifying gains and losses, would simply increase the inequalities. If it resulted in debasing the standard ten per cent, might exactly remedy debts correction fifteen would be too small it years old, but the for those older and too and Appreciation 425] Interest. 83 large for those younger than fifteen years. form the great bulk average life of a of The latter existing indebtedness. The farm mortgage the average age of mortgages 4^ is now years so that ^ in force would be about ^Yi years. Bank loans run only a few days or months. These and other short time loans make up some mainder consists few The sixty per cent, of existing indebtedness.^ them extend back of dominant effect of to 1873.^ '^\i^ and chief debasement would therefore be defraud the lender of today and yesterday.* debts, for re- and government loans and of railway which the remedy is The to older designed, no longer exist. §4. But even if bimetallism or any other financial scheme could so scale debts as exactly to counteract the losses connected with the fall of prices, arrangement ought not to the ethics of such an go unmentioned. The fact that debtors have lost does not imply that they have suffered an injustice. a If man insures his house and burns the next day the insurance company suffers a but not an injustice. islative relief If the company should ask on the ground that sudden a termination foresee or provide against, ^ Keep your ^ that the fire was could not possibly would be laughed contract " would be the reply. 'Eleventh Census, Bulletin '^Holmes, it it for leg- had not expected so of its policy, brought about by causes which " it it loss to scorn. It would 71. loc. cit. mucb less than one- fourth for American railways. This made by looking over all the funded indebtedness whose Probably estimate is dates of issue are given in the " Ofl&cial Intelligencer" for 1894. * For effects on "Social Classes," see article by Professor H. Farnani, Yale Review^ August, 1895, p. 183. W. American Economic 84 make no difference if the fires Association. [426 were nniversal, and every company lost. Those who assume the risks must take the consequences. A farmer mortgages his farm and agrees to pay $1,000 and 5% interest. By the terms of the agreement he takes all risks as to what the dollar will buy of wheat or anything else. He may lose and all farmers may lose and the causes may be in India insurance we can or Australia or in the sun spots, but scarcely af- ford to surrender the ancient principle of the Inviolabil- through sympathy with the misfortunes any individual man or group of men. That elements ity of Contracts, of of risk exist in every contract and that responsibility are too often ignored. writes " Increase in the value of ^ : It forces this risk implies President money Andrews robs debtors. every one of them to pay more than he cove- nanted [!] contracts —not which more more value." But not call for " value " dollars but call for money do any more than contracts to deliver wheat call for money. If a man had agreed a year ago to deliver 10,000 bricks to a builder at a fixed price, he would not be justified in offering only 9,000 on the gone up. A contract to ground that the price had pay " value " would be a legal and the court which should attempt to interwould hear an interesting assortment of defini- curiosity, pret it tions from our leading economists. Closely associated with the principle of the Inviolability of laws, Contracts and in contracts. is the principle particular, against laws The world against retro-active which has reached alter existing these principles through a long and weary struggle and much costly experience with repudiation and the abuses of legal tender. The burden ^ of proof rests " An Honest Dollar, "p. 2. on those who would revert Appreciation 427] and Interest. to these experiments for the sake of 85 any benefits from bimetallism. Surely the practical reasons against such a course are obvious enough. When once a government has undertaken to " correct " debtor's stop at one attempt. losses, it will not History teaches that a nation once embarked on such a policy never keeps its most solemn word as to where it shall leave off. Creditors will fear ^ to lend except at usurious rates and the debtor of the fu- ture will pay dearly for the emancipation of the debtor of the present.