Andreas Andreades - History of The Bank of England
Andreas Andreades - History of The Bank of England
HISTORY OF THE
BANK OF ENGLAND
By
A.
ANDREADES,
TRANSLATED BY
CHR1STABEL
MEREDITH,
WITH
H.
S.
PREFACE
BY
FOXWELL,
M.A.,
F.B.A.,
Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge ; Professor of Political Economy in the University of London.
TWO VOLUMES
16401903.
IN
ONE.
LONDON
P.
S.
ORCHARD HOUSE,
WESTMINSTER.
1909.
8ENERM.
-Z-
AUTHOR'S PREFACE.
THE Author
of
this
appearance of an
English translation of so
At the same time it factory a character. remind the to English reader that this
may
is
be well
a history
of an English institution written by a foreigner and intended for the use of foreigners. Difficulties must
arise
any attempt to judge the institutions of other countries and to form an opinion with regard
in
to advisable
reforms.
The
task
is
especially hard
in the case of a
attention
is
country like England, where more Hence paid to facts than to theories.
with respect to various questions, especially some arising towards the end of the work, when I have
own views by
I
confine myself to a statement of the facts than to set forth theories which might be disproved by subsequent events.
writing for French readers, I have described various matters and in particular historical
Moreover,
the
in
events,
discussion
of which
may perhaps
be
I must then ask superfluous for English readers. the latter to remember that the political and
192501
AUTHOR'S PREFACE.
economic
history of Great Britain is less well to continental readers than to themselves.
known
I
am
conscious of
is
many
a
this
book, which
work
its
not for the pressure of University duties and other In I should have completed and revised it.
present form it is the result of the conscientious study of several years and as such I hope it will obtain the indulgence of my new readers.
;
to
in
work whose instructive preface is sufficient give the book a special value.
the
A.
ANDREADES,
Professor at the University of Athens.
PREFACE.
ENGLISHMEN may be pardoned if they regard the Bank of England as the greatest financial institution in the world. It is far inferior, no doubt, to many Continental banks, in the extent of its metallic reserves and and there are even other of its note circulation English banks which hold a larger amount of private deposits. It can hardly be considered so essentially a national bank as the Banks of France and Germany, each of which does a larger business in the provinces than in the capital it is not so democratic in the range of its operations as the Banque de France, perhaps not so directly associated with general enterNo existing bank can prise as the Reichsbank. boast a history at the same time so long, so continuous and so distinguished nor has any played so large and so worthy a part, not merely in the fortunes of a great nation, but also in the general financial activities of the world. The history of this famous Bank, here presented in an English version by Mrs. Meredith, must be held to be in many respects a tour de force. It was written a in French and by Greek, notwithstanding the double difficulty with which the author had to contend in describing an institution, so characteristically English, in a language not his own, it is the most comprehensive and most readable account of the Bank Dr. Andreades, indeed, following yet published. Mr. Stephens, goes so far as to say that nothing deserving to be called a history of the Bank had previously been written, though the attempt had more than once been made. If this be so, the fact is
;
: ; :
viii.
PREFACE.
sufficiently remarkable, and suggests reflections, some not too pleasant, to those who are concerned for the
credit of
we accept
must certainly agree, with M. Lyon-Caen, that no complete history of the Bank existed before the appearance of this book. Many valuable contributions to such a history had been published from time to time but all of them left something to be
;
We
fragmentary, some were hardly them history is often only incidental to the author's main purpose nearly all, a characteristically English fault, were unsystematic none of them covered the whole period, even approxiWe had no complete, formal and scientific mately. such as would compare for instance with account, Courtois' Alphonse history of the Banque de France. Let us glance at some of the more important exThe account given by Macleod, in his isting works. and Practice of Banking, may be said to have Theory the before field held the appearance of Dr. Andreades' is in It many respects very good within history.
desired.
scientific
;
Some were
in the best of
like the late Henry more suggestive and instructive Sidgwick, found it But the historical work was merely than any other. incidental with Macleod, not his principal aim as may be gathered from the fact that the word history does not even occur on the title of his book and his vigorous sketch deals with banking rather than with
its
limits
'
'
Bank a distinction, I will admit, which counts for less in earlier times than it would to-day.
the
:
(the
contributed invaluable
known History of
the Napoleonic war, but in hardly less degree for the whole period 1793-1857 covered by them. But Tooke's work might be regarded as a documented argument rather than a reasoned history: an objection
PREFACE.
which would apply to Macleod as perhaps not quite to the same degree.
well,
ix.
though
object of both writers was rather, to establish a controversial thesis than to give a scientific explanation of the None the less, each work contains course of events. abundant and trustworthy historical material : the unconcealed bias of the writers does not seem to have interfered with their accurate record of the facts.
The
Avowed
what
is
really
the pretence of impartiality. Tooke, dangerous sometimes puts upon the facts a construction perhaps, on the other hand, he is they cannot fairly bear most careful to give references, the lack of which is a It is certain that everyprincipal defect in Macleod. deal with the history of English to one who essays indebted to both these writers. be deeply banking must There are some excellent authorities, too, upon the First among earlier years of the history of the Bank.
;
them in merit, though not in time, I would mention Thorold Rogers, whose First Nine Years of the Bank of England has always seemed to me the most brilliant It of his many contributions to economic history. of course, only a fragment but it is a model for the economic historian. Among others who have thrown light on the earlier history must also be mentioned Mr. Hilton Price, Mr. Maberly Phillips, and the late Mr. J. B. Martin whose numerous works and papers are full of valuable information as to early banking history, banking practice, and banking documents. Many others might be named,
,
did space permit, who have made similar valuable studies of local banking, and individual banks. What
seems
I
to be
period in
mean
an admirable sketch, covering a longer a more connected way, must be noted here Mr. W. R. Bisschop's De Opkomst der
;
Londensche Geldmarkt
1896.
Unfortunately
linguistic
many
x.
PREFACE.
critical
exposition of this
Returning to the larger works, Lawson's History of Banking is another book of considerable merit. It wants system, but has a great deal of interesting information about the early history of banking, is throughout well-informed on points of banking practice, and deserves special mention for the frequent references to the relations between the Bank and the Government, on which little has been written in English, though Dr. Philippovich, in his Die Bank von England imDienste derFinanzverwaltungdes Staates^ has treated it exhaustively over the whole period up Lawson's book too has an Appendix full to 1884.
including a reprint of the By-Laws of the Bank. It has been to Lawson, and it is still more true of the objected better-known History of the Bank of England by Francis, that his history is too anecdotal and popular Neither writer, however, appealed to an in form.
of interesting
matter,
Charter and
academic audience, nor would have found one at that It may at any rate be said of both time if he had.
result of
Gilbart again is a writer of pretty wide reading. whom we must speak with respect. His contributions to the history of banking range wide over He has written of banking not both time and place. in United the Kingdom, but in America as merely and has not confined his studies to the period well No he knew best, the first half of the igth century. readable him of his accuse one could being unduly and didactic to often methodical the is always writing verge of pomposity. As might be expected from the founder and manager of the first great London Joint Stock Bank, his works are full of details of administrastudents may be a little tion, of which modern but they are solid, well furnished with impatient statistics, and of real value to the historian. They
;
;
PREFACE.
xi.
He is our main active, Mr. Inglis Palgrave. source of information for the history of English His mastery of banking in the last half-century. is unrivalled he has given statistics English banking in the Bankers' in us, partly published works, partly series a of studies of and elsewhere, long Magazine in and rate the the discount changes English banking
still
;
are not however so directly concerned with the Bank of England as with Joint Stock Banking. Passing over slighter sketches and papers, of which there are very many, as well as books like those of Maclaren, really a history of opinions, and of Doubleday, a notable criticism of the funding system, we come in conclusion to a writer of foremost importance, happily
and in his last work, Bank Rate and the Money Market, we have a collection of comparative statistics from 1844 to 1900 which seems to exhaust the available material on the
structure and
banking methods
we have no adequate history of the Bank, evident that very important contributions to such a history exist. Moreover, as Dr. Andreades truly records the says, they contain are full of incident and of romance. almost attraction, Why have we had to wait so long for a worthy formal and fairly complete handling of such an interesting and fundamental
chapter in
Dr. Andreades
reference to the difficulty and magnitude of the task but he does not seem convinced that this is quite an adequate explanation. Probably various reasons will occur to the reader. I will venture to suggest two considerations which may have given pause to others, as they certainly did to myself; and I write as one who for more than a quarter of a century has felt that special fascination in banking history to which our author refers. The first is the remarkable absence of official records in connection with the Bank, especially for
makes a modest
xii.
PREFACE.
It has often been the first century of its activity. observed that the English are peculiarly fortunate in a result partly of their habits this matter of records of publicity, and of the representative character of their political life. Speaking of our legal records, Maitland says they form "a series which for continuity and catholicity, minute detail and authoritative value has I believe that we may safely say it no equal, no rival, in the world." This is equally true in the case of many of our economic and political institutions. The Bank of England stands out as a striking exIt never seems to have published ception to the rule. any reports, or even to have preserved its own minutes and accounts. We have mainly to rely for any official
;
knowledge of its operations on the occasional returns extracted by Parliamentary Committees, and on the weekly returns under the Act of 1844, which competent judges have declared to be the most valuable result But the Committees throw no secured by that Act. before the French war and the on the period light returns under the Act of 1844 are very inadequate. Neither source gives the mass of valuable information contained in the Annual Reports of the Banks of France and Germany, and indeed of most of the
;
Hence there are many questions of foreign banks. Bank policy which can only be studied upon such basis as is afforded by hearsay, and the articles or occasional utterances of individuals. This absence of official records greatly increases the labour involved in writing a history of the Bank, and makes the result of it, after all is done, less But complete and authentic than could be wished. we should probably have had our history, authentic or not, if this had been all that stood in the way. It was not the absence of official records that left so many other chapters of English economic history to be first dealt with by foreigners. The main cause is to be found in the anti-historical bias of the dominant
PREFACE.
school of English
xiii.
official economists, most of them avowed disciples of that most unhistorical writer, David Ricardo. Their doctrinaire habits of thought, and their belief that they were in possession of a set " of universal led them to of "
principles
application,
frown on historical research as at best mere waste of time. No physician, worthy of the name, will prescribe without some knowledge, direct or inferred, of the history of the case under treatment. To the typical English economist, however, who claimed that his "laws" were, would or should be (he was not quite clear about the tense) of world-wide pertinence, historical differences had no interest, and he relegated
This, as we now see, is history to the antiquary. the attitude of the really quack. What is curious is, that in England, and to some extent in France also, the quack methods received the sanction of the professed practitioner, and it was left to the layman to follow the sounder practice. Hence for the half-
century and more during which this "orthodox" school has been supreme, such economic history as was written in England was written outside academic circles, or at least by men whose work was under the ban of the dominant school. I well remember how His completely this school ostracised Macleod. admirable historical work, to which so many writers are indebted, was appreciated in every country but his own. Here, because of certain eccentricities in
his theoretical position,
scribed.
fate,
Richard Jones
;
though Whewell and Cliffe Leslie in later times did not fare neglect much better. There are many living economists who are not likely to forget the discouragement they suffered by this official blight on historical studies.
all passed away, never, we confidently assert, to return passed away so that the men completely younger perhaps hardly
whole works were prodays met a similar preserved him from entire
his
in earlier
may
xiv.
PREFACE.
realise how much it crippled and narrowed the work Thanks mainly to of the generation before them. the example of leaders like Archdeacon Cunningham and Professor Ashley, and later to the encouragement given to realistic studies at the London School of Economics, we now have a public which welcomes the results of historical research, and there is a large and growing number of scholars actively engaged
upon
it.
achievement
With these attempts to explain what I cannot pretend to excuse, let me leave the question of our
English shortcomings in this matter, and turn to the more agreeable work of considering the brilliant essay in which Dr. Andreades has gone so far to supply what we lacked. No two persons, reviewing so large a mass of situations and incidents, would be likely to agree in every estimate of evidence, or in all their judgments upon the actors in the drama. If I may venture to express an opinion, I should say that Dr. Andreades seems, on the whole, to have shown a singularly sure There are of course a instinct in his appreciations. few points of fact, and some minor contentions, which might deserve examination, if this were the proper but in general, and notably on many place for it much disputed issues, his conclusions seem to me, at any rate, to be sound and scholarly. Where I should
;
differ
most, is in regard to the period covered by the French war, and more particularly as to the conduct of the Bank during the Restriction. This period is classical in the history of banking, and has attracted the attention of every writer on the Never was the fate of England and her subject. more intimately bound up with the fortunes Empire and there is no chapter in the of her national credit Bank of England in regard to which of the long story On both her conduct has been so severely censured.
;
PREFACE.
grounds
it
xv.
must always be of
special interest to
an
historian of our National Bank ; and we might expect that the traditional verdicts would receive a very It is just careful and critical scrutiny at his hands. here that our author, who is not afraid to make excursions into party politics, and to shower censures on Pitt which will not commend themselves to everyone, seems to become less venturesome in dealing with the banking history, and follows too faithfully, It as some may think, the generally accepted views. some state be to worth while, then, briefly may considerations which he has perhaps under-rated. Too much can easily be made of the iniquity of the
Restriction itself, especially as a ground for reflections on the Bank. The difficulties of the Bank throughout were mainly due to its strong patriotism and loyalty to the Government. Even the Government, in the demands persistent upon the Bank which made the Restriction necessary, was only following the well-
In the eighteenth established policy of the time. banks in the same nations their exploited century as ruthless, impenitent way they exploited their colonies and their trade. The contemporary Caisse
d'Escompte in France, otherwise a very promising and well-managed institution, was completely wrecked by the insatiable demands of the State and in later years the Banque de France was more than once brought by the same policy to a temporary suspension of payments. Nor is it so certain, quite apart from
:
8th century notions, that we could even now get through a first-rate war without an inconvertible Gilbart, giving evidence before the Comcurrency. mittee on Banks of Issue in 1841, says very frankly and emphatically that in the event of another war such as the war with France, " I would, immediately on the commencement of the war, issue an order in Council for the Bank to stop payment." He says he formed the opinion that the suspension of cash
1
xvi.
PREFACE.
in
" was not a matter of choice, but 1797 of necessity it has since been confirmed by the writings of McCulloch." Quite recently again, at the discussion of Sir Robert Giffen's important paper at the Royal United Service Institution in March, 1908, several speakers expressed their conviction that a suspension of payments would be inevitable on the outbreak of a first-rate war and Sir Felix Schuster said that we should certainly prohibit the shipment of gold to the enemy, which would involve a partial suspension. To find precedents for such a We have an policy we need not go back to 1797. excellent example to hand in the case of France in 1870. Suspension, then, must be considered as a still possible expedient, rather than as the scandal of a less enlightened age. It is admitted by the severest critics of the Bank that
payments
there is no substantial ground for complaint as to its conduct during the Restriction until 1808-9. There does not seem indeed to have been any real deprecia-
The price of ^4 its paper until that date. which ounce figures monotonously for the years per was 1803-9, really an arbitrary price, fixed by the Bank itself as one at which it would purchase foreign gold.* The Bank, in fact, was adopting at its own expense the policy so common on the Continent to-day of strengthening the reserve by buying gold No doubt it is less easy to defend the at a premium. Bank action of the It might have just after 1808. done more than it actually did to check the speculative movement at that time. But events in South America were opening up splendid opportunities, which the English did well to seize, even at some risks. We must consider too, how limited were the means of control then at the disposition of the Bank. Regulation of
,
the Resolution of the Committee of Treasury, 28 Mar. 1804, in Appendix to Report of 1819.
PREFACE.
tion
xvii.
by the rate of discount, the method now approved, The Usury law prequite out of the question. vented a higher rate than 5% and the Bank had long made 5% its minimum. It had to work therefore with
was
a fixed rate of discount. Its policy in regard to the of seems very cautious, even accommodation granting Tooke tells us in comparison with modern practice.
(I., p.
159) "The rule by which the Bank directors professed to be, and were in the main guided," was "the demand for discount of good mercantile bills,
not exceeding 61 days date, at the rate of 5% per that this rule "did, with the necessary policy of Government in periodically reducing the floating debt within certain limits by funding, operate as a principle of limitation upon the If the Bank wished to total issues of the Bank." contract its circulation, what courses were open to it ? To refuse accommodation altogether is always held to be dangerous. To make personal preferences is It is just invidious, especially for a National Bank. Bank the have resorted to the possible expedient might used in 1795-6, I mean the granting of pro raia discounts but even so, it must have put severe on the market, and risked the creation of pressure Further, its power over the market was panic. seriously diminished by the rapid growth and reckless advances of the country banks. It was to these banks, and not to the Bank of England, that most of the troubles of the Restriction were due. The Bank was practically responsible for the solvency of this crowd of small, ill-managed institutions, but dared not call them to account, on peril of provoking a general collapse of credit. Thus the country banks over-traded without check, and on a moderate estimate had afloat a circulation of ^30,000,000, a figure never touched by the circulation of the Bank itself. Still there were those who held that, cost what it might, the Bank could and should have brought its
;
xviii.
PREFACE.
paper and the exchanges to par. Tooke seems on the whole to have been of this opinion but he clearly perceives and fairly states the extreme danger of such a course. After noting the difficulties imposed by the " Usury law, he says, Under these circumstances, and at such a time of unprecedented political difficulties, I am perfectly convinced that if the attempt alluded to had been made, there would have been a moment
;
of total stoppage of business, something very like a general suspension of all payments except for retail purposes, and of all business excepting retail trade" The alternative open to the Bank is (IV., p. 118). stated admirably by him in another passage (I., p. 164), too long to quote here. The Bank had to choose between "violent changes in the state of the money market" and " extraordinary fluctuations in the exchanges." If the issues had been rigorously contracted so as to keep the exchanges at par, the most disastrous pressure would have been caused in the money market. In this earlier passage Tooke seems to think a financial crisis the lesser evil of the two. But there is much to be said for the opposite view. should remember that it was a main point with Napoleon to wreck our national credit. He regarded the remarkable credit development in England as a prime source of its military power, so long as it could be maintained but he was equally satisfied that the development had proceeded to a dangerous extent, and that it would be quite possible to bring about its * To that collapse. object he directed many of his He permitted the free import of corn to measures. England, in the hope that it would cause a drain of The Berlin and Milan decrees not only aimed gold. at injuring our trade, but at destroying the basis of and they our credit, by causing drains of bullion
We
clearly shown by Miss Cunningham, in an interesting paper, shortly to appear, upon Napoleorts Attack on British Credit^ which I have had the advantage of reading in MS.
PREFACE.
xix.
undoubtedly helped to bring about the high premium on exchange in 1810. If the Bank, in the attempt to correct this premium, had caused an internal stringency, and thereby provoked a general crisis, it would have exactly realised Napoleon's aims. Our credit, then (as now), was our strongest resource in war then (as now), it was a vulnerable point, and its
;
destruction
was the
first
enemy.
Considerations of this kind, no doubt, rather than abstract arguments, led Parliament and the Bank in 181 1 to reject the main recommendation of the Bullion Committee. For my part, I believe they were right; and that if at a time of such unprecedented disturbance to trade, the Bank had followed the counsels of the doctrinaires, the whole system of war finance would have collapsed. But the rejection of the Report, together with the passing of Lord Stanhope's Act in the same year, which put a check on the not too patriotic Lord King, and saved us from the danger of "two prices," enabled the Bank to pull As it was, and without the forced conthrough. traction of issues which resumption must have caused,
prices
according to Jevons' investigations, from 1810 to 117 in 1819, or nearly 29 per cent, in 164 nine years. It may be doubted whether, at such a critical time, the country could have supported a
fell,
in
more rapid
fall.
situation, one would think, was so difficult and uncertain, that even if Parliament and the Bank had made an error of judgment, the error might have
The
been pardoned, or at least gently handled all the more too, inasmuch as many weighty authorities, merchants, bankers, and writers, inclined against the recommendation of the Committee. But the Bank had a consistent and uncompromising enemy in
;
Ricardo.
He came
to
the
front
in
the
currency
controversies,
to be the
acknowledged
xx.
PREFACE.
origin I do not know, and it would be unprofitable to speculate upon it. In a letter to Malthus in 1815, he writes, " I always enjoy an attack upon the Bank, and if I had sufficient courage, I would be a party to
its
He seems to have found his courage later. In 1822 he denounced the Bank in Parliament as "a company of merchants who ... did not acknowledge the true principles of the currency, and who, in fact, in his opinion, did not know anything about it/' It was precisely because they were a company of merchants that they saved the trade of the country from the crude However it is only prescription of the doctrinaires. fair to Ricardo to note that though he never tired of abusing the Bank, he was far from entirely approving the Report of 1810, which he is so often assumed to have inspired. For in a letter to that able writer dated i8th September, 1821, we find him Wheatley, 4< rather You misconceive my opinions on this writing I never should advise a government to restore question. a currency which was depreciated 30 per cent, to par ... It was without any legislation that the currency from 1813 to 1819 became within 5 percent, of the value of gold, in it was this state of things, and not with a currency depreciated 30 per cent., that I advised a recurrence to the old standard.'' The policy he here disclaims was precisely the policy recommended by the Bullion Committee. It is perhaps doubtful whether Ricardo's view was so qualified in 1810-11 and we may well be thankful that men of more cautious temper were at the helm then. Huskisson, who knew both the times and the man exceptionally well, pronounced a judgment on Ricardo in 1826 which we may extend to the whole " that " I believe," he said, party of the doctrinaires. if that gentleman, ingenious as he was, had been the
it."
. . .
PREFACE.
would before
sole director of the Bank of England, the country this have seen the stoppage of that
establishment."
(Speeches,
II. p. 462).
Other critics have taken a kinder view of the action of the Bank. Baring in 1819, and Adam Smith fifty both before, years agree, that, as Smith puts it, the Bank of to the public " may sometimes have the duty obliged it, without any fault of its directors, to overstock the circulation with paper money." There was no severer critic of the Restriction finance than Doubleday, the opponent of funding in all its forms. But Doubleday, far from thinking that the Bank should have acted on the recommendation of the Bullion Committee, says that it " seemed to smack of "
a degree of fatuity that looked like political insanity Senior, too, even when criticising the Bank (p. 184). for the extension of its issues, concludes with words of praise. "Such conduct," he says, "injurious as it was, is a model of sobriety and moderation when or commucompared with that of any other individual " and again, "The nity invested with similar powers Bank directors exercised their power with extra:
And Fullarton, in 1844, ordinary moderation." speaks of "the deep debt which the nation owes the Bank for its services throughout that long and trying crisis" (p. 68), and adds, "I believe they cannot be too highly appreciated and I believe, further, that the same services could not have been so beneficially
;
performed by any mere Bank of the State, or by any body whatever less intimately bound up in all its interests and relations with the commercial affairs
and prosperity of the country." This impression certainly grows upon me, the more I read the history of the period. I doubt whether the crowd of critics who have repeated Ricardo's censures of the Bank have sufficiently distinguished between the speculative views and the I think it will practical measures of the Directors.
xxii.
PREFACE.
appear, the more the circumstances are examined, that their actual policy during the Restriction was It would be generally guided by a sound instinct. to defend some of their impossible arguments but As so often happens they were not there to argue. with men of affairs, their policy was much better than the reasons they gave for it. The fact remains that where there was about an ever;, chance of failure, the Bank succeeded we may well be grateful to it for steering the country safely through the most critical period in the whole history of its banking and credit No doubt the Bank had the defects of its system. qualities ; it may have laid rather too much stress upon the urgency of accommodating the trade and commerce of the country but if so, its vices leaned
;
to virtue's side.
its
were due to
unwavering
loyalty
to
the
State
and
to
its
endeavour, so far as lay in its power, to avert undue These are pressure on the commercial community. the ends for which a National Bank exists. If we are to criticise the Bank, its conduct seems more open to objection in the twenty years after than in the twenty years before the Resumption of Cash Payments. As our author's account clearly shows, its management of the crises of 1825-6, and 1837-9 was far from prudent and this after full allowance is made for the difficulties caused by the Usury Law and the conversion of the debt in the first period. One cannot help feeling too that much grave currency trouble might have been spared to our own times ir the Bank had given a more favourable consideration
;
But here again the Directors might plead Ricardo. that they were hardly free agents ; the political situation was dominated by Cobbett, whose hostility to these schemes is well-known. For the worst blemish on the long and honourable record of the Bank we must go back to earlier times, to that fevered
PREFACE.
xxiii.
It was the wild competition of the Bank year 1720. with the South Sea Company which, more than anything else, as was ably argued by a contemporary writer, was the prime cause of the speculative mania of that year. The Bank was never nearer ruin than at that time, and only escaped, as Dr. Andreades neatly puts His caustic its own proposals. it, by the rejection of seems this warranted. episode fully judgment upon Dr. Andreades apologizes for not having discussed more exhaustively the question of liberty of note issue, and the particular system of issue imposed by the Act of 1844, another legacy of the doctrinaires. English readers will hardly complain of this the Act The vital question has been discussed ad nauseam. for us to-day is not so much liberty of issue, as the discovery of some means of regaining the elasticity of The issue of which the Act of 1844 deprived us. in far as so whole question of note issue, it is separable from the question of reserve, is of much less importance for England than for most other countries. But there are some omissions in this history which strike one. It is hardly as strong as might be wished on the documentary and statistical side. One
:
would have welcomed an Appendix containing some fundamental statistics for instance, statistics of Capital, Dividends, Reserves, Discount Rates, and Note Circulation. A history of the Charter renewals would have been convenient the original Charter and By-laws, the monopoly and other important Acts, and certain Orders and other documents might well have been printed. These are the things most useful, and generally most inaccessible, both to the student and the man of affairs. Again, some account of the various forms of Notes, Cheques, Bills, Tokens, etc., issued or handled by the Bank, such as might have been gathered from the writings of Maberley Phillips, Hilton Price, Bisschop and Philippovich, would said It may be certainly have been instructive.
:
xxiv.
PREFACE.
generally that the development of English banking is very closely connected with the currency development, and neither can be thoroughly understood without some reference to the other. Some of the incidents connected with the Recoinages of 1696 and 1774 have left their mark not only on the currency history of the world, but upon its banking history also, and certainly on the history of the Bank of It would be difficult, for instance, to England. exaggerate the importance of the rejection, in deference to Locke's plausible platitudes, of the very well considered Report of the Parliamentary ComMuch the same may be said in regard mittee of 1695. outside to systems of banking. The development of banking in Scotland and Ireland is intimately connected at many epochs with the history of the Bank. More information also might have been given as to the relation of the Bank to various groups of other English banks. The growth of the country banks and the extent to which they were able to force the hand of the central institution, might have formed a
which would have thrown much light on the period 1793 1844. Another might have been devoted to the Bank's relations with the group of More detail City bankers, and with the Clearing. in to been too, regard Joplin's movemight given,
special study,
ment, the relaxation of the Bank monopolies, the growth of the great Joint Stock Banks, and the effects produced by these changes upon the position of the Bank, and its control over the money market. After all is said, however, the fact remains that we have in this work of Dr. Andr6ades the best general survey of the subject which exists. It is the only one that covers the whole period of the Bank's history, and takes note of all the most important passages in it. Its author shows a remarkable familiarity with
his
full
PREFACE.
xxv.
The earlier part of the of suggestion and stimulus. history has never before been thrown into a form so convenient for English students; and they will find in the later part some new matter of interest, especially the sketch of the relations between the Bank and the Treasury, and a Memorandum by Sir Robert Peel which has not appeared in any previous work on the The whole treatment is always alert and subject. animated, the topics are vividly presented and well arranged, and above all, the book is eminently readable and attractive. These merits seem to have been generally recognized. Dr. Andreades' history has been everywhere well received, and by none more cordially, I think, than by those who best appreciate the great difficulty of the task. As I have ventured to touch on one or two matters in regard to which our points of view are not exactly the same, it is all the more pleasant to me to be able to congratulate the author upon his remarkable success, and upon the recognition it has received, not only in other countries, but in his own, where he now holds an important Chair in the University of Athens. The work of the translator also calls for grateful recognition. The lucidity and vivacity of the original have been admirably preserved in Mrs. Meredith's effective and idiomatic version. While the translation is accurate, and to the text, it has the keeps closely unusual merit that it bears no trace, except perhaps in its clearness and point, of the original language from which it has been rendered. Perhaps it should be mentioned here that the translator did not attempt a general revision of the work, or the completion of the Bibliography obvious though many slips and and occasional inaccuracies of mis-spellings, quotation and fact have been carefully corrected by reference to
;
the original authorities. It only remains to note that the appearance of the book is most timely. The question of the constitution
xxvi.
PREFACE.
and policy of National Banks is in some respects the supreme economic question of the day. The financier his is the dominating influence is in the ascendant on modern economic activities. We are living in an age when financial fortunes and financial operations are upon a scale never dreamt of before and when and are conmovements price manipulations gold and dislocation of stantly causing wreckage industry
;
If disturbing forces of this are be to within due control, it can kept magnitude be institutions national by only resources, wielding and under the direction of men representing general men in touch with the national public interests commercial and industrial conditions, and with the general aims of the State. National Banks, then, are more necessary than they ever were ; though their role has changed. If we look at their early history, either here or abroad, we shall find that the main object of the State in establishing relations with a Bank was to become its immediate beneficiary indeed by the loans it exacted it very frequently crippled the Bank for its proper function of controlling the monetary position and
:
securing due accommodation to industry and comIn modern times the public or national merce. character of a Bank is mainly important in so far as it may be a guarantee that the Bank will safeguard public
that is to say, will realise that its chief duty the business world rather than to its shareholders, and its chief purpose to maintain financial It security and stability rather than to make profit. is from this point of view that National Banks will now be judged, and that we interest ourselves in their So regarded, the world's great National history. Banks have no cause to be ashamed of their record, the Bank of England least of all.
interests
is
:
to
H.
S.
FOX WELL,
CONTENTS.
PAGR
AUTHOR'S PREFACE
PREFACE by Professor H.
S.
v.
Fox well
vii.
VOLUME
INTRODUCTION
:
I.
16401819.
I
Importance and Difficulties of the Subject. Reasons why no History of the Bank of England has ever been written. Examination of Sources (a) Narrative sources and general works on Banking, (&) Official publications, (c) Pamphlets and tracts. Observations in reply to two criticisms likely to be made of the present work.
PART
ORIGIN
I.
IN
ENGLAND
...
the
14
Political situation in England about 1640. Financial difficulties of Charles I. Seizure of Bullion deposited by the merchants in the Tower. Serious results of this proceeding.
It encourages the development of Banking, establishment of a National Bank.
but delays
RISE
OF
BANKING
21
Position and transactions of the Goldsmiths. their success and their unpopularity.
Reasons
for
...
26
Extension of English Trade. Projects for a National Bank. Pamphlets by Gerbier and Lamb. The return of the Jews, its influence upon Banking.
32
Government of Charles II. The King's Foreign Policy. Dutch War. First Run on the Banks. Financial Relations between Charles II. and Louis XIV. Second Dutch War. Suspension of Exchequer payments. Results and criticism of this Policy.
the
xxviii.
CONTENTS
PART
II.
CHAPTER
NECESSITY FOR
A
I.
PACK
NATIONAL BANK
43 45
Reasons
POLITICAL
NECESSITY
FOR
BANK
54
of the War against Louis XIV. Inadequate returns from taxation. MonThe Tontine and the Lottery tague's financial expedients.
Bad
Heavy expense
Loan.
CHAPTER
PATERSON'S LIFE
II.
AND WORK.
BANK OF
60
LIFE
OF WILLIAM PATERSON
........
Birth and youthful adventures. Return to England after 1688. Active share in public affairs. Explanation of his leaving the
Bank
of
England shortly
Expedition.
gratitude.
The Darien after he had founded it. His claims on public Last years of his life.
65
" A scheme, 1691. His Pamphlet in 1694, Principles Brief Account of the Intended Bank of England." on which the new Bank should be based.
Paterson's
first
67
Commercial Tories its of the landed gentry causes. The dissentient Whigs. Arguments used by the Bank's opponents. Opposition in Parliament. Bill only passed because the Government wanted money and could not obtain it otherPolitical opponents ; Jacobites rivals ; the Goldsmiths. Hostility
and
wise.
CHAPTER
ORGANISATION OF THE
III.
NEW
BANK.
72
The Tonnage
Act.
CONTENTS
xxix.
COMPARISON BETWEEN THE BANK OF ENGLAND AND THE PRINCIPAL CONTINENTAL BANKS OF THE PERIOD
Venice. Primitive Venetian Banks their transactions resembled those of modern Banks. Reasons for the establishment of a single Bank by the Senate. The Banco della Piazza del Rialto (1584) and the Banco del Giro (1619). Amalgamation of these two establishments. Their transactions. The Bank of Genoa. Origin and original character of the Bank of Saint George. The biglietti di cartulari di San-Giorgio.
of
;
......
75
The Bank
The Bank
position
of Amsterdam. Its importance. Its exceptional to the end of the eighteenth century. Distinctions between the Bank of England and the three continental Banks. Bank money and the English bank notes. Resemblance in this respect between the Banks of England and Sweden. The use of the continental bank notes forced, and the English ones not even legal tender. No monopoly enjoyed by the Bank of England when first founded. Gradual disappearance of these Close resemblance between the Bank of England distinctions. in the present day and the primitive Banks of Italy and
up
Holland.
THE TRANSACTIONS
reserve.
OF THE
BANK OF ENGLAND
....
84
The
CHAPTER
RESULTS OF THE
Political
IV. 86
and economic condition of England at the time of its foundation. Success of the Bank. Causes of this success. Michael Godfrey, his salutary influence on the commercial " A Short Account world, his pamphlet, of the Bank of England.'' Services of the Bank to the Government and the
public.
CHAPTER
THE RESTORATION OF THE COINAGE
V.
90
Scandalous condition of the English coinage. Laws powerless to prevent clipping. The Re-Coinage Act of 1696. Examination of this Law. Montague's difficulties, (a) Great expense involved in the successful completion of the operation, (&) The standard of the new coins. Controversy between Lowndes and Locke. Decision of the House of Commons.
CHAPTER
THE LAND BANK
VI.
103
RENEWAL AND EXTENSION OF THE BANK CHARTER His Economic theories and scheme for (a) Dr. Chamberlain. a Land Bank. Bill for the Land Bank passed by the House of Commons. Collapse of the Land Bank. (6) Position of the Bank of England after the re-coinage and the foundation of Partial suspension of the Bank's payments. the Land Bank. First Exchequer Bills issued, (c) Grievances and demands of the Bank of England. Renewal and extension of the Charter.
Chief provisions of the Act of February 3, 1697. a monopoly.
Question of
xxx.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
VII.
WAR OF SUCCESSION
MM
114
of England in 1700. Problem of the Political position of William III. UnSpanish Succession. War declared. (6) Policy popularity of a War with France. of the Bank during the War. Bank's close alliance with the Protestant Monarchy. Attacked by the enemies of the Government, but secures the continuation and extension of its Charter. Run of 1707. Act of 1709. Criticism of this Act (i) Bank secures a genuine monopoly. Results of this, (2) Bank undertakes to circulate Exchequer Bills. Is authorised to double its
:
Economic condition
Capital.
The
Sacheverell affair.
PART
III.
THE BANK OF ENGLAND UNDER THE HANOVERIAN DYNASTY UP TO THE TIME OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
CHAPTER
THE BANK AND THE SOUTH SEA COMPANY
I.
128
accepts the proposals of the South Sea Company. Speculative mania. Multiplication of schemes of every kind. The South Sea Company's lawsuit against the new Companies. Results of this lawsuit Ruin of the South Sea Company. Trial of the Company's Directors. End of the crisis. Part played and risks run by the Bank during the crisis.
;
CHAPTER
THE BANK
IN
II.
THE REIGN OF GEORGE II Establishment of a Reserve Fund. Renewal of the Charter in 1742. Contemporary idea of the privilege of Exclusive BankDefinition given by the Act of 1742.
146
ing. Act.
Importance of the
The Bank and the Jacobite rising of 1745. Black Friday. The Bank and the conversion of 1750. Relation between the Bank and the Treasury.
CHAPTER
III.
THE BANK FROM THE DEATH OF GEORGE II. TO THE FRENCH REVOLUTION Renewals of the Bank Charter (1764 and 1781). Commercial Crises of 1763, 1772, 1783 Re-coinage. Gordon Riots. Bank afterwards guarded day and night.
154
PART IV. THE BANK DURING THE REVOLUTIONARY AND NAPOLEONIC WARS
CHAPTER
I.
ECONOMIC CONDITION OF ENGLAND AT THE OUTBREAK OF THE REVOLUTION Sketch of the Industrial Revolution in England. The Cotton and other industries. The canals. The steam engine. Results
...........
l6l
CONTENTS
of the transformation of England from an agricultural commercial into a commercial and industrial Country.
effects
xxxi.
PAGE
and
Its
on the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. Its effects on the organisation of provincial credit. The Country Banks.
CHAPTER
FINANCIAL POLICY OF WILLIAM PITT
.
II.
. .
.
1/4
Pitt and the Revolution. Pitt's financial policy before 1789. Connection between Pitt's financial policy and the suspension of cash payments. Sketch of this policy. Mr. Gladstone's The subsidies paid to the Allies. The rate at which speech.
Criticism of
............
Crisis of 1797.
Pitt's
CHAPTER
unwise treatment of the Bank. Advances to Government forbidden by the Bank Charter. Modification of this. Incessant loans from 1793 to Disturbances among 1797. Exportation and drain of specie. the Country Banks, Panic due to the landing of a handful of French Troops. Policy of the Bank directors. Suspension of cash payments. Decision of the Privy Council. Message from the King to Parliament. Position of the Bank and parliamentary debates.
The Bank
Restriction Act.
CHAPTER
RESULTS OF THE BANK RESTRICTION ACT
IV.
2O3
Pitt's caution. Results of the Act between 1797 and 1808. Increase in the issues and in Prevailing errors on the subject the advances to Government. Results of the Act in reference to
Economic
Addington.
Parliamentary debates. Theory stated by Speeches of Fox and Lord King. The economists and the influence of excessive issues on the foreign exchanges
theories.
of gold.
Crisis of 1800.
Theories of Walter Boyd, Thornton, Lord King and Ricardo on the depreciation of a paper currency. Monetary crisis in Ireland. Parliamentary inquiry. Opinion held by the Directors
of the
Bank
of Ireland.
CHAPTER
THE BULLION COMMITTEE AND THE
V.
BULLION
REPORT
2l8
Appointment of the Bullion Committee. The Berlin Decree and the Spanish Wars. Speculation due to these events. Imprudent policy of the Bank. Crisis of 1809. Appointment The Bullion Report. Comparison of a Committee of Inquiry. The problem put before the with the Irish Crisis in 1804. Discussion on the depreciation of the Bullion Committee. notes. Discussion on the effects of increasing the note issue. DisDiscussion on the effects of decreasing the note issue.
xxxii.
CONTENTS
PAGE
cussion on the policy to be adopted with regard to the Issues. Conclusions of the Bullion Report. Discussion of the Bullion Report in Parliament. Speeches of Horner, Rose, Thornton, Vansittart and Canning. Horner's resolutions thrown out, those of Vansittart passed.
CHAPTER
REPEAL OF THE BANK RESTRICTION ACT
VI.
235
Lord King's
circular to his tenants. The Stanhope Act. The Act of 1819. Great drain of specie in 1818 and 1819. Appointment of Committees to consider the advisability of resuming cash payments. Reports of the Committees of both Houses. Proposals of Lord Lauderdale. Debates in Parliament Robert Peel's Speech on the alteration of the standard. The Act of 1819, its chief provisions. Resumption of cash payments.
:
VOLUME
INTRODUCTORY
CHAPTER
Difference between their subject matter.
II.
18191903.
245
Volume II. and Volume I. in respect to The possibility of omitting references to Necessity for dealing in one general history in Volume II. part of the present Volume with the working of the Bank under the existing system. The Act of 1826 regarded as one of the causes of the Act of 1844. Method adopted in examining the
intention of Peel's Act.
PART
CHAPTER
The
I.
248
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
The Inquiry The regulation
II.
xxxiii.
PAGE
256
Banks.
CHAPTER
THE CRISIS OF 1836-1839
III.
263
Extensive Condition of public opinion from 1833 to 1836. speculations at home. Foreign Loans. The Bank's policy during this Period. Rapid fall in the Bank reserve in 1836. Its causes President Jackson's monetary reform in America Refusal of Bank to re-discount paper the crisis in Ireland. Outbreak of the already discounted by a joint-stock bank. It spreads throughout England. crisis in Lancashire. Firm Return of the policy of the Bank, the crisis apparently over. The crisis in 1838 on the Continent and in the United States. Bank of Belgium suspends payment. Remarkable imprudence of the Directors of the Bank of England. Violence of the crisis The Bank on the verge of ruin. on the London Market. Painful and prolonged Assistance of the Bank of France.
: :
CHAPTER
Active
1839.
IV.
.
tendencies (a) The Banking Principle Its chief exponents, Tooke, Fullarton and Wilson. The essence of the Banking Principle, Current Criticism and dangers of the theory, errors on this subject. (b) The Currency Principle : Statement of the Currency PrinThe theoretical and practical errors involved. Success of ciple. Need to examine the practical form the Currency Principle.
:
movement for reform aroused by the Numerous schemes proposed. Two main
:
crisis of
1830^*.
{.^ */
.
under which
England.
CHAPTER
V.
THE CURRENCY PRINCIPLE AND THE PROMOTORS OF THE ACT OF 1844 (LORD OVERSTONE, COLONEL TORRENS, o. w. NORMAN) Lord Overstone, the chief promoter of the Act of 1844, his " Reflections Sugpamphlets and his theories Analysis of the
.
.
278
xxxiv.
CONTENTS
PACK
:
gested by Mr. Palmer's Pamphlet." Lord Overstone and the Bank of England Criticism of the organisation of the Bank. (a) Full publication of accounts, (b) Suggests two reforms Division of Bank into two departments. Colonel Torrens' plan. Bank obliged to purchase bullion at a fixed price. Lord Overstone and the country banks of issue Numerous disadvantages in the multiplicity of banks of issue. Need for strengthening the central monopoly of issue. Summary of the proposals of the advocates of the Currency Principle.
:
CHAPTER
SIR
VI. 284
ACT
OF
1844
Peel's theories on Banking. His two Speeches in the House of Commons. His Memorandum to the Cabinet. Peel's rejection of free competition as regards note issue. Argument from reason. Argument from experience ; disastrous Necessity for a part played by country banks. central bank of issue Reasons why this should be the Bank of England. The Act of 1844 passed without opposition. Chief As regards the Bank of England. As provisions of the Act. Limitation and gradual regards the country banks of issue. loss of the right of issue. Ricardo's plan for a national bank. Points of likeness to Robert Peel's Act. Its uselessness.
:
PART
THE BANK OF ENGLAND
INTRODUCTION
II.
IN
ORDINARY TIMES
295
The weekly Bank Return. The works of Clare and Raffalovich. Outward form of the return. Comparison with a French The separation of the Bank into two departbalance sheet. ments The issue department and the banking department. The plan both dangerous and artificial.
;
SECTION
I.
......
cheques.
:
297
Ihe amount of the issue and the part played by The issue of notes from an administrative standpoint.
Manu-
Destruction of all notes returned to the facture of the notes. Bank. Average circulation of the notes. The issue of notes from a legal standpoint. Rules governing the issue Except for a fixed amount, the issue to be against gold. Rights of issue held by certain country banks. Present position of the question. Authorised issue much reduced since 1844, the actual issue much less than the authorised issue. Statistics. The issue and the circulation. Quantity of notes in circulation less during the last ten years than the metallic reserve of the Bank. Explanation of the fact. The function of cheques. The Clearing Houses in London and the provinces. Consideration of the English system of note issue. The English system indefensible
CONTENTS
xxxv.
from a theoretical standpoint. The practical aspect of the question. Comparison between the Act of 1844 and the German Laws of 1875 and 1899.
SECTION
II.
MM
305
of
is
like any England publish a weekly balance sheet. This balance sheet, like all others, states the liabilities and the assets. The liabilities of the banking department. ProAmount of the Capital Comprietors' Capital and the Rest. parison with that of the Banks of France and of Germany.
;
Bank
its amount. Public Deposits. Amount and Other Deposits. The current account of fluctuations of these. the bankers. Advantage of publishing a separate statement of
The
Banking Department.
assets
are
divided
(a)
Government
Other Securities, (c) Notes, (d) Gold and Silver Coin. The two first constitute the investments of the Bank, and the two last its reserve.
Securities, (6)
CHAPTER
I.
(&)
Other
securities.
these.
Uncertainty
......
Average since 1844
312
Its fluctuations.
and variations. Periodic fluctuations. The Autumnal Drain. The Bank Rate and the Market Rate. The Bank Rate before 1844. Competition between the Bank and the Market between 1844 and 1878. Since 1878 the Bank Rate in London always above the Market Rate. Position different in the Provinces. Frequent fluctuations in the Bank Rate. Comparison with the chief European Banks. Bad effect of the fluctuations in the discount rate upon trade. Explanation of the fluctuations of
the
Special character of the London English Bank Rate. Market. Artificial character of the Act of 1844. Lack of fluidity in the securities held by the Bank of England.
CHAPTER
II.
THE RESERVE.
The Nature of the reserve. What is meant by the term. The bank reserve reserve as the keystone of English credit. of the reserve. It's and the reserve of the bankers. Amount normal fluctuations. The reserve in time of crisis. Question whether the suspension of the limit of issue was foreseen by Peel in 1844. Obscurity of the debates in Parliament. A letter
of Peel.
3 2I
for
reform (1873).
xxxvi.
CONTENTS
PART
III.
CHAPTER
THE
CRISIS
I.
PAGE
Failure of the harvests made necessary a large importation of grain and hence a large exportation of specie. Extensive speculation. The railway mania. The Crisis of 1847 and the Bank of England. Unfortunate effect of the Act of 1844 useless pressure on the Money Market the object of its promoters not attained as regards the Luckily restriction of the interior circulation in exact proportion to the of bullion. Unwise policy of the Bank its reserves export
: ; ; :
OF
33!
reduced to ^2,558,000. The crisis, allayed for a time, renewed with violence. Bank refuses to Large number of failures. make advances on Government securities. Panic produced by
this policy,
hoarding of notes and coin, increase in failures. forced to choose between complete refusal to discount and suspension of the Act of 1844. Suspension of the Act of 1844. End of the crisis. Delay of Government to suspend Act until situation desperate. Letter from the Chancellor of the Exchequer to the Governor of the Bank. Conditions under which the suspension granted. Magic effect of the suspension. The knowledge that notes could be obtained removed the desire to have them. End of the crisis. Great services of the Bank to the public during the crisis. Results of the crisis. Parliamentary Debates. Speech of Sir Robert Peel his opinion of the effects of the Act ; degree in which its object attained modifications to be made in the Act the joint-stock banks and the metallic reserve. The Inquiry of 1848. Report of the ComRemarkable Report of the mittee of the House of Commons.
Bank
Lords' Committee.
CHAPTER
THE CRISIS
II.
OF
1857
of
:
343
a contrast to the the crisis of 1857 preceding one. Cautious policy of the Bank during the Crimean War. Condition of the market during 1856 and more than The crisis of 1857 in America. The three causes half 1857. Their influence felt also in Europe. of the American crisis. (a) The great discoveries of gold, (b) The extension of railways, development of banking and the abuse of credit (r) The facilities. Extraordinary number of failures in America. The ruin of American banks led to that of a number of English banks. The Bank of England the only source of discount in Reduction of the Bank Reserve on the United Kingdom. November 12, to ^384,114. Assistance given by the Bank to commerce in anticipation of the suspension of the Act. The Letter of the Chancellor of the suspension of the Act. Exchequer : text of this letter. Bank issues ,2,000,000 notes the maximum put into the statutory limit in excess of circulation only ^928,000. Comparison between the crisis of 1857 and the crises of 1847 and 1866 with reference to the
Sudden outbreak
CONTENTS
xxxvii.
suspension of the Act of 1844. A Bill of Indemnity had to be The Inquiry of 1858 and the causes of the crisis of passed. l8 S7 (0 Unprecedented extension of International Trade, (2) Excessive importation of precious metals, (3) Remarkable
:
development of banks of
credit.
CHAPTER
THE CRISIS or 1866
III.
353
Economic
War
in the
U.S.A.
Influx of
Immedigold into Europe. Disturbance of the cotton trade. ate causes of the crisis of 1866. (i) The rage for limited companies, (2) The practice of financing, (3) Bad customs adopted by certain banks with regard to deposits. The crisis of 1866. The crisis of 1864 and the crisis of 1866. A retarded liquidation. The failure of Overend and Gurney. Black Friday. Remarks on the firm of Overend and Gurney and the causes of its collapse. Unprecedented panic resulted from the failure of this firm. Advances amounting to four millions made by the Bank in a single day (Friday, May n). Suspension of the Act of 1844. End of the crisis. Part played by the Bank. The Act suspended on the evening of Friday, May n. Announcement of suspension allayed panic, fresh outbreak a few days later, flow of deposits to the Bank, no additional issue required. Great services rendered by the Bank, Advances amounting to ^12,225,000 made in five days. Results of the crisis of 1866. Excitement aroused by the crisis outside England. Lord Clarendon's circular. Heavy losses at home. Some good effects of the crisis.
CHAPTER
THE CRISIS OF
1890
IV.
368
1890.
Causes of the
crisis.
Extensive specuThe Argentine the Argentine Republic. Land Banks and the cedulas. The Bank rate of discount. Reprehensible policy of the joint-stock banks. Incidents of the crisis. Failure of the Barings. Intervention of the Bank. The guarantee fund. Firm and successful policy of the Governor, Lidderdale. Importation of foreign gold. Assistance given by the Bank of France. Fate of the firm of Baring. Comparison between the crisis of 1890 and the preceding crises. Important differences. The Bank Reserve during the various crises. The The public crisis of 1890 stopped in time, the others were not. knew nothing of the crisis of 1890 until it was over.
xxxviii.
CONTENTS
PART IV.
GENERAL CONSIDERATION OF PEEL'S ACT PRESENT POSITION OF THE QUESTION-SCHEMES FOR REFORM.
CHAPTER
I.
PACK
370
Opposition to Act of 1844 re-awakened by the crisis of 1890. Numerous schemes for reform. Proposal of Mr. Goschen, then Chancellor of the Exchequer. Analysis of Mr. Goschen 's Criticism of existing system, speeches. (i) Insufficiency of central stock of gold, (2) Absence of elasticity in time of crisis. Plan for reform. Drawbacks to and advantages of Mr.
(i)
The plan
No
conditions
specified subject to
Advantages of the scheme. Increase of gold through the introduction of a new and convenient form of paper currency, and without resorting to the international Fate and results of Mr. Goschen 's scheme. gold market. Doubtful welcome given to his proposals. Little justification for opposition to i notes. The situation in 1825 and at Mr. Goschen 's proposals never drafted in the form of present. a Bill, but had the good effect of increasing the central stock
of gold.
CHAPTER
Change
in
II.
381
APPENDIX.
HISTORY OF THE RELATIONS BETWEEN THE BANK OF ENGLAND AND THE TREASURY
Relations of chartered banks of issue and the Public Finances. Various ways in which such banks pay for their Advantages gained by the English Government from privileges. the privileges granted to the Bank. Summary of these advantBusiness connected with the Treasury and the public ages Managemoney, the Administration of the national debt. ment of the revenues (a) The management of the revenues Modifications of The Act the Act of before 1834, (c) 1834, (b) made in the Act of 1834. Present position. Management of the The The Act of Paymaster General. Simple 1848. expenditure. and practical management of the accounts. The Administration The Bank and the administration of the national debt. The Act of 1751. The Act of 1834. of the permanent debt.
:
:
389
CONTENTS
xxxix.
PAGE
Deficiency bills and deficiency advances. The Bank undertakes not only the payment of interest, but also the administration of The Bank and the administration of the the national debt. floating debt (issue, circulation, redemption of exchequer bills and bonds and of treasury bills. The Act of 1709 and those The exchequer bills and bonds and the of 1834 an d J 866. treasury bills. Indemnity paid to the Bank in return for the administration of the permanent and floating debts.
CONCLUSION
402
SUPPLEMENTS
I.
Memorandum on Banking
to the Cabinet
407
.
II.
III.
Text of the Bank Charter Act, 1844 Ricardo's Plan for a National Bank, 1824
-4"
-4*7
429
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX
-447
VOLUME
I.
16401819.
OF THE V UNIVERSITY
OF
INTRODUCTION.
Importance and
Difficulties oi the Subject. Reasons why no History of the England has ever been written. Examination of Sources (a) Narrative sources and general works on Banking, (6) Official publications, Observations in reply to two criticisms likely (c) Pamphlets and tracts.
Bank
of
to be
made
oi
THE Bank
banks. 1
England
is
European national
Established in 1694, ^ nas seen tne great banks which preceded it disappear one by one and has witnessed the collapse of many later foundations. At the present day
it
still
many
points of
bank
in the world.
very slight study of English history shows the importance of this great institution to the Government and to the English nation. The loans made by the Bank
to
William
that position
all
and Queen Anne enabled England to regain among European nations which she had to appearances hopelessly lost. The English Government
III.
all
the eighteenth
1 The term national bank seems well-suited to those great establishments for the supply of credit facilities, such as the Banks of France, Spain, and Germany, which are, in fact, national institutions, performing, as they do, important services for the Government and for the public, and possessThe expression " national " ing more or less exclusive privileges of issue. bank also enables us to distinguish these institutions from genuine State
banks.
of the
South Sea
""Bubble. 1
Finally, not only the establishment of public credit by the formation of the permanent debt, but the organisation of the floating debt, and even the conversion
Such
forgotten by the London commercial The Government. world, English which was until 1694 a P rev to usurers and without even a safe place of deposit for its money, has shown its gratitude 2 to the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street by the eagerness with which it has defended her in all times of danger.
of the national debt, are in the main the services as these have not been
work
of the
Bank.
Much has changed since these far-distant days. The machinery of credit has extended, and big loans have become customary. Now, when a Government wishes to borrow it makes direct appeal to the public, and individuals are familiar with more than one important bank which will
discount their
bills,
or keep
their
deposits
in
complete
But even to-day the importance of the Bank to security. the Government and to the public is hardly less striking than it was formerly. The Bank of England is, in fact, both the banker of the Treasury and the guardian of the gold reserve upon which the whole fabric of British commercial credit rests; it is this combination which makes it at once so powerful and so unique.
Certain questions naturally arise in respect to such a longestablished and remarkable institution Why, and in what
:
manner was
its
it held during long existence ? What changes has it undergone ? How has it acquired its present form ? What, in short, has been its history? And this history proves to be so varied, so it
founded
What
position has
and
relate
it
is
irresistible,
indifferently good or even very imperfect. This being so, it will be asked why the history of the Bank of
England
A nickname
given to the
Bank on account
of
its
site.
INTRODUCTION.
as Mr. Stephens difficulty of such a task?
Is
it,
1
clusions which
may
be deduced will
probability be
It is perhaps this to an answer question. suggest It is besides, only fair to remark that although the Bank's history has never been written, it has at any rate been
in 1797, and is the Bank of England, from the Estabof lishment of that Institution to the present day. The book consists of no small pages, and fulfils sufficiently well its author's intention, which was to give some account of the
attempted more than once. The first work of the kind was written
called
The History
Bank, together with a concise history of the crises through which it had passed. The pamphlet is obviously inspired by the events of 1797, with which it is chiefly concerned; it
followed by a copy of the charter and of the principal regulations of the Bank. The next account which I have been able to discover is an 2 anonymous pamphlet containing 62 pages, and called The
is
and Adventures of the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street^ containing an account of her numerous intrigues
Life
See A Contribution to the Bibliography of the Bank of England. The " of the Bank from the scientific standpoint ... has yet to be " if " written." anyone Possibly," the author continues (p. ix., preface), endowed with the necessary qualifications for writing a full and exact history of the Bank of England, the' literary skill to deal with the vast mass of material, and the historical imagination to give it form and consistency, has ever contemplated the task, he may have been deterred by its magnitude, by the reflection that it must embrace a great deal of the commercial and most of For the financial history of the country during more than two centuries. the literature on the subject is enormous, and as the information it contains has never been collected and exhibited in a systematic form, it is the more necessary that record of it should be preserved." Most likely if I had carefully estimated the difficulty of the task before me four years ago, I should not have entered upon it unprovided as I am with any of the qualifications demanded by Mr. Stephens, and writing about a country and in a language which, alien to one another, are alike foreign
1
history
to
me. The charm of difficulty, or rather the natural presumption of youth, induced me to persevere. But this presumption, great though it may be, has not blinded me to the weaknesses and omissions in this I have, attempt. therefore, called Mr. Stephens to witness to the difficulties inherent in the subject, out of no feeling of pride at success, but in the hope that the kindly reader will allow me the excuse of extenuating circumstances.
2
The author
of
it
is
probably
W.
Reid.
with various eminent statesmen of the past and present times. This purports to be an autobiography, but apart from its curious form the contents are wretchedly poor. The author, who is an ardent supporter of the Bank, thinks himself witty when he calls Louis XIV. Louis the Gascon,
1
Bank as being received by William III. in Kensington. When he refers to the newly opened branches, he compares the Bank to Sarah giving birth to a child in her old age, and he is guilty of a thousand other like absurdities. The book is one of the coarsest and dullest I have ever met with. It was published in 1832.
or describes the
his palace at
In 1848 Francis' History of the Bank of England 2 appeared. Mr. Stephens has accurately summed up its " good qualities and its defects by describing it as popular." It is certainly not a scientific work, and the writer lived at a time when those who wrote for the mass of the public were too much influenced by the author of the Trois MusMr. Francis has, however, the credit of being quetaires. a pioneer in a difficult task. His position at the Bank enabled him to give various interesting details, and I must confess to having read his book carefully and with advant-
age.
The one really scientific work which has been published on the history of the Bank of England unfortunately deals
with but a very small portion of that history.
I
refer to
Nine Years of the Bank of England,* by Thorold Rogers. It is no small praise to say that this book is a worthy companion to the same author's great work, A HisIt is a matter for some tory of Agriculture and Prices. regret that in this book, which was written but shortly before his death, Mr. Rogers has not dealt with the period leading up to the Act of 1694, an d that he begins with the
The
First
of the Bank of England. This, as he explains in the preface, is due to the fact that the work was taken up accidentally. During researches connected with his History of Agriculture and Prices, he came across
actual creation
2 s
pp. 6
and
cit.
13.
Loc.
INTRODUCTION.
a
weekly
register
lyth,
of
in
the
to
prices
statistical
of
Bank
lyth,
stock
from
this
August
register
1694,
September
1703;
was found
apothecary
paper published
In
by
City
called
Houghton.
some short articles on passing events, contained a list of the prices of corn and other commodities on the markets of different English towns, as well Mr. as a great variety of notices and advertisements.
Rogers applied to the Bank for an explanation of some obscure points, and found to his surprise that they possessed no record of the prices of the shares before 1705. He consequently determined to publish this register with comments;
this
of the
book
in question,
and
explains why it is limited to the brief period of nine years. 1 If it was true, as Mr. Rogers alleges, that the political and financial history of the Bank of England had never been
written, he
filled
up These
to 1703, the last date referred to in his work. are, to the best of knowledge, the only
my
works
especially devoted to the subject. It is a curious fact that for a complete history of the Bank of England we must look, not to a book primarily concerned with the Bank itself, but to one dealing with banking in
general, that is, to Macleod's treatise on the Theory and 2 In this book the Scotch economist Practice of Banking. gives the most complete existing account of the subject,
especially with regard to the question of currency. Moreover, he supplies excellent analyses of the reports of Locke, Lowndes and Newton on the coinage question, and of the
Bullion Report and the debates relating to it. Unfortunof ately, Mr. Macleod wrote history less with the object theories of certain to supply proof discovering the truth than
for
which he was responsible, and of which he was for that value of very reason uncritical. This does not destroy the on the caution his work, but makes some part of necessary
the reader.
Another general
1 2
treatise
is
Lawson's History of Banking. 1 This book appears superform, but a more detailed study will show that, notwithstanding his stories of eccentric wills and celebrated frauds, of Quakers and adventurers, the author possesses a thorough knowledge of business and of the art of discussing
ficial in
a problem.
Lawson
is
who
There are also interesting historical chapters in Gilbart's 3 and Mr. Collins' 4 books on Banking, but there is no reference to the history of the
Bank
in
the best
known
of the
general works, Bagehot's Lombard Street. In addition to the histories mentioned above, and
among
of
number
of official
publications devotecf to
the
Bank
England, such as exist for all other English institutions, and which have greatly facilitated our study. These publications form a very complete series from the early nineteenth century, dating from the appearance in 1810 of the Bullion Report and the account of the preceding Inquiry. Since 1810 there have been numerous Committees and Reports on Banking. They have followed almost all the great crises which have shaken public credit to its foundations at
intervals during the nineteenth century. These reports are so valuable that the Bank of France has thought it worth while to have them translated. 7
6
The Parliamentary
official
publications.
debates 8 are no less important than the Some of the debates on banking in the
this point see the Appendix to Vol. II. of the present work. The last edition of this History, Principles and Practice of Banking. work was published in 1907. 4 The History, Law and Practice of Banking (1882). 5 Among these may be included La Banque d'Angleterre et les Banqnes d'Ecosse by Wolowski. This is a collection of studies, some of which are
3
London, 1850.
On
historical.
6
of the
The correspondence exchanged from time to time between the Chancellor Exchequer and the Governor of the Bank of England has also been
published. 7 Extraites des EnquStes anglaises sur la question des banques. Edited by MM. Coullet and Juglar. 8 vols., 1865. Parliamentary Debates from 1803 to the present time. Edited by Han,?,
sard.
INTRODUCTION.
English Parliament are unrivalled in their completeness. Among these may be instanced the debates on the Bullion Report, on the resumption of cash payments (1819), on the crisis of 1826, on the Act of 1844, on the crises of 1847 and
1857;
stone,
tne
course
of of
these
their
discussions,
finest
orators
like
some
speeches,
and the
problems raised were examined from an historical as well as from a theoretical and a practical point of view. Before 1803 the Parliamentary debates were only published in a fragmentary manner. The summaries in 1 Cobbett's Parliamentary History cannot however be neglected without them it would be impossible to study the South Sea crisis, or even the Act of Restriction. Another source of quite a different character, but affording valuable information, is the innumerable mass of pam;
bank,
2 Since then they publications began to appear about 1660. have never entirely ceased, and have always been especially plentiful at times of crisis, when every quack has a
is
The study of these pamphlets is particularly indispensable for the period from the middle of the seventeenth to the beginning of the nineteenth century. During this long
interval
owing
to the lack of
by means
of pamphlets.
period wrote in this form, in which appeared the studies of Petty, Child, and Locke, as well as those of Paterson, Godfrey, Chamberlain and everyone else w ho discussed 3 banking questions, from Cradocke to Sir Francis Baring. After the beginning of the nineteenth century it becomes
7
Parliamentary History of England from 1066 to 1803. Edited by Cobbett. 36 volumes. 2 There were some even before this date. s Many of the pamphlets devoted to the Bank of England are absurd or childish from an economic point of view, but none the less they have a vivid historical interest. They are often written in dialogue form.
io
an impossible and also a less useful task to look through all the pamphlets relating to the Bank. Impossible because of the excessive number of these productions, less useful because more complete works 1 are now obtainable in addition
to these publications.
is
so firmly established
was
carried on almost entirely in pamphlets. This account of authorities would be incomplete without a further reference to Stephens' work, A Contribution to the
Bibliography of the Bank of England." This is, as stated in the title, merely a contribution to the bibliography, not a complete list of books. The author has indeed omitted several interesting works, but he has at any rate taken the trouble to read those mentioned, and often to give in addiMr. Stephens has tion a short and able analysis of them. value of his work the increased by adding to the biblioworks on the English list of graphy a chronological national debt, and biographical notices of the founders of
the
Bank
of
England.
I should like to reply two criticisms which will probably be
:
anticipation
to
made with regard to this book, viz. been devoted (a) That too much space has
;
to
general
history that while claiming to write a history of the something like a history of England itself has
Bank, been
attempted.
issues
That the dispute as to the respective merits and regulated issues has been treated negligently and with a certain lack of interest.
(6)
of free
rather
The first criticism is perhaps justified as far as certain 3 minor questions are concerned, but on the whole we believe The history of a national bank must be it to be undeserved.
1 Among these may be included Lord been collected into a volume.
2
3
London, 1897.
Our excuse for this is the hope that the reader may be as much interested to hear about these questions as the author has been to write about them.
INTRODUCTION.
11
regarded as part of the general history of the country, and besides this, the creation of the Bank of England was so closely connected with political events, and was, indeed, so direct a result of some of these events that it cannot be described without taking them into account. Moreover, the Bank of England was distinguished at the outset from other
1 Continental banks by certain characteristic features introduced into banking operations by the goldsmiths; hence the importance of studying the business methods of these goldsmiths and their causes, which causes however, are purely historical. And further, the Bank when established did not
in its original position but secured further privileges, the explanation of this must be sought in political causes.
remain
and
of England was thus created for political was preceded by the goldsmiths and their banking methods, which again were due to political events and had received from them their peculiar form; it has been supported and attacked for political purposes. How then is
The Bank
It
reasons.
it
possible to avoid treating of general history in writing the special history of the Bank ? In particular, no understanding of the position and transactions of the Bank
during the first thirty years of its existence can be obtained without a knowledge of the events which preceded and accompanied its creation, and of the quarrels and prejudices, the Jacobite opposition, the political corruption, the hatred of the landed gentry for the commercial world,
midst of which England was then struggling. once this period was passed frequent references to general history became less necessary and we have avoided making them. The Seven Years' War, the American Revolution, the Crimean War, have been barely mentioned. But on the other hand, we have had to emphasise the economic revolution which transformed England from an agricultural into a commercial and industrial country, and also the wars with the French Republic and with Napoleon. At this point, indeed, general history becomes once again
in the
When
See below,
p.
80, etc.
12
Victimised by closely connected with that of the Bank. William Pitt's imprudence the Bank had to suspend cash payments in 1797, and was unable to resume them until four
years after Waterloo. The transformation of England into an industrial country, on the other hand, not only enabled Great Britain to resist Napoleon, but also produced an upheaval of the system of credit which had hitherto existed, and thus led to crises which brought the Bank of England
to the
verge of destruction.
But the necessity for purely historical discussion has proved a fruitful source of difficulty. In the first place, it has not been easy to decide which historical events must be included and which might be neglected. When this was
settled fresh difficulties arose with regard to the satisfactory combination of this historical information with economic discussions; in some cases it has seemed better to treat the history separately, and this has led to an apparent lack of unity in the book.
As regards the second probable criticism, that of neglecting in our discussion of the Act of 1844 the important controversy concerning freedom versus regulation of issues, we must acknowledge that we have here deliberately incurred the risk of blame. judged that a discussion of this question w ould over-burden without compensating 1 advantage, a book already long enough. If however we had to give an opinion on this unsolved problem, this opinion while favouring in theory the idea of a certain limitation of issues, would resemble the definition once given by Smile Augier in an unspoken answer to a speech There is a legend, says the dramatist, 2 of M. Emile Olivier. that a Minerva was discovered fragment by fragment in
We
it would be hard to say anyThis question, like many others of which people are beginning to weary, was formerly very fashionable, especially in France. Reviews, newspapers and economic societies gave it no peace, and the English crisis of 1866 aroused a famous controversy at the expense of the doctrine of liberty between Wolowski and Michael Chevalier. (The whole of this discussion, together with the articles and letters of the two economists, will be found in
thing new.
>>
d'Angleterre).
p. 289.
INTRODUCTION.
13
successive excavations over a considerable extent of country. Each of the fortunate discoverers caused the portion he had
found to be completed by a local sculptor, so that there were ten indifferent statues, each containing part of the masterpiece which was thus condemned to perpetual dis-
memberment.
The
tion
somewhat
of this nature ?
may
be an instance.
issues
ing
the
industry.
directors
accentuate some crises by preventeffective help to trade and Free issues may bring about other crises by en-
may
who
to
and ought
the prices of that this precaution has not been always observed. On the other hand the case of the Bank of France may be noted;
this institution,
in an ill-judged excess. No doubt bank w orking under the latter principle may be guided by the course of the exchange and the precious metals. But experience snows
are
enjoying what is practically complete freeof issue, has secured all the advantages of the system without falling into the excesses to which it might have led.
dom
We
may
in
fact
system for regulating issues is of more importance than the actual system adopted. In this as in other cases it may be
said that
it is a bad workman who finds fault with his tools. Hence we have attached less importance to the theoretical
its
practical working.
PART
I.
ENGLAND.
Political situation in
England about 1640. Financial difficulties of Charles I. Seizure of Bullion deposited by the merchants in the Tower. Serious results of this proceeding. It encourages the development of banking, but delays the establishment of a National Bank.
Reasons
for their success
and
Extension of English Trade. Projects for a National Bank. Pamphlets by Gerbier and Lamb. The return of the Jews, its influence upon banking. The Bankers and the Government of Charles II. The King's Foreign Policy. Dutch War. First Run on the Banks. Financial Relations between Charles II. and Louis XIV. Second Dutch War. Suspension of Exchequer payments. Results and criticism of this Policy.
BANKING, in the modern sense of the word, had no existence in England before the year 1640," writes Macleod. 1 This state of things might have gone on for a long time, for the merchants had acquired the habit of depositing their
bullion
less
"
and coin
felt for
at the
need
Tower, and there was therefore the mere banks of deposit. But an incident,
the precursor of the approaching internal struggles, hastened the appearance of bankers and of banking.
explain this incident more clearly, the political situabriefly recalled. Charles I., who was then King of England, had ascended the throne not only believing in the political theories of his father, but firmly determined to put them into practice. To enforce these ideas, which were based on the theory of divine right and hence of absolute
tion
To
must be
monarchy, a standing army was essential. And for the maintenance of this army money was required. The King
1
Macleod,
op.
cit.
(jrd ed.)
Vol.
I.,
p.
364.
ORIGIN OF BANKING
was resolved
to
IN
ENGLAND.
15
money, the Commons were resolved not to vote Things were at a deadlock as Charles was not long in realising. After dissolving two Parliaments and calling a third, he determined to dismiss this also and to summon no more. Thanks to the remarkable talents
have
it.
this
Wentworth, better known by his title of Strafford, England was able to live for eleven years under a system The great question throughout of absolute monarchy. these eleven years was how to get money. The solution of the problem was not easy. As Dr. Cunningham points out, Charles was more seriously in need than his father, and his requirements demanded both skill and invention.
of
1
Commons
kept a tight hold on the purse-strings and only granted concessions in the form of tenths and fifteenths, a method of taxation which disappeared after this period, yet they did at any rate vote him numerous subsidies according to
the custom which
source of revenue
monarchy.
had originated under the Tudors. This naturally declined under the absolute But the expenses so far from decreasing pro-
portionately, were increased by the necessity of keeping up the army which was urgently needed to strengthen the
system of absolute monarchy so painfully built up. It was thus important to invent a speedy remedy. One of the various methods of obtaining money was to grant monopolies under the pretence of developing the national industry, on which monopolies taxes were levied to com-
2 pensate the Crown for the decrease in Customs duties. But the device which was the most successful and which had the
consequences, was the illegal levying of a intended for use in emergencies, which is known in the listory of English taxation as Ship Money. This tax was levied as follows the English maritime unties were bound, in case of a naval war, to provide a certain number of ships for the defence of the coasts.
lost disastrous
: 1
The Growth
of
p. 217.
16
Money payments had sometimes been substituted for these The Lord-Keeper Finch was of the opinion that this ships.
tax
might be levied
issued
in time of
peace,
accordingly pretext that pirates were in the Channel, and that it was capturing English ships " the defence of the kingdom," and necessary to provide for " the safeguard of the sea." This tax brought in ^100,000 in the first year. Made covetous by this, the Government raised ,200,000 by the tax in the following year, extending 2 it to all towns, indiscriminately, whether maritime or not. In this way a tax which ought only to have existed in emergencies, and then to have fallen upon a limited number
of citizens,
under the
was
and throughout
the
illegality caused the a vigorous protest was made. John Hampden, whose name afterwards became famous, took it upon himself to dispute the legality of the tax. He was condemned by the Court of the Exchequer, though by a very small majority. This decision only increased the general irritation, for everyone could see, as Strafford did, that if taxes intended for the fleet might legally be levied without authority, there was no reason why it should not be equally legal to collect in a similar manner taxes intended for the army. This was the moment chosen by Charles to involve himself in fresh difficulties by provoking a religious crisis This affair, the details of which we need not in Scotland. 3 discuss, ended in civil war, and the maintenance of an army very soon exhausted the ill-supplied coffers of the royal 4 The Scotch army had no such anxieties, for exchequer.
it
1 For the assessment of this tax, see Davenant, Ways and Means of Supplying the War. Works, Vol. I., p. 37. 2 Dowell, History of Taxation in England, Vol. I., pp. 234, 263. 3 For the Scotch crisis, see Clarendon, History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England, Book II., Vol. I., pp. 137-218, in Macray's edition in 6 volumes; and John Hill Burton, History of Scotland, Vol. VI., Chaps. 68-72
It
cost ^300,000.
ORIGIN OF BANKING
and above
perty.
to rely
IN
ENGLAND.
17
all, by the confiscations of its opponents' proCharles had no resources of this kind he had still
;
delighted to find an excuse for summoning Parliament in an intercepted letter which contained, as he alleged, the proofs of an understand1 The said ing between the King of France and the Scotch.
He was
had actually been written. And in this conduct the King's enemies had only followed the traditional policy of Scotland, which was to apply to France for help in case of 2 Charles reckoned on the any quarrel with England. indignation aroused by this letter to produce a docile and
letter
generous Parliament. Parliament met in the early spring of 1640. The new assembly according to the testimony of a famous author, was more moderate and showed more respect for the rights of the Crown than any of its predecessors since the death
of Elizabeth.
But apparently
it
King
hastily dissolved it after a session lasting three months without giving it time to pass a single Act.
who
The need for money continued to be no less urgent. Taxation was inadequate to supply means to maintain an army and to repel an impending invasion and a loan was
To raise this the Government applied to the suggested. of Spain, the Pope, and the City of London. The King of Spain refused the request for ,400,000. The Pope King was not prepared to give effective assistance unless Charles would become a Catholic. The City, being definitely
opposed him. 3
to the
to
do nothing
to help
The
to
King
individuals.
make
was more successful in dealing with Certain persons in official positions agreed him loans, which in all amounted to ,60,000; the
1 This letter, which was addressed, but not despatched, to the King of ranee by the Scotch, is given in Mazure, Histoire de la Revolution d' Angle* terre, Vol. II., p. 405. 2 The converse was equally true. See a reference to an old proverb in
I.,
sc.
Then with Scotland first begin." Parliament was summoned, the city did however grant a small loan, though it was only paid by instalments.
When
i8
But amounts which were large for vanced large sums. individuals were nothing to a government in extremities.
was thus of but short duration, and new exmoney had to be devised. The first one suggested was not exactly new, it had formerly been a usual practice, and consisted merely in the debasement of the coinage. Tlie proposal was to coin ^300,000 of shillings, each containing three pennyworth of silver, with the motto, Exsurgat Deus, dissipentur inimici.* This proposal caused great indignation. According to Macleod it was most warmly opposed by Sir Thomas Rowe " in a noble argument, which might have been studied with 3 advantage two centuries later." But in spite of this noble protest, the Mint was ordered to coin the new money, and the Attorney-General drew up a proclamation announcing the intention. The King although he had declared that the debasement was inevitable, now sent Cottington and
The
relief
Vane to the City to promise that if the merchants .would grant the loan of ^200,000 which had been demanded so long before there should be no more talk of debasing the coinage. The Common Council at a specially summoned meeting, replied that it had no power to dispose of the citizens' money. Renewed orders were sent to the Mint.
When this was known general prices rose 10 per cent., and Charles gave way, having, as Mr. Gardiner 4 points out, drawn upon himself all the unpopularity of the measure, without gaining any of the immediate advantages which might have accompanied it.
/
His resources exhausted, and apprehensive of complete ruin, the King seized 130,000 in bullion which had been
History of England, Vol. IX., p. 169. were reserved for civilians, the soldiers according to Stafford's advice, were always to be paid in good money.
3
1
See Gardiner,
These new
shillings
(p. 366) probably refers to a remarkable speech by Sir Thomas This (A speech touching tlic alteration of Coin), published in 1641. speech is often confused with one made by Sir Robert Cotton before the Privy Council in 1626, and published in 1651 in Cottoni Posthunni.
Macleod
Rowe
<
ORIGIN OF BANKING
deposited
bullion
IN
ENGLAND.
19
in the Tower by the city merchants, This had come from Spain, and was to have been despatched to Dunkirk, then a Spanish port. The horror of the merchants may easily be imagined. This seizure apart from the immediate loss meant the ruin of the bullion trade which then flourished in London. They met at once and drew up a vigorous protest w hich they He answered that the step had only been sent to StrafTord.
7
r
taken in consequence of their refusal to lend money to the King. At length, after a whole day spent in argument,
Charles agreed to give back the money he had seized, in return for a loan of ^40,000, the Customs receipts being the security for the payment of interest and capital.
Before pronouncing judgment on the King's strange proceedings, his position must be remembered. It has been well summarised thus: "The enemy were proud and insolent,
the
disheartened,
the
country
.
.
.
mutinous and inclined to the rebels, and the court were all three." The actions of the King could only be the situation in which he found himself. Like explained by a drowning man clutching at straws Charles committed This folly after folly, each one more fruitless than the last. interpretation of his behaviour is confirmed by the fact that
in the case of the seizure of the bullion, as in
the earlier
debase the coinage, Charles dared not carry out his plans, and dishonour was all that he obtained. The
to
scheme
w as nevertheless an exceptionally serious matter, and had not even the excuse of a precedent. As Francis remarks 2 "If the short-sighted policy of the earlier kings of England had extorted money from the Jew and the Lombard, at least they borrowed from their English subseizure
r
jects;
it remained for the polished Charles to sully his fair fame by robbing them." It is only fair, however, to re-
mark
that as regards
"
subjects," the
"
polished Charles,"
him
Macleod,
p. p.
365.
21.
Op.
cit.,
20
city
reasonably enough, received him badly, refused to lend him money, showed no eagerness to 1 pay taxes, and in the approaching struggle were to be the strongest supporters of his enemies.
It
of the seizure.
consequences in which respect it is of supreme interest. It had two results which are in appearance contradictory (1) It led to the rise of banking. (2) It delayed the foundation of a national bank. will begin by a few remarks on the second point, to save returning to it later on. This seizure so affected the country that it was long before the people could consider the possibility of an official bank, on account of the difficulty of protecting the precious metals in it from the depredations of royalty. The behaviour of Charles II. did not tend to
:
We
More needs
to
first result,
the rise of
banking. In this respect the King's action had such important consequences that we have not scrupled to study the question from the beginning, ab ovo. This explains indeed
the starting point of the present work, a starting point which might otherwise seem to have but a slender connection with the subject.
We
to
the
history
of
the
development
of
AFTER such an experience the merchants could no longer think of entrusting their money to the Tower. They were
own
reduced to keeping it themselves under the charge of their But the Civil War broke out, a clerks and employees. warlike spirit seized upon everyone, and amongst others
1
Mayor and
conduct."
This, at least, was what the King alleged, when he summoned the Lord " Coat and the Sheriffs for their neglect to pay the taxes of
See Gardiner,
loc.
cit.
DEVELOPMENT OF BANKING.
21
upon the cashiers, who went off to join one or other of the opposed armies, taking their masters' money with them. It was a run of ill-luck, especially as even the more peaceful clerks were not more scrupulous, and secretly lent out to the
goldsmiths at the rate of 4d. a day the sums entrusted to them. The goldsmiths inspired universal confidence. And consequently it soon occurred to the merchants that since their cashiers had treated them no better than their king, it would be both safer and more profitable to deposit their money directly with these goldsmiths. The country gentlemen very soon followed the example of the merchants,
and, seeing their homes exposed to all the dangers of civil war, were only too glad to entrust their rents to the goldsmiths even without receiving interest. Thus rapidly and with but little trouble the goldsmiths found themselves in
possession of considerable sums.
new
field of
to
business of a
OF THE GOLDSMITHS.
The business
carried on
it
scrupulously honest. In the first place along with their former trade as (a) 2 goldsmiths which many of them did not at once abandon, they adopted very readily, thanks to their knowledge of 3 Charles coins, the extremely lucrative business of exchange. I. who let slip no opportunity of making money, had indeed
See on this point a most valuable though very short pamphlet (it conThe Mystery of the New-Fashioned Goldsmiths or only 8 pages) Bankers discovered (1676). This booklet, which is adverse to the Goldsmiths, gives a very interesting account of their transactions. See also Macpherson, Annals of Commerce, Vol. II., p. 427, etc., and various other works which we shall mention in the course of this study.
tains
:
Maitland states that even in his time many important bankers kept a Maitland's History of goldsmith's shop in combination with their bank. London was published in 1739.^
Copernicus in his Traite de la monnaie, maintains that the state of the coinage which was deplorable in his time, served only to bring profit to the See Deschamps, Cours de doctrines economiques, 1897-98. goldsmiths.
3
22
debarred them from this occupation by declaring it to be a Crown monopoly, and reviving the office of royal ex1 But this office disappeared with the King, and changer. during the revolution the goldsmiths resumed the business of exchange, which was the more profitable since the coins struck in these disturbed times were very unequal in weight. They sometimes varied by as much as 3d. an ounce and many of them were heavier than the foreign coins of equivalent values. The goldsmiths did what is always done under such conditions; they put aside all the good coins, with a view to exportation. When it is remembered that Parliament about this time ordered the coinage of halfcrowns to the value of seven millions, it will easily be seen what profits were to be gained from this business alone.
only advantage which the goldsmiths deknowledge of precious metals; they were on all sides of debasing the coinage. It accused expressly seems likely that these accusations were not without truth. remarks * " If One of the founders of the Bank of
this the
Nor was
England
money
of the nation
with the goldsmiths had been deposited in the Bank four cr five years past, it had prevented its being so scandalously clipped, which one day or the other must cost the nation one and a half millions or two millions to repair it." And
the founders of the
for
Bank
of
in their accusations.
One
opponents says
3
:
"
As
the
them,
goldsmiths, no one expects any reformation from or that anything will make them honest but a
catchpole."
This office was a very ancient one. Its holder had to buy bullion with to exchange coins of one metal for those of another, and also to exThe arrangement appears to have change foreign and English coins. hindered trade, and hence Henry VIII. abolished the office in 1539, on the advice of Sir Thomas Gresham. Charles I. revived it in 1627, on the pretence of preventing the shameful debasement of the coinage, and conferred it upon the Earl of Holland for 21 years. (Ruding, op. cit., pp. 383-385). 3 Godfrey, A short account of the Bank of England.
gold,
1
Remarks on the proceedings of the Commissioners for putting into execution an Act passed last session for Establishing a Land Bank. 1696, pp.