^ §5- To those of debts who claim that the cause of the aggravation was governmental action and that therefore it is in the now a fit subject answer correction, the obvious is for first instance governmental that this does not ap- ply to the great mass of existing contracts which have been formed since demonetization. Finally such it is is it may be on the side objected that the gold standard as of creditors as against debtors because an appreciating standard and according to our statistics own the debtor usually wins in rising and loses in falling prices. Such reasoning, however, is entirely fallacious. The same kind as that contained in the fa" Buy when stocks cetious advice to young speculators It is easy to are low and sell when they are high. " fallacy is of the : prophesy after the event have lost for ; investors in India silver bonds twenty years but this does not prove that the present price of rupee paper did, 1 London brokers would be the Shaw, " History of the Currency," (18951 of American Currency," 2 is still See the writer's The Bond Record, first ; too high. to know If it it and also Sumner, " History p. 331. "Would Bimetallism benefit the 'Debtor Class'?" April, 1896. American Economic 86 correct We it. arrangement the debtor. " Association. cannot therefore in favor of is all What [428 the " present say and against creditor tlie bimetallist will risk his reputation in predicting the course of prices and interest in the next twenty years ? we may with prices rise, If If they probability predict that the debtor will vrin. fall, he will But who knows which lose. great is the true §6. Legislation to offset the effects of a the past is wrong, because retro-active. offset the effects of a fall in we cannot know there would be no need There remains the future there will be a to fall, absurd, because and we if could, of legislation. less variable, that we can not to prevent something which to prevent Legislation to be considered legislation for the purpose of making the monetar}- unit is, is prices in fall of something which we cannot foresee but foresee. Such must be recognized at once as thoroughly sound. But it applies equally well to " symmetallism" and other plans - for monetary a reason for monetan,- legislation ^ reform. That bimetallism ( as long as it lasted)^ would be Edgewortli, " Thoughts on monetary reform", Economic loiirnal, September, 1S95. ' 'E.g., the multiple standard propounded by Lowe, and 1S22, Scrope, 1833, and advocated by Jevor.s, "Money and the Mechanism of Exchange", p. 328, and "Investigations", p. 123, and by Marshall, Report of the Commission on Depression of Trade, p. 423 the various forms of double standard suggested by Marshall, ; also ibid., Edgeworth, ibid., Hertzka " Das iuternationale Wahrungsproblems," also the various forms of 1892, and Stokes, "Joint Metallism," (1S95) elastic currenc}* suggested by Professor Walras, " Theorie de la Monnaie", (Lausanne, iSS5i, by Secretary Windom and others. ; 'See the writer's " Mechanics of Bimetallism," Economic Journal, September, 1894. Appreciation and Interest. 429] 87 more dependable than monometallism is probable on statistics which we have given seem to reveal as great uncertainty in price movements a priori grounds, but the before 1873 ^^ how since. indeed a large question is remedy the far au}^ sort of monetary' reform could matter ; expansion for the might be almost as violent may be however, is It worth while little." ^ If and contraction and mischievous that " the evils do to much . . as ever. in order to diminish ^ now it them a monetary will be an inestimable As an improvement on the civilized world. single standards it It are so great that a more stable and less expensive standard can be found, credit of boon to the two existing, bimetallism, launched at the market ratio, ma}" be worth serious consideration. But the proposal now before the world 15/^ or 16 to I. is bimetallism at Such bimetallism means debasement any single country- which attempts it. it means debasement in gold standard of the standard of If international, countries, and a violent contraction and appreciation in silver standard countries. In no other wa}- could the in- fluence of the legal ratio on the market ratio be felt. We should witness not only losses to creditors in the former countries but losses to debtors in the latter, and these losses would be far in excess of those found to follow from the slow" which we have and half foreseen appre- ciation of the last tv^'enty years. 'Marshall, "Principles of Economics" Vol. *Jevons, "Investigations," p. 104; " . 3rded., (1895), p. 674. the very scarcity of gold recommendation in itself gold digging has ever seemed me almost a dead loss of labor as regards the -world in general." is its to . I, . . Also Lexis, Economic Journal, June, 1S95, p. 276. CHAPTER XII. THE THEORY OF INTEREST. §1. The relation existing between interest and implies that the rate of interest in which is it Adam Smith appreciation relative to the standard Hume Economists, from expressed. down, seem is to and have considered the money element entirely eliminated from the rate of interest by the simple fact that, in the last analysis, which not money, has been seen, is we can loaned it is and returned. capital, But, as identify the rate of interest in terms of capital with the rate of interest in terms of money only when the price ratio between money and capital remains constant. The first thought suggested by this fact is to dis- " " real" interest in the money as introducing a " third element"^ nominal" and same way that we distinguish between " nominal" and " real" wages. This seems to be the thought of all the writers who have touched on the subject. Professor " " real" and nominal."^ Marshall in fact uses the words de Haas speaks of the effect of the appreciation or detinguish between preciation of into the rate of interest. This " element" is to be added to or subtracted from the sum of the other two elements, which are a payment for capital (or the rate of interest proper) and a payment for insurance. John Stuart Mill ' "Principles of Economics," Vol. I, 3rd ed. (1S95), P674. It will ''Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, March, 1S89. be seen from the formula i-l-7"=(i (i a) that the "third element" is not a mere additive term. + + Appreciation aiid hiterest. 43 1] and the eighteentli century pamphleteer 89 ^ were evidently thinking of a normal rate of in terest in coin to which a certain extra charge in reference to John B. Clark is ^ to be added paper depreciates if Finally the article of Professor coin. devoted chiefly to a search for an ab- is which we may refer any monetary appreciation or depreciation and in which therefore solute standard to " real" interest could be expressed. " real" that the words ient terms and and " It is not denied nominal" are very conven- may rough and ready expression for a serve a useful purpose. But the mere distinction be- tween "real" and "nominal" is quite inadequate for a true and accurate statement of the case.^ If we seek to eliminate the money element by ex- pressing the rate of interest in terms of real " capital," we are immediately confronted with the fact that no two forms of capital maintain or are expected to maintain a There are therefore constant price ratio. rates of interest on capital Even diverging in value. dex number if we title of " real " interest. changes in ; we many could find an ideal in- for capital in general there are other kinds of interest the just as as there are forms of capital or for commodities, which might also claim and " income"* refer to " labor" even be claimed that relative wages and incomes are abnormal phe- cannot It prices, nomena, or incident only to a dynamic society. Even in the most ideal stationary state, the mere changes in seasons would ' See Chapter make interest between summer and winter I, § 2. "^ Political Science Quarterly, September, 1895. * Professor Edgeworth ( " Variations in Value of Monetary Stand- ards", Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, 1889, p. 163), exhibits seven kinds of standards for deferred payments. * See Chapter X, ?? 8, 9. Ama-ican Economic 90 low in terms Association. summer precincts of [432 sncli as frnit, interest is, as Professor and high The rate of Bohm-Bawerk shows, an agio on in terms of winter products such as ice. present goods exchanged for future goods of the same kind. It is Professor agio may a simple corollary of this theorem, though Bohm-Bawerk does not express it, that this be in theory and must be in practice a different agio for each separate kind of goods. § 2. But, it may be urged, surely there standard conceivable in theory practice, which may is some invariable not determinable in if serve for a base line of apprecia- tion and depreciation for all goods and money, and in terms of which we This brings us of value. may express a "real" rate of interest. to the question of But here we Such an absolute standard The vidual.^ difficulty. will differ with each indi- a dollar fact that an absolute standard encounter another is a smaller unit to a millionaire than to a poor laborer, has as its consequence that as the millionaire grows poorer his dollar grows larger while as the laborer grows richer his dollar grows On smaller. account of such changes in personal for- tunes the dollar, however defined, will be constantly appreciating and depreciating in different degrees different men and quence In fact the phenomenon of classes. borrowing and lending of the different ciates or depreciates to among some extent itself a consedegrees in which money appre- is to borrower and lender. 1 Marshall, "Principles," Vol. I, (3rd ed.), p. 198, and Royal Comalso the writer's mission on Depression of Trade, 1SS6, p. 423 "Mathematical Investigations in the Theory of Value and Prices," ; Transactions of the Connectictd Academy, (New Haven, 1892). Appreciation 433] and hiterest. 