44. 45-
DEVELOPMENT OF BANKING.
But whatever were the
profits
23
made by
of their transactions as exchangers, they carried on another business which brought in yet larger gains, and through
which they introduced banking into England. We have seen how, thanks to the uncertainties of (b) war and the dishonesty of some of the cashiers, a considerable capital had been collected in the hands of the goldsmiths. This capital, which they received at a very low rate, or even for nothing, they used for the discount of bills
The profitable nature of these for loans at high rates. transactions induced the goldsmiths to encourage the deposit
and
with them by offering good interest and by the depositors to withdraw their money without allowing
of spare
notice.
in
money
This policy succeeded beyond all expectations, and the course of a few years the citizens had generally
1
Receipts were given for these deposits, which, under the title of goldsmiths' notes, soon circulated better than the Nor was actual coins whose scarcity they often supplied. this usage a temporary one, for even in 1696, during the
crisis
due
Davenant 3
tells
All great dealings were us that in the absence of coins, transacted by tallies, bank bills, and goldsmiths' notes." Goldsmiths notes must thus be regarded as the earliest form of bank-notes issued in England. It is not surprising, in view of these profitable transactions, that the goldsmiths grew rich with prodigious
"
speed.
1
Sir Dudley North, on his return to London in 1680, after several years' absence, was surprised to find everyone depositing their money with the goldsmiths. He could not reconcile himself to such new customs, more especially as on the one occasion when he had the misfortune to entrust ^50 to a See the life of Dudley North, htf* banker, he chanced to select a bankrupt. his brother Roger, in The Lives of the Norths (ed. by A. Jessop, 1890), Vol.
II., p. 174.
"
II.,
Chap. V.
II., p.
161.
24
such a reputation on the London market 1 that people would have trusted them with all the money in the kingdom. " And they then first came to be called Bankers." This immense prosperity naturally aroused some envy. And the conduct of the new bankers furnished excuse for numerous attacks. They were not only accused of debas3 ing the coinage, but also of a succession of other misdeeds,
and this especially after they began to lend money to the Government. These accusations are expressed in the
Mystery of the new-fashioned Goldsmiths, and, indeed, in most of the other economic pamphlets of the period. In the first place, it was alleged that they lent money at exorbitant rates, and that they asked 33 per cent, or even more, whilst the legal rate was 6 per cent.* Complaint was made also of the inadequate security which they offered to 5 depositors. According to Godfrey, two or three millions
1
The
of these goldsmiths.
Mr. Collins supplies some details about the early London bankers in a chapter of some interest, the only one in his History and Practice of Banking which can be so described (Chap. IV., pp. 39-59. The Early London Bankers). Amongst other things he gives a list of people who had deposits with Sir Francis Child. We find among the number Cromwell, Nell Gwyne, Churchill (afterwards Duke of Marlborough), William III., and so on (see pp. 49 and The firm still exists. Mr. Collins has indeed obtained most of his 50). information from a study by one of its members, Mr. F. G. Hilton Price, who supplies interesting details about his own and other firms of goldsmiths. See A Handbook of London Bankers, with some account of their predecessors,
the early Goldsmiths.
Some amusing anecdotes will also be found in an article by Disraeli, Usurers of the Seventeenth Century (see Curiosities of Literature, pp. 228The stories are well told, and without pretence to scientific knowledge, 233).
like all the
volume contains.
goldsmiths and their London establishments are given in a book by one of their descendants, Mr. J. Biddulph Martin, The Grasshopper in Lombard Street. The grasshopper was the sign It also formed part of of a banking house in Lombard Street (now No. 68).
More
Sir
Thomas Gresham's
coat-of-arms.
Finally, for the sake of completeness, we will mention a short pamphlet by Mr. A. F. Baker, Banks and Banking, which gives a brief summary of the history of the principal London banks.
2
*
Compare Macleod,
op.
cit.,
p. 367.
See above, p. 22. 4 Bank of Credit: or the usefulness and security of the Bank of Credit examined in a dialogue between a country gentleman and a London merchant, An analysis of this pamphlet is given below (p. 50, et seq.). p. 18.
5
It is
sum
the
money belonging
to the goldsmiths
II.
DEVELOPMENT OF BANKING.
had been
lost
25
the disappearance of their clerks. Finally, the goldsmiths their than to the safety of their more attention to paid profits made loans to and investments, persons of no commercial
solidity.
This accusation
of the
at
any
rate is
Bank
*'
It
had
its
The Bankers
Venice did just as our Bankers have done here, they got mens' money into their hands at interest, and used it (as was
necessary) to their best advantage, that they might make a better profit of their money than the interest they paied, they
lent
it
Government to interfere in the matter. These accusations apparently contained elements of 2 truth, and all this serves to explain why, although the
goldsmiths introduced banking into England, they did not succeed in adequately fulfilling the functions of a genuine
later
on
Bank
of
Eng-
land; supported as it was by the State, was able to avoid the mistakes of its predecessors.
this institution
have now described the introduction of banking into England; it remains to observe its development under the successive governments of Cromwell and of Charles II. This development was favoured by a number of economic and political events which we shall proceed to describe, and
the importance of the goldsmiths was increased by the fact that they began to make loans to the Government.
We
We
Republic
and
more unity
1 A Large Model of a Bank (1678), p. 40. The author of the pamphlet about banking called England's Glory, which was published in 1694, and is often quoted, borrowed largely from Lewis. 3 The goldsmiths published an answer to these attacks, under the curious title of Is not the hand of Joab in all this? or, An Enquiry into the grounds " The Mystery of the new-fashioned Goldof a late pamphlet, entitled, smiths." This second pamphlet contains 17 pages. Unfortunately, it is not nearly so good as the first. There is nothing of interest in it. The author denies the accusations brought against the goldsmiths, and in particular (p. 4), i, their crimes; 2, their insecurity.
26
account and to avoid repetition, \ve shall defer the question of State loans until we come to the reign of Charles II. Moreover, it was only in this reign that such loans
to the
became frequent.
SECTION
I.
THE
and more
carrying trade,
and
finally,
to
the liberal
policy
which
opened England's gates to a race pre-eminently commercial, which had been ignominiously despoiled and ultimately
banished several centuries earlier. This commercial prosperity naturally favoured the development of banking, and in 1651 we may note the appearance of the first work which recommended the establishment of a bank. It was called Some considerations of the two grand staple commodities of England, and is only nine pages long. It is written by Sir Balthazar Gerbier, The two staple the author of several economic tracts. 2 in these is in trade the commodities are fish and cloth
1
;
is
how
to
attract
is
to
England.
The
:
question
of
the
fishing
trade
1 The complete title is Some considerations of the two grand stable commodities of England, and on certain establishments wherein the Public good is very much concerned. Humbly presented to the Parliament by Sir Balthazar Gerbier, Kt. London, printed by I. Mab and A. Coles, 1651. This pamphlet has sometimes been referred to, but has not hitherto been honoured by an analysis, though it has at least the merit of novelty in default of other good
qualities.
3
P- 3-
27
With respect to the trade in and cites the example of France, Gerbier of manufacture cloth, this established which industry at Sedan, and was afterwards able
to
supply half Europe. Moreover in order to " bank of furnish credit facilities to English business, a " ought to be set up in London. Gerbier points payment out the advantages other countries had gained from such institutions, and in particular he believes, for he is frankly
mercantilist, that the capital of various foreign traders might be attracted in this way, and that a great benefit would result
Some
Protector. In this case the author's principal object is to advocate the establishment of a bank. He enumerates the advantages derived by the Dutch from theirs. Of these eight are important, and he considers that similar benefits, the chief being the increase
of
national capital
and the
reduction of the rate of interest, will be felt in England as soon as the bank is founded. Shortly afterwards Lamb issued a proposal in the form of a petition to Parliament.
to
it,
For the question of the fishing trade and the importance then attached not only from a commercial standpoint but also as regards the main;
fleet, see, among modern authors, Cunningham, The Growth of English Industry and Commerce (Early and Middle Ages, p. 443) Motley, Dutch Republic (Vol. I., p. 43); and among contemporary writers, H. in Trade Increased Robinson, England's Safety (1641), p. 16; John Smith, England's Improvement Revived (1673), p. 262. There was a series of laws, dating from Henry VIII. 's time, to protect the fisheries, and especially the herring fisheries. The introduction of bounties was also advocated. See C. Reynal, The true English Interest (1674), p. 28. It is difficult to realise the importance attached to this trade. Dr. Cunningham remarks that it was believed to be the basis of Dutch prosperity. It is with regret that we limit our discussion to this note. We may add however, that the Navigation Act was evidently directed against the naval supremacy of Holland. (The Act was passed in 1651.) And similarly, the war of 1652 was due rather to commercial rivalry than to the relationship between the Stuarts and the Prince of Orange. See Morley, Cromwell, p.
tenance of a
336,
latter
a
work
p.
9.
is
full of
The of British Policy (Vol. II., Chap. I.). original opinions and of interesting, though rather conthe
fused, detail.
Compare
Bank
of Lyons.
28
but there
is
no
other countries, must have exercised considerable influence on the development of banks in England. I refer to the
return of the Jews. The return of the
]ews4o England.
Its influence
on
banking. Spanish Jews on the development of Dutch commerce is well known. The influence of the Jews at Venice was no less marked. 1 It was two Jews who first (in 1400) obtained the authority of the Senate to found a bank in the strict sense of the word. Their success was so great that many Venetian nobles established rival institutions. Abuses followed which, combined with monetary difficulties, determined the Government to estab2 lish the Bank of Venice. The same influence must have made itself felt in England.
effect of thes influx of
The
In other words, when and for what But at what date ? reason were the Jews authorised to return to England ? it is not altogether will proceed to consider this question
We
easy to answer
It is
it.
attempted
1
England.
Venice.
3
Macleod, Dictionary of Political Economy, p. 216, article Bunk of This dictionary which if finished, might have been of inestimable
It
was published
p. 75.
in
1863.
See above,
p. 25,
and below,
3 Cromwell's best known historians say little on this point. Morley and Carlyle devote little more than a page to it, and confine themselves to an appreciation of the event. See Oliver Cromwell, pp. 433-434, and Letters and Goodwin (History of the Commonwealth, Vol. Speeches, p. 175, Vol. IV. IV., Chap. XVII.), who devotes a chapter to the subject, does not tell us much more. Interesting information will be found in Gardiner, History of the Commonwealth and Protectorate, Vol. II., p. 30; in Leti, Storia et memorie sopra la Vita di Ol. Cromwell, Vol. II. and especially in a pubGuizot lished lecture by Mr. Wolf, Resettlement of the Jews in England. may also be consulted with advantage, Hisloire de la Re"publique d'Angleterre, Vol. II., pp. 154-157.
;
OF THE
UNIVERSITY
OF
29
unfavourable to them, partly on account of the biblical spirit which then prevailed, and partly because of the services rendered by them in Holland, a country which the English of this period constantly set before them as a model. Thus Gardiner mentions 1 the publication of a pamphlet about this time, in which in order to prove the importance of Dunkirk, it is stated that the Jews were prepared to give 60,000 to ,80,000 in return for the toleration of a syna-
gogue
there, and that such permission would attract all the Portuguese merchants from Amsterdam, from which a still 2 The Amsterdam merchants greater benefit would result. had not expected such demonstrations of sympathy. They took the initiative, and two of them presented a petition in
1649 to Fairfax and the Council, for the revocation of the banishment of the Jews. 3 Another petition is referred to by some historians. Certain Jews had asked for the repeal of the laws passed against them, and on condition that the Bodleian Library was made over to them, together with permission to convert St. Paul's Cathedral into a synagogue, they undertook
to
according broken off because the parties could not agree as to the price, the English Government asking eight millions or ^"800,000. It is unfortunate as far as concerns the authenticity of this
tale, that
others.
by the
historians
are inade-
Gardiner, loc. cit. ; see also Historical Review, July, 1896, p. 485. For a similar opinion, see a letter from Major Whalley to Thurloe. Thurloe's Papers, Vol. IV., p. 308.
2
3 See Clarke Papers, Vol. end of Wolf's Resettlement.
II., p.
172, note a.
This petition
is
given at the
The
refers to Thurloe.
historians in question are Francis and Goodwin. Francis (p. 24) According to his habit he mentions neither volume nor
page, in which indeed he is wise, for whenever he departs from this custom his references are false. Goodwin (Vol IV. p. 246, note), who does not himself believe the petition to be authentic, refers to Salmonet's Histoire des
Troubles de la Grande Bretagne (p. 309). But Mentet de Salmonet on p. 309 is speaking of the year 1642 and the King's stay at York. Besides, this work which was published in 1649, deals with nothing later than 1646. Guizot and other historians make no reference to the affair. Neither have I found anything in Thurloe, a book researches in which are greatly facilitated by the
excellent index.
30
quate or erroneous, hence we only refer to it as a curiosity. These negotiations came to nothing. Mr. Wolf proves however, that notwithstanding this rebuff a number of Jews established themselves secretly in London in the time
of the
Commonwealth.
situation
improved still more during the Protectorate. Cromwell's ideas were in advance of his times, and as Mr. 2 " Noble were the efforts of the ProF. Harrison remarks, tector to impress his own spirit of toleration on the in-
The
He effectively protected the his age Quakers; he admitted the Jews, after an expulsion of three centuries; and he satisfied Mazarin that he had given to Catholics all the protection that he dared." Cromwell was particularly well-disposed towards the Jews, with whom he
tolerance of
;
. .
had, according
to
M.
Guizot,
fairly
frequent dealings.
They seem
have done him numerous services. The Jews for their part were not unaware of the Protector's feeling towards them, and did their best to profit by it.
to
matter.
Rabbi Manasseh Ben Israel took the initiative in the This Rabbi was a remarkable character. He was
in
Portugal about 1604, but while still a child he emigrated with his family to Holland. There he became a brilliant student, wrote books, and even established the first
born
Jewish printing press at Amsterdam. But his chief efforts were devoted to improving the lot of his co-religionists, and to securing their admission into the different European In particular he tried by various means, such countries. as petitions to the Protector, and even the dedication of his
book, Spes Israelis, to the British Parliament,
4
to obtain
Jews
to return to
England.
1 See The Crypto-Jews under the Commonwealth. A lecture re-published from The Jewish Chronicle, and from the first pages of the " Resettlement " by the same author. 3 Frederick Harrison, Oliver Cromwell, p. 216. See also Glasson, Hist, du
"
The English
translation of this
in 1650.
31
commission, presided over by Cromwell, was appointed consider the question. It was composed of lawyers, 1 The debates were long-winded priests and merchants.
to
and threatened
plicated
be interminable.
Cromwell consequently
enough to start with, now appeared more intricate " than ever, and that, although he wished no more reasoning, he yet
2 begged an interest in their prayers." The conference was thus without result and Manasseh's
hopes were apparently vain. As a matter of fact however, the Jews were tacitly allowed to live in England. Manasseh 100 to console him for his disreceived a pension of And three years later, on February i5th appointment. 1658, at a reception at Whitehall, Cromwell seems to have given an assurance of his protection to Carvajal and his co3
religionists.
Whatever may be the truth about this latter point, it is probable that Cromwell took no legislative action with regard to the Jew^s, but it is certain that he tolerated their return, and that at the end of the Protectorate a number of them were living in England. They must have taken an active part in trade, for shortly afterwards a petition was signed
1 Readers must not Collier, Ecclesiastical History, Vol. VIII., p. 380-382. be surprised to find that this celebrated discussion is credited to the reign of Charles II. Collier was an uncompromising royalist, who never recognised the Revolution, and refused to take the oath to William III.
Francis, p. 26.
Perhaps Cromwell would have done more if it had not been for Manasseh's behaviour, which Mr. Wolf considers to have been most extravagant. According to the statement of Sagredo, the Venetian ambassador, he seems actually to have adored Cromwell, asking him if he were not a superhuman Moreover one or more of his companions, having obtained leave to being. visit Cambridge, went to Huntingdon, Cromwell's birthplace. The rumour spread that they had gone there to study the Protector's ancestry, to discover a Jewish origin for him, and to prove that he was the Messiah. (For this journey to Huntingdon, which has been disputed, see Leti, op. cit., Vol. II., These rumours were made use of by Cromwell's enemies, and he, p. 443.) anxious to avoid ridicule and sarcasm, ordered the Rabbi's companions to return to London.
32
by numerous merchants complaining that the Jews were not subject to the alien law, and that in consequence the
Treasury suffered a yearly loss of
l
10,000.
SECTION
II.
THE distinctive feature of this period is the transactions of the bankers with the Government, transactions which took the form of loans and advances in anticipation of the supLoans of this sort had already been made under the plies. Protectorate. Cromwell had to maintain a large army to
carry on continual wars, one of w^hich,
that with Spain,
was very unpopular, and he dared not ask Parliament to vote new taxes, owing to his somewhat strained relations with that assembly, which was jealous of his power, hence he was hard pressed for money, 2 and was often forced to rely on the help of the goldsmiths. Charles II., when he returned to the throne of his fathers, was forced to have recourse to his predecessor's expedients,
in this respect at least, with still greater frequency. It is true that he had not such a large army as the Protector's to
keep up; indeed, he had no regular standing army, strictly 3 Neither had he a specially warlike disposition, speaking. since he entered upon only two European wars during the
1 Stowe, A Survey of the cities of London and Westminster, Vol. II., p. Others demanded that strict regulations should be made for the Jews, 243: see T. Violet, Petition against the Jews (1661), and England's Wants (1667), the question of These unfavourable feelings lasted for a long time p. 40. In the naturalisation of the Jews gave rise to long Parjiamentary debates. of popular opposition, 1753 naturalisation was conceded, and then, in the face
;
See Josiah Tucker, A letter to a friend concerning Naturalisation in this century Macaulay had to write an essay protesting against the civil disabilities of the Jews. It is interesting to note that as soon as the Jews were placed on an equal footing with other citizens these feelings began rapidly to disappear. At the present day I have found no trace of anti-semitism in England.
withdrawn.
(1753).
Even
Goodwin, Vol. IV., p. 552. Charles' standing army was for a long time limited to his personal guards. This army was increased later on, but even at the end of his reign, after the evacuation of Tangier, the dowry of his wife, Catherine of Braganza, the King had no more than 7,000 foot and 1,700 horse and dragoons at his
3
disposal.
33
twenty-four years of his reign, wars which indeed brought The Parliaments, neither honour nor profit to England. and liberal voted subsidies with unusual were too, enough,
zeal, especially
during the years immediately following the Charles' vices and courtiers were however Restoration. quite able to swallow up more money in one year than all
Cromwell's armies and wars had cost in ten. And his urgent desires could ill adapt themselves to tardiness and delays, two qualities which usually accompany the collection of He wanted money and that at once, and the goldtaxes. smiths undertook to supply him.
however only fair to acknowledge that Charles was obliged to apply to the goldsmiths at the very outset of his Cromwell's army had then to be disbanded, since it reign. was at once an object of hatred to the people, a danger to the Crown and a heavy burden to the Treasury. But considerable sums were owing to the troops. Between tw o and three hundred thousand pounds had to be found in a few days. The House of Commons had readily voted this sum, but it could not be raised all at once by taxation. To put off the disbanding of the troops would have increased the
It is
r
nation's obligation each month in incredible proportions. None could supply those occasions," writes Clarendon, 1 " but the bankers, which brought the King's ministers
'
first
acquainted with them and they were so well satisfied with their proceedings that they did always declare that they were so necessary to the King's affairs that they knew " not how to have conducted them without that assistance.'
; '
This satisfaction was indeed so great that soon the Crown could not do without the bankers, and entered into the closest relations with them.
3 According to Clarendon's account, these transactions were managed as follows As soon as the subsidies were
:
sums
Clarendon, Life, Vol. II., p. 218. All that follows is taken from the Life, we have merely condensed the No one could have a better knowledge than the original to some extent. author, who was then Lord Chancellor, of the financial practices devised by
2
himself.
34
the King summoned the bankers to his no contract was arranged without him. Each banker was asked how much he could advance, and what Each answered according to security he would require. his ow n resources, for there was no combination between them. The bankers asked 8 per cent, for their money, which
needed
once,
presence, for
was not unreasonable, and the King was ready to pay it; but after mature consideration they decided to leave the rate of interest to be determined by the King's bounty, at the same time remarking that they were themselves paying 6
per cent, to their 1 to be true.
own
creditors,
which was,
in fact,
known
received a transfer of the credits for the paytaxes voted by Parliament, and tallies on those parts of the budget which were the least heavily burdened. But even this was not sufficient security, for the
They then
of the
ment
first
King and the Minister of Finance might devote the sums thus collected to other objects. Hence they had really no other security than their firm belief in the justice of the King
and
in the honour and integrity of his Treasurer; this was the real basis of the credit which supplied the needs of the
always treated them graciously as and the Ministers regarded them as good servants, very worthy people. In this way for many years, even up to the unfortunate outbreak of the Dutch war, the public finances were, Clarendon states, managed with little difficulty, though perhaps at some slight additional cost, and no one said a w ord against the bankers, whose credit and reputation increased daily, and who had everyone's money at their disposal. Probably at the time of which Clarendon speaks, that is before 1665, the goldsmiths did not ask more than 8 per cent., but this could not long continue, and their demands
too,
Crown.
The King,
his very
more
increased proportionately with the needs of the King, all the since they were advancing money on more and more
distant revenues, and had already anticipated all the payments to the Crown which would fall due in the near future.
1
p. 219.
35
1 Soon, according to contemporary evidence, they were ask2 that as early as ing 20 and 30 per cent. Pepys tells us 20 per and sometimes 1663 the Treasury was paying 15 " and horrid a most shame," ought cent., which is, he says, not to be allowed, nor, he adds, should the goldsmith Maynell be suffered to make an income of ^"10,000 a year in this
way.
Possibly the contemporary writers exaggerated a little, but there is no doubt that the goldsmiths got 12 per cent,
from the King for their money. 3 And when it is remembered that they were paying barely half this interest to their depositors, the indignation of the public may be understood, an indignation which was further increased by the shame of 4 seeing the King in the hands of usurers, and by the harshness, common to all farmers of taxes, with which the goldsmiths collected those taxes which were made over to them. But even if the farmers derived as much profit from the King's vices as their enemies alleged, they were shortly to pay cruelly for their gains, thanks to this same royal immorality.
At this point the history of banking becomes once more closely connected with the general history of England. must now consider in turn Charles' two European wars.
We
The War with Holland. The Dutch fleet enters the (a) Thames. First "run" on the banks. Charles had entered upon a war with Holland. After several vicissitudes, and
at the very
1
the con-
Charles being in want of money, the bankers took 10 per cent, of barefacedly, and by private contracts on many bills, orders, tallies, and debts of that King, they got 20, sometimes 30 per cent., to the great dishonour of Government. This great gain induced the goldsmiths to become more and more lenders to the King, to anticipate all the revenues, to take also to outvie every grant of Parliament into pawn as soon as it was given each other in buying and taking to pawn bills, orders, and tallies, so that, in See The new-fashioned effect, all the revenue passed through their hands."
"
him
Goldsmiths,
3
cf.
Macpherson, p
428.
Diary, Vol. II., p. 97. This diary and that of Evelyn, are most any study of the history and customs of the period. Pepys was the Admiralty during the reigns of the two Stuarts. Christie, Life of Shaftesbury, Vol. II., p. 57. 4 " Sir John Hebden, the Russian Resident, cries out against the King's dealing so much with goldsmiths and suffering himself to have his kingdom and commanded them." Vol. kept by II., p. 170. Pepys,
36
De Ruyter sailed up the Thames., took Sheerness, burnt such ships as were at Chatham and seemed A description of this event actually to threaten London. 1 will be found in Clarendon. Consternation spread through London, the inhabitants of which thought themselves on the 2 verge of destruction. Parliament, which had voted large
elusion of peace,
and for the fortifications of the river, was 3 beyond description at hearing the enemies' guns for the first time. It was believed that the Dutch had taken Greenwich, and had it not been for the presence of mind of the King and the Duke of York, the Tower would have been abandoned. Everyone who had any money had deposited it with the goldsmiths. This money was known to have been lent to a Government which at the moment seemed to offer no
for the fleet
terrified
sums
security ; each man then hastened to his banker in the hopes of being in time to save some remnants of his fortune, and London witnessed for the first time a phenomenon, with " " run which, alas it was destined to become familiar a
!
on the banks. 4 These fears were calmed by a royal proclamation 5 declaring that payments from the Exchequer would be made as " And that we will not upon any occasion whatsoever usual, or suffer any alteration, anticipation, or interruption permit to be made to our said subjects." It w ill now be seen how Charles kept his promise, and what he called " our royal word and declaration." Second War with Holland. Treaty of Dover. Sus(fr)
7
pension of Exchequer payments. A treaty of peace followed De Ruyter's expedition. During the years succeeding this treaty Charles seemed determined to enter upon friendly relations with the Low Countries. Through the good offices
1
PP- 414-419-
See contra, Life of King James II., Vol. I., p. 425. For an account of this panic and its accompanying incidents, see Evelyn, Diary, Vol. II., pp. 24-25. * The same phenomenon occurred in Amsterdam five years later.
3
This
:
is
Th.
Bankers and
their creditors,
more
fully stated
and
37
William Temple, 1 the ambassador to Holland, a Protestant Triple Alliance was made between the States General, England, and Sweden. Charles hoped by this to
Sir
give temporary satisfaction to English public opinion, and, above all, to make a definite breach between Holland and Louis XIV. who had hitherto been allies, at any rate in name. Shortly after he made with Louis XIV. a second 2 treaty, known to history as the Treaty of Dover, at which town the King had personally carried on the negotiations. This treaty, in which Madame took such an important share, Charles was careful not to publish, not even communicating it to all his ministers. He bound himself to join Louis XIV. in a war against Holland, to be converted to Catholicism
and
to several
have two
Charles
In return he was to other undertakings. million francs in two instalments, and three
II. 's
Dover was neither foreign policy nor the conversion of the English to Catholicism, but to obtain power to satisfy the caprices of himself and his companions in other words, to get money. He was undoubtedly attracted by Catholicism, the faith in which he died, and his conversion to which seemed
;
Doubtless, too, all his sympathies were for very rapid. France, brought up as he had been by a French mother,
and subject
1
to the
sister
and
of his
Sir William Temple," pp. 418and, of course, Mignet's Histoire des Negotiations relatives d la succession d'Espagne, Vol. II., p. 549, etc. An account of the varying feelings with which this treaty was regarded by the King of France will be found in the CEuvres de Louis XIV., Vol. III., pp.
this treaty, see
For
in
"
468,
the
one-volume
83-85-
the
For the Treaty of Dover, see Mignet, Vol. III., and the text itself in For contemporary English writers, see An account p. 187. and also the Secret of the private league in State Tracts (1705), 37-44 History of Whitehall, Letter xix. This last work, which was published in It possesses some interest as an 1697, is evidently directed against France.
same volume,
historical curiosity. 3 Of this conversion, which must have taken place even before the Treaty of Dover, an .account full of romantic and curious details, which seem however to be authentic, is given by an Italian Jesuit Storia della Conversione alia Chiesa Cattolica de Carlo II., re d'Inghilterra, Cavata de Scritture authentiche ed originali per Guiseppe Boere D.C.D.G. Estratto della Civilta Cattolica. Rome, 1863.
:
38
cousin, Louis XIV., then at the height of his magnificence, But the subtle, and later of the Duchess of Portsmouth.
intelligent and sceptical Charles II. was not the sort of man to risk his crown for the Pope and the King of France.
He knew well how to exploit the fears with which Louis XIV. inspired Parliament, and the anxieties which Parliament aroused
in
a few subsidies.
We
The Treaty
shall shortly be able to watch him at his work. of Dover was no sooner signed than the Lord1
Keeper Bridgeman urged Parliament to vote fresh supplies in order that the English navy might equal the constantly increasing navies of France and Holland. Parliament voted i, 300,000 to pay off debts and ^800,000 to equip the fleet, adding a long report in which it prayed the King to take measures against the dangers of Popery. Charles promised
;
all they asked, issued a religious proclamation of the character desired, prorogued Parliament, spent the ,800,000 on anything but the equipment of the fleet, and at the end of
the year signed a new treaty with Louis XIV. in which he secured even better conditions than those of six months
earlier.
2
XIV.
deter-
This minister, who acted as spokesman of the Government on the occawas not aware of the Treaty of Dover. a Madame had died in the interval, but this had not caused that loosening of the relations between the two Kings on which some people had counted. 8 " And so, in return for the prorogation of Parliament for fifteen months, which took place in November, 1675, Louis pays ^100,000. Again, in 1677, when Parliament presents an address representing the danger from French aggression and imploring the King to strengthen himself by such alliances as may secure Flanders and quiet the fears of the English people,' Parliament On the other is prorogued again, but this time Louis has to pay ;i 80,000. hand, at the beginning of 1678, when Charles demands ^"600,000 from Louis for a similar service and meets with a refusal, Charles begins to decide upon for enabling his war, and obtains a grant of ^600,000 from Parliament " Seeley, op. Majesty to enter into actual war against the French King.'
sion,
* '
cit.,
4
Vol.
II.,
p.
214.
This delay was due to the fact that although Louvois had completed army, the new army had not yet been tested. See Camille Rousset, Histoire de Louvois, Vol. I., p. 294. The affairs of Lorraine gave an admirable opportunity for a trial of the new system.
his reform of the
39
war with Holland. The Cabal 1 Ministry Charles was as usual without money, he dared not summon Parliament, and the French King's subsidies were no longer adequate. He determined on an action at once arbitrary, unjust and foolish, which was inspired by
Clifford,
though
who
in fact,
has often been attributed to Shaftesbury, according to his biographer, Mr. Christie, both
it
:
condemned and opposed it. 2 An order was issued on Clifford's remedy was as follows before the commencetwo months January 2nd, 1672, just ment of the war, suspending all payments out of the
Exchequer on whatever warrant, order or security, for a period of twelve months. When this order was issued the Government owed ,1,300,000 to the goldsmiths, of which ,416,724 belonged
1
"
Clifford, Arlington,
8
five
ministers
Lord Ashley, afterwards the Earl of Shaftesbury, even sent a written protest to the King against the suspension of payments from the Exchequer. See also a letter from him to Locke, and the corroborating evidence of Sir W. Temple in Christie, Vol. II., pp. 58-70. This account is supported by Evelyn, Vol. II., p. 70. Burnet, however (History of his own time, Vol. I., " Shaftespp. 532-533), formally accuses Shaftesbury of instigating the King bury was the chief man in this advice." He alleges tfiat he had this from
:
Shaftesbury, to whom the book is dedicated, having supplied numerous documents, his biography, I say, has somewhat the tone of an apology. Mr. Christie's work has however nothing in common with those biographies of which Macaulay speaks as the result of an agreement by which the family On the contrary the provides the documents and the historian the flattery. book is one of the best there is on the reign of Charles II. In this connection it is regrettable to have to state that we possess no good history of Charles II.'s reign, and worse still, that the gap is not unique. There are hardly more than two periods of modern history about which scientific works exist, that dealt with by Gardiner, and the fifteen years (1685-1700) to which Macaulay 's History of England is devoted. It is true that pictures of Charles II.'s reign are to be found both in Macaulay's work and in Fox's James II. , but however good these may be, they remain little more than pictures, serving as an
introduction to
Shaftesbury himself, who had moreover withdrawn his money from the bankers before the seizure. J. Lingard (History of England, Vol. IX., p. 202, note ft) is inclined to agree with Burnet. I do not believe that Burnet was But nevertheless I feel some doubt as to Christie's assertions, beright. cause, to say nothing of the morality of Shaftesbury he would have served for a model for Ot way's Senator in Venetia Preserved his biography, published with the consent and assistance of his family, the 7th Earl of
more
serious studies.
40
to Sir
less
plished so suddenly, and was so entirely unexpected by the public, that indescribable confusion at once spread through the town and caused a number of financial disasters. This confusion can be easily explained, since, although the
number
yet, as
was comparatively
everyone
it
trusted
to
brought The bankers indeed stopped their payments immediately, and those merchants who had deposited capital with the
2 Colbert who, goldsmiths declared themselves bankrupt. in the interests of the war, approved of the measure, refers to the great opposition it aroused, and remarks that bills of exchange to the value of ,30,000 had to be sent back to 8 Italy dishonoured. Four days later (on January 6th), an explanatory announcement was made, promising the bankers 6 per cent,
to ruin
these bankers, the total number of was not less than ten thousand.
people
interest
should not
and declaring that the suspension of payments last more than six months. The next day the
the
King summoned
goldsmiths
to
the
Treasury.
He
pacified them and persuaded them to repay the money deposited with them by the merchants. This was done, and the evil was so far diminished, but the bankers were no nearer payment. The King probably had some idea that Parliament would provide the means of repaying them when But nothing of the sort hapthe twelve months were over.
of
to
Commons
list
rejected
the
Collins, op.
cit.,
which they were respectively defrauded Sir Robert Vyner ... ^416,724. E. Blackwell ^295,994.
G. Whitehall
J.
J. J.
Snow
Colville
..
..
248,866.
Thomas Rowe
T. Portman Divers
Horneby
Snell
G.
a
^22,548. ^10,894.
935O5-
Vivid details of this crisis will be found in Tumor's pamphlet referred to above. 3 See Christie, loc. cit., Letters of January 4th and 8th (1672) in the Archives of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Colbert too estimated the number of those affected at ten thousand.
41
cent, interest, and in 1677 the yearly rent on his hereditary excise for this purpose. All payment of interest ceased, however, in 1683, and was not resumed after the Revolution, in spite of a lawsuit of a unique character which was carried on by the
King granted a
At length (in 1701) an Act was passed charggoldsmiths. the ing hereditary excise with a yearly interest of 3 per cent., payable from 1705, not on the actual amount of the debt, but on the original capital. Moreover, these 3 per cent, annuities were counted as redemption, and were to cease
when
this
half the original capital, that is, ,664,263, had been The Act of 1701 was simply a fraud, for six times repaid.
to the
bankers.
r
It
was calculated
that they had lost three millions in the affair, without counting their legal expenses. But w hat was most remarkable was that this debt, known as the " Bankers' Debt," was
never paid, and still forms part of the English national debt, having been consolidated with the South Sea annuity.
Substantially the same accounts are given of this lawsuit by Macleod, Edition, Vol. I., pp. 373-375, and Broom, Constitutional Laws (The Bankers' Case), pp. 228-234. The latter discusses the duties of a sovereign to his subjects combined with the right to personal liberty, there exists the right to private property. It is in connection with the latter that Broom gives a very detailed account of the whole dispute. The ground for quibbling was that the letters patent, in which Charles had recognised his debt to each of the goldsmiths and to their heirs, had been ratified by the House of Lords, but had never been presented to the House of Commons, and had not passed into law.
3rd
Thus, when the goldsmiths brought an action before the Court of the Exchequer in 1689, and finally won their case after a delay of two years, the Government raised two questions, viz. i. Whether the letters patent were good and valid to bind the Crown. 2. Whether the Court of Exchequer was competent to decide the case, or whether the petitioners ought not to have applied directly to the King. The discussion turned chiefly on the second point, since the first was not Somers, the Lord Chancellor, in spite of the opinion of seriously disputed. the majority of the judges, declared that the Court of Exchequer was not in the case. competent The question whether Lord Somers could give a decision contrary to the opinion of the majority of the judges gave rise to an appeal to the House of Lords, the Supreme Court, which, on January 23rd, 1701, reversed Lord Somers' judgment. But and this is the most surprising part of this remarkable suit as Macleod aptly points out, although this Court recognised the indisputable rights of the petitioners, it made no attempt to redress their And this was the conclusion of a lawsuit of twelve years' grievances.
:
.
duration.
42
This melancholy history brings us to the conclusion of our first part. It is not possible to treat Charles II. as we treated his father in a similar case, i.e., to find excuses for him. On
the other hand,
it
is
evident
how
Exchequer payments accorded with the general character and with the political ideas of this prince, a charming person, but born with tastes in excess of his resources, and with no idea of sacrificing these tastes to the interests of his
An economist of well-deserved reputation, M. Wilfredo Pareto, 1 has however defended him as follows: 11 Charles has been much blamed for a deed which differs but slightly from the actions which have been done and continue to be done by governments who appropriate the treasures of banks." It might equally well be said that William III.'s Government treated the defrauded bankers very little better than Charles' had done. But these after
country.
all,
are
meagre excuses.
d' Economic Politique, profess^
ti
Cours
la
I.,
P-
PART
II.
Bad
Heavy expense of the War against Louis Inadequate returns from taxation. Montague's financial expedients. The Tontine and the Lottery Loan. Montague and Paterson's scheme.
state of the public finances.
XIV.
IN spite of defeats abroad and disorder at home, industry and commerce prospered under the Restoration Government. The comparative peace enjoyed by England and the wars into which Louis XIV. 's insatiable ambition plunged the rest of Europe, largely contributed towards this commercial expansion.
counted for
great deal.
The
Numerous
1 Some of these laws, such as the passed by Parliament. extension and improvement of the Navigation Act, were of great service to the country. Others were marked by the for absurdity to which extreme protection often leads that ordered which the law M. Glasson, instance, quoted by corpses should be buried in flannel shrouds so as to encour:
age the growing woollen industry. This commercial prosperity required to be supplemented by the foundation of a bank, an institution which would strengthen England's position in a remarkable degree by
regulating and securing the paper currency, by reducing
1
Glasson, op.
cit.,
Vol.
V., pp.
201-202.
44
the rate of interest and by looking after a thousand other secondary interests. The goldsmiths had perhaps delayed the creation of such an institution, but had not succeeded in making it superfluous. Even before they had been de-
spoiled
by the King,
1
their
unpopular.
II.'s reign there was accordingly a outburst of pamphlets advocating the estabspontaneous lishment of every variety of bank, whose proposals were very favourably received by the public. The promoters also
Throughout Charles
could readily point to the services done by the banks to Venice and to Genoa, and, above all, to Amsterdam and this latter case had no small weight in a country and at a time when the imitation of the Dutch and their institutions was exalted into a regular system. 2 These projects came to nothing for accidental reasons which we shall notice presently, but from this time onwards the commercial world actively desired the creation of an institution of which it felt in serious need. Very soon it was not alone in this wish. The Revolution of 1688 had occurred, involving a war with France. William III.'s Government having engaged in an expensive and, for a long time, an unsuccessful struggle, and unable to count on a satisfactory payment of the taxes, and having tried all kinds of financial expedients, at length realised that the creation of a bank would be of immense service to them, for nothing but a national bank could raise an important loan and subsequently maintain the King's
;
financial position.
Henceforth the interests of the Government were in accordance with those of the country. A suitable proposal, The easily carried out, was brought forward by Paterson.
two divisions
effects of this
cit.,
45
2.
The commercial necessity for the foundation of a bank. The political necessity. The first part, besides describing the requirements of
will deal
commerce,
satisfying
is, the different projects suggested for banks and the reasons for their non-success. The second part will deal with the financial and political reasons which induced the Government to found a bank, and these reasons will explain the opposition with which the institution met from the beginning.
;
them
that
SECTION
I.
of
commerce.
We have
;
already pointed out the chief reasons which influenced the commercial world in favour of the establishment of a bank they correspond to the three main classes of business which a bank undertakes the receiving of deposits, the lending
:
money, and, in the case in point, the issue of bank-notes. The deposits made with the goldsmiths have been discussed, and it has been shown that the system did not always offer
of
desirable guarantees of security. The chief remaining services which the public expected from a bank were (i) that
:
it
rate of
interest
(2)
that
it
w ould
r
of
The rate of interest. Interest was first forbidden England by two synods in 787. But the codification the canon law was only begun in England in Henry
under the influence of researches into the law
initiated
III.'s reign,
which were
Even
T
at this period,
It
w as not London
1
until 1364 that Edward III. empowered the city of to issue an Ordinatio contra Usurarios. Act
An
Dictionary
Vol.
I., p.
of
Political
History,
721.
46
having the same object was passed in 1390. The usurers evaded these laws by numberless devices and consequently a very stringent Act was passed in 1487. But this proved equally vain and was repealed by a law passed in 1495, " which, while condemning usury, allowed the poena conThis in fact sanctioned ventionalis, or usura punitoria." the very practice it pretended to forbid. At length an Act
of Henry VIII. (1545) legalised the demand for interest and In 1552 there was a fresh profixed the rate at 10 per cent. which hibition, again failed, and the legality of interest was
1 recognised anew by Elizabeth, with the former limit of 10 per cent. The limit was reduced to 8 per cent, in 1624. This reduction 3 was followed by a second in 1651, which made the limit 6 per cent. And Sir Josiah Child, 3 believing that the low rate of interest had largely contributed to the 4 prosperity of Holland, and considering the 6 per cent, limit too high, proposed an additional reduction to 4 per cent., which he calculated would double the national wealth in
twenty years. Very soon the controversy as to the legality of interest changed into one as to the legal rate. William Petty, in his
has been alleged that this was due to Protestant influence and a from Calvin to Oekolampadius on the Aristotelian theories is quoted Besides this, it is pointed out that Holland, where in support of this. interest was early permitted, was a Protestant country, whilst about the same time Dumoulin's Tractatus contractarum et usurarium was censured in France. I believe, however, that it is difficult to form a definite opinion the canonists were less severe than people try to make out, on this matter and objected chiefly to loans to consumers. 3 The reduction of 1624, like that of 1652, was chiefly due to Sir Thomas Culpepper, who thus helped to put into practice the theories which he had His set forth as early as 1621 in his Tract against the high rate of usury. son also wrote various works on the same subject.
1
It
letter
3 See the first edition of A New Discourse of Trade, published in 1668 Some brief Observations concerning trade and interest of under the title money, pp. 7-16. 4 The legal reduction of the rate of interest was, as Professor Edgworth Child alleged for justly remarks, Child's panacea, his unum magnum. instance, that the sole reason why Holland was able to capture English trade in spite of the Navigation Act, was that the rate of interest was 3 John Law of Lauriston shared per cent, lower there than in England. See Premier Memoir e sur les Banques, in Child's views on this matter. Guillaumin's edition, Economistes et financiers du xviiie. siecle, p. 550. 5 Child declared that a high rate of interest encouraged luxury and p. jo. hindered the development of commerce.
:
47
laws regulating interest. in his Considerations on the Lowering of Interest and Raising the Value of Money, tend to the same conclusions.
Quantulumcunque,
condemns
all
As regards the period in question, it appears that the merchants had little ground for complaint, since the legal rate was no higher than 6 per cent, which was in no way immoderate considering the financial condition of the
Unfortunately this limit was theoretical and but theoretical. The goldsmiths were not the kind nothing of people to be satisfied with so little.* have seen the interest which they asked from the King; and they were even more exacting in dealing with ordinary merchants, especially with the poor ones, from whom they demanded exorbitant rates. 4 Hence there was urgent need to remedy a situation which was most irksome to the commercial world, and a national bank was the only institution which would be sufficiently influential to improve matters, and to secure for trade that credit which is "one of the essential conditions of its expansion." 5 Such a bank would also do good service in another matter, that of the paper currency.
country.
2
We
The paper currency. The future bank must also Contemporary thinkers had clearly analysed the advantages which might follow from the use of the metallic coin thus made available. Sir William Petty, for in his instance, pamphlet, Quantulumcunque,* to which w e
(2).
issue notes.
For Petty's theories on interest see a recent work by Question 23. M. Maurice Pasquier, Sir William Petty, pp. 186-192. 2 This is pointed out by the author of the pamphlet, The Interest of Money mistaken, who attejnpts to refute Child, and remarks very justly that the latter throughout his argument is mistaking cause for effect. * This was, besides, the rate which they themselves were paying to
their
own
is an undoubted fact, and is proved by a number of authorities to reference has already been made. The author of Bank of Credit, p. 18, states that although the rate of interest had been reduced to 6 per cent., private enquiry showed that poor men could not obtain loans for less than 33 per cent., and were lucky not to be asked 60, 70, or even 80 per cent., as had been known to happen. (See also above, pp. 25 and 35).
This
whom
Lyon-Caen and Renault, Manuel de Droit Commercial, p. 510. We imagine that the loans were not to take the form of discounts, but were to be advanced on the security of goods held in deposit.
6
Question 26,
p.
Money.
48
"If there
is
any way
at."
to
money."
turn
it it
think it may be pretty well guessed a particular merchant, may have too much money, I mean coined money." If there is too little " which money, the best remedy is the erection of a bank well computed doth almost double the effect of our coined " 1
nation," by saying,
is
sufficient for
any
nation, like
"
into
send
if there is too much coin, vessels or utensils of gold out as a commodity where the same
Again,
. . .
we may
and
is
silver, or wanting or
desired, or
let
it
is
high."
These opinions had been originally stated by Francis 2 Cradocke, a merchant who in 1660 wrote to Charles II. concerning the advantages which would follow from the establishment of a bank. He believed that the profits would be so great that it would be possible to abolish all taxation, " An expedient for taking and hence he called his pamphlet a revenue without and for all impositions, raising away taxes by creating banks for the encouragement of trade." This pamphlet is seven pages long, but the theories in it are not demonstrated scientifically, and the author exag:
gerates the effects of his device. Petty 's pamphlet dates from 1682. Hence it is a mistake to credit Adam Smith with having discovered how the issue of paper money might increase the riches of a given country.
waggon-way through the The second advantage which the public hoped to gain from paper money is more unexpected. Whenever a comparison has been made between a paper currency and a
simile, that of the
In this case as elsewhere, the father of political economy discovered nothing, he merely w orked out the idea, and above all, was able to render it tangible by a most happy " air."
r
metallic coinage, economists have always been careful to note among the drawbacks of the former that it is much
He remarks also that a country is not always the See Question 26. " Poorer for having less Money." For, as the most thriving Men keep little or no Money by them, but turn and wind it into various commodities, to their great Profit, so may the whole Nation."
1
"
II.,
p. 485.
49
more variable in value than the latter. But at the time of which \ve write the metallic currency was in such confusion and the English coins were so debased, clipped and falsithat people could not recognise them, and they fied, preferred to take a bank-note which they might reasonably hope to pass the next day at the same price as that for which it had been received.
In
addition
to
these
certain
two
public
anticipated
the the
bank, on which it is superfluous to dwell, but which helped in the production of a number of projects on the subject. This brings us to our second point, the description of these
suggested projects. B. Description of the projects suggested. This descripIt is true that none of the tion seems to us necessary. projects in question was fully carried out, but they prepared public opinion, which was thus ripe to receive Paterson's scheme. On this account alone, apart from the interest
possessed by some of them for their own sake, they deserve not to be neglected. For reasons already stated, the schemes proposed were exceedingly numerous. Their publication was encouraged by the policy of the city of London. This city had had for a long time the charge of children of deceased freemen. The property of these children was administered by the Court In this way a large sum of money had been of Orphans.
accumulated which w as known as the Orphans' Fund, and this, being rashly lent to the King, had been much
r
diminished.
The
corporation tried to
fulfil their
obligations
by means
examine
of the profits which might result from the creation of a bank, and the Lord Mayor appointed a committee to
all such propositions as should be made by any persons for the improvement of the Chamber of London." Amongst the suggestions made was one which the committee accepted, and which it only remained to carry out. To assist in this was the object of a very compact little work called Corporation Credit or a Bank of Credit made current by common consent in London more useful and safe than Money. This pamphlet, which appeared in 1682, was four pages long (numbered six), and concluded with an appeal
"
50
to
names
as such
various
specified
taverns.
1 apparently unheard. Apart from these municipal schemes there was the project for a land bank, which was put forward by Dr. Chamberlain, a project which nearly ruined the Bank of England,
The speak more at length. Proin a M. contained Lewis, pamphlet by propositions posals for a large model of a Bank, published in 1678, must also be referred to, and we may then pause to consider a bank of credit which was actually established and carried on
and
of
which we
shall
have
to
business for a certain time. The functions and the utility of this bank of credit are stated in the form of a dialogue between a country gentleman and a London merchant in a lucid and most amusing
pamphlet
security of the
of Credit, or the usefulness and Credit examined in a dialogue between a Country Gentleman and a London Merchant. The scheme however referred only to a bank of credit, there was no question of a deposit bank. The somewhat curious reason for this omission is given in the merchant's answer to the country gentleman, who was inclined to think highly of the advantages of such a com3 The directors, he says, "are unwilling to meddle bination. with Money, ... because ... the scarcity thereof (on any occasion) would perhaps, by ignorant or malicious men, be
called,
1
Bank Bank of
A more complete account of this scheme will be found in England's Interest, or the great benefit to the trade by the Banks and offices of credit in London, as it hath been considered and agreed upon by a Committee of Aldermen and Commons appointed by the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor
This pamphlet contains 8 pages. See below, p. 103. Before proposing a land bank, Dr. Chamberlain had apparently had a share in Mr. Murray's scheme to establish shops where merchants could deposit goods which they did not immediately require, and receive in return loans to enable them to carry on their business successfully. See Murray, Proposals for advancement of Trade (1676) 4 pages. 3 The gentleman had said (p. 16) " Let me ask you for what reason the Bank will not meddle with money for in my opinion, considering the
(1682).
3
:
great security and safety of their constitution, they might very well, and without any damage to themselves, have secured the running cash of the Nobility, Gentry, Merchants and Traders of this City and Kingdom from all hazard of loss. That would have been a great ease and benefit to all concerned, who know not now where to deposit their cash securely especially if running cash should prove, as some imagine, to be within the state of
;
bankrupt."
51
never be their Crime, they imputed to them and as that can " would also avoid the Imputation. What then was the business which the directors proposed
undertake ? " that Tradesmen, Their first object 2 was thus described when they have a considerable quantity of goods or wares whereas made, they know not what to do therewith
to
:
. .
.
by the help of this Bank they may deposit their Goods, and by raising a credit on their own dead stock imploy their Servants, and increase their Trades, untill they get a good Market, without spending their time ... to look out Chapmen, who usually take advantage of such men's necessities they being many times forced to sell their Goods and
. .
Wares
to loss."
Traders might offer as security not only merchandise but any other kind of unproductive goods, such as silks, ribbons, 3 jewellery, toys, linen, which they could thus make use of in case of emergency. The bank also made loans on real " without hazard or property and even on long leases, trouble of their Friends." The interest on the loans was 6 per cent. Should the goods deposited be lost, the bank forfeited the sums advanced on them. These sums might not exceed two-
But as regards the be avoided surplus might by insurance 4 through a monthly payment of two shillings per ^ioo. " The directors also intended to encourage any ingenious invention tending to the Increase of and Promoting of any Linnen, Woolen, Silk, Lace, Paper, Salt; or any other 5 useful Manufacture. ." Notes were to be issued but the merchant was quite " undisturbed by the dangers of forgery. 6 I am well asthirds or three-thirds of their value.
value,
the
risk
The directors' fears were not ill-founded, for this very accusation p. 17. was afterwards brought against the Bank of England. 2 See pp. 5, 6, 7. In short, this bank was to be especially useful in cases of over-production, but it was dangerous on that very account, for by
temporarily saving the merchants from the dangers of a glut, it would enthem to speculate by excessive production or by ill-judged purchases. courage 3 The Bank of Hamburg, established in 1619 on the model of the Bank of Amsterdam, made advances on jewellery as readily as on bullion. 4 5 P- 15P 16. The promoters of the bank of credit were moreover not alone in their belief that the solution of this problem was a In England's simple matter. Glory, a work published in 1694, the author remarks incidentally that the notes will be printed on special paper so as to prevent imitations. The odd
52
sured," he asserts,
is
morally impossible that they should be counterfeited." He 1 enumerates the precautions taken, and the list is so long " I cannot but admire and that his questioner remarks,
applaud the care and caution of trie bank in this particular." The London merchant was no more disturbed by the dangers which might arise from the note issue. The bearers would he considered, have sufficient guarantee in the honour of the directors, who would besides be liable up to 2 This satisfied the country the full value of their property. was content with very man a wise who like gentleman,
little.
the
time. 8
pages, is system, and objections which may be raised. The pamphlet, Several objections sometimes made against the office of credit fully 5 is merely a later, slightly revised edition of answered, this second part. Finally, An account of the constitution and security of the general Bank of Credit* contains nothing
7 which has not already been noticed.
A description part of this, consisting of devoted to an explanation of the working of the the second, consisting of 15 pages, answers the
:
The
first
that these optimistic views were actually justified by facts for a long first conviction for counterfeiting was not until 1758, sixty-four The guilty person was years after the foundation of the Bank of England. a Stratford draper called Richard Vaughan.
thing
time.
is
The
pp. 12-13.
It must be remembered that, owing to the mercial world at that time, the personality of much more important part than at present, and itself offered little more security to the bearers
3
narrow limits of the comthe directors would play a that the Bank of England
of
its
notes.
which The man none can great gain and wealth. Printed by the order of the Society, 1665. 5 Undated, Mr. Stephens in his Contribution to the Bibliography of the Bank of England, refers it to the year 1682. Two circulars announcing the establishment of the Bank of Credit for the City of London will be found in the British Museum bound up with the pamphlet in question.
6
7
50. full title is : A description of the office of credit by the use of may certainly receive possibly sustain loss, but every
p.
1683, 14 pages.
said of the
arguments
in
England's Interest.
See
above,
50.
53
This bank of credit was at length established after numerous vicissitudes its offices were in Devonshire House, Bishopsgate Street. Its transactions suggest those of some of the Italian Monti. Advances were made of three-quarters of the value of the goods deposited and notes for this sum
;
were given
to the depositor.
To
company had been formed of persons enin various branches of commerce, who undertook to gaged in payment. the notes accept Anyone possessing notes from this might purchase goods company as easily as if he offered coin. The bank does not seem to have been a sucIts organisation was too complicated and the risk of cess. depreciation in the value of the goods was too great. Failure of the projects. Reasons for this failure. To be brief, none of these schemes, to which must be added a project for mortgage on land, the Land Bank, could be realised
these notes a
successfully.
of these failures must be sought not only in the weakness of the schemes, in the very genuine dread of royal confiscation, 1 and in the distaste felt by some nations for novelty, but above all in a speculative mania which had suddenly spread and was diverting public attention from serious schemes which would take time to mature, to the advantage of charlatans who offered rapid profits to be made in lotteries, by the exploitation of unknown mines and pearl fisheries, or from treasures hidden at the bottom of
intrinsic
The cause
the sea.
Anderson draws a vivid picture of what was truly a raging fever, which we shall find reappearing in England with the South Sea scheme, and in France with the Compagnie des
Indes. The promoters of these enterprises made much stir in the town, says Anderson, in order to induce the public to support them, and employed a variety of devices and
stratagems.
They
stated
that
vein
of
gold, silver or
1 See in Pepys' Diary (Aug. I7th, 1666) a discussion which took place The fear of during an excursion which Pepys made with several friends. confiscation was not peculiar to England. Compare Law's remarks on this
point, op,
cit.,
p. 574.
54
bronze, had been found in a piece of land which they knew, that they had made a contract with the owner of this land, and that he, in return for a small life- annuity or for a share in the profits, had leased the mine to them for 21 years, it remaining for them to exploit it and to extract its wealth. Then they formed a company, generally with 400 shares,
and declared
between
at very
all
the shareholders.
their intenton of dividing the resulting profits The shares were at first sold
little, perhaps for ten or twenty shillings. Then, suddenly, the price was raised to ^"3, ^"5, ,10, and even At this stage the promoters hastily sold out and the 15.
1
company Under
it
is
to nothing. The speculators who were in the majority in these days, did not care to invest capital in lengthy undertakings which could not yield more than from 10 to 15 per cent., when they might triple their fortune from one day to another. Prudent people for their part, only noticed the failures, which were
and to be on the safe side, refused to involve themselves in any project whatever. It must not be concluded from this however that the
of daily occurrence,
fundamental reasons for creating a bank no longer existed. On the contrary the economic necessities which have been described were now strengthened by political necessities which we must .next consider.
SECTION
II.
THE
WE have attempted to describe in a few words the embarrassment of the Government; it was excessive. William when he came to the English throne, found that
1 For a similar account see De Foe, Essay on Projects, pp. 11-13 (1697), published in 1698 one of the very numerous economic writings by the author of Robinson Crusoe, 2 An echo of the failures due in these days to speculation will be found Bank of Credit, in the anxieties of the country gentleman so often quoted.
;
p.
20.
55
of the
was as follows The total revenue he had abolished the hearth tax in Kingdom, the hope of gaining popularity, was between ;i, 600,000 and i, 700,000, of which ; i, 1 01,839 had to be devoted to the needs of an insignificant army and a fleet in very bad conafter
1
dition.
These supplies were small enough in time of peace; in time of war they were absurdly inadequate. But William was soon successful in his policy of joining England to the European coalition. And a civil war in Ireland and Scotland was shortly added to the war with France. Attempts were made to supply these needs by a series of 2 taxes. The poll-tax, both burdensome and unpopular, was introduced from Holland. From thence also came the
3 the customs and excise were considerably increased even hearth-money was revived in the form of a window tax, 4 and a large number of direct taxes were
stamp tax;
;
levied.
The
administration
that
the
1 The tax known as hearth-money or chimney-money was imposed in 1662 on all dwellings excepting cottages. The tax was 2S. on every hearth or stove in every dwelling-house. It was extremely unpopular on account of its inquisitional character, and was at first collected with much difficulty This tax was profitable, being farmed at (Davenant, Vol. I., p. 208). ;i 70,000. It was abolished by an Act of William and Mary (i and 2, c. 10)
when it was yielding ^200,000 (see Sir Robert Howard's report, Commons' Journals, Vol. II.). It is interesting to note that a similar tax, the Kapnikon, existed at Byzantium, and was also abolished for political reasons by the Emperor
For these taxes see the section in Do well's Taxation and Taxes England referring to William III.'s reign, Vol. II., pp. 37-63.
In 1694. 4 In 1696.
*
5
Theophilus. a
in
(1697), on
There were besides the land tax and the window tax, taxes on pedlars hackney coaches (1694), on births, marriages, and burials (1695), Recent proposals have invested the latter and finally on bachelors (1695). tax with some importance it was not a succession tax, but really a direct Dukes paid 12 us. a year, pertax, each paying according to his rank. sons at the other extremity of the social ladder is. only; gentlemen paid 6s., i 6s. See the list in esquires and Doctors of Divinity, Law, or Physic Do well, Vol. II., p. 544. This tax was abolished in 1706. Another suggestion which Macaulay qualifies as confiscation, was to impose a tax of ^100,000 on the Jews. The Jews, however, prevented this imposition by threatening to leave England if it was voted Macaulay, History of England, Chap, xv., p. 125 of the popular edition in two volumes. 6 even less than those in 1688. The returns were sometimes
:
56
The poll tax only produced half of what it ought to have done and the other taxes succeeded little better. Even had the finances been honestly administered the revenue would not have covered the war expenses, not only because these were enormous, but because the army commissariat and the army contractors were such that the taxes collected never reached their destination. The King w as 1 left without his carriage, and the soldiers went shoeless. The administrative machinery, both civil and military, was rotten throughout. When not in use and looked at from a distance it might perhaps still have imposed on the 2 But when after the fall of the Stuarts, people ignorant. wished to set it going, the structure crumbled to dust. William did much to improve matters, but his throne was insecure and he recognised his unpopularity, and hence
r
dared not introduce changes except with the utmost caution. His ministers too could not resort to the plan so much used by their predecessors of mortgaging the taxes voted by Parliament, for the policy had been adopted of granting subsidies for short periods only, and soon Parliament voted taxes only for the service of the current year. This limitation
was due
to
want
of confidence in
William
III.,
and was
regarded as the best guarantee that the nation could have that Parliament would be summoned regularly. Taxation then was insufficient to meet the expenses of the war. Nowadays this is the usual state of things, and we find Governments raising a loan on the outbreak of war. Then matters were different, the public were unaccustomed
Macaulay, Chap, xiv., Vol. II., p. 89 of the edition referred to above. says with regard to the Irish campaign, and more especially with regard to the Commissioner General, Henry Shales: "The beef and brandy which he furnished were so bad that the soldiers turned from them with loathing the muskets broke in the the clothing was scanty the tents were rotten great numbers of shoes were set down to the account of the handling Government, but two months after the Treasury had paid the bill the shoes had not arrived in Ireland. ... An ample number of horses had been But Shales had let them out for harvest work to the farmers purchased of Cheshire, had pocketed the hire, and had left the troops in Ulster to get on as they best might." The fleet fared little better, see Macaulay, Chap, xv., Vol. II., p. 127.
1
He
for men like Bonrepaux, who had been sent by 1686 to investigate the state of the English navy, were not deceived as to the real condition of things.
2
say
Louis XIV.
57
It may have been that William could not have procured money, for he had no credit not to readily 1 mention the bankers' recollections of Charles II., the public had no confidence in the stability of this Government, the Jacobites were numerous, and Louis XIV. continued to be 2 victorious. William was forced to beg a loan of ^"100,000 from the city of London. Paterson 3 says that to get the money the ministers and aldermen had to go from shop to shop and from office to office. In the end they could only raise the whole amount by allowing commissions and giving premiums, which reduced the total by nearly 30 per cent. The war expenses had however to be met, and Montague
;
first of these devices, which strict-minded people be inclined to call shifty, was a loan raised in 1692 might " 6 in the form of a tontine. The subscribers were to receive
The
to
and after that ,7,000 per annum was be divided among the survivors till their number was reduced to seven, when, on the death of each, his annuity
10 per cent, until 1700,
The ingenuity
of the
The lawsuit of the goldsmiths was then in full swing. It was suggested that they should be offered 6 per cent, for their money on condition that they would advance, at the same rate, a sum equal to the debt, which was estimated at ;i, 340,000. But these proposals met with little success. * At the time of which I write Ireland was not yet completely re-conTourvi'lle had control of the quered and rebellion was raging in Scotland. Channel, and Luxembourg was fighting William in Flanders. And this, apart from the personal exploits of Louis, the capture of Mons, and the taking of Namur, which last event inspired such terror in Europe and such bad verses in France.
See Wednesday Club in Friday Street. One of these had important results, though in itself a small matter. A tax was put on the shares of the East India and of the Hudson's Bay "This tax," says Mr. Dowell (p. 51), "had the effect of a Companies. caution to the public creditor. No one is more easily alarmed than the man about to lend his money." Even after the repeal of the tax "it was found expedient, if not necessary, to introduce into the Loan Acts a proviso that Government annuities should be clear of all taxes and duties whatsoever." As regards the loan demanded from the City, the Council refused to help the King except on receipt of a commission. See on this point Remarks on the proceedings of the Commissioners for putting into execution the Act last session a Land Bank Passed for establishing (1696). 6 Macleod, op. cit. (3rd Edition), p. 376. The interest on the loan was to be met by a new tax on beer.
4
1
58
1
was
collected.
the addition of a clause by which subscribers could get 14 1 per cent, during the life of any person they liked to indicate.
This loan, which in the end brought in ,881,493, and 2 the money from the land tax, which was raised in 1692 to
45. in the
3 and produced i,922,ooo, joined to a relative improvement in the political situation, enabled things to go on until 1694. But at this date political affairs were as bad as they had been two years earlier. Trfe estimates for the year were enormous, over five millions; more than half 4 In order to meet them this was needed for the army alone. and a lottery loan was all possible taxes were imposed agreed to; the latter was a new invention of the indefatig-
able Montague.
This
into
lottery
had
nothing
in
common
with
modern
10,000
10 shares.
But as this was not enough to attract the public, years. added. ,40,000 was to be divided each year were prizes 5 This sum, and also the 10 fortunate winners. the among be raised was to cent, interest, by means of a new tax per on salt. A million was secured by this means, and another was needed to make up the required sum of 5,030,000; there was only one way of obtaining it, which was to adopt
1
Many
for a
was entered in the name of Charles Duncombe, then three years old, who afterwards translated Horace. This author received 77 annual payments under the Act of 1692. Macaulay, Chap, xix., Vol. II., p. 398. 2 A tax imposed on the rental value of land. 3 In 1693 the land tax did not, as Macaulay (Chap, xix.) states, bring The total rent was in two millions, but ; 100,000 less than the year before. Davenant (Essay upon Ways and stated this year by the taxpayer on oath. Means, Works, Vol. I., p. 33) attributes the decrease to this method of assessment. 4 The King wished to increase the army to 94,000 men he was in the end allowed 83,000. Things had advanced a long way since Charles' 8,700 men, and since his budgets of ^1,500,000. 5 The largest prize, a ;ioo annuity, was won by four Huguenots who had given up their country to keep their religion. The English public thought that the hand of God was recognisable in this result.
;
in return people received incomes throughout the i8th century few pounds lent to William III. in their youth. For instance, ^100
59
this
it,
was founded. time to learn something of Paterson and his scheme. shall first give a biographical sketch of this remarkable man and then proceed to examine his scheme, or rather schemes, and point out their main features.
It
is
now turned
his attention to
now
We
1 See the reports of F. Bonnet to Frederick III., Elector of Brandenburg, which were found among the Secret Archives at Berlin by Leopold Van Ranke, and were published by him at the end of his History of England These letters frtncipally in the Seventeenth Century, Vol. II., pp. 144-278.
are of great interest, the writer describes vividly the financial difficulties in which William III.'s Government were continually involved. See especially the letter of January 12-22, in which the future Bank is discussed, and pp.
238, 239, 240.
The letter of April 20-30, 1694, (p. 246), is the most interesting of all. Bonnet explains the organisation of the Bank and the reasons for its foundaHe concludes by stating that the paper tax has been passed and that tion. " this last possibly a tax on hackney coaches will be passed; but, he adds, contribution is regarded as an extra one, because the House has only agreed to " raise a sum of 5, 030,000 this year, which is to be produced as follows
:
at
,1,500,000
^"0,700,000 0,330,000 1,000,000
,, ,,
Lottery,
,,
,, ,,
The Bank,
Annuities,
.1,200,000 ,0,300,000
5,030,000
CHAPTER II. PATERSON, HIS LIFE AND WORK. THE FOUNDATION OF THE BANK OF
ENGLAND.
Birth and youthful adventures. Return to England after 1688. Active share in public affairs. Explanation of his leaving the Bank of England shortly The Darien Expedition. Last years of his life. after he had founded it. His claims on public gratitude.
Paterson's
first
scheme, 1691.
of
His Pamphlet in 1694, " A Brief Account of England." Principles on which the new Bank
;
Jacobites and Tories Commercial rivals the Goldsmiths. its causes. The dissentient Whigs. the landed gentry Arguments used by the Bank's opponents. Opposition in Parliament. Bill only passed because the Government wanted money and could not obtain it otherwise.
opponents
Hostility of
SECTION
I.
at Trailflat,
in
the county
He came
to
3
England when
in travelling,
In particular George I. he visited the West Indies, and was able to point out the importance which would be acquired by a colony on the isthmus of Panama, or of Darien, as it was then called. But the tale 4 according to which he joined some American buccaneers, after having started from England as a missionary, while it is possible, yet rests on no sufficient
of his letters to
shown by one
foundation.
See Pagan, The Birthplace and Parentage of W. Paterson. This date may be deduced from his will, made in July, 1718, in which he says that he is 60 years old. The farm where he was born was only
1
I.
(March
8th,
1714).
dishonourable
and
it
from
profession of buccaneer was not then accounted was alleged that Blackburn, Archbishop of York See Thorold Rogers, The followed it in his youth.
The
AND WORK.
61
Amsterdam
he apparently took part in quarters of the English Whigs the revolutionary movement of 1688, and must have been
deeply involved in the Liberal agitation which preceded the
campaign
in
England.
At any
rate like
many
politicians,
came
rich
and
influential.
Michael Godfrey and other London merchants, proposed the foundation of the Bank of England, at the same time pointing out the need for a restoration of the coinage. Paterson was tlie chief promoter of this scheme, but in spite
of his repeated efforts, nothing During this time Paterson, who
adventurer people have tried various important undertakings, helped to supply North London with drinking water, and in 1692 was the chief witness before the Parliamentary Committee appointed to
receive proposals for raising supplies. It was during these negotiations that he
came of it for three years. was by no means the mere to make out, took part in
had the good fortune to become acquainted with Montague, then one of the Commissioners of the Treasury, who recognised the advantages to the State which might follow the realisation of Paterson 's scheme, and whose influence proved invaluable two years later, when the proposal came to be voted
upon.
When the Bank was founded Paterson became a director, with a salary of ,2,000, but the Bank did not completely fulfil his expectations, and a year later he resigned, after a disagreement with his colleagues. As a matter of fact the exact cause of Paterson 's retirement is not known. In his Enquiry 2 he expresses himself purposely in vague terms. Sir W. Scott and Chambers both incline to the belief that his colleagues having made use of his experience, wished now to- make use of his post. Mr. Stephens 3 considers this view quite mistaken he believes it to be impossible that a body of people having such
;
by the Wednesday's Club in Friday Street (1717), p. 68. See Enquiry, loc. cit. See the notice of Paterson by Mr. Stephens at the end of his Contribution to the Bibliography of the Bank of England, p. 160.
2
3
An Enquiry
62
high reputations should act so meanly and should be blind enough to get rid of so experienced a colleague. The explanation of these disagreements seems to me easy
enough to find when we remember the differences of charand financial training which distinguished Paterson from his colleagues. Paterson was a genius, bold even to rashness, quick to undertake difficult enterprises and to acacter
1
we
cept the risks of untried experiments, experiments which, as shall see, were not always successful. His colleagues were of quite a different type they were merchants, the heads of
;
important firms, not having like him made a rapid fortune, but on the contrary, having amassed their wealth by prolonged ejfort, and on this very account not caring to risk in a day what had cost them so much labour to acquire. The long practice which they had had in business inclined them to excessive prudence. Paterson in spite of his many good qualities, had the adventurer's temperament, which must have frightened not a little the good citizens who were his colleagues. As long as Godfrey lived he was able to keep the peace between these two inharmonious factors. After his death the differences of opinion came to the surface, and Paterson realised that there was nothing for it but to retire, which he did in a perfectly dignified manner.* However he was soon to be involved in fresh adventures. He took up once more a scheme with which he had previously dallied, and to promote which he had applied to the Elector of Brandenburg, and had even gone to Prussia, but without success. I refer to the famous project of the Darien
or
Panama
This
1
is
See also the pamphlet Observations upon the Constitution of the Company of the Bank of England, with a narrative of their late proceedings. The author complains amongst other things of a director, who expected an " unreasonable reward," and was inclined to express his opinions on the
:
matter
in
the
coffee-houses.
this
It
is
is
the
person
referred to,
would give a new explanation of his resignation. 3 Apparently however he continued to feel a certain resentment at the incident, for some years afterwards, in a petition to Godolphin, the Lord
and
Treasurer, dated the 4th of April, 1709, he refers to the services he rendered for his efforts and for the expense to
63
into which the whole Scotch nation threw itself and with unexpected fervour. The result was deplorable, but Paterson's share in the matter was absolutely 3 honourable. 2 Indeed on his return to London he was most graciously received by William III., who accorded him numerous interviews and requested him to formulate his schemes in writing. These schemes related to various financial questions and occasionally to political matters 4 such as the real union between England and Scotland. Many of these proposals subsequently formed the basis of
:
~\
important financial reforms, such as Walpole's Sinking 5 Fund, and the consolidation of the national debt in 17 17. in William Paterson died in London 1719. According to some writers he passed the concluding years of his life in want. 6 He certainly lost ^10,000 in the Darien expedition, and he complained of poverty unceasingly until the end of 7 It seems his life. however, that in 1715 he was recomfor in the Scotch expedition, for not only his losses pensed did Parliament, at the request of the King, vote him a sum of ,18,241 at this time, but it is probable that he actually received the money since in his will he left considerable
8 bequests to different people.
Details as to the Darien Expedition will be found in Macaulay, Chap, and in John Hill Burton, History of Scotland, Vol. VIII., chap. Ixxxiv. The Scotch numbered 1,200 and the expedition went in five large ships. 2 Paterson nearly lost his life in this expedition, during the whole of which he displayed great courage and energy. His fellow-countrymen never blamed him for their common failure, disastrous though it was for Scotland. Dumfries elected him a Member of the first United Parliament.
xxiv.,
The
last Scotch Parliament had already recommended him to Queen Anne on account of his good services. De Foe, History of the Union, p. 525.
3
April, 1701.
Enquiry, p. 84. I have omitted to say that Paterson, who certainly took a part in There is everything, was concerned in the question of the Orphans' Fund. in the British Museum a pamphlet called Some account of the Transactions The catalogue of Mr. W. Paterson in relation to the Orphans' Fund (1695). states however that this document is "wanting all but title page," and it adds for our more definite information, and out of respect to the memory of M. de la Palice, that the work is incomplete. 6 Dalrymple, Memoirs on Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. II., Part III.,
5
:
3 pp._89-i2 ~
The last petition which he made to the Government is in a letter a month before his death, in December, 1718, to Lord Stanhope. 8 He left ;6,ooo to different relatives, ^1,000 to Paul Daranda, his executor, etc. The will was made in 1718.
sent
legal
64
of
There have been none more eventful and, it England. must be acknowledged, none more fruitful or more honourable. On all the occasions when he was the promoter of an enterprise, Paterson showed much talent and energy, and whatever mistakes he may have made, he never spared either himself or his fortune. His courage and the nobility of his character were proved during the Panama expedition, an undertaking which was happy in its conception and which
deserved to succeed. He gave evidence of diplomatic skill in the negotiations with Scotland with which the Queen entrusted him about 1706, and of statesmanship in the various measures which he brought forward between 1701 and his
death, and which others had the honour of carrying out. In addition he not only possessed great facility, which was a sufficiently common gift at that time, 2 but also exceptional
Nevertheless, his name will be gifts as a political writer. in remembered chiefly history on account of his share in
founding the Bank of England. He had the honour of proposing the first really workable and matured scheme and possessed talent and perseverance to carry it out in the face of innumerable obstacles, as much
;
it
is
do not think
it
able
may
celebrity.
2 Daniel De Foe's work is the most famous instance of the prolific and M. Taine diverse character of the writings of the authors of the period. wrote in verse, in prose, on every subject, political and says of him religious, ephemeral and fundamental, satires and romances, travels and pamphlets, business treatises and statistical studies, in all 210 works." Histoire de la Literature anglaise, Bk. III., Chap, vi., p. 264.
:
"He
3 Bannister's edition, The Writings of William Paterson, with a biographical notice, is not complete. A full list of Paterson 's works will be found at the end of Stephens' notice of him.
65
a large portion of his concluding years in this condition. Posterity will do him more justice than his contemporaries, and his name will always be connected with the famous institution which owes its origin to him.
SECTION
II.
WILLIAM PATERSON AND THE BANK OF ENGLAND. The scheme which was accepted by Montague and was destined to be realised in the form of the Bank of England
was not Paterson's only project; there were two others.
early as 1691, he proposed, in to lend a million to the notables, city for a yearly payment of ,65,000, of
the expenses of
of the
As
management, on condition that the notes be founded should be legal tender. The committee to whom these proposals were submitted refused to make the notes legal tender, but were ready to authorize Paterson was willing to accept this, but his their issue. 1 colleagues would not support him. The second scheme, which offered to provide two millions
bank
to
Government, also came to nothing. And it w as to compensate for this failure that Montague devised the lottery but as we have seen, the sums yielded by this were loan inadequate, and application was made to Paterson, who in the interval, had drawn up his final scheme. The plan now was to raise "1,200,000 to be lent to the Government in return for a yearly interest of ,100,000. The subscribers to the loan were to form a corporation with
for the
:
up
The Governor and corporation was to be called, 2 Company of the Bank of England." Paterson wrote a pamphlet demonstrating the economic principles on which the future Bank of England was to
The
rest.
I., p. 47. Bannister, Paterson's Works, pp. xxviii., xxix. (.2nd edition). 2 " The See Bonnet, letter referred to above, p. 246. high profit of 8 per cent, paid to those who lend the sum of ;i, 200,000, only affects a small number of persons and the majority of the Lower House, who are in a For the whole position to advance ten, twenty, or thirty thousand pounds.
1
"
YoL
I.,
66
that the stamp or denominanotes the old mistake The fallacy tion gives or adds to the value of money." contained in this was pointed out by those who had sug-
gested the foundation of the Bank some years earlier. Its promoters had seen that the institution ought to be based on the following principles 2 *' i. That all money or credit not having an intrinsic value, to answer the contents or denomination thereof, is
:
false
and
counterfeit,
and the
loss
must
fall
one where or
other.
"2. That the species of gold and silver being accepted, and chosen by the commercial world for the standard, or
measure, of other effects, everything else is only accounted valuable as compared w-ith these. "3. Wherefore all credit not founded on the universal species of gold and silver is impracticable, and can never subsist neither safely nor long, at least till some other species of credit be found out and chosen by the trading part of mankind over and above or in lieu thereof." After describing the strong position of the Bank and its prospects of success, and stating that no dividend would be paid without several months' notice, in order to give the shareholders the choice of selling or retaining their shares, " The politicians Paterson remarks that distinguish between the interest of land and trade, as they have lately done between that of a king and his people," 3 but " if the proprietors of the Bank can circulate their own fundation of twelve hundred thousand pounds without having more than two or three hundred thousand pounds lying dead at one time with another, this Bank will be in effect as nine hundred
.
.
amount is divided into shares of ,10,000 each, of which not less than one nor more than three may be taken. The subscribers are to form a which will pay them at the rate of company, here called a corporation, and from which can withdraw their money at any time 4i per cent., they
.
.
cent,
.
any quantity that they wish, hence the proprietors will make 8 per on the money they have lent, and 3^ per cent, on what is lent to them. But Parliament makes the corporation responsible for all the sums which it receives above ,1,200,000, and makes the proprietors jointly and
in
. .
and
severally liable." 1 A brief account of the intended op. cit., Vol. III., p. 80.
2 8
Bank
of
England
(1604), n.
7.
Bannister
pp. 9, 10.
p.
12,
an allusion
Land Bank.
Bannister, p. 85.
67
thousand pounds or a million of fresh money brought into the nation." The Bank, far from being a source of danger 1 will benefit them by to borrowers, traders or landowners, reducing the rate of interest, as has been done by the Banks in Amsterdam and Genoa. Paterson concludes that the enemies of the Bank are only " Jacobites who apprehend it may contribute to lessen their monarch of France, with some few usurers and brokers of money and the third sort are commonly such as have not wherewith to trade, unless it be like Haman of old, for whole nations or peoples at once." 2 This conclusion leads us to refer to the objections which
;
3 greeted the announcement that the Government had accepted Paterson's scheme, and the inclusion of the plan of
the
new Bank
all
in the
Tonnage
Bill.
sides, and though the Bank opponents may if necessary, be classified in Paterson's three categories, such
from
a division requires to be explained and defined. This will be the aim of the third part of our second chapter.
shall also explain
We
why
their opposition
was
ineffectual.
SECTION
III.
political
and commercial.
were
place, the Tory party and the Jacobites that the Government would be strengthened
first
is
by a
and above all the landed bank would absorb all the money in the country, and would only make loans at abnormal rates. Godfrey, the second founder of the Bank, also did what he could to dispel
Paterson
proprietors,
such fears.
cit.,
(p. 7 of the pamphlet already referred to, Francis, op. " The Bank will reduce the interest of 247): money in England to 3 per cent, per annum in a few years, without any law to enforce it, in like manner as it is in all other countries where banks are establisht, the lessening the interest of money will infallibly raise the value of will unavoidably advance land for the falling the interest of money the price of land to above thirty years' purchase, which will raise the value of the lands of England at least 100 millions, and thereby abundantly reimburse the nation all the charges of the war." Godfrey does not however
He
writes
Vol.
II.,
p.
say on what ground he promises this remarkable rise, and appears mainly concerned to disarm the opposition of the landed proprietors. 2 Bannister, p. 87. 3 The statute establishing the Bank had received the royal assent on
April the 25th.
68
would be
there were all the country gentry, whose opposiwas due not only to their political opinions, but also to the horror which merchants and financiers, such as were the promoters of the Bank, have always inspired in small landowners, condemned to lead a miserable existence on their estates. Moreover, these landowners had been induced to believe that the Bank would attract all the money in the country and that borrowing would no longer be
tion
Then
possible except at exorbitant rates. The new Bank had also to meet the opposition of the goldsmiths and money-lenders who were deprived of their most
obvious profits by the new undertaking; and of the promoters of rival schemes, chiefly that of Chamberlain and the
other supporters of the Land Bank. Finally, these various opponents were joined by a few dissentient Whigs, whose opposition was not altogether without effect. This union between all the enemies of the Government
served to rouse its partisans. But nevertheless the arguments of the opponents did not The principal ones appear valueless to contemporaries. were as follows 3
:
was alleged that the Bank, which was nicknamed (1) the Tonnage Bank, would absorb all the money in the kingdom and would subject commerce to usurious exactions. A remarkable objection this to come from the goldsmiths, who had never enjoyed the reputation of lending their money for nothing none the less they talked of the risk of honest
It
;
merchants
(2)
It
"
was alleged
in the
that the
Bank would
its
the
1
money
We
latter
country by
high
rate of interest,
and
The
p.
have seen that Paterson and Godfrey tried to allay these forebodings. even went to the length of making rash promises. See above,
67 note. 3 Burnet, op. cit., Vol. IV., p. 246. a Thorold Rogers, pp. 9, 10. 4 From the name of the headquarters of the company.
69
that no capital would be available for trade and industry. The This is the objection made by Davenant, * who writes are so inviting and of such infinite profit that funds few now are willing to let out their money to traders at 6 per cent, as formerly; so that all merchants who subsist by
:
.
must in time give over/' was alleged that the Bank would grow too powerful, (3) and would become the keystone of the commercial world, and that if it failed, it would drag down with it the whole of
credit,
It
English trade.
was alleged that the Bank could only favour a number of merchants, and that these, thanks to a very low rate of discount and to facilities of all kinds, would
(4)
It
limited
2 isoon be able to ruin their competitors. (5) From a political point of view the Tories declared that a State Bank would be one step towards a republic, because such institutions are not compatible with a mon3 Indeed the facts seemed to give some plausibility to archy.
this theory, since the three great banks then existing were established in three republics.
(6)
totally different conclusions, the dissentient Whigs feared lest the foundation of a bank should lead to absolute mon-
Jarchy,
since the King would be supplied with means of procuring money through this institution and might thus escape the financial control of Parliament. To meet this criticism, a clause was introduced into the law prohibiting the Bank from lending money to the Government without the express authority of Parliament.
The
1
full
wisdom
of this prohibition
was not
realised until
it
Essay upon Ways and Means (2nd edition, 1695, p. 44). [Works, Whitworth's Edition, 1771, Vol. I., p. 24.] 3 This objection was not, to be strictly accurate, brought forward until It is the only original objection contained in a work 1707. opposing the renewal of the Bank's charter Reasons offered against the continuation of the Bank. In a letter to a Member of Parliament. Perhaps it is partly due to considerations of this kind that the Bank of France is obliged by its
:
same
"Another tells us that in all his Paterson, Intended Bank, p. 8. peregrinations he never met banks but only in Republics. And if we let them get footing in England, we shall certainly be in danger of a commonwealth." See also pp. 7 and 9.
70
crisis resulted
was disregarded by William Pitt, from which neglect a whose description will occupy the whole of the IVth Part of this volume.
All these criticisms, contradictory though they appear, greatly excited public opinion, and aroused many fears among the landed proprietors who formed the House of
Lords. The project was only passed because the Government needed money and could not obtain it otherwise. Bonnet thus describes the debate in the House of Commons " People think that this institution has its good and its bad points, but had it not been that time pressed, they do not believe that it would have been passed by the Lower House, for there was strong opposition at the last moment,
1
:
one of the chief objections being that this will be a Bank in the State without being under the control of the Govern" No ment." The Bill however passed without a division. " has been more vigorously question," writes our author, debated in this Parliament than that of the establishment of It came before the a Bank in the hands of a corporation. Upper House yesterday, and the assistance of all the Lords of the Court party was needed to get it through. The Marquess of Halifax, and the Earls of Rochester, Nottingham and Monmouth, spoke several times against
this institution,
ments
since
it
to
and brought forward a number of argushow that it would be injurious to the King, was not to his interest that the management of such
Government.
public,
it
large funds should be in other hands than those of the That it would be still more injurious to the
since instead
of
money being
invested in trade,
bank; and that it would be no less injurious to individuals, since it was obvious that they would no longer be able to sell or to mortgage lands without great loss. The Marquess of Caermarthen and the Earl of Mulgrave were the chief among those who maintained that the Bill must be passed without alteration not because the arguments against the Bank were not good ones, but
would be deposited
in this
Op.
cit.,
71
refusal,
of the King, which would at least be detwelve or ten days by a consent, seemed more real than layed those with which they were threatened. But the number of
the division
number of arguments, carried the day, for in w hich they were forced to take there was a
r
majority of twelve in favour of passing the Bill unaltered, and it has been read to-day for the last time." 1
1
May
4th,
p.
248.
CHAPTER
The Tonnage The Bank
Act.
III.
ORGANISATION OF THE
mercial world. Charter.
NEW
BANK.
The Bank Supported by Government and by the comEnthusiastic subscription for its stock. The Bank
;
of Venice. Primitive Venetian Banks their transactions resembled those of modern Banks. Reasons for the establishment of a single Bank by the Senate. The Banco della Piazza del Rialto (1584) and the Banco del Giro (1619). Their Amalgamation of these two establishments. transactions. The Bank of Genoa. Origin and original character of the Bank of Saint George. The biglietti di cartulari di San-Giorgio. The Bank of Amsterdam. Its importance. Its exceptional position up to the end of the eighteenth century. Distinctions between the Bank of England and the three continental Banks. Bank money and the English bank Resemblance in this respect between the Banks of England and notes. Sweden. The use of the continental bank notes forced, and the English No monopoly enjoyed by the Bank of ones not even legal tender. England when first founded. Gradual disappearance of these distinctions. Close resemblance between the Bank of England in the present day and the primitive Banks of Italy and Holland.
reserve.
The
THUS
was finally passed, and the Tonnage Bill became the Tonnage Act. We shall proceed to study its provisions. Then we shall compare the Bank of England with the principal Continental banks of the period, and shall point out the original character of the new institution, and in what way This comparison will lead us it marked a definite advance. to examine the business which the youthful bank proposed
to transact.
SECTION
I.
The Act
is
of Parliament
called
"An
Rates and
1
for granting to their Majesties several Duties upon Tunnages of Ships and Vessels, and
Act
Gilbart, History, Principles and Practice of Banking, Vol. I., p. 31 It is almost the only of 1907), gives a good analysis of this Act. thing in which this book has proved of service.
(edition
ORGANISATION OF THE
NEW
BANK.
73
upon Beer, Ale, and other Liquors; for securing Recompenses and Advantages, in the said Act mentioned, to Such persons as shall voluntarily advance the Sum of Fifteen hundred thousand Pounds towards carrying on the war against France."
After various articles referring to the imposition of taxes, the Act authorised the raising of ,1,200,000 by subscription, the subscribers forming a corporation to be called, " The Governor and Company of the Bank of Eng-
certain
land." 1 No person might subscribe more than 10,000 before the ist of July following, and even after this date no individual subscription might exceed ,20,000. The corporation was to lend the whole of its capital to the Government, and in return it was to be paid interest at the
rate of 8 per cent., and 4,000 for expenses of management, in all ,100,000 per annum. The corporation was to have
the privileges of a bank for twelve years, then the Government reserved the right of annulling the charter after giving
to the company. The corporation were not authorised to borrow or owe more than their capital ; if they did so, the members became personally liable in proportion to the amount of their stock. The corporation were " forbidden to trade in any merchandise whatever, but they were allowed to deal in bills of exchange, gold or silver bullion, and to sell any wares or merchandise upon which
they had advanced money, and which had not been redeemed within three months after the time agreed upon. 02 The subscription list was opened at the Mercers' Chapel, 3
then the headquarters of the corporation, on Thursday, June 21, 1694. According to Luttrell, ^300,000 was subscribed on the opening day alone, the Queen having contributed
first
"To
encourage
capitalists,
2 IDS. per
three
amount subscribed was allowed on the days, and ,2 on the subscriptions of Monday,
This is the official title still in use. The word t( company " is even preserved in the Italian form then fashionable the Bank notes are issued in the name of the Governor and Compania of the Bank of England.
1
;
2
3
Gilbart, Vol.
I., p.
32.
it it
The Bank continued at the Mercers' Chapel until September 28, when moved to Grocers' Hall, which had been taken for u years, and where
remained for
40.
74
after which the advantage was reduced by five 1 for each of the successive days."' per cent. This reduction was justified, since ,900,000 had already been subscribed, and the ,600,000 which came in during the first three days sufficed to make the subscribers into a
June 25;
shillings
corporation. After this great success the Charter of Incorporation was Its main provisions were as granted on July 27, 1694. 3 follows: " That the management and government of the corporation be committed to the governor, deputy-governor, and twenty-four directors, who shall be elected between the 25th day of March and the 25th day of April each year, from the members of the company duly qualified. among " That no dividend shall at any time be made by the said governor and company save only out of the interest, profit or produce arising out of the said capital stock or fund. "They must be natural born subjects of England, or naturalised subjects they shall have in their own name and for their own use, severally, viz., the governor at least ^4,000, the deputy-governor ,3,000, and each director ,2,000 of the capital stock of the said corporation. " That thirteen or more of the said governors or directors (of which the governor or deputy-governor shall be always one) shall constitute a court of directors for the management of the affairs of the company." It may be noted also that according to the terms of the
;
Charter, each director must have at least ^500 capital stock; "four general courts" must be held in each year, conditions are specified under which additional meetings may be summoned, and finally, the general courts are to issue "by-laws and ordinances for the government of the
1
corporation.
1
'*
"These premiums were defrayed from the civil list," Postlethwayt, History of the English Revenue, p. 10. This fact, joined to that of the Queen's subscription, shows the intense
interest
a
8
which the Orangist party had in the success of the Bank. Thorold Rogers, First Nine Years of the Bank of England, p. 2. See Gilbart, Vol. I., pp. 32, 33. 4 The laws and ordinances of the Bank, " not repugnant to the laws of the Kingdom," were drafted according to the advice of Sergeant Levinz, a
ORGANISATION OF THE
scale.
NEW
BANK.
75
The new institution was started on a sufficiently modest " The secretaries and clerks altogether numbered
but fifty-four, while their united salaries did not exceed M1 Business was carried on in a single room with ,4,350. Even sixteen years later Addison 2 primitive simplicity. " I looked into the great hall where the Bank is writes: and was not a little pleased to see the directors, kept,
secretaries
and
clerks
ranged
economy."
SECTION
II.
COMPARISON BETWEEN THE BANK OF ENGLAND AND THE BANKS OF VENICE, GENOA, AMSTERDAM, AND SWEDEN. At the time of the foundation of the Bank of England, at
important banks existed in Europe, those of An examination of the Venice, Genoa, and Amsterdam. constitution of these banks, and a comparison between them and the Bank of England, will prove both interesting and
least three
3
important.
A.
i.
The Banks
The Bank
of Venice
of Venice,
of
Venice.
Bank
1
3, 1701).
be found in Chalmers'
collection,
British Essayists, with prefaces historical and biographical, Vol. VI., p. 13. I was surprised not to find it in the edition of Addison's Essays brought out by Sir John Lubbock in 1894. See Sir John Lubbock's hundred Books. The essay in question contains an allegory illustrating the close union between the Bank and the Whig party ; we shall refer to it
The
again below, seep. 119. 3 For this two-fold purpose the following works may be consulted Law, Memoires sur les Banques ; Guillaumin's edition, Economistes et Financiers du XVIIIe siecle; and Rota (P.), Storia delle Banche. For the Bank of Venice in particular Lattes La Liberia delle Banche a Venezia dal Secolo XIII. al XVII; and C. F. Dunbar, The Bank of Venice (Quarterly Journal For the Bank of Genoa Carlo Cuneo, of Economics, April, 1892). Memorie sopra I'antico debito publico mutui, compere, e banche di San Giorgio in Genova; and Adam Wiszniewski, La Mdthode Historique appliqude a la rejorme des banques ; Histoire de la Banque Saint-Georges de la Rtpublique de Genes. Finally, for the Bank of Amsterdam Mr. Pierson, Principles of Economics, English translation, p. 488, mentions a Dutch work by Dr. W. C. Mees, Proeveener geschiedenis -van net Bankwezen in Nederland. The various books to which we refer in the text may also be read with advantage.
:
:
76
As
in
Bank was
centuries later.
Probably however, private banks existed Venice from an early date, doubtless as a supplement to the business of the exchangers. These exchangers, the 1 soon to campsores, accept deposits, and in a law of began some September 24th, 1318, security was given to the deBut be it should noted that an earlier law, passed positors. in 1270, which regulates the transactions of the campsores makes no mention of deposits. From this it seems likely that this new business developed between 1270 and 1318.
,
At all events, the laws following that of 1318 frequently use the terms bancherius and bancus.
Their business was multiplied. modern banks. similar to that of They were banks of very and of discount. Moreover deposit payments by means of
book existed from the early i5th were simplified by the issue of These transfers century. certificates of deposit, the contadi di Banco, to which reference is made as early as 1421, and which were used,
transfers on the banker's
in this way these primitive according to Rota, like coin Venetian banks resembled our banks of issue.
;
Some of these private banks became very powerful, but many of them ultimately failed. Thomas Contarini, in a
3 speech that well repays reading, states that out of 103 banks which had been established only 9 had succeeded. 4
series of failures in I489 and 1523, and in 1504 the failure of the Pisani and the Tiepolo, with liabilities of
1
The
36.
3 3 Contarini 's speech in favour of the establishment of a public bank, and that of a senator opposing this policy, both delivered during the great debate of 1584, were published by Lattes in 1869 at the end of his book.
the causes of the failure of the private banks was the perpetual to the Government loans which were indeed enforced by law, for it was decreed that the banks might not employ in trade more than one and a half times the amount of the money lent to the Government. Another cause of these failures may have been the greed of the bankers, who, tempted by high interest, lent money to persons of no commercial solidity.
loans
One of made
5 The failures were in some cases due most important of these, which occurred
to
in
"runs."
1489,
is
description of the
given
by Malpiero
in
I.,
ORGANISATION OF THE
NEW
BANK.
77
500,000 ducats, apparently convinced the Venetian Senate 1 that the system of private banks must be abandoned, and a fresh one introduced, for it did not even occur to them without a that banks might be dispensed with altogether Venice could not exist. Contarini remarked, bank, After some remarkable debates, it was decided to establish a public bank, and the Banco della Piazza del Rialto was founded by the laws passed in 1584 and 1587. Another law in 1593 decreed that all bills of exchange should be paid
;
2 only through bank transfers. Unlike the private banks which it replaced, the Bank of Rialto was not a bank in the modern sense of the term. The new bank had not been created for any fiscal purpose but solely to ensure security in trade. Hence the republic very wisely refused to undertake the investment of the funds entrusted to it, and did not attempt to make any profit out of In theory at any rate, it restricted the credit of the bank.
itself to
paying
owners.
it
keeping the depositors' money in security, and out or transferring it according to the wish of
to
its
private banks had been suppressed in 1587, but the need for a second bank soon made itself felt, and in 1619 the famous Banco del Giro was founded, which is often made 4 to date from the I2th century. Hardly was this bank established than it made a tem-
The
porary loan to the republic of 500,000 ducats; this incident accounts for the tradition according to which the Bank of Venice owed its origin to a national debt. In other the Banco del Giro transacted in business respects exactly the same way as the Banco della Piazza del Rialto, which it ultimately (in 1637) absorbed.
The
1
republic
was
not,
its
debt to the
Lewis, op. cit., p. 40; compare above, p. 25. See Lattes, pp. 170-171, for the reason of this. Dunbar, p. 321. See also below, p. 81, for some remarks on the transactions of Continental banks in general.
3
3
of the
gives numerous instances of this mistake, he noted it in most Dictionaries of Political Economy, and even in the Dictionnaire des Finances, VoL I., p. 291. Rezasco's Dizionario di Linguaggio Italiano Storico e Amministrativo
Dunbar
p. 85.
78
Banco
and
after
many
was
suspend cash payments from 1717 to 1739.* This obliged suspension had the effect of reducing almost to nothing the
premium on bank money, which had sometimes amounted to 20 per cent., and had existed throughout the I7th and
i8th centuries.
2
In 1739 the Bank of Venice resumed cash payments, and continued them until the French occupation of Venice. At
in 1797, the Bank had a reserve of this time, that is 522,000 ducats against liabilities of 1,500,000 ducats. The Banco del Giro nevertheless survived the French occupation, and was not suppressed until 1806, after the peace of
Presbourg.
of Genoa. Perhaps the Middle Ages produced no institution more unique than the Compania or Casa di San Giorgio of Genoa; an association of State
2.
The Bank
creditors
colonies
the revenues of the republic, owned and possessions, maintained armies and fleets, made war and concluded treaties, and combined with all these various functions the duties of a bank of deposit. This institution was founded under the following cir:
who managed
cumstances
In
1148,
which had previously had no a loan, and its creditors public debt, were formed into a company to which was entrusted the administration of certain taxes, whose returns were to be devoted to paying the interest and capital of the loan. This system was extended, and gradually there came to be as many distinct companies as there had been loans. These companies were called compere, and this organisation of compere recalls that of the monti of. Venice, Florence, and Sienna. Complications resulted from the increasing number of compere, and they were united about 1250 into one
the republic,
was obliged
to raise
Comf era
changed
1 Apparently there had been previous suspensions between 1631 and 1669 during the war in Crete. Compare what Savary writes in 1679 in Le Parfait Negotiant, Part II., p. 128.
a 3
Dunbar,
Rota,
p.
p. 330.
185.
ORGANISATION OF THE
this
NEW
BANK.
79
compera into the Ufficio di San Giorgio, a company intended to advance to the Government the money needed In this for the conversion of the numerous existing debts. respect the Ufficio never changed its character, and from 1441 to 1736 it supplied the Government with frequent
loans.
1
Soon the Ufficio di San Giorgio became a State within a State, and much surpassed in importance the most powerful
of chartered
never held in
that
which the
Ufficio occupied at
Genoa.
to
it in 1453 Pera and its republic began by ceding In the same year Corsica, in which the republic, torn by internal discussions, could not maintain its authority, was made over to it. Many other such con-
The
citizens," says Machiavelli, preferred the authority of the company to that of the State, on account of the tyranny of the latter and the excellent
"
The
"
administration of the former." It has often been stated that the Bank of Genoa did not begin to carry on banking business until 1675. This view, as has now been proved, is a mistake. 3 The error can be explained as due to a confusion. It was, in fact, at this date that it was decreed that bills of exchange should be
paid in biglietti di cartulari di San Giorgio. Amongst the instruments of credit of these early banks the cartulary notes of St. George are those which most resemble bank-notes.
4"
They were
of Saint
George used
certificates of deposits, deposits which the Bank in whatever way it considered ex-
pedient.
The
crisis of
Bank
of
Saint George,
and between 1799 and 1804 the Ligurian Senate tried vainly to restore it. In 1816 Genoa was annexed to Sardinia and the debt of the Bank of Saint George was consolidated with
the Sardinian national debt.
For the amounts and dates of these loans see Wiszniewski, p. 106, Le Istorie Florentine, Bk. V., III. Giraudet's French
Rota,
4
et seq.
Translation,
of Saint
George was
in
Compare
8o
3.
Amsterdam. This bank was at the its glory when the Bank of England was Established at the time when the Netherlands
of
first
Amsterdam was continuously prosperous. In 1608 and 1609 a monopoly was granted to it by the decrees which
of
Bank
abolished the offices of the exchangers, and a subsequent law still further increased its power by enforcing the use of its receipts for all payments exceeding a certain amount, an
arrangement which obliged every merchant of importance to have a deposit account at the Bank. And its credit became boundless after Louis XIV. 's invasion of Holland and the consequent run on the Bank resulted in proving that its 1 treasure was absolutely intact.
The prosperity of the Bank of Amsterdam was so continuous and it was so generally looked upon as a model bank, even in the time of Steuart and of Adam Smith, that these economists felt it necessary to study the organisation
of the
Bank
country. Unfortunately, at the time of the invasion of the revolutionary armies it was discovered that all the Bank's treasure had been lent to the East India Company. This was the
Bank
of their
own
certain points of resemblance to Genoa, such as a similar origin (both banks existence through the organisation of a loan, and
of
found their privileges increasing in return for successive advances made to the State), 3 and without pausing either to
1 The marks on those coins which had been injured in the fire at the Stadthauss could be easily seen. a An Enquiry into the Principles of Political Economy, Chap. 36-39, and Wealth of Nations, Vol. IV., Chap. iii. Adam Smith was helped in his study by his friend Hope. s Other banks owed their existence to a loan, e.g., those established at Florence in 1336 and 1357, at Chieri (Piedmont), in 1415, at Barcelona in In modern times the National Bank of (See W. Pareto, p. 356). 1349. Austria was founded in 1817 in order to withdraw from circulation the paper
ORGANISATION OF THE
notice that the
NEW
BANK.
81
powers
of the Italian
ways
in
Bank of England never possessed the political Bank, we must bring out at once the which the Bank of England was original and
banks were merely banks of deposit while the Bank of England was something more and something better. We must explain. The Continental banks, with the exception indeed of the Bank of St. George, accepted from merchants coins of all countries of repute and held them " as the equivalents of the bills issued against them. In theory the notes of these earlier banks were of the nature of dock warrants, entitling the holder to claim not only the sum which they expressed, but, theoretically at least, the very 1 coins which were deposited against them."
differed essentially from its Continental rivals. (a) The chief distinction was that the Continental
The Bank of Amsterdam guaranteed that its depositors should always receive the same weight of money, that is a value equal to what they had deposited. Accounts were 2 In this way kept in terms of an ideal money, bank money.
the paper issued
by the banks was much superior to metallic which liable to all kinds of depreciation. Hence was money 3 it was at a premium. The Bank of England from the outset adopted a different
money issued by the Government. The Banks of Genoa and Turin also lent 20 millions to the Piedmontese Government, which authorised their amalgathis bank continued to make loans to the mation into a single bank Government and became the national bank of Sardinia and then the Bank of Italy. The Bank of Spain was founded in 1874 to raise a loan of 125 Since then its advances have continued millions of pesetas for the State. under various forms. As examples of a different origin the Bank of Amsterdam may be noticed and more recently the Scotch banks. The Banks of France and Belgium were created by private enterprise but they received a more or less direct
;
assistance from the Government. For further details on the above points see du Hays du Gassart, prSts consentis aux Etats par les Banques de Circulation, Chap. I.
1
Des
Thorold Rogers,
p. 8.
Gide, p. 336. The incident of 1672 showed that the obligation of keeping the deposits was not at first an illusory guarantee. According to Davenant, the Bank of Amsterdam held regularly ^36, 000,000. For a long time the public believed that this policy was always followed, but Law (Memoire sur les Banques, edition already quoted, p. 553), and Galliani (Delia Moneta, Vol. II., p. 212, edition of the Economisti classici Italiani), were sceptical, and future events showed that they were justified. 3 The same thing happened at Venice. See above, p. Pierson, p. 489.
78,
and Savary,
loc. cit.
82
policy, that already followed by the goldsmiths and by the Bank of Sweden. 1 " It purported to give in its bills the
equivalent of what it had received, but it never pretended to take the deposit for any other purpose than that of trading with it. It never professed to make its issues square exactly with its coin and bullion, though, of course, it made its liabilities square with its assets, plus the capital of its shareholders, and in time, plus its rest or reserve also, i.e., its
accumulated and undivided profits. At first, these profits were derived from the dividends it received from Government, and from the gains it made out of the notes which it
put into circulation cash which it took.
in
It
exchange
for,
or in addition
to,
the
own
credit into
paper money."* (b) Another important distinction between the Bank of England and the other Continental banks consisted in the fact that its notes were not legal tender, whereas in the case of the three banks described above, debtors were obliged to
offer
and creditors to receive the paper money issued by the banks. 3 The Republic of Venice, for instance, forbade the use of metallic money for sums exceeding 300 ducats, and ordered such payments to be made by bank transfers. At Amsterdam payments of sums exceeding, at first 600 and later 300 ducats, had to be made in bank receipts. Finally, at Genoa, an ordinance of 1675 ordered all payments, however small, of bills of exchange or other remittances, to be
made through
the
Bank
of St. George.
There was nothing of this sort in the case of the Bank of England. The English Government did not make the Bank's notes legal tender, and moreover the Bank had no
1 The Bank of Stockholm, established in 1656, had already issued banknotes (Law, op. cit., p. 556). Voltaire writes that the Bank of Sweden, which is the oldest bank in Europe, had to be created because the currency was copper and iron, the transport of which was too difficult (Histoire de Charles XII., Bk. I., p. i). On this point see also Palgrave, Notes on Bank-
Hamburg,
p. 87.
:
all
American work History of Banking in Nations, Vol. IV., pp. 393-395, and the Economiste Franfais for Feb. 2nd,
the
of Palmstruch an
On
Bank
1901,
1
*
may
be consulted.
op.
cit.,
Vol.
I., p.
360, et seq.
ORGANISATION OF THE
NEW
BANK.
83
thought of asking that they should do so, for the directors were not in favour of such a measure. One of them re" 1 It's nothing makes bank bills currant, but only marked, because that all those who desire it, can go when they will,
and
fetch their
(c)
money
for
them."
banks
third important distinction is that the Continental enjoyed a monopoly while the Bank of England was
granted no such privilege at the time of its foundation. The Government even threatened it with a formidable rival by
the creation
of
the
Land Bank.
It
was only
after
the
collapse of this institution, which nearly ruined the Bank of England, that the Government (in 1697) conceded to the
latter
a partial monopoly
was granted.
The distinction between the Bank of England and the Banks of the late Renaissance will be better understood if we study the business which the new English bank undertook from the outset of its career. But before doing this, we must point out that the important differences which we
have
tried to describe exist
no longer.
of
England enjoys a
monopoly, which, originally limited to London, has been extended throughout the country its notes are legal tender, and have been so since 1833; and in addition to this, it has
shown
for some time a tendency to return to the position of the primitive banks, whose chief function was to manage the exchanges, to supply good money, and to take charge
all the gold can be shown that for some time more than ten years the value of the Bank of England notes in circulation has always been less than that of its metallic reserve. The character of the banknotes has thus completely changed like the old certificates
Bank
to
buy
it
offered to
it
at a fixed price.
And
besides
of deposit, they are to-day approximately warrants. In fact the Bank of England to-day is less a credit institution than a
1
Godfrey, op. cit., pp. 7-8. [Francis, op. of., Vol. II., p. 248.] Leroy-Beaulieu, Traite thtoriquf et pratique d'Jiconomie politique, Vol.
III., p. 604.
84
repository of cash. It is the guardian of the cash reserves the whole of English commerce, i.e., almost for the world's commerce. 1
for
SECTION
III.
had been lent to the Government. The only security the shareholders had was the good faith of the debtor. But only two years had passed since the system of a national debt had been first introduced by the Government through the annuities. The lottery loan of a million w as undertaken at the same time as the foundation of the bank. It was speedily successful, but this debt also was temporary, and was to be liquidated in sixteen years. Thus the loan from the Bank was the first permanent loan, if not in theory, since the Government reserved the right to pay it off in 1705, at any rate in fact, since everyone foresaw that the Government would never want to destroy an institution so useful
r
to itself
and
to the public.
capital of the Bank was thus in the hands of the Government. In what way, then, could it make any profit? ist. Besides the income of ; 100,000 paid to it yearly by the Government, the Bank had the power to issue notes. It issued these to an amount equal to the sum advanced These notes, as we have seen, w ere to the Government.
The
1 shall see at the end of the present work (Vol. II., appendix) that the English Government has avoided the inconvenience of keeping the public money by entrusting this to the Bank. It is interesting to note that as early as the eighteenth century the Republic of Venice proposed to hand over the duties of the Treasury to the Banco del Giro see Besta, Lezioni sulla Contabilita di Stato, Bk. VII., Chap. iii. a For an account of these transactions see Godfrey, A short account of the Bank of England (1695). This pamphlet also describes the immediate results of the Bank's foundation. It is most useful and we have already referred to it. All references are to the reprint which Francis gives at the
We
ORGANISATION OF THE
NEW
BANK.
85
not legal tender; an interest of 2d. a day was allowed on them, which cost the Bank ,36,000 a year, but attracted to the patronage of the goldsmiths. This policy made it people use these notes less often in making payments; but it also deprived them of that fixity of value which is one of the main characteristics of a well-managed currency. It seems incredible that the Bank took no precaution to ensure the convertibility of its notes, and during the restoration of the coinage it was reduced to the most desperate expedients to maintain its credit. It would not have succeeded in doing so had it not been for the sacrifices made
its directors and shareholders. 2nd. Nominally the Bank discounted at 4^ per cent, in the case of foreign bills of exchange, and at 6 per cent, in the But considerable case of English bills and notes for debts. reductions were made to such of its customers as kept their money deposited with it. This was not the only favour shown to depositors. 3rd. In order to increase the profits which could be made on
by
deposits the
them by paying 4 This practice aroused great indignation among the Bank's opponents who declared that it would cause the withdrawal of capital from commerce and
to attract
1
Bank endeavoured
industry.
4th.
Its first
Bank
to lend
money
on pawned articles. According to Godfrey it lent money on " pawns of commodities " and " real securities " at 5 per cent, per annum. If the titles to land had been more certain, advances would have been made on mortgages at
4 per cent., and in time of peace, at 3 per cent. The Bank does not seem to have made much use of its power to lend on pawned goods, and it never bore any resemblance to
a pawn-dealer.
Another feature distinguishing depositors, so far from making any to pay for them.
a
1
it
profit
(1698), Part
205.
and economic condition of England at the time of its foundation. Causes of this success. Michael Godfrey, his " A Short salutary influence on the commercial world, his pamphlet, Account of the Bank of England." Services of the Bank to the Government and the public.
Success of the Bank.
created under
gloomy
auspices.
The political
;
outlook was bad, 1 the March equinoxes had been extremely 2 severe and the financial situation was deplorable not only was the market constantly upset by the gambling fever, 8
1 Marlborough had disclosed to James II. the plan for an assault on Brest, and had thus converted into a disaster an attack which it had been believed must ruin the French navy. (This letter from Marlborough is published among the Stuart Papers. See also Henri Martin, Vol. XIV., pp. 196-197). At home the Government was not strengthened, an attack on the coasts of Britain was feared, and it was rumoured that the Pope was going to advance considerable sums to James II. to support this expedition. 2 One of these alone seems to have done damage to the amount of ^400,000, a considerable sum when the English navy according to Rogers' In 1702 the total ionnage estimate, hardly exceeded 200,000 tons burden. At present it is according to Macpherson, did not exceed 212,222 tons. with for as 1,639,552 Germany, and 957,756 for France 9,164,342, compared (these figures are taken from very detailed statistics published in the Times for February 5, 1901). In 1898, 761 merchant vessels were constructed in England whose total tonnage amounted to 1,367,250 tons, without counting
33 warships of a total tonnage of 120,560 (see Victor BeVard, L'Angleterre et I' Impe'rialisme contemporairi). In other words, the annual construction is now seven times the total tonnage of the English merchant navy two centuries ago. 3 We have already referred to this (p. 53), and to the companies formed, often entirely without foundation, and whose shares fluctuated incessantly. These fluctuations were the more numerous owing to the ease with which a panic regarding the shares of such-and-such a company could be spread or The public was an artificial rise in the shares of others produced.
The to manipulations of this kind and was easily deceived. speculators used to meet at the coffee-houses, especially at Garra way's and Jonathan's, which in London history are the equivalents of the Rue Quincampoix they had no qualms about producing fluctuations to an extent of which a few figures will give an idea. The stock of the Hudson's Bay That of the East India 80 in three years. Company fell from ^250 to 37 Company, which had stood at ^146 at the beginning of 1693, fell to in May, 1697, to rise again to ^142 by the beginning of 1700. The stock of the English East India Company, the young rival of the former, with which it ultimately combined, suffered a like fate from ^46 in March,
unaccustomed
; ;
87
1 but the lack of sound metallic coinage on which to base the credit currency might at any moment have forced the Bank to the verge of ruin. However, in spite of all, the Bank prospered at the outset. 2 This was due to the prudence and ability of its directors and shareholders. Michael Godfrey, who had done for the Bank in all that related to the City what Montague had done for it in matters concerning the Government, not only gave it the support of his personal influence, which was great, but also took pains to surround it with wealthy financiers of high reputa-
There was Sir John Houblon, 3 the first governor, afterwards Lord Mayor of London, Gilbert Heathcote, and several other merchants of excellent commercial standThe personality of the directors had more influence ing. then than to-day and that of Godfrey's colleagues was such
tion.
new
establish-
ment. 5
success of the Bank had also a political side and Its promoters were all active Whigs, and political causes.
The
although this exposed it to attacks as we know, it also ensured to it the support of the Government and the sympathy of the commercial world, who rallied round the new
institution
when they saw it attacked. Whatever the exact causes, the success was
brilliant.
it rose to ^219 in March, 1703. And these were well-established comThe I have chosen them on that panies of good repute. very account. enormous fluctuations in the stock of other companies now long forgotten may easily be imagined.
1699,
The
condition of the coinage will form the subject of the next chapter.
all
On
work
The
First Nine
Years of the
3
Bank
of England,
These Houblons, for Sir John had four brothers, were of Flemish origin. Their father had taken refuge in England on account of religious persecutions. He made a good deal of money in London, but always continued a member of the French colony, of which he was for a long time the president.
come
He had Godfrey was killed at the siege of Namur on July 15, 1695. to bring subsidies to William, who was besieging the town, and like a good courtier accompanied his sovereign into the trenches, where he was shot. His enemies alleged that he ventured into such an exposed position only out of excess of prudence, believing that the one place of safety was with the King.
4
fall of 2
88
Godfrey lived long enough to witness it and some little time before his death he published his famous pamphlet, in which he expressed his delight with some complaisancy. The primary advantage which followed from the establishment of the Bank was, according to him, 1 that a loan was
granted
to the
Government
at
an exceptional
rate.
This
is
quite true and it was this that enabled William to take the offensive in Flanders and to secure his first successes.
Moreover, the Bank helped the Government by making the voting of taxes more effective, as well as by actual loans. It accepted the tallies at par so that they soon rose to a premium, whereas until 1694, even the most secure of these tallies which had but a short time to run, such as those on the land tax, had been at a discount of from i J to 2 per cent., while tallies which offered less security were discounted at a loss of 15 to 30 per cent, over and above the interest. 2
The advantages which the Bank afforded to the public were no less great. The citizens now had a place where 3 their deposits would be in security, and would bear interest although the money could be withdrawn at will. The Bank also had a beneficial influence on the rate of discount. Godfrey remarks as a thing both surprising and unexampled that after six years of war and after an ex4 penditure of thirty millions, there had been a great fall in the rate of interest instead of the rise usual in such cases. The author prophesied that in a few years, thanks to the Bank, the rate of interest would be reduced permanently to
3 per cent., and the value of the lands of 5 by nearly 100 millions.
England increased
The Bank was undoubtedly an immense benefit to both Government and public; Godfrey's statements are confirmed on all sides. And what is more, the benefit was
mutual, since the
'
Bank
lost
nothing.
P
2
P 5' Godfrey takes tne opportunity of making various accusations against the goldsmiths. See above, pp. 22 and 25.
*p.
5
6.
p. 7,
p.
89
its stock, which soon and on October 25th, 1694, was at IO 5- After some fluctuations, of which Rogers gives a most detailed account, it rose again to 99 on March 25th of the follow-
rose to par
1
ing year, fell slightly, then rose once more, so that in January, 1696, it reached the unprecedented height of 2 All seemed to be going well when two dangers made io8. their appearance, which proved to be among the most serious of those with which the new institution was threatthese dangers were the reform, now become unened
:
for
the
Land
next
Bank.
chapters.
They
will
form
subjects
of
the
two
See his Table I., giving the "Weekly Prices of Bank Stock." These fluctuations were due either to the political events, favourable and otherwise, which occurred during these years, such as the taking of Namur, the death of the Queen, etc., or to events particularly affecting the Bank, such as Godfrey's death, or the announcement of a dividend, or, to the scandals and political intrigues which marked the period. finally, Macaulay (Chap, xxi.) describes the scandals connected with the East India Company and with the City of London Orphans' Fund. On this occasion the Speaker was accused of corruption, and had himself to put the question to the House over which he was presiding. The vote was against him, and he was expelled from the House. Seymour and Leeds were also implicated, and their accusers were no better than they. These scandals threw discredit upon the stock of all the great financial companies, and that of the Bank was further affected by the manipulations of Lord Godolphin and Charles Duncombe, who sold all their stock in order to produce a fictitious fall. The effects of this sudden and combined sale may be imagined when it is remembered that Duncombe alone had .80,000 of stock. This same Duncombe, a man of the worst character, who had been
1
convicted of forgery but released in default of a legal penalty for his crime, ended by becoming Lord Mayor of London by means of unrestrained corruption. He had made his fortune in all ways imaginable. The account of his life would form a curious chapter in the history of the social behaviour, and in particular, of the electioneering habits of his time. Bribery in every form ran rife at elections without concealment or needless beating about the bush. It is one of the things not least to the credit of modern England that she has freed herself from these scandalous methods, which, with the connivance of the Hanoverian monarchy, persisted down to the end of the eighteenth century.
CHAPTER
V.
IN William III.'s time the coins were struck at the Tower by a mill worked by horses. But until the introduction of a machine for stamping the coins, this had been done by a hammer; the metal was first cut into pieces and then stamped. These two sorts of coins circulated together, in theory at least, in actual fact the bad money soon drove 1 out the good. Folkes, indeed, states that during the re-
coinage in 1696 the coins brought to the Mint had all been struck between the 6th year of Edward VI. 's reign and 1662, the year in which milling had been introduced. At the time of which we write at all events, the state of the currency had become scandalous; coins dating from the Plantagenets were still in circulation, as well as debased coins of Henry VIII. and Edward VI., which had escaped the re-coinage 2 in Elizabeth's reign and which were valued accurately by the dealers in money, for coins were found " The offered for sale and valued as half alloy. English Mint levied on the bullion coined a pretty heavy seignor3 age to cover charges, for the coin had to carry, not
only the fourteen pence per pound charged for manufacture, but the cost of melting and refining. Now such a seignorage
1
p. 42.
details as to this re-coinage will be found in our fourth part, chap. It was this re-coinage which vi., in connection with Robert Peel's speech. gave Gresham the opportunity of stating the law called by his name.
9 At the present day all the expenses of minting are met by the taxes, and the English sovereign is the only coin which really possesses its face value.
Some
91
charge must have led to a considerable importation of foreign coin, which in the exchanges was estimated at its 1 The disadvantages bullion, as opposed to its Mint value." of such a situation were continually making themselves felt, and had been the subject of petitions to the House of Commons and of various Bills. But in 1694 the matter
became insupportable. The silver currency was depreciating daily, and at the end of the year, the guineas which
were nominally equivalent to 20 shillings, rose gradually to 30 shillings. The exchange on Holland fell 25 per cent, although the balance of trade was favourable to England. This state of things could not fail to attract the attention of Parliament. 2 The difficulties were so great that trade was at a standstill and the taxes were no longer collected. The silver money had been getting clipped for a long time and the damage was done so secretly and was so well concealed by all who were interested in dealing in the currency, that all the coins had greatly decreased in value, five pounds in cash being hardly worth forty shillings. There were
also
in circulation
3
silvered over.
money should be
re-
and calculated that this would cost a million. It also recommended that the new money should be of the same weight and fineness as the old that the crown should be valued at 5s. 6d. and that numerous penalties should be imposed on those who debased the coins. An Act was passed in 1695,* the preamble of which states that it was notorious that the currency had been greatly debased by various devices, that many false coins had been clipped to make them like the good ones, and that these
;
;
Thorold Rogers, op. cit., p. 31. A committee was appointed as early as 1689, but it presented no report. References to the monetary crisis are found in many of the literary writings of the period, in Dryden's correspondence, for example; in Blackmore's Satyr against Wit, and even in Gibber's comedy, The Fool of Fashion, the hero of which, in language reflecting the licence which then prevailed in the " Virtue is as much debased as our English drama, declares that money, and faith, Dei gratia, is as hard to be found in a girl of sixteen as round the brim of an old shilling."
3
3 4
6 and 7
p. 955.
92
practices had been carried on by persons who made a trade of exchanging good money for bad, or other like devices.
The law
therefore forbade
anyone
to
exchange, lend,
sell,
any coins, clipped or undipped, of gold or silver, for more than their nominal value, under a penalty of IDS. for every 2os. so traded in. The law added (art. 4)
buy, or receive
that
of the clippings of the coins, should forfeit them, and should be liable to a fine of ^500 and to be branded on the right
profession, was forbidden, under penalty of imprisonment, to buy or sell bullion, and various 1 In penalties were imposed on those who exported coin.
a striking addition, this law, which Rogers describes as illustration of that unwisdom and ignorance of monetary
**
more
characteristic sections.
Warden, with two assistants of the Goldsmiths' Company, or two justices of the peace, to enter any house suspected of containing bullion, and if any was found, it rested with the owner of the house to prove that it was not the product of melted coin or of clippings. The law went even further in ordering the sheriffs of counties, on and
Section 8 allowed the
after May ist, 1695, to pay ,40 to anyone who procures the conviction of a clipper ; and the informant may sue the sheriff if the latter neglects to pay him his reward.
This was sufficient to put a premium on denunciation. But the law went still further in this direction. Any clipper who could prove the guilt of two others was pardoned and an apprentice who informed successfully against his master was at once made a freeman of the City. His denunciation " served him instead of a masterpiece." We have thought it necessary to dwell upon these pro1 The provisions are as follows Section 5 See sections 5, 6, and 7. disables every person from exporting bullion unless it be stamped at Goldsmiths' Hall and oath be made that it is not the produce of English coin. " was worth about Bullion thus "sworn off i^d. an ounce more than other As Mr. Rogers witily remarks, " this meant that three halfpence bullion. an ounce in gold was the price of perjury." Section 6 permits unstamped bullion to be seized and confiscated by the Customs' House. Section 7 authorises goldsmiths alone to deal in bullion.
:
93
too
similar legislative attempts, and it is not that the prohibition of keeping money
coined or in bullion, and the encouragement of informing, are the necessary outcome of measures by which statesmen
have hoped to restrain the free action of monetary laws. refer only to France, we find similar provisions under the Regency, when sons denounced their fathers, and in the laws of the revolutionists w ith regard to assignats. The French laws only served to bring trouble and disorder and fulfilled none of the hopes with which they were passed. The effects of the English laws may be deduced from the facts which follow.
To
of
May, June, and July, 1695, 572 100 each, were brought into the
is,
exchequer.
" 1 contemporary writer says Upon trial I have found that 55. of milled money weighed 8s. of the present current money, and 35. of the 8s. was not clipped, only worn. Again, I have found IDS. in milled money to weigh 2 is. of the clipped money. Again, 2os. of milled money to weigh 435. of our no\v current money."
The
officers of the
Exchequer, according
weighed ,57,200 of hammered money. Its to have exceeded 221,418 ounces, it was actually 113,771 ounces. The weight per bag was as follows
:
to
and
3rd
4 th
5th 6th
M.375
27,318 23,469 20,899 19.588
221,418
1
the
Culloch's reprint in A Collection of scarce Tracts on Money. See also Martin Folkes, op. cit., p. 117, note. L'Hermitage also says (Dec. gth, 1695) that three well-known London goldsmiths were asked to supply ;ioo of current silver coin; the ^300 ought to have weighed 1,200 ounces, they actually weighed only 624.
An Essay for the Regulation of the Coin, By A. V. (Sept. 2nd, 1695). Some Remarks on a Report containing an Essay for the Amendment of Silver Coins (1695), p. 159 of the original edition, and p. 253 of Mac-
94
calculation.
asked them to take out of their strong-boxes a bag of ^100; he found that these bags weighed as follows
ist
bag
2nd
3rd 4 th
5th 6th
198 190
182
174
The whole ,600 weighed 17,198 ounces, which would have been the weight of ^310 of milled money. The author adds that he is informed that the money paid into the Exchequer weighs from 13 to 2O-lbs. per ^100 sterling and that it is worth less than two-thirds of its nominal value. " 3 But, since it was thought that the money in the country is generally not one-half as bad as it is in and near London," he obtained an account from various cities as
follows
:
ist
bag of
2nd
ist
227
203 211 180
192
2nd
ist
2nd
ist
216
198
1,668 ounces
2nd
The ;8oo weighed no more than ^431 155. of milled money, so that the difference from the London figures was
very small. Our author exaggerates slightly, for some parts of the North escaped the infection. Macaulay relates with his usual wit, the tale of the Lancashire Quaker, who during a
1
Essay for Regulation, p. 8, Chap. iv. I omit fractions, so that the totals given are slightly higher than those
P- 9-
95
London, found to his amazement that the value money changed and increased as he drew nearer to the Capital. When he got there his wealth was half as great
1 again as when he started. What was the reason for this incessant clipping of the coin ? It could not be explained by the negligence of the The laws were only too severe, and were actually law. instances of condemnation to death followed by enforced 2 execution occur by dozens. Godfrey accuses the goldsmiths. Rogers considers that the crime was fashionable, and that the morals of the Court after the Restoration
:
afforded a bad example to the public. It is certain, at any rate, that these practices were extra3 the bullion had become so much ordinarily profitable;
dearer than the coined money that people were irresistibly 4 tempted to clip the coins, more especially since the con-
made
the exporta-
tion of bullion extremely easy. Another equally certain fact is that people were so tolerant of these crimes that the clergy thought it incumbent upon
1
Chap,
xxi., p.
Vol.
IV., p.
627 in the first edition. 3 Seven men were hanged and a woman burnt in a single morning for a crime of this kind. Macaulay, p. 543, Vol. II., or p. 625, Vol. IV. 3 Luttrell says that many people made fortunes in this way, and instances Moor of Westminster, who, when his crime was discovered, offered a considerable sum in order to save his life. See Thorold Rogers, op. cit., p. 32. 4 The trade of clipping coin, says L'Hermitage (Oct. ist), was so profitable and seemed so easy that, no matter what was done to suppress the The author of the clippers, others were always ready to take their places. Essay for regulation of the coin (p. 3) in his second chapter, headed, Setting forth what is become of the great quantities of money coined in the reign of or even King Charles II. and the preceding Reigns, points out that 4d., 6d., lad. may be gained by melting an undipped 55. piece. He adds, " And 20 per cent, advantage is a good allay for any scruple of conscience that may have those that practice it, and those that receive and pay one thousand pounds a day, and meet with but one hundred pounds amongst it of undipped Silver may in a year (accounting but three hundred days) get six hundred
sterling."
(p. 4) for the disappearance of the fashion for gold and silver plate, and for chains, buttons, and buckles of the precious metals, a fashion which must have caused the melting of more than 7 million sterling, involving an annual loss of interest of ^420,000. The author suggests that the use of such plate should be forbidden or that it should be licensed and a tax of 5 per cent, imposed. Such complaints of the inconveniences of fashion recall those made by Bodin in his answer to the paradox of M. de Malestroit.
the coin
was
96
them
view of
little to alter
and the
price of gold
and
the foreign
were continually disturbed by it. During 1694 tne price of gold varied from 8os. to 8 is. 6d. That of guineas from 2 is. lod. to 225. 6d., and that of the ounce of silver from 55. 2d. to 5s. 5d. In 1695 the prices of
the precious metals began to rise. On January nth, the price of an ounce of gold was 8os. 6d., and that of guineas 22s. 9d. These prices rose steadily, and on June i4th, were
4
i Two sermons on this subject are particularly remarkable. The first and most striking was preached by Fleetwood, afterwards Bishop of Ely, then chaplain to the King, before the Lord Mayor and Aldermen, and was Fleetwood was one printed by order of the court (Ruding, p. 36, note 2). of the most interesting characters amongst the English clergy, he was an ardent Whig and continually introduced politics into his sermons. (We have of his a Chronicon Pretiosum, or an account of English gold and silver Money, published anonymously in 1707, and various sermons on passive obedience and in opposition to the peace of Utrecht). In this case he showed considerable knowledge of economic questions. He took for his text Genesis xxiii., 16, and in reference to the grave of Sarah found opportunity (p. 19) to point out the evils of debasing the coinage, especially in regard to payments " For it is not to foreigners which could not be made in clipped money. Caesar's face and titles, but weight and goodness that procure credit." (t " if he the of our be
.
concludes, exportation weighty money mischief to the nation, we see it is occasioned chiefly by the clipping." The other sermon was preached by G. Halley at York Castle, befo some " clippers " who were to be hanged the next day.
3
Now,"
For
this Act,
its
causes, and
some
interesting details,
see
Shaw, T
Rogers gives
I.
five tables
The Weekly Prices of Bank Stock from Aug. 17, 1694, to The Rates of Exchange on Amsterdam. III. The II. 1703. Discount or premium on bills of exchange, London and Amsterdam. IV. V. Changes in the value of gold, silver, and Discount of Bank Bills. guineas. Rogers made considerable use of a book by Alexander Justice, General Treatise on Moneys and Exchanges (1707). I have not been able to consult this work, for the only copy is in the Oxford Library. The Director of the British Museum, to whom I applied, promised to procure the book if
question. Sept. 17,
[There Goldsmiths' Library.] The price of silver fluctuated less, because silver was in fact the standard coin of the country, and during this crisis the Government, so far as a Government can exercise influence in such a matter, was able to control Gold partially the price of this metal through the quantity of coin issued. did not become the English standard until 1816, and the single standard was adopted less for theoretical reasons than on grounds of economy. Silver was then at a premium. For the present monetary system in England
is
possible, but apparently the attempt has not hitherto been successful.
now
4
a copy
in the
see
Cauwes' Cours
II., p.
542.
97
prices
maximum
The
rate of
exchange
fell in
a corresponding manner.
In
June, 1695, the exchange on Amsterdam, which is important both on account of the prominent position held by this town and also because the sums necessary to support the English
troops in Flanders were sent through
it,
was
below par, and in August English bills of exchange on Amsterdam were at a discount of 30 per cent. This latter fact hastened the decision arrived at by Montague and Somers that the currency must be reformed at all costs and that this could only be done on condition that the debts to individual creditors and to the public remained
unaltered in value.
It
was, in
fact,
out of
all
the
numerous
results of the
rate of
upon the
exchange which most disturbed England at that moment. Whatever might be the state of home trade, the sufferings of those who were dependent on their salaries, the disturbance produced in credit, the immense profits of the goldsmiths and exchangers, all these evils seemed small compared with the fact that the subsidies voted for a war upon whose result, as was commonly thought, the very existence of England depended, were always reduced by 20 or 30 per cent, owing
to the
their destination.
The new Parliament met in November, 1695, and the reform of the currency was its first subject of discussion. The law which decreed the reform of the currency was 7 William III., c.i. 2 The remedy came almost too late, for the distress continued to be extreme during the first year after its application. The currency reform under William III.,
under Elizabeth, was an undertaking of fundamental importance and extreme delicacy, and it was unlike
like that
In April, 1696, after the new coins had been issued, guineas and the price of gold, on July 10, to 825. silver at the
;
fell
to 22S.,
again
same date
was
*
55. 2d.
See Rogers,
The Statutes
I?
98
it
Elizabeth's re-coinage in that so far from yielding a profit was a great expense. 1 The re-coinage Ruding 2 states, was not completed until 1699, having occupied the greater part of this and the three
According
The expenses were met by a tax on houses and windows, and amounted in all to ,2,702,164, which was far in excess of the original
estimates.
4
Criticisms of the Act of 1696. Difficulties which Mon5 had encounter. It known that the Act of to is well tague
to
Montague and a
difficult
enough
task he
Montague received much help from his colleague Somers, and above all, from two men of genius for whom political economy had not been a primary object of study I refer The latter was not content merely to Newton and Locke. to advise, he also wrote a masterly pamphlet, of which we These four men, each so shall presently give an analysis. in own his province, had many difficulties to distinguished two chief were (i) the question of which the of solve, the expense which must necessarily be incurred by the recoinage, (2) the question whether, when the re-coinage was
accomplished, the coins should keep their old standard or be issued at a lower one. First difficulty. The ^2,703,164 required for the undertaking had to be covered; a considerable sum at any time,
and
1
enormous.
left
Most
likely
if
this
expense
See below,
Elizabeth's re-coinage
Vol.
II.,
a net
profit of
.14,079
135.
gd.
p. 240.
8
p.
57. for
Exeter,
Chester,
Norwich,
Lord Liverpool, draft of an intended report on the Leake (An Historical Account of English Money, p. 369) points out that all the expenses might have been avoided if the matter had been taken up in time. Some details interesting from a technical point of view, on this reform and on the statutes relating to it, will be found in a work by Edward Hawkins, curator of the antiquities at the British Museum, The silver Coins of England, pp. 391-392.
a
p.
44 et seq.
99
had been clearly instead of vaguely foreseen, Montague would have argued in vain. Possibly too, if the Bank had realised the difficulties it would have to face the depreciation of its stock and notes, the suspension of payments and of dividends its directors, in spite of their courage and intelligence, would have refused to enter upon such a formidable adventure, more especially since they were already threatened by the Land Bank. Godfrey estimated To the cost of the re-coinage at from one to two millions. a million to three sum more than a equal spend pounds, revenue in time of as a serious matter at peace, was year's the end of the lyth century as the loss of a hundred million
pounds to-day. Second difficulty. The second difficulty encountered by The harvest had Montague was a more delicate matter. been bad, prices had risen, and the distress was great. " Would it not be better to keep the same names for the crown, the half-crown, the shilling, and the sixpence, but to coin an ounce of silver into seven shillings instead of five ? There are people who even now believe that the Government can give an intrinsic value to a coin which it does not 1 But many more people believed in this possess in bullion. 2 Parliament had fixed and was to go on theory in i695." fixing for some time the prices of crowns and guineas, of beef and salt, of labour and of money (by deciding the rate
of interest)
;
why might
it
At all events this opinion had not entirely disappeared some years ago. In England, in 1819, when cash payments were to be resumed after a suspension lasting 22 years, Lord Lauderdale proposed that the standard should be lowered, and maintained that gold ought to be valued at 4 is. an ounce. It was also suggested that it should be valued at 4 los. or at 5, since these prices, reckoned in Bank notes, had prevailed some time before the resumption of cash payments. People also said that as a great part of the national debt had been incurred during a period of forced currency, it was fair to pay the interest on it in depreciated coin. But wisdom prevailed and the old standard of the coins was re-established. This was not accomplished without opposition, and Robert Peel who advocated the policy, was treated as a lunatic by his own father, the statesman who had taken such a large share in drawing up the first labour laws. Montague's example must have been in the minds of those who were managing the business of resumption.
a
cit. t
pp. 45-46.
ioo
coinage by lowering the standard of fineness of the coins and continuing to call the coins by their former names? 1 These opinions were developed in a report by William Lowndes, the Secretary of the Treasury, published under
the
A Report containing an essay for the amendment title the coins (London, 1695). This work which consilver of tains much interesting historical information, called forth
:
The
latter
in turn, and after stating them very impartially, proceeded to refute them or rather to crush them to powder, in a
3 Locke's opinions had been stated before, masterly manner. but never with so much authority and skill. 4 That celebrated philosopher had written the pamphlet in question for the private use of Somers. Somers was delighted w ith it, and ordered it to be printed. The little treatise concludes
7
as follows
"
The
1 The King, and afterwards Somers, proposed that the money should be weighed and not counted, but these suggestions were negatived by the
council.
Further considerations concerning raising the value of money. This pamphlet and two other economic essays by Locke, Some considerations on the lowering of interest and raising the value of money, and On the Coining of Silver Money, have been reprinted at the end of McCulloch's Principles of Political Economy. See Macleod, $th edition, Vol. I., p. 468. 8 See note, pp. 322-349 of McCulloch's reprint.
4
We may
of Coin and of Coinage, by Rice Vaughan, a book in which the author in spite of his talent, has been unable to escape the idea that the stamp affects the real value of the coin. The book, which is worth reading, was printed in 1675, but must have been written some time earlier, at any rate before 1643, when Louis XIII. died, for (p. 29) reference' is made to an edict
A Discourse
of the present
I
In connection with Locke's work, of France, in 1614. some extracts from Quantulumcunque which refer to the question. William Petty seems to me to be far in advance of the ordinary thought of his time on all the points with which he deals, both in the boldness and in the decision of his answers, and his short pamphlet it is only See Question 8 (p. 65, Select ten pages long deserves to be remembered. " If the new shilling were but three-quarters of the weight as Tracts) formerly ... the Merchant would export them, just as before, only he will new give but three-quarters so much Pepper or other Indian Goods for the And consequently there would retrenched shilling as he did for the old. be no difference, but among a few such Fools as take money by its name and not by its weight and fineness." " If a shilling was by new Coinage reduced to three-quarters Question 9.
King
cannot
resist giving
of
we now
present weight, should we not thereby have one-third more money than have, and consequently be so much the richer? Answer You would indeed have one-third part more of the new christened shillings, but not an
its
101
silver
by
its
tion that is the price of things and the measure of commerce ; and it is the weight of silver in it, and not the name of the
pieces,
that
men
them
"
for.
If this be not so, when the necessity of our affairs abroad, or ill-husbandry at home, has carried away half our it is but to issue a proclamation that a treasure, penny shall go for two pence, sixpence for a shilling, half a crown for a crown, etc., and immediately, without any more ado, we are as rich as before. And, when half the remainder is gone, it is but doing the same thing again, and raising the denomination anew. And so on, and if the denomination were raised 15 or 16 times, everyone would find his wealth in silver turned into gold. " If this be not so, I desire anyone to show me why the
.
.
.
same way
value of
cannot,
which can
raise the
money in respect to other commodities one-fifth, when you please, raise it another fifth, and so on."
on, is an arbitrary matter; the shilling might be called a penny, and vice versa; similarly, the existing proportion between the two coins might be changed. " But this, however ordered, alters not one jot the value of the ounce of silver, in respect of other things, any more than it does its weight, this raising being but giving of
names at pleasure to aliquot parts of any piece." No human " raise the value of our money their double in power can of other commodities, and make that same piece or respect
quantity of silver, under a double denomination, purchase double the quantity of pepper, wine, or lead, an instant after such proclamation, to what it would do an instant before."
of Silver ... of Foreign Commodities Nor even of any Domestic Commodities. Suppose you buy a Silver Vessel from a Goldsmith weighing 20 ounces at 6s. per ounce, making 6 pounds or 24 ounces of Coined Silver now suppose that the said 6 pounds were reduced from weighing 24 ounces to weigh but 18 ounces upon the new Coinage, but be still called 6 pounds even by the King's Proclamation. Can it be imagined that the Goldsmith will give his Vessel weighing 20 ounces of wrought for 18 ounces of un wrought Silver? Now this Absurdity is the same in all other commodities."
Ounce more
102
Locke's conclusions seem unanswerable, 1 and nowadays no one would seriously deny that Lowndes' suggestion would have given a severe blow to the credit of the Government, and would have involved the spoliation of creditors for the benefit of debtors. Many interests were opposed to an alteration of the standard. Creditors would have lost a part of their incomes, landlords a part of their rents, and everyone who had a contract not yet fulfilled would have
But the notion that the name of it was with powerful and Lowndes* shilling carried the thing reasoning answered well to the prevailing frame of mind. The resolution to preserve the old standard of the coins, vigorously supported by Montague, was, however, passed 2 by a majority of 1 1 1
suffered in like
manner.
His premises were no less important. He began by stating as a principle that there is only one difference between the Government which debases the coins and the criminal who clips them, viz., that the Government can oblige people to accept the debased coin. He then points out that such conduct will The debasement of the coin in fact " will defraud the cost the State dear. King, the Church, and the universities and hospitals, and of so much of their It will weaken, if not totally settled revenue as the money is raised. destroy the public faith, when all that have trusted the public and assisted our present necessities upon Acts of Parliament, in the million lottery, Bank Act, and other loans, should be deprived of twenty per cent." Later on, p. 338, Locke adds that it is alleged that the lowering of the standard will enable more debts to be paid, which shows evidently that there is a fraud involved which it would be impossible to sanction.
1
. .
Macaulay, Vol.
II., p.
552.
CHAPTER
VI.
Dr. Chamberlain.
Bill for the
the House of Commons. Collapse of Position of the Bank of England after the recoinage and the foundation of the Land Bank. Partial suspension of the Bank's payments. First Exchequer Bills issued, (c) Grievances and demands of the Bank of England. Renewal and extension of the Charter. Chief provisions of the Act of February 3, 1697. Question of a monopoly.
the
Land Bank.
of Bank stock, which on February ist, 1696, stood fallen to ^83 on the i4th of the same month. had ^107, It was at this time that the House of Commons sanctioned the scheme for a Land Bank, best known by the name of its promoter Dr. Chamberlain. Chamberlain was an accoucheur who had written two or three medical books, and who had for some time been endeavouring to found a Land Bank, or indeed, a bank of Four years after the failure of his scheme in any kind.
at
1
THE price
England he made another attempt at Edinburgh, but with no better success than on the former occasion. 2
As early as 1693 Chamberlain had submitted his scheme for a Land to the House of Commons, who considered it and pronounced it to be and practicable. Before this a formal allusion to Dr. Chamberlain's schemes occurs in the pamphlet so often referred to, Bank of Credit. The City merchant remarks that Mr. Murray and the Doctor have drawn up a very ingenious scheme for a bank of credit, but since they have received no encouragement from the City, they have made a proposal for a bank of a more general character, including not only London and its suburbs, but the whole kingdom. This pamphlet is dated 1683. Possibly this opposition explains Chamberlain's hatred of the City commercial men. * Rogers is uncertain whether Hugh Chamberlain, the author of the Manuale Medicum, is to be identified with the promoter of these schemes. If he is, the latter was physician in ordinary to Charles II. and a member of the Royal Society. It is certain that Hugh Chamberlain of the Land Bank was summoned to attend the confinement of Queen Mary of Modena in 1688, but was at Gravesend and arrived too late. He wrote a Narrative
1
Bank
useful
104
John Briscoe was another promoter of the new scheme. He was supported by Harley, afterwards Lord Oxford, and by Foley, the Speaker of the House of Commons. Both were political opponents of the Bank of England and very jealous of Montague. Chamberlain maintained that he could raise a public loan
double of that subscribed by the Bank, upon the security of landed property, could make the loan the guarantee for the interest which would be paid on the notes issued, and lend
and subsequently landowners on mortgage security at 3} per cent. The projectors regarded it as axiomatic that everyone who owned real property ought to have in addition paper money For instance the equivalent in value to that property. owner of an estate worth ,2,000 ought also to have ,2,000 in paper money. Briscoe and Chamberlain alleged that
the capital directly to the Government,
to
over-issue
of equivalent value. No one, they said, will accuse a goldsmith of over-issue so long as there are guineas and crowns in his
10 note there
to
every
vaults equal in value to the notes in circulation which bear his signature. should not an acre of fertile land have
Why
bag of gold or silver ? The promoters did not deny that the public preferred the precious metals, and that in consequence if the Land Bank were forced to pay
the
same
virtue as a
would soon have to suspend its payments. But they proposed to overcome this difficulty by making the notes inconvertible and legal tender. The speculations of Chamberlain on the subject of the
in gold,
it
'
"
may
even
1
in
our
own
time.
But
he added an
See two pamphlets by the two promoters, i. A proposal by Dr. Hugh Chamberlayne, in Essex Street, for a Bank of Secure Current Credit, to be founded upon Land, in order to the general Good of Landed men. to the increase of the value of Land, and the no less benefit of trade and commerce
(1695)2. Proposals for the supplying their Majesties with money on easy terms, exempting the Nobility, Gentry, etc., from taxes, enlarging their yearly estates and enriching all the subjects of the Kingdom by a National Land Bank. By John Briscoe. With the motto O fortunatos nimium bona si sua norint Anglicanos. 3rd edition, 1696.
:
Op.
cit.,
p. 481,
LAND BANK.
error
105
which began and ended with him. He was fool enough to take it for granted, in all his reasonings, that the value of an estate varied directly as the duration. He maintained that, if the annual income derived from a manor were a thousand pounds, a grant of that manor for twenty years must be worth twenty thousand pounds, and a grant for a hundred years worth a hundred thousand pounds. If, therefore, the lord of such a manor would pledge it for a hundred years to the Land Bank, the Land Bank might on that security instantly issue notes for a hundred thousand
pounds."
point Chamberlain was proof against ridicule, " He arguments and even arithmetical demonstration. was reminded that the fee simple of land would not sell for
this
On
more than twenty years' purchase. To say, therefore, that a term of a hundred years was worth five times as much as a term of twenty years, was to say that a term of a hundred
years was worth five times the fee simple; in other words, that a hundred was five times infinity. Those who reasoned thus were refuted by being told that they were usurers and
;
should seem that a large number of country gentlemen 1 thought the refutation complete." On Monday, February loth, the Commons met in ComIt was mittee to find a means of procuring two millions. decided that this sum should not be raised by the Bank of " raise it upon the England. Mr. Neale then proposed to " Exchequer (i.e., by Exchequer bills), but, this being also rejected, it was ultimately agreed that a Land Bank should be founded and should provide the capital required by subMoreover anyone concerned in the Bank of scription. w as forbidden to take a part in the management England
it
r
of the
new
institution.
This law received the royal assent on the 27th of April. How the King and his Dutch advisers, who were the leaders of financial science in Europe, could have risked the campaign of 1696 on such a scheme, is inexplicable.
As
Parliament, this
1 For a reply to these doctrines see A Bank Dialogue between Dr. H. C. and a Country Gentleman.
106
the financiers
must be put down to the hatred felt by the landowners for and the commercial world. This hatred was so
keen that they were ready to believe anything that appealed and no scheme could have done this better than Dr. Chamberlain's, promising them, as it did, loans at an unhoped-for rate, and the ruin of the Puritan usurers
to their passions,
of Grocers' Hall.
As in the case of the Bank itself the measure relating to Land Bank was included in what is known in England as a Ways and Means Bill. The object of the law was to
the
raise a loan of ,2,564,000 over and above the ordinary revenue. Harley, Foley and Chamberlain undertook this task. The interest on this loan, i.e., ,179, 480,* was to be secured by a salt tax imposed for the purpose. Most of the other provisions are also copied from the Tonnage Act. The King was to appoint a certain number of commissioners to receive subscriptions before August ist, 1696. It was intended to issue letters-patent recognising the company under the title of the Governor and Company of the National Land Bank, on condition however, that half the loan were subscribed before August ist, and the remainder by the New Year. In order to avoid speculation, each subscriber, as in the case of the Bank of England, must pay a quarter of his subscription at once. The bank might not negotiate bills of exchange or issue notes in excess of the sum paid to the Exchequer. It must lend at least 500,000 on land securities at an interest not
exceeding 3} or 4 per cent., according to whether the interest was paid quarterly or half-yearly. The company was authorised to sell lands on which it had received no interest for two years.
These are the chief provisions which was not however destined collapse was absolute.
1
of this
to
famous scheme,
into force.
Its
come
and
the Commons to useful and practicable. 3 The rate was 7 per cent.
in the Doctor's pamphlets Analogous reasons had influenced declare three years earlier that Chamberlain's project was
107
be opened at Mercers' Hall not passed in May But his advertisements had silence by Dr. Chamberlain. so little effect that on June nth the promoters were reduced to expedients, and announced that they were ready to accept "old clipped money that cannot be passed away without loss." On August ist the Land Bank, in accordance with the Act constituting it, ceased to exist. The total subscription amounted to .2,100, to which must be added 5,000
to
was
before
contributed by the King. This collapse put the Government into a very awkward position and the landed interest was disappointed in its dearest hopes, but the country was saved from bankruptcy,
scheme being the Bank in was threatened the first instance by of England, which the project itself, and was subsequently obliged to grapple 1 with a most perilous situation. Position of the Bank of England after the creation of the " Land Bank " and the reform of the currency. Partial
the real victim of Dr. Chamberlain's
suspension of payments.
instance, from the project
The Bank
itself,
and
its
stock
fell
from
107
Besides
this,
The old coins ceased to be current on May 4, but there were no new ones to take their place. Hence on May 6, when the goldsmiths organised a run on the Bank of England, the
A clever defence of the Land Bank was set forth some time after the failure of the company in a little work already mentioned : Remarks on the proceedings of the commissioners for putting in execution an Act passed last
1
Land Bank (1696). This posthumous pamphlet was of the Land Bank. Pamphlets commending Dr. Chamberlain's system continued to appear from time to time. The two last were published after the South Sea disaster they are called, Proposals for
;
^ '
restoring credit, for making the Bank of England more useful and profitable, and for relieving the sufferers of the South Sea Company (1721). An honest scheme for improving the trade and credit of the nation (1727). * The creation of a rival establishment even to-day causes some disturbance in the prices of the stock of the in these days these disoriginal institution turbances were much more violent, for the public instantly became alarmed without troubling to consider whether both institutions could not exist side by side without serious mutual damage. Thus, when Montague raised up a political and economic rival to the old East India Company by creating the English East India Company, the stock of the old Tory company fell from ;*5 8 to ^33. Five years later the shares of the old company stood at and those of the new at .219.
;
'
io8
latter had not enough coin to meet the suddenly increased demand. Sir John Houblon, who was at once Lord Mayor, Governor of the Bank, and one of the Lords of the ;iAdmiralty, endeavoured to reassure the claimants by offerto a tenth of their in demands and b cash, pay ing promising on behalf of the Bank, to pay the remainder soon as the Mint could supply the coins.
"
On Wednesday, May
to offer to
r
13,
put such persons as distrusted the notes of the Bank the tallies w hich they themselves held of the Government as security for their loans. Meanwhile the Lords of the Treasury pledged themselves to pay ^60,000 a week in the new money into the Bank till their whole stock was
who agreed
dividend
and
re-coined."
By about June 11 the failure of Chamberlain's scheme had become evident to all, and the Treasury had to apply to the very institution which the Land Bank had expected
to ruin.
it
The Bank of England did not open a subscription, borrowed 20 per cent, of their capital from its subscribers for six months at 6 per cent, only, and paid this into the
7
Treasury, w hile
it
applied to the
Bank
of
Amsterdam
for
an additional sum of ,100,000. The total amount advanced to the Government was ,340,000. The issue of the new coins was meanwhile going on fairly
sums promised
rapidly but the Treasury continually put off paying the to the Bank. The Bank was obliged to limit its cash payments to 3 per cent, of the amounts payable.
It was at this point that the Lords of the Treasury at length determined to come to the rescue of public credit by issuing " that no public notary should enter an order on July I3th a protest upon any bill of the Bank of England for fourteen 2 days." This was not without effect, for three days later the 3 discount on bank bills fell from 16 to 8 per cent.
1
" In those days the protesting of a commercial bi Rogers, p. 66. could only be effective when drawn up by one of these functionaries." s Rogers, loc. cit. The notes did not rise to par until September 17, i< when a dividend was declared to the shareholders, who had received nor
a
cit.,
p.
63.
for
two years.
109
1 Exchequer Bills. At this same time the Government opened an office at the Exchequer for the issue This of Exchequer bills to supply the want of currency. of a as a result clause and was done at Montague's desire inserted into the Ways and Means Act of the last session. Meanwhile, nearly a million of the new money had been
coined.
bills, for
10 each, bearing
were issued on July 23rd. The Bank bills were at a discount of 10 per cent, on July 28th, and the King secured the promise of a loan of ,500,000 from the Dutch Government, on condition that
Several persons of high standing security was provided. in the City, almost all of them Tories, undertook to guarantee the money. On August i5th, the Bank made a further advance to the King of 200,000 at the urgent request of Portland, one of its principal shareholders.
The Bank's grievances and demands. The second Bank Renewal and extension of the Charter of the Bank of England. The situation forced upon the Bank of EngThe Government had land in 1696 was scandalous. borrowed its last shilling, had forced it to incur liabilities in Holland, to forgo its dividends, and even, by not keeping
Act.
its
to
new
coins, to
payments. To crown all it had supported the Land Bank, and then as soon as this absurd scheme had collapsed, it had had recourse once more to the assistance of the Bank. Finally, it wanted to oblige the
Bank to increase its capital and to accept depreciated tallies payment of the new subscription this proceeding, by largely diminishing the number of tallies, would have helped to raise their value and so to restore the credit of the paper currency which w as then in confusion, but, of course,
in
;
r
always
1
at the
Bank's expense. 3
Hamilton, Inquiry Concerning the National Debt, p. 122. Altogether ^2,975,550 of gold money and ^7,014,047 of silver were coined. The amounts coined since Elizabeth's re-coinage had been ^14,669,949 in gold and ^20,355,651 in silver. * See The arguments and reasons for and against engrafting upon the Bank of England with Tallies, as they have been debated at a late general
3
io
Under these circumstances the directors, urged by the shareholders, thought it their duty to demand guarantees which would enable them to carry on their business successThis position had fully and to strengthen their position. not improved since the collapse of the Land Bank. In 1697 the price of stock was even lower than in the midst of the
crisis.
in the
The Bank notes too, had met with dangerous rivals new Exchequer bills, which were easily negotiated,
and were less liabk to depreciation than the old tallies, hence the notes did not rise to par until after the announce-
Ryswick and of a heavy dividend. The and demands of the Bank are set forth in the grievances two pamphlets to which we have just referred in the note. The three principal demands are as follows The concession of a monopoly. I. This had become
of the peace of
:
ment
essential for the following reason. The notes, according to the author of letter to a friend, will only circulate if the
they are issued are safe, secured and expedient can supply the place of public confidence. Hence the Bank must be the only institution of its kind, for competition causes distrust and contracts credit instead of enlarging it. The Bank, to be useful to the State, must be the general repository of cash for all the inhabitants of London. This is the policy which
sufficient.
funds on which
No compulsory
Not dated, but no doubt written at the beginning court of the said Bank. of 1697. The chief argument brought forward against the proceeding is that it would cause such an increase of capital that the corresponding interest would be out of proportion to the profits. The author, nevertheless, thinks that the scheme would be practicable if additional privileges were conceded These privileges might be to the Bank, amongst others that of a monopoly. granted in return for the great services rendered to commerce by the Bank, in particular the reduction of the rate of discount, which was now 3 per cent, instead of 12 per cent, as in the days of the goldsmiths. The author of A letter to a friend concerning the credit of the Nation, and with relation to the Bank of England, Written by a Member of the said Corporation for the public good of the Kingdom (1697), gives similar arguments against the proceeding, which he considers both unjust and stupid. Stupid because the credit of the Government depends on the good faith with which it carries out its promises unjust because the shareholders of the Bank have a right to the profits due to their foresight and their efforts, not to mention the reward due to them for all the sacrifices, including even that of their dividends, made to help the Government in its times of difficulty. In addition to all these good reasons, the anonymous author suggests another which must in his opinion have seemed excellent, viz., that he had invested a large part of his fortune in the Bank, and had already suffered considerable loss. This explains the eloquence of his remarks about justice.
;
in
has caused the strength and utility of the Banks of Venice, Amsterdam and Hamburg. The payment through the Bank of stims due to the II. Government. This would be a great advantage to the Bank
certain
number
of secondary reforms.
Amongst
others,
efficient
a renewal of the
Bank's privileges
and a more
counterfeiting of
notes.
Parliament and the Bank were agreed upon the two main ist That the privileges of the Bank should points, viz. be renewed and extended. 2nd That in return the Bank should make a loan to the Government. It remained to determine the amount of this loan. The House of Commons asked for 2j millions, guaranteed by a tax on salt. 1
:
On
that,
having regard
to
2
the scarcity of coin, it could not agree to such a large loan, but that it was ready to increase its capital under certain conditions which were ultimately accepted by the Commons,
and which were sanctioned by the Act of 1697. Chief provisions of the Act of February $rd (8 and 9 William III. c. 20). The monopoly and its results. (1) The Bank was to add 1,001,171 to its original
;
capital.
(2)
Anyone might
notes.
subscribe,
be paid four-fifths in
Exchequer
Bank
(3)
pany.
In return for these sacrifices, the Act conferred on the of privileges with which we are already familiar through the claims made in the two pamphlets
Bank a number
referred to.
(i)
corporation
1
Crown might put an end to the by repaying the sums owing to it was prothe
The tax in question was that voted on account of the Land Bank. The directors must have made this decision in order to please the shareholders, who objected strongly to the policy of making loans to the Government. See A second part of a Discourse concerning Banks (undated, but
8
ii2
August, 1710.
(2)
During
this period a
to the
England, since no other corporation of the nature of a bank was to be established by Act of Parliament.
of
(3)
Bank
An
England.
(4)
was
to
Before opening the subscription the original capital be estimated and made up to 100 per cent, for each
authorised to issue notes to the amount
proprietor.
(5)
original capital of ;i, 200,000, and to the amount of the sums to be subscribed, on condition that they were pay1 able on demand; in case such payment was not made, these
of
its
notes might be presented at the Exchequer, and would be payable out of the funds constituting the annuity due to
the Bank.
(6)
taxa-
tion.
Finally it was made a felony, without benefit of clergy, to forge or tamper with Bank notes. These privileges were important, and the consequences Bank notes to the amount of of the Act were no less so. the and tallies to amount of ^800,000 were ,200,000
(7)
drawn out of circulation, and hence the value of the remainder rose so that by the end of the year the notes were at 2 Soon par and the interest-bearing tallies at a premium. wish w as and circulate bank-notes could realised, Godfrey's
r
as
to see
them,
i.e.,
without
bearing
it
the chief gainer by this Act. The benefits secured were extensive. Macleod 3 thinks them excessive and attributes a large proportion of the subsequent crises to the monopoly granted to the Bank. There is no doubt that
1 But the debts of the corporation might not exceed the shareholders became personally liable.
its capital,
otherwi
3 3
From
p.
50 per cent, below par they rose to 112. 479 (5th edition).
113
'this monopoly had a very bad effect on the organisation of 1 provincial credit, but possibly most of the crises which we shall describe below might have been avoided if the advice of a contemporary author 2 had been followed, and the Bank of England had established branches in every commercial
town
kingdom. it may, it must be acknowledged that the immediate effects of the Act were highly satisfactory. The Bank notes rose to par, the stock did the same, and a second dividend of 7 per cent, was paid on September 2ist, 1698. 3 At this time the Bank undertook a transaction of a more prolonged character which it was able to bring to a successful conclusion. This was the repayment of the new debt of ;i, 001,171 subscribed in January, 1697. The first instalment was paid on September 10, 1698, and for the next ten years the Bank paid both a dividend and a bonus. But although the debt was finally paid off in March, 1707,
in the
Be
this as
the
Bank continued
it
to
reckon
it
as part of
its
capital.
seems probable that the Bank repaid to its fortiori shareholders the loans of ^"240,000 and ^200,000 of June 1 1 and August 15, 1696, respectively. One writer 4 even alleges that the Bank offered to advance a million to the Government without interest for 21 years, on condition that its charter was prolonged for the same period. This statement may be correct, but it does not seem to be confirmed by other writers, and in any case, the transaction referred to w as not carried
r
nut.
1
i.,
pp.
country
panks.
Some Thoughts in the Interest of England. Later on the profits were greater, and it is said that Sir Gilbert Heathcote, one of the directors of the Bank, made more than ^60,000 for himself ilone. See Francis, p. 80.
8
letter
CHAPTER
VII.
Economic condition
sion.
of England in 1700. Problem of the Spanish SuccesUnpopularity of a War with position of William III. France. War declared. (&) Policy of the Bank during the War. Bank's close alliance with the Protestant Monarchy. Attacked by the enemies of the Government, but secures the continuation and extension of its Charter. Run of 1707. Act of 1709. Criticism of this Act (i) Bank secures a monopoly. Results of this, (2) Bank undertakes to circulate The Sacheverell Is authorised to double its Capital. f^nuine xchequer Bills. affair. Attack on the Bank.
Political
:
THE year 1699 passed uneventfully. The situation continued to improve and the year 1700 opened under the most favourable auspices. The stock, which had been quoted at nfy at the beginning of the previous year, rose towards the middle of March to the hitherto unheard-of price of ^148. This happy state of things was not confined to the Bank. The prosperity was general; the harvest of 1699
had been very good and
lent; industry flourished
having no longer anything to fear from the French privaProof of this is to be found in the noticeable rise in teers. the prices of the stock of the two East India Companies and in the Customs returns, of which the average for 1700-1701 exceeded that for the period 1700-1 7 14, l although the duties were considerably increased during these later years. The rate of interest too, had fallen enormously. The extent of this fall and the abundance of capital available may be estimated from a project which is attributed by 2 Rogers to the Bank's old enemy, Duncombe. This was
nothing less than the formation of a company for the pi pose of advancing four millions to the Government at 5
1
The average
P-
was ^1,352,764.
III., p.
Macpherson,
HI.,
a
45p.
Rogers,
101,
320.
THE
WAR
OF SUCCESSION.
115
paying off the Bank of India the new East and Company, to which the England extensive had Government privileges two years granted
a loan at 7 per cent. This scheme, which was never carried out, was published 12 at once. The fall may on October 5. Bank stock fell also be explained as due to another cause, i.e., to the news of an event which attracted the attention of the whole civilised world, which everyone had long been expecting and fearing, and which when it took place, inevitably
earlier in return for
destroyed all the good results of the peace of Ryswick and I nvolved Europe in a crisis which she will never forget refer to the death of Charles II., King of Spain. The news of his death when first announced was false, :>ut the actual event was not long delayed. The King of Spain died on November i, and shortly
:
Duke of Anjou was proclaimed his heir. William III. had had absolute power, the doubt whether it was not better to keep quiet and to acquiesce in the fact that the Spaniards had acknowledged the Duke of Anjou, would never even have been hinted at. William [iated Louis XIV., and his great political ambition was always to humiliate France. He was naturally eager to join the European coalition. It was however difficult for him as a constitutional monarch to carry out his wishes and enter upon a war, which was likely to prove both long and costly, without the good wishes and the support of his people. But The idea of a fresh tie had neither the one nor the other. war was as unpopular as he was himself. He was disliked as a foreigner, and for his cold manners, his accent, and his advisers, who were foreigners like himself. As he had himself foreseen, the great services which he had done for England were forgotten. His high intelligence, his military ability, and indeed all the other talents which made him, with the exception of Cromwell, the greatest man who has ever ruled England, were overlooked, and instead, his stern personality was contrasted with the charm and elegance of Charles II., and regrets were lavished on the peaceful and
afterwards the
If
ii6
merry times of the Stuarts. Nine-tenths of the clergy and the country squires were still Jacobites. Even those who would have been most vigorously opposed to the return of James II. and his family only looked upon William as the lesser of two evils, and so long as there was no immediate danger of a counter-revolution, were quite ready to oppose and thwart their sovereign. And although in case of need they were prepared to support him at the risk of their lives and fortunes, they continued meanwhile to be gloomy and dissatisfied. As Somers pointed out in a remarkable letter to the King There is a deadness and want of spirit in
all
*
the nation universally.'* This state of mind is easily explained. William's reign had been one long series of wars and commercial crises,
which had so disturbed the country that even after three years of peace, it had not entirely recovered. It had been necessary to raise loans at high rates, and heavy taxes had
be levied to pay the interest on the borrowed money. Besides this, and what was more important, the executive power was extremely weak, notwithstanding William's genius and the high ability of the men whom he had placed in office. At that time the parliamentary customs which now prevail were not yet established in England. The Government did not require the support of a majority in
to
Parliament; and indeed, during William's reign, it hardly ever had this. The Opposition could therefore reject without scruple the financial measures brought forward by the Government, since this rejection did not oblige them to assume the reins of government themselves and devise an
alternative policy.
to
in reference
in
majority, it appoints the ministry, and this is enough to give it or to restore to it some glimmerings of good sense.
Its
leaders,
feel
themselves responsible for it, and are forced to take account of the effects of such laws as they may either propose or
1
La
III., p.
205 (Vol.
.1.
of
117
It is rare for a Minister of Finance to agree to accept. advise expenditure \vhich his revenue will not cover, or a system of collection which will hinder the payment of taxes. 1 " this source of instruction and But," continues the author,
6,
good sense had been cut off from the outset. On November 1789, influenced by principle and by the fear of corruption, the assembly had declared that none of its members might hold office as a minister. Henceforth it was deprived
of all the lessons supplied
affairs.
by the direct management of and what was another result of the same mistake, it was a victim to continual terrors. It had placed in lukewarm or suspected hands the powers it would not take upon itself, and hence it was perpetually uneasy, and all its decrees are not only marked by the voluntary ignorance in which it persisted, but by the exaggerated or Taine concludes: 2 illusory fears from which it suffered." " For want of having the control of the driving-wheel which would have enabled it to guide the engine, it was suspicious of all the machinery, both old and new." Taine's words are as true of the English Parliament of
Worse
still,
our period as of the Constituent Assembly. The English Opposition, very suspicious of all new machinery, rejected without consideration all proposals for financial reform, and William's Government found itself without weapons in face of a corrupt Parliament. It is not surprising under the circumstances, that an unpopular king, who had no prerogative allowing him to dispense with his subjects' consent, could not undertake a war against which so many excellent arguments, both political and financial, were brought forward. To take the financial point of view only in the first place the expenses of the war would have to be met, and for this recourse must be had to a loan or to taxation, and in particular to taxation, a method of raising money for which the public always feels the strongest distaste; a distaste which was the more natural when we remember the irksome character of the taxes of that time, and that, thanks to the
: 1
p.