91 In addition to the differences already mentioned, there a different rate of interest for each period of time con- is The sidered. tracted to-day rate in any given goods for a loan con- and payable one year hence next year's goods this year's over is the agio of the rate for a -loan to ; be contracted one year hence and payable two years hence is the agio ( reckoned to-day ) of next year's goods over the goods of the succeeding year and so on. rate for a loan contracted to-day hence rates. is the " actuarial average " There is The and payable two years two previous no reason why these three rates and others constructed in the ^ of the same manner should not be all different.^ § 4- We thus reach a multiple theory of interest. results are, first, Our that different standards have in general different rates of interest ; secondly, that of the numer- ous standards thus possible a different one for each individual ; is " absolute " thirdly, that in each standard there will be a different rate for dijfferent periods of time.^ ' See Chapter V, § 4. " p. 280 ), in showing ( "Positive Theory, "arbitrage transactions" tend to equalize rates, tacitly assumes that the iirst two rates above mentioned are equal and only proves that in that case the third will be equal to the first. "^ Professsor Bohm-Bawerk how Besides these three sorts of variations there are others due to unIn the theory of Part I, we have only considered the case where the relative divergence of two standards is foreknown with certainty. To complete the picture it is necessary to introduce the theory of probabilities as applicable to economics. ^ certainties of various kinds. (See Marshall's "Principles", p. 198, note, and 211, note.) When this done it will also explain the diiferent terms for call loans, 30 days, 60 days loans, etc., as well as for different degrees of security. Although in the latter case we may distinguish pure interest as the rate for perfect security, yet the surplus above this sum is not simple insuranceIt is not a certain sum paid for a contingent loss but it is itself conis American Economic 92 Association. [434 In actual business experience none of these three sorts The third is usually The second is not reducible to of differences attract attention. very slight in amount. statistical ^ measurement ; while the first escapes notice because of the habit of reckoning- always in money. a few cases, as for Indian and Chinese bonds, In London brokers must have occasion to note the fact that 3% in ^ silver is usually not equivalent to in gold, but even 3 in such cases the gold rate is thought of as " the " rate. So also speculative contracts in wheat, and land, etc., ordinary loans, which are really advances of stock, materials, into and other forms money and pendent standards so often finds of capital, are always translated their essential nature as involving inde- it money and speak is concealed. But the economist, who necessary to forsake the language of in terms of the things which money measures, must here also recognize the fact that the rate of interest in terms of money is simply a common repre- sentative of multiform rates in other standards. These rates are mutually connected and our task has been merely to state the law of that connection. We have not attempted the bolder task of explaining the Such an explanation constitutes the more usual sense and forms Professor Bohm-Bawerk's masterly trea- rates themselves. " theory of interest " in the the subject of tise. ject The relation between the two branches may be pictured as somewhat analogous tween the theory of relative prices of the subto that be- and the theory of price levels. and, what is more important here, it is not a present sum but a series of deferred sums and as such is itself subject to the principles of pure interest. It follows that we cannot strike out the " insurance element " as a mere additive term with which the theory of interest tingeut ; proper has no concern. ' A complete theory has yet to be written. For a supposable case of great variation, see Chapter V, ^ ? i, 2. APPENDIX. STATISTICAL DATA. § I. The writer has found so much difficulty in securing a long series of yearly averages for rates on " money ", that the results are here presented in the hope that they may be of use to others. 1 YEARLY AVERAGE RATES OF INTEREST ON London New Berlin. York. ' (LI 1824 1825 1826 1S27 1828 1829 1830 1831 1832 1833 1834 1835 1836 1837 1838 1839 1840 1841 1842 1843 1844 1845 1846 1847 1848 1849 1850 1851 1852 1853 1854 1855 1856 1857 1858 1859 i860 1861 1862 1863 1864 1865 1866 1867 1868 1869 1870 1871 1872 1873 1874 1875 1876 1877 1878 1879 1880 188 1882 1883 1884 1S85 1886 1887 ib88 1889 1890 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 I I C Calcutta rt " MONEY." Tokyo. i Shanghai. I 3-5 3-9 4-5 3-3 30 , 3-4 2.8 3-7 ! I ! 