207.
p 210.
ii8
corruption of the officials who collected them, only a small 1 part of the money raised ever reached the Exchequer. The merchants for their part, feared that a new privateer
war would ruin their trade, which was beginning to revive since the peace, and were particularly anxious about the trade with India, to which the new company had given a
great stimulus,
difficulty
in
defending itself against piracy. Public opinion, also (except in Kent), was opposed to the war, and the House of Lords, in its reply to a warlike King's " support speech, stated that its members were prepared to his Majesty and his Government, and take such effectual measures as may best conduce to the interest and safety of
England, the preservation of the Protestant religion, and the peace of Europe." The House of Commons, by its behaviour with regard to various matters, such as the impeachment of the four lords and the petition of Kent, showed an even greater dislike for the war and a very characteristic
suspicion of the King.
to be certain, when an either of thoughtless sentimentalism or of malicious provocation, changed the whole situation, strengthened William on his throne and caused the outbreak of one of
act,
the longest and most expensive of modern wars. James II. died at Saint-Germain on September 16, and Louis XIV.,
some think by the dignity of his death and by the grief of the excited queen, or believing, as others allege, that William's throne was so unstable that this prince might
affected as
as
be insulted with impunity, acknowledged James II.'s son King of England. The indignation of the English people at this news, the break in diplomatic relations with France, the dissolution of
Parliament, the crushing defeat of the Tories in the elections
which followed, the beginning of the War of Succession, the European coalition and the speedy abandonment of Louis XIV. by his last allies, belong to the province of
1 In Scotland, especially, throughout almost the whole of the i8th century the cost of collecting the customs exceeded the amount collected.
THE
WAR
We
OF SUCCESSION.
119
must content ourselves with examining general history. the influence of this war on the Bank, the part played by this institution, and the way in which its fortunes became permanently bound up with those of England. The Policy of the Bank during the war. Run of 1707. Bank's Charter renewed and extended. The Sacheverell
affair.
The
marked by
policy followed by the Bank at this period was the same characteristics as its policy during the
preceding war.
the quarrels of the Protestant the Government with the means supplied 1 of carrying on the war; on this account it had to suffer from the calumnies and the attacks of the enemies of the Govern-
dynasty, and
it
In substance the changes made were merely in name. III. died at the beginning of the struggle, but his sister-in-law made no alteration in his policy, and even did more than he for the Bank since she avoided encouraging such rivals as the Land Bank. The Bank for its part, supported to the best of its ability the Protestant succession with which its own interests were henceforth bound up. 2
William
Addison has described the position excellently in an allegory in which he relates how In Grocers' Hall he saw Public " Credit on a throne of gold. At the upper end of the hall was the Magna Charta. At the lower end of the hall was the Act of Settlement, which was placed full in the eye of the
:
This war was very expensive. See the list given by Do well (2nd edition, 1888, Vol. II., Appendices V. and VI.) of the cost of each of the wars carried on by England between 1688 and 1815, and the amount of the national debt which accrued in each case.
1688-1697 1702-1713 1739-1748 1756-1763 1776-1785 1793-1815
Cost of each -war. 32.643.764 50,684,956 43. 655 J 92 82,623,738
Debt accrued.
14,522,925 21,483,098
59.633.000 117,285,000 831,446,449 504,889,452 3 The importance of the Bank may be judged from the following fact Some years after the outbreak of reported by Burnet (Vol. VI., p. 8). hostilities, the Queen obliged Sunderland to resign and gave the seals to Lord Dartmouth. This caused alarm both at home and abroad which was only allayed when the Queen declared to some of her subjects, and notably to the "governors of the Bank of England," that she would make no other changes.
120
The floor on her right upon the throne. left, was covered with vast sums of gold, that rose up in pyramids on either side of her. But this I did not so much wonder at when I heard that she could
.
.
convert whatever she pleased into that precious metal." All at once the door opened, and the Pretender hastened in, carrying in one hand a sponge and in the other a sword, which " he often brandished at the Act of Settlement." " the beautiful virgin, fainted and died away at the Credit, The charm by which she changed all about her into sight." was broken. The money bags burst like bladders gold " a with The great heaps of gold now pricked pin. of to be or little notched of appeared paper piles only heaps sticks." This allegory is to be found in the third number
.
.
of the Spectator, in the same essay in which Addison describes the simple way in which the work of the Bank was
1 carried on.
Bank. On several occasions, war the Bank found itself involved in difficulties, but it was not until 1707 that At this date the agitation of the it ran any serious risk. the announcement of a French stimulated by Jacobite party,
after
invasion, spread panic through the country. The price of 2 The enemies of the public stocks fell 14 or 15 per cent. the reigning dynasty combined with those of the Bank to
3 The private bankers tried organise a run upon the latter. to ruin their great rival and Sir Francis Child refused to accept Bank notes; he explained afterwards that he was only applying the law of retaliation to the Bank. This panic served to show that although the Bank had enemies, it had not lost its powerful and devoted friends.
On this of his colleagues after the elections of January 23, 1701. the details that can be desired will be found in a pamphlet written directly afterwards, and which is well worth reading notwithstanding its The villainy of Stock-jobbers detected and the causes of the eccentric title late run upon the Bank of England discovered and considered.
some
point
all
:
See above, p. 75. See a pamphlet entitled, The anatomy of Exchange Alley. Many details are here given about this affair and the part played by two leading goldsmiths " Knights also and one of them Member of Parliament, too," Sir R. Hoare and Sir Francis Child. 3 The Bank had already suffered from a run organised by Duncombe and
2
121
Help came from all sides. The Dukes of Marlborough, Newcastle and Somerset, as well as other nobles and a number of merchants, offered to advance considerable sums One individual, whose whole fortune amounted to 500, brought this sum to the Bank. The Queen, when she heard of this, sent him ;ioo, with a bill on the Treasury for the
repayment of the ^500.
The Lord
Treasurer, Godolphin,
who
recognised that the credit of the country was bound up with that of the Bank, told the directors "that the Queen
would allow,
for six
1
Finally, the Bank itself made a call of 20 per cent, on its shareholders, and the danger was overcome by the combination of all these efforts.
their sealed bills."
tended.
The Bank's Charter renewed and ex1709. In 1708 the Government was once more involved in financial difficulties. The receipts from the taxes hardly
Act of
covered half the expenditure. In this dilemma the Ministry applied to the Bank of England for help, offering it in return a continuation of its privileges. This proposal roused violent opposition the old enemies of the Bank were un;
conquered, and they proceeded to set forth their opinions in numerous pamphlets. The author of one of these 2 was not content to propose the abolition of the Bank, which he regarded as beyond all doubt a harmful institution, but, in addition, he suggested a remedy for the financial necessities of the moment. This remedy, cleverly set forth, was that adequate revenues should be collected by improving the
Excise,
and
of quantity.
1
particular by authorising the officials to and to tax them according to quality instead But this writer and his companions could not
in
Such a thing has never happened again. Francis, Vol. I., p. 87. Arguments against prolonging the Bank, with proposals for advancing the Revenue of the excise and making more useful to the Nation than ever the Bank can be, -without any danger to the Publick. In a letter to a Member of Parliament (1708). For other protests against the continuance of the Bank see also, Remarks on the Bank of England with regard more especially to our trade, By a Merchant of London and a true lover of our Constitution. A short view of the apparent dangers and mischief from the Bank of England. More particularly addressed to the Country Gentlemen. Reasons against the
2
continuance of the Bank of England. I give the titles of those pamphlets without an analysis, which would tell us nothing new, for they merely reproduce the arguments already brought forward against the Bank at the time of its foundation.
122
hinder the Government from making the following agreement with the Bank
:
i.
It
was agreed
that
the
interest
capital of
cent.,
,1,200,000 should be reduced from 8 to 6 per with an allowance of ,4,000 a year for expenses of
also agreed that the
management. 2. It was
fresh loan of
,400,000 at 6 per cent. Since the Government wished to circulate Exchequer 3. bills on the security of the house duties, the Bank undertook to put them into circulation and to pay ; 1,775,027 for these at once. The Bank was to receive 6 per cent, of this sum, 3 per cent, as interest, and 3 per cent, as repayment of
the capital. In return for these concessions the
i.
Bank secured
The
i,
continuation of
1711.
its
August
,100 being
list,
Anderson
conditions,
states
that
in spite of these
somewhat severe
which was opened on subscription was filled between nine o'clock 22, 1709, February entirely and mid-day " Near one million more," he says, " would have been on the same day subscribed, had there been room for it, so great was the crowd of people coming with their After these transactions the total money to the books." of the Bank amounted to ,6,577,370, viz. capital
the
: :
Capital of the
Bank
..... .....
Total
-
^2,201,171
4,402,343
IDS.
And
To
increased by the 400,000 now advanced which must be added for the Exchequer Bills
4,802,343 1,775,027
6,577,370
of
all,
the Bank's
Vol.
III.,
p.
33.
123
had decreed that no other bank should be allowed by Act of Parliament; but it did not
1697
forbid the formation of other joint-stock companies, nor of any company which undertook banking business. One
company, called the Company of Mine Adventurers of England, had constituted itself into a bank of issue and circulated notes, a power allowed it under the Act of 1697.* " That during the To put a stop to this it was now enacted continuance of the said corporation of the Governor and
:
Company
of the
Bank
of
England,
it
shall not
be lawful for
any body politic or corporate whatsoever, erected or to be erected, ... or for any other persons whatsoever, united or to be united in covenants or partnerships, exceeding the
number
of six persons, in that part of Great Britain called England, to borrow, owe, or take up any sum or sums of
their bills or notes
money on
payable at demand, or at any less time than six months from the borrowing thereof." At this time the power to issue notes was looked upon as so essential a part of the business of banking that its prohibition was considered to prevent the formation of any bank whose shares were held by more than six persons, and thus to prevent any private company from exercising an
influence dangerous to the
Bank.
at the time that the clause did prevent the formation of It was not until much later that it joint-stock bank.
any was
be nearly so stringent. 2 The Bank's monopoly of issue was only limited by the formal order not to issue notes to an amount exceeding its
capital.
to
note-issue have
been
Sir
five
at the
head of
this
showed an
for
deceived the shareholders years by the payment of fictitious dividends and other frauds ; he the of and caused them other mines, to be coined at the Mint bought products as produced by the silver mines of the company, etc. But, in spite of all he could not came succeed for this, out, and the Company Everything long. of the Mine Adventurers was pronounced a bubble by the House of Commons, and Sir Humphrey Mackworth was declared guilty of scandalous frauds. 3 See below, Part IV., Chap, i., p. 171.
He
company, and he
124
Government was attended by an equivalent " increase in the paper currency. Now, to a certain extent, this plan might be attended with no evil consequences, but
to
made
the
perfectly clear that its principle is utterly vicious. There nothing so wild or absurd in John Law's Theory of Money as this. His scheme of basing a paper currency upon land If for every debt the Governis sober sense compared to it. ments incurs an equal amount of money is to be created, why, here we have the philosopher's stone at once. What is the long-sought Eldorado compared to this ? Even there the gold required to be picked up and fashioned into coin.
it
is
is
But let us coolly consider the principle involved in this plan of issuing notes upon the security of the public debts. That the way to Stated in simple language, it is this
.
CREATE;
money
is
say, security of the mortgage, A is allowed Jto^crfatc^an equal amount of money to what he has already lent!! Granting that to a small extent this may be done without any practical
That
is to
Government
mischief, yet, as a general principle, what can be more The ravings of Chamberlain himself are
In 1713, the last year of the war, the Bank made another loan to the Government, and secured the continuation of its charter until 1743. The fear of In the following year Queen Anne died. civil war roused by the question of the succession caused some anxiety in the City, but all was soon as quiet as usual. The Hanoverian dynasty now established on the English throne, could hardly be ill-disposed towards the Bank, and in 1716 a new agreement was made with the Bank in respect The Act of 1716 was passed in to the Government debt. return for the redemption of the previous debts and for
further advances at 5 per cent". This Act also exempted the Bank from the usury laws, 2 which were becoming a heavy
pp. 416
8
and 417 (5th edition, pp. 487, 488). Macleod, Vol. I., p. 488 (5th edition).
125
Affair.
The
would
be incomplete without a reference to the dangers incurred by the Bank of England in 1709 owing to a sermon preached at St. Paul's by Dr. Sacheverell. " A sermon at St. Paul's," says Mr. Morley, 2 " was like Dr. Price's a modern demonstration in Hyde Park.
'
discourse at the dissenting meeting-house in the Old Jewry on 4th November, 1789, laid the train for Burke's Reflec-
on the French Revolution. It was Dr. Sacheverell's sermon on November 5th, 1709, that provoked the most violent Tory explosion of the century." This sermon was violent in tone and apparently directed
tions
in it dissenters declared the particular, and non-resistance to Governof obedience passive principle the with allusions to views which had inment, opposite
against
the
spired the revolution of 1688. The Lord Mayor who was present and who was a Tory M.P., asked the preacher to
dinner, thanked
it
him
to
and allowed
it
This publication made a scandal. The sermon referred Lord of the Treasury as Volpone. The author was arrested on account of the liberties he had taken with the Government. The populace supported his cause which
to the First
was
that of the
Church
of
escorted to Westminster, where his trial was honoured by 3 the presence of the Queen, by a guard of butcher boys.
The crowd pressed round the doctor, struggling his hand, and money was thrown to it by the
1
to kiss
gentry,
are Morley, Walpole, pp. History of Queen Anne's White Kenett, Wisdom Sacheverell's proceeding,
The best authorities to consult 13-17; Smollett, Vol. VIII., pp. 72-79; Stanhope, See also as curiosities, Reign, Chap, xii., p. 4.
Conduct,
of looking Backward with an account of Dr. and the opinion of the famous Duchess of Marlp. 247.
borough
2
in
Account of
my
P-
14-
" God bless 3 People cried out as the Queen proceeded to Westminster your Majesty and the Church, we hope your Majesty is for Dr. Sacheverell." Morley, p. 16. The English Church regarded the accused as a hero and a martyr, prayers were said in all the churches for his acquittal, his behaviour was praised in sermons and the royal chaplain himself expressed his admiration and
approval.
126
followed the procession in hackney coaches. The with could not rest contented these demonpeople peaceful strations, they plundered the dissenting chapels and burnt the books and other spoils collected from them, in Lincoln's Inn Fields. They even pillaged accidentally one
of the orthodox churches
ciently distinctive.
who
suffi-
very soon acquired a purely character and the Bank, always an object of attack, political was warned that it was to be assaulted. The assembled
The
directors appealed to the Secretary of State for a guard to defend their establishment. No troops were available, but the Queen sent her own foot and horse guards, preferring to be left unprotected rather than risk the capture of the
Bank.
"Am
to
in-
received the royal commands. There was quired, no need to do either, the mere appearance of the troops sufficed to put the rioters to flight.
when he
devotion.
The Bank was thus saved from plunder by the Queen's As to the Sacheverell affair it ended as follows
:
Sacheverell, notwithstanding the excellent defence which he read before the House of Lords and which was prob-
ably the work of Atterbury, was condemned by 69 votes to l But the light penalty imposed 2 caused the sentence to 52. be looked upon as a victory for him and his supporters. Shortly afterwards Godolphin resigned and the Tories were
conspicuously victorious in the elections which followed. To gain a better understanding of these continual riots and scandals and of the state of England during the period, the third chapter of Taine's Histoire de la Litteratme Anglaise, Vol. III., should be read. There was nothing to be seen," writes the great critic, " but corruption in high places and brutality among the common people a group of intriguers leading a populace of brutes. The human animal, drunk with political pas'
and
violence,
and swaying
to
Out
of the 13 bishops
He was
who voted, only 7 were against him. forbidden to preach for three years and his sermon was ordered
to be burnt.
127
its blind outbursts. was the signal for riot, for disevent Every political for broken heads. When Dr. Sacheverell blows and order, was tried, butcher boys, chimney sweeps, fruit sellers,
to destroy society
by
prostitutes and the dregs of the population, believing the Church to be in danger, accompanied him with howls of
rage and enthusiasm and in the evening devoted themselves to the burning and pillaging of dissenting chapels." Taine goes on to describe the burning of Admiral Byng's effigy, the stoning of Lord Bute, Pitt's unpopular successor, who was obliged to surround his carriage with a guard of boxers, the judges not daring to condemn drunkards, the House of Commons afraid to pass Walpole's Excise Bill, and the Gordon Riots. He might easily have lengthened the list, for Royalty was no more respected than the Ministers, and the Duke of Bedford's house underwent
actual sieges
and
assaults.
gulf between this state of things and the England of the igth century is immense. Indeed I know of nothing which is more to England's credit than the transformation this produced in less than a hundred years. It shows how much can be accomplished by the persevering work and
The
devotion of
all
It
what could be done by the active and intelligent interference of the middle classes, who, not submitting to be set on one side or submerged, were able to take the lead in public affairs and to revolutionise the country. They afford an excellent example of that patriotism which refuses to be put off with mere words. English history is accordingly a
shows
also,
splendid study for nations which, like the English nation of the. lyth and i8th centuries, are numerically small, unorganised, and the victims of demagogues. It proves that these evils are not such as need be suffered involuntarily, and offers encouragement, combined with a good example.
1
Vol. III., p.
5, of
PART
III.
CHAPTER
I.
South Sea Coirpany. Speculative mania. Multiplication of schemes of The South Sea Company's lawsuit against the in \\ Comevery kind. Ruin of the South Sea Company. Trial panies. Results of this lawsuit End of the crisis. Tart played and risks of the Company's Directors. run by the Bank during the crisis.
;
in
which marked the period of the Regency, England was passing through a similar crisis. Although she had not her man of genius like Law, she had her Comfagnie dcs Indcs Occidentals in the South Sea Company. The results of this crisis were less severe in England than in France, but the For more than a year the crisis itself was no less alarming. history of England is bound up with that of the South Sea
in 1711 by Lord Oxford with the object of strengthening public credit which had been severely shaken by the fall of the Whigs. Like all such contemporary institutions it originated in a
The company undertook to provide the money due to the army and navy, as well as for other parts of the unfunded debt. This was to be done in return for a 6 per cent, interest on the security of various duties and the monopoly of trading in the South Seas (i.e., the Pacific Ocean), from which the company took its name. at It carried on its trading business quietly until 1720 which date it won its melancholy notoriety.
State loan.
129
The year 1720 was, according to Anderson, "a year remarkable beyond any other which can be pitched upon by historians for extraordinary and romantic projects." The public rage for speculation approached insanity. But
the rulers too were partly responsible for the misfortunes which followed. The crisis originated, if Smollett is to be believed, from the King's recommendation to the Commons " to consider the the national means for
proper
lessening
debt."
The South Sea project was then brought forward by Sir John Blount, who had the coolness and audacity required
such an enterprise. He submitted his scheme to Aislabie, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, and to one of the Secretaries of State, both of whom were already prejudiced
for
favour for self-interested reasons. Hence he was able meet their objections without much difficulty. The scheme was adopted by the Government its primary object was to lighten the burden of the national debt by
in its
to
reducing all the public debts into one. On January 22, 1720, the House of Commons met in committee to consider the project. The South Sea Company offered to take over all the debts of the State, which were estimated at ^"30,981,712, in return for an interest of 5 per cent, until 1727, and of 4 per cent, after that date. In ex-
change for this it was to pay 3^ millions. These proposals were brought forward unexpectedly by the Government, who hoped thus to secure a favourable vote. The House however received them somewhat coldly, and the friends of
of England, by pointing out the great services rendered by this institution to the State, and the harm which the passing of this scheme would do to it, secured a delay of five days. 3 The Bank took advantage of this interval, and before it
the
Bank
An Historical and Chronological Deduction of the Origin of Commerce, Vol. III., p. 91. This work, dating from 113 years ago, gives most valuable information about the whole of this affair. See also Macpherson, Annals of Commerce (1805) Vol. III., p. 76. Up to 1764 this work is however merely a revised edition of Anderson's.
1
History of Scotland, Vol. VIII., p. 238. Brodrick was the chief supporter of the
debate.
130
was over offered to undertake the same responsibilities as the South Sea Company and to pay five millions in return with less delay than the rival company had required to raise the smaller amount tendered by it. The proposals of the Bank were no sooner announced than the directors of the South Sea Company called a general meeting of their shareholders and received instructions to
1
secure the preference at all costs. They accordingly offered to increase the sum granted to the Government from 3j to
7^ millions. The Bank however threw all its strength into the desperate struggle, and began in its turn to make the most insane proposals. It offered to give ,1,700 Bank stock
for every annuity of
;ioo
"
for
96 or 99 years.
"
Let any-
consider how this was possible." one," writes Anderson, for Bank these the proposals were rejected. At one Luckily
time there was some idea of dividing the undertaking between the two establishments. But Sir John Blount is said to have refused to agree to this Solomon's proposal, ex-
No, sir! we will never divide the child." claiming The proposals of the South Sea Company were only accepted after prolonged and violent debates in Parliament. In the House of Commoas, where, after a discussion lasting two days, the scheme was passed by 172 votes to 55, Robert
'*
Walpole was the principal speaker for the Opposition. In House of Lords, where the debate was very short and where there was no division, the most notable speech was that of Lord North and Grey. Earl Cowper also spoke " like the Trojan horse, it was against the Bill, saying that, ushered in and received with great pomp and acclamations of joy; but was contrived for treachery and destruction.' The royal assent was given on the 7th of April. On June nth when he (dissolved Parliament, the King conthe
1 These proposals are to be found in two or three contemporary pamphlets, such as The schemes of the South Sea Company and the Bank of England as proposed in Parliament for the reducing of the National Debt; and A comparison between the proposals of the Bank and the S.S. Company. Wherein is shown that the proposals of the first are much more advantageous than that of the latter. 3 See Parliamentary History, Vol. VII., pp. 644-646, for the debates in the House of Commons, and pp. 646-648 for those in the House of Lords. The principal supporters of the scheme were Aislabie and Lord Sutherland.
131
gratulated the two Houses on having set the liquidation of the national debt on a firm basis without violation of the
public faith.
report that the South Sea Company intended over the consolidated debt made its shares rise in 1719 to ,126. When the law was passed they were at ^310. After the success of the first subscriptions, due to more or * less correct rumours, the shares rose to ,500, then (June 2, 2 1720), to ,890 they did not even stop there for a wave of veritable madness had turned everyone's heads. At the end 3 of June their price had reached ^2,ooo. Recourse was had to devices and promises of all kinds in order to maintain this artificial level promises were made of
to take
;
The mere
and of the acquisition of distant and invaluable markets it was whispered that mines and hidden treasures had been discovered. All these devices had been employed before, and we have already had to describe them at sufficient length but this was no reason why they should
profits of 50 per cent.,
;
;
not be successfully used once again. The great majority of the public was caught in the snare. The same thing happened in Change Alley in London as had happened in the Rue Quincampoix in Paris; nobles
and
citizens,
bishops,
1
women belonging
merchants and country squires, judges and 4 to all classes of society, crowded
May
One
23.
of the reports which contributed most to this rise was that a treaty of peace had just been signed between Spain and England, as a consequence of which Port Mahon and Gibraltar were to be exchanged for part of Peru. This exchange was exceedingly profitable to the company it strengthened its position in the Pacific and secured to it the trade of a country of legendary wealth (Smollett, p. 244).
;
3 In the interval the company had opened a third subscription list at ;i,ooo per share; four millions were subscribed. Some of the directors also were made baronets for their great services. 4 See Pope's description in his Epistle to Allen, Lord Bathurst. " At like a flood
length corruption,
general
Did deluge all, and avarice creeping on Spread like a low-born mist and hid the sun. Statesmen and patriots plied alike the stocks, Peeress and butler shared alike the box, And judges jobbed and bishops bit the town, And mighty dukes packed cards for half-a-crown Britain was sunk in lucre's sordid charms." See also Swift's poem The South Sea Project, in Complete Works (edition 1824), Vol. XIV., pp. 146-155, and the satirical poem, South Sea Ballad, or
:
132
together there.
tion
and his mistress is accused of making considerable profits from the affair, which gains she hastened to send to Hanover. Fashion even was affected. South Sea carriages, coats, and neckties made their appearance; the ladies wore no jewellery except that bearing this name, and there were South Sea servants.
the shares produced an artificial an increase of wealth, and unprecedented luxury appeared
artificial
The
rise
in
Speculators and adventurers, says a contemporary author, drunk with their imaginary riches, bought the rarest food and the finest wines that could be imported with neither taste nor judgment they purchased
in the country.
;
the most gorgeous furniture and carriages; they gave freely to the most shameful excesses and their speech
way
was
characterised
tion.
2
by pride, insolence
and a ridiculous
rise in
ostenta-
The
was an immense
general
the level of prices reached in France was not prices. 3 attained and if no one gave ^200 for a chicken, this was only because the Bank was not involved in the South Sea
Company,
nevertheless
the prices were such that people with moderate incomes were forced either to speculate or to live in poverty. The clerks of the company were among the few people
profits.
We
give these
numerous
literary references not to display a vain erudition, but because in actual fact
it is from such sources as these that the best descriptions are obtained, in default of a history of the crisis. Finally, see Smollett, p. 244, and compare Thiers Histoire de Law, p. 93. The two crises are so much alike that a description of the one might easily be read as applying to the other.
not actually
King vigorously supported the project, if he did it. The Duchess of Ormond wrote to Swift " You remember, and so do I, when the South Sea was said to be my Lord Oxford's brat, and must be starved at nurse. Now the King has adopted it and calls it his beloved child though perhaps you may say, if he loves it
It is
make money by
but he loves it as well no better than his son, it may not be saying much as he does the Duchess of Kendal, and that is saying a good deal. I wish it may thrive, for some of my friends are deep in it I wish you were so too." This letter will be found in Swift's works, Vol. XVI., p. 335.
; ;
2
3
Compare
Thiers,
p.
Thiers, op.
107.
cit.,
p.
103.
133
100, people often gave day might mean a difference of them a 20 note to hasten the transaction. The profits which they made in this way were so great that they used to wear clothes trimmed with lace, and replied to those who " if criticised them that they did not put gold upon their would not make clothes, they away with half their earn-
ings."
It would have been fortunate if the evil had ended here. But the success of the South Sea Scheme gave rise to all kinds of other projects. Some of these were serious and deserved to succeed, but the absurdity of the others was
1
"
stamped
may be few examples will 3 illustrate this. One project was for the "discovery of perpetual motion," another to found a company " for importing a number of large jack-asses from Spain," a third "for building of hospitals for bastard children," a fourth "for extracting silver from lead," and, finally, the most remarkable of all was a project to found a " company for carrying on an undertaking of great advantEach subage, which shall in due time be revealed." scriber was to deposit two guineas, in return for which he
of those
2 truly termed a commercial lunacy."
minds
who
would subsequently receive a loo-guinea share, and would It is diffisame time hear the nature of the scheme cult to believe that in five hours the ingenious promoter had collected 1,000 subscriptions, i.e., ,2,000, with which he
at the
!
decamped
evening.
for projects of this kind,
Any
subscription
was accepted
even a shilling for ^"5, i.e., i per cent. 4 And since no one ever asked for the remainder of the subscription, the poor man with his few pence could build the same castles in the air as the rich man with his millions of pounds.
1
Among
exist.
Francis, p. 127.
Still more extravagant projects are given by Mahon, pp. 16 and 17, and by Anderson, p. 108. * There were even some promoters who asked only a shilling for ^Jioo.
134
Another fraud of the period 1 was that of the "Globe permits," small squares of playing cards, on which were " Sail printed pictures of the Globe tavern with the words, cloth permits." These cards were merely permits to subscribe to a future Sail cloth company, and were sold currently for 60 guineas apiece. The crush and confusion were so great that the same shares were sometimes sold 10 more at one place in Change Alley simultaneously for
than at another. 2
The new companies enjoyed the patronage of the highest nobility. The Prince of Wales, afterwards George II., consented to be governor of the Welsh Copper Company.
Lord Mahon, 8 the Speaker and Walpole tried in vain to dissuade him it was not until the company was threatened with an action that His Royal Highness had the
According
to
;
prudence
The Duke of Bridgewater founded a company to build houses in London and Westminster and the Duke of Chandos was the head of the York Buildings Company. The Dukes
Practically all the other nobles followed these examples. of Argyll and of Roxburgh and Lord Stanhope
were apparently the only persons among the nobility and ministers who escaped the infection. This state of things afforded excellent opportunities for
satire.
Announcement was
made
of
"
company
for
making
projects.
butter from beech trees," and of various analogous But the most brilliant satires and the most biting
1 Mackay, Popular Delusions, p. 54. " This work also contains an essaj in Holland. on Law, and one on the " Tulipomania a The way in which business was carried on may be gathered from tl account of a contemporary. The London Journal for June n, says: " Th< hurry of our stock-jobbing bubblers has been so great this week, that it hi There has been nothing but running exceeded all that was ever known. about from one coffee-house to another, and from one tavern to another, t< The general cry hi subscribe without examining what the proposals were. For G 's sake let us but subscribe to something, we don't care whal been, it is!' So that, in short, many have taken them at their words, and entere them adventurers in some of the grossest cheats and improbable undertakand yet by all these the projectors have ings that ever the world heard of got money, and have had their subscription full as soon as desired." 3 See p. 15, and Morley, W'alfrule, p. 64.
'
"
135
1 epigrams are to be found in the contemporary verse. " The and print shops teemed with caricatures," says Mackay, the newspapers with epigrams and satires upon the prevalent of South folly. An ingenious card-maker published a pack each card containing, besides the Sea playing cards, usual figures, ... a caricature of a bubble company, with One of the most famous appropriate verses beneath. bubbles was Puckles' Machine Company for discharging round and square cannon-balls and bullets, and making a
.
.
'
'
war.
Its
pretensions to public
summed up
in the eight of
spades
" A rare invention to destroy the crowd Of fools at home, instead of fools abroad.
Fear not my friends, this terrible machine, They're only wounded who have shares within."
Each company of the same kind was ridiculed in turn. 2 Mackay gives most of the verses, and a reproduction of the
very curious cards. Unfortunately so long as the speculator was putting money into his pocket, he paid no heed to the satires, and laughed at those who ridiculed him. It was estimated that the total amount subscribed to the different projects exceeded ,300,000,000, 3 and the price of their shares 4 rose continually. Things reached such a pitch that sensible men could no longer hide from themselves the dangers of the
situation.
6
sanity,
1
Walpole, the Jeremiah of this period was continually prophesying the most
the following may be quoted laughed to see an ass Eat thistles and neglect good grass, But had the sage beheld the folly
:
of
in-
terrible
Of
2
late transacted in
have seen worse asses there Give solid gold for empty air."
pp.
8
He might
Change
Alley,
60-62.
History of England from the Revolution to George II., Vol. VII., p. 357, and Smollett, p. 245. Anderson gives (pp. 104-107) the amounts actually subscribed for each project. * For the prices of shares during this period see Anderson, pp. 103-104, Bank of England stock itself was quoted at 260.
Tindal,
6
elasticity of conscience,
Walpole's gloomy prophecies did not prevent him, with characteristic from making ^40,000 by speculation in South Sea
136
The King, roused to anxiety, issued a on June u, against "Such mischievous and proclamation dangerous undertakings, especially the presuming to act as
misfortunes.
a corporate body, or raising stocks or shares without legal But this proclamation had no more effect than authority.'* the satires and epigrams, and it remained for the South Sea Company itself, jealous of its rivals, to put an end to the folly and to bring about its own ruin. t
Alarmed by the success of all th'ese projects, the South Sea Company obtained a w rit from the Lord Justices rejecting all petitions and dissolving all the bubble companies. This writ, issued on July 12, was followed by a list of those companies which were considered to be of this kind. There were no fewer than 86 and this list is still amusing to read, both for the number and the absurdity of the inventions. 2 The company was apparently triumphant but the burstr
ing of the bubbles caused general uneasiness; everyone to realise his gains. People quickly tound out the difference between the prices in Change Alley and the real value of the shares of the different companies, and the South Sea Company found itself involved in the ruin it had caused.
wished
began the company's stock ^700 until September 2, but kept up on the I3th it was only ^400 and on the 2Qth, after a continuous fall, it was selling at ^175. The anxious directors promised a dividend of 30 per cent., and guaranteed one of 50 per cent, for the following years, but their promises had no influence on the now incredulous public w hich was
the legal proceedings
It
When
stood at ^850.
to
very soon in a state of absolute panic. Everything collapsed, thousands of families were reduced to beggary, many people were unable to survive the disaster and the fortunes
Stock he managed to choose a good moment for selling out, see Coxe, " His firm and wise Memoirs, Vol. I., p. 730. Mr. Morley remarks (p. 134), conviction of the folly of the South Sea schemes did not prevent him from turning his wisdom to account by dealing in South Sea stock."
;
20,
1720, in
consequence of the
the
But
author
only
137
secured by a handful of individuals only served to aggravate the prevailing ruin. The directors of the company vainly sought to delay the catastrophe by the help of credit. Several goldsmiths and private bankers who had advanced money on the shares were
obliged to stop payment owing to the depreciation of these, and the Sword Blade Association which had been the company's chief pashiers, now shared its disgrace. In vain they even applied to the Bank itself. Urged by Walpole the directors had indeed undertaken to circulate ;3, 500,000 of the company's bonds at ^400, but this agree-
made on September
13,
was no longer
had not been legally ratified, and Indeed, had they been forced to would it out, they only have shared the South Sea carryBank had difficulty enough to mainruin. The Company's tain its own credit and it was only able to meet the run made upon it by devices which Macleod 2 thus describes
.
and the
employed a number of clerks to tell out the money which was demanded, as well as what was brought in.
It
"
Payments were made in light sixpences and shillings, and large sums were paid to particular friends, who went out with their bags of money at one door, to deliver them to people placed at another, who were let in to pay the same money to tellers, who took time to count it over. These persons were, of course, always served first. By this means time was gained, the friends of the Bank rallied round it, and made large subscriptions to support the company. The festival of Michaelmas, at which it was usual at that time to shut up the Bank, came, and, when it was opened again, the public alarm had passed off." The directors of the South Sea Company thought at one
time of taking legal measures to force the Bank to execute its contract, but they soon remembered that the lawsuit
1
Bank Contract,"
Craftsman.
3
of the
reply to
the
attacks printed
by Aislabie in the
3rd Edition,
428.
138
must throw light on their own proceedings and would do them more harm than good. Besides, they had triumphed so insolently in their days of prosperity, and had so oppressed well-meaning people by their ill-judged luxury, that they could not find a single supporter in the day of misfortune, and during more on account of
their frauds.
1
The crisis, however, continued, and George I., who according to habit, was never in England, had to leave Hanover and return to his new kingdom at the beginning of November. Several remedies were suggested. The most important of these was that nine millions of the capital should be made over to the Bank of England and an equal amount to the East India Company; this would leave twenty millions to the South Sea Company. This measure which
was ably drafted by Walpole, was passed, in spite of the objections of the Bank and of the two other companies concerned; but the vote of the two Houses did not result in the execution of the arrangement, which was optional in character and remained a dead letter. Meanwhile, the debates and the Parliamentary inquiry were revealing the most scandalous proceedings, and the tone of the discussion reflected the unmeasured wrath of the 2 No one public against the company and its promoters. seemed to realise that the nation had been as guilty as the company. The nation was composed of simple, hard-working, honest people, despoiled by a group of thieves who deserved to be cast out without mercy. This was the unanimous opinion in the country and Parliament was hardly
more reasonable. The protest there was the more violent, since several members tried in this way to throw dust in the
eyes of the public.
The King,
hoped
1 3
that
it
speech at the opening of the session, would be remembered that " all your prudence,
in his
affair
to
in Pur/.
139
your temper, and resolution, are necessary to find out and apply the proper remedies to our misfortunes." These words were scarcely heard. The House of Lords
was content to urge that the property of the criminals should be confiscated. But in the Commons, Lord Molesworth 1 demanded that extraordinary penalties should be inflicted on extraordinary crimes, and recalled the example of the ancient Romans, who, having no law against the unforeseen crime of parricide, yet made one as soon as it was committed, and threw the guilty wretch sewed up in a sack into the Tiber. He should, he added, be content to see
these speculators, as the parricides of their country, treated in a like manner and thrown into the Thames. These views
were shared by Parliament, and Walpole who was the only person who kept his head, had much difficulty in calming the audience indeed, on the following day he could not do so, and penalties with retrospective force were passed " the Infamous practice of Stock-Jobbing." against A committee of inquiry was appointed. 2 The governors, and officers of the company were summoned directors before the bar of the House of Commons, and since
;
Knight, the treasurer, had thought it prudent to escape, a proclamation was issued, forbidding any of the accused to
leave the
kingdom.
General Ross, 3 with more vigour than elegance, described ** to the House how The committee had discovered a train of the deepest villainy and fraud that had ever contrived to ruin a nation." Bribery had been used to pass the Act, all the directors who were members of the House were expelled and all the officers of the company who held Government The inquiry was hampered by posts were dismissed. obstacles of every kind the company's cashier was in France and the most important of the books had been It was discovered tampered with or entirely destroyed.
:
140
to
have been sold, had been distributed among ministers, influential nobles and the King's favourites. The Earl of
had had ^50,000; Mr. Secretary Craggs, Mr. Charles Stanhope, one of the secretaries of ,30,000; the Treasury, ; 10,000; the Sword Blade Company, The Duchess of Kendal having accepted .50,000. ,10,000, the other favourite, the Countess of Platen, received a like sum an impartial treatment which Lord Mahon thinks worthy of praise and her two nieces were
Sutherland
not forgotten. But the person most compromised by the inquiry was 1 He had Aislabie, the Chancellor of the Exchequer. advised the company to increase its second subscription by
a million, on no authority but his own, and had he had also apparently been well paid for this permission received a large share of the stock which had been dishalf
;
tributed in the
manner
just described.
Speedy and
well-
deserved punishment fell upon him. He was expelled from the House with ignominy, sent to the Tower, and all his
property was confiscated for the benefit of the victims. This sentence was welcomed with extraordinary enthusiasm. London was illuminated, fireworks were let off and a huge crowd assembled on Tower Hill to witness his
But the demonstration was caused less by degradation. at Aislabie's condemnation than by indignation at pleasure on the previous day. Stanhope's acquittal Charles Stanhope had been the first to be sentenced, 2 and although his defence, skilful as it was, had convinced no one, he had been acquitted by a majority of three. The most powerful influence had been exerted to save him.
Lord Stanhope, Lord Chesterfield's son, had approached the members of the House in turn and was able to induce a large number of them to vote for the acquittal, or at
The verdict roused much least, to abstain from voting. discontent in the country and was the cause of numerous troubles in London. Similar dissatisfaction was caused by the acquittal of the Earl of Sutherland. It was stated that
1 For his trial see Parl Hist., p. 748. The Secretary of State, Craggs, could not be tried since he had died in the interval.
746-747.
141
power.
The rest of the accused, the directors of the South Sea Company, many of whom had themselves been ruined by the business, were all condemned. More than two millions were confiscated the fines were based more on the guilt of
;
the speculators than on the extent of their property. These proceedings, a justice indulgent to the great
and
harsh to the poor, to quote Figaro, were rightly conHe complains demned by the great historian, Gibbon. 3 " Instead of the calm solemnity of a judicial inquiry, that, the fortune and honour of thirty-three Englishmen were made the topics of hasty conversation." All the accused
not as individuals but in a body, absent or unheard,
often on paltry evidence
and
were condemned
to arbitrary fines
assembly, some of whose members were glad to be able to satisfy their personal animosity
by a passionate and
secret vote.
bitter
by a
The
before
which Gibbon
a remarkable eloquence,
is But, nevertheless, the judges, it is well to imagine oneself living at that time and in the circumstances under which they were called upon to give judgment.
undeniable.
condemning
No doubt
1
injustices
were committed.
his
Lord Mahon, pp. 31-32, is inclined to justify this acquittal he bases argument on the fact that there was no written evidence against Sutherland, and that the witnesses were not to be trusted. Sutherland was however forced by public opinion to resign his post of First Lord of the
3
Treasury.
The values of the estates and the amounts of the fines will be found in Parl. Hist., Vol. VII., This list is given by Francis but accordpp. 834-835. ing to his habit he does not mention the source of his information.
Memoirs of Life and Writing, p. 12 of the ist edition (1796); a large In writing these fine pages Gibbon, if portion of this work is in French. not avenging his own wrongs, was at any rate performing an officium pietatis, for his grandfather and namesake was one of the directors of the South Sea Company and lost a large part of his fortune through it he was condemned to pay a fine of ^10,000 his estates had been valued at ^106,543. was Gibbon, however, not the man to yield to personal feeling, even in a chapter devoted to the origins of his family, and his evidence, which is the supported by facts, is worthy of attention.
; ;
142
seized their opportunity of revenging themselves for the vanity and insolence displayed by the directors of the com-
pany in their days of prosperity. Evidently, too, Parliament hardly attained the standard of a calm and impartial tribunal. It was excited by passions which were exciting the whole nation and by which any tribunal must have been But it should be noticed in its favour that, affected. although we may think the sentences severe, contemporaries looked upon them as mild and considered the gallows the
only fate worthy of those
whom
Change
Alley.
scant mercy to Law, who and who, like some of the South Sea directors, had gone the affair rich and emerged from it poor. 2
r
they called the cannibals of showed but was yet a thoroughly honest man,
into
The sentences having been passed, it remained to deal w ith yet more serious problems. It was easier to punish the guilty than to comfort their victims. Something was accomplished in this respect however, thanks to the ability of Walpole, who, when his first scheme failed, was ready to devise a second. The capital of the South Sea Company according to the estimate made at the end of 1720, was in round numbers ^37, 800,000, whilst the stock allotted to
the various shareholders
amounted only
to
^24,500,000; so
that there remained ^"13,300,000 belonging to the company in its corporate capacity and representing the profit which
it had made out of the national disaster. The State had a claim to ,7,500,000 out of this sum, this being the payment promised when the company was founded. But to set a
good example, the Government cancelled five millions of this debt; there was thus 8, 900,000 to divide among the
shareholders, i.e., 33^ per cent, of their stock. Many of these shareholders were, however, so dissatisfied, and inter3 rupted the meetings of Parliament by such constant disturbances,
1
that the
the
of Britannicus in
the
London Journal
November
3 Levasseur, R^cherches historiques sur le systeme Dubois, Histoire des doctrines Economiques, Vol. I., p. 3 These disturbances were so violent that it was " You Riot Act, to which the crowd retorted pick imprison us for complaining."
:
de
Law,
p.
315
am
326.
143
company's debt
to
it,
paid a second dividend of 6J per cent. In this way the credit of the South Sea Company's stock was maintained. The Bank which had hitherto been powerless, now took action in its turn, and purchased annuities to the value of ,200,000, which the company had been authorised to sell. 1 To enable it to make this payment the Bank's
capital
was increased by 3,400,000 and now stood at The stock was subscribed for at 118 per cent, so that the Bank made a profit of .610, 169 by the operation. The Government payed ,632,698 for long and short annuities, and now had its annual revenue consolidated into a redeemable fund for which it had only to pay 4 per cent,
.8,959,955.
after 1727.
thus secured a yearly advantage of 339,631 This was, according to Coxe, 2 the signal for a reduction of
It
.
But all these must not lead us to infer that the South Sea was beneficial to England. It had produced enormous agitation and an unjust redistribution of wealth and had 3 Besides very nearly ruined the Hanoverian monarchy. this the crisis had a deplorable influence on public morality. Queen Caroline compared the South Sea scheme to the Those who shared in it 1735. Triple Alliance of knew perfectly well that it was only a fraud, but hoped Each notwithstanding to make some profit out of it. reckoned that he would be the first to withdraw after making his own fortune, and each thought himself clever enough to leave his companions in the lurch. I believe no more
accurate analysis of the speculators' state of mind has ever been given. These speculators and this is one of the most painful features of the crisis represented all classes of
This profitable transaction was at first the cause of some anxiety ; an A letter to the expression of this will be found in a contemporary pamphlet Governor of the Bank of England (Against the purchase of annuities from the South Sea Company), 1722, the year of the purchase. 3 The French Government secured a similar Coxe, op. and loc. cit. advantage from the crisis of the Compagnie des Indes, The national debt remained the same, but the rate of interest was much reduced, and the Treasury had only to pay 37 millions instead of 80. ' For the hopes raised among the Jacobites by this crisis, see Mahon,
:
Chap.
xii.
144
society,
man
1
:
might ruin himself as easily as the millionaire. Hutcheson, borrowing the language of the gambling-house, says " The South Sea stock must be allowed the honour of being
the gold-tables, the better sort of bubbles the silver-tables, of these are the farthing-tables for the
The
it
evil was thus as widespread as it was was the less skilful rather than the more
ment was as objectionable as the offence. The crisis of 1720 was especially serious had on the Bank of England. It twice forced
to the
this institution
verge of ruin.
first place it led the directors to make proposals of so absurd a kind that, had they been accepted, they would, as Aislabie 2 very plainly showed, have much intensified the
In the
crisis instead of
staving
it
off.
offers of the
Bank were even less practicable than those of 3 the South Sea Company, partly because the Bank would inevitably have tried to keep up the credit of its new stock by that of its notes, would have made over-issues, and, in a
endeavour to fulfil its rash promises, would have coi promised an institution which had already done gree services to England and was destined to do still great(
futile
ones.
the
It
was
in this
way that Law in trying to keep up tl Company, compromised and finally ruine
botl
to
the
ea South Sea
collection
'
87 (1720), Published at the end of A treatises relating to the National Debts and Funds. 3 See his speech in the House of Lords.
3 The impossible nature of the South Sea Company's promises was clearly pointed out even in 1720 in a pamphlet by Hutcheson, Some calculations relating to the proposals made by the South Sea Company and the Bank of England to the House of Commons. The author shows that the South Sea Company's assumption of all the public debts, funded and unfunded, would raise its capital to ^43,558,000. And he proceeds to ask how it can undertake a trade so extensive as to enable it to pay an interest exceeding the total revenue obtained from the Customs and Excise of the
whole kingdom.
145
to
its
It proposals. the and later which second resulted from the escaped danger 1 failure of the South Sea Company only by breaking its
The Bank owed its escape from this who secured the rejection of
first
its
danger
word, and it only withstood the run upon methods unworthy of a great establishment.
1
it
by using
See above,
p.
137.
CHAPTER
THE BANK OF ENGLAND GEORGE
Establishment of a Reserve Fund. temporary idea of the privilege by the Act of 1742. Importance Black Friday. rising of 1745. Relation between the Bank and
II.
IN
II.
THE REIGN OF
Renewal of the Charter in 1742. ConDefinition given of Exclusive Banking. The Bank and the Jacobite of the Act. The Bank and the conversion of 1750. the Treasury.
1
years of George I.'s reign and the first years of were very peaceful. Walpole was the true ruler of England and, despicable as he was in many respects, he had at least the indisputable merit of securing 1 tranquillity at home and preserving peace in Europe.
last
THE
his successor's
industry flourished under his influence and the history of the Bank of England became uneventful. One important fact deserves notice, viz., the establishment
Commerce and
and the renewal of the Charter in 1742 which confirmed and extended the Bank's privileges, must
of a reserve fund,
The period of peace continued until 1745 when the great Jacobite rising endangered the Bank's existence once again. shall consider these three events in succession. Then we shall conclude the chapter by examining the relations between the Bank and the Treasury during this period.
also be mentioned.
We
I attribute to Walpole 's love of peace what otherwise appears to be the rather exaggerated admiration felt for him by Mr. Morley. The English Historical Review published in 1901 a series of remarkable articles by Mr. Basil Williams on The Foreign Policy of England under Walpole.
The good effect of Walpole 's financial management was proved by th< high price that the funds had reached. A 3 per cent, loan issued in 1/2; stood at par in 1736, and in the next year at 107. Under such conditions is plain that the whole redeemable debt might have been reduced to 3 cent, or even lower. Political expediency, which made it an object to fav<
the
"
fundholders, who were strong supporters of the Hanoverian dynast) " It wil prevented this useful measure (Bastable, 2nd edition, pp. 631, 632). be remembered that the conversions made in France under the Restoration first aroused much discontent.
II.
147
ESTABLISHMENT OF A RESERVE
FUND.
Until 1722 the Bank divided all its profits amongst the shareholders, and provided no reserve fund. As a consequence, the dividends had been exceedingly variable, and
The disadvantages
and on which to rely in case of an emergency. Urgent needs had indeed been met hitherto by a call upon the shareholders, but this policy became increasingly inconvenient in practice as business developed and the personal connection between traders was proportionately loosened, so that in 1722 it was found necessary to establish a reserve fund, known in England as The Rest.
SECTION
II.
in 1716 to 6 per cent, in 1722. of this state of things were keenly felt also the dangers due to the absence of any reserve fund
IN
1742.
Each time that the question of renewing the Bank charter came to the front during this period there happened in England what still happens in many countries on like occasions. There were always some persons who opposed the renewal, and the Government took advantage of this opposition to secure conditions from the Bank that were more to the public interest, or sometimes merely more advantageous to itself. It was upon such conditions, and more particularly in return for a loan, that the Bank secured the renewal of its privileges in 1742, as well as in 1764 and 1782.
As
the year
1742,
the
date of
the
expiration
of the
monopoly, drew near, the controversy was renewed even more fiercely than before and the Bank's privileges were even more seriously endangered. But when the fatal date arrived the Government was as usual involved in financial difficulties, and the Bank agreed to lend it ; 1,600,000 w ith1
r
The long peaceful interval ended in 1739. When peace was concluded in 1748 the total of the national debt had reached ^78, 000,000.
148
out interest. 1 In order to raise this sum the directors made as usual a call upon the shareholders, the response to which increased the capital to ,9, 800,000. In return the Bank's
privileges were continued, and it was provided that they should not be cancelled without a preliminary twelve months' notice, which notice could not be given before 1764. The Bank thus obtained complete security for 22 years apart from the additional guarantee that the Government w ould have to pay off all the capital lent to it should the privileges be cancelled. Moreover the monopoly introduced into the charter of 1709 was confirmed and defined. The new Act (statute 1742,
r
c. 13, s. 5) conferred on the Bank the privilege of "exclusive banking." The clause in question explains the " nature of this privilege It is the true intent and meaning
:
of the
Act that no other bank shall be erected, established or allowed by Parliament, and that it shall not be lawful for
to
any body,
united or politic or corporate, whatsoever, be united in covenants or partnerships, exceeding the number of six persons, in that part of Great Britain called
. .
England, to borrow, owe, or take up any sum or sums of money, on their bills or notes payable at demand, or at any less time than six months from the borrowing thereof, during the continuance of such said privileges of the said Governor and Company." As Macleod 2 remarks, this clause merits "the most earnest attention," firstly, "because it is the one which contains the sole monopoly of the
Bank
clause,
England," and secondly, because "it is a penal and therefore, of course, to be construed strictly." "The sole monopoly granted to the Bank ... is that,
of
.
.
during the continuance of its charter, no partnerships exshould issue notes payable on ceeding six persons demand, or at any less time than six months after issue." Banks of any other kind and all other methods of carrying on the business of banking are left free and unaffected.
.
This in fact reduced the interest paid hitherto on the original capital The amount lent was doubled cent, to 3 per cent. without increasing the interest paid, which was equivalent to a reduction of 50 per cent, in the interest. 3 3rd Edition, p. 430.
of
II.
149
was nothing to prevent a foreign company from opening a London branch and carrying on all
forms of banking, with the exception of the issue of notes payable in a less time than six months.
SECTION
III.
JACOBITE
OF
1745.
occasion on which the Bank had In 1722, the Duke of Orleans had revealed to George I. the existence of a Jacobite con1 proclamation by the Pretender was distributed, spiracy. and the most absurd rumours were current. All was said
suffered from the Jacobites.
to be in readiness, money collected, officers appointed, arms and ammunition stocked. One of the intended victims was the Bank of England which was destined to be pillaged. These rumours were believed. The Jacobite party was still powerful and the Regent could hardly be suspected of
making such statements without foundation hence the stock of the Bank fell, and, as usual, the public hurried to its doors. But vigorous measures were taken, the royal troops were at once assembled, and the Jacobite peril vanished into
;
smoke.
could not be thus stifled w hen, in 1745, the Pretender landed in Scotland at the end of July, almost alone, without anyone's support, trusting to his lucky star and to the help of a few Highland chiefs. 2 The history of the rising is well known, for its romantic side has been
crisis
r
The
frequently depicted on the stage and in novels, and the personality of Prince Charles has always had a strange fascination for historians. 8 Hence it would be superfluous
1
twelfth part of the Scotch nation. See Chambers, History of the Rebellion. John Hill Burton, History of Scotland, Vol. VIII., pp. 431-505. Mahon, Vol. III., pp. 301-470. There is also an excellent summary in Lecky, England in the Eighteenth Century, See in addition Mr. Andrew Lang's recent book, Vol. I., pp. 421-423. much a work Prince Charles Edward, information. The author containing was allowed to consult the Stuart Papers at Windsor, and were it on this account alone his book would have the attraction of a novel treatment of a
8
hackneyed subject.
i5o
the defeat
John Cope, and the triumphal entry into Edinburgh. In a few weeks the royal adventurer was master of Scotland, and on the 5th of November he invaded England. Fortune seemed always in his favour; he took Carlisle on November I5th after a short resistance, and marched as far as Derby without opposition. 2 The alarm caused in London by this news may well be imagined. The Pretender was only 127 miles away and what was worse, had numerous 3 The Duke of Newcastle was unsupporters in the City. certain what policy to adopt and debated whether he should not join the enemy. The fear of a French invasion added
of Sir
1
fell
to
49,* all
known
the shops were closed, and the 6th of for a long time as Black Friday. 6
December was
Finally there
came
the inevitable
for
panics a run on the Bank, not prepared. This run was instigated not only by political opponents, but also, it appears, by some of the Bank's
rivals.
6
to resist
it,
thanks partly
to
1 This siege of Carlisle forms a somewhat amusing Interlude. The town was defended by a Colonel Durand, and by a Mayor whose name suggested a Scotch origin, and who changed it in order to inspire greater confidence.
p. 419.
According to a letter sent to the Duke of Cumberland from Manchester, " was taken this town by a sergeant, a drummer, and a girl," who entered See the whole of this exceedingly it in vtew of thousands of spectators.
curious letter in
*
4
in
Mahon, pp. 400-401. The chief of these was a City Alderman called Heathcote. The Pretender had tried to calm the fears of the public by
declaring
the second article of his manifesto, that, although the national debt had been contracted under an illegal government and was a heavy burden on the nation, his father would consult Parliament before coming to any decision But a mere declaration was not enough to satisfy the public about it. creditors, who distrusted an unknown Parliament and had not forgotten what the promises of the Stuarts were worth.
8 See note to a letter from Horace Walpole to Sir Horace Man in See also Fielding, The true the collection of these letters, Vol. I., p. 409. See below, Vol. Patriot. Friday, May u, 1866, received the same name.
II-, P.
*
358.
it is true that the Bank's rivals took an active share in the run, were only paying it back in its own coin. According to Francis 164) the Bank had organised a run on the firm of Messrs. Child. (p. Jealous of the reputation of this house, it had secretly collected the firm's
If
they
II.
151
attained in the commercial world. similar manifesto was issued with equally good results fifty-two years later. That of 1745 was as follows :
A
'
sensible
undersigned, merchants and others, being necessary the preservation of public credit is at this time, do hereby declare that we will not refuse to receive Bank notes in payment of any sum of money to be
We,
the
how
paid to us, and we will use our utmost endeavours to make our payments in the same manner." This declaration was signed in the course of a single day by 1,140 merchants and fundholders. The retreat from Derby, followed by the retirement from
England, happened shortly afterwards, and improved the situation, relieving the Bank from all danger, though not from all anxiety, for in the following year the Government was obliged to apply again for its assistance on account of
the difficulty of meeting the expenses of the expedition against the Pretender, and also those of the struggle in-
tended to safeguard the integrity of Hanover. The directors were empowered to cancel ^"986,000 of Exchequer bills in return for an annuity of 4 per cent, and to issue new stock
for the purpose.
capital to
This transaction increased the paid-up ^10,780,000. This was the only increase in the
until 1782.
Bank's capital
receipts which circulated like cheques, intending to present them for payMr. at a time when there would be difficulty in meeting the demand. Child was only saved by the intervention of the Duchess of Marlborough, Bank. for on Thus armed the Child who sent him a cheque ^700,000 as soon as they were presented he sent one of awaited his rival's demands to the and the w'hole value Duchess' of his partners with the Bank, cheque Francis the receipts, about ^500,000 or ^"600,000 was paid in Bank notes. says that he has taken this story from Ireland, but gives no reference, so that it has not been possible to verify the authenticity of the incident. Compare the run in 1707, above, pp. 120-121.
ment
152
1750.
The
John Barnard.
The
The
was
was at first reduced to 3j per cent.; this rate be paid until 1757, when it was to fall automatically to 3 per cent. The conversion so successfully carried out in 1888 resembled that of 1750 in this Mr. Goschen by for of interest was at first reduced to 2| the rate particular, and a certain date, it fell automatically then after per cent.,
interest
to
to 2j per cent.
to the
Bank
3
:
composed
as follows
Funded Debt.
1.
Capital.
Interest.
Original Capital
;i,6oo,ooo
1,600,000
New Loan
2.
%)
3,200,000
3,200,000
.96,000
4%
3.
4.
5.
since 1727
500,000
4,000,000 1,750,000 1,250,000
20,000
160,000 70,000 50,000
39.47 2
6.
For purchasing the Stock of the South Sea Company at 4 % Annuity of 1728 at 4 % Annuity of 1729* at 4% For cancelling Exchequer Bills
(1748) at 4
986,800
'11,868,000
435,472
1 For an account of the conversion of 1750, see Sir John Sinclair, The History of the Public Revenue of the British Empire, Part II., p. 86. a For the conversion of 1888, see Hamilton (E. W.), An Account of the operations under the National Debt Conversion Act, 1888, and the National
II.
153
payment
of ,435,472,
,96,000 repre-
sented interest already reduced to 3 per cent, in 1742, which was not therefore affected. The rest of the annuity,
to
,297,038
until
December
25,
and
to
We
.254,604
also note
may
from
I
Bank
CHAPTER
III.
II.
Bank Charter
Re-coinage.
Commercial Crises
of 1763,
THE
history of
England during this first part of George end of the Seven Years' War, the
Rebellion and the recognition of the Independence of the American Colonies. It includes also an unprecedented commercial and industrial development with which we shall deal when we come to describe the economic condition of
England
As
regards the history of the Bank the period of twentytwo renewals of the charter (in 1764 and
1781), three economic crises, following somewhat closely on one another; another re-coinage, which need only be briefly touched upon, and an attack on the Bank during These the disturbances known as the Gordon Riots.
various events, grouped according to their character rather than in chronological order, will supply material for four paragraphs.
SECTION L
RENEWALS OF THE
BANK
CHARTER.
The first of these renewals was in 1764. The charter was continued until the repayment of the Government debt, and for this six months' notice was required, which notice could not be given before August ist, 1786. This was in fact a renewal, in the usual form for twentytwo years. As usual also this renewal was paid for by a
financial sacrifice.
to the nation,
REIGN OF GEORGE
and
lent the
III.:
FIRST PERIOD.
155
Government a million on Exchequer bills for These advances were of great service to the country which was just concluding a glorious and profitable war, which had however been an immense
two years
at 3 per cent.
1
expense.
By
of c
this
same Act,
*'
it
forge powers of attorney, or other authorities, for receiving dividends, transfering or selling stock, or for personating the proprietors of any stock, for such pur1
pose."
Similarly by an Act of 1773, the forging of bank-notes was made punishable with death. This crime was a recent innovation. As we have noticed above the first instance of
it
any kind,
bill
1
was made
illegal to
Bank of Engor promissory bill bearing the words " Bank or or even to state any sum in land/ post bill," " Bank white letters on a black ground so as to resemble paper," under penalty of six months' imprisonment. ;ording to the law of 1764 the possibly fatal date
Bank's privileges was granted, and in the usual formula these were continued until 1812 in return for a loan of two
"
when the charter might be cancelled was 1786. Five years before this limit was reached the second renewal of the
millions at 3 per cent. During the following year a call of 8 per cent, was made on the Bank's shareholders, which brought in ,862,000 and increased the company's capital
;ll, 642,400. This renewal of the privileges five years before they expired roused animated discussions; but the Ministry paid a well-deserved tribute to the services rendered by the Bank
tO
and refused
to
make any
modification in
its
charter.
They
were supported by a large majority and the new agreement was passed by 109 votes to 30. When it is remembered that the 3 per cent.'s stood then at 58, the Bank's offers must be considered very advantageous to the State, impoverished as
MO*
*
total cost
off
the Seven
p.
Yean* War
is
Francis, op.
cit.,
175
156
it
was by the American War which had cost no less than ^97,599,496 and whose results had been very different from those of the Seven Years' War.
SECTION
II.
COMMERCIAL CRISES OF
1763,
1772,
1783.
bankon the Continent. The Years' War seems Seven ruptcies to have given rise to much speculation. With the peace
for the
The year
number
of serious
came
the
day
it
the collapse of
many
chants
who had
these failures
was undoubtedly
Amsterdam. This firm left liabilities of 330,000 guineas and not only ruined 18 important Dutch houses but also a large number of rich Hamburg merchants. 1 The shock was so great that for some time business was only transThese disasters could not of course be acted for cash.
confined to the two great commercial cities in question. There were numerous failures in Germany and the crisis spread to England, where according to Smith, the Bank advanced nearly a million to the merchants. England was shortly to be the headquarters of a similar crisis, which, like that just described, was not confined to the country where it began. The years 1770 and 1771 had been years of great commercial prosperity throughout Europe, but this was especially the case in England, whose export trade in parand ticular expanded to an extent previously unknown 1 which was not again reached until 1787. Macpherson remarks that a number of failures often follow after too great commercial prosperity, just as certain diseases in mankind are the result of an undue confidence in healt h
1
The Amsterdam
that
if
merchants
had
been
warned
by
their
HaTnbu irg
colleagues
did not support Neufville Brothers the merchants would suspend payment. Unfortunately, the warning late and the Hamburg firms had to carry out their threat.
they
Hamburg
came
too
REIGN OF GEORGE
This theory was fully ticular case before us.
III.:
FIRST PERIOD.
157
in the par-
Speculative mania had broken out afresh, and a partner in the firm of Heale having disappeared with ^"300,000, this house failed on June roth, 1772, The Bank and dragging down several others with it. certain merchants endeavoured to maintain credit and for several days were apparently successful but at length they could do so no more and a general collapse followed.
;
The number of failures reached the amazing figure .of 525 * whereas since 1728 there had never been as many as 300. It was a return to the South Sea year, and this crisis is memorable as the first of those great modern panics which played so important a part in the history of the Bank. In the following year the evil spread to Holland, and it soon affected all Europe, thanks to the general mania for speculations, whether commercial or in the public funds. Macleod
estimates the total losses at ,io,ooo,ooo. The evil was cured in England by a series of vigorous measures. The Dutch merchants behaved with their cus2
The Bank
to
of
3 Russia, Francis asserts, secured the English merchants at St. Petersburg from risk by giving them unlimited credit at her own bankers. Thanks to these combined efforts the crisis of 1772 was calmed and for eleven years the commercial world of Europe was at peace. The crisis of 1783 like that of 1763, followed upon a treaty
of peace.
When
in
acknowledged
the independence of the United States was 1782, international trade which had suf-
fered greatly from the war, developed very rapidly. This increase of business and the opening up of new markets,
led to extravagant transactions which were combined with a considerable over-issue of notes. An alarming drain of precious metals from the Bank produced a crisis which nearly ended in the suspension of cash payments.
1 There had been 425 Bankruptcies in 1726, 446 in 1727, and 388 in 1728. Since then there had never been as many as 300 except in 1764, when there were 301. For the failures between 1700 and 1793 see Chalmers, Estimate of the Strength of Great Britain (1810), p. 36.
3rd Edition,
p. 433.
p.
177.
158
the issues
could be restricted even for a short time, the coin, instead of being exported, flowed back even more quickly than it had been withdrawn they had thus arrived at the following rule: 1 "That while a drain of specie is going on their issues should be contracted as much as possible, but that as soon as the tide had given signs of ceasing, and turning the other way, it was then safe to extend their issues freely." The Bank therefore determined not to apply to the Government, but merely to restrict its issues for a time until the exchanges were once more favourable. The anxiety was at All further advances to the its height in May, 1783. Government on the loan of that year were then refused, though they did not demand the repayment of the advances previously made which amounted to nine or ten millions. This policy was maintained until October when the withdrawal of precious metals finally ceased and a movement in the opposite direction began to show itself. As soon as these favourable signs were confirmed, the Bank made considerable advances to the Government upon the loan, although the coin then at its disposal was only ^673,000, and was less than it had been at the time when the greatest alarm had been felt.
;
SECTION
III.
The year 1774 brings us back to a subject with which we have previously dealt at length but which can now be much more briefly disposed of the subject of the restoration of the coinage. During the i8th century the currency had In the report of a committee deteriorated. increasingly
appointed by the House of Commons, it was estimated that there was a deficiency of gold in the coins of nearly 9 An ounce of gold which had been worth per cent.
^3
1
is.
was
Consequently,
This rule
due to Bosanquet,
437.
REIGN OF GEORGE
III.:
FIRST PERIOD.
159
ordered a re-coinage, which reduced the value of an ounce of gold to ^3 175. 6d. at which price it continued until
September, 1797.
SECTION
IV.
anti-Catholic disturbances in 1780 involved the Bank dangers. At first the excitement was confined to the neighbourhood of the Houses of Parliament where the rioters and their leader, Lord George Gordon, treated the
of the two Houses with deplorable violence, hoping 1 prevent the passing of a Bill favourable to the Catholics. But, as generally happens in disputes whose pretext is religion, the objectors soon became rioters, and the members 2 of the Protestant Association, as Gordon's supporters called themselves, began to plunder the chapels and houses of the Catholics, destroying the objects of veneration, and not forgetting to carry off the valuable pictures and the gold and
to
members
silver plate. The police seemed powerless to prevent or suppress these proceedings, and the rioters, no doubt in a spirit of tolerance, ceased to be content with plundering the Catholics, but laid hands on the property of all who came in their way, without regard to sect or creed they even went so far as to take Newgate Prison by assault and to set free 3 their imprisoned comrades. Emboldened by this success,
;
proceeded to the Bank of England. The Governhad been warned, sent some help, and this was supplemented by a band of Volunteers fortunately formed by the London citizens. The rioters were daunted by these measures they only made a half-hearted attack where a more vigorous effort would probably have sucThis attempt is of historic interest. It was only ceeded.
the
mob
ment which
The
object of the
Bill
was
under
in existence for two years, but had hitherto with peaceful agitation. 3 An account of these riots will be found in all the histories of England. Dickens has given an especially vivid description in Barnaby Rudge, one of
160
after
had been made that the bank was guarded day and
next day an army of 20,000 men was assembled, and somewhat severe fight the rioters were defeated, 300
the field of battle.
night.
The
after a
Shortly after1
wards, 192 of them were condemned, and 25 were executed. As for their leader, Lord George Gordon, he was acquitted
after a lengthy sojourn in the Tower. He died in 1793, after being condemned to five years' imprisonment for two libels
against Marie Antoinette, and, a curious experience for a champion of Protestantism, after being in all probability converted to the Jewish faith. Most people thought him a little mad, but he had warm admirers, one of whom, 2 has a of life. left us his Watson, history
Notes and Queries. A medium of intercommunication for Literary Men, Second series, Vol. I., p. 518. Robert Watson, Life of Lord George Gordon, with a philosophical review of his political conduct. For an account of these trials see (i) Cobbett's State Trials, xxi., pp. 485-687; and (2) The whole Proceedings on the Trials of two Informations against Lord George Gordon, 1787.
1
etc. a
PART
IV.
THE BANK OF ENGLAND DURING THE FRENCH REVOLUTION AND THE NAPOLEONIC WARS.
CHAPTER
I.
The Cotton and other of the Industrial Revolution in England. industries. The canals. The steam engine. Results of the transformation of England from an agricultural and commercial into a commercial and Its effects on the Revolutionary and Napoleonic industrial Country. Wars. Its effects on the Organisation of provincial credit. The Country
Banks.
TWENTY
I I
years before the French Revolution, England was an agricultural and commercial country. Agriculture employed the great majority of the population and was the 1 chief source of the country's wealth. Industry was indeed
still
I
I
I I
I
1
I
already flourishing in the i8th century, but, as M. Bry 2 WTites, it showed no signs of concentration of capital or of masses of workpeople in large factories. Big fortunes at this time were still in the hands of the trading companies. The masters w^ere artisans who often worked themselves with their wives and children, in the villages or in the country. The prevailing system was a combination of agriculture and
1 industrial work.
1 The population of England was estimated at 8,500,000, and the total I annual income at ^"119,500,000. The agricultural population was 3,600,000, with an income of 66 millions, and the industrial population was 3,000,000, I with an income of only 27 millions. (See the list of the different classes of I inhabitants with the amount of their respective incomes, given by G. Bry,
I Histoire Industrielle et Economique de I'Angleterre, p. 453). The agri1 cultural section was thus not only the most numerous but also the richest land all the evidence goes to show that it was contented and prosperous.
;
JSee
especially Young's comparison between its condition and French peasant, Political Arithmetic, pp. 133, 158, not to speak Im France. See also Sir J. Stewart, Enquiry into the Principles Economy (1767), Bk. I., Chap, xviii, and Adam Smith, Bk. I.,
*
Chap.
viii.
Op.
cit. t p.
447.
162
Twenty years after the Revolution, England was in miniature the England of to-day. To give one instance only, that of the cotton industry. This industry was introduced into England at the beginning of the 1 8th century owing to the infatuation of the public for the calicoes and other materials imported from India, but its importance was still so small that even in 1750 the value of the cotton goods exported was only 45,000, while that of the woollens was two millions. In 1833 the woollen exand the cottons to "6,539,731 ports had increased to
^18,486,408.
1
When
gaged
In the interval an industrial revolution had taken place. it is remembered that during the period we are
in
is, from 1793 to 1815, England was ena struggle which cost her more than 80 millions a year, and in. all, more than 830 millions, 2 and that during this same period she witnessed the conquest of her
considering, that
the frequent defeat of her own troops, the increase of her national debt from 247 to 861 million pounds and of her yearly burden of taxation to 70 millions; when it is also remembered that English industry and commerce was faced by extraordinary difficulties, by the Bank of England's suspension of cash payments, by the sudden closing of the markets of the Continent and of South America to English goods, 3 and by the Berlin decree, devised by Napoleon, which was a most formidable weapon against British trade, it is easy to infer that there must be a close connection between England's final triumph and her
allies,
economic revolution. Indeed England's policy during this period can hardl] be explained and her financial history is incomprehensibl< if the economic transformation is neglected a transform; tion which can only be compared to that which Euro]
The cotton export now exceeds 70 millions and the home consumptk equals this in value, so that this industry supports a commerce of it millions. The export of woollens amounts to 24 millions. a The exact cost of the war was ^83 1,146,449. 8 In addition to all this there was the difficulty of obtaining certain materials, such as Spanish wools, which were indispensable to English
industry.
1
163
of
which
some
brief account
must be given.
1 Sketch of the Industrial Revolution in England. will begin with the cotton industry to which we have already referred, and in which the changes were most striking. Between 1697 and i7<54 2 the importations of cotton increased from i ,976,359-lbs. to 3,870,392-^35. Progress was small and the work was done by hand. In 1767 Hargreaves invented the spinning jenny, which by means of a wheel, enabled eight spindles to be worked at once, and afterwards a still greater number, so that one man could spin 100 threads of
We
cotton at a time.
Another important innovation was that of roller spinning, w hich was done at first by men and 3 later by water power. Arkwright perfected this machine and made it for the first time an important factor in the manufacture of cotton. 4 These great inventions were followed by a series of others, such as Crompton's mule and Berthollet's use of chlorine for the bleaching of cotton cloth, and the process was so revolutionised that a single man could now work 2,200
:
spindles.
These important discoveries, which made England the leading industrial country in the world, were at first greeted with terror, for it seemed evident that to enable one man to do work which had hitherto employed 2,200 was to turn his 2,199 fellows into the streets. 5 But it soon appeared
that these fears were ill-founded for whilst at
of
George
trie
1 Amongst general works on this question the reader may consult Cunningham, op. cit., Bk. III., Part II. H. Traill, Social England, Vol. V., Chaps, xviii. and xix. Bry, op. cit., Bk. V., Chaps, i. and ii. Lecky, op. cit., Vol. VI., Chap, xxiii. McCulloch, Account of the British Empire, and Essay on Manufactures (in Treatises of Economic Policy) De B. Gibbins, Industrial History of England. [Also Paul Mantoux, La Revolution In;
; ;
dustrielle.]
I
r
For a complete list of the fluctuations during this period see Baines, History of the Cotton Manufacture in Great Britain (1835), p. 109. 8 The first idea of this process is attributed sometimes to John Wyatt, sometimes to Lewis Paul. See for the first opinion Baines, and for the second French, Life and Times of Crompton. 4 Arkwright took out his patent in 1769. 6 Lecky (pp. 209-210) gives an account of the persecutions suffered by Kay, Hargreaves, Arkwright, and Peel, the grandfather of the Prime
Minister.
164
40,000 men, in 1785 it employed 80,000, and in 1831, 833,000.* The population of Lancashire, the headquarters of the industry, was only 166,200 at the beginning of the i8th century; at the end of the century it was 672,000; now The towns of Manchester and Liverit is over four millions. 2 pool have each more than half a million inhabitants.
We have seen
of
cotton
imported hardly doubled, while the exportations increased in an even smaller proportion. During the last twenty years of the i8th century, the former multiplied
and the latter fifteen and a half-fold. 3 The enormous growth of the cotton industry, though the most striking, is not the only sign of the progress which made the second part of the i8th century the most memorable period in the history of English industry. Something must be said too of the manufacture of pottery and china, which was introduced in the first instance, like so many
seven-fold
McCulloch, Account of the British Empire, pp. 218, 219, 360. Wages, however, fell cpnsiderably between 1795 and 1815 Cunningham (p. 468) estimates that during this period they were only two-thirds of what they had been during the preceding decade. On three occasions, in 1795, 1800, and 1808, it was proposed to fix a minimum wage, but this idea was rejected as likely rather to increase the evil (on this point see the Report of the Committee of the House of Commons, Reports, Vol. II., p. 97). Things were
;
XXX.
8
which
will give
quote from Baines' yearly list for the period 1781-1832 some figures a more exact idea of the increase in the cotton imports
:
Cotton imported
Year.
1781 1784 1789 1792
for spinning.
5,198,778 Ibs. ,, 11,482,083 32,576,023 ,, 34,907,497
five years,
Year,
1771
Wool imported.
1,829,000 2,582,000 8,609,000 10,914,000
Ibs.
,,
Decline for
1799 1800 1802
43379278
56,010,732 60,345,600 74,925,306 132,488,935 50,966,000 99.366,343 280,080,000
Ibs.
1807 1810
1813 1815 1831
(maximum
for the
war
period).
165
iron
of
the
iron industries \vere old-established, but never really expanded until after the inventions of Darby of Colebrook,
The
and especially
of Cort of Gosport,
who
in 1783
introduced
The industry the process of puddling and rolling iron. 3 did not attain its full development until the iQth century, but even in the previous century it had made considerable
4
progress.
One
was
after the discovery of the Darbys, father and son, coke could be used for smelting instead of the wood char-
that
coal
which had been employed before and which was very The demand for coke increased daily and * stimulated the exploitation of coal mines, which soon grew to an importance of which the list given below will give
scarce.
All this industrial development would have if it had not coincided with increased
attaining coal.
For this industry see Lecky, pp. 210-211, and Bry, p. 500. Its headquarters are in Staffordshire, which stands fifth among English counties as regards population. These industries owe their development to Josiah Wedgwood, for whose life see Eliza Meteyard, Life of Wedgwood.
2
p.
466
'of
Treatises on Economical
see
Policy.
3
For further
In
details
as
to
the iron
industry,
Fairbairn,
Iron,
its
history, properties
4
and manufacture.
1740 the total quantity of pig-iron manufactured in England and at 17,000 tons. In 1796 it was 125,079, and in 1806, It increased to 678,117 tons in 1830. 258,206. Birmingham, Sheffield and a number of other towns owe their prosperity, it may be even said their very
existence, to this industry. 6 As early as 1621 Lord Dudley took out a patent for a similar invention. He started some works which came to an untimely end and then the matter was forgotten in the confusion of the Civil War. But Dud Dudley, the natural son of this Lord Dudley, published in 1665 an account of what had happened under the title of Metallum Martis. This pamphlet, which had
become very rare, was reprinted fifty years ago. 6 For the working of the mines and its difficulties see
England,
1
Traill,
Social
p. 314.
(p.
:
Cunningham
1660
at different dates
1700
i66
supposes and encourages improvement in the public roads it also stimulates great undertakings such as those which entirely changed the methods of internal communication
in
1
England. I refer to the construction of canals. Canals had been used for a long time on the Continent. 2 England on the contrary, was very backward in this re3 spect. Consequently transport rates were very high. The carriage of a ton of goods between Manchester and Liverpool cost 4os. by land and i2s. by river.
1761
that
it
It
was determined
to
make a
Worsley and Manchester. This canal, the first made in England, was constructed by Brindley entirely at the expense of the
in
Duke of Bridgewater.
It
England and its extension supplied an easy and cheap means of communication between Liverpool and Manchester.
4
After this canal Brindley made another 139 miles long, 5 He died in 1772 at the age connecting the pottery centres. of 56. For a long time his schemes had been rejected or laughed at, but he lived long enough to witness their success. Eighteen years after his death canals were constructed according to his plans to connect the four great ports of London, Bristol, Liverpool and Hull. In the same year a
canal joining the Forth and Clyde, whose construction had
1 H. D. Traill, op. cit., pp. 322-326, and Phillips, A general History of Inland Navigation. * Not to mention Italy and Spain, where canals had been constructed at a very early date, the undertakings of Charles XII. and of Peter the Great may be noticed, and in France the canal from the Seine to the Loire, begun under Henri IV., and the canal du Midi, finished under Louis XIV. 8 As early as 1656, it is true, Francis Mathew suggested joining the Isis to the Avon by a canal, and various similar projects were brought forward, but nothing was done beyond the improvement of certain rivers. 4 This first canal cost the Duke ^220, ooo, but Brindley 's pay formed but a small part of this sum, for he was only paid 2S. 6d., and afterwards 33. 6d. a day. He was uneducated as well as inexpensive, his letters being full of uncouth spelling mistakes, but he was none the less a man of genius who made important changes in his country. (His biography will be found in Smiles, Lives of the Engineers). 6 Canals are a means of transport peculiarly adapted for pottery since they offer little risk of breakage, hence they are still used for this industry. In Brindley's time there were additional considerations, the carriage of pottery cost nearly a shilling per mile per ton and the expense put a stop to
all
After the construction of the canal the cost of transport from trade. Etruria to Liverpool fell from 505. to 133. <jd. (Traill, p. 324).
167
taken twenty-two years, was completed. During the next four years Parliament passed no less than 81 Acts authoris1 ing the construction of navigable canals. Undertakings of this kind are still of much importance. Canals continue to be the best means of internal transport for heavy goods and for such as do not require rapid transit.
Hence great nations still devote considerable sums to their But whatever may be the extension and improvement. actual importance of canals, it is as nothing compared with
it was a century ago, or to speak generally, before the invention of railways. In those days the method of transport they offered was the cheapest, the safest, the easiest and not the least rapid. In fact had it not been for them the greatest industrial discoveries would have had but limited
what
results, and English industry and commerce owes an eternal debt of gratitude to Brindley. It is estimated that before the introduction of railways no less than 2,600 miles of navigable canals had been con2 structed, without counting those in Ireland and Scotland,
million
which owned respectively 276 and 225 miles, and that 50 pounds had been invested in these undertakings. But if inventions may be judged by their consequences, the most important of all was James Watt's 3 improvement in the steam engine. James Watt, who was born at Greenock in 1736, and details of whose life will be found in Lardner's works and in the biographies of Muirhead and Smiles, took out his first patent in 1769, but it was not until long afterwards that he succeeded in giving to the steam engine, which had hitherto moved only vertically, "a rotary motion and a parallel motion, and, by the regulating centrifugal force of the governor, in placing the machine in all its various com1
Lecky,
3
p. 214.
With regard
Newenham, View
of the circumstances
of
R. H. Thurston, History of the Steam Engine, gives an account of Denys Papin, the Marquis of Worcester, Savery, Newcomen and other forerunners of Watt. There are no doubt excellent works in French on the subject, but it has not been easy to find them, since the present book has been written
entirely in England.
68
bined motions under the complete control of the mechanic.*' When once this result was secured the steam engine became a real influence in industry, and Watt may be said to have brought about an unprecedented revolution. These were the chief among the inventions which transformed England from an essentially agricultural country into an essentially industrial country, and in the course of a few years produced those vast accumulations of wealth 2
now
of population which are There is nothing her predominant characteristics. more striking from this point of view than the persistent
growth in trade and population. The following figures are quoted from the statistics given by Cunningham .2
Population. 5.475.000 6,736,000 7,428,000 7.953.ooo 8,675,000 8,892,536 10,164,256 12,000,236
Year.
1613 1662
1821
Trade. Exports. Imports. 2,487,435 2,141,151 2,022,812 4,301,000 7,120,000 6,910,899 6,090,083 12,699,081 7,772,039 11,651,281 13,896,415 29,196,198 21,024,866 28,257,781 31,064,492 39,301,612 43,568,757 58,624,550 32,438,650 197,330,265 100,460,433
changes from a
point of view. The emigration of workpeople to the manufacturing centres, the decline of agriculture, and even of the 4 5 agricultural industries, the labour laws, the abolition of tariffs and the adoption of free trade principles, all follow These however were not the directly from this revolution.
it
is
Lecky, op. cit., Vol. VII., p. 279 (edition 1899). This accumulation was the more rapid owing to the immense profits made in the early years. Pitt, when he imposed the legacy duty, thought it absurd to consider the possibility of any inheritance exceeding a million. But things changed so rapidly that after a short time a year rarely passed without such a case occurring. William Johnston, England as it is, Chap. xii. 9 Op. cit., p. 694-695. 4 Especially when water-power was no longer the principal driving force
1
in use.
5 The first of these laws was passed in 1802 and was introduced by Sir Robert Peel, the father of the Prime Minister. Jay, Cours de Legislation
Industrielle, 1897-1898.
169
can be traced throughout English social life and in all the marks of the English temperament. this period of thirty years, from 1789-1819, we During must confine ourselves to our particular subject, and shall deal only with the effects of the change on the course of the
The Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. confidently asserted that had it not been for the
i.
It
may
be
industrial
revolution, England, even with a commercial monopoly, would never have been able to muster the resources needed to resist the Republican army and to conquer Bonaparte. Attempts have been made in vain to explain this extraordinary vitality and energy by other causes. It has even been alleged that England could not have provided the
capital expended during a struggle of a quarter of a century without the inconvertible currency, which enabled her to coin boundless wealth from every piece of money. It will not be difficult to show how far removed this opinion is from the truth, for the fact is, that England made no attempt during Pitt's lifetime to profit by the situation and to urge
to excessive issues, and that later on, when this was policy adopted, the result was a cruel disillusionment. On the contrary, it is due to Arkwright, Watt, Brindley and their companions, that England was able to raise the capital for her immense loans, to impose taxes to pay the interest on them and to provide for the expenses of the war. This fact is eloquently stated by Mr. Lecky The first and most obvious fact is that the triumphant issue of the great French war was largely, if not mainly, due to the cotton mill and the steam engine. England might well place the statues of Watt and Arkwright by the side of those of Wellington and Nelson, for had it not been for the wealth which they created, she could never have supported an expenditure which, during the last ten years of the war, averaged more than 84 millions a year, and rose in 1814 to 106 millions, nor could she have endured without bankruptcy a national debt which had risen in 1816 to 885
the
Bank
millions."
1
p. 218.
170
The second point which we The Country Banks. 2. have to consider is the effect of the industrial and commercial development in extending country banking.
Necessarily this effect was immense, but for special reasons the extension was not of a very advantageous kind.
Bank of England notes did not circulate outside London and the Bank did not establish any branches in the provinces. At the same time the enormous increase in industrial undertakings demanded a greater extension of credit facilities and in particular, an increased supply of paper money; this need was supplied by the issues of
country banks formed for this one object. The Bank itself assisted in the formation of these banks
in the following manner : During the crisis of 1783
Bank succeeded
in
which we have described, the a stop to the drain on its reserve putting
by an exceptional contraction of its issues. When the crisis was over there was a continuous stream of gold into its coffers, and the supply of currency was necessarily increased payment for the gold. Hence. the issues which between 1783 and 1785 had not exceeded six millions, rose to ^11,121,800 and the bullion increased to ;8, 645, 865. This increase in the coin and in the issues of the Bank occurring thus in time of peace, naturally caused a decline in the rate of interest, whilst the Bank did not reduce
by the
issue of notes in
l
its rate
of discount.
to
discount bills, some of which at any rate, would have been discounted at the Bank had the rate of interest been higher. The Bank's discounts
increase their issues in order to
were
,4,973,926 in 1785, to ; 1789, and, taking into account the general increase in business, it may be concluded that the discounts of the country banks increased by more than the difference between these two amounts. For all these reasons the development of the banks was very rapid, but owing to the deficient organisation of credit the extension was not, as we have said, very advantageous.
actually
in
2 >35)9Oi
1
reduced
from
I.,
p.
194.
171
1
of 1742 (c. 13, 5) " that part of conferred on the Bank a monopoly of issue in The only banks not affected Great Britain called England.
was as
follows.
The Act
1 *
than six partners. The Bank of England, playing in this matter the part of dog in the manger, not only did not found branches to issue notes, but was even unwilling to allow powerful and wellestablished companies to be formed for the purpose, although this might on occasions have helped to strengthen
less
its
own
credit.
it
a discount,
Further, when the country notes were at refused to supply issues which would have
that wealthy and issue were unable to notes, and that, respectable companies since the country needed a circulating medium and could not get a good one, it was soon supplied with a bad one.
of shopkeepers, chemists, tailors and bakers, taking advantage of the clause authorising banks formed by 3 and flooded the less than six persons, became bankers
number
1 See above, p. 148. A criticism of the organisation of the country banks given by W. Boyd, Letter to the Honourable W. Pitt on the Influence of the stoppage of Issues in Specie at the Bank of England (1801), p. 20 of the edition of 1811, revised by the author and more particularly by H. Thornton An Enquiry into the Nature and Effects of the Paper Credit of Great Britain,
is
vii., entitled, Of Country Banks; their advantages and disadvantages, For a special discussion of the relations pp. 236-261 of McCulloch's reprint. between these banks and industry, see p. 245.
Chap,
3 The privileges conferred by this Act were limited in fact to borrowing or owing money on bills or notes payable on demand. The business of banking was at that time actually confined to this. Since the clause was strictly interpreted the device of using cheques, which was borrowed from Holland, was not forbidden by the law. Hence there was nothing to prevent companies from being formed and carrying on banking by this means. This did happen by degrees and without occasion arising for Parliamentary interference. The custom passed unnoticed until it was too widespread to be forbidden, and shortly afterwards Mr. Joplin pointed out that the foundation of deposit banks was absolutely legal (see Supplementary Observations to the third edition of an Essay on Banking, p. 84 In 1833 some joint-stock 1823). companies were established in London and undertook banking business, but without issuing notes. The Bank of England tried vainly to have them condemned as illegal. At the present time there are numbers of these joint-stock banks in London, which enjoy an excellent reputation and well-deserved For this whole subject see below, p. 258, et seq. prosperity.
In 1775 an attempt was made to remedy matters by an Act forbidding the issue of notes of lower value than 2os., and two years later the limit was increased to ^5. See below, p. 253, Lord Liverpool's speech in February, 1826, describing the persons who took up the profession of banking, in connection with the crisis of 1825 and the part played by the country banks.
OF THE
UNIVERSITY
i;2
In 1750 there were not 12 banks outside London in 1793 there w ere 400. Some of these 400 banks were no doubt well-established, and of these a few still survive, but the remainder did not
offer the
same guarantee
of solidity,
and
in their
eagerness
for profit, they made the mistake of keeping an inadequate reserve of coin to support their issues, so that they collapsed 1 at the first unusual demand for cash.
The two great crises of 1793 and 1797 were due to the defective organisation of the provincial credit system. The Bank of England had not chosen to lend any substantial aid to the organisation of credit and it the punishment of its careless selfishness.
left it to
shall see, it accomplished the task in 1793, thanks to the active interference of the Government who
As we
however,
it
its
own
way.
Nor did
happened
the evil cease with the year 1797 the same thing in 1810 and 1812. Macleod 2 informs us that
during the three years 1814-1816, 92 commissions in bankruptcy were issued against country banks, and that during the 28 years, 1791-1818, there were no less than 273 commissions of this kind. The Act of 1826 permitted the formation of joint-stock companies to carry on the business of banking and with
power
than 65 miles
Jfrom
London. In 1844 however the law deprived both private banks (banks having less than six partners) and
1 According to Sir Francis Baring, banks had been established throughout the country in the interval between the failure of the Ayr Bank in 1772, and 1793. This was an important change and as long as credit was well established it was a change beneficial to the country, in that it increased the Unfortunately these banks were founded upon an insecure basis, currency. and they were quite unable to withstand any sudden disturbance, for they allowed interest on all deposits and hence could not afford to keep even a small reserve of idle and unproductive capital (see Observations on the Establishment of the Bank of England, p. 15.)
2 3rd Edition, Vol. II., p. 380. The author goes on to remark that if we allow the usual proportion of three or four suspensions to one bankruptcy we may readily calculate that upwards of a thousand banks stopped payment
173
joint-stock banks of the right of issue. But those actually in existence, viz., 72 joint-stock banks and 207 private banks, retained their privilege of issuing notes though only
up
to
a fixed limit.
of these banks with issue rights has greatly decreased and continues to decrease in 1888 there were only 1 Whenever one 19 private banks and 44 joint-stock banks. of these banks disappears its right of issue passes over to the Bank of England. The note issue of private and joint-stock banks was limited in 1866 to ,8,648,008 2 it is now only
; ;
The number
;2, 762,323.*
M. Octave Noel, Le Banques d' emission en Europe (Vol. I., pp. 78, 82), gives a very complete list of the banks of issue then in existence and of the respective limits of their rights of issue. 3 ^j 5i53. ooo for the private banks, and ^"3,495,000 for the joint-stock
banks.
3
1
The
much
less.
See below,
p.
297
The
ment
issue depart-
CHAPTER
II.
1
Pitt and the Revolution. Connection financial policy before 1789. between Pitt's financial policy and the suspension of cash payments. Sketch of this policy. Mr. Gladstone's speech. The subsidies paid to the Allies. The rate at which the loans were raised. Loans versus taxation. Conclusion. Criticism of Pitt's policy. The Sinking Fund.
WHEN the French Revolution broke out, Pitt had been in power since 1784; his general policy was peaceful and his 2 financial policy especially fortunate. He began to pay off the debt; a million a year was set aside for this object. This million was to be devoted to the purchasing of Government stock and was to be increased each year by the interest
1 I have thought this chapter essential as an explanation of those which follow, but I have not written it without many hesitations and with considerable difficulty. It is very difficult to judge of a financial policy during such a remarkable period, and Pitt could not reasonably be expected to foresee all To this first difficulty the events of which he was to be an eye witness. The political struggles is added a second, that of finding data for an opinion. were exceptionally violent and they influence nearly all the books on the Moreover, Mr. Lecky's work stops at 1793. There is no general subject. Lord Stanhope's Life of the Right Honour' history whatever for this period. able W. Pitt (4 volumes) is anything but a scientific work.
The following may be consulted for the subject matter of the chapter A masterly speech by Gladstone, delivered on May 8, 1854 (see Parliamentary Debates, third series, Vol. 132, columns 1472-79 devoted to this matter). McCulloch, Collection of Tracts on the National Debt (with a preface) The History of the Bank of England (1798), a work already mentioned, whose G. K. Rickards, The Financial Policy of standpoint is essentially liberal. War, an answer to Mr. Newmarch. Grellier, Terms of all the public Loans, with an appendix by R. W. Wade (1812) very important. William Newmarch, in a valuable pamphlet which contains much documentary evidence, On the Loans Raised by Mr. Pitt during the first French War, has given a brilliant defence of Pitt's financial policy. More recently the question has been discussed very ably, but unfortunately too The appendices A and B may briefly, by Lord Rosebery, Pitt, pp. 148-156. also be read with advantage, since Lord Rosebery's figures are more accurate than those given by Newmarch. Finally, the Parliamentary Debates may be consulted, especially, of course, the speeches of Pitt and Fox, but they cannot be read with too great caution. Amongst other speakers, William Smith and his report of February 9, 1796, deserves mention. 3 Rosebery, op. cit., Chaps. IV. and V.
:
;
175
on the stock already acquired. A special commission, independent of the House of Commons, was to carry out this plan and to administer the Sinking Fund. This system on which exaggerated hopes were based, continued to work It reduced the throughout the wars of the Revolution. national debt by ^10,250,000 between 1786 and 1793.
At the first outbreak of the revolution Pitt apparently intended to continue the same policy. If he did not actually 1 ignore the Revolution, as Lord Rosebery says, at least he appeared to do so. There is ample evidence to show that he had no thought of interference, and he did all that he could 2 Further than that he did not go. to avoid the conflict.
After the loth of August, the English Government recalled
at Paris,
and from
this
time onwards the hostility to France felt by the King and Pitt tried to the English people continuously increased. resist the current but the French victories in the Netherlands were calculated to weaken his resistance the beheading of Louis XVI. dispelled his doubts. The English, who regard the execution of a king as their special monopoly, received the news of this unfortunate prince's death with extraordinary demonstrations. The theatres were closed,
;
everyone put on mourning, pulpit and platform re-echoed with the murder committed in France, and the King's chariot was surrounded by a mob demanding "war with France!" "Since the massacre of St. Bartholomew," " writes Lecky, 3 no event in a foreign country had produced such a thrill of horror in England." Pitt, the author con'
P 96.
.
February, 1792, on introducing the budget, Pitt made a famous speech, one of those exceptional speeches which he revised with a view to He proposed the removal of certain taxes, the increase of the publication. sinking fund, the suppression of the subsidies paid to the Hessian mercenaries, and a reduction in the number of seamen from 18,000 to 16,000. Moreover he declared that " Unquestionably there never was a time in the history of this country when from the situation of Europe we might more reasonably expect fifteen years of peace than at the present moment."
:
In
Lord Rosebery, pp. 118 to 123, gives numerous other proofs of Pitt's state of mind. This view is corroborated by Newmarch, g. 5, and Lecky, pp. 2-4. See also for Maret's mission to England and his interview with Pitt
1792), Ernouf, Maret,
9
due de Bassano.
(Nov.,
p. 122.
176
the opportunity of breaking with France, and on January 24th, Grenville, the Foreign Secretary, Qrdered Chauvelin to leave the country within eight days. On February ist the Convention made the only response possible, and declared war against both the King 1 of England and the Stadholder of Holland. The war concerns us only in so far as it affected the
tinues, at once seized
of England. Between February ist, 1793, and March i7th, 1801, the Government was obliged to increase the English national
Bank
debt by ^325, 211, 460. 2 The Bank, on the other hand, had to suspend its cash payments in February, 1797. Was there any connection between these two facts? Would a wiser administration of the public finance have
This is the question into which we must now inquire. Yearly loans had to be raised from the outbreak of the war until the peace of Amiens. These loans, which were at first small, rapidly increased in amount, and after 1795 became excessive, but decreased and 1800. After this the upward slightl^Detween 1798 that so at the end of 1801, the movel^^ began again, total J^^lish funded debt had increased by ^271,980,000
during the nine years of Pitt's administration, the average yearly increase being ^"30,000,000.
Mr. Lecky, with his customary talent and learning, tried to justify the behaviour of England and to mark it off from that of the Continental monarchies. It would be out of place to discuss the question here, but if I had to express an opinion I should sum up the matter thus that, while the behaviour of England in these wars against Louis XVI. and Napoleon was justifiable and did good service to Europe, her conduct during the whole
:
period 1789-1793, now before us, was unjust, deceitful and full of hypocrisy. yet I am not inspired by any excessive admiration for the Revolution, and willingly acknowledge that the Convention, by indulging in incongruous and unsuitable demonstrations, played into the hands of its enemies and supplied them with their strongest arguments. 3 This sum did not indeed represent the whole debt, for besides their shares, the subscribers received a certain number of terminable annuities as of their security. Those annuities, known as " Long Annuities," expired part in 1860, and their value reckoned at 5 per cent, interest would be ^9,323,976. But during this time the Sinking Fund continued in operation and ^"42,518,832 was redeemed through it, which sum must be subtracted from the total amount. Rosebery, pp. 150-151.
And
177
in all these loans were issued conthe Government only actually received below par, siderably 1 out of the 271 millions for which it was ,202,375,000
same reason, the interest, nominally 3 per cent., was actually much higher. 2 This increase was mainly due to the disinclination felt at
The taxes levied during years 1793-1797 amounted to ^70,000,000, or 1 ; 7, 500,000 a year, whilst during the four years 1799-1802 the taxes amounted to ,134,750,000, i.e., there was an
the outset to impose fresh taxes.
the
four
And finally, a large part of the money raised by these loans was not used in the public service but was absorbed in subsidies paid to the allies. These were of two kinds (i) direct subsidies, (2) Imperial loans, guaranteed by the English Government and raised in England. These loans ultimately became a charge on the English Treasury.
:
has been severely attacked on all will proceed to examine these and will with of those Mr. Gladstone, criticisms, begin honour where it is due. rendering During the debate of
Pitt's financial policy
these
accounts.
We
the
Newmarch, p. 39, gives the annual amounts sums actually raised as follows
:
and
Loans contracted.
1704
Money
actually raised*
.;S
HISTORY
(>!
Till-
r>.\\K
(>!'
l-NCl
AM).
May S, iS>i, this peat statesman, \\ho \\.is then C'hancellor of the Fxcheqtier, set himself the task of proving that all war expenses ought to be met by taxation, an attempt \\hich
1
gave evidence
courage.
and
political
grounds
for his opinion, (Gladstone passed on to discuss the lessons of history, and ciiticised Pitt strongly for the policy 3 He ridiculed the he adopted at the beginning of the war. " Heaven-born view \\hich had gained for Pitt the title of
minister," though
at
the
same time he acknowledged a memory, and pointed out how he changed his policy and whole5
The speaker
resort to loans.
in
4
fact,
entirely
condemned
the continued
rate at
which
adequate interest of 3 per cent, was offered, much larger sums had to be borrowed than were actually received, and above all, the possibility of future conversions was cut otT. Finally, Pitt has been almost unanimously blamed for the
subsidies given to the allies. Let us examine these various points.
1 Sec the whole of this speech, Par/. Debates, Vol. 132 pp. 1414 to 1479.
tM.uch-May,
1854),
'
P-
one
is cluu actei -istics. It surprising tint this has Tilt made mistakes icadilv. hut. the fault o attention. committed, he as quickly realised it, and never persisted in it ohstinatel Witness his behaviour in the \\ar with France: he soon recognised that had been a mistake to enter upon the simple and when the Directory gn him an excuse for chanpntj his policy, he at once opened negotiations A Witness his behaviour to diil all he could to conclude an honourable peace. he exploited that institution so ruthlessly as to force it to suspend tlu> Hank
of
his
distinctive
attracted
more
cash payments but when the paper money was actually precaution to avoid abusing this dan^eious weapon. the same kind could be s^iven.
;
in
Other examples
4 Gladstone also condemned the Sinking Fund, but since everyone with his condemnation, this matter can be defened till latei.
See Hastable,
>/.
and
Ice.
lit.
SUBSIDIES
PAID
we;
TO
THK
ALIJI
These subsidies, as
ways. was given for which, rity
I
Either
he;
have said, were managed in two was paid over directly, or security money the loans raised by the German Empire,
1
considering
2
the
state
of
first
the
Imperial
1797,
The
of these loans
fr
only tor
r
/,*4,ooo,orx),
\
was
,620,000.
Most English writers, not even excepting Newmarch,* .ondemn the payment of these subsidies.
It is true that some of the allies d'-vrved the name of "treacherous" given them by Fox, 4 and that they employed the money for anything rather than the support of England in her struggle against revolutionary France. It
when the allies were honest, there or no agreement between them and the English troops, that the combination did more harm than good to both parties, and that ultimately England gained little
>
little
advantage from the 15 millions and more which she spent between 1793 and 1801. But it cannot therefore be asserted as has too often been done in England, that Pitt's policy was nothing but a mistake and a delusion. In my opinion this is perhaps the very point where he is least to blame. In fact, these payments only formed a small part of the war expenses, and it cannot be said either that they were
wholly ineffectual,
for
still
or that
to
justified
in
sidies
1
better results.
The amount paid directly was ,9,024,817. Details of the distribution be found in Rosebery, Appendix A, and Newmarch, p. 51, Appendix /. We may again point out that the figures given by the former are more accurate than those of the latt'-r.
will
3
'Jlie
first
795-
'J'he
loan was guaranteed, at the request of the King, on February guarantee gave rise to lively debates. The opposition did not
lack
arguments
which were,
indeed,
justified
12-13, contra Rosebery. Speerh on February 5. The whole speech, which this question, should be r-
pp.
is
entirely devoted to
i8o
Macleod
holds this view. At the time they were believed to be the sole cause of the drain of bullion. The opposition repeated this persistently and the commercial world was convinced of its truth. People apparently attributed the exportation of precious metals entirely to the subsidies, forgetting the fleets and armies which England had to 1 maintain abroad. Sir Francis Baring pointed this out " It must be indifferent to the country, if clearly enough but bullion is exported, to what service it shall be applied
:
;
of infinite importance whether the magnitude of the sum shall exceed, or fall short, of the balance of trade. Whether
it is
money
payment
of the
British troops in Germany, for the foreign expenditure of fleets in the Mediterranean or Lisbon, or whether it shall be for an Imperial loan ... is exactly the same to the
country.'* Here, as in other cases, the mistake lay in having undertaken an unjust and imprudent war. But, this mistake been it was made, having England's duty to secure
Continental
retain
allies
in
the
first
instance,
and
then
to
This was the only way in which Great Britain with her insignificant army, could threaten the French frontiers it was the only way in which she could keep the Republican army from her own coasts. Hence, although Pitt may be blamed for distributing several
them
at all costs.
cannot in justice
him
means
SECTION
II.
THE RATE
Mr. Newmarch
apology,
tries to
failed to raise loans at 5 per cent., not from any unwillingness to do so, but because he could find no one to lend money
on
such
terms,
since
the
public
wanted
to
enjoy
the
1 Op. cit., pp. 50-51. In the next chapter we give the sums expended abroad on behalf of the Government they far exceed the money granted See Tooke, p. 208. the allied Governments.
;
181
version.
advantages of a high rate and to avoid the risk of conMr. Newmarch 1 supplies very convincing proofs will merely notice the most in support of this theory.
We
striking of these.
The
But
first
raised at
at
an
interest of
to
statement in the 1793), seems to have tried in vain to borrow at 4 or 5 per cent., and to have been forced, without option, to borrow at 3 per cent., although he realised that the conditions were more burdensome than he had expected. This fact is confirmed by J. J. Grellier, who states that Pitt did everything he could to excite competition, but without success.
The same thing is true for the subsequent loans. In November, 1796, a part of the floating debt which circulated in the form of Naval bills and Exchequer bills, was funded. The holders were offered a choice between stock bearing respectively 3, 4, and 5 per cent, interest. The offers were so arranged that in actual fact all the stock paid more than 5 per cent., and there was a bonus on that at 4 and 5 per cent. The first paid $ 5s., the second ,5 ios., and the third ;5 i6s. per ^100 of capital. But even this was not enough to attract the subscribers, who were alarmed at the possibility of conversion, and out of a total of ^13,029,339
funded, 85 per cent, were subscribed at 3 per cent. There remains another yet more characteristic fact.
In and was 1796 England was in an isolated position threatened with an apparently inevitable invasion. The 3 budget showed a deficit of 18 millions, and as, under the
pp. 7-20.
Mr. Gladstone laid great stress on the fact that to issue these loans nominally at 3 per cent, was a deception, and that Pitt borrowed first at j4 33., then at ^4 ios., then at 4 155., and finally at 5 145. and at
6 6s. iod., which
this fact
3
It
cavalry,
is the rate at which the loan in 1797 was raised. But was perfectly clear to contemporaries and deceived no one. was intended to raise fresh troops, viz., 15,000 foot, 20,000 irregular and 60,000 militia.
182
it was determined to raise a patriotic subscription, the Loyalty Loan. 112 in Everyone who subscribed ;ioo was to receive 5 per cent stock. This loan was inconvertible until after all other 5 per cent, loans had been converted, and the shareholders were always to have the option of ^100 in cash or
cient,
;i33
these
shares,
which were
1
patriotic
enthusiasm,
fell
In spite of all these advantages subscribed for amidst great so low that Pitt thought it
advisable to help the shareholders by adding to the above conditions a long annuity of 75. 6d. per share, hoping in this 2 way to stop a fall which had already reached 14 per cent.
To sum up
second point do not seem to us well-founded those made by Mr. Gladstone with respect to the continual appeal to loans are certainly more justifiable, without being wholly sound.
SECTION
III.
LOAN
versus TAX.
will
be remembered.
With-
Jout disputing their correctness in principle, we may note that it has been said in reply : first, that in this particular case Pitt could not levy fresh taxes without risk of crushing the new-born English industries; and second, that those industries were not in a position to bear the burden of the war until after the naval victories had assured them a commercial monopoly; this, however, was not until 1798. It has been pointed out too, that the first years of the war were not only years of great commercial distress, as is
proved by the number of failures, but also of agricultural distress due to the remarkable series of bad harvests. The conditions were thus very unsuited to the imposition of
to impose any. that Pitt gave any not convinced am This is true, but of the condition country and rather thought to the economic
new
taxes,
and
Pitt
I
The loan was completely subscribed within 15 hours. Pitt's scheme only passed the House by 36 votes to 35, and consequently
out.
183
believe with Gladstone that he was chiefly concerned to maintain his own popularity. Mr. Gladstone's criticisms however only refer to the period 1793-1797; he has only praise to bestow on Pitt as 1 regards the succeeding years. In 1797, he says, Pitt made " a first effort towards a more healthy policy by proposing 2 to raise ,7,000,000 by assessed taxes. The plan broke he only got ,4,000,000. In the year 1798, down . and he proposed to raise not daunted by that failure,
. .
Lord Lansdowne
The
taxes brought
,59,300,000, that is, an increase of 15 per cent. From this date until 1816 the revenue never fell below 60 millions and sometimes exceeded 70. 3 But from the breaking of the peace of Amiens until 1816 the national debt was only increased by ,360,000,000; that The period 1793-1802, is, a yearly increase of 25 millions. 4 though the expenses were much smaller, had witnessed an increase in the debt of 30 millions a year. This comparatively satisfactory result was only obtained by a bold increase in taxation. Mr. Gladstone states that if the income tax had been imposed in time it would have saved the nation from these enormous loans, since the annual expenditure except for the interest on the debt, might have been
P- M74These taxes afford an interesting study from the fiscal point of view. They were taxes on luxury, sumptuary taxes. Compare Stourm, Systemes Ge"ne"raux d'impdts, p. 95, and Leroy-Beaulieu, Sciences des Finances, Vol. I.,
'
1
p. 429.
1793 to 1797 the yearly revenue averaged ^17,500,000. increased expenditure was mainly owing to the very expensive wars with Spain.
4
From
The
i8 4
covered during the later years by the returns from taxation. But even if we assume that all the excuses made for Pitt if we admit, as we did at the outset, that Pitt are justified; was not wrong to send subsidies to the allies; if we admit that he could not issue loans under more favourable conditions than those forced upon him by circumstances; even if we admit, what is very doubtful, that Pitt could not have he yet made three relied more than he did on taxation These are, the conmistakes which are inexcusable. tinuance of the Sinking Fund, his forecast as to the duration of the war, and his treatment of the Bank; and all three, 1 especially the last, are unworthy of a great statesman. For the present we will confine ourselves to a consideration of the
two
first
occupy
The Sinking Fund* " The sinking fund established by Mr. Pitt," says Gladstone, "was another form of mischief. By means of the sinking fund you were continually buying up stock at 3, 4, or 5 per cent, below the rate at which you
were simultaneously creating stock
in
were buying stock to reduce it at 60, and creating it again sometimes as high as 68. Thus what the heaven-born policy did was to re-
money
to
make
the purchase.
'
You
'
by putting a seton into the body was nothing but a perpetual drain upon
for
the
resources of the country." Lord Grenville, Pitt's cousin, has tried to exonerate him 8 by pointing out that the nation accepted the sinking fund almost without consideration and with unlimited belief in what was regarded as an all-powerful remedy. This being " so he concludes that It can be no reproach to indi-
any
vidual to have partaken largely in these feelings, and least of all to that able and excellent statesman who carried
express our own firm conviction, but, as we have already pointed is so difficult and involved that we do not maintain that our opinion is the right one. 3 See also McCulloch and Rickards, cit.
out, the subject
op.
1
We
Essay on the supposed advantages of a Sinking Fund author himself, however, condemns the policy.
(1828).
The
185
through the Act of 1786." To which it may be replied that Pitt's mistake was not excused by the fact, if it be one, that he only believed in the sinking fund because the public looked upon it as a universal remedy. Hamilton's criticisms 1 in 1813, and Ricardo's seven
years
showed plainly the fallacies involved in this and the sinking fund as a special institution was invention, abandoned in 1829. 3 False judgments as to the duration of the 'war and the strength of the enemy. Pitt was confronted by a vigorous though small Opposition, led by men who may indeed have made mistakes, and who, in my opinion, were too ready to remember that the government of their country was in the
later,
hands of
their political opponents, but who exercised a real House by their eloquence and remarkable
controversial skill.
The Opposition speakers, whose names are preserved in history, pointed out untiringly that the war was unjust, that it would be long and unprofitable and that it would bring about the ruin of the country. The uninterrupted victories of the Republican armies and the disloyal behaviour of some of the allies provided them daily with fresh arguments. Pitt endeavoured not to disgust the country by increased taxation and to pacify the House by describing the war as necessarily of short duration, because *' France had exhausted her resources and was on the verge,
4 This was one of his nay, in the gulf of bankruptcy." favourite arguments; he was always referring to the
ment
3 3
idea of paying off the debt did not however perish. Conversions in various forms have appreciably reduced the national debt under a wise, patriotic and far-sighted administration. Amongst the measures used, that of terminable annuities was imitated in France by M. Caillaux. When the South African War broke out (Autumn, 1899) the national debt
The
and purchases
to 625 millions.
This phrase served as a motto to a reply to Pitt's statements, written at Paris in 1696 by Tom Paine, and called The Decline and Fall of the English System of Finance.
i86
be acknowledged that Pitt was sincere in what he it is comprehensible that at first he may easily have flattered himself into the idea that the war would be short and that the chaotic state of the French Government would prevent its carrying on a vigorous campaign. But how long could he have kept up this illusion ? How could a statesman such as he have cherished these ideas after the 1 battle of Fleurus P and when he could no longer reasonably believe them, was it loyal, in Fox's 2 picturesque phrase, to " amuse " the country "with his ideas on the finances of France,'* with calculations as to the assignats and the French bankruptcy, when he was himself leading the way to an inconvertible currency and to the verge of a simih
It
said
and
bankruptcy.
1
Even
in
before Easter.
* See Fox's speech on the occasion of the suspension of cash payments an analysis of which is given below. See also Sheridan's speech on th same occasion. " Surely it was not for want of warning. The Marquess o Lansdowne and several other enlightened senators in both Houses of Parlia ment predicted the approach of this melancholy event. Mr. Pitt was so busj on the calculation and depreciation of French assignats and mandats that he had not time, it is presumed, to attend to our own immaculate paper credit, as Lord Grenville, that luminous statesman, called it about two years ago." (See The History of the Bank of England, etc., 1797, p. 105). 8 Pitt's apologists (see Newmarch, p. 23), emphasise the fact that these illusions were shared by the majority of the nation and that traces of them are found in Burke's last work, Letters on a Regicide Peace, published at the end of 1796. As regards Burke, his opinion here is of little value. He had taken too important a part in the declaration of war against France to acknowledge his mistake openly, and, moreover, some doubts must have survived amidst the reasons which induced this champion of liberalism to write the Reflections on the Revolution in France. As to the fact that Pitt shared in a general delusion, it is of this especially that I complain. This " heaven-born minister " to use the phrase quoted by Gladstone had sufficient genius to enable him, in this matter as in that of the Sinking Fund, to form his own opinion he ought not to have been reduced, like any ordinary
;
CHAPTER
THE CRISES OF
1793
III.
AND
1797.
THE BANK
1793.
Advances
Crisis of 1797. Pitt's unwise treatment of the Bank. Government forbidden by the Bank Charter. Modification of Incessant loans from 1793 to 1797. Exportation and drain of specie.
to
Disturbances among the Country Banks, Panic due to the landing of a handful of French Troops. Policy of the Bank directors. Suspension of cash payments. Decision of the Privy Council. Message from the King to Parliament. Position of the Bank and parliamentary debates. The
Bank
Restriction Act.
A.
CRISIS OF 1793.
The harvest in auspices. 1792 was very bad, as were most of the harvests between 1789 and 1802, the price of corn had risen 135., and in addition to the agricultural distress, a serious economic 1 crisis occurred just before the declaration of war. This
declaration, however much it may have been expected, gave " In the month the last blow to the tottering public credit. " of November this year," says Macpherson, 2 there were
no fewer than one hundred and five bankruptcies. There were very few months in all the years preceding 1792 wherein the gazette has exhibited above the half of that
.
was only the beginning. On February 19, the Bank refused the paper of Lane, Son & Fraser, who suspended payment the next day, leaving a deficit of a This failure was followed by several others and million. the numbers continued to increase during the succeeding
number."
But
this
months. 3
Failures
simultaneously.
1
among the country banks occurred almost The crisis began at Newcastle, where the
of Prices, Vol. I., pp. 176-177)
Tooke (History
seems to
me
to
minimise
p.
Baring, op.
cit.,
19,
Annals of Commerce, Vol. IV., There were 105 in March, 188 to 158 in June and 108 in July.
8
p. 254. in April,
209 in
May
88
banks stopped payment after an unexpected run although the shareholders had adequate resources to meet all demands. The evil spread throughout the provinces, where credit The facilities, as we have said, were very badly organised. banks their and country issues, mis-managed although they were not all ruined, their credit was severely shaken. Distrust prevailed both in the capital and in the provinces; no money could be borrowed on the shares of industrial undertakings or canals and still less could loans be raised
without security. The Bank itself gave way to alarms which Sir Francis Baring 1 condemns as ill-founded, contracted its issues, raised its rate of discount and looked on
unmoved
number
of failures going
on around
Matters became urgent, the more so because the evil had spread to Scotland and one of the directors of the Royal Bank of Scotland had come to London to request assistance, declaring that unless the Government gave immediate help there would be a general bankruptcy. At the suggestion of Sir John Sinclair and after a meeting of the City merchants to consider the situation, Pitt agreed to advance ,5,000,000 in Exchequer bills to the merchants upon the security of commodities of all kinds.
the scheme,
in spite of the
somewhat
3 short-sighted opposition of Fox and Grey. The remedy was so effective that, as soon as the vote was known, ^70,000 were sent to Manchester and Glasgow. This had excellent
1
For
cit.,
pp. 15-35.
:
According to Tooke (p. 193, note) the number of bankruptcies in 1793, compared with those in the two previous years, was as follows 1793 1,956 failures, of which 26 were country banks. 1792 934 failures, of which i was a country bank. 769 failures, of which i was a country bank. 1791 3 Fox declared that the proceeding involved a violation of the Constitution the (p. 757), and placed unsuitable and excessive powers in the hands of executive (see his speech in Parl Hist., Vol. XXX., pp. 755-788). At bottom Fox's speeches are spoilt by his habit of condemning all measures, whether good or bad, which were proposed by the Government. A little more impartiality and a more serious study of the questions on hand would have improved his orations, which from many points of view were masterpieces. Fox's speeches were published in 1815 in six volumes, but this edition is incomplete and defective.
189
results in a crisis caused partly by lack of sufficient currency and partly by the general want of confidence. The feeling that credit could be obtained was enough to calm people's fears and to prevent many from actually asking for it. As
Macpherson says
"The very
first
tion of the legislature to support the merchants, operated all over the country like a charm, and in a degree superseded
instantaneous
was not found actually necessary to advance the whole by Parliament. There were 338
;
amount advanced being ^2,202,200. Of the other demands, 49 were refused and the rest were withdrawn by the applicants themselves. Far from losing by this transaction, the State made a net profit of 4,348 only two of the borrowers went bankrupt and some of the others repaid their debts
;
before they
fell
due.
B.
Sir Francis
1
CRISIS OF 1797.
2 Baring and Mr. Tooke are agreed that nothing could be more satisfactory than the economic conBoth dition of the country during 1794 and part of 1795. also recognise that the difficulties which ended in the catastrophe of 1797 began during the second half of 1795.
The
1
quiet, .the
Tooke reckons the crisis as beginning rather pp. 178-179 and 192-211. earlier than Baring does. He considers that owing to the exceptionally hard winter of 1794-5, fears were felt even in the following spring with regard to
the coming harvest, and prices rose very quickly. In the succeeding autumn the situation became so strained that the King drew the attention of Parliament to it in the following words "I have observed for some time past with the greatest anxiety the very high price of grain, and that anxiety is increased by the apprehension that the produce of the wheat harvest in the present year may not have been such an effectual one" to relieve my people from the difficulties with which they have to contend (Speech of October
:
Several remedies were suggested, the principal one being to offer bounties on importation until a certain quantity of corn had been brought in. Amongst minor proposals one is rather curious the Members of Parliament agreed to reduce the consumption of wheat in their houses by one-third, and to urge all their friends to do the same.
:
go
was difficult to get 4 per cent, for money. The country was about to pass suddenly from abundance to scarcity, from scarcity to famine, and from famine to bankthat
ruptcy.
February 27, 1797, the Bank stopped its cash payWhat were the causes of this suspension ? 1 According to Baring they were as follows i. Disorders among the country banks and in the paper circulation in the provinces, which produced a crisis similar
ments.
:
On
to that of 1793.
2.
3.
The general alarm due to a French invasion. The excessive exportation of bullion or coin
to the
Continent.
4.
The unwise influence of the Government. Changing the order adopted by Baring, we will begin by
studying together causes 3 and 4, which are closely connected. shall then examine causes i and 2 in the same
We
way.
SECTION
\
I.
THE UNWISE INFLUENCE OF THE GOVERNMENT. PITT'S DISLOYAL BEHAVIOUR. THE EXPORTATION
~~AND DRAIN OF SPECIE.
"
be perpetrated by an unscrupulous Government, and the dangerous power which so potent an engine as the Bank of England would confer upon them, had been clearly foreseen by its antagonists at the time of its foundation. have seen that stringent precautions were taken in the first Act of 1694 to prevent the Bank making any advances to 4 Government without the express permission of Parliament. It had been the custom, however, time out of mind, to advance for the amount of such Treasury bills of exchange These advances as were made payable at the Bank." amounted to twenty or thirty thousand pounds; complaints were made if they reached fifty thousand. This limit was
We
p- 65.
3 ' 4
For
Vol.
this Section
I.,
see
Macleod (5th
et seq.
191
greatly exceeded during the American war, and sometimes 1 50,000 was advanced. The legality of these proceedings ; seemed doubtful to Bosanquet, the governor of the Bank, who discussed the matter with the directors it was agreed to apply to the Government for a bill of indemnity for the
;
past
for authority to continue these transactions in the but future, only on condition that they were kept within a fixed limit. This limit was to be .50,000 ^100,000. Bosanquet went out of office at this time and could not continue the negotiations, but Pitt was too clever not to see at once what immense powers would be given to the Government by an Act of this kind. He therefore hurried the Bill through Parliament, but was careful to omit the limiting
and
clause.
No government had ever had such a formidable weapon placed in its hands. The Act allowed the Bank to be drawn upon without any restriction, for the directors dared not dishonour the Government drafts. Henceforward the Bank
was completely at Pitt's mercy and he made large demands on the resources thus placed at his disposal. 2
1
Statute 1793,
c.
32.
documents laid before the House of Commons at the request of Bank of England, 9 Tierney (History of the Bank of England, p. no). March, 1797. An account of the amount of Money advanced for the public service by the Bank of England and outstanding on the 2$th of February,
the official
1797.
.141,000
.*....
Total
. .
-4,077,000
196,000 158,000 75 000
.
On
the Malt
Tax
75
000
1,854,000
1,323,000 821,400
2, 144, 400
GENERAL TOTAL 8,075,400 8,075,400 must be added the advances without interest made on Exchequer Bills to the amount of 376,739, and on Treasury Bills to the amount of This raises the total advanced by the 1,512,274. Bank in four years to 9,964,413.
To
this total of
192
At about this time the English Government began to send subsidies to the Continental powers. And as we have explained, these were not the only sums remitted abroad. For various purposes ,2,715,232 was exported in 1793; ^8,335,592 in 1794; ^11,040,236 in 1795. To which must be added ,4,702,818 sent abroad for naval expenses. 1
These enormous payments had the effect of making the exchange adverse and caused great anxiety at the Bank. At the very time w'hen this withdrawal of bullion was going on the Treasury bills were increased to an unheard-of extent, and the demands made by the commercial world wer
equally pressing.
On December u,
r
were getting w orse and worse, remonstrated with Pitt. In ! January, 1795, when they heard that a foreign loan and a home loan were about to be raised, they declared that the Treasury could not expect further assistance from them, and that in particular, they could not allow the advances on the Treasury bills to exceed ^"500,000. Pitt promised all they asked, then pretended that he had forgotten his promise in
the stress of business,
and
finally,
The exchange began to fall rapidly at the end of 1794, and in May, 1795, it was so unfavourable that specie point The only way to counteract this adverse was reached. 2 tendency would have been to reduce the issue of Bank notes. Instead of this, the Bank, worried by Pitt's demands, fell into the mistake of increasing the issue by issuing notes for
l
1 In 1796 the expectations were ^10,649,916; these Tooke, p. 208. figures are quoted by Tooke from the Appendices Nos. 23 and 27 of the Report to the House of Lords. a Sir F. Baring (p. 49) shows that the profit on sending gold from London to Hamburg was 75 per cent, in January, 1796, 63 per cent, in February, and After that, thanks to good harvests, the exchange 8f per cent, in March. was once more favourable until February, 1800. On this question see Sir John Sinclair, Letters written to the Governor and Directors of the Bank of England in September, 1796. The author
suggests four remedies 1. An increase in the capital of the Bank. A remedy used on various occasions. 2. The issue of 2 or ^3 notes. The issue, with the authorisation of Government, of a million Bank 3. These notes would circulate without disnotes, inconvertible for one year.
:
193
In August, 1794, the total circulation did not exceed 10 millions; in February, 1795, it rose to 14 millions. The drain of coin began to take full effect in the autumn of The Bank 1795; the reserve declined more and more.
directors
saw
and
that they must choose between their own bankruptcy and that of the Government. Consequently in a resolution of
1795, it was announced that the sum to be discounts should be fixed for each day in advance. Any excess in the demands was to be dealt with " a pro rata proportion of such bills in each by returning without regard parcel as are not otherwise objectionable to the respectability of the party sending in the bills or the 1 solidity of the bills themselves."
31,
in
.
.
.
December employed
bills
count, in consequence of an agreement with the different merchants whose the Bank discounted. These three measures would tend to increase the circulating medium. An alteration in the coinage since " while we continue to make our 4. gold coin so much finer than that of other nations, and almost give a bonus to the smelter by demanding nothing for the expence of the manufacture, it is impossible that our coin should not either be exported abroad or smelted
:
down
Sir
at
home."
in fact to alter the coinage by mixing a greater proportion of alloy," and this supplies the subject matter of the second of the two letters of which his pamphlet consists.
"
See the text of the declaration in Tooke, p. 200, note. The policy of Bank, combined with the restriction of issues and the high profits resulting from the export of precious metals, produced a great scarcity in the On circulating medium and caused much protest in the commercial world. April 2 there was a large gathering of merchants at the London Tavern the meeting passed a resolution stating that the scarcity of coin was due to the increase of trade, and in particular, to the measures taken by the Bank. A committee was appointed to find a means of increasing the circulating medium without violating the Bank's charter. See for this incident Thornton, pp. 87-89, and especially a pamphlet by W. Boyd, the secretary to the committee, Letter to the Honourable W. Pitt on the Influence of the Stoppage of Issues in Specie at the Bank of England (1801), in particular pp. 86-102 of the edition of 1811, revised and corrected by the author. Mr. Boyd makes a long report, suggesting that Parliament should appoint a Board, consisting pf 25 of its Members, authorised to issue notes payable at six months, bearing a daily interest of i^d. per 100, and exchangeable for gold or silver or for sills of exchange due in less than three months. This scheme was submitted .0 the Chancellor of the Exchequer. He replied that the Bank had already a of the the consolidation suggested remedy, floating debt, which would be ried before the proposal of the committee. Mr. Boyd adds (p. 102) that the boating debt was funded by means of a loan of ^7,500,000 raised on very iberal terms, after the subscribers had been led to understand that there was The distress in May, joing to be an entire change in the policy of the Bank. 795, shows how this promise was kept. Sir Francis Baring devotes a short pamphlet to a criticism of Boyd's cheme, Observations on the Publication of W. Boyd, Esq., M.P.
1
the
194
of
the Government, but it proved insufficient to curb the Prime Minister's rapacity. Pitt had never carried out his repeated promises to reduce the advances on Treasury bills to
,500,000; on June
,1,232,649.
14,
He demanded .800,000
in
and a
like
sum
August.
The
new request for ,2,750,000 on the security of certain taxes. This was granted on condition that the advances on the Treasury bills, which now
amounted
to ^1,513,345, should be repaid. Pitt secured the but was careful not to redeem the bills. Then he money, returned to the attack and asked for fresh advances, intended for San Domingo and Ireland. The sum needed for Ireland was at first to be only ^"200,000, but in the end it amounted to
first, but refused the one was useless to him without This to revoke their decision. some platonic remonstrances. In November Pitt proffered a
grant. the
second. Pitt said that the the other and invited them they did after indulging in
,1,750,000.
SECTION
II.
Henry Thornton
the issues of the provincial banks had been decreased by one-half, and he adds that the requirements of trade had
attracted an
decrease.
enormous quantity of money to counteract this At the same time although the exchange was now favourable, the Bank of England continued to restricl its issues. During the three last months of 1796 they die not exceed those of 1782, although the total of commercia payments made was several times greater than the total ir that year. The payments had to be made whatever happened and for want of paper money they were made ir
coin, so that
which
fell
calls were constantly made on the reserve from ,2, 972,000 in March, 1796, to ,2,502,00*
195
December
At
of the
same
year,
when a
serious withdrawal
of bullion
began.
the beginning of 1797 the political situation was worse than ever. The country banks, scenting the storm, took
precautions and tried to withdraw as much coin as possible This helped still further to diminish the from London.
reserve.
1
occurrence of but small importance strategically procrisis. The landing of a handful of French 2 troops, says Baring, caused a general alarm, which showed itself chiefly in a demand for coined money, even bullion being refused. All ranks of society were seized with panic
An
duced a definite
traders,
artisans
all
them.
RESPONSIBILITY IN
3 writers allege that even the advances made to the Government should not have prevented the Bank from continuing its issues and helping commerce. Ultimately, then, it is upon this point that the matter turns, and good arguments are not wanting to those who adopt this adverse view. They point out that the undue restriction of issues caused an
situdes in
very vivid description of the crisis of 1797, and in particular of its vicisScotland, is given by Sir William Forbes in his Memoirs of a Banking House. These memoirs were not published until 1860 by Robert Chambers, although Sir William had died fifty years before and deserved the titlo given him by Stephens, p. 93, of the Evelyn of the Bank.
2 3
iv.,
196
vincial notes were discredited, and that the Bank took no steps to supply the gap left by the disappearance of the 1 notes.
Moreover this contraction had caused the forced sale and the consequent depreciation of the public stock, which would have been avoided if only the Bank had kept up its issues
Finally, it was stated that when the was most unfavourable and it was profitable to exchange export gold, the directors had issued notes to the value of ; 14,000,000, and that, on the contrary, they had reduced their issues to ,8,640,225 when the exchange had been
to the level of 1795.
favourable for several months. To put the matter briefly, the contraction of the issues had largely contributed to
empty the coffers of the Bank during the autumn of 1796, when an extension of issue would have helped to replenish
them. 3
Bullion Report adopted this opinion, which was the development of the Expansive theory set forth by Bosanquet in 1783, and together with most of the contemporary authors, it condemned the Restrictive theory put
in fact
The
into practice
It
by the
directors.
Bank had a
large share of
responsibility in the crisis of 1797 and this ledged by the directors themselves before the
1810.
was acknowCommittee of
3 But, as Macleod very clearly points out, it may be asked whether any administration, however wise and prudent, could have avoided the suspension of cash payments a measure which Robert Peel in 1844 described as " fatal.*' Macleod is driven to believe that it was fortunate that the suspension occurred at this time, since later on the situation became still worse. The Irish rebellion and the naval mutiny joined with the permanent risk of an invasion to produce such an alarming combination, that a convertible
paper currency would have had small chance of surviving. " the constant power of producing public emFinally,
1 See above, Chap, i., Part III., pp. 170 and 171, what we have said as to the bad organisation of provincial credit. 2 Macleod, 3rd Edition, Vol. I., p. 461 (5th Edition, p. 533). 3 PP- 4 6l '4 6 3-
197
" would have been a barrassment by demands for gold in the of who w ould have hands enemies weapon powerful been supported in England by political sympathies. The measure thus removed a perpetual source of alarm, and the extreme depreciation of the notes which took place some years later w as in no sense a necessary result of the suspension, but was entirely due to a surprising want
r
of foresight
directors.
and
it
on the part of the Government and of the Bank The suspension of payments was inevitable, was better for the country that it occurred before the
great disasters.
D.
THE ACT OF
The crisis began with the failure of the Newcastle banks on February 2oth, 1797. The news quickly reached London and from this moment the events followed one another in rapid succession. The reserve of the Bank was reduced on February 25th to ,1,272,000. The Bank had also considerably decreased its issues; they were reduced from
^10,550,830 (January 21) to ^"8,640,000 (February 25). This only gives an inadequate idea of the decrease in the paper currency, for it must be remembered that the private banks were forced to imitate the Bank of England's example. Several of them were obliged to make enormous sacrifices to meet the demands on them, and to sell securities at a considerable loss. The 3 per cents, were at 51 and the other funds fell in a similar manner. The fatal hour had come the suspension of cash payments was not to be averted. The directors of the Bank applied to Pitt for advice and assistance. Pitt induced the
:
King
the
meeting summoned
to con-
Bank
council unanimously agreed 1 that should be forbidden to make any payment in cash
The
until
adopted.
1
p.
1518.
98
stopped cash payments on February a statement that the satisfactory and 797 published of its affairs was such as might remove condition prosperous all doubts as to its solvency. At the same time, what was more important, a large meeting of well-known financiers and bankers passed a resolution undertaking to accept Bank notes in payment of sums due to them. This resolution was supported by four thousand signatures, including all the
2 7>
names
of
any importance
fit
the unprecedented event to the Commons in a Royal Message. 2 Pitt communi3 cated this message to the House and proposed that a committee should be appointed to inquire into the position of the Bank, although as he added, he felt no doubt of the Fox replied in a rather dull solidity of the establishment. 5 4 speech and Sheridan in a violent oration, but neither opposed the nomination of the committee. The discussion was resumed on the question of the reply to be given to the message and this gave Fox an oppor6 tunity to make a magnificent speech, which, however, suggested no remedy except the speedy conclusion of peace. In the House of Lords the speeches of Lord Grenville,
Lord Bedford and Lord Lansdowne, 7 are worthy of mention. The latter remarked that his colleagues would do him " the justice to remember that he had foretold the present
This notice is given in History of the Bank of England (1797), p. See The King's Message respecting the unusual demand for specie.
Par/. Hist., pp. 1518-1519. Part. Hist., pp. 1519-1520. Par/. Hist., pp. 1520-1522.
43.
The following are some extracts from its conclusion 1526-1538. see now what has been the conduct of the present minister in the course of this war, upon the subject of finance. Have any three months passed in which he has not produced some new expedient? And have they
pp. " Let us
:
not, every one of them without a single exception, proved erroneous?" (see " The minister has conalso Fox's Speeches, Vol. VI., p. 289), and again ducted the war upon the hope that we should be able to defeat the French by a contest of finance, and you now see the expedients to wKich we are driven." "Year after year the minister has been amusing us with his ideas
:
now on the verge, now in the gulf of bankruptcy while he was thus amusing us he has led us to the very same verge, aye, into the very same gulf."
I
But
pp. 1564-1568.
199
exigency" since 1793. He compared public credit to the soul of England everything had been done to ruin credit, " the inordinate increase of exin the first instance by and the subsidies sent abroad; war then the pense," by now the death-blow w as to be struck by decreeing an inconr
Mark my prophecy, my lords," he " exclaimed in conclusion, 1 and do not disdain the counsel while yet in time. If you attempt to make bank notes a legal tender, their credit will perish. They may go on for a time, but the consequence is certain do not speak upon the is matter of conjecture, experience. A fever is as thing
vertible currency.
.
.
"
We
much
j
i
a fever in
London
as in Paris or
Amsterdam
On March
i
3rd, the
report.
Committee
It
of the
House
of
Commons
amount
of
presented
.
.
its
stated that
"
the total
outstanding demands on the Bank on the 25th of February last was ,13,770,390; and that the total amount of the funds for discharging those demands (not including the perimanent debt due from Government of 11,686,800, which bears an interest of 3 per cent.) was ,17,597,280; and that the result is that there was ... a surplus ... of
i
^3,826,898."*
The
j
situation thus
seemed
all that
more than ten millions had been lent to the Government, which reduced the sum immediately available to seven millions. This fact was brought out very clearly by j Sheridan. 3 The speaker began by remarking that the .11,686,800 of Government debt could not be regarded as
of
funds,
[capital,
since the
Bank could
it
not
demand
its
repayment.
130,000.
of
(Moreover,
for
1
appeared that besides these eleven millions, the Bank had advanced nearly ten millions
the public expenses.
Vol.
he continued,
What
was, then,
its'
position
XXXII.,
p. 1567. in Parl
Hist., Vol.
XXXIII.,
pp. 25-26,
presented in the name of the Committee of the House of Lords by the Earl of Chatham, Pitt's elder brother, which supports this conclusion, Ibid., pp. 26-29.
3
XXXIII.
200
Its debts amounted to only 13 millions, 10 millions of which stood to the account of a single debtor, and the debtor was most generously offering support. Suppose a merchant, owing in all ^13,000, and with a sum of ,10,000 due to him from one man, " would not that merchant think it very Sir, extraordinary conduct in that man if he should say, I understand that your affairs are in a ticklish way, let me make an inquiry into them, and if ... I discover that you have wherewithal in due time to ... discharge your debts, I will not say that I may not guarantee them for you.' The gentleman would say, do you not pay me the I . and then money you owe me, may be able to satisfy every demand without your interference.'
* .
'
Why
'
What are Sheridan inquired, the bankers ? The stewards and guardians of their constituents. What consolation will it be to those creditors to hear that those stewards lent this money to the minister, and that the minister lent a considerable portion of it to the emperor, and that the emperor gave it to his soldiers, and
With regard
to bankers,
*'
Warnings, Sheridan repeated, had not been wanting, but Pitt, indeed, was so busy in the calculation and depreciation of French assignats and mandats, that he had
"Mr.
not time,
it
is
presumed,
to attend to
our
paper
called
credit, as
it,
Lord Grenville,
that
about two years ago." 2 These Parliamentary criticisms 3 were followed by a series 4 of epigrams and puns similar to those aimed at Law and the
1
a
3
Bank
of the Bank of England, published in 1797, may be profitThis work, written directly after the suspension of cash payments by an ardent supporter of Fox and Sheridan, gives a good summary of the opinions of the Liberal Opposition on the crisis, with which it is almost
The History
consulted.
ably
entirely occupied.
4
Lord Stanhope has preserved the following, which was much " Of Augustus and Rome
in
vogue
The Poets
still
How
And
he found
left it
So of
Pitt
say without vapour That he found it of gold And left it of paper." According to the author of The Life of Pitt, this
Men
and England
is
201
as are the
usual accompaniment of
May
i.
3 of the
Its chief
called.
Bank
it
:
is
generally
was granted to the Bank and with for anything done in purconnected it, persons suance of the Order in Council. 2. The Bank was forbidden to make any payments in cash to any creditors, or to use cash for any payments except to the Army and Navy, or in pursuance of an order from the Privy Council.
clause of indemnity
all
3.
4.
at
the
anyone deposited a sum not less than ^"500 in gold Bank, he might be repaid three-fourths of this
of
amount.
5.
The payment
as
debts
if
in
Bank
deemed
6.
payment
in cash,
offered
No
debtor could be held to special bail unless the payment in bank notes had not been
notes were to be received at par
in force until the
offered.
7.
Bank
by
all
public
offices in
8.
24th of June
following.
Finally, an Act dated May ist and intended to remedy the scarcity of currency, suspended the Statute 1775, c. 51., which restricted the circulation of Bank notes of low values. In a few days the Bank had arranged for the preparation
and
issue of
and
2 notes.
To meet
the
demand
for
of an epigram which had previously appeared in a Society journal. These verses recall those written in France three or four years earlier
" Ah
le
la
Chatre
folcitre
Dans
Aux
1
assignats."
I.,
202
small money, the directors announced that they had obtained a large quantity of Spanish dollars valued at 45. 6d.* In short, it may be said that the Act of 1797 allowed the Bank not to cash its notes and gave these notes a highly privileged position, but did not make them legal tender and left people free to refuse payments not made in cash. By a curious coincidence, at the very moment when the Bank Restriction Act was passed in England, the system of
assignats collapsed in France, and the mandats which succeeded them were destined shortly to disappear also.
1 It was discovered later that they were really worth 2d. more, and their current price was increased by 3d. This left a profit of id. per dollar, and the they issued dollars so like those of goldsmiths began to manufacture them the Bank that the latter could not distinguish them and was obliged to accept both kinds. In order to naturalise these coins, a little head of George III. was stamped This inspired the following over the image of Ferdinand, King of Spain. severe but just lampoon " The Bank to make their Spanish dollars current pass, Stamped the head of a fool on the head of an ass."
; :
p.
104.
debates.
Speeches of Fox and Lord King. the influence of excessive issues on the foreign exchanges and the price of gold. Crisis of 1800. State of public opinion. Theories of Walter Boyd, Thornton, Lord King and Ricardo on the Monetary crisis in Ireland. Parliadepreciation of a paper currency. mentary inquiry. Opinion held by the Directors of the Bank of Ireland. Report of the Committee.
SUCH was the Bank Restriction Act. It has been credited with producing important and even extraordinary results. It has been stated that England owed to it those immense resources which enabled it to carry on and to conclude successfully the greatest of modern wars; that it was owing to the paper currency that Pitt and his colleagues were able to
those loans which amazed the world; that to the also, various other advantages must be attributed that in short, by passing the Restriction Act the English Government had discovered the philosopher's stone for which the alchemists of the Middle Ages had searched
raise
paper money,
;
in vain.
These opinions spread rapidly. The debates on the Bullion Report of 1810 will enable us to show that the Since then majority in Parliament believed them firmly. the doctrine has been continually revived, and even as late as 1861, after the Act of 1819, after the publications of
Tooke and Macleod, an author of Lord Stanhope's reputation, in a book which is regarded in England as the standard
life
"
1
of Pitt,
It
could write as follows 2 must be observed, however, that so long as the war
1
:
This appreciation is sufficiently accurate to give a somewhat depressing of the other books devoted to this subject and of the condition of historical study in England. It is much to be regretted that Lord Rosebery's work did not exceed the narrow limits of an essay.
idea
3
Op.
cit.,
204
good
England.
Expanding
precisely in
propor-
tion to the exigencies of the public service, by an undeviating reliance on the national
us, as certainly no other system could, to raise year loans of unparalleled amount; to transmit repeated by year subsidies to Foreign Powers in alliance with us; and to bear, without sinking beneath it, the burthen of accumulated It was, in short, a gigantic system of paper credit, taxes. us power to cope with no less gigantic foes." giving In our sketch of the condition of England at the end of the
enabled
i8th century we stated, basing our opinion upon undisputable authorities, that England's success in withstanding the onslaught of the revolutionary armies, and the final defeat
Napoleon were less due to the genius of her sailors, of Wellington and of Pitt, than to that of Brindley, Watt and Arkwright. It was owing to the remarkable stimulus given by these great men to her industry and commerce that Great Britain was able to raise such immense loans, to keep Europe in her pay, to maintain her armies and fleets and to endure steadfastly until it pleased fortune to favour her
of
arms.
We
shall proceed to
show
that Pitt,
1
who supported
and
the Restriction Act from necessity alone, did not make such use of it as his clumsy admirers have alleged; and that as
the
Bank
age
directors, with extraordinary blindness, took advantof their exemption from cash payments to make over-
issues, England, instead of reaping any benefit from their action, found herself involved in endless difficulties difficulties which, had it not been for the Russian campaign, must have brought disaster on the United Kingdom, and
from whose
clusion of peace.
Our study
Act
will be
the first including divided into two parts years of Pitt's ministry and extending, strictly speaking, up t the last
1 Lord Grenville said during the discussion on the Stanhope Bill (1811) that the day when Pitt was forced to propose the restriction was one of the most painful in his life. See below, p. 236, note 3.
205
the second dealing with the period from 1809 to 1819. During the first period the privilege conceded by the Act of 1797 was used by both the Government and the Bank
1809
with the utmost prudence. The inconveniences of the suspension of cash payments were not at first great, but they were beginning to make themselves felt and to attract the attention of able men, who from this time onwards tried to define the rules and conditions of a healthy paper
currency.
The second
issues to
period will
of
show
The
disastrous results,
detected as early as 1801, definitely drew public attention to the problem of the circulation. They gave rise to a discussion which
of
was the
first,
and
is still
the great monetary controversies in the The study of this celebrated controversy,
which centred
round the Bullion Report, will form the subject of the next chapter. For the present we shall deal with the first period
only.
When the Restriction Act was passed, the exchanges were so favourable that gold was being imported in considerable quantities. On May 3Oth, Mr. Manning informed the
House of Commons that very large quantities of gold had come in to the Bank both from at home and abroad. The Government and the directors were however agreed that
to resume cash payments just at the the Restriction Act expired, and the Act was accordingly continued until a month after the beginning of the next session.
it
would be unwise
time
when
House
We
Parliament met on November 2nd. On the I5th the of Commons appointed a committee to consider the
1 may notice here three French books which appeared about this time, and which are, I believe, the first French works dealing with the Bank of England. i. The author J. H. Marniere (1801), Essai sur le credit commercial. describes the Banks of Genoa and of England. 2. Considerations sur la facility d'etablir a Paris une banque egale a. celle de Londres (1802), by the same author. A consideration of J. H. Lassale, Des finances d'Angleterre (1803). 3. the results of the Restriction Act, and a discussion on the burden of the taxes the book is full of political discussion.
;
206
question, and the report of this committee, presented on the i;th, stated that on the nth the total liabilities of the Bank
to ^17,578,910, and the assets to ^"21,418,460, a balance of ,3,839,550 without countfavourable leaving debt of ; 11,686,800; that the advances the Government ing made to the Government had been reduced to ^4,258,140; whilst the stock of coin and bullion was five times greater than it had been on February 25th and much larger than it had been since September, 1795; and that the exchange on Hamburg was remarkably favourable and was to all appearances likely to continue so; that finally, and above all, the London bankers and merchants experienced no inconvenience from the Act, since, although the law allowed them
amounted
to withdraw three-quarters of their deposits, they had actually withdrawn only one-sixteenth. Notwithstanding all these statements and in spite of the
Bank could resume cash payments without danger, the Government chose to keep things as they were, and a law was passed prolonging the Act until one month after a peace should be concluded. the issue The note issue was managed with great care
directors' assertion that the
:
1797 hardly exceeded by half a million that for 1796, which had been ;i 1,030,1 10, and this in spite of the lack of
in
2 1 In August, I798, the note coin for ordinary transactions. circulation had increased to ,10,649,550 in notes of .5 and upwards, and to ,1,531,060 in notes of under ,5, the total
being ,12,180,610.
years after the suspension (on February 25th, 1799), the issues amounted to ,12,959,800. The metallic reserve had risen to ,7,563,900; it exceeded one-third of the Bank's liabilities, which were only 21 millions, including 8 millions
of deposits.
Two
This favourable
state of things
was maintained
throughout the remainder of the year 1799. The Charter was to expire in 1812. In 1800 the Bank secured a renewal for 21 years, reckoned from this date,
total of issues had been ^13,539,160 in 1795. Tooke, p. 207. At this date the deposits amounted against ^4,891, 530 in February, 1797.
*
*
The
to ^8,300,720,
as
207
i.e., until 1833, making in return a loan of 3 millions for three years without interest. 1 This sacrifice of 3 millions, drawn from the reserve, was a heavy one, in spite of the
considerable profit which the Bank made from its right to a commission on the public loans subscribed at its offices.
The Bank agreed to it nevertheless, because it was just then the object of vigorous attacks made especially by Pulteney, who proposed the foundation of a national bank and it was
hence of particular importance to secure the renewal of
its
On December
25th, 1799, there were ^12,335,920 of notes over $ in circulation. This total was not greatly superior to the total issues on the day of the suspension of cash payments.* At
an increase of two million pounds could have been use to Pitt for his European payments, and for meeting the expenses of a terrible war. The fact is that Pitt was fully conscious of the mistake he had made in misusing the Bank's credit his was not a nature to be obstinate when once he had realised a mistake, nor to profit by the Restriction Act to obtain artificial resources. He knew too
any
rate
very
little
much
excessive issues
of the disadvantages of paper money to indulge in and thus convert the Bank of England
notes into
common
;
as si gnats.
Whatever
may have been, from 1797 onwards his policy deserves nothing but praise he made vigorous use of taxation, was
not afraid of injuring his popularity by the introduction of the income tax, consolidated by successive loans a floating
debt
which
had
attained
formidable
finally,
i
arranged
made by
so far from increasing after the Restriction Act, should the contrary, be reduced.
on
He
after
time the loan was continued for six years, but at aa confinally the repayment was deferred until the
It
was
208
showed that after an almost negligible and 1803, 2 the total issues declined again. The average for the five succeeding years was only 1 2, it had been 957, 404, whilst from 1802 to 1803 of The ^13,450,727. study averages being somewhat
Tooke
first
of all
rise
during 1802
deceptive,
justly remark that the position of the Bank in February, 1808, was prob4 ably the same as if it had been paying in gold.
was
"
Tooke could
But, what
|
is
better
moderation in the
Treasury. He proved, from some documents laid before Parliament at the repeated request of Mr. Grenfell, that the average of the Government deposits was in 1806, and 12, 197, 303 that this average varied between u and 12 millions for several years. But, during these same years, the average of the advances made by the Bank to the Government was rather less than 14^ millions. Hence the actual advances in cash, and likewise the actual sums employed by the Government in excess of its deposits did not much exceed 3 million
fl
Op.
cit., p.
281.
which we
shall deal
presently.
3
1806, 1802, 12,697,352. i3,9i7>9771807, 1803, 12,983,477. 13,221,988. 1808, 12,621,348. 1804, 13,402,160. 1805, 12,844,170. 4 serve Its assets were 35,239,550, of which .7,855,470 was metallic rese its liabilities were 30,150,820, of which 11,961,960 were deposits (Tooke, of metallic reserve Thus the totals its and of its exceeded deposits p. 281). The those of 1799, although this was an exceptionally prosperous year. metallic reserve fell to 5 millions in 1800, to 4 and 3$ millions from 1801 to 1803, then it increased again and was 6 millions in 1804, and 7,644,500 in It will be remembered that after the crisis in 1793 the reserve in1805.
creased in 1794 to
1797.
8
fi
fell
to
1,186,170 in February,
pp. 286-287.
was
209
to the Government, reckoned in yearly the deposits of the Treasury exceeded averages,
From
,, ,,
,,
1780-1784 by ^4, 841,000. 1785-1789 ,, ,2,335,000. 1790-1796 ,, ^"5,664,000. 1799-1803 ,, ^5,364,0091804-1810 ,, ;4, 146,000.
This comparative smallness of the advances to Govern1 " ment," says Tooke, completely negatives the supposition, so commonly entertained and reasoned upon as a point be-
"
yond doubt, that the Bank was rendered, by the restriction, And a mere engine in the hands of Government. whether this moderation in the amount of advances resulted exclusively from the forbearance of Government in not re. .
.
quiring, or from the firmness of the directors in refusing, such accommodation, it equally tends (especially when combined with the consideration of the large amount of treasure
Bank during the greater part of the strengthen the presumption that the Government and the directors of that period were sincere in the
in possession of the
2
)
restriction
to
declaration that there constantly existed, on the part of both, a reference to the eventual resumption of cash payments."
It is evident how little foundation remains for the statements of those historians and economists who have tried to
make out
the
that Pitt
which
Bank allowed itself to be drawn after this period. But first we must consider the economic theories which
sprang from the Restriction Act. For notwithstanding the 'moderate use which the Government had made of this Act,
it
had had
its
influence
life
of the
country.
1
The
troubles due to
In this volume
Tooke
more
2
The amount of this reserve shows that the Bank intended to resume its ash payments, for what otherwise could have been the object of buying gold bullion at ^4 the ounce, as was done during 1808?
210
intelligent public, and resulted in the discovery of truths whose existence had hitherto been only suspected. Effects of the Restriction Act on economic theories. The theoretical side of the question came to be discussed
Parliament through an accidental circumstance which The Restriction Act should have expired in September, 1802; six months before that date the Peace of Amiens had been concluded, but although the Bank declared its readiness to resume cash payments, the Act was prolonged by the advice of Addington, the Chancellor of
in
deserves notice.
the Exchequer, until March, 1803. The arguments brought forward in support of this policy showed complete ignorance
of the subject. Addington, in proposing the delay, based his view on the fact that the exchanges were unfavourable.
He
said
1
:
House
foreign
"It cannot be necessary for me to inform the exchange between this country and
parts is disadvantageous to ourselves that the trade has been for some months at a stand, that while export the rate of exchange is disadvantageous to us, an augmentation of the circulating cash would create a trade highly For several injurious to the commerce of this country.
months past
of guineas with a view to exportation." These were the very reasons for which cash payments should have been resumed
Guineas were being bought up on account the paper was declining in value compared with guineas and as a necessary result the guineas were being exported. In spite of this the Act of Restriction was prolonged until
without delay.
of the excess of paper;
March
in
ist,
1803.
the
interval,
principle,
This he Addington proposed a further continuation. secured, and as the war broke out again shortly after, there was no further question of repealing the Act of 1797, which
remained in force until 1819. This time however the prolongation was not agreed to without discussion. Fox points out 2 that arguments of this
1
XXXVI.,
in Par/.
XXXVI.
211
kind would logically establish it as an axiom that cash payments ought to be suspended whenever the exchanges were " so unfavourable as to leave no room to expect the importa" " it might tion of bullion." Perhaps even," he went on, of the turn unfavourable the that exchange against happen this country might be owing to the very restriction on the Bank. ... In 1772, or 1773, when there was a great quantity of bad money in the country, the course of exchange was then also much against us; but when, in the room of this adulterated money good gold was substituted, the consequence was that the exchanges turned almost immediately in our favour. As long as our currency continued bad, the exchange was against us; so is it now, because paper is not much better than bad gold or, it is attended with the same inconveniences. May it not therefore be expected, that as, in the former case, when our currency was ameliorated, the course of exchange turned in our favour, so also if the Bank now resumed its cash payments the same favourable circumstances might attend the change?" 1 The theory thus suggested by Fox was expounded with
;
and clearness in the House of Lords by Lord 2 King, who, a few months later, gave an admirable exposition of the principles upon which a paper currency ought '* to be based. In his opinion, 3 The natural and only true limit of every paper currency was the power of compelling payment in specie, paper currency not convertible into had no rule or standard specie except the discretion of the whom it To determine the quantity was issued. persons by of currency necessary for circulation was in all cases a difficult and delicate problem. A very strict attention to the price of bullion, and the state of the foreign exchanges,
skill
.
much
was the first time that the causes of unfavourable forth in the House of Commons. Fox has been much praised for his reference to the subject, and his biographers also make a of the fact it that was he who first Adam Smith in a Parliapoint quoted mentary debate. It is unfortunate that in the first case his statement of the truth was exceedingly hesitating, and that in the second he referred to a
p.
1153.
This
set
exchanges were
book which he afterwards confessed never to have read. For the second ooint see the Dictionary of National Biography under " Adam Smith."
2 3
On December
13,
1803.
I., p.
1836.
212
of affording a just criterion by which the could be In the present case quantity truly ascertained." it was evident from the in the price of bullion derangement
in
and
the
foreign
exchanges that
the
directors
had
limit.
The
attracted the notice of the public in the following way. know that the exchanges were favourable up to the
We
The price of gold was maintained at 1799. an ounce. bad harvest and some serious 6d. 3 175. failures at Hamburg led to a great exportation of coin and
end of
entirely
to
changed the
situation.
The
price of bullion
rose
$ 55. an ounce, and the exchange on Hamburg fell 14 cent, below par, whilst the cost of transporting gold per was not more than 7 per cent. These phenomena were only to be explained by the depreciation of the currency; but at the time their cause entirely escaped the notice of the stupefied public. Macleod
of
gives the following excellent analysis of the prevailing state have already seen that, in the great monemind " of crisis 1696-97, it was universally acknowledged by tary Parliament and the most eminent merchants, that it was the bad state of the coinage which produced the great rise in the market price of bullion and the heavy fall in the At that time Bank notes were not a foreign exchanges.
:
We
to them,
was
anyone having thought of saying that it was the notes that denoted the pound sterling, and that bullion had risen.
Adam
Smith
laid
it
down
price of bullion of the coinage condition the must be necessarily caused by the and Hume had observed that exchange never itself;
little
beyond the cost of the transportation Such were the truths established, when a
Since the export of gold coin was forbidden, gold bullion was the only hence the true exn-pt smuggling, of conducting transactions abroad, condition of the foreign exchanges must be estimated by its value.
means
213
metallic currency was the only one thought of, in estimating But at this time a new principle was introduced value.
was what was substantially an inconvertible paper currency." What rules were to be applied to this new form
there
of
at
first
arise, for
to
resolution of bankers
of the
and merchants
"
payment of taxes at their par value, and the great caution exercised by the directors during the first few years after the restriction," removed the apprehension
felt that as soon as the suspension took place the Bank notes would be depreciated, and for some time the notes circulated at par.
Bank
was not until after the crisis of 1800 that the " that if a deterioration of the great truth was suspected, a rise of market price of bullion above the coinage produced the Mint price, and a fall in the foreign exchanges under a metallic currency, then that the opposite proposition was also necessarily true. That under a paper currency, which was only the representative of a metallic currency, if the market price of bullion exceeded the Mint price, and
It
.
the foreign exchanges fell beyond the cost of the transmission of specie, that excess could only arise from the depreciation of the representative of the metallic currency,
infallibly
and, therefore, when these circumstances occurred, they indicated that the paper currency was depre1
ciated."
It is
not clear
who ought
to
of this important truth. Walter Boyd, in his letter to Pitt, was certainly the first to state it. Boyd guessed, from the
effects of Pitt's policy,
was kept
secret, that the number of notes must have been increased; and, in actual fact, in 1801, when his pamphlet
II., pp.
2-4.
Right Honourable W. Pitt on the influence of the stoppage of the issues in Specie, etc., a work to which we have referred above.
letter to the
2i 4
Boyd's appeared, this increase exceeded three millions. pamphlet served to call attention to the matter, and it was followed by the more complete works of Thornton and Lord
King.
financial crisis in Ireland very soon afforded opportunity for defining and completing this theory.
Financial crisis in Ireland. 3 In spite of the fact that the exchanges were favourable to Ireland and that gold was plentiful there, the Bank of Ireland was ordered to suspend its cash payments by an Act passed by the Irish Parliament, which followed on the Act of 1797 and was prompted solely by a mania for uniformity.
The exchange at Dublin on London had always been favourable to Ireland, and this state of things continued until 1797. Then the situation suddenly changed, and a
began, which was stated by Lord Archibald with an increase in the issues of the Bank of Ireland: these had been ,600,000 in 1797, and 5 were now Moreover there was a difference of 2, 700,000. 10 per cent, in the exchanges at Dublin and Belfast, which were only 100 miles apart, and the exchange on London was 20 per cent, against Dublin. At the same time, the price of gold rose, and guineas could only be bought at a
steady
fall
Hamilton 4
to coincide
premium
of 2s. 6d.
to inquire into the state of the Irish currency. It included the leading statesmen of the day and was the first committee appointed by the British
The
increase
was not
was
so
shock was enough to disturb it. 2 We have frequently referred to Thornton's An Enquiry into the nature and effects of the paper credit. Lord King's pamphlet only appeared in 1803,
:
we
shall discuss
it
presently.
Mr. Bastable kindly called my attention to a work by John Leslie Foster, Essay on the Principle of Commercial Exchanges, more particularly on the relations between England and Ireland (1804). Unfortunately the British Museum, though possessing other works and speeches by Foster, has no copy of this. An analysis of it is given in the Dictionary of Political Economy, Vol. II., p. 121. Dillon's book (History of Banking in Ireland) contains nothing of interest about this crisis. 4 See Par/. Debates for February 13, 1804, on the Irish Restriction Bi
pp.
6
1082-1098.
p.
1083.
215
Amongst
ville
of the directors of the Bank of Ireland. the witnesses who gave evidence were Mr. Col-
directors of the
Bank
of Ireland.
the
by the
adverse state of the exchange; the coin of the country was exported to pay the balances of the remittances and hence it was necessary to supplement the scarcity of gold by paper. He did not believe that the increase in the issues was a cause of the adverse exchange on the contrary, the paper replaced the gold and allowed it to be exported, hence it " was " a clear and decided cause preventing the exchange from falling still lower. His companion entirely agreed with him. As regards " the depreciation of the notes, they were of opinion that the circulation said to be depreciated must first be proved to
;
have become burdensome to the holders, and bargains to have been made by unnecessary purchasers to get rid of that which they have found inconvenient, or were apprehensive to hold. The mere buying of gold at an advanced price
beyond
is
the effect,
of the exchange, and, therefore, no proof of the depreciation of the paper itself." Both the directors considered that the
sole cause of fluctuation in the
The
In reality the basis of their reasoning was entirely false. inquiry held by the committee showed that the balance
of trade, instead of being unfavourable to Ireland, was the opposite, and that in the only district in the country (Belfast)
where paper money was tabooed, the exchange was unfavourable to Great Britain. In short, a theory was beginning to be current in Ireland which was soon to prevail in England it may be summed
;
up thus
money
inaccurate to speak of depreciated paper the paper is not depreciated but the price of gold
It
is
has increased. 1
1 This theory was vigorously disputed by Mr. Marshall, the InspectorGeneral of Imports and Exports at Belfast. He pointed out that the Dublin exchangers were selling guineas at the rate of a paper guinea plus 25. 2d., 106 and that a bill of exchange on London for ^100 could be obtained for
216
of of
With regard to the regulation of the issues, the directors the Bank of Ireland suggested the following theory, which was afterwards adopted by the directors of the Bank
*'
bank should be governed under a convertible and an 1 That in the first case the inconvertible paper currency." issues ought to be regulated according to the price of guineas and the rate of exchange on London, and that, supposing there to be an unusual demand for guineas, or an adverse exchange, the issues should be decreased in order to stop the withdrawal of coin. But in the case of an inconvertible currency a different policy would be adopted. A bank, under prudent management, might issue notes in proportion to the demands made on it, and without taking into account the rate of exchange and the price of guineas; always provided that the notes were issued in exchange for real and convertible assets, such as commercial bills of undoubted solidity, payable at fixed dates, and based on actual commercial transactions. After prolonged consideration the committee decided
England
on
that the paper was depreciated and that the theory that gold had increased in value was absurd. The report added that normal fluctuations in the rate of exchange could not exceed those in the cost of transporting specie from one country to another, and hence that any increase in excess In reference to of this cost must be due to other causes.
this
enormous increase
in
the
Irish issues, which, since the Restriction Act, had not been restrained by the convertibility of the notes. The committee after suggesting some minor remedies,
in particular the assimilation of the English and' Irish 2 advised the directors to their currencies, regulate
in
and that
Bank of England notes, whilst it cost ^116 in Irish paper money, this difference existed whatever the nature of the goods purchased. If this fall of 10 or 12 per cent, in prices were due to the increased value of gold the effect would necessarily be to attract gold from England, for the
gold or
not
remain
in
a country where
its
value continued
Moreover the Bank notes, which were issued at par with the stationary. coin, should have risen pari passu with it, so that one could be exchanged for the other. Since the contrary had happened, there had been a fall in the
original value
1
Macleod, 3rd Edition, Vol. II., p. 17. 2 Also Irish Bank notes were to be payable in Bank of England notes and the Bank of Ireland was to keep a deposit account at London for this purpose.
217
upon the
price of guineas
exchanges.
The presentation of the report on the Irish currency does not appear to have aroused much interest, and it had little i was indeed The issue of notes of a value below effect.
forbidden in Ireland in 1805, but a proposal,
made
in 1809,
by Mr. Parnell, to assimilate the English and Irish curMoreover the rencies, was rejected without discussion. must however 1826. until It was itself not printed report have been communicated to the Bank of Ireland, and apparently had some influence upon it, since the directors reduced their issues from 3 to 2j millions during the months of May, June, and July, 1804, and the exchanges were affected thereby but the improvement was short-lived for in the succeeding months the directors relapsed into their former
;
errors.
Some time afterwards, Fox took advantage of Addington's statement that the over-issue of notes led to their
1
1 depreciation, to congratulate him and to assert triumphantly that the House would never hear again the fantastical
opinion that the paper was not depreciated but the value
of gold increased. shall see later
2
We
how
far this
prophecy was
fulfilled.
1 It must be noted, however, that Addington continued to say that it was heresy to believe that the depreciation of the paper could influence the exchanges. 2 With regard to the theories suggested by the Act of 1797 see Lord King's Thoughts on the Restriction of Payments in Specie at the Banks of England and Ireland (1803). Lord King, writing of the Irish crisis, anticipates Ricardo in his statement of the true method of demonstrating the depreciation of a paper " A rise of the market or currency Paper price of gold above the Mint price, and a fall in the foreign exchanges beyond the cost of sending bullion from one place to another, is the proof and the measure of the depreciation of the Paper money." (See Stephens, Contribution to the Bibliography of
:
Bank of England, p. 34, the account of King's pamphlet). Lord King's pamphlet is followed by a very useful appendix, giving the rates of the exchange with Hamburg, Paris, and Dublin, and the prices of standard silver
the
since 1789.
work, which is superior to those of Boyd and Thornton, has thrown into the shade by Ricardo 's pamphlet, The high price of Bullion a proof of the depreciation of Bank notes (1810). This was originally published in the form of letters in the Morning Chronicle. The first appeared on September 9, 1809. See McCulloch's one volume edition of Ricardo 's works, pp. 261-290. See also another of Ricardo's writings on the subject which is published in the same edition, pp. 303-360, A Reply to Mr. BosanThis
little
since been
CHAPTER
V.
A.
WE
of over-issue during the first years of the Restriction Act. The prudence of the directors, the moderation of the
Government demands, the wisdom and patriotism of the commercial world, all combined to save the English notes from the fate of the Irish issues. The inconvertible Bank notes circulated at par, and the most celebrated of the French economists has justly remarked that this w as one of the best experiments in political economy ever made. This admirable state of things continued even after Pitt's death,
r
but did not long survive him a succession of political events combined with a change in the policy of the Bank sufficed to transform everything. The transformation began with the Berlin and Milan
;
These had the effect of closing all European ports England, with the exception of the Swedish. England responded by a series of similar measures, which served to prohibit the importation of a number of French products and of products of countries under the direct influence of France, such as Spanish wools and Italian silks, and hence encouraged speculation in all such goods. Moreover the blow given by these measures to the rights of neutrals nearly
decrees.
to
219
war with America, and the possibility of this new war caused an artificial rise in the prices of American products, especially tobacco and cotton. Speculation, favoured by the scarcity of commodities, was
still
further stimulated
of Portugal,
tical
and
later of
by the following facts The invasion Spain, by the French, gave prac:
independence
two countries
and hence opened the South American ports to English products, which had hitherto been entirely excluded from them. This offered a wide field to speculation and the opportunity was seized without delay. Very soon there was a
repetition of the events of 1720.
all
Joint-stock companies of
kinds were formed to construct canals and bridges, to found breweries and insurance companies and to carry out The Bank of undertakings of every kind imaginable.
England, instead of applying the curb, encouraged the prevailing fever to the full. Sir F. Baring stated in his evidence before the Bullion Committee, that he knew several
^100, who, since the restriction, had set up as merchants, and to whom the Bank had granted credit accounts of 5 to 10 thousand pounds; these accounts had no connection with the real requirements of trade, and would never have been opened if it had not been for the suspension
clerks not worth
of cash payments. The value of the paper discounted
1
was ^2,946,500
,20,070,000
as in
in
by the Bank, which was 1795, ,i5>475>7o in 1809, and 1810. Nor was this all. The speculative
in
of country banks, which, flooded the 1793, provinces with their notes. The number of these banks, which in 1797 had been reduced to 270, was 600 in 1808, and soon rose to 721. It stood at the latter figure two years later when the Bullion Committee
was appointed. During this same year (1810) the Bank of England had issued notes to the value of ,21,000,000, and the issues of the country banks appear, according to the best estimates, to have exceeded this figure and reached
30 millions. This increase of paper currency, which had no legitimate
1
II., p. 25.