3-1 2.7 3-4 3-7 4.2 4-5 3-0 5-1 50 4-9 3-3 2.2 2.1 3-0 3-8 5-9 3-2 2.3 2.2 3-1 1-9 3.7 4-9 4-7 5-9 3-9 9-7 6.5 7-1 3.1 7.0 6.1 25 4-9 4.2 4.2 4.1 5-5 2.4 5-1 4-3 7-4 4.6 6.7 2.3 5-5 8.7 6.9 9-1 5-1 5.8 6.0 1.8 3-0 3-1 2.7 3-8 5-7 4-7 50 3-9 6.2 4-5 3-5 3-0 2.2 5-7 6.8 8.4 5-3 6.3 4.6 5-3 6.6 6.8 6.4 5-4 6.0 5-6 5-5 7.0 5-8 2.3 3-5 1.8 2.2 2.9 3-4 3-0 2.6 2.0 2-1 2.4 2.4 2.7 3-7 2.5 1-5 The London, Berlin and Paris iS. !i8 141414. 12. 12. 12. 10. II. 11. 18 18 14 ii4 '14 i,S ^3 15 |i6 '17 ;i7 131410. 17 7.9 II 12. 16 13. II 8.8 9.0 10. TO. 11. 9 8 I 9 10 II 3-1 9-4 3-5 4-9 5-4 4-3 8.3! 8 market rates are on 9 7.8i 7 9-3; • 9.6 first . class merchants' Appreciation arid Interest. 437] 95 All the rates are entered in the foregoing table as rates of "interest," though the rates for the England, Germany and France are rates The two Banks of of discount. are not quite equivalent but, for the purposes of the foregoing work, the distinction between them unnecessary because, in a continuous any, affects all series, the error, items nearly alike and thus cancels is if itself out in the comparisons. Had it been necessary, some of the tables could have Thus been extended back. could be given to 1696 but use. The the it Bank was too of England rate inflexible to be of bank rates could also be exmarket rate could be given from Berlin and Paris tended and the Paris 1861 (except for 1870 and 1871) from data in Wi^ Economist. The figures for 1824-58 are from the evidence of D. Chapman before the reprinted in Hunt's Merchants' Magazine. Vol. 41, (1859) P- 95)- Th"; remaining figures are compiled from the Economist. For those for 18S4-94, the writer is indebted to Professor F. M. Taylor of Michigan University, who had collected them, from the Economist for a different purpose. The Bank of England rates for 1824-43 are reduced from Burdett's " Ofiicial Intelligencer," (1894), p. 1,771. The remaining ones for England, Germany and France are reduced from those given in the Report of the Royal Commission on Depression of Trade, 1886, p. 373, and the Economist. They represent the bank "minimum." The New York rates are taken, the first two columns, from a table by E. B. Elliott (afterward government actuary) in the (New York) Banker's Magazine, 1S74. The quotations given as "60 days" apparently included single name paper. The third column to 1890 is compiled from a diagram of highest and lowest monthly rates prepared at Yale college by Mr. G. P. Robbins of the class of 1891, and has been completed from the Financial Review, by averaging the highest and lowest weekly rates. It has been found impossible to extend the table back beyond 1849, as the rates are not systematically reported. The Calcutta rates are the minimum of the Bank of Bengal and have been kindly furnished by Messrs. Place, Siddons and Gough, brokers, of Calcutta. The market rates of Tokyo are averages of the highest and lowest rates of each year, furnished by Mr. Ichi Hara of the Bank of Japan, Tokyo. The bank rates are for the Tokyo and Yokohama Co-operative Bank and were translated by Mr. Sakata, student at Yale, from a history of Japan by Zenshiro Tsuboya. The tables for Shanghai have been procured through the kindness of Mr. F. W. "Williams of the department of Oriental History of Yale University, who obtained them from Mr. J. F. Seaman of Shanghai. The first column contains the rates ruling in the native market, and the second, those of the Hong Kong and Shanghai bank (under English control) on overdrawn current accounts, a species of demand loans and the ordinary form of lending in Shanghai. Mr. Seaman was told that the market rates cannot be extended back beyond 1S85, as the books of the Chinese banks for previous years are burnt. bills. Committee on the Bank Act, 1857, Sess. 2, X, B. pt. I, p. 463, (also 2 This rate is only from September when the operation of the Bank Act began, previous to this the custom of the bank was to have a uniform rate for all loans. American Economic gS Many drawn of the sources as the rates Amsterdam and other money weekly or monthly number [438 from which the table has been also contain other information such for Vienna, the Association. of rates, the variation changes of the centres, the with the seasons, Bank Minimum, etc. §2. Of sources not mentioned in the above which the writer has encountered are note, the chief : Adolf Soetbeer, " Materiallen zur Wabrungsfrage," (Berlin, 1S86), p. 78. Covers 1851-S5 for Banks of England, France and Germany, and market rates of Hamburg and Vienna. Austrian Government, " Tabellen zur Wabrungsfrage," (Vienna, (A second edition bas just appeared, 1896). 