220
basis, was accompanied by two phenomena already observed a rise in the price of gold, and a fall in Ireland in 1804
exchange. These two phenomena assumed disquieting proportions; the price of guineas rose to 265. or 275. On February ist, 1810, Mr. Homer demanded explanations from the Government. At the conclusion of his speech, the House decided to make an inquiry into the causes of the rise in the price of bullion and the famous Bullion Committee was charged with this task. The Bullion Committee included some of the most competent among the Members of Parliament, such as Messrs. Baring, Huskisson, Homer, and Foster, but it contained fewer political celebrities than the committee of 1804, with whom it had only two members in common, Mr. Sheridan
in the
The report of this committee, drawn up by Horner, Huskisson and Thornton, has become celebrated under the name of the^ " Bullion Report." 1 Macleod 2 rightly points out that although the Bullion Report made a great stir, and threw into the shade the
same
report of 1804, yet both deal with similar facts, state the theories, and draw the same conclusions.
greater success of the second of these two reports is probably due to the fact that it referred to matters of more
The
general interest, and that it was drawn up more scientifically and in a more literary form. In addition to the points of likeness already noticed it may be remarked that a strong analogy existed between the evidence collected on the two In both cases the witnesses examined were occasions. drawn from four classes: (i) Bank directors, (2) private bankers, (3) merchants, (4) independent witnesses. Further, the evidences given by the English Bank directors and mer1 For the Report and the Minutes of Evidence see Parl. Debates, Vol. XVII., Part VIII., p. ccii., et seq. 3 See the masterly analysis of the Bullion Report given by this author,
o/>-
cit.,
58-80.
221
chants agreed with that of their Irish colleagues in 1804 they, too, maintained that the price of gold had risen and that the paper was not depreciated, and held the same theories as to the regulation of the issues and the various other points in the controversy. The problem submitted to the Bullion Committee. What was the exact point of dispute which the committee had to decide ?
:
was as follows 2 Three facts were agreed upon (i) that whilst the Mint price of gold bullion ought to be 3 iys. 6d. an ounce, the market price had risen to ^"4 IDS; (2) that the foreign exchanges had fallen below par, 14 per cent, in the case of Paris, 9 per cent, in that of Hamburg, and 7 per
It
: :
cent, in that of
Amsterdam
(3)
was increasing, specie had disappeared from circulation. There was however no agreement as to the causes of these facts, and the controversy centred chiefly round four points which we shall consider in order i. Whether the notes were depreciated, or whether, on the contrary, the price of gold had actually risen. 2. Whether the increase in the issue had any influence
:
upon the
3.
exchanges. a restriction of the issues would have on the price of gold and the rate of the exchanges. What policy ought to be followed with regard to the 4.
rate of the
effect
What
regulation of the issues. These are the four points which formed the object of the Bullion Committee's investigations and were dealt with in
the conclusions of the Bullion Report. The depreciation of the notes. 1.
in
The condition of 1810 was of like that Ireland in 1804, England exactly In Ireland the bank-notes were with one exception. there were two prices in trade, the obviously depreciated one in notes, the other in coin, and there existed shops in which guineas were sold for bank-notes at a higher nominal
:
The merchants had something to gain from the victory of the directors' theory, for it was natural that they should wish to see their bills discounted in the largest numbers possible, and there were fewer facilities for this when the notes were convertible.
1
II., p.
29, et seq.
222
value.
1 This was not the case in England, partly because Bank notes were accepted at their face value, but mainly
owing
to at
the fact
that
more than
2 is.
letter.
was a criminal offence to sell and the law in this matter was About this time a man named
it
Young
been for
narrowly escaped the penalty imposed. Had it not this there would have been two prices for everyas there had been in Ireland. As it was no one paid thing for bullion in guineas, but only in paper. Apart from this the problem was the same and the doctrine that the notes were not depreciated found numerous and determined supporters. One of these, Mr. Chambers, a well-known merchant, defended it with remarkable
2
ability.
to
recognise
that
forced
currency affected the exchanges, but he did not conceive it possible that a currency which was not forced could be
there was no forced currency so long as the was accepted willingly, which was only the case when paper In the same way, the said paper was not depreciated. an excessive increase believed that Mr. Chambers although in the metallic currency, such as might result, for instnmv, from the discovery of new mines, would raise the price of all commodities, he denied that a similar effect would follow an excessive increase of paper money. The latter would
excessive
value because paper money could not its full increased beyond the needs of the public, who would >therwise refuse to exchange any article of value for a piece
laintain
>f
paper.
of questions, afterwards
At
Members
least in general, but many instances to the contrary were supplied by See of Parliament during the debates on the Bullion Report.
below, pp. 232 and 233. 2 Some time afterwards the Court of Common Pleas annulled the sentence pronounced on Young and decided that it was not criminal to sell guineas Moreover the only effect of reviving an obsolete law was at a premium. This was illegal, but to cause the guineas to be melted into bullion. the profit was I2S. an ounce, and people preferred to incur a penalty rather than exchange their guineas for paper. Thus the guineas disappeared, and there was comparatively little opportunity to transgress the law by establishing two prices for commodities. 3 Par/. Deb., Vol. XVII., p. cccxc.
223
to acknowledge that, according to the Mint standard, the price of a one-guinea note was 5-dwts. 3-grs., whilst on the market it was only 4-dwts. 8-grs., and hence that the Bank note was not exchangeable for the amount of
gold it represented. But the witness, who was not to be " I do not embarrassed by so small a difficulty, added: conceive gold to be a fairer standard for Bank of England notes than indigo or broadcloth." The reply might have been that a Bank note w^as a promise to pay a definite weight of gold of a certain standard, but that it could not be said to represent any given hence, as soon as it was not worth the quantity of indigo it was depreciated. 5-dwts. 3-grs. of standard gold,
;
Chambers' mistake, and that of all who agreed with him, was that he had come to believe that the paper money was the real measure of all commodities and that gold w as only one of those commodities whose value is determined by reference to this invariable and universal standard. This is the theory which Canning ridiculed with so much eloquence and whose untenability was sufficiently exposed
r
Report. According to the report the notion market price of gold could exceed the Mint price was due to a misconception. Gold was the measure of value in this country. Commodities were thought to be cheap
in the Bullion
that the
" which they were exchangeable. But a given quantity of gold will never be exchanged for a greater or a less quan" tity of gold of the same standard fineness except there be a slight difference depending on special causes. 2 An ounce
for
l
1
amount
of gold
p. ccix.
The difference might for instance arise from the greater convenience of having coin rather than bullion. The Report also mentions other possible causes the deterioration of the coinage, the delay involved in minting the coin, obstacles to exportation, the two latter causes combined producing an actual difference of nearly 5^ per cent. None of these causes existed at Hamburg with regard to silver, the currency there being of a definitely fixed weight and of standard fineness and no opposition being made to exportation. In England, the Report concludes, the difference had never exceeded
:
The
Bank paid in gold and the coin was of full weight. difference might have been greater in countries where the Mint charged for the expenses of making the coin, but in England people only had to suffer a loss of interest for the time during which the coin was kept at the Mint.
5^ per cent, so long as the
224
of standard gold could never fetch more than 3 175. lojd. on the market unless 3 175. lojd. in our currency contained less than an ounce of gold. Since the suspension of cash payments however, gold had partially ceased to be the measure of value, and the only standard was the circulating medium, issued partly by the Bank of England and partly by the country banks
a circulating medium whose value varied only in proportion to its quantity. It was most desirable that its value should correspond to that of the real and legal standard, gold. Finally, the Bullion Report compared the state of things under a depreciated metallic coinage with that under an
inconvertible
that the
in prices,
and excessive
credit
effects, i.e.,
on
all
including that of gold, and a fall in the exchanges countries except those which had an equally depre-
ciated currency.
The possible effects of an increase of the issues 1 In order to discuss this the rate of exchange. the report began by stating, as an indisputable principle, that the difference of the exchange between two places can11.
upon
not exceed the expenses of transport, that is, the charge and insurance. Dangers in war time might, But the evidence increase these expenses. collected showed that the total cost of sending bullion to
Holland did not exceed 7 per cent., and that of sending The depression of the exchange it to Paris was still less. had, however, been 20 per cent., and the problem was to account for this fall of 13 per cent., which was independent
It could only be explained of the cost of transport. the depreciation of the currency.
It
by
due to a were so, demand the price of the metal must have risen to a like degree on the Continental markets, and it was clear that no such rise had taken place. One witness, who gave evidence on two occasions under
was
said, indeed, that the difference was But if this for gold on the Continent.
pp. ccxv.-ccxxvii.
225
a Continental merchant," 1 displayed a knowledge on this question of the effect of the issues on the exchanges which might well have been envied by his English colleagues. He considered that as the balance of 2 trade was considerably in favour of England, the fall in the exchange could only be accounted for by excessive This effect of excessive issues, he remarks, is of issues. constant occurrence; "we have seen a strong instance of it last summer" (i.e., the summer of 1809), Austria, when " a considerable additional issue became necessary,
name
of
"
in consequence of which the exchange on that country fell an additional 50 per cent., and gold coin fetched from three to four times its nominal value there." 111. The influence which a decrease in the issues may have on the price of gold and the rate of the exchange* It is easy to see after what has been said, that in the opinion of the Bank directors such a decrease could have no influence whatever. Obviously if an increase of issues is thought to have no effect, a decrease must be equally fruitless.
it is
its
clear that the decrease in the paper value compared with all other com-
price of
entirely with reference to the price as in Bank and not in guineas, evidently a reducnotes, paid tion in the quantity of paper would have reduced the price of gold expressed in paper, and would have tended to make the real value of the notes correspond more closely to their nominal value. To raise in this way the value of the if the decrease was must, currency sufficiently large, raise
the
exchange
to par,
into circulation.
In addition to these theoretical considerations, the Bullion Report, working out the analogy between a metallic currency and a paper currency when both are alike depreciated, instanced, amongst others, the historical example of the
1
For his evidence see Parl Debates, Vol. XVII., Part VIII., pp. cccxxxv.
cccliii.
and
2 The following figures are given in the Bullion Report, p. ccxxiii. ibalance of trade had been favourable to England 1808 by In 1805 by 6,616,000. 12,481,000. 1806 10,437,000. 1809 14,834,000. ,, 5,866,000.
:
The
226
crisis of 1696-1697, when the restoration of the coinage had the effect of lowering the price of bullion and of restoring
adopted
in
regulating
this
the
ought
to
vertibility
of
the
notes.
According
the
directors,
there was no need after the restriction to regulate the issues by reference to the price of bullion and the foreign ex-
changes; the only criterion was the demand for discount. The directors 2 and some of the merchants were eager to establish a theory of whose truth they felt assured, i.e., that an over-issue was impossible so long as the advances took " the form of discounts of paper of undoubted solidity arising out of actual commercial transactions, and payable
at short
The
which had already been supported by the directors of the Bank of Ireland. According to the report " The fallacy upon which it is founded, lies in not distinguishing between advance of capital to merchants and an additional supply of currency to the general mass of circulating medium. If the advance of capital only is considered as made to those who are ready to employ it in judicious and productive undertakings, it is evident that there need be no other limit to the total amount of advances than what the means of the lender and his prudence in the selection of borrowers may impose. But, in the present situation every advance becomes an addition, also, to the mass of circulating medium. In trie first instance, when the advance is made
:
.
. .
by notes paid
in
discount of a
bill,
it
is
undoubtedly so
much
in the
if
capital, so
hands of
much power of making purchases, placed a merchant who receives the notes; and,
. .
these hands are safe, the operation is so far, and in this, its first step, useful and productive to the public. But . as soon as the notes are exchanged by him for some other
article
1
which
is
channel of circulaof
Bullion Report, p. cccxxviii., et seq. in particular the evidence of Mr. the Bank of England, and of Mr. Pearse,
3
See
who was
then Governor.
227
circulating medium, and form an addition of currency. The necessary effect of every such addition to the mass is to diminish the relative value of any
to the
much
mass
1 given portion of that mass in exchange for commodities." And, since the notes are inconvertible, they cannot be returned to the Bank by the free working of economic laws, and the increase continues in existence until the Bank is repaid the principal of the bills originally discounted. But before the notes are thus paid in, fresh issues will have
already neutralised the good results which might have fol" lowed from their return. Each successive advance repeats If the amount of discounts is prothe same process.
gressively increasing, the amount of paper which remains out in circulation over and above what is wanted for the
increase also
and
the
2
money
prices of
commodities
will
progressively
rise."
The report then gives various statistics as to the quantity But it denies of notes in circulation at different periods.
reverse.
that the quantity of notes can be a test of over-issue or the Different commercial conditions require different
The
must also be
of economising
the use of
money may
ably. foreign exchanges and the price of bullion. Conclusions of the Bullion Report. Macleod
:
The only
real test is to be
if
3 " That at that time there was an general conclusions thus excessive paper currency, of which the most unequivocal symptom was the very high price of gold bullion, and next to that the very depressed state of the foreign exchanges. That the excess was to be attributed to the removal of all
sums up
the
on the issues of the Bank of England by the susof cash payment. It was greatly to be regretted, pension I therefore, that this Act, which at best was only intended to be temporary, had been continued as a permanent war
[control
I
1
See Macleod, Vol. II., 5th edition, pp. 269, 270. Macleod, loc. cit. See Macleod, 3rd edition, Vol. II., pp. 45, 46.
228
measure." That the fatal results of the existing situation were too well known to need description, and it was more than likely that things would get worse; the integrity and honour of Parliament demanded, therefore, that an immediate remedy should be found. That the continuance of this state of matters held out a temptation to Parliament to have recourse to a depreciation of the gold coin by an alteration of the standard, which had been done by many governments under similar circumstances, and which might be the easiest remedy to the evil. But it would be a great breach of public faith and of the
*
down
the paper to the legal standard of the coin." Some had to a the evil of the restriction proposed remedy by legal Bank's issues; but such a measure would be fruitless, be-
cause the required proportion could never be determined, " and even if it were so, might very much aggravate the inconveniences of a temporary pressure"; in any case, such an interference would be incompatible with the rights
commercial property. " The only true and proper remedy was ... a That, however, was an resumption of cash payments. operation of the greatest delicacy, and it must be left entirely Parliament should merely to the discretion of the Bank. fix the time, and leave it to them to carry out the details." In any case, the committee judged that an interval of two years would be necessary and sufficient to conclude the matter satisfactorily. This, then, is the Bullion Report; it stimulated the publication of a complete economic literature, and caused long
of
. . .
1 This literature is most abundant, and it would be a considerable undertaking to study it in detail. It would be almost impossible to attempt here what we tried to do with regard to the literature advocating the foundation Neither is there anything new to be learnt from the pamphlets of the Bank. published about 1810 they only reproduce the well-known arguments. The most able criticism of the theories contained in the Bullion Report is that of Mr. Bosanquet, who has given an excellent summary of the doctrines which we have already described, in his Practical Observations on the Report of the Bullion Committee. This pamphlet is famous less for its own merits than on account of the crushing reply made to it by Ricardo. See Reply to Mr. Bosanquet's Practical Observations.
;
229
discussions in Parliament. These debates must be briefly considered. But we shall not attempt any detailed analysis of the speeches, and we shall only refer to those which raise
points not already dealt with.
C.
The report was presented by Horner on June 9, 1810. It was not formally considered until the 6th of May, 1811. The discussion was opened by Mr. Horner, who spoke at great 1 His speech may still be read with interest and length. pleasure; in it he stated the arguments which we have already sufficiently discussed, and concluded by moving a series of resolutions, of which we give the substance in a 2 note, and which embody in the main the conclusions of the
Bullion Report.
Mr. Rose answered Mr. Horner in another long speech, stating arguments on the opposite side which are also
familiar to us.
The debate became more interesting when it was taken up by Mr. Henry Thornton, in the most original of the 4 In his speeches heard by the House on the subject. main the at issue was whether it was opinion point
1
The speech
It
will be
found
in Par/.
Debates, Vol.
230
Bank should regulate its issues with reference to the price of bullion and the state of the exchanges, and whether these were influenced by the quantity of paper. He set himself to prove the affirmative, firstly in his turn the principles contained in the Bullion by stating
expedient that the
Report, and then by the help of a number of historical examples. In particular, he referred to the case of the Bank
of
for-
and the
broke
out,
to
r
Government, was obliged in 1805 when the war again borrow from various M merchants and
to
capitalists,
w ho then contrived
were
fabricate
selves, securities as
and proceeded
to discount at the
true lender."
that the
this transaction
was a
"
great increase in the paper of the Bank of France. drain of their cash followed; the diligences were found to be carrying off silver into the departments, which the bank
had continually to bring back, with much expense." was obliged at length to stop payment, and its notes were at a discount of 10 per cent. Almost immediately there was a corresponding fall in the exchanges. The bank now, 2 acting on the advice of Dupont de Nemours, the secretary
.
It
of a special commission,
In
three
months' time payments were resumed as usual and the exchanges became normal. Another useful example of conditions analogous to those in England was supplied by the Bank of Sweden. Thornton 3 briefly described the Scandanavian banking
See p. 907. For the causes of the crisis of 1805 see also the report of Dupont de Nemours, especially pp. 48-55, London edition, 1811. The more recent work of M. V. de Swarte should also be consulted Les vingt premieres anndes de Id Banque de France, p. 18, et scq. (author's note). 2 " The Bank should The secretary's words were as follows always draw in its discounts as soon as it perceives the existence of a more than mean For what to Bank for ordinary disposition paper money. exchange these applications for money? They imply that there are more Bank notes on the spot than the circumstances of the time demand. And how are you to provide against this evil? By diminishing their quantity through a reduction which shall exceed the new emissions." The exact title of the Report is, Sur la Banque de France et les causes de
:
:
la crise qu'elle
*
a tprouvee.
231
system and remarked that although the paper money was at a discount of nearly 70 per cent, after the suspension of " the public in Sweden were not fully cash payments, the their of of paper; for many of persuaded depreciation their commodities, their iron in particular, had not risen in any proportion to the fall of their currency." In Russia, too, although the rouble had fallen from its original value of 48 pence to that of 12 or 14 pence, and although it was known that the quantity of paper money had been largely increased, yet the Russian merchants and business men, amongst whom the speaker had lived for a long time, persisted in ascribing the fall to an unfavourable balance of trade, or to political events which were quite The same mistake incapable of producing such a result. was made by the American public with regard to the crisis
.
.
due
"
who seems
to see the
consequence of a similar prejudice, we assume that the currency, which is in all our hands, and with which we ourselves are, as it were, identified, is fixed, and that the price of bullion moves.** Then with regard to the balance of
trade,
And, in fact, to the annual of the Custom House, the according report balance in favour of England amounted to ,16,000,000. The second part of Mr. Thornton's speech dealt with the standard of the currency. He showed that a permanent currency of paper money was most dangerous in that it tended to swell the numbers of those who advocated a return to a metallic currency combined with a lowering of the " standard. The very argument of justice, after a certain
time, passes over to the side of deterioration ... if eight, ten, or even fifteen or twenty years, have passed since the
refuted this opinion by a previous statement Rose himself, in which he declared how favourable the balance of trade had been.
uncommonly
paper
fell,
then
1
it
may
232
for bargains will ancient value of the circulating medium have been made, and loans supplied, under an expectation
1 of the continuance of the existing depreciation."
Mr. Vansittart, afterwards Lord Bexley, in moving the counter-resolution to Mr. Horner's, denied the principles set forth in the Bullion Report. In particular he appeared to
like most of his colleagues, that the Restriction Act had supplied the country with the enormous resources needed for the war. We have already discussed this theory, but it is well to recall it here since it was in the course of these debates that it was first stated as an indisputable fact. Mr. Vansittart based his argument on the fact that there had never been any difference between prices in coin and those in paper and hence declared that the theories which had held as regards Ireland in 1804, were not applicable to the case in point. The two situations were not analogous whilst in Ireland coin was openly sold at a premium, owing 2 to the depreciation of Bank notes, and two distinct prices were in force according to the form of payment, in England on the contrary, none of these things had occurred. Hence there was no depreciation. This was a cheap victory since the non-appearance of such phenomena in England was due to the severity of the laws which suppressed them. At this very time three men were committed for trial under an old
believe,
statute
of
Edward
And VI., revived for the occasion. not accordvary really true that prices did
payment
?
several
Members.
Mr. Sharpe, who was on the committee, showed 3 that the Government itself, though responsible for the laws, was obliged to break them and to acknowledge the very For instance, depreciation which it claimed to prevent. " it had been usual to send over specie to Guernsey to pay our troops there. Each guinea had recently been paid to
1
See
p. 917.
Mr. Vansittart explains this depreciation, moreover, as due not issue but to temporary political circumstances.
*
to over-
Par/.
Debates,
p.
1062.
OF THE
\
1|
V
(
UNIVERSITY
CF
xX
233
^^.^^-JJlSJ--^^^^^
the soldiers at the rate of twenty-three shillings. Again, a person who inherited from a distant relation the sum of a thousand guineas, was lately paid in specie. He went to invest the money in the funds, and on asking the price of the 3 per cents., was told 64^. On inquiring, however,
at
for
rate he could obtain the stock if he paid real money he was told, after some consideration, that he might it, have it for cash at 6o.' yi
what
made
debate, and I cannot resist the temptation to give extracts from that of one of the best and most able
some
men
Lord Castlereagh had spoken of "a sense of value in to currency as compared with commodities." seized the opportunity to crush utterly the theory Canning to that of the Bullion Report. This theory conopposed sisted simply in the doctrine that the pound sterling was nothing tangible; it was a creature of the imagination, which had no real existence, and might vary with the weather. It was a sense of value communicated mysteri" A sense of value," ously from one person to another. " exclaimed Canning, but whose sense? with whom is it to originate ? and how is it to be communicated to others
reference
:
who
is to
promulgate,
.
who
is to
acknowledge, or who
.
is to
enforce it?
What
its
.
. .
authority control
fluctuations?
would throw loose ... all contracts gerous principle and pecuniary bargains, by leaving them to be measured from day to day, and from hour to hour, by no other rule than that of the fancies and interests of each individual conflicting with the fancies and interests of his neighbour."
Notwithstanding the excellence of these speeches
the
Report.
it
reject
self
Sir Fr. Burdett also stated that in spite of the prohibitions he had him" been asked " far different prices according as he paid in specie or in
Bank
paper.
234
Horner's resolutions, 1 it also passed, in spite of 2 Canning's protests, a series of counter-resolutions moved 3 These by Mr. Vansittart at the end of a second speech. resolutions, contained in sixteen articles, included such " statements as that Bank notes have hitherto been, and are at this time, held in public estimation to be equivalent 4 to the legal coin of the realm."
Mr.
1 The first resolution was thrown out by 152 votes to 75, and the remainSee Par/. ing ones by increasing majorities, with which Robert Peel voted.
Debates,
2
p. 1169.
At the end of his speech (see Par/. Debates, Vol. XX., pp. 94-123) Canning proposed an amendment, which was rejected by 82 votes to 48. Canning's two speeches have been published under the title of Substance of two Speeches delivered on the 8th and i$th of May, 1811. 3 See Mr. Vansittart's second speech, Vol. XX., pp. 1-74. * See the 2nd and 3rd resolutions. The statements are contrary to all the
evidence.
CHAPTER
VI.
Lord King's circular to his of 1819. Great drain of specie in 1818 and 1819. Appointment of Committees to consider the advisability of resuming cash pavments. Reports of the Committees of both Houses. Debates in Parliament Robert Peel's Proposals of Lord Lauderdale. Speech on the alteration of the standard. The Act of 1819, its chief provisions. Resumption of cash payments.
The Stanhope
Acf.
The Act
SECTION
I.
RESULTS REPORT.
ONE
as
it
inevitable result followed from the vote in Parliament, Bank was encouraged to issue as many notes
wished
in
this
way
it
continually,
of land
depended on
As
the
continued
to
increase,
debtors had everything to gain by prolonging the existing state of things, but creditors- were being ruined. Things reached such a pitch that Lord King, as much to protect
his own interests as to decide a theoretical question, sent a circular to his farmers and tenants requesting to be paid
gold or "in guineas, in Portugal "in or Bank notes of a sum sufficient to purgold coin," chase at the present market price the weight of standard
for the future either in
1 gold requisite to discharge the rent."
The
action, which Lord King also stated in the circular, was " that in 1807, when the farmers had agreed to pay in good and lawful money of Great Britain," gold was worth
,4
$ 143., which
House
See the complete text of this circular given in Lord King's speech in the of Lords. Par/. Debates, Vol. XX., pp. 792-793.
236
This claim was perfectly legal, since the Act of 1797 while authorising the Bank to suspend cash payments, had not decreed a forced currency. It was moreover just, for besides the reasons given by Lord King, there is another the price of the farmers' crops was very obvious one
:
same
rents
be,
just the request might nevertheless completely upset the theory which the House had just taken such pains to establish. Lord Stan1 hope brought in a Bill forbidding all differences between
it
in coin he justified this by the had been asked for a guinea, 2 a statement which was confirmed by Lord Holland, who opposed the Bill, and which is an additional proof of the inaccuracy
payments
in
paper and
of Vansittart's assertions.
was opposed by Lord Grenville, 3 a member of the Cabinet which had brought in the Act of Restriction, and by the Marquess of Lansdowne, Lord Grey and Lord King, who spoke in explanation of his action in the matter 4 of the circular. It was easy enough for these speakers to show that since the inconvertibility of the notes had been authorised, such a measure as the present would inevitably
The
Bill
lead the
way to a forced currency. a matter of fact, the Restriction Act led on naturally to the passing of the new law and ultimately to a forced
As
currency.
who supported
1
This was ably demonstrated by Lord Eldon, the Bill. He took as an illustration the case
Scandal-mongers alleged that Lord Stanhope owed ^100,000, and that so earnestly on behalf of debtors he was really pleading pro domo. But he himself made a formal denial of the accusations. Par/. De-
when he pleaded
bates, p. 762.
2
Lord Stanhope thought that " there was no such thing in this country as a measure of value founded on a quantity of bullion of standard fineness. The legal coin was the money with the stamp upon it. ... If Bank notes and gold bore a fixed proportional ratio to the pound sterling by law they were equal to one another, and to prove this he need go no further than the first book of Euclid, where it was laid down as an axiom that things equal to the same thing are equal to one another." 3 It was on this occasion that Grenville said that the day on which Mr. Pitt and he had been forced to propose the Restriction Act was one of the
most painful
4
237
young
professional
man who
Suppose that he has a private fortune of ,3,000 on deposit at the Bank, which ought to yield him an annual income of ,90. His landlord demands his rent in gold,
the world.
while the
Bank
refuses to
pay his
interest in specie.
He
reasonably ask whether it is just that the same law which forces him to accept the notes also forces him to pay his rent in gold, when he cannot obtain any and is hence reduced, if not to prison, at any rate to the sale of his
may
property.
Whatever may be thought of these speeches, the Act was passed, and though originally its effects were to cease on March 25, 1812, it was afterwards continued as long as the Act of Restriction was in force. It is hardly necessary to add that things continued as before in spite of this Act, and the price of an ounce of But the law had a bad effect on busi5 IDS. gold rose to
1
ness.
of their outstanding debts, and in particular, those who had granted long leases received only two-thirds of their rent.
to
not restrict its issues, and country banks conbe established, hence general prices went on the price of corn indeed, reached a level hitherto
unknown.
SECTION
II.
THE ACT OF
The conclusion
1819.
of the war, plentiful harvests and a great reduction in country bank issues 2 so improved the situation that the Bank began to consider the possibility of a
return
to
directors
1
cash payments. By November, 1816, the had collected so much gold that they announced
in the
Commons by
Its
House of Lords by 43 votes to 16, and in the form differed somewhat from that at first proposed would be useless to give details which have only a
a This reduction was chiefly due to the failure of 89 country banks of issue, which occurred between 1814 and 1815 as a result, and in proof of the truth of the principles of the Bullion Report, gold fell from -< 6s. the ounce to
;
3 i8s. (ist
October, 1816).
238
their readiness to
once
all
January, People had however grown so accustomed to the notes that they did not present them at the Bank, and indeed in many cases they preferred them to gold. The partial resumption of cash payments was nevertheless quite successful and preparations were being made for a general resumption, when a steady demand for gold made its appearance. This withdrawal was mainly due to the big loans at high
rates raised in
1812, 1816.
and
in order
and also in to replace their depreciated paper currencies interest on in to a reduction the Exchequer bills, paid part
which caused these
bills to lose
some
1
of their popularity.
price of gold began to rise, the Bank directors, far from reducing their issues, made an advance of 28 millions instead of 20 millions to the Government, and the country
The
banks displayed even less intelligence. Matters became so serious that on February 3, 1819, the two Houses each appointed a committee to inquire into the position of the Bank. The two committees examined a certain number of witnesses on the subject and the inquiry had a surprising Whereas in 1804 and 1810 the majority of the comresult. mercial world denied that the issues had any effect on the foreign exchanges or on the price of gold, in 1819 it was in entire agreement with the theories of the Bullion Committee. This may be seen from the evidence of most of the witnesses, even that of the governor, the deputy-governor and several other directors of the Bank. The general court of the Bank directors was alone in maintaining the opposite opinion in spite of everything, and on March 25th it passed an official resolution to give firm expression to its belief. 2 The committees of both Houses agreed in recommending
that after
February the
ist,
1820,
the
Bank should be
It
was not
until
books.
239
$
ist,
is.
rate
and
after
May
the
1821, to the
to
Mint
price of
gold, viz.,
3 173. lojd.
This obligation
pay
in bullion
continue for not less than two and not more than three years after May ist, 1821, when cash payments should be resumed.
was
to
report was presented to the House of Lords on May 2ist, 1819. Lord Harrowby very shortly afterwards brought forward, on behalf of the ministry, some proposals which
The
embodied those of the report. These were discussed, but was somewhat strangely diverted by a resolution moved by Lord Lauderdale to alter the Mint price of gold to Robert Peel, in a correspond with the market price. demonstrated that it was essential to masterly speech, (i) resume cash payments, (2) that the standard of the coin
the debate
ought not
to
be lowered. 1
With regard to the first point Peel freely acknowledged that his opinions had undergone a material change since 1811. Every sound writer agreed that the true standard of
value consisted of a definite quantity of metal of an equally
definite fineness, with an inscription stating the weight fineness. No doubt the Bank was perfectly solvent, it did not therefore follow' that an over-issue of paper
r
and
but
was
an impossibility. If solvency alone w as sufficient proof that there was no excess, Law's theory was just, and the land as well as the funds might be converted into a circulating medium. Peel strenuously opposed any lowering of the standard. His arguments were as follows: " There could be no inconvenience in compelling the Bank to pay in specie at the 3 Mint Price. It had done so from 1776 to I797, and the price of gold had never risen above 3 175. 6d. The fact that this price had since risen to $ 2s. did not therefore prove that the standard was variable. What had was that a for substitute had been introhappened gold
1
See Par/. Debates, pp. 676-705, for this speech, also Macleod, 3rd edition,
II., p. 84, et seq.
Vol.
in 1774.
See above,
p. 158.
2 4o
its price was considered in relation to that Let not the House be led away by any calculation to mistake the price for the value. When people talked of gold rising in price, were they prepared to show that it had risen in intrinsic value ? So far from gold having risen in value during the last fifty years, it had actually fallen, partly from the greater abundance of the metal itself, partly from the substitutes that were used for it. 1
duced, and
substitute.
very prevalent theory was, that instead of regulating paper by the value of gold gold should be regulated by the value of paper. This was nothing less than a fraud the creditor. It was vain to think that foreign public upon nations could be imposed upon by such a deception. The only result would be that after the public creditor had been cheated, the coin would be debased. ought to follow the example of our wisest and most distinguished ancestors, and return to the ancient standard of the coins. Three great reforms of the coinage had already been undertaken on these lines in the reigns of Edward 2 In all three cases the III., Elizabeth and William III. difficulties were much greater than on the present occasion.
We
The idea that the country owed its glory and military honours to an inconvertible paper currency was ridiculous there had been great military victories even before 1797. Peel believed that the true difference between England and
:
of
1 This was also pointed out by Lord Liverpool in a speech in the House Lords which deserves to be mentioned in connection with Peel's. * With regard to the first of these reforms see Ruding, Vol. I., pp. 190For the third see above, p. 90, the chapter entirely devoted to 206. For the second see Ruding, Vol. I., pp. 332-343, and Froude, this subject. History of England from the fall of Wolsey to the defeat of the Spanish Armada, Vol. VII., pp. 453-460. Elizabeth found the coinage in an appalling state of depreciation. By the advice of Burleigh, the founder of the house
of Cecil, she ordered a general re-coinage in spite of the which such an undertaking involved. The operation was the Crown made a profit of .14,079 out of it.
As Froude remarks (p. 453), no measure in Elizabeth's reign has received Sometimes, to be strictly accurate, the praises which were better merited. praises have exceeded the merits, for some historians have described the reform as carried out at the cost of the Crown. Official congratulations were Elizabeth was very proud of her reform. offered by Parliament (see Parl. Hist., Vol. IV., p. 214). She caused a medal to be struck in commemoration with the inscription, Bene constituta re nummaria, and her monumental inscription concludes thus Gallia domata, Belgium sustentum, Pax fondata et Moneta in justum valorem redacta.
:
241
other States was that she always kept her faith inviolate. It was this feeling that enabled the country to resist
adversity and to secure a final triumph. Now that they had reached the other shore in safety, let them not abandon the
dismal voyage.
rest of the discussion in the Commons threw no fresh on the subject. Amongst the other speakers we may light mention Canning, whose speech at the end of the next 1 and sitting seems to have had a brilliant reception,
The
2 Ricardo, who pointed out with considerable effect that the evidence given by the directors as individuals contradicted their resolution as a court; he concluded that in view of their past conduct, the only course open to the House was to
deprive them of their extraordinary powers. The Act (statute 1819, c. 49) 3 was passed unanimously 4 after amendment by the House of Lords. Its chief provisions were as follows I. The Acts restraining cash payments were continued until May ist, 1823, at which date they were to cease.
:
Temporary provisions adopted from the reports i. Between February ist and October ist, 1820, the Bank was bound to pay all notes presented to them at the
:
May
and
ist,
was
to
be
3.
Between
May
was
ist,
1821,
May
ist,
of gold bullion
II.
to
be
,3
175. lojd.
The
trade in bullion
Moreover, a law of July 6th, 1819 (statute 1819, c. the Bank to make any advance to Government forbade 76), without the authority of Parliament. Supposing a request of this kind to be thought necessary, it was to be made in
III.
See Parl. Debates, p. 800. According to this journal, the conclusion of his very short speech was greeted with " Loud and Universal cries of hear, hear." a See Ricardo 's Speech, pp. 742-748. 3 Statutes of the Realm, Vol. LIX., p. 156. 4 See Parl. Debates, p. 1137.
8
1
242
writing and laid before both Houses of Parliament together with the answer made to it by the court of directors. It was hoped that this would put a stop to a liberty which
had rapidly degenerated into licence and which resulted in this terrible crisis lasting 22 years. Resumption of cash payments. The Act fixed May
1823, as the latest date for
had
ist,
the resumption
of cash pay-
But this final date was anticipated, and on May 1821, the paper currency, established since 1797, was replaced by a currency on a metallic basis, of which the country had been deprived for 24 years and 2 months.
ments.
ist,
During this period the crisis had at times been very and the scarcity of coin had caused a depreciation in the notes issued by the Bank. This depreciation, from 100 in 1801, had varied in the following being ;8 75. per manner
intense,
:
7
2
53. 35.
in
1802.
to 1809.
from 1803
.13
from 1817
in
to 1818.
The depreciation continued until 1821, at which date the notes once more circulated at par.
END VOL.
I.
VOLUME
II.
18191903.
INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER.
Difference between Volume The possibility matter.
II.
and Volume
I.
in
respect
to their
subject
omitting references to general history in Volume II. Necessity for dealing in one part of the present Volume with The Act of 1826 the working of the Bank under the existing system. Method adopted in regarded as one of the causes of the Act of 1844.
of
THE
first
volume
of
of this
of the
Bank
England,
itself,
founda-
tion, the
and subsequent developments. the In this volume we propose to examine the later history, system under which the Bank has carried on its business
foundation
since 1844, an d a few introductory remarks on this subject may not be out of place.
The
found
one.
materials
made use
of in the present
volume
will
be
to differ slightly
first
in the
preceding
has been possible to ignore the general The Government and the English England. have learnt understand better their own interests to public and the part that should be played by the Bank; hence this general history has become less and less closely connected with that of the Bank, or rather the connection has ceased except when absolutely unavoidable.
In the
place,
it
history of
runs," or worse still, the actual assaults to which it gave rise, have vanished. The Government, too, grown wiser by experience and helped by the remarkable increase of facilities for public credit, no longer applies to the Bank whenever it has need of money and hence does not now involve that institution in all its financial embarrassments. 1
the
1 On the other hand the normal connection between the Bank and the Treasury has become closer and closer as regards all that concerns the business of the Treasury account and the administration of the national debt, both we have examined this subject at some length in an floating and permanent Appendix.
;
hostility of
246
In the second place, a study of the actual working of the Act of 1844 nas not seemed to us out of place in the history of the Bank, though we have reduced this study to comparatively modest proportions. A mere analysis of the Act followed by a description of the crises which the Bank has since experienced would not constitute a history just as an
;
analysis of the constitution of a country, accompanied by a description of the wars in which it has taken part, do not by
themselves make up its history. The history of a country must include some study, however short, of its internal life; at the least it must point out the general lines of its develop-
ment. Similarly in the case before us the section dealing with the working activities of the Bank is in all essentials an historical study. After an analysis of Robert Peel's Act as it appeared in 1844, we shall study the Bank as we find it
after
Bank
in
of
siderable
instance,
change
several
For
the Act of 1844 contemplated that silver would a considerable part in the reserve, but for a long time play past the reserve has consisted entirely of gold. Again, in
1844 people were very far from anticipating what has actually been the case since 1893, viz., that the metallic Nor was it reserve would exceed the paper currency. realised that the Bank would cease to be a bank of discount
commercial world, etc. In this part of our work we shall have occasion,
discuss various questions of a more or less historical character, which it would have been difficult to deal with
elsewhere; such matters, for example, as the increasing importance of cheques, of current accounts and of the bankers' reserve, and Mr. Lowe's scheme for reform in 1873,
etc.
To
have included
pass to another point it may seem strange that we in Part I., amongst the causes of the Act of
1844, the crisis of 1825 and the Act of 1826, which enforced' those very regulations in opposition to which Peel's Act was passed. But a moment's thought will show that jusl
INTRODUCTORY.
247
because Peel's Act involved a reaction against the Act of 1826, we are justified in describing it as a consequence of this In fact, especially in the mid igth century, the conAct. ception of a monopoly could hardly have been arrived at without making preliminary trial of a system of freedom.
The
crisis of 1825 was generally attributed to the bad organisation of provincial credit; the remedy had been sought in the removal of those restrictions placed on the
when
it
issue of notes in the provinces by the Act of 1742. Then, this policy was found to be inadequate and was even
regarded by some as the cause of the crisis of 1836-1839, was judged necessary to centralise the control of the note issues and to take the management of them out of the hands 1 of the Bank. But the debates in Parliament and the contemporary pamphlets show clearly enough that such a policy w ould never have been adopted if people had not first exy
2 perienced the effect of the opposite system. Finally, to gain a better understanding of the Act of 1844, we have traced the origin and development of its main provisions, first in the works of its chief promoters, Lord Overstone, Torrens and Norman, and then in the speeches and Memorandum of Sir Robert Peel, who presented it to Parliament and by whose name it is known. This plan
to
an historical
the present, than the alternative of giving a study detailed criticism of each provision of the law.
1 The Report of the Committee of 1832 brings out the theories according to which the Bank regulated, or at least was supposed to regulate, its issues. 3 The Act of 1833, which forms the subject of our second chapter, by making Bank notes legal tender, by insisting on some degree of publicity for the Bank's balance sheets, though less, it is true, than is imposed to-day, and by granting official recognition to the joint-stock banks and to the employment of their cheques, gave to the existing system of English banking three of its most salient features. Consequently, this Act may be regarded as one of the causes of that of 1844, notwithstanding the great differences between the two.
PART
I.
CHAPTER
THE CRISIS OF
The
I.
1825
1826.
Renewal Crisis of 1825. Effects of the resumption of cash payments. of speculative mania. Its causes. Speculations in South American and Foreign Loans. The crisis. Policy of the Bank during the crisis. The Responsibility of the Banks and the effect of over-issues on the crisis The Act of 1826. Meeting of Parliament Speeches of exaggerated. Lord Liverpool, Peel and Huskisson. The Act of 1828, its two-fold Reorganisation of the provincial credit system. Suppression of object. the Bank of England's privileges in the Provinces. Abolition of small notes. Small notes continued in Scotland. Action of Sir Walter Scott.
:
A.
THE
CRISIS OF 1825.
THE
the
resumption of cash payments and the ease with which anticipated the date fixed by the law of 1819* The harvests, which quickly restored public confidence. had been scanty during the last three years of what had been practically a forced currency, were plentiful for three seasons after 1821. According to Tooke the trade and industry of the country had never been in a more satisfactory condition than they were between 1821 and 1824.
Bank had
King
con-
repeated his congratulations at the end of the following year and even at the beginning of the year 1825. The Bank of England shared in the general prosperity and its bullion reserve rose to ^14,200,000 an immense
sum
At
the
1
at that date.
the
Bank
The
same time an Act passed in April, 1822, empowered of England and the country banks to increase their
resumption of cash payments was
May
ist
Bank had
actually resumed
earlier.
CRISIS OF
issues.
1825
AND ACT OF
rise in prices,
1826.
249
The
result of this
was a
Government to reduce the rate of interest Debt from 5 to 4 and from 4 to 3^ per cent., with the help of an advance of ,5,000,000 made to it by the Bank.
the
The conversion of the 5 per cents, affected stock to the value of 135 millions, while that of the 4 per cents, applied
to
80 millions.
on
capital caused many of the holders of public securities, who could not be satisfied with a small income, to sell out as
There was, in fact, a proverb current world that "John Bull can stand many things but he cannot stand 2 per cent." When the price of money remains at a low level for any considerable period, people will turn to risky investments if no good ones offer themselves, and a crisis is the necessary result of such experiments. This fact has been frequently noticed; 2 the period of which we write affords an illustration of it. Speculation of all kinds reappeared, but especially in the form of transactions with South America, which had already been a notable feature in 1809 and 1810. The South American Revolution had excited intense interest in England. As soon as the independence of the Republics had been recognised, their appeal was responded to with unreasoning
quickly as possible.
in the financial
eagerness by investors and traders, who subscribed indiscriminately to all the loans raised by these States, which
generally proved quite incapable of meeting their liabilities. At the same time increased support w as given to a number of other public loans. 3 The commercial world allowed itself
r
to
The reduction in the interest on the public funds was accompanied by a reduction in the half-yearly dividend of the Bank from 5 to 4 per cent. This caused a number of sales and the Bank stock fell 16 points.
2 This fact is so obvious that after the crisis of 1866 William Newmarch suggested that a minimum limit should be fixed, below which the Bank might not lower its rate of discount. This limit was to be 4 per cent. 3 The public loans raised between 1822 and 1825 are given in a well
in the
250
markets thus opened up, and especially in regard to the Colonial food stuffs. Macleod 1 estimates that 150 millions were invested in various ways in Mexico and South America. Transactions
of this kind, essentially speculative in nature, multiplied continually and the Lord Chancellor thought it necessary even at the beginning of 1825 to call the attention of Parliament to the prevailing mania, while seven weeks later Lord
Lauderdale stated that ^200,000,000 had been subscribed to companies of all kinds. Very soon the situation recalled memories not only of 1810, but of 1720 and the time of the South Sea Bubble. 2 Companies were formed with the most absurd objects, and
subscriptions paid up did not often exceed 5 per nominal value of the shares, persons of very modest fortunes were able to take part in the transactions. The number of companies formed rose to 624, involving a
as the
first
cent, of the
nominal capital of ^372,173,100. This enormous sum represented ^150 per head for the 13 million persons who
Vol.
in
XLL,
p. 313.
London and
The following list shows the amount of the loans raised the prices at which they were issued
:
CRISIS OF
1825
AND ACT OF
1826.
251
then constituted the population of England, and was equivalent to a third of the total wealth of the country. 1 The price of the shares in several of the new companies
rose very quickly. Those of The Anglo-Mexican Mining Company, for instance, which were issued at ;io, rose within a month from ^43 to ,150; and the shares of the
still
more
at ^"70, rose from ^550 to ; 1,350.* significant feature was that the prices of com-
and sometimes tripled in a few inevitable reaction came. Prices began to fall at the of the and this was followed summer, beginning by a collapse in securities upon which no further payments
modities were doubled
months.
The
At the end of November the failure of several large firms which speculated in cotton produced a The Bank of England thought fit to general panic. abandon the policy of 1797 and to increase its issues freely.
could be obtained.
reserve sank from ^13,500,000 in January, 1824, to in October, 1824. It persevered in this conduct in spite of an unfavourable exchange, and in April, 1825, its reserve was only ,6,650,000, while its issues exceeded the total in circulation in January, 1824. The Bank only realised its mistake at the very height of the crisis, but on December 3ist it raised its discount rate to 5 per cent. This did not prevent a further decline in the reserve
Its
;i i, 400,000
from over 3 millions in November to ,1,260,890 (December 3 3 ist), which threw the circulation into unheard-of confusion.
1
p. 446. fluctuations in the share values of the different mining companies will be found in Palgrave, Dictionary of Political Economy (Vol. I., p. 458). 3 The following table from Juglar (p. 337) will give an exact idea of the continued fall in the Bank reserve
2
The
1824.
1825.
January February
March
April
May
June
July
November December
13,500,000 13,800,000 13,800,000 13,400,000 12,800,000 12,800,000 11,800,000 11,700,000 11,800,000 11,400,000 11,300,000 10,700,000
9,400,000 8,800,000 8,100,000 6,600,000 6,100,000 5,400,000 4,100,000 3,600,000 3,400,000 3,100,000 3,000,000 1,200,000
252
The
of the
Government which ordered the Mint to be kept working day and night; and this scarcity became a veritable famine after the failure of the London Bank, one of the leading banking firms, which dragged down with it sixty
other financial companies. The drain on the coin was so great that the Bank was obliged* to put into circulation 600,000 one pound notes, which, although they had been created when the Restriction
in its safes.
Act was passed, had lain for a long time forgotten This measure was effective in saving the Bank
of Norwich, but could not materially alter the unprecedented state of affairs. No one was willing to part with such
money
as he possessed, and according to Huskisson's statement in the House of Commons, 1 it w as impossible during the greater part of December to realise even the best securities, such as Government stock and the shares of the Bank of England and the East India Company. The general distress was increased by the failure of thirtysix country banks which the Bank could not assist in time
?
and
the Government, decided finally to increase its issues; it granted new loans to the value of ,400,000. This afforded
substantial assistance to those firms which were solid
to offer resistance to misfortune,
enough
the
and
at length,
when
weaker ones had all collapsed, things gradually improved and two years later money was being lent at 4 per cent. These are the broad outlines of the crisis of 1825. The attempt has been made, and indeed is still made, to throw the whole responsibility for it upon the over-issues of the Bank of England and of the country banks. On this point Macleod 2 very fairly remarks that:
1
p. 230.
117, 118.
CRISIS OF
1
1825
AND ACT OF
1826.
253
indisputable that the Bank acted on the most in not contracting its issues when the great drain of bullion for exportation was going on, it is a mere delusion for men to attribute the consequences of their own wild and extravagant mania to the Bank of England, or
Though
it is
unsound principles
any bank. The errors of all the banks put together were compared to the outbreaks of speculative insanity Was it the issue of Bank which seized upon all classes.
to
trivial
. .
.
a respectable book-selling firm to risk on a ,100,000 speculation in hops? The Bank had committed many errors before, as serious as those of 1825, without leading to any such disaster."
notes
that
led
THE ACT OF
1826.
search for
once the crisis had subsided, the time came to this its causes and to find a remedy for them task devolved on Parliament when it assembled on February
;
When
3rd.
The Prime Minister, Lord Liverpool, in a speech 3 of which w e made use in studying the condition of provincial
credit
of the French Revolution, criticised the both severely system on which this credit was organised
on the eve
and also the Act of 1709, which limited the number of partners in a bank of issue to six, so that any small provincial tradesman, a fruiterer, a grocer or a butcher, might open a bank whilst the right of issue was refused to genuine
companies, well deserving of confidence. Peel supported these views in the House of
3
Commons 4
in
England with
He pointed out that in England the free Scotch system. loo banks had failed in 1793, 157 between 1810 and 1817,
1
XIV., pp.
2-3.
3
3
For
p. 462.
*
254
and 76 during the recent crisis, and that, moreover, the numbers recorded would have been much greater had it not been for the different ways of making composition, and so on whilst in Scotland, on the contrary, there was only a single bank failure on record, and even in that case the creditors had ultimately been paid in full.
;
Peel then
established
described
the terrible
condition
of country
With reference to the small notes, which had just formed 1 the subject of a strong speech by Huskisson, Peel agreed i notes with the latter in thinking that the only served to
drive out the sovereigns that the over-issue of paper money was one of the worst evils from which the country suffered
;
and
was an
rid of
The Act
of 1826 was passed by a very large majority. This Act had a two-fold object, corresponding to the two-
fold criticism
it
attempted
,
reorganise country credit by abolishing the monopoly established by the laws of 1708 and 1742; (6) to suppress the small notes.
(a)
A.
The Reorganisation
of
Country Credit.
We
are
already familiar with the organisation of country credit have seen its absurdity. 2 The situaprevious to 1826. tion was made still worse because the Bank, while insisting on its monopoly in the provinces and preventing the formation of banks of issue with more than six partners, yet made no attempt to secure the right of establishing branches. In other words, the Bank hindered the provision by others of
We
any
satisfactory form of paper currency, and at the same time refused to take the matter into its own hands. It
played the part of the proverbial dog in the manger. The effect of this mistaken policy was the introduction of an absurd and dangerous system of provincial credit facil1 The small notes were attacked with equal vigour in the course of the debate by Lord King, Baring and various other speakers. 2 See above, p. 170, et seq.
CRISIS OF
ities,
1825
AND ACT OF
1826.
255
to issue notes
which allowed every small grocer to set up a bank and which he was unable to honour.
The Statute 1826 (c. 46), in order to remedy this evil, authorised the establishment of banks 65 miles or more from London, having any number of partners and with pow er to
r
issue notes.
In this
to the
creation of joint-stock banks of issue. The Bank of England was at the same time empowered to establish branches in any
part of England.
The Suppression of the Small Notes. The small notes were said to be of no use except to raise prices and encourage speculation. The Statute 1826 (c. 6) abolished
B.
Bank
this
was
force the
Bank
to
result of
7
and 8
millions of notes.
This latter Act was to have been extended to Scotland. But the measure was strongly opposed in that country, where i notes were established by long custom, and it found a celebrated opponent in the person of Sir Walter Scott. Sir Walter, under the pseudonym of Malachi Malagrowther, published three letters containing a most amusing 1 satire on the mania for uniformity. These letters made a stir and were the Scotch great ultimately victorious. By an Act of 1828 (c. 65), however, the circulation of Scotch notes in England was forbidden.
These three letters, which originally came out in the Edinburgh Weekly Journal in February and March, 1826, were soon afterwards published in one volume. They are also to be found among the complete works of W. Scott. See The Miscellaneous Prose Works of W. Scott (3 vols., Edinburgh, 185456), Vol. I., pp.
1
72S-75 6
CHAPTER
THE COMMITTEE OF
The Inquiry
II.
1832
1833-
of 1832. Chief problems brought forward (a) The regulation of the currency. Theory stated for the first time by Horsley Palmer, that a reserve equivalent to one-third of the liabilities guarantees a Bank from all risk. Its Application of this theory by legislation in various cases. worth. (&) Establishment of Joint-Stock Banks in London. History of this matter. Mr. Joplin's book. Legal aspect of the question, (c) Bank notes as legal tender. Advantages of making the notes legal tender as Peel's opposition. Notes made legal tender. stated by Lord Althorp. Need for suspending the usury (d) The limitation of the rate of interest. laws especially with reference to the Bank. (e) The publication of accounts. The Act of 1833. Its chief provisions. Fate of the Joint-Stock
Banks.
THE
much
political
Lonwhere the distress was as as in the rest of the don, great a There was run on the but it as was of a Bank, country. character and was confined to it is purely political London, of no importance as far as our subject is concerned; it is enough to mention it in passing. The Bank's Charter w<as to expire in 1833. At the beginning of 1832 a Committee of Inquiry was appointed
Disturbances were frequent
in
of the
to consider the question of its renewal, but owing to the excitement aroused by the Reform Bill, its report was not presented until the end of the year. The inquiry dealt with several important points l (i) The
:
/
The
possibility of establishing
have changed the order of the questions and have omitted some of For further details see an excellent Summary of the Inquiry of 1832, called, A digest of the Evidence on the Bank charter taken before the ComThe extracts from the mittee of 1832 (London, 1833, edited by Ridgway). evidence are preceded by 121 pages dealing with the Bank of England and with previous crises. The work contains also some very useful tables on the coinage, on the note circulation of country banks, etc.
them.
We
COMMITTEE OF
joint-stock
1832
AND ACT OF
;
1833.
257
banks
tender;
(4)
(3)
I.
As regards
interest.
much
England
place the directors of the Bank of were unanimous in supporting the theories conIn
the
first
currency ought 1 exchanges and the price of bullion. Besides this, one of the directors, Mr. Horsley Palmer, stated for the first time a theory with regard to the note circulation, which has since been frequently repeated and has 4 even formed a basis for legislation on various occasions.
He
to
be invested
said that in principle only two-thirds of the assets ought in interest-bearing securities and one-third
ought to be kept as reserve in bullion. This proportion 3 Palmer's theory would, in his opinion, prevent all risk. 4 was supported by another director, Mr. G. W. Norman; it served at the time to guide the issues of the Bank of
some partisans. "It is," reEngland and it still finds " an empirical formula which may marks M. Cauwes, 5
1 The directors of the Bank had hitherto been misled by observing that in practice the foreign exchanges did not follow exactly the variations in the paper currency of the Bank. The difficulty was a serious one for those who were unwilling to look further. A little closer examination would, however, have shown, as M. Juglar justly observes (p. 341), that it was necessary to reckon in the paper currency not only the issues of the Bank but those of the whole country, which would include bills of exchange, commercial securities,
of the Imperial Bank of Germany and that 1880. may note as conforming to this the system under which the Bank of Belgium works, according to theory which the reserve should amount to one-third of the notes and deposits combined, but may fall to one-fourth with the authorisation of the Government the the Hungarian law of 1873 the very complicated Swedish law of 1874 Swiss legislation, which fixes the amount of the reserve at 40 per cent, of the amount of the note issue, ajid which is, indeed, only a variation of the same
of the
We
principle.
8
A Digest
of Evidence, p. 7.
4
6
258
of the issues
was
insufficient."
if
the proportion is fixe<: but also the conversion 01 only discounting the notes may become impossible Suppose that there i< a reserve of 100 millions and notes to the value of 300 millions; the Bank has preserved the required proportion But it has done this so exactly that at the moment it cannot cash a single note without breaking the rule and causing the reserve to fall below one-third of the value of the notes, for 99 is not a third of 299. Thus the precaution leads to th* very danger it was intended to avoid.
at one-third, not
!
M. Gide 1
"
ESTABLISHMENT OF JOINT-STOCK BANKS IN LONDON This point requires some explanation we have already 2 The Statute 1742 (c. 13-15), an Ac briefly referred to it.
II.
;
often
referred
to
in
this
But the privileges con borrowing or owinj The at business of banking on notes payable money sight. was really limited to this at that time. The clause w<l interpreted strictly and hence the use of cheques, which wa borrowed from the Dutch, was not forbidden by the law /Thus there was no obstacle to prevent banking beinj carried on by the help of the cheque system. This custon
to
;
monopoly England "; only banks were exempt from this monopoly. ferred by this Act were limited
of issue in
"
work,
gave
to
the
Bank
tin
that part of Great Britain calle< formed by fewer than six person;
spread
it
little
by
little
for interference
existence
was
realise<
1 Principes d'Economie Politique, p. 374, note. See also Wilfredo Paret< Cours d'Jiconomie Politique profess^ a I' University de Lausanne, p. 38* u No rule can be laid down as to the amount of the reserve. The reserve
:
needed solely to insure the convertibility of the notes into gold, and for th purpose it has sometimes to be a large fraction and sometimes a small fractio of the paper circulation. 2 See above, pp. 171, 172.
COMMITTEE OF
1832
AND ACT OF
1833.
259
moreover a short time afterwards, Mr. Joplin pointed out for the first time that the establishment of these banks of 1 deposit and their transactions were absolutely legal. This was the state of affairs when the Act of 1826 was passed authorising the foundation of joint-stock banks of
issue outside the 65 mile limit.
London
The question thus remained unsolved. It was deny that from a legal point of view the right to form companies carrying on all kinds of banking transactions except that of note issue was absolutely established. Joplin's reasoning was irrefutable. The Bank of England tried in vain to dispute it and applied unsuccessfully to the Government for a modification of the law. The question 2 was, however, brought before the Committee of i832; even those who supported the new banks realised that to avoid uncertainty it would be better to settle the matter by legislation.
III.
The Bank of England notes had never been legal tender. Even under the regime of the Restriction Act, the notes, though inconvertible, were not legal money and it was this fact which enabled Lord King to write his famous circular to his tenants. The problem now was whether it was advisable to give them this legal character. This question was raised before the Committee of 1832 as well as before Parliament.
Joplin,
1
Supplementary Observations
84 (1823).
an Essay on
Banking,
3
p.
It is interesting to note that the question was raised as a matter of In fact, notwithstanding Joplin's discovery, no jointtheory, not of practice. stock bank had been established in London, though the Government had
obtained a decision from the Court of King's Bench in case such a difficult
problem presented
3
itself.
readers will remember that the founders of the Bank and in particular Godfrey, so far from asking that the notes should be legal tender, asserted that the only thing which enabled notes to circulate was that the bearer could convert them into cash whenever he desired. See above, p. 83.
Our
260
House
of
Commons.
He
ages which would result if the notes were made legal tender. In ordinary times it was true the change would have little effect, for, now that the small notes were suppressed, gold an d 5 notes would be able to circulate together; the directors would take care of that. But on the other hand, the proposed alteration would protect the Bank from any drain which was not due to the state of the exchanges. Under existing conditions, w hen a provincial bank feared a run on its reserve, it was forced to send for bullion from
r
the
Bank
of
for the
amount immediately
larger sum which would be rehad to meet all its liabilities. The Bank was to unexpected withdrawals for home use and
the effects of every
to
much
suffered from
banks.
The proposal
by
the notes legal tender was opposed 2 Sir Robert Peel during the sitting of July ist, as being
make
In contrary to the true principles of a paper currency. Peel's opinion the matter resolved itself into a question of confidence and confidence could not be had to order. Nc doubt anything that tended to increase confidence and
security in a country was a good thing, but this resuli could not be obtained by Act of Parliament.
LEGAL LIMITATION OF THE RATE OF INTEREST. This was another important question which came up fo:
IV.
discussion in 1832. There were many general argument; Ir to be given in favour of the repeal of the usury laws.
the case of the Bank there was a special reason, which wa: that these laws hindered the rate of discount from working
freely
enough to withstand an actual or impending This particular disadvantage of limiting the rate of
1
crisis
interes
speech
2
See the whole of th Parliamentary Debates, Vol. XVIII., p. 179. made by Lord Althorp in introducing the Act of 1833, pp. 169-187.
Parl.
COMMITTEE OF
was
felt in
1832
AND ACT OF
1833.
261
France also.
V.
ENGLAND.
necessity for a publication of the accounts was fully 2 There w>ere no differences of recognised at this time.
The
opinion on the subject in Parliament; though there was some opposition before the Committee of Inquiry on the 3 There was, however, no part of the directors of the Bank. as a of suggestion yet weekly statement, it was merely a of between question deciding monthly and quarterly publications.
THE ACT OF
The Act
1833.
of 1833 (Statute 1833, c. 98) embodies the solutions generally accepted of the problems we have just considered. It made the Bank three concessions of appreci-
able value
.
4
:
i The Bank notes were made legal tender, which they had never been hitherto. 5 2. The Bank was exempted from the action of the usury
to
laws so far as the discount of bills not having three months run was concerned. It was thus enabled to raise its rate
3.
its
to
the
Bank
one-fourth of
to
capital,
1
Cauwes,
maximum
2
3
It will be remembered that 6 per cent, p. 322. rate for commercial business.
See Lord Al thorp's speech, pp. 176-178. Palmer declared himself opposed to any publicity. See Abstract, p. 20. Norman, on the other hand, was willing to agree to a quarterly statement see p. 44. Compare the very discreet evidence of Richards, a former Governor.
4
Exchequer
of the Exchequer and the at the time of this renewal of the charter was published by See A Copy of the Correspondence between the Chancellor and the Bank of England relative to the renewal of the
Charter in 1833. 5 This proposal, which, as we have seen, was opposed by Peel, was passed by 214 votes to 156.
^62
1
But in return the Treasury reduced by 0,890,000. 20,000 the yearly sum paid to the Bank for the management of the public debt; this sum was now only ^131,000. On the other hand the Bank had to furnish the Chancellor
;
of the
of the
amount
of its
bullion, of the number of notes in circulation and of the total of its deposits. The London Gazette was to publish monthly the balance sheet for the previous quarter.
The Act of 1833 also affirmed the legality of joint-stock banks which issued cheques a legality which the Bank had long contested in vain. And it was not long before the first joint-stock bank, the London & Westminster, was It was followed by many others. established in London. Amongst the most famous of these were the London JointStock Bank in 1836, and the Union Bank and the London
in 1839.
Finally, the Bank's charter was renewed until 1855, but the Government reserved the right to suspend it, under certain conditions, at the
how
this
1
the English
It will
be seen
use of
to
make
power.
The Bank
it
was not to be deterred from its opposition the wording of some of the laws to wage a violent war against the joint-stock banks. The latter having at their head such men as Gilbart and George Pollard, met this attack by the most The ingenious devices and legal interference was again necessary in 1844. struggle by which the joint-stock banks secured their independence would afford a most amusing subject of study.
of
England
and
took advantage of
CHAPTER
THE CRISIS OF
III.
1836-1839.
Condition of public opinion from 1833 to 1836. Extensive speculations at home. Foreign Loans. The Bank's policy during this period. Rapid fall in the Bank reserve in 1836. Its causes President Jackson's monetary reform in America the crisis in Ireland. Refusal of Bank to re-discount paper already discounted by a joint-stock bank. Outbreak of the crisis in Lancashire. It spreads throughout England. Firm policy of the Bank, the crisis apparently over. Return of the crisis in 1838 on the Continent and in the United States. The Bank of Belgium suspends Remarkable imprudence of the Directors of the Bank of payment. The Bank on England. Violence of the crisis on the London Market. the verge of ruin. Assistance of the Bank of France. Painful and prolonged liquidation of the crisis.
:
THE three years which followed the Act of 1833 wei*e a time of great prosperity. The harvests were remarkably abundant. Moreover the foundation of a number of jointstock banks 1 in the provinces increased the facilities of credit and considerably lowered the rate of interest. Finally the success, as great as it was unexpected, of the first railway
lines,
panies. All these things combined to make the English public forget the crisis of 1825 and plunge anew into a speculative mania which was only distinguished from those we have already described by the fact that this time the speculation
Between 1833 and 1836, 72 joint-stock banks were founded in England and Ireland. See The Causes and Consequences of the Pressure on the Money Market, with a statement of the action of the Bank of England from ist October, 1833 to zyth December, 1836, by J. H. Palmer, p. 10. Palmer's work is interesting reading he states clearly enough the causes of the crisis of 1836, but he tries unsuccessfully to absolve the Bank of England, of which he was a director, from all responsibility. Palmer criticises most severely the joint-stock banks, whose continued existence he thinks incompatible with that of the Bank of England. His pamphlet gives in an appendix the correspondence between the Treasury and the Bank in 1826 with regard to the
13
in
;
establishment of branches in the provinces. The work is best known through the reply made to it by S. J. Loyd, afterwards Lord Overstone.
3
Mania
see
et
ses
264
This did not prevent an enterprises. additional dabbling in certain foreign speculations nor subscriptions to the numerous foreign loans which were issued on the London market. 2
was mainly
home
How
The
did the
Bank
?
of
England
act
when confronted by
such a situation
its
rule according to which it was supposed to conduct business was as follows the reserve kept, composed of bullion and securities, was to be equal to its liabilities; while the regulation of the note circulation was left to the
:
movement
changes, and meanwhile, whether the demands on the Bank came from at home or abroad, it was to maintain a
metallic reserve equal to one-third of
its
liabilities.
This
1 These speculations led to the formation of a great many companies, of which some few were useful but the majority entirely futile. The following list of them is given by Levi, The History of British Commerce, p. 220, note
:
Companies.
Nominal
Capital.
Railways Mining Companies Packet and Navigation Companies Banking Companies Conveyance Companies Insurance Companies Investment Companies Newspaper Companies Canal Companies Gas Companies Cemetery Companies Miscellaneous Companies
69,666,000 7,035,200 3>533>ooo 23,750,000 500,000 7,600,000 1,730,000 350,000 3,655,000 890,000 435,000 16,104,500
135,248,700
Hyde Clarke,
State.
loc.
cit.,
list
of these loans
and the
Amount.
Price of Issue.
p.c.
1832
Greece 100 ^2,344,000 (Loan guaranteed by the three Powers protecting Greece).
State.
Amount.
^2,000,000
3,000,000 1,000,000 450,000 4,000,000 6,000,000 1,200,000 200,000 900,000
Price of Issue.
1833
Portugal Russia
Portugal Spain (Cuba) Spain Portugal
48 94
p.c.
p.c.
1834
1835 1836
60 p.c. 70 p.c.
92 p.c.
Belgium
Florida
Portugal
80
p.c.
THE CRISIS OF
1836-1839.
265
supposed rule was not easy to keep inviolate and between 1 1833 and 1835 it was often broken.
At
of
sufficiently large
the beginning of 1836 the reserve of the Bank Towards the it was over 8 millions.
;
was end
began to decline and fell to 6 millions in June, October and to ,3,640,000 at the end of The Bank's liabilities at this last date November. amounted to more than 30 millions. 2 A vain attempt had been made to stop this withdrawal of gold by raising the rate of discount, at first to 4^ per cent, and then to 5 per
it
March
to 5 millions in
cent.
The
drain
was the
result
both
of
foreign
and home
demands.
As regards the former, President Jackson had determined not to renew the charter of the United States Bank and to give what he considered to be a more secure basis to the currency. 3 large number of securities of all kinds were sold in England to obtain the gold needed for this reform this transaction was made easier by the low rate of discount and by the multiplication of country banks. In the autumn of 1836 there was another exportation of gold, this time to Ireland, where the failure of the Agri4 cultural and Commercial Bank made the other banks afraid of a run upon their reserves. They were only able to prevent this by importing 2 millions of gold, borrowed from 5 the Bank of England.
On September 9, 1834, for instance, the reserve was .7, 010,000, as against liabilities of ^31,058,000, and in May, 1835, it was ^5,951,000, as For details see Levi, p. 221, note, and against liabilities of ^29,417,000.
1
Macleod, Theory of Credit, p. ion. 2 Exactly ^30,941,000. 1 For an account of President Jackson's reform and of his famous Specie Circular of June u, 1836, see Conant, A History of Banks of Issue, p. 481. The following may also be consulted with advantage as regards the reasons which led to this reform. Poor, Money and its Laws, pp. 489-537 Knox United States Notes, pp. 40-46, and in particular, A History of Bank(J- J-)
;
still
exists,
but
is
now
* For and its charter see Dillon (Malcolm), The It is not howHistory and Development of Banking in Ireland, pp. 71-77. ever, too severe a criticism to say that this book of Dillon's is worthless. 6 This enormous importation of gold confirmed Lord Althorp's theory, which was that so long as the notes of the Bank of England were not legal But it tender, the Bank would suffer for every run on a country bank.
266
The
simultaneously with the crises in Ireland and America. One of the most prevalent forms of speculation had been the re-discount of bills, which had been largely practised by the joint-stock banks. In August however, the Bank of England was not content with merely raising its discount rate to 5 per cent, but also refused flatly to discount any bill which had been already endorsed by a joint-stock bank. This was a fatal blow to most of the American securities, which had been bought by the joint-stock banks and put into circulation again after endorsement. The actual crisis began in Lancashire, a county which had become deeply involved in American and Irish investments. As early as November the Northern and Central Bank of
At to the Bank of England for help. was refused, but the failure of this establishment which had 39 branches in industrial districts, would have been so disastrous that the Bank was forced to consent to make advances, at first of ,500,000 and ultimately of
Manchester applied
first this
^1,370,000. In January, 1837, similar difficulties were experienced in London the American houses were in urgent need of It was found assistance. upon examination that these houses were actually solvent, although unable to meet the demands made upon them at the moment. Besides this, it was evident that to allow them to fail would produce a complete upset of credit. Under these circumstances the Bank determined on a bold step and advanced them 6 millions. not only was a terribh It had no cause to regret its courage crash avoided, but the advances made were repaid almost ii
:
:
and, since the previous liquidation had withdrawn large quantity of paper from circulation, gold now flowi
full
back into its safes. This influx of gold continued throughout 1837;
was a disputed point whether the Bank
Ireland.
in
of England notes were legal tern to this uncertainty, the Bank of Ireland had to imp< a much larger quantity of gold than it would otherwise have needed and the Bank of England felt the effects of tlie run upon the Bank of Ireland. During the crisis the Bank of England notes were depreciated 2 5 per cent, in
Owing
Ireland.
THE CRISIS OF
1836-1839.
267
cember the metallic reserve was ^10,500,800. In March, 1838, the desired proportion was again attained, the assets being ^"10,527,000 in coin and bullion and ^21,046,000,
while the
liabilities
The
The
crisis
seemed
it
was only
just
beginning.
which had been excellent from 1833 to 1837, Such scarcity had not been known value of ^"10,000,000 had to be imported. The natural result was a great exportation of gold. Other causes combined with this primary one to increase the drain of gold. During the preceding years there had been a great misuse of credit and of paper money in America, France and Belgium. This in itself, by attracting large quantities of gold to England, had helped the Bank to replenish its coffers more rapidly. But this extension of credit stopped suddenly, as was indeed to be expected, and towards the end of 1838 a general collapse
harvests,
in 1838. since 1816; corn to the
came, the Bank of Belgium giving the signal for the crisis The Bank of France was by suspending its payments. almost to send to London for money obliged immediately in order to withstand a run upon it, whilst America, where the crisis was complicated by a currency reform, also helped to increase the drain on English gold. During this time the Bank of England had been acting in a manner very far from prudent. Seeing that gold came in plentifully, it reduced its rate of discount from 5 to 4 per Concent., and in November, 1838, even to 3j per cent.
sequently, at this latter date, at the very moment when the collapse of the Bank of Belgium gave clear warning of the imminence of a serious drain, the Bank rate was lower than the market rate. By way of meeting the danger, and not
content with increasing its discounts when it was evident that everyone was exporting gold to America, the Bank thought fit in the face of an unfavourable exchange to send a million to America on its own account! "Of all acts of mismanagement in the whole history of the Bank," " 1 this is probably the most astounding." says Macleod, When the drain began the Bank did not at first change
1
Op.
cit., p.
1016.
268
its
and
it
was not
until
May
I4th that
it
decided to
raise its discount rate to 5 per cent. Its metallic reserve, which, according to the statements of the directors, ought always to equal one-third of its liabilities, was then
,4,117,000, whilst the liabilities amounted to ,25,711,000. After this matters got worse, and on July 16 the reserve had fallen to ,2,987,000 and the Bank of England was face to face with bankruptcy. Some expedient had to be devised to avoid the suspension of payments. At first an attempt was made to sell " " dead weight annuities, but no purchaser could be found at the price demanded it was then decided to sell public securities to the value of ,700,000 and later, in May, bills were drawn upon Paris for ,600,000. But when these expired the Bank was quite unable to meet them and the foreign bankers, understanding the situation, hastened to
:
London. seemed desperate, and would actually have been Things so if the Bank of France had not come to the rescue of the Bank of England, as indeed it had to do on a second occaBut since the Bank of England sion, fifty years later. was not in the habit of drawing on foreign countries and the Bank of France was unaccustomed to make loans except by discounting bills of exchange or on public securities, it was arranged that Baring Brothers should draw bills of exchange on twelve Parisian bankers to the amount of
realise their securities in
,2,000,000, whilst the Bank of France undertook to disA similar transaction with Hamburg count these bills. 1
in
stopping the
The reserve was at its lowest on Septemwhen it amounted to ^2,406,000; after this it
Bankruptcy had been avoided, but at what liquidation went on until 1843 and during the crisis sixty-three country banks, of which twenty-nine 2 issued notes, had had to suspend payments.
slowly rose.
cost
!
The
Compare
Levi, p. 224.
movement for reform aroused by the crisis of 1836-1839. Numerous schemes proposed. Two main tendencies (a) The Banking Principle Its chief exponents, Tooke, Fullarton and Wilson. The essence of the Banking Principle, Current errors on this subject. Criticism and dangers of Statement of the Currency the theory, (b) The Currency Principle The theoretical and practical errors involved. Success of the Principle. Currency Principle. Need to examine the practical form under which this theory presented itself in England.
:
THE
1 England. The most competent financiers and men of business were convinced that the intensity of the crisis was due
currency and that unlimited freefor a country exposed, by its as commercial centre of the world, to exceptional position the effects of the crises occurring on all the other markets of
to the fluctuations in the
dom
of issue
was a danger
production and consumption. It was pointed out on all sides that most of the banks of issue that had failed had not been on a satisfactory basis
;
usually been founded in the hope of finding, through the issue of paper money, the means to negotiate big enterprises and hence to make large profits, and that of the twenty-nine institutions which had disthat
they
had
appeared beween 1839 an d 1843, seventeen had never paid any dividend. An epigram much in vogue at the time " asserted that, Free trade in banking is synonymous with free trade in swindling." This being the prevailing state of mind, it was not surprising to find a number of pamphlets appearing and a thousand systems being proposed, each of which, according to its author, would prove a sovereign remedy.
1
24
270
It
would be impossible here to discuss all the plans sugMoreover the various schemes quickly grouped gested. themselves round two opposing theories the Banking PrinWe propose to examine ciple and the Currency Principle. these two theories and seek to find out the partial truth contained in each, while briefly noticing the chief of the works in which they were originally stated. 2 Then we shall consider the practical form assumed by that one of the systems which ultimately won the day.
I.
THE BANKING
PRINCIPLE.
Statement of the Banking Principle. The advocates of the Banking Principle were believers, not, as has often been wrongly asserted, in unlimited competition in the matter of issues, but in the absence of a definite limit im3 posed on the issues, which is quite a different thing. They
A.
The
chief of these
(1851).
and Banking
pp. 289-356.
2
have been very clearly stated in Gilbart's Currency See the works of this author in six volumes, Vol. IV.,
Apart from contemporary writings and the evidence, which is well worth study, given before the various Committees of Inquiry between 1840 and 1858, statements of the controversy between the Banking and the Currency Principles are given by J. T. Danson, On the Account of the Bank of England under the operation of the Act 7 and 8 Viet., ch. 32 (in the Journal of the Statistical Society, Vol. X.), by Roscher, Nationalokonomik des Handels und Geiverbfleisses, pp. 314-332, and in several other works on Political Economy or on Banking. More recently the question has been summarised in a most able manner by Dr. N. G. Pierson, the well-known Dutch economist. See Principles of Economics, English translation, by A. A. Wotzel, pp. 454-461.
is the chief representative of the Prices, Vol. III., pp. 201-208. Tooke, issue of notes, lays down most strongly, as a principle, the right of the State to make regulations in such a matter. " as an undoubted " I am here assuming," he says (p. 206), right on the part of the State, the principle that banks of issue are properly subjects for regulaAs to free banking, in the sense in which it is sometimes contended for, tion. I agree with an American writer, who observes that free trade in banking is synonymous with free trade in swindling." On the following page Tooke adds that there can be no question of free competition, since the issue of paper it is a thing as a substitute for coin is not a branch of productive industry which ought to be regulated by the State and be included in the department a similar of administration. statement in Tooke's other book, An Compare is
8
This
especially true of
Tooke, who
Inquiry, p. 105. The full exposition of Tooke's theories on banking will be found in his History of Prices, particularly in the 3rd volume, chapters iii. and v. in his evidence before the Committees of Inquiry, of which a critical summary is given by Poor, op. cit., pp. 313-317, and in a special work, An Inquiry into
;
271
to legal measures taken with the object of guaranteeing the quality of the notes, but they were opposed to any which tended to restrict the quantity
of the paper money issued. In fact, they maintained that an over-issue could involve no danger either for the issuing
bank or
vertible.
for the public so long as the notes remained conIf the conversion of the notes into gold was not
assured,
enough.
,
the danger from an excessive issue was evident But otherwise there w as no risk whatever to be
r
feared, because
it
was impossible
occur.
For how could such an over-issue take place ? In the first place the notes are only issued in the course of banking transactions, that is, in discounting or making advances on The amount of the issue therefore depends, securities.
not on the wishes of the Bank, but on the needs of the 2 The number of notes issued by the Bank will public.
depend on the amount of the bills presented for discount and this in its turn will depend on the activity of business.
the Currency Principle, the connection of the currency with prices, and the expediency of a separation of Issue from Banking. Tooke's two most important supporters were J. Fullarton, On the Regulation of Currencies and the working of the new Bank Act (1844), and James Wilson, Capital, Currency and Banking, a collection of articles re-published from the Economist, 2nd edition, 1859. The latter has been translated into Italian. See Biblioteca dell' Economista, 2nd series, Vol. VI.
ability,
these writers have been ansv/ered at great length, if not with great by Torrens. See The Principles and Practical Operation of Sir Robert Peel's Act of 1844 explained and defended, pp. 189-299. The 3rd edition, 1858, of this work also contains a refutation of J. S. Mill's theories on currency, and of the article by Danson to which we have just referred.
All
For the sake of completeness we may notice also a work by Charles Tennant called The Bank of England and the organisation of Credit in EngBut land, which contains, pp. 15-17, a refutation of the currency principle. this lengthy (990 pp.) book is hardly worth the trouble of reading. The 3rd
edition,
1867, contains a translation of the evidence of the brothers Pereire before the Committee of Inquiry in 1865 concerning the Bank of France, and a correspondence between Tennant and Wolowski.
1
See especially Chapter V. in Fullarton 's book, a chapter entitled, Proof of the impossibility of Over-Issue. " It is " in the not," says Tooke, power of Banks of Issue, including the Bank of England, to make any direct addition to the amount of notes circulating in their respective districts, however disposed they may be to do
1
so."
Compare History of Prices, Vol. III., pp. 373-374. p. 123. op. cit., p. 377, remarks that this is only true in theory, since an unscrupulous banker, whose sole object is to attract customers, could always by lowering his rate of discount enough, unduly extend his business and hence also his issues.
M. Gide,
See Inquiry,
272
In the second place, Bank notes only remain in circulation 1 for a very limited time, they return to the Bank a few weeks after issue. Hence, even if the Bank managed to issue notes
could not keep them in circulaissued they necessarily many become depreciated and the least depreciation will be enough to bring them all back to the Bank in a body. To sum up, it is evident, say the advocates of the Banking Principle, that a bank can only circulate a certain quantity of notes, which quantity is determined by force of circumin
it
tion,
too
notes are
stances, and that any over-issue will return to the bank as if contracted by an iron law. This is the B. Criticism of the Banking Principle.
the Banking Principle; it has often been and Mr. Pierson has quite recently once again demonstrated its weakness. This able Dutch economist,
theory
known as
refuted
while admitting that excessive issues are returned to the Bank, expresses surprise that this should be considered a safeguard, whereas it is precisely in this fact that the danger " The amount of the circulation continues the same, it lies. unis true, but its components are no longer the same circulation and the covered is substituted for covered relation between metallic reserve and note circulation be'
'
'
'
comes less favourable.** Mr. Pierson 2 gives the following illustration in support of his reasoning Suppose that a bank has a note circulation amounting to ; 18,000,000 and a metallic reserve of " It grants loans for a further ,2,000,000, but ;8, 000,000. not the public does require more than ^18,000,000 in notes;
:
the extra ,2,000,000 put into circulation will therefore cause a redundancy of money. It now becomes advantageous to
export coin or bullion and that coin or bullion is obtainable The extra 2 millions at the bank in exchange for notes." will now return to the bank and the circulation will be again
1 This is true. As we shall see below (Part II., p. 298), it has been calculated that the average time during which each note remains in circulatic notes of higher value; is 70 days for $ notes and from 58 to 9 days for indeed, the ^1,000 notes only circulate, on the average, for a single week.
See op.
cit.,
pp. 458-460.
273
reduced to 18 millions. But against these 18 millions the " The bank may bank's reserve will now be only 6 millions. It this for a course time. may increase its pursue long
loans up to ^18,000,000, the amount of its note circulation remaining all the while at the old figure." But the whole reserve, that is, the guarantee of the convertibility of the
notes, will
THE CURRENCY
PRINCIPLE.
A.
the
According
to to
Bank was
extend
as possible, provided of that were in these sound character, without any course, that it had a special function to perform of greater feeling importance than all its other functions and to which these
much
must of necessity be sacrificed. 1 The Currency Principle embodied a totally different view of the position of the Bank of England. The primary function of the Bank was not the transaction of business, but the maintenance of a sufficient reserve on behalf of the nation to enable the latter to meet its liabilities with other countries.
of the Currency Principle took up the their starting point. There was, Lord as following position Overstone repeatedly asserted, a certain quantity of gold in
The supporters 2
it
to
1
which
it
has a right.
Leroy-Beaulieu, Cours d'c. Polit., Vol. III., p. 590. The inventor and the most important advocate of the Currency Principle 'is undoubtedly the London banker, S. J. Loyd, who was afterwards raised to the peerage as Lord Overstone. Between 1837 and 1848 Loyd wrote a series of pamphlets in support of his system. These pamphlets, together with the ijletters contributed by Lord Overstone to the Times between 1855 and 1857, L on the state of the currency and his evidence before the Committees of 1840 and 1848, were collected and published in a volume by McCulloch in 1858, under the title of Tracts and other Publications on Metallic and Paper
2
:
Currency.
I
Lord Overstone was vigorously supported by Colonel Torrens, see A Letter to the Right Hon. Viscount Melbourne, on the causes of the recent 'derangement of the Money Market (1837), and The Principles and Practical Operation of Sir R. Peel's Act explained and defended (3rd edition, 1858), and by Geo. Warde Norman, Remarks on some prevalent errors with respect to currency and banking (1838), and .4 letter to C. Wood, Esq., on Money and
lithe
of the
Currency Principle
in the first
274
would always include such a propor1 might be needful. In fact, in the case of a country without any paper currency, there could be no scarcity of metallic money. An
poor, but
capital
tion of coined
money
as
unfavourable balance of trade could not cause the permanent exportation of the coin and bullion for a scarcity of money increases its value, this produces a fall in prices and hence a decrease in imports and an increase in exports, which will continue until the country has once more an
;
Things are different in the case of a country which has a mixed currency, that is, paper money combined with coined money. Here, if the balance of trade is unfavourable and gold is exported, there is no ground for hoping that its absence will be short; in actual fact the banks will increase their paper circulation and since the circulating medium is no scarcer, prices will not fall. It may even be feared that the situation, instead of improving, will become increasingly serious. The metallic money may even be entirely driven out without prices being at all reduced. What is the remedy for such a state of things ?