1S92), pp. 204-6. Covers 1S61-91 for banks of Italy, England, France, Germany, Austria, Belgium and Holland, and market rates in Vienna, iS6q-gi. W. Stanley Jevons, " Investigations in Currency and Finance," (Lon- don, 1884). Contains diagram for prices of consols and 3 per cent, stock from 1731, and minimum rate of interest in London from 1824 also monthly variation in rate of interest, p. 10. The diagram for the price of consols shows that during the middle and first half of the eighteenth century the interest realized was almost as low as in the present generation. This was a period of falling prices. ; Eleventb Census of the United Slates, Bulletin mortgages, 1880-89). 71 (on real estate probably the most elaborate series of interest averages ever If these averages be compared with the course of prices during the average term of the contracts (five years), it will be found in nearly every case that interest is high or low according to the degree This is constructed. of the rise or fall in prices. "Viscomte G. D'Avenel, " Histoire economique de la propriety, des Salaires, des Denr^es et de tous les Prix en gdn^ral depuis I'an 1200 jusqu'en I'an 1800," (Paris, 1894), vol. II, p. 882. This work contains also tables of the purchasing power of money, but neither the interest nor price statistics are sufficiently exact or detailed for use in the foregoing study. Tooke, "History of Prices," and Tooke and Newmarcb, " History of Prices from 1793 to 1856." G. Winter, "Zur Gescbicbte des Zinsfusses in Mittelalter," Zeitschrift fiir Social und Wirlschaftsgeschichte, (Weimar), 1895,1V, 2. Arthur Crump, "English Manual of Banking," (4th ed., London, 1879). PP- Mi-4Gives Bank of England rates for 1694-1876. Appreciation and hiterest. 439] Alph. Courtois 97 " Histoire des Banques en France," (Paris, 1881). fils, Gives rate of interest at the Bank of France, iSoo-1880. Wilhelm von Lucam, " Die Oesterreichische Nationalbank wahrend der Dauer des dritten Privilegiums," (Vienna, 1876), p. 121. Gives rates for Bank of Austria, "Jahrbiicher fiir 1817-75. Nationalokonomie und Statistik," February, 1896, pp. 282-83. Gives bank and market rates for London, Paris, Berlin, Amsterdam, Vienna and St. Petersburg, 1841-80 by decades, and 1881-95 by Brussels, years. " Handworterbuch der Staatswissenschaften," Article "Banken." Gives rates for Bank of Prussia and Germany, iS47-89i^^for Bank of Austria, 1878-89 ; <^^^ Switzerland, 1883-88. Om A. N. Kiaer, " seddelbanker, " (Kristiania, 1877). Contains diagram of bank rates at Kristiania, Stockholm and Kjobenhavn, 1853-76. M. G. Mullhall, "Dictionary of Statistics," (London, 1892), pp. 76, 607. Gives rates for countries of Europe by five and ten year periods since 1850. William Farr, "On the valuation of railroads, telegraphs," ^ic, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, September, 1S76, pp. 464-530, " Report of the New England Mutual Life Ins. Co.," Boston, 1890. Gives rates realized by twenty representative insurance companies for 1869-88, and for Massachusetts savings banks for 1877-89, and bank divi- dends in Boston, New York and Philadelphia. The rates realized by the insurance companies for the twenty years, 1869-88, inclusive, were 6.0, 5.9, 6.1, 6.2, 6.5, 6.2, 6.5, 6.1, 5.6, 5.1, 5.0, 4.8, 4.8, 5.1, 5.1, 4.7, 4.7, 4.9, 4.7, 4.6, These represent (if the -writer mistakes not) the average rates earned on the par value of investments of all ages, some old, some new, some terminable soon and others having many years to run. For this reason they are of little or no use for the foregoing study. respectively. Robert GifFen, "Essay in Finance," second series, (London, 1886), P- 37- Seasonal variations of interest in connection with bank reserves, F. M. Taylor, ' ' Do we want an Elastic Currency ? ' ' etc. Political Science Quarterly, March, 1896, pp. 133-157. Gives diagram showing the relation of surplus reserves and rates discount ; of also seasonal variation of rate of discount. R. H. Inglis Palgrave, "Analysis of the Transactions of the Bank of England," (London, 1874). Gives rates, 1844-72, and seasonal variation, 1844-56 and dependence of rate on ratio of reserve to liabilities. 1857-72. Shows R. H. Inglis Palgrave, "Bank-rate in England, France, and Germany, 1844-78 with remarks on the causes which influence the rate of interest charged and an analysis of the accounts of the Bank of ; ; England," (London, 1880). R. H. Inglis Palgrave, (London) Bankers' Magazine, March, April, May, 1878. Number of changes in bank rates of England, France, and Germany. American Economic ^8 Association. [446 Theodor Hertzka, "Wahrung und Handel," (Vienna, 1S76). Gives the number of weeks each rate lasted for the Banks of England, France, Germany, and Austria during 1844-73. George "Money Market Clare, Diagrams for Primer," (London, 1S91). seasonal variations of interest, bank reserves, etc. Commercial and Financial Statistics of British India. Second (Government Printing OfSce, Calcutta), 1894, pp. 354-64. Monthly Discount, Bank of Bengal, 1861-94, and average quotations government securities held in I,ondon. Report of the Secretary of the Treasury, 1893, Report of the Comptroller of Currency, 1894, issue, of p. 401. p. 179. H. W. Farnam, "Some Effects of Falling Prices," Yale Review, August, 1895. The last three references contain statistics of rates of interest realized on some United States Government bonds. R. A. Bayley, "National Loans of the United States", (Government Printing Ofl&ce, Washington, 1882). Gives rates of interest and price of issue of all United States loans from July 4, 1776, to June 30, 1880. "Dictionaire des Finances," Article "Interet." Gives rates at vrhich France has borrowed. The following tables of index numbers are appended in order that the reader and X falling prices and may for the reason that those for India, been accessible to verify the periods of rising which have been discussed in Chapters many of the tables, notably Japan and China, have not hitherto most readers. 1 1 INDSX NUMBERS IN SEIVEN COUNTRIES.i England. 1824 1825 1826 1827 182S 1829 1830 1831 1832 1833 1834 1835 1836 1837 1838 1839 1840 1841 1842 1843 1844 1845 1846 1847 1848 1849 1850 1851 1852 1853 1854 1855 1856 1857 1858 1859 i860 1861 1852 1863 1864 1865 1866 1867 1868 1869 1870 1871 1872 1873 1874 1875 1876 1877 1878 1879 1880 188 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1890 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1 Germany. United States. India. Japan. China. 105 124 108 108 97 95 97 98 93 90 93 96 103 lOI loi no 104 102 90 83 90 84 85 88 95 95 88 83 89 99 98 85 83 94 82 77 77 79 100 102 114 781 95 102 loi lOI 105 91 94 99 98 lOI 103 105 lOI 102 100 113 99 98 96 100 109 III 102 96 95 94 87 105 105 109 112 114 121 134 129 124 123 130 114 116 121 118 123 125 129 123 126 124 122 123 123 127 136 138 136 130 128 128 "3 103 100 100 118 127 129 112 115 100 95 97 94 94 105 103 94 87 85 82 121 117 122 132 172 232 188 166 174 152 144 136 132 129 130 129 123 114 105 95 105 108 109 107 103 121 122 122 114 109 104 102 102 106 108 109I 94 104 79 106 102 93 93 94 96 98 94 94 100 100 loi 104 119 134 149 156 164 165 167 167 166 167 166 162 158 151 144 141 139 143 151 153 159 155 156 156 157 158 163 168 169 95 99 121 125 119 112 99 96 97 95 99 loi 104 107 103 104 "5 119 104 104 105 102 105 114 145 160 175 159 130 116 116 107 109 112 116 124 123 124 129 100 103 III 10 106 III 105 no 108 103 104 105 107 105 100 105 104 104 108 109 92 91 For England, the figures for prices are from Jevons and Sauerbeck. Those American Economic lOO Associatio7i. [442 from Sauerbeck begin in 1852. They are taken from the Aldrich report (I, 247) and from the Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, March, 1S96. Those from Jevons are from 1824 to 1852 inclusive, and are taken from his " Investigitions in Currency and Finance." In order to make ihe tables of Jevons and Sauerbeck continuous, Jevons' number for 1S52 is called 78 (i. e., Sauerbeck's for that year) instead of 65 as given in the "Investigations," and all the other numbers are raised in the ratio 78 65. Jevons' figures are for forty commodities Sauerbeck's for fortj'-five. The index numbers for English wages are from the article by Bowley in the Journal of the Royal Statistical Soceety, June, 1895. The German numbers are from Soetbeer, Heinz and Conrad. Those for 1851-gi inclusive, are from Soetbeer, continued by Heinz, and given in the Aldrich report those for 1891-95 inclusive, are from Conrad, as given in "his JahrbUcher^ (I, 294) 1S94-6, but are all magnified in the ratio 109 98 in order to make the series continuous, since Heinz's figure for 1891 is 109, and Conrad's 98. The statistics of Soetbeer and Heinz cover 114 commodities. The French numbers are from the Aldrich report (I, 335) founded on the figures of the Commission permanente des valeurs. They cover only sixteen articles. The figures for the United States are those of Professor Falkner in the Aldrich report (I, 9, 13), the weighted averages (last method) being employed. Those for India, Japan and China are from the Japanese Report of the Commission for investigation of monetary systems, 1S95. The writer is under great obligations to Mr. Ichi Hara, of Tokyo, for a copy of the report, and to Mr. Sakata of Yale University, for translating the tables. 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