The supporters
it
:
of the
that
was as follows 2 A decrease in the circulation, of whatever kind, must never be replaced by paper. It ought to be illegal for banks to substitute paper for the gold exported,
or better
still,
; J. Loyd, Further Reflections on the Currency, p. 34. Norman also, who is at times hesitating in his conclusions, seems to be Before the Committee of Inquiry (Question quite decided upon this point. 1749) he stated that notes are preferable to coin because they are cheaper and more convenient, but that they ought not to be preferred unless they also possess the other qualities of a metallic currency and in particular, unless they increase or diminish in the same way as a metallic currency would do. In his Remarks, Norman alleges that the existing paper circulation suffered from the following disadvantages, which were due to the fact that it was not regulated upon the metallic circulation " i. A tendency to vary in amount both as to excess or deficiency in an unnecessary degree and at unsuitable periods. " 2. A liability to discredit ... in a large proportion, if not the wl of it. " 3. Insolvency on the part of many of the issuers."
:
Compare Norman, A letter to C. Wood, Esq., p. 17. See Torrens, A Letter to Lord Melbourne, p. 29 S.
275
The
defects in
by
the advocates of the Currency " that a bank invariably Principle was that of supposing does wrong when it supplies a deficiency in the monetary
first
The
mistake
made by
by issuing notes.'* This view would oblige us one of the greatest advantages of a well-regulated forego banking system." In fact, in the case of a demand due to a panic or to a great exportation of bullion resulting from a bad harvest, it is the bank's duty to assist the public, lest, in order to obtain precious metal for which paper money might quite well be temporarily substituted, people are forced at an unfavourable moment to sell either securities, which may be excellent in themselves, or, in the case of farmers, machinery or cattle. It will be time enough for the
circulation
to
"
bank gradually
to restrict its issues and to refill its coffers when the crisis is past and the public have been helped. The Currency Principle involves a second no less serious It is not true that, in a country where no bank mistake.
'
immediate fall in prices and consequently in an alteration in the balance of payments. It would be so if bank notes were the only possible substitutes for specie; but bank deposits
also serve as substitutes for specie." But bank notes and bank deposits differ only in form, since both take the place
of specie "
"
when they are not covered by a metallic reserve." Let the needful stock of media of payment," says Mr. Pierson in illustration,'2 " be represented by the figure 100, and suppose it to be made up of specie and bank deposits each to the extent of 50. If specie be now exported to the value of 10, but the banks at the same time grant credits to
their depositors to the
Op. cit., pp. 456-458. In spite of the defects he points out, Mr. Pierson considers that the Currency Principle is less dangerous than the Banking Principle and agrees with Bagehot in preferring the mediocre rules imposed on the Bank directors by the Act of 1844, to those which they might have invented for themselves. See p. 461.
3
P-
457-
276
. . .
credits
with which people pay each other. A deposit bank its depositors' accounts, and the balances produced in this way also constitute a medium of payment."
The exponents
this
of
1
fact, recognise As the Dictionary of Political accepted by economists. 2 it "It marks the difference between those Economy puts who regard bank notes as money,' and those who con:
'
the Currency Principle refused to hence their theory has never been
sider them,
credit,'
in
'
the words of
Huskisson, as
.
.
'
circulating
insisting,
and a
While
and properly, on adequate security being given for bank note, the Currency doctrine leaves out of sight
the the
operation of all other instruments of credit, equally effective in their way, as bank notes, on price and the movements of commodities."
In excuse for Lord Overstone it has been pointed out that notes then formed the principal part of bankers' liabilities, For instance, in deposits played only a secondary part. the of circulation Bank the amounted to February, 1820,
in deposits were ,4,000,000; were and February, 1890, they respectively ^23,500,000 But although the deposits were small in ;35, 000,000. amount in 1820, their character, their advantages and the And future before them were clearly understood by 1844. the thanks to the that after out Tooke, deposits, pointing
^23,000,000,
while
the
money
as well or even
which
It is
this
notes, of payment w^ould undergo. difficult to decide in favour of either one of these
Bank
method
Apparently Torrens must be included among those exponents of Currency Principle who were unwilling to recognise this. Compare pp. 6-12 of his letter to Lord Melbourne, and pp. 6 and 9 of his Principles and Practical Operations. On p. 8 of this latter work Torrens finally says that a cheque is distinct from money, because it possesses a power of purchase but not of liquidating debt, since if it is not subsequently honoured the transaction conies
to nothing.
2
8
Vol.
I.,
p. 473-
Cheques, according to Tooke (Inquiry, Chap, v., Deposits and Cheq they save possess the following advantages compared with bank notes worry of having to pay the fractions of the sum owed in coin and the ri of theft and fire they do not necessitate a receipt, since the banker's are sufficient proof of payment, etc., etc.
:
277
opposing principles. Apart from defects of theory, they both have their practical disadvantages, and in general it
be said, that as regards the regulation of issues, all systems risk one or other of two dangers either the paper
may
currency
is
unduly
restricted or
it
is left
so free as to en-
danger security. For the rest, the discussion of the merits and demerits of these two systems is not only, speaking generally, someW'hat futile and very dull, but is also rather out of place in an historical work. Whatever may in reality be the advantages of the Banking Principle (and it may be noted that as applied in a prudent manner in France its results are far from bad), it was very soon rejected in England. Hence it is more important to examine the practical form given by the exponents of the Currency Principle to their theory, and the methods by which they wished to enforce it. For this purpose we judge it advisable to begin by analysing Lord Overstone's numerous pamphlets, and in so doing to compare his proposals with those of Torrens and Norman. This study will have the double advantage of giving a
closer
its
knowledge of the Currency Principle and of explaining beforehand the ideas which inspired the legislation of
1844.
CHAPTER
V.
" Reflections Suggested by Mr. Palmer's Analysis of the Pamphlet." Lord Overstone and the Bank of England Criticism of the Suggests two reforms (a) Full publication of organisation of the Bank. Colonel Torrens' accounts, (b) Division of Bank into two departments. Lord Overstone plan. Bank obliged to purchase bullion at a fixed price.
: :
chief
plicity of
and the country banks of issue Numerous disadvantages in the multibanks of issue. Need for strengthening the central monopoly of issue Summary of the proposals of the advocates of the Currency
:
Principle.
THE Currency Principle was expounded for the first time in a pamphlet by S. J. Loyd, published in 1837 an d entitled, Reflections suggested by a perusal of Mr. ]. Horsley Palmer's pamphlet on the causes and consequences of the pressure on the Money Market, which is a reply to a work of Palmer's already referred to, on the crisis of 1836. This pamphlet, the first which Loyd wrote, 1 merits careful study for it contains in germ the Act of 1844. It recommends, indeed, as much the reform of the Bank of England as the reform of English banks. The author begins by an examination of the rules which govern the Bank of Eng-i
1 He wrote many Others afterwards ; McCulloch's edition, to which all our references are made, contains the following Remarks on the Management and the Circulation, and on the condiI. tions and conduction of the Bank of England and of the country issues during the year 1839 (1840). A Letter to J. B. Smith, Esq., President of the Manchester Chamber II.
:
of
Commerce.
of the
Bank
of England.
A second
IV. Thoughts on the Separation of the departments of the Bank of England (1844). V. The petition of the Merchants, Bankers and Traders of London In collaboraagainst the Bank Charter Act, with comments on each clause.
tion with Torrens, 1847.
279
land and after pointing out their absurdity, suggests two remedies (a) the publication of the accounts in full, (b) the separation of the Bank into two departments. Loyd then
passes on to consider the system of country banking, finds
numerous defects in it, criticises the system of joint-stock banks and the confusion between banks of issue and banks of deposit and finally suggests as a remedy the extension
of the
We
I.
monopoly
of central issue.
According
"
capacities
i.
:
acts in
two
"
As
"-As a body performing the ordinary functions of a banking concern." These two functions are in themselves entirely distinct. Unfortunately this distinction has not been sufficiently
2.
down by
the
Bank
for its
own guidance.
Lord Overstone 1 proceeds to describe this principle as formulated by Mr. Palmer as follows: that "against the amount of notes out it shall hold at its disposal securities and specie, that the amount of securities shall be invariable, and that consequently all fluctuations in the amount of notes out shall be met by a corresponding fluctuation in the amount of specie in deposit; thus the public, and not the Bank, will be made the regulators of the amount of the circulation, and that amount will by this principle be made to fluctuate precisely as it would have fluctuated had the currency been purely metallic." Lord Overstone goes on to point out that this rule is only accurate in reference to the Bank as a manager of the circulation it is quite unworkable in regard to the Bank of England considered as an ordinary banking concern. For "it is in the nature of banking business that the amount of its deposits should vary with a variety of circumstances;
;
280
and as its amount of deposits varies, the amount of that in which those deposits are invested (viz., the securities) must vary also." Hence it is absurd to expect the Bank of England, as a banking concern, to keep the amount of its securities invariable, any more than this is done by any
other banking establishment. The rule as stated by the Bank's directors is therefore What method should be adopted to secure a circulafalse.
tion
which will fluctuate as though it were metallic ? The methods are two (i) The publication of simple,
:
full
and
into
i.
intelligible accounts.
(2)
The
separation of the
Bank
in the
to be,
amount of circulation shall correspond the amount of bullion, and the adherence of the Bank to this rule ought to be obvious upon the face of the published accounts. By this means, and by this means only, can we obtain a paper circulation varying in amount exactly as the circulation would have varied had it been metallic and, in
to the variations in
;
addition to the establishment of this only sound principle of currency, we shall obtain a simple and intelligible
account, requiring no further explanation, nor the production of any information not at the command of the public." 2. Were the management of the currency, Lord
1
to
its operations. The importance of a adherence to this rule cannot be over-estimated; and rigid if it be incompatible, as is alleged by some, with the mixed functions of the Bank of England, it seems to become a very serious question whether it is not better to separate alt< gether the business of banking from that of regulating tl currency, rather than suffer so essential a rule to be in an] " degree compromised Moreover it is difficult to see any insurmountabl
obstacles to this separation. "In proportion as these functions are kept distinct will each be rendered moi
1
281
suggest
naturalists, whose peculiar property it is that, Iwhen cut into two parts, they move off in opposite directions, leach half equally full of life and energy."
Iscribed
by
Torrens, in his
letter to
scheme
Bank into two departments. This scheme, which was much more detailed than that just described by Loyd, was imitated in the Act of 1844; ^ must 1 therefore be briefly noticed.
for the division of the
las
issue department, or the department of circulation Torrens called it, was to confine itself to exchanging gold for notes, and notes for gold. It was also to be subject to
:
The
buy
It
pounds.
2.
(foreign gold
in bullion at
with permission to sell it at It was 3 175. gd. 3. jounce, to be authorised to lend notes on coin or bullion at a very low rate, say i per cent., so as to give facilities to trade without disturbing the circulation.
1
to
be published in
full.
of
:
After criticising the rules according to which the Bank England was managed and pointing out the changes hich he thought were needed, Lord Overstone goes
to criticise the
idit.
>n
organisation of provincial
facilities
for
'he existing
Torrens' scheme was ably summarised by G. W. Norman, who was in See also an advocate of the separation into two departments. 'emarks, pp. 98 and 105.
le
main
p.
In the author's opinion these criticisms applied as much to the Hence he suggested a little to the country banks. rther on, p. 38, that the issue department should be controlled by a comthe Government should sit. For a similar of littee on which a representative he advocates the appointment of a committee roposal see Torrens, p. 64 losen by the Government and Parliament.
a
13.
ink of
England as
282
absolutely distinct functions. Moreover the persons who " not a body of individuals exercise the right of issue are
to exercise
qualified (by their total separation from all such interests) a dispassionate and disinterested judgment; but,
on the contrary, men the most largely engaged in mercantile and monied operations, and, therefore, more than any other class exposed in their private interests to the immediate
effects of
Again, with respect to joint-stock banks, we create by law large and powerful establishments, to which is given the right to issue paper money without any absolute restriction and even that knowledge of the action of the Bank which is essential to enable them to take a just view of the condition
;
"
of the currency
to
Besides
Loyd
corresponding duty, is afforded imperfect and delusive accounts." 2 continues a little further on, banks
their
.
.
1
banks of discount, whereas the " The sole duty objects of the two are entirely different. of the former ... is to take efficient means for issuing its
of issue are confused with
paper
amount
security and regulating the fixed rule. The principal object and business of the latter ... is to obtain the command of as
by one
large a proportion as possible of the existing circulating medium and to distribute it in such a manner as shall combine security for repayment with the highest rate of profit."
Loyd concluded
central
that
it
was necessary
to strengthen the
" 4 when prices are rising, profits inexplains that creasing, and every merchant ... is desirous of extending his operations," and demands credit for this purpose, the banker's position is difficult. His relations with trade are intimate and it is unpleasant for him to refuse the credit, " however much it
monopoly
of issue. 3
He
may
be his duty
to
do
so.
If
under
the*
at the
same
abuses in the management of the issues and the resemblance between right of issue and that of coining money as possessed by powerful subjects barbaric times.
283
his ordinary and legitimate resources, is also Jperly called entrusted with the power of issuing paper money ad libitum;
Can lis it not inevitable that he should abuse that power? Iwe expect that under such circumstances, whilst all his other are strained to the utmost for the accommodation jresources his customers, he will still keep a firm and unyielding pf restraint over the amount of his issues ? Will he under such
temptation
jspective
in no respect confound or compromise his reduties as a Banker of Issue and a Banker of
?
"
knowledge of human nature and experience, combined a study of the Bank returns, prove that he will not resist, and that the result will be a confusion of and a com" The effect ... of between the two functions. JDromise isuch an application by the Banker of his power to issue will
ivrith
pe
(
give a further stimulus to the existing tendencies of trading world, and ultimately to aggravate the convulhion to which they must lead." This is the outline of the practical application of the Currency Principle put forward by the chief exponents of he theory. The plan may be summarised, as far as conto
:he
:erns the
.
three heads:
circulation according to
it
fluctuations
ley.
:.
been coined
The
separation of the
Bank
into
two departments,
the regular publication of clear and full balance sheets. The obligation imposed on the Bank to buy gold at
fed price.
regards country banks, the multiplication of banks was opposed and the extension of the central mopoly of issue was demanded, so that the indirect control [ercised over the provincial issues might be more powerful
issue
id
more
efficient.
CHAPTER
SIR
(a)
VI.
1844.
INTERVENTION OF SIR ROBERT PEEL; (b) THE ACT OF 1844; (c) THE ACT OF 1844 AND RICARDO'S PLAN FOR A NATIONAL BANK.
the
Peel's theories on banking. His two Speeches in of Commons. His Memorandum to the Cabinet. Peel's rejection of free competition as regards note issue. Argument from reason.
House
Argument from experience disastrous part played by country banks. Reasons why this should be the Necessity for a central bank of issue Bank of England. The Act of 1844 passed without opposition. Chief provisions of the Act. As regards the Bank of England. As regards the country banks of issue. Limitation and gradual loss of the right of issue.
;
THE
the
dispute between the advocates of the Currency and of Banking Principles might have gone on for a long
time.
years,
The Committees of Inquiry had been sitting for five and had asked more than 14,000 questions without
1
;
indeed, without even reaching any definite conclusion a there was then at the head presenting report. Fortunately of affairs a man whose intelligence was equal to his high 2 character, and who, with Canning and Gladstone, ranks among the most eminent English statesmen in the igth
century.
Robert Peel, for it is to him that we refer, had been a Conservative all his life, but a Conservative of that English type which does not confuse conservatism with reaction and never shrinks from a necessary reform. He considered that
That is, 3,000 questions in 1836; 4,570 in 1837; 1,700 in 1838; 3,859 in See Peel's speech on December 3, 1847, 1840; and nearly 1,000 in 1841. ParL Debates, Vol. XCV., p. 655. 3 Were it not for my national feeling I should rank Peel even above Canning and Gladstone he was placed in more difficult circumstances than the former and showed himself equally courageous but less nervous than the latter. It must also be noted that Gladstone owed some of his greatest financial successes to the apprenticeship which he served under Peel.
;
SIR
it
1844.
285
was time to have done with theoretical discussions and to come to the actual reform for which everyone wished, but as
whose exact form no one could agree. Peel took advantage of a clause in the law of 1833 which empowered the Government to suspend the Bank's charter in 1845, and after careful reflection he brought in the Bill which was to become the Bank Charter Act of 1844.
to
This
Bill is
shall examine exponents of the Currency Principle. in Peel their favour, which decided reasons the presently
We
>
be noticed at the outset that Peel did not come to banking problems with an absolutely open mind. He had been so strongly impressed by the evils of over-issue, the most dangerous of the abuses to which banking is liable, which had displayed themselves with extraordinary violence between 1836 and 1839, that he became 1 almost blind to any other consideration.
but
it
may
the study of
(a)
Although the banking question finds no place in the Memoirs 2 of the great English statesman, Sir Robert Peel's views on the matter are fully stated in a Memorandum which he laid before the Cabinet 3 and in two speeches, remarkable
It is interesting to notice that the misuse of paper money always produces for remedies of extraordinary severity and an entire forgetfulness of the possible uses of this paper. Macleod (Vol. I., p. 267), quotes a Chinese author, who, writing in 1309, at a time when the Chinese currency had been thrown into extreme disorder by over-issues, regretted former days in the fol" Then it was ordered that at the offices of the rich merchants lowing words
1
demand
who managed the enterprise, when notes were paid in the money came out, when the bills came out the money went in. The money was the mother, the note was the son. The son and the mother were reciprocally exchanged
for each other."
is
forth in the year 1309 by a Chinese (Theory and Practice of Banking, 3rd
See Memoirs, published by Lord Stanhope and Lord Cardwell. These memoirs are divided into three parts (i) The Roman Catholic Question The New Government, 1834-5 (3) Repeal of the Corn Laws, 1845-6. (2)
:
;
This Memorandum has been recently published in a work by Charles Stuart Parker, Sir Robert Peel from his Private Papers, Vol. III., p. 134, et Lord seq. Rosebery published an analysis of Parker's book in the AngloSaxon Review; this analysis, which is in fact a brilliant essay, has been issued in a volume entitled Sir Robert Peel.
*
286
and closeness of reasoning, made on 20 in the House of Commons, and which supplied the explanation and justification of the law of
May
May
I844.
After inquiring, What is the signification of that word " 'a pound,' and answering that it is " a quantity of the precious metals of certain weight and certain fineness," Peel
"
proceeded to deduce from this definition the various conse2 He then pointed out the distinction quences implied in it. between bank notes and other forms of paper credit and
tried to show that the convertibility of the note did not afford sufficient guarantee against the dangers of excessive He rejected the doctrine of free competition in the issue.
(a)
from reasoning," says Peel, that free competition in the supply of any given article will probably ensure us the most abundant supply of that article at the cheapest rate. But we do not want an abundant just supply of cheap promissory paper. We want only such a quantity of paper ... as shall be equivalent in point That system, of value to the coin which it represents. therefore, which provides a constant supply of paper equal
"
certainly,
.
in value to coin,
all
and so varying
in
amount as
to
ensure
at
times immediate convertibility into coin, together with perfect confidence in the solvency of the issuers of paper, is the system which ought to be preferred." Quality, not
1
For Peel's two speeches see The Speeches of the Right Hon. Sir R. Peel, delivered in the House of Commons, Vol. IV., pp. 349-366 and 374-385 reA translation of them spectively and, A Corner in Gold, Appendix, p. 113. has been published in the Journal des jconomistcs, Vol. III., pp. 251 and William Taylor gives a summary of them in Life and Times of Sir 357R. Peel, Vol. III., pp. 259-276. Taylor's work, in three volumes, is una fourth volume has been added by Ch. Mackay, and contains an finished account of Peel's life from his retirement until his death. The whole work is of little value.
;
2
3
p. 351.
SIR
1844.
287
cheapness, is required, and this quality cannot be regulated " Unless the issuers of paper by an unlimited competition. unless conform to certain principles, they vigilantly observe
the causes which influence the influx or efflux of coin, and regulate their issues of paper accordingly, there is danger
that the value of the paper will not correspond with the That is, there will be an excessive issue.
(b)
1
Peel goes on to discuss the arguments which he deduces from the history of the country banks of issue. Competition among the country banks is determined by the feeling which makes each issuer say, " naturally enough, It is vain for
'
me
individually to contract
my
issues
when
do the same. I shall suffer by doing so. My efforts will produce no effect on the aggregate, while some competitor will take that share of the circulation which I may withdraw.' And thus, each refusing to make the individual
sacrifice,
. .
The
of
England to great danger Peel thought, on four occasions, owing to the unwillingness or inability of the country banks
to contract their issues.
The
Between 1839 and 1843, 82 banks, of which 29 were banks of issue, 3 failed; 240 suspended payment between 1814 and 1816 and similar disasters occurred from 1825 to 1840. The
great losses resulting from these failures ought to be considered and it must be remembered that the worst suffering
fell
it
the situation
the
more
2 3
Out
of these 29, 17
288
own
neighbourhood. Peel concluded his criticism of the existing system by citing in addition to the example of the English country banks, that of the American banks, an illustration which appears somewhat ill-chosen then he passed on to explain the system whose adoption he recommended.
;
In brief the
in this
that a central
bank
With
single bank could no doubt be specially established, but " the true policy in this country is to work, so far as it be
possible, with the instruments you have ready to your hand to avail yourselves of that advantage which they possess from having been in use, from being familiar from constitut-
ing a part of the habits and usages of society. They will probably work more smoothly than perfectly novel instruthink it ments of greater theoretical perfection. 1
. . .
We
Bank
of
England as
that
controlling and
central
So much
2
1844
it
remains
(b)
THE ACT OF
1844.
was passed by the House of Commons with hardly any opposition by 185 votes to 30. In the House of Lords things went even more smoothly and after a single protest from Lord Radnor, it was passed without a
The Act
of 1844
division.
1 See p. 360. In his Memorandum Peel rejects the idea of a special board of issue, independent of the Government but responsible to Parliament (see pp. 135-137). Amongst other disadvantages, he thinks that it would be inconvenient to impose a uniform system upon each of the three divisions of the United Kingdom, when, as things are, each has a differently organised cur-
rency.
2
p. 73.
Peel, in speaking of the regular publication of accounts (p. 360), says that (C nothing will more conduce to the credit of the Bank itself and to the prevention of needless alarm."
SIR
1844.
289
The chief provisions of the new law can be grouped under two heads those which concern the Bank of England and shall discuss those which concern the country banks. each in turn.
:
We
I.
i.
to After August 3ist, 1844, the and be divided into two departments, the issue department the banking department.
the same day the Governor and Company of the Bank England must transfer to the issue department securities to the value of ^14,000,000, of which the Government debt to the bank (say ; 11,000,000) w as to form a part, and also all the gold coin and gold and silver bullion not needed in
of
r
On
the
banking department.
silver in the Issue
to
The
;
was never
was
of
to
hand over
equal
to the
notes
to
the
and bullion, so transferred to it. In other words the Bank might issue notes against securities to the amount of 14 millions, but beyond this sum
could not issue a single note except against coin or bullion. 2. If any banker who had retained the right of issue ceased to exercise this privilege, the Bank of England might
increase the
it
amount
department
by a
:
sum
from circulation.
In this
1
way
the
Bank gradually
This proportion has never actually been reached, but the Bank has at times held a considerable quantity of silver bullion. The maximum was attained on October 3rd, 1846, when the Bank had a reserve of ,2,727,000 in silver and ^12,632,000 in gold. Since August 2Oth, 1853, the balance sheet of the Bank has ceased to quote the stock of silver except during the very short interval between November 28th, 1860, and July 3rd, 1861, when the Bank held some silver bullion, though no great amount. For the stock of silver bullion held by the Bank of England see Palgrave, The Bank Rate and
the
I., p.
80.
ago
We
their privilege shall see that, thanks to this of England has extended its
i.e.,
of
issue
1
considerably,
from
^14,000,000
to
i8,45o,ooo.
3.
'
all stamp duty on its the but in return for notes, privileges granted to it the annual sum paid to the Government was increased from 1 80,000. 1 20,000 to ; ; was entitled to demand notes from the Bank 4. Anyone in exchange for standard gold at the rate of ^3 173. gd. per ounce. In other words, the Bank is forced to buy at a fixed price
all
it.
5. Weekly accounts in a specified form were to be sent to the Government and published in the London Gazette. The importance of this last reform will be understood from a comparison of the balance sheets of the Bank before and after the law of 1844.
Weekly Return
September
of the
Bank
of
:
7th, 1844
(New form)
Issue Department.
Notes issued
..
28,351,295
Government Debt
.
11,015,
Silver
bullion
12,657,208 1,694,087
28,351,295
28,351,295
Proprietors'
Capital
.
Rest
Public
deposits deposits
.
.
. .
securities,
. .
bills
the dead2 weight annuity Other securities Notes Gold and silver coin
. . . .
857,765
31,423,240
31,423,240
M. MARSHALL, (Chief
1
Cashier).
p. 299.
yearly
payment
of
588,740
made by
in
the
for
Government
return for an
1823
SIR
1844.
291
form
London
292
The Act
of 1844
The Act provides that the right of issuing notes shall be confined to those bankers who possessed this privilege before 1844. Even in their case the right of issue was regulated
as follows
:
right of issue of each country bank was not to exceed the average issue of the twelve weeks preceding April 27th,
The
1844.
banker who became bankrupt was to forfeit his right If two or more banks afterwards became united they might not issue notes should the number of partners exceed six. The notes issued by country banks were not to be legal
Any
of issue.
tender.
It is
evident that the whole tendency of the Act of 1844 was to eliminate by degrees all notes except those of the
complicated nature is obvious, as are also the numerous precautions with which it hedged in the right 2 of issue. Wagner might well speak of Peel's Act as a "
strait waistcoat.*'
men, cannot be judged by appearances, and judge of the value of legislation, its practical results and the degree to which it has attained its object 3 must be examined. A banking system must moreover be studied both in ordinary times and in periods of crisis if a just appreciation of its influence is to be formed. We propose to do this with regard to the system of the Bank of England. But first we must say a word or two concerning a scheme which relike
But laws,
in order to
For the practical results of this clause see below, p. 299. In his article on Kredit und Banken in Schonberg (Handbuch d. Pol, Oekon.). See the Italian translation, Biblioteca dell' Economista, 3rd series,
3
We may
it
remark
through
to
'
SIR
1844.
293
tains a certain interest from the name of its author and which undoubtedly attracted Peel's notice. The scheme in question is Ricardo's plan for a National Bank.
1
(c)
COMPARISON BETWEEN PEEL'S ACT AND RICARDO'S PLAN FOR A NATIONAL BANK. Ricardo had previously recognised that the Bank of
distinct functions, (i) the issue of notes, business of the banking properly so called. He wished (2) to create a special body, a State bank, to which he would have entrusted the duties imposed by the Act of 1844 on the
banking department.
In short, Ricardo's National Bank was a State Treasury which issued notes. The notes were all to be issued against
gold, with the exception of a quantity, not to exceed 25 millions in value, which the Bank might issue uncovered. Of these 25 millions, 15 millions would have sufficed to
repay to the Bank of England the capital lent to the Government, and the 10 millions remaining would have served on the one hand to buy bullion, and on the other to redeem the Government debt to the Bank, which took the form of Ex-
chequer
bills.
first
"Ricardo's sight," says Courcelle-Seneuil, plan of a bank appears very different from the system established in England by Sir Robert Peel's Act. Ricardo, in
wished to have only a single bank of issue for United Kingdom, whereas several such banks still continue to exist in Great Britain. He suggested a State bank, while in actual fact the Bank of England has been maintained. But these two points are only secondary
fact,
"At
the
details in the plan of the great economist. The originality of his scheme lies in the definite restriction of the paper
circulation, the prohibition of the issue of notes payable to bearer in excess of a certain amount, except when secured
See Ricardo's posthumous work, Plan for a National Bank (1824). See articles 2 and 3 of the scheme. A French translation of the Plan given at the end of M. Courcelle Seneuil's book, appendix No. 2.
3
8
1
is
Loc.
cit.
294
by gold.
by Robert Peel." Ricardo's plan was answered as early as 1831 by McCul1 loch, and quite recently it has been again condemned by M. Leroy-Beaulieu. 2 According to the latter, 3 the only profit which the State could derive from Ricardo's bank would be that resulting from the issue of notes in excess of
the reserve. If it happened, as is the case to-day, that the metallic reserve exceeded the issues, the State would actually
lose.
1
See Chap.
of
The Bank
III. of his Historical Sketch of the Bank of England, headed England in connection with the Government and the Public. work was published anonymously, but McCulloch acknowledged
it
by placing
it
Economy.
See the analysis and refutation see also above, p. 288, pp. 639-645 especially Memorandum, pp. 135-137.
;
of Ricardo's plan,
op.
cit.,
p.
642.
PART
THE BANK OF ENGLAND
II.
IN
ORDINARY TIMES.
INTRODUCTION.
The works of Clare and Raffalovich. Outward Comparison with a French balance sheet. The separation of the Bank into two departments the issue department and The plan both dangerous and artificial. the banking department.
;
The amount
Authorised issue much reduced since 1844, the actual issue much less than The issue and circulation. Quantity Statistics. the authorised issue. of notes in circulation less during the last ten years than the metallic reserve of the Bank. Explanation of the fact. The function of cheques. The Clearing Houses in London and the provinces. Consideration of the English system of note issue. The English system indefensible from a
theoretical standpoint. The practical aspect of the question. Comparison between the Act of 1844 and the German Laws of 1875 and 1899.
The issue of notes of the issue and the part played by cheques. from an administrative standpoint. Manufacture of the notes. Destruction of all notes returned to the Bank. Average circulation of the notes. The issue of notes from a legal standpoint. Rules governing the issue Except for a fixed amount, the issue to be against gold. Rights of issue Present position of the question. held by certain country banks.
:
The Banking Department of the Bank of England is like any other bank This balance sheet, except that it must publish a weekly balance sheet. like all others, states the liabilities and the assets. The liabilities of the banking department. Proprietors' Capital and the Rest. Amount of the Capital Comparison with that of the Banks of France and of Germany. The Rest and its amount. Public Deposits. Amount and fluctuations of these. Other Deposits. The current account of the bankers. Advantage
;
of publishing a separate statement of this account, discontinued in 1877. Seven Day and other Bills. The assets of the Banking Department. The four headings under which the assets are divided are: (a) Government The Securities, (b) Other Securities, (c) Notes, (d) Gold and Silver Coin. two first constitute the investments of the Bank, and the two last its reserve.
THERE is no better guide to a study of the working of the Bank of England than one of the Returns which the Bank
issues weekly. Since 1844 the
clear
Bank's balance sheet has been remarkably and an examination of it, besides being of interest for
296
its
tions
own sake, will help us greatly now before us. By way of illustration we give
1
the
:
Bank Return
for the
i6th, 1903
Issue Department.
.50
Government Debt
.
.11,015,100
. .
7,434,900 32,204,500
,50.654,500
Proprietors' Capital
Rest
Public
......
.
i4553> 000
7,117,298 37,184,730 118,502
deposits deposits
.
.
.
.
silver coin
22,011,110 2,109,573
bills
62,727,399
62,727,399
Liabilities.
Specie (gold and silver coin and bullion) -34, 314,073 Securities 21,655,875
.
ion circulation
.28,643,390
118x02 118,5
Government
securities,
seven-
advances, and other marketable securities Government debt and other non-marketable
securities
16,950,841
....
18,450,000
Current account with Treasury Current accounts and deposit accounts Dividends unpaid
.
7,117,298
Shareholders' capital
91,360,789
The study
of the
I.
Bank
two sections
II.
Section Section
two absolutely separate departments, into two watertight compartments which are entirely disconnected,
into
1 For and Key
Bank
A complete analysis of it has been the Returns of the Bank of England. given by M. Raffalovich, Bilan de la Banque d'Angleterre, in the Journal des Jzconomistes for June, 1893.
9
this examination consult Clare (George), A Money Market Primer to the Exchanges. The first part of this excellent work deals with
Op.
cit.,
p.
44.
ISSUE DEPARTMENT.
is
297
may
sometimes be actually harmful. M. Wolowski, one of the advocates of the Act of 1844,
as follows : The expedient of separating the Bank into two departments does not seem to us to possess that high degree of importance which has been attributed to it a good system of accounts, like that of the Bank of France, is enough to enable people to judge of the various factors in the balance
criticises
it
l
"
It would be easy, were it thought necessary, to impose a definite limit to the issue of notes, without having recourse to the public parade of a division of functions between two branches of the same establish-
ment."
From another point of view, Mr. Palgrave, in a recent and most valuable book to which we have already referred, 1 expressly condemns the division of the Bank into two departments and attributes to it a considerable share in producing those variations in the discount rate which are so
frequent in England. In fact, the division of the Bank into two departments involves the separation of its resources into two very unequal parts, upon the smaller of which all the demands fall, demands which in England are naturally very large and may be unexpected. The Bank has thus to guard against a continual danger which would be far less formidable if a less artificial plan had been adopted.
SECTION
I.
THE
(a)
ISSUE
The amount
of
The Return
figures for
Notes issued
of the issue
September
.
i6th, 1903
.50,654,500
Government Debt
.
.11,015,100 7>4349oo
32,204,500
50,654,500
50.654.500
1
La Question des Banques, p. 362. The Bank Rate and the Money Market,
p.
198.
298
Thus
total issued
not
is
issue of notes
is
essential to understand.
the administrative point of view the issue of notes subjected to the following regulations :
1
From
Every note issued is entered in the registers of the issue department with its proper number and date, and these registers are duly made up at the end of each day, when the notes remaining over are returned to the cashier, whose accounts must thus show the number of notes issued in the
course of the year.
At the Bank
of
England
by the
issue
department are never returned into circulation a practice contrary to that adopted by most European banks. Such
notes are
first
submitted
for
to the test of
cancelled and then, after they have been a special system of book-keeping,
they are put away in the strong boxes, where they remain 2 seven years before being destroyed. The number of notes cashed each day varies roughly from 25,000 to 60,000. It has been calculated that the average time during which each note stays in circulation is 70 days
for
$ notes,
20, 50, 58 days for ^10 notes, 27 days for 100 notes, 9 days for ,200, ^300, and ^500 notes,
and and
From
The notes
of
bound
to
amount
which the greater part represent the Government debt to Bank. According to the Act of 1844 the "uncovered" issue amounted to 14 millions, of which 11 millions represented
the
1
Government
With regard
106,
to
debt.
How
to
be
(4th
edition), p.
and a most interesting lecture by Mr. Henry Bradbury On the Security and Manufacture of Bank Notes; compare also as a curiosity, Barlow, On a Bank of England Note, of which a summary is given by Lawson, History of Banking, pp. 149-150.
3
the preparation
the
Bank
notes see
Hankey
Noel,
p.
46.
ISSUE DEPARTMENT.
increased
to
299
is
^18,450,000?
This increase
due
to
the
loss of rights of issue possessed by country banks, of which rights, it will be remembered, the Bank of England inherits
two-thirds.
The Act
of 1844 recognised
207 Private Banks with a right of issue amounting to .5.153,417 ... ... ... ... ... 3,478,230 72 Joint Stock Banks
8,631,647
was as follows
Authorised Issue.
33 Private Banks 27 Joint Stock Banks
Actual Issue.
344*760 825,009
...... ......
1,120,588 I 54 I 735
The reduction in the rights of issue possessed by the country banks was one of the objects of the law of 1844 and 3 this object has evidently been attained most successfully. Moreover, the notes of the country banks are not legal tender and hence the bankers shrink from the risks involved in the issue of notes payable to bearer at sight and keep well within the legal limit. It is on this account that their actual issues are so much below their authorised issues.
1
I., p.
113.
The following table from the Quarterly Journal of Economics (Vol. XIV., p. 561, number for August, 1900) shows the various dates at which the Bank of England's right of issue has been increased and the amounts of the
respective increases
:
Years.
Amount
................................................ ................................................ ................................................
................................................ ................................................ ................................................ ................................................ ................................................
of Increase.
475.
975,000
Total
this must be added the original otal of There 17,775,000 for 1900. 675,000 since this date.
.........
3.775.ooo
To
sum
Many country banks have lost their right of issue through amalgamation with other firms.
300
must now consider the amount of the issues from another and a very important point of view. The note issue in England is smaller than in the other great European countries, but notwithstanding this it would be quite wrong to suppose that the whole of this issue
passes into circulation the greater part of it is kept at the Bank as " reserve." For the last ten years the value of the notes in circulation has been less than the value of the gold
;
We
in the issue
department.
16, 1903, out of ^50,654,500 of notes issued, ^22,011,110 were in the banking department, which reduces the total of notes in circulation to ,28,643,390,
Thus on September
against which a gold reserve of ^32,204,500 was held. Thus we get a curious application of Vice's theory on spiral progression and are carried back to the banking systems at the end of the Renaissance bank notes, in fact, have once more become certificates of deposit, but resting on better security than did the original ones. And more even than this, a considerable portion of the 28 millions, i.e., more than 4 millions, 2 is not actually in cir;
up
in safes,
reserve of
fears.
ISSUE DEPARTMENT.
301
The question then arises, how, with a paper circulation of 1 28 millions (of which, we repeat, at most 24 millions are in the hands of the public), and a metallic currency actually much scantier than that of France, 2 England is able to carry on more transactions than the latter country ? The explanation of this must be sought in the fact that in England notes and coin are merely a subsidiary means of making
payments. The latter are made through bills and, above all, through cheques, thanks to that admirable institution known as the Clearing House. The Clearing House system is familiar to all who have an interest, however slight, in banking transactions, and a study of this institution would be misplaced here. We may content ourselves with saying that it developed rapidly in London 3 and that payments made there in paper and coined money have very quickly been reduced to a mere fraction of
the whole.
Thus
in
made
in
London
in
1864.
1881.
Coin
Notes
.6
.728
2.6
...
2.039
97- 22 3 loo.
96.8
100.
of
still
more
during the
About 700 million francs the average paper circulation in France last ten years has been 3,768,200,000 francs, and in Germany i3&%3OO,ooo francs (see Jackson, Table I.). A According to M. Leroy-Beaulieu, Vol. III., p. 609, the English stock of metal is hardly equal to 40 per cent, of the French; it is ^131,600,000 (3,290,000,000 francs), of which no millions are in gold and ^21,600,000 in silver, as compared to a French stock of about ^320, 000,000 (8,000 million of francs), of which 180 millions are in gold and 140 millions in silver. 8 As early as 1858, according to Courcelle-Seneuil (p. 336), out of a million pounds, the methods of payment were in the following proportions
;
:
Bills
^422,948
510,694 45.649 20,709
Cheques at sight
notes Coin and Postal Orders
Bank
,1,000,000
Pownall, The insufficiency of our cash reserves and of our central stock of gold, in the Economic Journal, Vol. II., p. 535.
4
302
sufficiently
1
In the country the development has been slower, but still marked; thus in the case of Manchester, Mr.
for the cash
Pownall gives the following figures (coin and notes). They formed
:
payments
In 1859 about 53 per cent, of the total turnover. ,, ,, ,, ,, 1864 42 I it ,, ,, ,, 8ji ,, 32 1881 20 ,, ,, ,, ,,
The transactions of the Manchester Clearing House have increased from a total of 72 millions in 1873 to a total of 163 millions in 1891.
The movement may be more vividly realised from the the number of impressed stamps, which following detail
:
are principally used for cheques, was 13 millions in 1857, in 1891 it W as more than 152 millions.
7
And
employment
1902, the deposits at country banks have risen from 184 millions to 334^ millions, that is an increase of 81 J per cent., and this increase is due to the increase in the branches
established by the country banks. These were 1,271 in 1892, as compared with 2,578 in 1902. 2
(b)
Leaving on one side the question whether the tendency of banks of issue to disappear should not be 4 resisted, and, a fortiori, also the question whether it w ould not be better to return to freedom of issue and the system
the country
r
existing before 1844, it may be asked, to refer only to the Bank of England, what judgment must be pronounced on
the organisation of the issue department?
1
Loc.
cit.
a *
See Jackson,
p.
9.
Jt will be discussed in give only an outline of the matter here. detail in the last chapter of this volume. 4 This is the opinion of M. Leroy-Beaulieu, (Vol. III., pp. 595 and and of many other eminent economists.
We
ISSUE DEPARTMENT.
From a
demned.
303
The amount
theoretical point of view it can only be con" " uncovered issue was fixed of the
at 14 millions in 1844
by the Bank amounted to that sum determining the amount of the paper If the Government debt had been twice this currency circulation have been would the uncovered amount, doubled ? or, forsooth, if the debt had not existed, would
public securities held curious method of
nent debt, cannot afford a guarantee or a basis for the issue of notes. If every Government debt could be used to create
an equivalent sum of money, the conclusion would inevit" that the way to create money is for a governably follow ment to borrow it," and we should have far outdistanced all the Laws and Chamberlains in creation.
To this it may be replied, from a practical standpoint, that however unfortunate these mistakes may be, they are not dangerous on a small scale and that in the present instance the total uncovered issue was not fixed at 14 millions solely because this was the amount of the Government debt, but also because the requirements of the English public had
estimated at this figure. answer, however, only suggests another and more ;rious criticism of the existing system. If we grant that the leeds of society were limited to 14 millions in 1844, we are to inquire why this limit has been preserved intact when the needs of society and, above all, the actual population, ive increased so greatly ?
jn
"his
It is difficult
to find
an answer
lore
because the principle of a fixed issue is in itself open 1 attack, for as has already been pointed out, at certain les a larger issue is justified, whilst at others the limit would itself be too high. 2
See especially Cauwes, o/>. and loc. cit., pp. 317-318. In Holland an attempt has been made to avoid the disadvantages of a ed issue by leaving the amount of the paper circulation to be fixed from to time by royal decree. Pierson, p. 498.
3
30 4
For all these reasons the attempt has been made to discover a system which combines the currency principle with a greater degree of elasticity. Such a system has been adopted by the German Empire and we must therefore condiffers from the English. the Note Issue in England and between Comparison in Germany. The law of 1875, which created the Imperial Bank, and the more recent law of 1899, subjected the issue
sider
how
the
German plan
of
of
bank notes
in
Germany
to the
following rules
The amount
England,
2 2, 500, ooo.
l
Out of this total only ,4,438,550 is contributed by banks of issue other than the Imperial Bank. Moreover the law of 1875, like the English law of 1844, tends towards centralisation, and both aim at the suppression of the plural system of issue. The banks of issue in Germany, apart from the Imperial 2 Bank, originally numbered 33, but are now reduced to 6,
and
of i899
their position has been made so much worse by the law 3 that it is a question whether these banks and in
particular the
Bank
up
of resemblance; the great distinction from 4 the point of view of the note issue is that the Imperial Bank may exceed the limit fixed for uncovered issues by paying
is
added
to the rate of
and
then
Before
1899
the
amount
first
^12,500,000
14,81 1,450.
Bavaria, of Wurtemburg, of
In order to protect the reserve of the Reichsbank, the law of 1899 forbids other banks of issue (i) to discount below the rate of the Reichsbank when this rate is 4 per cent, or higher, (2) to discount more than per cent, below the rate of the Reichsbank in other cases. 4 There are many other differences between the two banks for instance, the metallic reserve of the Bank of Germany must equal at least one-third of the amount of notes in circulation, while the remaining two-thirds must consist of bills of exchange not having more than three months to run again, the German system has a highly-developed fiscal side, which would probably be objectionable to English ideas and which has been made still But we are not concerned with all more prominent by the law of 1899. this, for a comparison between the Bank of England and the other Europe^ banks does not fall within our province.
;
BANKING DEPARTMENT.
305
discount, which would be already high in times of crisis, there is no danger that the Bank will use its power rashly
and thus
indirectly
encourage speculation.
SECTION
II.
is
like
that
of
other
of
banks,
shows
turn
and
assets.
The examination
:
these in
occupy the two parts of our second section. The liabilities fall under five heads (i) Proprietors' Capital (2) Rest (3) Public Deposits (4) Other Deposits (5) Seven-day and other bills. The assets fall under four heads only (i) Government Securities; (2) Other Securities; (3) Notes; (4) Gold and
will
;
;
Silver Coin.
PART
I.
THE
The
LIABILITIES
i
Nos.
and
2.
and Rest.
capital of the Bank of England is ^H,553,ooo; it larger than that of the Bank of France or that of the Bank of Germany, although the latter has lately (1899) been inis
creased by one-half and raised from 6 to 9 millions. But and this distinguishes it from other systems the capital of the Bank is all sunk in Government debt and hence constitutes a guarantee capital. The rest or reserve fund was only formed, as we have
seen, in 1722.
fund
fall
The directors have agreed never to let this below 3 millions and on September 16, 1903, it
is to
The
1
afford security to
its
The Bank of Germany has however recently been accused of misusing supplementary issues, which reached a total of ^76, 800,000 in 1899. See Encyc. Brit., loc. cit., p. 117.
306
the depositors and these enjoy complete safety at the Bank of England. The capital, combined with the rest, represents nearly 40 per cent, of the total deposits and more than
1 But the magnitude of 45 per cent, of the private deposits. 2 the capital has its disadvantages, since, according to Clare, its earnings, in spite of the fact that the total profits are i J millions, only amount to 10 per cent., i.e., a dividend of 2 i8s. on shares at ^342. The other important English and Scotch banks pay dividends varying from 3! to 4^ per
cent.
No.
"
3.
Public Deposits.
21
These form the largest account in the Bank's books and the largest probably that any bank has ever possessed."' The daily receipts from the Customs and Excise are paid in
at the
branches of the Bank of England, and, moreover, payments made by the Treasury for the Army, Navy and Civil Service, are effected by cheques on the Bank the latter also undertakes the administration of the Public Debt, but for this it receives a special payment. 5 The balance kept by the Treasury at the Bank amounts on an average to about 3 millions. In addition to this sum, the Public Deposits include the balances credited to the Secretary of State for India and to the National Debt ComAt the beginning of the year the Public missioners. shrink on account of the dividends paid on the Deposits National Debt, but from the middle of January until the end of March the sums paid in exceed by 6 or 7 millions those paid out. This is due to the fact that the greater part of the direct taxes (income tax, house duty and land tax)
the
;
first
quarter.
At
the
same time
the
of the total deposits for the last ten years is ^"48,610,000, See Jackson, Table I. of the private deposits ^39, 482,000. For everything relating to See Clare, p. 25, and Raffalovich, p. 364. the liabilities of the banking department, we have found Clare and his com-
The average
mentator invaluable.
8
The total value of this account has increased from ;5, 231,000 in 1844 ^9,285,000 in 1900. Palgrave, p. 13. 6 See below, Appendix, the section specially devoted to this question.
BANKING DEPARTMENT.
of
307
payments made by the Government are deferred till the end March, which marks the close of the financial year. During the first days of April the Public Deposits fall again by about 4 millions and the balance returns to what it was 1 in January. The result of this payment of taxes is an in the circulation of notes and coin, decrease appreciable to millions for gold and ij millions for notes. 3 amounting The reserve of the Bank reaches its maximum at the end of March. The transfer to the Bank of a considerable sum, drawn mainly from the resources of the joint-stock and private
banks, narrows the margin between the official rate of discount and the market rate. The difference between the two is i sometimes reduced from 35. per cent, to IDS. cent. This time Bank discounts least. is the when the per After some unimportant fluctuations, the Public Deposits reach their minimum about November. Preparation then has to be made for the payments falling due in January and if the Exchequer has but a small balance, advances are
made
to
it
on
bills
which
it
revenues.
No.
4.
Other Deposits. 3
The Bank's
under
which
fall
to the current
The balance
of the
sums standing
to
Bank's customers serves as a kind of measure of the supply of available capital. If the total rises above the average there is an excess of such capital and vice versa.
The Bank
1
of
England
is in fact
central reservoir
For the fluctuations in the public deposits at the Bank of England see Clare, Table III. a These bills used to be known as deficiency bills, but have since been See in the Appendix on the Relations replaced by deficiency advances. between the Bank of England and the Treasury, the section dealing with the
floating debt.
Clare, pp. 28-31. The total of these private deposits has increased from in 1844 to ^"40,602,000 in 1900 (Palgrave, p. 12), i.e., an increase of 503 per cent.
^8,069,000
308
the great merchants and the big limited companies, but also those of numerous country banks and of all the London bankers belonging to the Clearing House. Each of the 18
clearing banks has an account at the Bank and differences are paid by means of transfers in its books. These transfers
to
a total
of
50
the
Besides
'
this, the
at the
Bank
"
reserves which they hold in case of emergency. The Bank has therefore the responsibility of looking after what
is
really the ultimate banking reserve of the whole country," and should difficulties arise it is to it that appeal will be made. This state of things necessarily carries with it
1
Bank specified in its Returns what proporthe deposits belonged to bankers. At this date there was a balance of 13 millions credited to customers who
were not bankers, and one of ,9,500,000 to bankers. 3 One of the most desirable reforms in the Bank's administration
is
the resumption of this statement. 4 In normal times the total of the private deposits fluctuates
5 regularly enough, but during a crisis it has been frequently /^observed that this total increases appreciably. This is partly because the banks feel it necessary to strengthen their
all
and partly because the public are eager to be rid of doubtful investments and to entrust their money to the institution which they believe, and not without reason, to
reserves
be the safest in the world, i.e., to the Bank of England. One other point remains to be considered with reference 6 to the current account of the bankers. When there is a drain of gold, which normally occurs in the autumn, the only defence which the Bank can make is to raise the discount rate so as to attract capital to England.
Clare, p. 30. As regards this point, see below the chapter on the Reserve, p. 323, Bank and the reserve of the bankers. 1 See Palgrave, pp. 12, 13. In 1876 the current account of the bankers was the proportion was thus greater. ^11,851,000 out of a total of ^23,493,000 4 On this point compare the last chapter of the present volume. 6 Clare, Table IV. Raffalovich, p. 367. Clare, pp. 37-40
2
1
The
reserve of the
BANKING DEPARTMENT.
309
Foreign bankers are thus induced to buy bills on London, a proceeding which reacts on the exchanges. The success of this policy depends on the support given
to the
is
Bank
of
If the latter
;
well supplied,
Bank's lead
hence
it
possible to judge from the state of the current accounts whether this policy will be successful or not.
is
also an indirect
:
method
of clearing the
Consols for money," and buys them back for the "account." The purchasers pay in cheques on their bankers and the balance to the credit
surplus capital
it
sells
"
of the latter
It
is
decreased.
has been suggested, says M. RafTalovich, that the Bank should secure command of the situation by paying interest on deposits. Since a large proportion of the money with deposited private banks is placed there for security, there is no doubt that in view of the prestige of the Bank of England, a very low rate of interest would serve to attract considerable sums and when once it had adopted this policy, a slight increase in the rate paid would be sufficient to deplete the market. There are, however, very serious objections to this course; for one thing it would be contrary
to the
is
to sacrifice profit
to absolute security
tion
with
other
and
certainly incur enmity and it would lose the profit which it makes from the balances of the current accounts on which
no interest
deposits,
is
paid.
its
the
Bank would
its
difficult to
its
maintain the
reserve
and
liabilities,
which
is
The
liabilities of the
the heading
No.
5,
which no comment
1
is
The average for the last ten years from 1882 to 1892 the average was only 42 per cent. The maximum was reached in 1894, when the proportion was 63 per cent. since then the tendency has been towards a decline. See Jackson, Table I.
;
3 io
We
fall
tfie
banking department
Securities;
(3)
(i)
Notes;
Other
securities
In actual fact, however, the first two groups, Government and other securities, represent the Bank's invest-
last groups, notes and gold and silver form the stock of money best known as the reserve. Hence instead of discussing each group separately, it will be convenient to combine them under two heads, which will
coin,
supply matter for the following chapters. Chapter I. The investments of the Bank.
The Bank
of
England and
Chapter
II.
The
reserve.
CHAPTER
I.
THE INVESTMENTS OF THE BANK. THE BANK OF ENGLAND AND THE DISCOUNT
RATE.
(a)
Government
Securities. Their nature; (b) Other Securities. Hankey's theory as to the proper nature of these. Uncertainty as to their actual character.
Its fluctuations. Average since 1844 and variations. Periodic fluctuations. The Autumnal Drain. The Bank Rate and the Market Rate. The Bank Rate before 1844. Competition between the Bank and the market between 1844 and 1878. Since 1878 the Bank Rate in London has always been above the Market Rate. Position different in the Provinces. Frequent fluctuations in the Bank Rate. Comparison with the chief European Banks. Bad effect of the fluctuations in the discount rate upon trade. Explanation of the fluctuations of the English Bank Rate. Special character of the London Market. Artificial character of the Act of 1844. Lack of fluidity in the securities held by the
Bank
of England.
(a)
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.
securities are those securities
which yield an income guaranteed by the State (Consols, Treasury bills, Little importance is attached to variations in the etc.).
THE Government
amount
of the Government securities. At the end of the quarter the total increases because the Government borrows on the security of bills, which it redeems in the course of a
few weeks.
When
it
the
Bank does
is
not renew the Treasury bills which a tightness on the money market.
(b)
OTHER
SECURITIES.
1
at one time Governor of the Bank of book on The Principles of Banking, discusses the nature of the securities which ought to be held by a bank. He distinguishes short loans and bills of exchange, which are based on commercial transactions, and
Thomas Hankey,
in his
England,
p. 26, et seq.
fifty
Hankey was
the full
title
than
years
a director of the Bank of England for more of his book is, The Principles of Banking, its with Remarks on the Working and Management of the
;
Wigram,
1887.
3 i2
and naturally converted into money, from other as mortgages, and business securities of a such securities, similar character, which, although they offer suitable openings for an investor, are not the kind of securities which a bank should hold, because they cannot be easily realised. The Bank of England follows Hankey's advice closely Its securities consist of Indian stock, railway enough. debenture stock, discounted commercial bills, and advances
are readily
on security. We can only speak on supposition, however, for since 1875 the details of the Bank's investments have not been published. Before this date a return was supplied to Parliament, which distinguished the discounts, the loans, and the
other assets. The discontinuance of this return is much to be regretted. Moreover, the discounts have decreased considerably owing to the competition of the outside market. Paper is only brought to the Bank under exceptional circumstances, when the market is ill-supplied with money and it is feared that the official rate may be raised.
Even before 1875, however, the total of the bills disit was counted was exceedingly variable very high when the market was stringent, as in 1836, 1847, 1857, an d from 2 1864-1867, it sank very low when the pressure was removed. Since this very difficult question of the Bank of England and the discount rate has been touched upon, it will be advisable to study it fully once for all, and, indeed, the matter is as much and perhaps more in place here than elsewhere.
1
j
This important question 3 can be best discussed under three heads, viz.: I., The average rate of the Bank of England and its periodical fluctuations. II., A comparison
Compare Palgrave, p. 14. Thus discounted bills made up more than half (56 per cent.) of the securities held by the Bank in 1847, and they were 46 per cent, in 1857, and 42 per cent, from 1864 to 1866, but they only made up 28 per cent, of the
a
1
the
cannot be examined without a preliminary study of Mr. Palgrave's recent book, Bank Rate and Market Mr. Palgrave has written no less than three Money (1903).
total securities in 1844, and only 23 per cent, in 1875. 3 . The very difficult question of the English Bank rate
313
between the Bank rate and the market rate. III., A comparison between the discount rates of the Bank of England and those of the Banks of France and Germany. The great
fluctuations in the
Bank
England phenomenon.
of
rate;
the results
and
I.
of the
Periodical Fluctuations.
The average rate of the Bank is relatively low in comparison with the usual rates of the Continental banks; it 1 exceeds that of the Bank of France only. It has been pointed out that the rate, after displaying a tendency to increase between 1854 an d 1866, has shown a constant tendency to fall since this period.
The period
sponds
1844-1900,
to the following
"
if divided into six groups, correa average rates
:
d.
...
385
332 304
4 12 9 i 3 16 3 3 II
3 125." for the whole period 1845-1900 is rate of discount is subject to periodical fluctuations in the course of each year; it is generally higher in the
'
The average
The
winter half as compared with the summer half. In autumn and early winter money is needed to meet the expenses of the home harvest, the cost of holidays and travelling, and,
works on this subject, in 1874, 1880, and 1892 his last book revises and completes the earlier ones, which were in themselves standard works on this M. Paul Loubet's on La question. essay Banque de France et I'Escompte may also be consulted with pleasure as well as profit this book, like Mr. Mr. F. E. Steele has Palgrave's, contains a mass of comparative statistics. also published an essay on the subject, entitled, On the Changes in the Bank Rate; First their Causes, and Secondly their Effect. This study originally came out in the Journal of the Institute of Bankers. 1 This may be seen from the table given by M. Paul Loubet (p. 103) of the average discount rate in the principal European capitals from 1885 to Between 1883 and 1902 the average rate was 2^ per. cent, for the 1900. Bank of France, 3^ per cent, for the Bank of England, and 3! per cent,
;
;
for the
8
Bank
of
p.
Germany.
107.
Palgrave,
OF THE
UNIVERSITY
September.
II.
the
Market Rate.
The Bank's
its
considerably. For a long time, indeed almost up to 1844, the Bank kept its rate fixed at from 4 to 5 per cent. When the market rate was high the Bank discounted, but when it was low and it was sometimes from if to 2 per cent, lower
Bank rate the Bank of necessity ceased to dissince no one was stupid enough to apply to it. count, After 1844 the Bank began to compete with the other
than the
banks of discount, sometimes leading and sometimes following the market. Then by degrees its discounts, which had been very considerable, 4 declined, and in 1878 it even made an official statement to the effect that it did not feel bound
to to the published minimum rate. matter of fact, from 1872 until the present time, the market rate has always been less than the Bank rate.
keep
As a
Between 1845 and 1872, on the contrary, there were ten years 5 It should be observed that in during which it was higher. the provinces the current rate is sometimes higher than the
Bank
1
rate
and, strange
to
say,
this
causes
discontent
in
paper currency
Scotland,
which causes an immediate demand for gold from the Bank of England. For further details on this point see Palgrave, pp. 107-110. 3 For the Autumnal Drain see Stanley Jevons^ Investigations in Currency and Finance, pp. 160-193. This chapter in Jevons' posthumous work had
The appeared in June, 1866, in the Journal of the Statistical Society. phenomenon had previously been pointed out and described by Mr. William Langton before the Manchester Statistical Society.
3
Bank
at this date
Mr. James Morris estimated that were one half of the total discounts.
For
315
the local bankers who have their deposits at the Bank and who complain that the latter is using their own capital as a means of competing with them.
III.
Comparison with other European Banks in this Effects and Explanation of this Phenomenon.
I
1
respect.
(a)
The most
is its
Bank
rate
lack of stability
of
and
this is yet
in this
Germany.
take the period from I875-I9OO 1 alone; during this interval the English Bank rate was altered 167 times, whilst only 84 changes are recorded in the German rate and only
2 25 in that of the Bank of France. Thus the average duration of the
To
365 days days Germany and 54 days England. If instead of taking averages the movements of the rate are examined year by year, it is found that between 1844 and 1900, i.e., during 57 years, there are only two years (1851 and 1897) during which the English Bank rate was
for the
Bank
for the
is
of
unaltered, as
in
the case of
Germany
and twenty
in the case of
What
is still
more serious
English Bank rate are not only very frequent, but are also very great. The Bank of England is the only bank at which
1
The discount rate at the Bank of France was only altered 124 times during the whole of the igth century, so that in 25 years the English rate has changed 43 times more than the French in a period four times as long. Compare Paul Loubet, p. 104. Between 1866 and 1900 the Bank of England made 400 changes in its rate, the Bank of Germany 161, the Bank of Belgium (established in 1851) 173, the Bank of Holland 173 and the Bank of France in. See Palgrave, Tables 37, 38 and 39, pp. 196-198. The statistics given by Mr. Palgrave with regard to the fluctuations in the discount rate are exthey begin in 1844 and relate to the five banks ceedingly complete and full of issue just mentioned.
;
Palgrave, p. 211, Table 43. This Table with Table 39, given by the same author.
is
inconsistent
in
some points
3 i6
the range of fluctuation during the same year has on three 1 occasions amounted to 5j, 6 and 6J per cent. Nowhere else, except on one occasion in Germany, have the fluctuations during a single year reached 4 and 5 per cent., as a rule they have not been more than i or 2 per
cent.
(b)
2
are the results of this fact? These constant and fluctuations have very injurious effects on trade. 8 -/large This may be better understood by considering the great
What
advantages of a moderate and a relatively stable rate. With respect to the moderation of the rate in the
first
discounts paper at a bank, that is in place, fact, every trader, naturally wishes to borrow at as low a rate as possible, since otherwise he cannot as a rule find such a use for the capital lent him as will repay him for the expenses of the transaction and one of the main
objects of the banking system will have disappeared. With respect to the stability of the rate, it may be said
that a certain fixity
to
is an essential. This enables the trader reckon beforehand, at least approximately, the amounts that he will have to pay his banker; the stability is thus a
anyone who
guarantee of the safety of his transactions. The English commercial world does not enjoy these 4 advantages and guarantees to the extent which it has a right It remains to discover the explanation of this to expect.
fact.
the Bank Rate of (c) Explanation of the Flucttiations in Discount. These fluctuations are due to several causes. shall deal first with those about which everyone is agreed and then pass on to those which are only partially
,.
We
accepted.
1
See the years 1858, 1873 and 1866 respectively. Palgrave, Table 38, p. 127.
3 Compare Steele, pp. 19 and 20. For the effect of the variations in the discount rate on the Stock Exchange see Steele, pp. 20-25. For the important question of the relations between the discount rate and prices see Giffen's second essay in his Essays in Finance (second series), pp. 37-89. 4 These advantages are so great that Professor Foxwell has observed that, 11 The true test of sound economic, as distinguished from merely solvent banking, is the moderation of the average rate of discount." Economic
317
of the
London Market.
The London market is distinguished from the other European markets by its importance. Nearly all the trade of the world is connected with London, and it has justly " the house
is
the
clearing
for
international exchanges." 1
,
has
its
sudden and large demands. The London market is also distinguished from the other European markets by the fact, to which, indeed, much of its importance is due that London is the only market in the In France the Bank world. free for gold a from 2j to 6 per mille, on charges premium, varying
market
to the risks of
:
in Germany, according to the 2 H. of Mr. F. remark witty Jackson, there exists the equally
formidable deterrent of the Imperial displeasure. In England there is nothing of this kind, the trade in gold is perhaps it is this which makes London the absolutely free financial capital of the world, but in return, it leaves only one means of resisting a demand for gold, that is an increase in the value of the capital lent, or in other words, a rise in the rate of discount. England thus subjects herself to fluctuations in the discount rates, but she does it only because she finds that the advantages of possessing a free
;
and
market for gold fully counter-balance the disadvantages, 3 at any rate she acts with her eyes open.
2.
The
Artificial
Has
by the
legislation of 1844
any
this
1 Edmond The"ry, Europe et tats Unis d'Amerique, p. in. also been called the Rome of finance for civilised countries.
London has
2 3
vation,
Jackson, op. cit., p. 6. Professor Foxwell justly quotes in this connection Mr. Pownall's obser" Our market is sensitive because we choose that it shall be
money
so."
Art. cit., p.
155.
318
Mr. Palgrave,
two parts also England "divides the resources of the Bank artificially into two parts, and causes the demand to fall on the smaller of them." In England the demands are naturally very large and may be sudden. The division into two departments, which has the advantage of " directing immediate attention to the amount of free resources which the Bank has at its
that the division of the
into
observes in the
first
place
disposal, nevertheless tends to render the amount actually available to meet any sudden demand smaller than it would
be
arrangement were not followed.' Moreover, the Bank is obliged by the Act of 1844 to buy standard gold to any amount at a fixed price, whether it needs it or not, and hence it is forced to replenish its reserves at the will of the importers and not at the wish of its
if
this artificial
directors.
Hence
there
is at
of gold,
low Bank
rate,
and
sometimes, when
the accumulations produce a tightness on the market, to the opposite result, neither of these movements in the rate having any connection with the needs of
trade.
2
3.
Lack
It
held by the
has been remarked that the exact nature of the securities Bank is not known, but all the evidence goes to
it probable that short loans only acquire importance under exceptional conditions and that the number of discounted bills is very limited. In an ordinary way, indeed, the Bank of England does not compete with the other banks of discount. It does not discount at the market rate except for its own customers and as this is generally lower than the
make
average difference during the last twenty it can hoi years has been | per cent, per annum), evidently only a very small number of commercial bills.
Bank
rate (the
199.
199.
319
On
same
because
of
it is
obliged
issues.
to
it
Germany because
its
of France be so by its constitution the Bank must hold bills to the value of two;
Bank
thirds of
If
we examine, as Mr. Palgrave 2 does, some recent balance sheets, we find that the Bank of France held securities at Paris and the branches to the value of
^54,000,000 (1,375,000,000 francs), of which ^31,000,000 was in bills for short periods and ,24,000,000 in short loans. At the Bank of Germany, out of securities worth
,64,000,000, nearly ,50,000,000 was in
of these being English paper, while form of short loans. 3
bills, ,2,100,000 ,8,000,000 was in the
large quantity of specie held in reserve, combined the readily available and fluid character of the securities, enables the Continental banks to control the
The
with
to
have an easy
command
of
ready
money.
The Bank of England cannot secure this control of the market except when circumstances force the latter to apply to it for discount, hence if in ordinary times the Bank wishes to obtain money quickly, it can only do so by selling Con4 and it does not hold any considerable quantity of sols, securities which by maturing rapidly will provide it with cash without forcing it to disturb the home market. Consequently the Bank has to determine its discount rate very
carefully reserve.
1
it
in
order to protect
its
P
a
3
6.
pp. 206
and
207.
of bills discounted during the last ten years was 27 millions (675 millions of francs) for France and 35 millions for the Bank of Germany. For further details on the total discounts of the Banks of France and Ger-
The average
many between 1883 and 1902 compare Jackson, Table 4 And this has obvious disadvantages.
I.
320
It
is
risk
its
appearing irrelevant,
that
characteristic
feature of the
Bank
of
England
securities is
analogous
to
a characteristic which may be observed in English finance as a whole. Whilst other countries hold numerous bills of exchange
England, and an appreciable number of English Treasury bills, the English public, which possesses an
on
enormous quantity
railway
public,
I
shares,
industrial
and seems
it
repeat, holds very little foreign commercial paper to consider it of small importance.
No doubt
the possession of foreign shares is a good thing, serves at need to pay a debt abroad and thus to avoid a
drain of English bullion. But it is no less true, on the other hand, that supposing a rise in the value of money on the European market or some danger of political trouble, a very
bullion
may
be produced
through the bills of exchange and the Treasury bills which 1 are held abroad. Some writers, in particular Mr. Palgrave, think that the situation is made more serious by the fact that the imports increase more rapidly than the exports and that the amount of "international securities" held in England tends to decrease, suggesting that "the country
living above
1
its
income.
8
"
p.
213, et seq.
p.
215.
CHAPTER
Nature of the reserve. keystone of English
II.
THE RESERVE.
the term. The reserve as the reserve and the reserve of the bankers. Amount of the reserve. Its normal fluctuations. The reserve in time of crisis. Question whether the suspension of the limit of issue was foreseen by Peel in 1844. Obscurity of the debates in Parliament.
is
What
credit.
letter of Peel.
THE
banking department, and a small extent of only gold and silver coin. very The Reserve forms the essential point, the " vital " point, " On the maintenas Clare calls it, of the Bank Return. ance of a sufficient store of actual cash to satisfy the claims
in the to
of depositors depends the very existence of the Bank, for the whole of the Deposits are practically debts payable in ld on demand and the Bank must either fulfil its obligation to
We
i
.
1 repay when called upon, or close its doors." shall study this delicate subject under five heads The nature of the Reserve.
2.
In what
way
is
credit?
3.
4.
5.
The Reserve of the Bank and the bankers' reserve. The amount of the Reserve; its fluctuations. The Reserve during a crisis. Did the author of the
Act of 1844 foresee the suspension, at such times, of the limit fixed for the uncovered issue ? Mr. Lowe's scheme for
reform.
I.
Mr. Clare's remarks on this subject are exceedingly well judged and should be read carefully by everyone who
wishes to obtain a clear understanding of the matter.
1
Clare, op.
cit.,
p. 45.
322
that the Reserve secures the note-holder as well as the depositor and that an export of gold is bad for the country, because it must impair the ability of the Bank to cash its notes on presentation." This is a misconception. The convertibility of the note has nothing to do with the banking department. The Reserve is solely a banking reserve. " the This misconception is due to a confusion between and cash reserve department's against deposits," banking " the issue department's stock of gold appropriated to the service of the note." It may be connected with the fact that the Reserve is commonly spoken of as gold, while in reality the principal stock of gold is deposited in the Issue Department as security for the notes. *' It is obvious, too, on examining the Return, that a withdrawal of bullion must diminish the stock in the issue should it also affect the cash at the department."
It is
Why
banking department ? This is readily understood if we consider the method used to withdraw gold from the Bank. " The usual course is to obtain credit with a London banker by discounting bills or selling securities, etc., tc make use of this credit by asking for Bank of England Notes, and to convert the notes into gold at the Issue Department. The gold, it is true, is actually paid out by th Issue Department, but the notes, which give power to de mand that gold, are bound to come out of the Reserve of th< Banking Department." This explains why a withdrawal o gold may weaken both the stock in the issue department an<^ also the Reserve properly so called.
II.
WHY MAY
IT
BE SAID THAT
"
IF
LOST, THE
WHOLE ENGLISH
BANKRUPT?"
issue department works automatically in giving ot| exchange for notes. The result of a drain is t gold weaken the Reserve and hence the position of the Banl The importance of variations in the Reserve depends on th
in
1
The
p. 45, ei seq.
THE RESERVE.
fact
323
that in England gold is the only metal which is unlimited legal tender; silver is only legal tender for sums not exceeding forty shillings. Under ordinary circumstances payments are made by " the principle that cheque, but the very basis of credit is 1 Yet the liabilities of bankers debts are payable in gold." to their depositors exceed by hundreds of millions the stock of gold actually in the country and this involves an obvious
danger.
The
it
in 1901 to ,888,100,000; 250 millions, thus seven or eight times larger than the whole stock 2 Besides this, the Bank of England of gold in the country. Reserve in 1901 was only ,24,046,000, i.e., 2.71 percent, of 3 the total liabilities of the banks. This 2.71 per cent, is thus
is
in 1851 at
amounted
all
that the
banks have
to
depend upon
which
rests
to
meet possible
demands.
The
terrible responsibility
is
on the Bank of
evident, as is also the manner in which the Bank England In is the keystone of the whole system of English credit. " if the Reserve were lost, this fact, as Mr. Clare remarks,
*
nation of shopkeepers
'
would have
to
put
its
shutters up."
III.
In the United States a deposit bank is obliged to keep In England, on the 25 per cent, of its deposits in cash. under banker is no restriction the whatever, contrary,
1
Clare, p. 48.
;
Mr. The exact value of the English coined money is not known Goschen and others have estimated it at 73 millions, but it was shown in the Economist for January 3rd, 1892, that this estimate is too small. According to this journal, the coin in circulation amounts to 86 millions, while the authorities of the Mint go still further and reckon it at 100 millions. 3 in 1872 the Reserve was Formerly the proportion was still smaller only ^12,100,000 as against 584 millions of deposits, i.e., the proportion was 2.06 per cent. Palgrave, p. 104. Mr. Pownall declared (Economic Journal, " If the Vol. II., p. 532) that: system did not exist, the man who suggested its introduction would be branded madman." See the whole article, The Insufficiency of our Cash Reserves and of our Central Stock of Gold, pp. 530;
543-
324
although, as we have seen, the total liabilities of the banks exceed the total metallic stock of the country. It is true that people sometimes speak of the bankers' reserve. But the word is not here used in its exact sense there is no reference here to a special fund set aside for use in emergencies, but merely to the till-money, the cash required by the bankers " The reserve, properly so for their ordinary business. called, of a Provincial Banker consists of readily convertible securities, such as Consols, etc., of money payable at call with the London brokers, of a credit balance in the books of his London Agent, and in some cases of a balance at the
;
* '
Bank
of
England as
well.
The same
is
true of the
London
banker. His actual reserve consists, not of a store of cash locked up in his strong-room, but of money at call, a balance 1 at the Bank, and a bundle of securities." These reserves are sufficient in ordinary times, but they 2 are not coin and the banks have undertaken to pay in coin
sums. Thus they all depend, directly or Bank on the of England, and not one of them is indirectly, an unusual demand out of his own reto meet prepared sources. This state of things is, it cannot be too often repeated, very serious, and may some day cause an unvery
large
pleasant surprise.
It
may be
offers, to
The
well to refer at this point, when opportunity a question which has aroused endless discussion question of the bankers' deposits at the Bank of
:
England.
Since 1876 no is the value of these deposits? on has been information this point given in the Bank special Returns a most regrettable fact but we know that in 1876 they amounted to uj millions out of a total of 23 millions. Mr. Foxwell 3 notes that between 1844 and 1877 there were " not sufficient to 6 1 occasions when the Bank Reserve was meet the London bankers' balances." Even in 1876, when
the Reserve was 40 per cent, above the average, the bankers' deposits amounted to 75 per cent, of this reserve.
1
What
'
This
Loc.
fact,
is
(P- 536).
3
cit., p.
For further
details
compare Palgrave,
THE RESERVE.
1
325
Hence it has several times been suggested that the Bank of England should keep unemployed the whole or a part of the
2 bankers' deposits. The Bank itself has always protested vigorously against such a theory and it has been pointed out that since these banks themselves only exist by using their customers' deposits, they cannot expect to impose a different
policy
it
upon the Bank of England. Moreover the Bank has never hitherto acknowledged that felt bound to keep a metallic reserve for the whole
it
country;
liabilities.
contents
itself
with a consideration of
its
own
But this latent responsibility is shown in the extreme care and promptitude with which it defends itself
against the dangers of a foreign drain. The position involves a conflict of interests. On the one hand, the shareholders would like to see the unemployed capital, upon which they make no profit, reduced to a minimum on the other hand, the public, remembering that the Bank pays
;
no interest on its deposits, is of opinion that it might well keep a larger reserve. Private bankers who belong to the Clearing House have often been advised to form an association and to keep their
own
reserve.
3
Peel himself considered that the joint-stock banks ought to be obliged to share in the expenses necessary to keep up a gold reserve and this opinion has in more recent times 5 4 received the support of Mr. Goschen and Mr. Lidderdale.
1
first
put forward
in the
Economist
for
November
i8th,
1872.
See Hankey, preface to the second edition and Jackson, pp. n and 12.
of his Principles of
Banking,
to the proportion of the bankers' deposits that the Bank of England ought to keep intact, see the correspondence between Mr. H. H. Gibbs and Professor Bonamy Price, which has been published at the end of This correspondence deals Price's Chapters on Practical Political Economy. with a number of questions of interest. Mr. Gibbs was a director of the Bank of England for more than fifty years he was raised to the peerage with the title of Lord Aldenham.
With regard
1847,
XCV., p. 4 "It
is a false and dangerous system," says Lord Goschen, to rely I hold that simply upon the aid the Bank of England can give in a crisis. the great banking institutions are bound to take their share." 5 " I feel," said Mr. Lidderdale, in a speech at the Mansion House, " that the one thing needful is the concern, in their various degrees, of all banks, and not merely the Bank of England."
"
326
But the bankers have always refused to do anything of the kind, being convinced that in case of need the Government would always intervene to save the Bank of England. 1
Indeed, apart from considerations of general interest, which would necessarily have immense weight since the Bank is
the keystone of the national credit, it is thought with reason that the Government would be forced to interfere, for the Treasury is the Bank's greatest customer and any misfor-
upset the
IV.
Between 1895 and 1900 the average amount of the Reserve was ,25,791,000; during this same period the Reserve
varied from 23 to 28 millions. This is a great improvement, mainly due to the lesson learnt from the crisis of 1890. Between 1880 and 1890 the average Reserve was only 13
and the actual amount varied from 19 to 9 millions. we compare the amount of the Reserve with that of the the liabilities, we find here also a satisfactory increase Reserve, which was formerly only 46 per cent, on the average, of the total liabilities, is now equal to more than
millions
If
:
liabilities.
Normal Fluctuations
in the Reserve.
The Reserve
its
maximum
increases during the first quarter and reaches at the end of March; it then falls, but
2 increases again at the end of June. The influences which affect the Reserve are both
home
and foreign.
1 In 1866 the directors of the Bank protested vigorously Clare, p. 53. against the idea, which was afterwards supported by Bagehot (p. 170), that the private banks had a right to count on assistance from the Bank of England during a crisis. Twenty-six years later the fact that the bankers relied on the Bank was so obvious that Lord Goschen, in his speech before the London Chamber of Commerce on December 2nd, 1891, did not even trouble to discuss it. He condemns, however, as likely to encourage speculation, the feeling that, at the worst, a letter from the Treasury will supply an
easy remedy.
8
1900, as
Thus the average reserve for March was ^14,364,000 between 1845 anc compared with ^12,747,000 for May.
THE RESERVE.
An
crisis,
327
increase of trade, the payment of wages, the fear of a cause a withdrawal of gold or notes from the Bank. There is also a home drain in May and in the autumn 1 for the half-yearly payments in Scotland and an influx of 3 millions of sovereigns in March after the collection of the
income
tax.
The normal and expected fluctuations in the Reserve do not affect the discount rate when they merely involve a withdrawal of gold for home uses but the case is quite different when it becomes a question of abnormal movements or of a
;
foreign drain.
V.
A CRISIS.
good experience shows that money will be used for current needs the gold and notes drawn only from the Bank will be returned to it as soon as they have fulfilled their purpose, but "when credit is bad there is no knowing how much additional currency the country
credit is
.
When
may suddenly ask for, nor how long it "'may keep it. If it much there will be a panic. The chief defect
in the constitution of the
Bank
is
that
it is
unfitted to
meet
" a sudden and excessive demand. The Reserve may melt it have had time before the to relieve measures taken away
to act."
In fact, the importation of gold from abroad, which is the only way to increase the currency, is still a tardy remedy, notwithstanding the improvements in methods of communication. On the other hand, a rise in the discount rate under such circumstances does not produce a decrease in the demands, since the people who have immediate liabilities to meet will pay whatever they are asked.
1
The average
1900.
Clare, p. 58; this is also J. S. Mill's opinion. Mill is very doubtful in pronouncing judgment on the Act of 1844; as he says himself, he is far from believing that in a problem so new and difficult we can learn nothing from discussion and experience. No doubt Mill realises perfectly well the dangers of the Banking Principle, but at the same time he declares 4) that, whatever may be the advantages (Principles, Bk. III., Chap, xxiv., of the Act of 1844, they are purchased at the cost of forbidding a certain extension of credit in time of crisis, when a temporary deficiency needs to
be met.
328
appearing and
is in danger of disthe thing has happened three times, in 1847, in 1857 an<^ i n Z 866 for the Government to take the responsibility of authorising the Bank to break the law. shall presently see, when we study the crises through
it
Hence
usual
We
which the Bank of England has passed, the way in which these permissions have been given and what their effects have been. For the present, to conclude this chapter, I wish briefly to discuss a question which has never been definitely cleared I wish to consider whether these authorisations to up. exceed the legal limit were foreseen by Peel in framing the Act of 1844. The question is worth discussing, since, if these repeated transgressions of the legal limit for the uncovered issues were foreseen by Peel, he did actually provide a kind of second reserve for times of crisis that second reserve about which so much was said in 1891.
Besides this, the question possesses historical interest and hence deserves examination in a work like the present.
Unfortunately the answer is not easy to find. First as regards the text of the law. The Act of 1844,
after fixing the amount up to which the Bank might issue notes against securities at 14 millions, adds that an authorisation from the Government will be required for any
additional issue.
Unfortunately, this clause refers to the succession to the rights of issue of a provincial bank. The law itself, then, throws no light on our question. S. J. Loyd, Torrens and the other promoters of the Act are also silent on this point it may be that they did not realise the possibility of any
;
such event.
Peel, who in his speeches in 1844 was purposely vague, 1 " The Bank would supply the said in his answer to Baring, the of the consent with void, Privy Council, by an issue But the context shows that these the ; 14, 000,000." beyond words also refer to the possible inheritance of the rights of issue of provincial banks.
1
During the
sitting of
May
2oth.
Vol.
THE RESERVE.
On
Peel
the other hand, in his speech on congratulated the Government
329
3rd, 1847, action in
2
December
on
their
1
authorising the suspension of the Act of I844 and Parker quotes a letter from Peel to Cotton which shows that as early as June 4th, 1844, P ee l acknowledged the possibility of
suspending the Act in question. The wording of this letter, written by Peel to the Governor of the Bank, and in particular the concluding sentence, leaves no room for doubt in the matter. 3 But whatever Peel may have thought in the first instance,
is clear that at the present day the possibility of suspending the Act in case of a crisis is a recognised part of the English legal regulation of the issue of Bank notes, and Mr. (afterwards Lord) Goschen made it clear that the commercial world relied absolutely on a measure of this kind. As a rule the mere suspension of the Act has proved sufficient to calm the severity of the crisis. This has been laid to the credit of English legislation; but in reality it is the best proof of a weakness in the system that the uneasiness caused by the Act of 1844 should be allayed by the
it
restriction
IN
1873.
4 Only one official proposal for reform in the matter before us has been brought forward. This was the scheme suggested in 1873 by Mr. Lowe, that Liberal Chancellor of the Exchequer whose cutting freedom of speech often did more
1
p. 668.
3
8
" The letter runs as follows My confidence is unshaken, that we are taking all the precautions which legislation can prudently take against the recurrence of a monetary crisis. It may recur in spite of our precautions, and if it does, and if it be necessary to assume a grave responsibility for the purpose of meeting it, I daresay men will be found willing to assume such a responsibility." And Peel concludes " I would rather trust to this than impair the efficacy and probable success of those measures by which one hopes to control evil tendencies in their beginning, and to diminish the risk that extraordinary measures may be necessary."
:
:
crisis of
For Mr. Goschen 's project and the reform movement which followed the 1890 see below, Part IV., Chap, i., p. 370.
330
harm
the
party than to his opponents, and who, under Lord Sherbrooke, " was extinguished in the House of Lords like a rocket in a fish-pond." 1 Mr. Robert Lowe 2 proposed that the Bank of England
title
own
of
should be allowed to exceed the authorised limit of its issues under three conditions: (i) That the rate of discount was not less than 12 per cent.; (2) That the foreign exchanges were favourable to England; (3) That the situation was one
of internal panic.
and soon passed into It is, indeed, difficult was deserved. oblivion. Mr. Lowe's three conditions in which to imagine a case if were would be satisfied and satisfied, it would mean they that the country was already suffering from those disadvantages which it is the object of a good system of banking to
The
Bill
was not
well received
Its failure
prevent.
1
The
is
given by Palgrave,
p. 93.
PART
.
III.
OF
I.
CRISIS.
CHAPTER
THE CRISIS OF
Causes of the
crisis
:
1847.
Failure of the harvests made necessary a large importaExtensive tion of grain and hence a large exportation of specie. The railway mania. The crisis of 1847 and the Bank of speculation. England. Unfortunate effect of the Act of 1844 useless pressure on the Money Market luckily the object of its promoters not attained as regards the restriction of the interior circulation in exact proportion to the export of bullion. Unwise policy of the Bank its reserves reduced The crisis, allayed for a time, renewed with violence. to ; 2 058,000.
; ;
Bank refuses to make advances on Governfailures. Panic produced by this policy, hoarding of notes and Bank forced to choose between complete coin, increase in failures. Refusal to Discount and Suspension of Act of 1844. Suspension of Act of 1844. End of the crisis. Delay of Government to suspend Act until Letter from the Chancellor of the Exchequer to situation desperate. Governor of the Bank. Conditions under which the suspension granted. Magical effect of the suspension. The knowledge that notes could be obtained removed the desire to have them. End of the crisis. Great Results of the services of the Bank to the public during the crisis. crisis. Parliamentary Debates. Speech of Sir Robert Peel his opinion of the effects of the Act degree in which its object attained modifications the joint-stock banks and the metallic reserve. to be made in the Act The Inquiry of 1848. Report of the Committee of the House of Commons. Remarkable Report of the Lords' Committee.
Large number of
securities.
ment
THE
crisis of
in particular
to the failure of the potato crops in Ireland, which made it necessary to purchase foreign grain in large quantities.
The importations
Years
...
......
The crisis produced in Ireland by the failure of the potato crops in The 1845 and 1847 recalls the famines of the darkest ages of humanity. peasants literally died of hunger in such large numbers that in some districts Famine and emigration combined reit was impossible to provide coffins. duced the population of the country from 8 to 6 millions. More than 700,000 A touching description of this Irish emigrated to the United States alone. crisis will be found in a most interesting and fairly impartial book by an A History of our Own Irish Member of Parliament, Mr. Justin MacCarthy Times, from the accession of Queen Victoria to the General Election of 1880, a Vol. I., pp. 299-304. Levi, p. 310.
:
332
Since the price of corn had risen to a corresponding it is not surprising that these importations produced a great demand for gold and were the immediate cause of
extent,
Combined with this immediate cause were others more deeply rooted and dating further back to wit, speculation,
and
in
tbe
intensified by the over-rigid provisions of the Act of 1844 and by the imprudent conduct of the Bank of England. 2 The Railway Mania. Some brief remarks must be made
with respect to the "railway mania" which spread perThe sums annually throughout Great Britain. invested in railway enterprises increased in the following
sistently
3
proportions
1838101841
1842 to 1843
The
1
other
European
countries
followed
England's
The movement
The crisis, which was so disastrous for England and other European The American countries, brought unusual prosperity to the United States. exports in 1847 exceeded by 40 per cent, those of the preceding year, and by 34,317,249 dollars the imports for 1847. It was 29 years before such favourSee Conant, p. 487. able conditions occurred again.
2
For these two causes see D. Morier Evans, The Commercial Crisis 1847and o3' I0 8 respectively. See Porter (G.), The Progress of the Nation in its Social and Comp.
mercial Relations,
327.
Porter was Ricardo's brother-in-law. p. 314) the expenses of labour and material
:
4,880,000 1844 11,280,000 2,384,000 1845 29,188,000 3.548,000 1846 20,560,000 1847 (first six months) 4 " In 1845 Belgium had already 343 miles of railways at a cost of 5,872,000; France 552 miles, at a cost of 10,232,000, with projects and 30,000,000 authority for 1,900 miles more, involving an expenditure of additional Germany had 2,000 miles of railway, made at a cost of
;
,1,176,000
THE CRISIS OF
lasted in
1847.
333
England throughout
suddenly stopped were thus two equally objectionable features about the rail(i) It involved a sudden absorption of the way mania of the nation in enterprises of a single kind. (2) It savings ended in a still more sudden stoppage in the development of the undertakings in which this capital was invested. These characteristics were rendered still more objectionable
:
the first part of 1847, and then after a specially intense outburst. There
by a burst of speculation in railway shares. At the same time it must be acknowledged that the railway mania was the least harmful of the causes of the crisis of 1847, since the evil was in some degree only a temporary one and the extension of the railway system laid a foundation for future prosperity.
1
(b)
THE
CRISIS OF
of 1844
1847
The Act
was intended by
authors to
restrict
the interior note circulation in exact proportion to the export If this end had been attained the results would of bullion.
have been even more disastrous than they actually were 2 all that the Act did produce was a useless pressure on the money market and a sudden contraction in the discounts at a time
;
when it was too late to arrest speculation. The policy of the Bank of England was, on the whole, most unwise. 3 The harvests in 1842, 1843 and 1844 had been very plentiful and the improvement in means of communication
and 2,300 miles more were authorised and the United States of America had completed 3,688 miles, at an expenditure of 17,702,000, and in construction 5,624 miles, involving an expenditure of 26,995,000." Levi, pp. 303-304. See also Conant, p. 488. 1 For a statement of this point of view see Sir Robert Peel's speech in
t
Par/. Debates, 3 rd series, Vol. XCV., pp. 666-667. 3 little the end at which Lord Overstone
How and his supporters aimed On August 29, 1846, actually attained is shown by the following figures the notes in the hands of the public amounted to 20,426,000 and the bullion to in On January 30 the following year the bullion had de16,366,000. creased to 12,902,000, whilst the notes amounted to 20,469,000. By 10 the bullion had dwindled to April .9,867,000, the amount of the notes the This state of same, viz., remaining practically 20,243,000. things much perplexed F. T. Baring, ex-Chancellor of the Exchequer, who had believed in " the " mechanical action of the Act of 1844. See Baring's speech, Parl. Debates, Vol. XCV., p. 615.
was
:
p. 657.
334
now made superfluous an accumulation of commodities such as had formerly been necessary, hence money flowed into the Bank of England and the discount rate was lowered to if per cent, and after some fluctuations, remained at 3 percent, from August, 1846, till January, 1847.
The
still
failure of the potato crop in 1845, followed by the of 1846, made it necessary, as
seen, to export large quantities of bullion for the purchase of foreign corn. Notwithstanding the continuous drain the Bank maintained the same rate of discount from
we have
the middle of September, 1846, until the following January; it was not until its stock of bullion, already reduced
.
had fallen to December, .15,163, ooo in 1846, that it raised the rate to ,13,940,000, 3^ per cent, on i6th. This proved absurdly inadequate, for the January bullion continued to disappear, and it was decided to raise the rate gradually until on April loth it reached 5 per cent. At this date the bullion in the Bank was reduced to ,9*367,000, whilst the Reserve had fallen from ,8,869,000 to ,2,558,000 during the period we have just described. In face of such a situation the market was seized with panic and severe measures had to be taken to stop the demand for notes. The directors decided to keep the discount rate at 5 per cent., but only to discount short paper,
to
and
of bills discounted, however good This policy caused the discount rate of the they might be. 10 or 12 per cent., which rise naturrise to private banks to of the drain bullion, and a sum of ,100,000, ally stopped to which had been shipped go to America, was hastily reto limit the
number
landed.
The Bank
crisis
was appeased
to
increased
,5,625,000. temporary.
to prices of grain had induced many merchants of the But its on quantities large importation. speculate goods imported, joined to the prospects of a good harvest both for corn and potatoes, led to an enormous fall in
The high
THE CRISIS OF
1
1847.
to the
335
speculators.
cereals,
which
fall
was disastrous
involving total
liabilities
market once again. The firm of Saunderson & Co., one of the principal billbroking establishments, which was in close connection with the most important corn dealers, stopped payment in the middle of September. Nearly all the firms engaged in trade with the Mauritius followed suit. These disasters were combined with other important failures in connection with East India trade, in which credit was generally allowed for very long periods on account of the distance. Finally,
the collapse was made absolute by the results of the insane speculation in railways to which we have referred above. The directors of the Bank of England recognised that the
time had come for heroic measures; in fact, the bullion had declined to .8,365,000 and the banking reserve had fallen once more to 3,409,000. On October 2nd, 1847, it was therefore announced that the discount rate would be raised
5j per cent, and that for the time, no advance would be made on public stock or on Exchequer bills. This last measure caused a panic on the Stock Exchange, 3 and led to a fall in Consols* and to the accumulation of notes
to
and coin in private strong boxes. 5 Moreover the banks, which had hitherto 'held their own 6 in the midst of so many
other failures,
now began
of
to give way. On October I3th Abingdon, stopped payment. On October which at the end of
The
price of wheat,
May had
to 493. 6d.
&
went bankrupt the following may be menCo., with liabilities of ^50,000; King, Melville ^200,000; Coventry & Sheppard, also with liabilities of ^200,000; Robinson & Co., whose senior partner was one of the directors of the Bank of England, etc., etc.
Amongst
:
tioned
Leslie,
Alexander
&
Co., with
liabilities of
For the
effect of this
announcement
see
1847.
Consols were at 84^, on October 5th they fell to yyf. Exchequer Bills 35 per cent. Samuel Gurney, in his evidence before the Committee, estimated at 4 or millions the value of the notes hoarded on account of the terror 5 people felt of being left without any. 6 Before October 13 only one bank, Messrs. Cockburns & Co., of WhiteSee Dictionary of Political Economy, Vol. I., p. 460. hall, had failed.
also
fell
6
336
1
Bank of Liverpool failed, and before the of October 23rd large numbers of banks in Liverpool, ManNewcastle and the West of England had followed chester,
8th the Royal
its
example.
of England had to choose between the utter ruin of English trade by an absolute refusal to discount, and the violation of the Act of I844. 1
(c)
The Bank
1844.
The Government
pass
like
desperate
in April and waited until things were before they suspended the Act. 3 It was not until October 23rd, when the banking reserve was ; i, 1 76,000, that the Government decided to inform the
that
they would propose a Bill of Inshould notes be issued in excess of the limit fixed by the Act of 1844, provided that the discount charged was not less than 8 per cent. The official letter was actually sent to the Governor of the Bank two days later; it authorised an increase in the discounts and loans at a minimum rate of 8 per cent. According to the terms of the letter these transactions were to be kept within reasonable limits and a Bill of Indemnity was promised should this
Bank
demnity
In order that policy lead to an infringement of the law. the Bank might not gain by the situation and so be
tempted to prolong it, the letter added that all profits resulting from the additional issues were to go to the Treasury. The publication of the Chancellor of the Exchequer's The certainty that money could letter had a magical effect. to all have it. 4 The Bank prepared desire be got took away
1 Compare Tooke's evidence before the House of Lords' Committee. See Extraits des Enquetes Anglaises, p. 251. a It was not unlikely that the Bank would have to suspend payment, although it had 6 millions in the Issue Department. Diet, of Pol. Econ.,
p. 461.
8 The Chancellor of the Exchequer, Sir Charles Wood, afterwards Lord Halifax, refused several times to agree to such a measure. 4 During the debate on November 30, Sir Charles Wood repeated the following words, characteristic of those who demanded the suspension of the don't mean, indeed, to take the Act of 1844: " Let us have notes notes, because we shall not want them only tell us that we can get them, and this will at once restore confidence." See Parl. Debates, Vol. XCV., p.
. . .
We
399-
THE
them.
CRISIS OF
1847.
337
,400,000 of additional notes, but there was no need to use Notes which had been hoarded under the impression that the limit fixed by the Act of 1844 would shortly be reached and that the Bank would be unable to assist the commercial world, were brought out in a mass from their
hiding-places; the same thing happened with regard to gold, so that both the bullion and the reserve of the Bank rapidly increased to adequate amounts.
1
Bank of England during the Crisis. The mistakes made in the management of the Bank must not make us forget the immense services which it rendered. Between September i5th and November I5th the Bank
Aid Given by
the
assisted different important financial and trading establishments and through them the whole of English commerce, 2 in the following ways
:
150,000 to a large firm in London ... on security of debentures of the Governor and Company of the Copper Miners of England," and prevented a failure
i.
"
It
advanced
with "
advanced .50,000
to
"3. It advanced ,120,000 to the Governor and Company of the Copper Miners, which prevented them stopping payment." 11 It advanced ,300,000 to the Royal Bank of Liver4.
pool."
Unfortunately,
It
this
proved
"
5. in the
it
was,
advanced ,100,000
country."
It
"6.
"
advanced ,130,000 on
advanced ,50,000
to
It
See Wood's speech, loc. cit. See Macleod, Theory of Credit, p. 1031, and Theory and Practice of Banking, Vol. II., p. 168. These two works are almost identical towards the end of his life Macleod deceived himself into a belief that he was working "by re-publishing his previous books under different titles.
3
:
338
11
8. It advanced ,50,000 on bills of exchange to a jointstock bank of issue, which soon after stopped payment." It saved a bank in Liverpool from 9. failing by not insisting on the immediate payment of ^100,000 which was
due
11
to
it.
It assisted another very large joint-stock bank in the country by an advance of ,800,000 beyond its usual discount limit."
10.
1 1 It advanced ,300,000 to two Scotch banks. Besides these advances it made many others in addition, both in London and in the provinces, but it would be tedious to specify them. must, however, note the well-deserved tribute paid to the Bank by the Chancellor of the Exchequer during the debate in the Commons on November 3oth. " The Bank of England," said Sir Charles Wood, 1 " was
.
We
all
and
through the London bankers, who were called Two upon to support their country correspondents. bill-brokers had stopped, and the operations of two others were nearly paralysed. The whole demand for discount was thrown upon the hands of the Bank of England. Notwithindirectly
.
the Bank never refused a bill w hich it standing this would have discounted at another time, but still, the larg( mass of bills which, under ordinary circumstances, are discounted by bill-brokers, could not be negotiated."
. .
(d)
1847.
There was a General Election in the autumn of 1847, am when Parliament met 2 the first proceeding of the Ministn was to propose the appointment of a Committee of Inquir " into the causes of the recent commercial distress, and ho\ far it has been affected by the Laws for regulating the Issu of Bank Notes payable on Demand." The Parliamentary debate on this motion lasted thre
1
Parl.
Debates,
loc.
cit.,
p. 398.
The Queen's Speech (Parl Debates, Vol. XCV., pp. 11-14) dealt at sonlength with the Bank of England and stated that happily the authorisatio granted to the Bank had not led to an infringement of the law.
THE CRISIS OF
1847.
339
days. The principal speakers were Messrs. Wilson, Molesworth, Ellice, Newdegate, Baring, the Chancellor of the have already referred Exchequer and Sir Robert Peel. to the speeches of Baring and Sir Charles Wood, and now propose to give a rather more detailed analysis of that of Sir Robert Peel, partly because the speaker was mainly
We
responsible for the Act of 1844, which had claimed to be a preventive against crises, but also because his speech is
in itself
worth recording. 1
Peel, after denying the statement that the Act of 1844 na d been passed without sufficient preliminary inquiry, 2 proceeded to consider the triple object of the law in question. 3
severe
was ... to prevent, by early and gradual, and sudden contraction, and the panic and confusion inseparable from it." In this object Peel admitted that the Act had failed, for the Bank had not been forced to take
Its first object
'
early precautions to prevent the withdrawal of its treasure. He remarked, however, that : "If the Bank had possessed
of
issues, by raising the rate of discount, ... if they had been firm and determined in the adoption of those precautions, the necessity for extrinsic interference
it
prevented, might not then have been necessary for the Government to authorise a violation of the Act of 1844."
But, besides this first object which had not been attained, " the Bill had two other objects of equal importance (i) to maintain and guarantee the convertibility of the paper
:
4
to prevent the difficulties which arise at all currency (2) times from undue speculation being aggravated by the abuse of paper credit in the form of promissory notes.' In these two objects Peel believed that the Bill had completely succeeded. There had been no shadow of doubt cast
;
' 7
'
'
on the convertibility of the paper currency and the power of making unlimited issues had been wisely checked with
respect both to the
Bank
of
England and
to the
country
banks.
1
in Par/.
3
Debates,
p.
655.
657.
340
After this discussion of the objects of the Act of 1844, Sir Robert Peel described the history of the crisis of 1847, 1 He explicitly beginning by an inquiry into its causes.
approved the policy of the Government both in sending the letter and in their choice of the moment for sending it. He " in the because when there principle, approved policy occurs a state of panic a state which cannot be foreseen or provided against by law which cannot be reasoned with, the Government must assume a power to prevent the con2 sequences which may occur."
Finally, in reference to the advisability of making some " modification in the Act of 1844, Peel declared himself in favour of the maintenance of the great principles of that
measure."
be required
He
"
believed 3 that the joint-stock banks ought to to bear some share of the expense of keeping
Bank of England, if were removed, others imposed would have to take their place. " Some restrictions you must impose, for after the experience of 1826, 1836 and 1839, I> f r one am not content to leave the regulation of the monetary concerns of this country to the uncontrolled discretion of the Bank. In 1844 the general conviction was that it ought not to be so left and I, for one, know no better mode of imposing restriction than that which was devised by the Act of 1844." After Sir Robert Peel's speech the proposal to appoint a
in reserve a stock of gold." the identical restrictions now
to the
>
;
As
Committee
of Inquiry
was agreed
to.
This inquiry
of view
and
supplies valuable information, without which the causes and the history of the crisis of 1847 could not be understood.
it
4
One
of
its
shows plainly
1 a
most interesting features is perhaps that that the supporters of Peel's Act were in
668.
p. 669.
all
See the Extraits des Enquetes Anglaises by references are to this edition.
MM.
THE CRISIS OF
1847.
341
no way discouraged by the crisis which was just over, author of they upheld the law more zealously than the
himself.
it
Consider, in the
and the 1 Morris and Mr. Prescott. They declared their full approval Act had attained its main object, The of the Act of 1844. the was to ensure which convertibility of the notes further crisis less severe, although it had had the made than this, it It must be recognised, they arrival. its perhaps hastened was inevitable and that it distress commercial said, that the was independent of the Act of 1844. But the great merit of the Act in their opinion was that owing to it the Bank
;
place, the evidence of the Governor Deputy-Governor of the Bank of England, Mr.
first
possessed a stock of bullion amounting to ^8,000,000, when the pressure came, whereas if the Bank had been free it
would have adopted the policy of dangerous liberality which had done so much harm on previous occasions. Hence the Governors of the Bank naturally deprecated any modification of the Act of 1844 an<^ the same conclusion was reached by Mr. G. W. Norman 2 and Mr. S. J. 3 Loyd. The brief and strongly worded Report of the Committee of the House of Commons came to the same decision. 4 The Report of the House of Lords, however, embodied
Its purport can be judged by the 5 M. Courcelle-Seneuil from following quotation Those who had believed that the Act of 1844 would
different conclusions.
'
prevent the periodical recurrence of over-excitement followed by a commercial crisis must have been sadly disappointed
by the events
1
of 1846
la
and
i847.
that the
la
See Enqu&te de
des
p.
Chambre
and Enqugte de
Chambre
3
8
Communes,
pp. 5-81.
218, Enquete des Lords. For the evidence of these two see Enquete des Lords, pp. 119-195. A French version of this report is given in the Extraits de I'Enqudte de
la
Chambre
*
des
Communes,
pp. 1-4.
Traite"
It is
imagined Thoughts on the Separation of the Departments of the Bank of England, which is reprinted in the Tracts, pp. 249-283, states definitely (pp. 240-241)
theorique et pratique des Operations de Banque, p. 324. only fair to point out that the authors of the law of 1844 never such absurdities. Loyd, for instance, in a pamphlet entitled
342
Act would discourage rash speculation could hardly have been less disappointed, for, according to the evidence of the Governor of the Bank of England, speculation had never been so rife as from 1846 to 1847. Those who thought that the Act would secure the market from violent fluctuations in the value of money, were undeceived when they found that the difference between the maximum and minimum rates of discount, which had varied from 2j to 2| per cent, during
in
the disastrous years of 1837 an<3 1839, rose to 6f per cent, 1847. Those who thought that in future the bank-
would be less frequent and less serious were conclusively answered when the Governor of the Bank described how in London alone thirty-three important firms had failed,
ruptcies
with a total liability of ,8,129,000, etc." Two suggestions " had been made before the Committee of the House of Lords the one advised the absolute repeal of the Act of 1844, the other proposed that the Act should be maintained, but accompanied by a wider relaxing power." The Report decided in favour of the latter suggestion. 1
;
" We that the reform will not prevent crises from occurring, but he adds, can prevent an additional stimulus being given to a rise of prices and undue It must be speculations by the influence of an ill-regulated currency." acknowledged after an interval of sixty years that even this limited object has not been completely attained.
1
Compare
CHAPTER
II.
THE CRISIS OF
Sudden outbreak of the
:
1857.
crisis of 1857 a contrast to the preceding one. Cautious policy of the Bank during the Crimean War. Condition of the market during 1856 and more than half 1857. The crisis of 1857 in America. The three causes of the American crisis. Their influence felt also in Europe, (a) The great discoveries of gold, (6) The extension of railways, (c) The development of banking and the abuse of credit facilities. number of failures in America. The ruin of American Extraordinary banks led to that of a number of English banks. The Bank of England the only source of discount in the United Kingdom. Reduction of the Bank Reserve on November 12, to ^384,114. Assistance given by the Bank to commerce in anticipation of the suspension of the Act. The suspension of the Act. Letter of the Chancellor of the Exchequer text of this letter. Bank issues ^2,000,000 notes in excess of the statutory limit, the maximum put into circulation only ,928,000. Comparison between the crisis of 1857 and the crises of 1847 and 1866 with reference A Bill of Indemnity had to be to the suspension of the Act of 1844. The Inquiry of 1858 and the causes of the crisis of 1857 (i) passed. Unprecedented extension of International Trade, (2) Excessive importation of precious metals, (3) Remarkable development of banks of credit.
: :
THE
1847.
crisis of
It
1857 differs in several respects from that of result of a bad harvest, but was in the
main the after effect of a crisis produced in America by unbounded speculation. The distinctive feature of this crisis in 1857 was that, although the panic accompanying it was less intense than that of ten years earlier, the pressure on the money market was more severe and more prolonged it was also the only crisis in which the Bank of England was obliged to violate the Act of 1844 by exceeding the statutory
;
limit.
began with great suddenness. There were, no doubt, signs of stringency on the money market even before Bad harvests and a decline in foreign investments 1857. had caused pressure on the European markets as early as 1853. But the Crimean War had increased people's timidity and had thus made the business world more prudent and
crisis
The
delayed the
crisis.
On
this occasion
344
of the
England deserved
all
praise;
its
policy
was
analogous to that followed quite recently during the South African War. It raised its rate of discount unhesitatingly
in spite of the violence
The
7
and bitterness of the protests raised. was very high throughout 1855 and even reached 2 per cent. and when the war came to an end without prorate
ducing the anticipated disaster, people were forced to acknowledge that the Bank of England deserved well of the
country. In spite of everything the market continued very uneasy during 1856; the discount rate was high and the situation continued somewhat strained until September, 1857, without, however, arousing any suspicion of what was to follow. According to the evidence of the Governor of the Bank, S.
things were then pretty stationary," but the " harvests promised well and except for certain more far4 the well were content with the conpublic seeing persons,"
Neave,
"
dition of affairs.
The Bank
of notes
felt
so confident that on
stock of bullion
the East India the East.
6
amounted
to
A week
THE
Company
to export a million in specie to later the crisis had burst out in America.
was
These were:
(i)
great discoveries of gold ; (2) The extension of railways; (3) The development of banking and of speculation.
1
fl
See Weguelin's evidence, Extraits des Enqutes, 1857, p. 101. It fell as low as 3$ per cent, only for a very short time during the
See
p. xv. of
summer.
3
the Report.
These far-seeing persons had observed that the great stimulus given to business by the war expenditure could only be temporary and that nevertheless, merchants were continuing their purchases in anticipation of a continuance of the high prices.
5
Juglar, p. 367.
THE CRISIS OF
i.
1857.
345
of
Gold.
large
Towards the middle of the iQth century the discovery of a number of gold mines caused an economic revolution,
which recalled that due to the discovery of the treasures of The average Peru and Mexico four centuries earlier. annual production between 1493 and 1850 had been estimated at ; i, 800,000; between 1851 and 1860 it increased to
President Buchanan a yearly average of ^26, 600,000. calculated that the production of the United States alone
1
Prices did not increase proportionately to the increase in " enterprises of all kinds received a money, but
2.
The Extension
of Railways.
In 1856, 3,642 miles of railway were constructed in the United States, and the construction from 1849 to 1857 had
This
total,
which amounted
to
seven-
ninths of the railway system in the whole country, had absorbed capital to the amount of ^140, 000,000, mainly foreign. The steady increase of immigration, added to the
normal growth of the population and the immense progress in districts which had hitherto been undeveloped, " 4 intoxicated the nation. As Von Hoist remarks: It was more and more lost sight of, that even in the age of steam, time must remain an essential factor in every process of " to development," and the American people were led mould the reality in their minds in accordance with what imagination pictured to them."
made
1 According to Conant, p. 493, Professor Soetbeer estimates the total production of gold between 1493 and 1850 as 173,258,000,000 marks, and between 1851 and 1885 at 17,810,000,000 marks. Between 1885 and 1895 the production was ^275, 000,000, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica (Supplement Vol. XIX., p. 18), and between 1895 and 1899 it apparently increased by two-fifths.
2 3
Conant, Conant,
p.
493.
loc. cit.
lation, Vol.
346
England and the Continent had witnessed a similar extension in their railway systems. In England alone more than 4,000 miles had been constructed since 1850, the exist1 ing lines being thus doubled. And in Europe, as in America, speculation in railways had been encouraged by the payment of dividends out of
capital.
3.
The Development
of Banking Credit.
of
of banks in America increased very rapidly; were 715, in 1857 there were 1,416. And what was worse, the discounts increased in like proportion and more than rose from 310,382,945 dollars to 684,456,887 double the previous amount. The circulation increased in an analogous manner from 105,519,766 dollars to 214,778,822 2 dollars. M. Juglar remarks that this was not actually due
in 1847 there
The number
owing to the strictness of the regulathe issues did not often exceed the metallic reserve; tions, but the bankers got over this difficulty by attracting deposits by high interest and lending them on similar terms
to over-issue, since
to reckless speculators.
M.
too the increase of banks having an insufficient capital an an of doubled excess exagmany deposits currency by gerated extension of discounting.
;
Nevertheless
United States. " Conditions were ripe both in Europe and America for a crash when the impulse came on August 24th, 1857, from the failure of the Ohio Life Insurance and Trust Co., of Cincinnati and New York, with reported liabilities A panic followed on the New York of 7,000,000 dollars. Stock Exchange, stocks fell, money was hoarded to be
of the United States The author gives a full Vol. III., p. 53. analysis of this crisis in America as well as some details with regard to
1
foreign
capital
steadily
flowed
into
the
For further
the
details see
from
Compromise
of 1850,
Europe.
3
p. 268.
p.
269.
THE CRISIS OF
1857.
347
loaned only at extravagant rates, deposits began to disappear from the banks, and late in September a run began on the banks of Philadelphia. They were compelled to 1 suspend specie payments on September 26th."
During the beginning of October the Illinois Central Railway, the New York and Erie and the Michigan Central all failed, as well as 150 banks in Pennsylvania, Virginia and Maryland. At the same time the New York banks shared the fate of those at Philadelphia. They had contracted their discounts very suddenly, reducing them from 122,000,000 dollars to 97,200,000 between August 8th and October I7th. But this contraction, says D. Morier Evans, 2 " by causing much damage to the country banks and the commercial interest, had awakened a feeling of jealousy in addition to the general alarm, and on the I3th (of October)
a preconcerted run took place.
The stoppage of eighteen banks was the immediate consequence of the pressure. The remaining establishments put themselves under the pro3 tection of the law." Out of the sixty-three banks in New York only one manto
aged
avoid suspending
i
its
of this crisis of 1857 n America may be realised from the fact that there were 5,123 failures in the United States and
Canada, with
liabilities
amounting
to 291,801,000 dollars.*
THE
Money was already dear in England and complaints were being raised against the Bank, when the news of the failure of the Ohio Life Insurance Co. caused intense alarm on account of the ,80,000,000 which were reported to be invested in American stock. The operations of a syndicate
1
Conant,
p. 496.
The History of the Commercial Crisis, 1858-59, p. 34. 3 Sumner, A History of American Currency, p. 184, says that the constitution of the State of New York forbade the suspension of specie payments directly or indirectly, but on this occasion the judges of the Supreme Court met and agreed not to grant any injunction unless the Bank appeared to be
really insolvent or guilty of fraud.
4
Morier Evans,
p. 34.
348
1 speculators for a fall, increased the anxiety, rate of in New York interest the attracted high although The Bank of France lost 25,000,000 considerable sums.
of bears,
francs in one
fell to
in the
Bank
of
England
On
^8,991,000 on October igth. November 7th the firm of Dennistoun stopped pay-
The Western liabilities of nearly 2 millions. Bank closed its doors on the 9th of November, the City of Glasgow Bank soon did likewise and a number of failures occurred. The Bank of England had to send more than a million to Scotland, besides meeting important demands for
ment, with
gold in Ireland. It was the only source of discount during a crisis which paralysed everyone's courage; in a single day its discounts amounted to ,2, 373,000. The conse-
quence was that on Wednesday, November nth, its entire reserve, including what was held at the branch establishments, only amounted to ,1,462,153, of which ,957,710 was in notes and the next evening the reserve in the banking department had fallen to ^384,914, consisting of
^274,953 in gold and ,42,106 in silver. The Bank could not have gone on for another day under the regime of the Act of 1844* and its stoppage would have meant the entire collapse of the London market.
^68,035
in notes,
Nevertheless, as we have seen, it had continued its discounts when everyone else had contracted theirs. This policy evidently implied a feeling of certainty that the Act would be suspended; this was actually done at the last moment, by a letter from the Chancellor of the Exchequer a letter modelled on the to the Governors of the Bank
1 In Stock Exchange parlance bears are specuGilbart, Vol. II., p. 302. lators for a fall, bulls speculators for a rise.
Macleod, Theory of Credit, p. 1056. See the statement made by the Governor of the Bank before the Committee of Inquiry. Question 132 Supposing that the letter from the Chancellor had not been issued on that day, would the Bank on the morning of the 1 3th (November) have been in a condition to continue its discounts? u No, certainly not." See Extraits des Enquetes Anglaises. Enque'te de
3
:
1858, p. 18.
Compare
p.
30.
THE CRISIS OF
1857.
349
analogous one of October 25th, 1847, whose contents we have described. 1 As in 1847, the public alarm was at once abated, but this time the demands for discount continued to be very numerous for more than a fortnight. The Bank issued
,2, 000,000
maximum
of additional
of notes in excess of the statutory limit; the notes actually in circulation did
not however exceed ,928,000 (on November 2Oth), remainder were added to the reserve. 2
1
the
The
"
Gentlemen,
November 12, 1857, is as follows Downing Street, 12 November, 1857. " Her Majesty's Government have observed with great concern the
text of the letter of
:
serious consequences which have ensued from the recent failure of certain joint-stock banks in England and Scotland, as well as of certain large The discredit mercantile firms, chiefly connected with the American trade. and distrust which have resulted from these events, and the withdrawal of a large amount of the paper circulation authorised by the existing Bank Acts,
Bank
present emergency to
it necessary for them to inform England that if they should be unable in the meet the demands for discounts and advances upon
of
approved securities without exceeding the limits of their circulation prescribed by the Act of 1844, the Government will be prepared to propose to Parliament, upon its meeting, a Bill of Indemnity for any excess so issued. "In order to prevent this temporary relaxation of the law being extended beyond the actual necessities of the occasion, Her Majesty's Government are of opinion that the Bank terms of discount should not be reduced below their
present rate.
" Her Majesty's Government reserve for future consideration the appropriation of any profits which may arise upon issues in excess of the statutory amount. " Her Majesty's Government are fully impressed with the importance of maintaining the letter of the law, even in a time of considerable mercantile but they believe that, for the removal of apprehensions which have difficulty checked the course of monetary transactions, such a measure as is now contemplated has become necessary, and they rely upon the discretion and
;
prudence of the directors for confining its operation within of the exigencies of the case.
" PALMERSTON. We have, etc., (Signed) "G. C. LEWIS." We quote this letter from the report of the Committee of 1857, Report from the Select Committee on the Bank Acts, p. xl. (French version by M. "
Emile Jouveaux, see
p.
Enqutcs
sur la legislation
limit was exCompare Rapport
ceeded from
November
i3th to 3oth.
p. xxi.
Commission d'EnquSte,
Nov. 13
14 16
17 18
;i86,ooo
622,000 860,000 836,000 852,000 896,000 998,000 6l7,OOO
Nov. 23
24 25 26 27 28
;397> 00
317,000 81,000 243,000 342.000 184,000 15,000
19
20
21
30
350
COMPARISON BETWEEN THE CRISIS OF 1857 AND THOSE OF 1847 AND 1866 WITH REGARD TO THE SUSPENSION OF THE ACT OF 1844.
exceeded
Although the amount by which the statutory limit was in 1857, was comparatively small, the mere fact that the limit was exceeded was unprecedented and has remained .unique in the history of the Bank down to the present day. It is true that the Bank had been authorised in 1847 to exceed the limit fixed by the Act of 1844 an d> as
shall see,
it
we
1866, but
*866 did
make
granted by the
Government.
The
inter-
vention of Parliament was a necessity on this occasion. It will be remembered, indeed, that the Chancellor of the
the Act of 1844, this
Exchequer does not actually authorise the Bank to violate would be beyond his powers; all that he can do is to inform the directors that if they find them-
selves obliged, in the interests of commerce, to exceed the statutory limit, the Government is prepared to propose a
Bill
of
Indemnity
letter
to
Parliament.
sufficient
to allay anxiety, the proved and limit not there was no need for was exceeded, statutory a Bill of Indemnity. In 1857, when Parliament met, the Government brought in and passed an Act sanctioning the
Chancellor's
additional issues which had been made, and temporarily suspending, (until February ist, 1858), the Act of 1844, on
condition that the directors did not reduce the rate of dis-
count below 10 per cent. On December 24th however the Bank lowered its rate to 8 per cent. This proceeding automatically set the Act of 1844 in force again. It had actually been suspended for forty-three days, from November i3th to December 24th, but in theory and legally the suspension
had only
1
Viet., c. i.)
lasted twelve days, since the Act of Indemnity (21 was not passed until December 12th. 1
The
is
THE CRISIS OF
1857.
35 1
COMPARISON BETWEEN THE CRISES OF 1847 AND 1857 WITH REGARD TO THEIR SEVERITY.
As
regards this point it is probable that the panic was than in 1847, but that, on the other hand,
the real suffering was more widespread. This view is borne out by the fact that the total of loans, discounts and Bank the of England was made stock advances upon by
ist.
had
THE INQUIRY OF
1858
According to the wise English custom, the crisis of 1857 was followed by an inquiry. It is impossible to give an 2 analysis of it here, but we may, at any rate, summarise its
conclusions as to the causes of the crisis.
As
classified
chief causes of
the crisis of 1857 were three (i) An unprecedented extension of foreign trade. (2) An excessive importation of gold and silver. remarkable development of banks and of (3)
credit.
(1)
With regard
to the first
cause,
it
was shown
that,
owing especially to the reform of the tariff, the imports had increased from 71 to 124 millions and that the exports, which until 1848 had never exceeded ^60,110,000, had
reached
(2)
in 1857.
it
With regard
was
stated
stock,
that
European
was exported, leaving a total increase of ,80,700,000. There was naturally a corresponding increase in the circulating medium, the paper currency not represented by bullion being ^"31,600,000 and the gold coins
whilst ^"26,800^000
amounting
1
to 50 millions.
Levi, p. 404. For this subject see Extraits des Enquctes by Coullet and Juglar. Report, p. v. (Extraits, especially p. xii.); see also D. M. Evans, op. cit.,
p. 32.
352
(3)
The
The
which
had
amounted
to
,8,800,000
in
1847,
were
^"43,100,724 in 1857, an d there was a proportional increase in the other deposits, both at the private and the country banks. The result was a great extension of credit facilities.
very easy to define how far credit very clear that during the years 1855 and 1856 the extension of credit was enormous and dangerous. It has been sometimes asserted, though there is no way of testing the truth of the assertion, that during the years in question there were as many bills offered for
may
"
this point
1
i
it
is
discount in
the real the
total
Lombard
of
volume
Street as there are now (1890), though of trade has vastly increased since 1857, imports and of exports being unitedly
^311,764,000
and ^748,944,000 in 1890. In those times it was a common thing for banks in manufacturing districts to send great masses of bills to London for re-dis.The amount of this business in 1856 and 1857 count. was enormous, and even after the panic of that year, when many bills came to an end by failures of traders and of bankers, the amount of re-discount by banks continued to be very large. But, at this moment, that business has almost come to an end."
in 1856,
.
.
Diet, of Political
Economy, Vol.
I.,
p.
462.
CHAPTER
III.
THE CRISIS OF
Economic
results of the Civil
1866.
War
in the
U.S.A. Influx of gold into Europe. Immediate causes of the crisis of 1866,
(i) The rage for limited companies, (2) The practice of financing, (3) Bad customs adopted by certain banks with regard to deposits. The crisis of
A retarded liquidation. 1864 and the crisis of 1866. Overend and Gurney. Black Friday. Remarks on the firm of Overend and Gurney and the causes of its collapse. Unprecedented panic resulting from the failure of this firm. Advances amountmillions Bank in to four made the a by ing single day (Friday, May n).
1866.
The
crisis of
The
failure of
End of the crisis. Part played by the Suspension of the Act of 1844. Bank. The Act suspended on the evening of Friday, May n. Announcement of suspension allayed panic, fresh outbreak a few days later, flow Great services of deposits to the Bank, no additional issue required. rendered by the Bank, Advances amounting to ,12,225,000 made in five Results of the crisis of 1866. Excitement aroused by the crisis days. Lord Clarendon's circular. outside England. Heavy losses at home.
Some good
(a)
WAR
OF SECESSION.
THE
War
in
'
America were years of financial difficulty in Europe as well as in America. These difficulties were in part due to the war and in part to causes distinct from but intensified by it. The influx of gold into Europe and the disturbance of the cotton trade must be ranked among the most important
yf the direct
The system of inconvertible Influx of gold into Europe. oaper currency established in the United States in 1861
:aused gold to flow into Europe in considerable quantities. f^n American author to whom frequent reference has been nade in the course of this work, Mr. Conant, estimates the ;old exported from America at 21,532,891 dollars in 1862; >6,642,2oo dollars in 1863; 89,484,865 dollars in 1864; and
1
dollars in 1865.
1
P-
5o-
354
(b)
1866.
disorganisation of the cotton trade, the confusion due export of gold, the fall in the rate of interest and the accumulation of capital resulting from the extension in the
to the
The
use of machinery, very soon gave a feverish and speculative character to the English money market, recalling the conditions prevailing in 1825 and 1847.
The speculative tendency showed itself especially in craze for limited liability companies and in the practic<
of financing.
'<
I.
The Mania
of this
for
Companies
special charters; their promotion did not become easy unti 3 after the amendment of the Company Law in i862.
the hope of unlimited profit combined wit! limited risk aroused much enthusiasm. In a short time thre
At the outset
Stanley Jevons Investigations in Currency and Between 1862 and 1866 the net imports of 54,094,337 tens of rupees (the ten of rupees was about bills on India sold by the English Government were
1
:
p. 58. into India wet tr i), whilst equal to only 29,409,469 tens (
Finance,
silver
France felt the indirect effects of this disturbance, since its silver piece which were at a premium, vanished as if by magic. 3 For this Act, 25 and 26 Viet., c. 139, see Lyon-Caen and Renaul
Traite" des Society's
Commer dales,
p.
478, et seq.
THE CRISIS OF
capital of ,504,000,000.
1866.
355
France amounted
in
sum
of
,145,000,000
four
months
of 1864 securities to the value of ,75,400,000 were 1 the English market. It has been estimated upon placed that 90 per cent, of these limited companies founded between
The abuses committed 1865 ultimately failed. made people forget for the time the advantages of the limited company system, and one distinguished writer 2 goes
1862 and
even
"
"
pestilential principle
of limited
The Practice
of Financing.
number issued, the shares became Owing Since credit was lacking, people resorted to unsaleable. financing and to finance bills. These terms demand some
to the excessive
3
explanation.
Suppose
applied to a
that a railway contractor wanted ,50,000; he company, offering as security shares in the line
he was constructing. The company agreed to lend him the amount, not in cash, but by an acceptance made out in his favour; this acceptance the contractor could then discount, and thus obtain the money required. In this way profit was made by the loan of a signature only. The transaction was not analogous to the discount of a bill of exchange, for
there were
an interval before being
no goods delivered and sold and requiring only consumed; hence the distaste which Bankers felt to accepting and circulating such paper. It must, however, be acknowledged that the new method was legitimate within the limits of the strength of the
'
By
its
means
enterprises which
value
1
could
Juglar, p. 378.
2
3
On the subject of financing see Juglar, p. 380, and Levi, p. 462. The stem was indeed not unknown in France in fact, this country was ahead f England in this respect, thanks chiefly to the Societe de Credit Mobilier.
356
the firms which turned their attention to financof the best known was that of Messrs. Overend, one ing of which we shall have more to say later. & Gurney Co., Combined with the limited companies and the practice of financing, bad habits in relation to deposits began to make Hitherto respectable banks had only their appearance. interest on their deposit accounts, which the depositors paid could only withdraw after due notice and in a lump sum, but had not allowed interest on current or drawing accounts, on which English depositors draw cheques and which can thus be withdrawn at will. The new banks, especially the Colonial banks, neglected these wise practices and began tc pay interest even on drawing accounts, at first at low rates,
Amongst
and country banks increased by 20 millions the same period. But the system ended in the ruir during both of the depositors and of the bankers.
at private
(c)
I.
THE
CRISIS OF
1866.
The
Crisis of 1864
crises in
the
first
ending
in
th
liquidation of the smaller tradesmen, the second affecting In both cases the liquidation on th the large capitalist.
in 1864;
its effects
were
felt
eve
and Australia.
different course:
In
This
easiness.
1
The
toward
See Conant,
p. 502.
in fact, consist* large proportion of these deposits, about a quarter of acceptances (see Juglar, p. 385).
THE CRISIS OF
,the
1866.
357
of
end of 1863
England
was twice obliged to raise its rate of discount to 9 per cent. For the time the collapse was successfully averted. Unfortunately it was only delayed a couple of years and
England gained nothing by waiting. The crisis of 1866 was, in fact, the most serious that has been experienced in modern times.
The
was
1 proof, as M. Juglar observes, that the crisis of 1866 not independent, but was the violent and inevitable
completion of that of 1864, though somewhat delayed, is that other countries had no share in it. Their crash had occurred
in 1864.
II.
The Failure
of
Over end
&
Gurney.
Black Friday.
The year 1866 opened with gloomy prospects. Abroad everything pointed to a European war; at home a commerThe first warning of .cial crisis soon appeared imminent.
was given in February by the failure of the Joint-Stock Discount Company, and this was followed by the stoppage "of Barned's Bank at Liverpool, with liabilities of
it
2
grew worse from day to day; Bank of England, which had fallen to 6 per cent., was raised early in May to 7, 8, 9 and inally, on May nth, to 10 per cent. Towards evening of May loth the news spread of the greatest failure which had occurred in England, that of Oyerend, Gurney and 3o. The firm of Overend & Gurney was one of the most
Iiitherto espected in the City. It enjoyed a European reputation ; )ne of the partners, S. Gurney, had played an important
i
iddition
1847 and the subsequent inquiry, and in held deposits to the amount of 8 millions. Unortunately, after 1860 this firm had become involved in a
it
>ut
and was actually insolvent withAn opportunity was taken in anyone suspecting to it as a limited reconstruct Xugust, 1865, liability comeries of risky speculations
it.
1
P- 3873
Gilbart, op.
cit.,
358
50 shares, of pany, with a capital of 5 millions in 100,000 which ;i5 were paid up. ,500,000 was paid for the goodwill of the old firm, whose position we have seen. The shares of the new company were at first sold at a 10. Some months later Overend, premium of Gurney and Company failed under the following circumstances
:
was pending before the law courts against the Mid- Wales Railway to recover the value of securities amounting to ^60,000 which had been accepted by the company, and which were held by Overend & Gurney and two other firms. Judgment was delivered on May gth to the effect that the railway company had no authority to accept the securities. This decision, combined with rumours about Overend & Gurney which had been current for some little
action
time, caused a run upon the firm. The directors tried to avert disaster by asking for help from the Bank of England
of ^"400,000; but the security offered was 1 loan was refused, and the firm of Overend, the insufficient,
to the
An
amount
liabilities
of
next day (Friday, May nth) will long be known in " Black Friday." 3 The prevailing of the City as annals the excitement is indescribable; Lombard Street was impass-
The
able,
crease to
seemed that demands for accommodaton must inan extraordinary extent, and doubt was thrown upon the position of the most respected houses. 4 " It might have been thought," exclaims Wolowski, " that the ships carrying England and her fortune had suddenly sprung a terrible leak and that the wrecked persons
it
1
Not without
Bank
& Gurney lasted 27 years and liquidation of the firm of Overend cost ^188,953. The final report of the liquidators was presented on Novembe For further details see the Bankers' Magazine for December, i> 18, 1893.
2
The
3 The same name had been given to Friday, December 6, 1745, when tf advance of the Pretender struck terror into the London commercial wor See above, p. 150. tl 4 See the beginning of an article by Wolowski which appeared in Revue des Deux Mondes (August 15, 1866), under the title of Le This article was reprinted with others by the same autn< Vendredi. et book bearing the somewhat inadequate title of La Banque d'Angleterre Banques d'Ecosse.
J
,
THE CRISIS OF
1866.
359
in
search
On this one day alone the Bank of England made advances to the value of nearly 4 millions; and its reserve, which had been ^5,727,000 in the morning, was reduced to about 3 millions. 1
III.
Suspension of the Act of 1844. End of the Part Played by the Bank of England.
the evening of this
stated that
Crisis.
On
the
Exchequer described
Commons and
the
same Friday the Chancellor the situation to the House the Government had written
of of
to in
Indemnity was obliged to exceed the statutory limit of its issues.* The news of the suspension of the Act of 1844 was received with applause from both sides of the House and was The enthusiastically welcomed by the commercial world. 3 of the authorisathe latter so as was intense that, anxiety tion for the additional issues was not announced before midnight, a deputation of bankers waited on the Chancellor of the Exchequer at the House itself. It is said that one of the representatives of the joint-stock banks remarked to the " I can draw a representative of the Bank of England, of will shut you to-morrow which couple cheques morning 4 at once." up The suspension of the Act of 1844 had such an effect that the next day the crisis seemed to be at an end. The pressure on the banks ceased temporarily, and, as in 1847, the Bank of England was not obliged to exceed the legal limits of its
case
it
Bank promising
to introduce a Bill of
issues.
The demand
it
siderable, but
1 These figures are taken from the letter of the Governor of the Bank, L. Holland, to Gladstone, who was then Chancellor of the Exchequer.
The
letter
similar letters
Wolowski,
J
of the Chancellor of the Exchequer was modelled on the sent in 1847 and 1857. The text of this letter is given by pp. 102-103.
On
&
this
Peto
4
Betts,
same Friday (May n) the great railway contractors, Morton, whose liabilities amounted to 4 millions, suspended payment.
cit..
Gilbart, op.
Vol. II.,
p. 319.
360
the
as soon as
it
was known
;
Unfortunately during the following week a number of failures took place these alarmed the depositors
of
would be issued.
and produced fresh disasters. The London Bank was obliged to stop payment with liabilities f ;4333>877, after paying 50 per cent, of its deposits.
the other banks
in its
The Consolidated Bank tried to assist it but collapsed turn. The Agra and Masterman's Bank, which then
liabilities of
occu-
pied a most important position in the East, failed also, with ,15,582,002. These banks all possessed sufficient assets, but they had not time to convert them into
cash.
The important
time
the
is
part played by the Bank of England at this evident from a statement made by Mr. Gladstone in
of
House
of
Commons on May
lyth.
to this statement, the advances made by the England on Government securities on Friday, the day of the panic, amounted to ,929,000, on the following day to .747,000, and during the three succeeding days they made up the total of ^2,874,000. With regard to com-
According
Bank
in general, the best measure that can be given of the manner in which the Bank has exercised its functions is
merce
"
has made advances upon bills and has ,9,350,000, making a total of advances and discounts in five days of ,12, 225,000.'*
shown
in this
that
it
discounted
(d)
1866.
The crisis was not appeased in a single day. The discount rate of 10 per cent, was maintained by the Bank from May nth until August 6th, for the distrust of English investments was so great that even this high rate failed to attract capital from countries where, as in France, the rate continued to be less than 4 per cent. This distrust on the part of the foreigner, which at one
time
it
persist,
that
had
1 The deposits at the Bank, which were 13^ millions on increased to 16 millions by the xyth.
THE CRISIS OF
1866.
361
London was going to lose its predominance in the world's money market. Sir Stafford Northcote is supposed to have remarked that there was " a run upon England." 1 The circular issued at this time by the Earl of Clarendon, 2 in which it was stated that "Her Majesty's Government have no reason to apprehend that there is any general want
in the ordinary trade of this country which can reasonable give ground for anxiety or alarm either in this or abroad," only served to increase the distrust felt country
of
soundness
by foreigners. At home there was no lack of confidence so far as the Bank of England was concerned; its metallic reserve, which had never fallen below ;i 1,800,000, rose to ^19,200,000 in December, 1866. But the losses in commerce and of savings jwere enormous. It was estimated that the various failures 4 (involved liabilities amounting to 50 millions, and it may [be supposed that the losses which were not published and which therefore cannot be calculated exactly, must have
5
and Consols
fell to
The crisis of 1866 had, however, some good results. The weaker banks and the doubtful companies
in
i
the struggle, but the well-established banks appeared from it Demerged yet further strengthened and extended their
sgood influence over a wider area. The practices of financing :and of giving accommodation bills were replaced by sounder commercial methods, and finally, as a result of all this,
[there
was no
Wolowski,
133.
Levi, p. 471.
Sidney Buxton, Finance and Politics, Vol. II., p. 21. Macleod, Theory of Credit, p. 1063. Certain banks doing business with the East published the extent of heir losses. The Bank of Hindustan, China and Japan, for instance, stated ts profits at .23,485 and its losses at 87,796, to which must be added a
>rofits
urther expected loss of The Asiatic Bank lost 70,000 were Macleod, op. cit. and loc. cit. 61,491, etc.
;
142,000, whilst
its
CHAPTER
THE CRISIS OF
1890,
IV.
OR THE BARING
Causes of the
crisis.
CRISIS.
of
1890.
Formation
Extensive speculation, especially in the Argentine Republic. The Argentine Land Banks and the cedulas. The Bank rate of discount. Reprehensible policy of the joint-stock banks. Incidents of the crisis. Failure of the Barings. Intervention of the Bank. Th? guarantee fund. Firm and successful policy of the Governor, Lidderdale. Assistance given by the Bank of Importation of foreign gold. France. Fate of the firm of Baring. Comparison between the crisis of 1890 and the preceding crises. Important differences. The Bank Reserve during the various crises. The crisis of 1890 stopped in time, the others were not. The public knew nothing of the crisis of 1890 until it was over.
crisis of 1866 was followed by a long interval of quiet prosperity. The theory which held that crises recurred every ten years received a striking refutation. Even the failure in
THE
1878 of two important banks, the City of Glasgow and the of England, which, considering the circumstances, might well have caused a panic, only raised a slight alarm. Twenty-four years passed before another crisis occurred, that of 1890, better known as the Baring crisis. 1 In 1890 there was, indeed, an economic crisis which might
West
have proved very serious, and which involved the failure house of Baring Brothers. The unexpected collapse of this celebrated firm made such an impression on the public mind that at first the cause was mistaken for the effect and
of the
it
was thought
that the crisis only occurred because Baring difficulties, whereas in actual fact
were due
such that a
crisis
was bound
1 For this chapter I have made frequent use of an article on the crisis of 1890 which appeared in the Economic Journal for March, 1891. I have also used an article published in the Journal of the Institute of Bankers for January, 1891, and Palgrave's Dictionary, Vol. I., especially pp. 462-466. Readers may also consult an article by M. Raffalovich, Les Marches Financiers en 1890, in the Journal des J^conomistes for January, 1891.
CRISIS OF
over
1890.
363
many other firms besides Baring Brothers had incurred liabilities which to a greater or less degree ex-
ceeded the limits of prudence. It is, besides, easy to show that this crisis, like all the preceding ones, was the result of a series of earlier
mistakes.
(a)
THE CAUSJ^ OF
.TJIE.
CRISIS.
Both 1888 and 1889 had been years of extensive speculaThis was probably due to the recent conversion of Consols, which made the public look out for investments
tion.
with higher profits than 2f per cent. At any rate a great many companies of a more or less speculative character were
formed, such as American mining companies and brewery companies, whilst many commercial and banking firms " were reconstructed as joint-stock companies. The Returns
of
the
Registrar
of
Joint-Stock
Companies show
l
that
^241,277,460 ." of the Many newly-registered companies were founded in for the abroad, enterprises especially Argentine a which was Republic, particularly attractive to country English savings. The money lent to the South American Republic during 1888 and 1889 was ^36,102,766 and 2 ,29,223,341, according to a table given in the Statist. The Stock Exchange was deeply interested in certain institutions for the mortgage of land in South America, which recall in a surprising manner the projects of Dr. " The British Hugh Chamberlain two centuries before. public also became interested to a very serious extent in the land mortgage bonds of certain Argentine banks known as cedulas, in connection with which it has since been ascerhave occurred. These tained that grave irregularities cedulas were introduced in Europe by one or two respectable London houses without any regular prospectus, and
in 1889,
. . .
of capital
registered during
1888 was
cit.,
cit.
p.
i.
364
were
by
investors
who
trusted
the
firms
in
question." ~
Towards
the end of 1889 prudent people began to feel that in Argentina, combined with the
enormous amount of English capital involved in speculations of all kinds and the rash conduct of some of the most important firms, would prove a source of danger to 2 England. There was a fall in the best securities. The Bank of England shared these anxieties and the directors, seeing that Consols were falling and that the
reserve of the
Bank declined also, wisely determined to raise their rate of discount to 6 per cent. They maintained this comparatively high rate for seven
weeks with a praiseworthy resolution, considering the strong opposition of the City bankers whose proceedings were thereby hindered. Unfortunately the joint-stock banks did not support the Bank of England in its prudent policy and the market rate of discount never rose above 4^ per cent. in addition, the well-known arguments on the futility of amassing a reserve to meet a crisis which would most probably never occur, were heard and read on every side. Hence towards the end of February the Bank had to reduce its rate to 5 per cent., although it had not succeeded in attracting an effective stock of gold.
;
criticises very severely the behaviour of the joint-stock banks on this occasion. "It is " a great pity," it remarks, that the joint-stock banks did not take a wiser view of the situation, for if they had, and if the Bank had been allowed to strengthen itself in the early part of 1890, it would probably have been unnecessary to
I.,
p.
192.
may refer here to a personal recollection. A Greek financier from London, now dead, M. K spent the winter 1889-1890 in my native country of Corfu. He often discussed the new customs of the Stock Exchange
,
with one of my relatives and complained that the English public were in" is u The evil," he remarked, volving themselves in absurd speculation. worse than people think, many important English firms are entangled, and even the Barings have turned out of the straight path."
'
P-
193.
CRISIS OF
apply
the
of
to foreign countries
. . .
1890.
365
when the crisis occurred in The banks have got thoroughly into the habit regarding the amount of the reserve of the Bank of
autumn.
of no importance, although it is the sole fund enable them to meet their liabilities if called
England as
upon.
in existence to
worst, the
They fully believe that, if the worst comes to the Bank will not be allowed to fail, as an ordinary
fail if
cash were gone, 1 and the experience of more than one commercial crisis has shown that this calculation is a safe one, and has consequently
bank would
the whole of
its
to
adhere
to their present
dangerous
(b)
1890.
The autumn of 1890 began badly. The usual inconveniences of the autumnal drain were intensified by various issues of new shares and by a revolution in the country so closely connected with English trade and finance, the
Argentine Republic.
The Bank
rate fell
in
and on November 7th, after an unexpected demand for gold for Spain, 2 it was raised to 6 per cent. The next day the firm of Baring Brothers
quickly rose to 5 per cent.,
collapsed.
The causes
of
the
failure
of
this
respected house, which was at one time called the sixth European Power, date back some way to the loss due to the
attempt
the Buenos Ayres Water had undertaken Messrs. Baring " had been obliged to keep the shares which they had underwritten." Other misfortunes were soon added to this; the firm had several undertakings on its hands at once, and it
to
3
:
Compare
;
90,000 of gold were exported, making part of required for a Spanish loan.
3
much
larger
sum
Econ. Journal,
p. 192.
366
to
that there
have thought that their command of money was so great was no need for the ordinary calculations and
precautions."
Although people began to suspect danger from so many uncertain undertakings, yet the firm of Baring appeared so firmly established, its branches were so extensive, and the services it had rendered to trade and to the State were so
1
great,
that
these
first
suspicions did
not
develop
into
alarm. 2
It
was not
until Saturday,
November
8th,
that two or
three prominent persons were told the true state of the case, and on the following Monday an eminent banker and a
member
of the
were instructed
Messrs. Baring.
was known by the general public, but Nothing a feeling of anxiety increased by the numerous sales of Consols, the price of which had already fallen to 93f began to prevail in the City; and the next day, when it was heard on the one hand that ;3, 500,000 of gold was to be 3 imported, and on the other that the sale of Consols was
definite
continuing, everyone
of the first
danger grew more intense in the course day ,750,000 of Consols were sold
panic on Friday,
4
of
at once,
when
became known and people heard that there was a meeting at the Bank of England of the representatives of the leading banks and commercial firms. That same evening, in view of the public interests at stake, and of the fact that it was impossible for the Barings to meet their liabilities although they were actually solvent the meeting decided to come to their help, and conse1 It may be recollected that it was a Sir Francis Baring who wrote one of the best studies that we possess on the Bank of England.
in
1797
2.
On
this
day Consols
fell
to 93$.
CRISIS OF
1890.
367
quently it was agreed that the Bank of England should provide for their obligations, and should be secured from risk of ultimate loss by a guarantee fund which was to be maintained for three years. 1 This fund, which at first amounted to 5 or 6 millions, rose
when the announcement of to 10 millions the next day what had happened calmed the public and arrested the
2
panic.
The
culties
fact that
Barings'
diffi-
Condifficulties, caused great satisfaction in the City. gratulations were heard on all sides and everyone sung the praises of the Bank of England and of its Governor, Mr.
Lidderdale,
3
who had
displayed so
much
resolution
and
courage.
Bank
Creation of a guarantee fund to last for three years. (2) Importation of gold from abroad and maintenance of the Bank rate at the high but not exaggerated level of 6 per
(1)
cent.
Gold was imported chiefly from France. This was the second occasion during the I9th century on which the assistance of the Bank of France enabled the Bank of England to escape from a difficult position and it must be acknowledged to the credit of the Bank of France that in 1890, as
;
The
is
given
in
Bankers,
2 The fund rose as high as 18 millions many people, when once all danger was over, thought it good form to share in a measure taken for the
;
public interest.
On December 30 a deputation from the Stock Exchange officially presented an address of thanks to the Bank of England. For the text of this address and the reply made by the Governor Lidderdale, see the Jour. Inst. of
Bankers, pp. 9-10.
4
In
spite
in
of
^32,000,000
from ^25,100,000
to
368
in
gave evidence of a friendly feeling towards the 1 England which cannot be too much praised. The situation was (3) No suspension of the Act of 1844. such that a letter from the Treasury would have intensified
Bank
However praiseworthy Mr. Lidderdale's policy, as thus described, may be, we must nevertheless point out that the creation of a guarantee fund is a quite exceptional proceeding, which could not, whatever may be said of it, pass into
general use, since there is theoretically no reason why it should not be applied to every case, for all securities and all investments may be regarded as virtually good and hence ultimately may be sold for a satisfactory price. What was the fate of the firm of Baring Brothers? The__liabilities of the house amounted to ^21,000,000. Those who had been charged with the investigation of its
taking the value of the private proof the as 1,000,000, the assets of the firm, ; partners perty calculated at the very low prices of Friday, November 7th, exceeded the liabilities by 3 millions. After the events which
affairs estimated that,
we have just described, Baring Brothers was reconstructed as a joint-stock company under the name of Baring Brothers & Co., Limited, with a capital of one million. Mr T. C. Baring, who had retired from business in 1883, disinterestedly placed his entire fortune at the disposal of the new
company,
bility
of
which he consented
to
become a
director.
In
subsequent payments devolved upon the company of Baring Brothers & Co., which has quickly restored the name of Baring to its former eminence.
and
all
I
(c)
favour of the crisis of 1890, In former which differs greatly from its predecessors. whole times alarm was diffused over the kingdom, London
The comparison
in
'
in
of the gold
was accomplished
is
The
by
This review Political Science Quarterly, March, 1894, p. 23. the Faculty of Political Science of Columbia College, Boston.
see edited
CRISIS OF
I
1890.
369
was drained of its reserves to fill up the wants of the and the imprudencies of banks, having caused or jcountry, [aggravated alarms, there was a general uneasiness in the [banking world and a consequent indisposition to grant assistance to the trading world. But on this last occasion there was no general alarm in the country. Banks outside London were hardly sensible of the crisis, and even in London there was no panic except in Capel Court. No :bank failed in town or country, and no suspicion of danger to banks seems to have existed amongst their customers. [Some great issuing houses lost their position and narrowly escaped suspension. Enormous losses fell on the public, but mot on banks except indirectly. It was not a panic
1
.
. .
any country.
"
prodigious, but
it
was
averted.
In former crises the danger was not averted and things were allowed to drift, so that great houses and banks failed, " it and general alarm ensued." In 1890 on the contrary,
may
iwas
over.
1
fairly
known
all practical purposes, nothing of the crisis in the country at large until all was
This
will
PART
IV.
GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS WITH REGARD TO THE ACT OF 1844. PRESENT POSITION OF THE QUESTION. SCHEMES FOR REFORM.
CHAPTER
I.
THE
1844.
crisis of
During the year 1891 numerous pamphlets drew the attention of the public to the need for a reform of the charter, and advocated the most varied remedies. 1
the most important of the works and articles which appeared time and at the beginning of 1892, the following may be noted Stanley Cobb, Banks' Cash Reserves, especially Chaps, vi. and vii. and Metallic Reserves and the Meeting of Parliament.
1
Amongst
this
about
Gardiner (Charles), President of the Institute of Bankers in Scotland, Mr. Goschen's Scheme for Reform of the Bank Acts. t" Mavor (James), The Call for Currency Reform and Mr. Goschen's Response.
is
Bosanquet (B. Tindal), Our Banking System. Moxon (T. B.), Our Banking System and its effect upon Commerce Gillett (W.), A letter to the Chancellor of the Exchequer. In some of the works mentioned above the discussion of the Act of 1844 combined with that of the bimetallist controversy, which was then raging
371
one time of giving an analysis here of the at this time and had even prepared such a study, but this preparation determined us to abandon
thought
at
We
chief proposals
made
the idea. In the first place, the great majority of these ischemes are now, after ten years' interval, completely forgotten, and some have been abandoned even by their [authors. In the second place, in the critical portion of their iwork, which is generally the only one of any value, most of the reforms emphasise certain disadvantages in the English banking system, such as the insufficiency of the
metallic reserve, the great fluctuations in the rate of discount, the necessity for suspending the Act of 1844 in time
and other points with which we have already suffiFinally, and above all, among the chorus of jciently one voice was heard more clearly and effectively [reformers [than the others, that of Mr. Goschen, who was then Chanof the Exchequer and the general attention and all jcellor discussions soon centred round his proposals. [the Hence the best method of studying the reform movement tin 1891 is to examine the speeches delivered and the letters This statesman written by Mr. (afterwards Lord) Goschen. indeed summarised with moderation and ability all the jpas herious criticisms which can be brought against the Act of
of crisis
dealt.
1
i
11844,
:
an d> addition, has put forward practical suggestions 2 or a reform, which afford a solid basis for discussion. Mr. Goschen began his speech on December 2nd before
1 See (i) the speech at Leeds on January 28, 1891, On the insufficiency of ur cash reserves and of our central stock of gold; (2) a speech before the London Chamber of Commerce on December 2, On the Metallic Reserve. The latter speech has been published as a pamphlet, together with a Letter \o the Governor of the Bank of England, dated December 3, 1891, and a
'
lo,
t|
Better 1892
lessor
to
Mr. Goschen 's proposals formed the subject of an excellent study by ProFox well, the economist to whom we owe the very complete biblio" iraphy on the question of the Right to the whole produce of labour." See Ifr. Goschen's Currency Proposals in the Economic Journal, March, 1892. ft. Francois also has examined Mr. Goschen's proposals in the Journal des mconomistes for January, 1892. a It must be acknowledged that, in addition to Lord Goschen's scheme, lertain other proposals were made which would have repaid discussion, e.g., Aose of Messrs. Stanley Cobb, Pownall, and Gairdiner. We have been unable examine them owing to lack of time and space. See, however, with |> ference to these schemes, Foxwell, pp. 148-149, and Goschen, Speech on
lecember
2,
pp. 25-26.
372
the
of
at the
and
failures resulting from imprudence tion, but that legislation might perhaps
prevent the spread of these panics. He then proceeded to criticise the system existing in England and attacked it mainly on two grounds: (i) The insufficiency of the central stock of gold and (2) The wan of elasticity in times of crisis which characterised the system
of the
Mr. Goschen's speech the average amoun in England was from 21 to 22 millions, as compared with 95 millions (gold and silver) in France, and 40 millions (gold and silver) in Germany. Th< United States held in the Treasury and in the Nationa Banks, a metallic reserve (gold and silver) of 142 millions. The inferiority of England in this respect was dangerou
At the time
metallic reserve
owing
attracting gold.
Gol<
could always be obtained, but time was necessary. fact had not been sufficiently foreseen and was what
.
. .
Thi
mad
the situation dangerous, especially "in these days whei when syndicates are so com combinations are so easy, " mon that an attack on the English stock of bullion woulc be a most simple matter.
II.
WANT
OF ELASTICITY IN TIME OF
CRISIS.
inadequate. In serious and many disasters must already have occurred before the Chancellor of the Exchequer could decide
1
for the suspension of the charter wa actual fact, the situation had to be ver
"There are certain authorities that the very uncertainty as to whether the Chancellor of th
or will not be given is in itself But experience has, ui preventive to over-speculation." it may be said th< and the contrary,
who
hoi
Exchequer's
letter will
fortunately, proved
373
in the City, gentlemen calculate with pretty considerable certainty that the Chancellor of the Exchequer's letter will be forthcoming if the alarm is great enough and the panic
great enough." After these remarks, Mr. Goschen declared that it was his intention to criticise the Act of 1844, l that he only |inot " desired to modify as little as possible a law which had, on ^ " the whole," worked extremely well." But after a lapse of | fifty years circumstances had changed enormously; "the Bank of England has not that command over the money
1
is
market which
it
fresh legislation
was necessary.
WHAT
MR. GOSCHEN?
We
to
gold, and to give greater These two reforms elasticity to the issues in time of crisis. had already been indicated by others, but the originality
increase the central
^of
Mr. Goschen's plan consisted in his combining them, i notes. thanks chiefly to the issue of The details of this scheme are very clearly summarised in the letter written by the proposer himself to the Governor
of the
"
at
present authorised to issue ^16,450,000 on securities. Beyond that all notes must be represented by gold. The average amount of gold in the issue department for the years 1881-90 may be taken as ... ^21,550,000, which, if added to the 16,450,000 the authorised amount of the would give a total of ^38,000,000, repreissue fiduciary
;
J
senting the average total issue under the provisions of the Act of 1844. I would disturb nothing up to this point i notes under precisely beyond authorising the issue of
1 " I have been and am a Bank Charter Act man." See p. 8 of the Speech on December 2nd. Mr. Goschen's respect for Robert Peel's Act is time has, in fact, raised the empirical measure shared by all the reformers \- passed in 1844 into an institution, which shares in the veneration enjoyed by national institution in England. i/lj every
;
374
the
But beyond
gold on securities." These proposals may be explained more vividly by means of an example. Suppose that the stock of gold in the issue " department stands at ,21,550,000. Suppose that an additional sum of ^"25,000,000 were issued in the proportion of ^4 on gold to \ on securities, the addition to the stock of gold would be ^"20,000,000, bringing the total up to ^"41,550,000, and the position would be as follows
to
\
:
of ^38,000,000, I would authorise the issue of notes under the conditions which I have sketched namely, $ on
Total Notes
Old average
Additional issue
.38,000,000
25,000,000
63,000,000
'*
This
total
securities
respectively, in the
...
...
Add
four-fifths
of
,25,000,000
...
20,000,000
...
...
...
"41,550,000
...
...
...
Add
one-fifth of
25,000,000
16,450,000 5,000,000
"21,450,000
...
63,000,000
11
The
new and
would be
Bank
instead
and the increase in the fiduciary issue would be only ,5, 000,000; and that increase would be due to the introduction of notes, which if once acclimatized, would
375
Mr. Goschen completes his scheme as follows: " If the addition to the stock of gold through the issue of i notes should bring the total stock up to ,30,000,000, a point which would be reached by the issue of ; 10,000,000 under
the new conditions, I should be prepared to give certain additional powers of issue in times of emergency. ... I
w ould authorise
r
the
Bank
to
banking department by the issue of additional notes against securities, on paying to the Government a high rate of The rate of interest must interest, to be fixed by law. be neither so high as to make the permission inoperative, nor so low as to encourage people to speculate up to it. " This additional authority to the Bank is intended to take
. .
and prevent the necessity for the Treasury which the Bank Charter Act has been several times letter, by suspended."
the
place of
Mr. Goschen's plan, like all human proposals, has its advantages and its disadvantages. We will first consider the latter, which will enable us the better to explain the
former.
it is
leaves undetermined a point of fundamental importance does not specify the conditions under which the second
is
reserve
1
to
be available.
issue
Mr. Goschen adds that " if contrary to my expectation, the additional under the new terms should reach^5o,ooo',ooo, I should be prepared to require any further issues beyond that sum to be covered in full by gold. Such a provision would meet the objection that an indefinite amount of gold might be lost to the country under my plan."
376
ex-
Why,
issued
be no fiduciary issue of
are
limitation
issue.
for instance, should he stipulate that there must i notes until 38 million notes
Especially as this
the
working
of the
Again, why are the new powers of relief issue not to be available until the stock of gold in the Issue Department amounts to ^30 millions ? This again seems an unnecessary
precaution,
for
"
new powers
even
if
might prevent the operation of the it was most required. It would, the scheme inoperative in 1857, i notes had then been in circula25 millions of
.
.
and
tion."
Why,
notes
in
fact,
notes, as the
Economist 2 suggests, on the present basis? And why make any distinction between the issue of the two kinds of
?
"It would seem," observes Mr. Foxwell, 3 "that Mr. Goschen has been led to complicate his proposals by an unnecessary tenderness for Peel's Act and a desire to represent his scheme as an addition to that Act rather than a modifiBut surely the Act of 1844 is from its very cation of it. nature one which no statesman need hesitate to amend. Its empirical basis shows that it was drafted to meet the special requirements of its own day, and cannot consequently be
perfectly adapted to the greatly altered conditions of the
present time." The conditions under which the second reserve is 2. available are not sufficiently specified. By not specifying these conditions, Mr. Goschen has
omitted to specify the exact nature of the second reserve. "Is it to be strictly a panic reserve, only available at times of absolute crisis," at times such as formerly have " Or is it to made it necessary to suspend the Act of 1844?
1
p.
152.
p.
153.
377
be generally available to prevent injurious monetary strains ? In other words, is the rate fixed for access to the reserve to be a comparatively low rate, fixed by the point at which the difficulty of obtaining accommodation becomes a serious obstacle to the ordinary business of the country; or is it to be a high rate, and are we aiming merely at relieving
strains which threaten the entire collapse of the credit system ?" Mr. Goschen said that the discount rate must neither be so high as to prevent the use of the second reserve nor so low as to encourage speculation. But what is this rate?
"Are we
in I873,
fixing the minimum rate at 10 per cent, or even higher; or shall we follow the example of Germany, where relief begins
at a 5
This question
unsettled,
and
this
want
of definiteness
makes
impossible to understand and consequently impossible to judge, the exact bearing of the scheme in this
it
respect.
Advantages of Mr. Goschen' s Plan. Apart from these disadvantages, which could be easily remedied, it must be acknowledged that Mr. Goschen's scheme has obvious merits. " It would undoubtedly increase the central stock of gold, while at the same time providing us with a new and convenient form of currency, and this by a costless operation which would not make any fresh demands on the international gold market, or in any way 2 This latter combination, it unfavourably affect prices." should be noted, is one deserving of high praise, and one which is not a feature of the other projects. It is true that, in so far as the issue was fiduciary, gold would doubtless leave the country, but the quantity thus lost would not be large and would be fully compensated for by the increased power given to the Bank from the centralisation of a sum As Mr. Goschen four times as great as that exported. " was to be preferred remarked, "^"40,000,000 at the centre
to
"^50,000,000
1
in the
p.
329.
Foxwell,
p.
142.
378
As regards the issue of notes the new position of the Bank would obviously be much stronger than the old one. " The notes would be much less likely to be presented
\
culation as a whole
would be increased. With the issue department thus strengthened, it becomes safe to make its reserve available
in certain emergencies for the purposes of the banking department."
must be confessed
that
The theorists, very favourably received by the public. to the and rather complicated probably owing vague nature
and the judgment
hostile.
1
of the proposed reform, expressed very doubtful opinions, of the commercial world was almost
\ notes aroused much This these small was opposition ill-judged opposition. in and in which have worked Scotland notes, excellently and are are convenient and America, presented very cheap,
payment much less often than notes of higher value. Their one disadvantage, as was pointed out by G. W. Norman more than sixty years ago, 2 is the risk of forgery, 3 but Mr. Goschen showed conclusively that this could be avoided. Hence the only argument that can be brought
for
notes (an argument very frequently used), is memory of the crisis of 1825; but it really shows a complete ignorance of the causes of this crisis to try to compare the new notes as suggested with those then i notes issued existing. There can be no analogy between
against
based on the
1 See the outcome of a meeting held at Sailers' Hall on January 21, 1892, Compare the Economist, loc. cit., and express the opinion of the City. Stanley Cobb, Metallic Reserves. a Op. cit., p. 67. M. Henri Germain made an interesting statement with Morales et regard to notes of low values before the Academic des Sciences Politiques at a meeting on July 9, 1892.
to
Speech on December
2, pp. 22-23.
379
The example of the crisis of 1825 is, in fact, the one and constant objection brought forward by those who reject all idea of modifying the Act of 1844; I was more than a little
it used even by a director of the Bank of But it cannot be too often insisted England. upon that the crisis of 1825 was not due to the absence of a limit to the fiduciary issue of the Bank of England, but to the absurd system of country banking and in particular, to the fact that the Bank of England had not yet learnt that the paper
surprised to find
1
circulation
Whatever may be thought of the merits of the discussion and in spite of the many advantages of Mr. Goschen's proposals, they were never embodied in a Bill. It is, however, some consolation to know that the efforts of this statesman were not entirely wasted and that to make up for the elasticity which was still lacking in the Act of 1844, ^e central stock of gold was much increased.
From
^"21,820,000 in 1890,
in 1892,
it
in ;34,4i4,ooo in 1894, ;38,95i>o ^25,524,000 in a maximum of ^44,319,000 1896. 1895, and reached Since then the stock has slightly decreased, but has always been maintained at a sufficiently respectable level 2 and in
1902 was
still
^"35,644,000.
same date the stock of gold at the Bank of France and that at the Bank of Germany ; 101,932, ooo But it must be remembered that these two ^36,273,000. Banks have a much larger quantity of notes in circulation than the Bank of England and if we consider the situation
At was
this
during the
to notes in
last
decade,
we
France 54 per
Mr. Jackson, op. cit., p. 15. 1 000 m l %97 ^33*567,000 ^33,321,000 in 1900; ^35,831,000 in 1901.
3
^SSoS
in
1898;
^32,268,000
in
1899;
3 8o
cent,
Germany 56
per cent.
If
is
also taken into account, though from an international point of view this is not comparable in importance to the gold
reserve, the metallic stock at the Bank of France amounted to 86 per cent, of the notes in circulation and that at the
Bank
In
of
Germany
respect
to 81
this
England, though
of
1
clearly, inferior
position of the Bank of some other ways, remains Bank of France or the Bank
Germany.
From
1892 to 1902 the average of notes in circulation
in
was in England, France, ^150,278,000; and in Germany, ^55,372,000, as compared with stocks of gold of ^35,030,000, ^81,187,000, and ^30,803,000, See Jackson, Table I. respectively.
^27,249,000;
CHAPTER
II.
THE Act
attack.
summary
of
most
it.
1
cannot regulate the England," he says, it could circulation only do so if it had a monopoly of the business of discounting and could stop any tendency to speculation in trade by the refusal of credit. But it is preof
;
The Bank
"
cisely at these times that trade has no need of the Bank of England; it can obtain credit more cheaply elsewhere.
to the
Bank when
;
of credit begin to be exhausted is this a suitable moment to refuse discount ? the reactionary movement has actually begun, ought the Bank to fill the cup to overflow-
When
ing and hasten the disaster, as in 1825 ? " The Bill of 1844 was based on several errors of fact. It supposed that banks could increase their circulation at
will, which is inexact; that commerce always requires the same quantity of money, which is inexact; and, finally, that a metallic currency is safer and less variable than a paper currency, which is equally inexact. Thus the Bill was framed in opposition to the natural laws which guide
Op. cit., p. 323-324. Compare the analogous judgment expressed by M. Courtois on the Act of 1844, p. 235, note, and pp. 251-252 of the Histoire des Banques en France, 2nd edition (1881).
382
the real
Although these
nothing further has been heard in England, since 1892, of modifying the Act of 1844.
I even noticed, at a meeting of the Political Economy Club on the i2th of June last, at which the question w as discussed, a marked disinclination to make changes which seemed useless and might be dangerous. As far as I could judge, the quieta non movere was apparently the motto of English economists as far as the Bank of England was concerned, a state of mind which would be of merely relative importance were it confined to England. For the English
r
public, naturally conservative, only demands changes when disturbed by a violent crisis, and the Old Lady of Thread-
needle Street, who is the Panglosse of the English commercial world, has adopted by turns with equal conviction, the most contradictory opinions. This superstitious adherence, this taboois-m, is the more childish when applied to Robert Peel's Act, considering the fundamentally empirical character of this measure and the fact that its authors themselves looked upon it as
temporary.
But, what is more important, a tendency to respect the old charter of 1844 is observable even outside England. Whether it be that its success, at first partial, but since 1867
complete, has disarmed some of its critics; be that theoretical discussions are somewhat out of fashion, and that nowadays people are inclined to admit the possible existence of several equally good systems as regards banks of issue; or whether it be for some other reason, the fact remains that the writers who have discussed the subject during the last ten years have concerned themselves less to criticise the Act of 1844 tnan to explain it. It might be supposed that after careful consideration it has been found less bad in reality than in appearance. This is, in the main, the conclusion reached by M.
practically
it
whether
The
latter
agrees
383
with Bagehot that the indifferent rules which the Act of 1844 imposed upon the directors of the Bank were at any rate preferable to those which the directors might have framed for themselves. 1
Even
has
Paris,
which
always been fascinated by the idea of freedom, was apparently not much affected by the numerous disadvantages which M. Sayous, following Mr. Pownall, pointed out in the working of the London money market during a crisis, disadvantages which in the main he attributed to the organisation of the Bank of England.
bines
finally, M. Leroy Beaulieu, an economist who comimmense learning with a sound, practical sense, and (what is nowadays growing more and more rare) a wide business experience, defends the Act with ability and
2
:
And
moderation as follows
"
of
1870 to the present day England and the Bank England which have become the centre of the trade and finance of the world, which have in a measure to regulate
the exchanges and all the business affairs of the universe, and which act almost as the ultimate repository of the
From
all
world's reserve have succeeded in playing their part without a suspension of the Act of 1844, and this during a
quarter of a century characterised by the activity of business
and by financial and commercial crises. The Bank has always been able, in fact, to supply gold to those who demanded it, not only to settle extraordinary purchases of cereals and commodities, but for foreign loans and investments. All that it has done has been to charge more highly
for this
*'
Under
definite. Strictly speaking, it does not credit facilities. Its function is to be the general supply repository for the cash reserve of British trade and finance
of the trade
and finance
of the world.
Op.
cit., p.
461.
384
In particular it is the Bank's business to procure gold for international settlements, and yet it only keeps a limited
supply.
'
. ' '
Thus the Banking Principle is entirely abandoned. The Bank of England, carrying out Ricardo's wish, if not
his actual
scheme, is the keeper of the gold reserve of Great Britain, while at the same time it provides the gold needed for international payments. ..." M. Leroy Beaulieu remarks that the loans on securities made by the Bank of England are even more limited than those of the Bank of France which latter also is tending to become the repository of commercial cash and observes that the Bank of England is thus returning to the system of banking which prevailed in ancient times and in the Middle
Ages.
11
1 " is actually obtained in England Credit," he goes on, from the private bankers, from the joint-stock banks, w^hich are hardly ever banks of issue, and also from the billbeaters or purveyors of brokers, who may be called the
*
'
These large joint-stock comthe large companies. in notes and coin as is reserve much as panies only keep their current for needs; they deposit the rest at required
.
.
the
Bank
of
for all
the banks in the country. " Delicate though this system appears, to no danger since 1871.
have multiplied during the International securities, negotiable on a large number of different markets, the use of the telefor assignments and transfers of money and of
"
Methods
of attracting gold
graph
actual transport, have railways and steam-boats for its in which a comparatively of state a new things, produced small reserve can be increased with much greater ease, and than consequently tends to be exhausted much less rapidly
formerly. " New habits are tending to reduce not only the quantity . of gold but also the quantity of notes available.
. . .
p.
604.
385
tool
artificial
though
it
be, is
than the French system. Since the privileged Bank practically undertakes none of the business connected with credit, there is more equality betwen the other banks. "Should the Act of 1844 be repealed? 1 It would be better to modify it in respect to the regulation of note issue the tendency for the notes not to exceed the cash reserve increases daily and may be looked upon as permanent. To repeal the portion of the Act dealing with this matter would be attended by no inconvenience, but also by no particular gain, and any legislative change in a matter of this sort which is not obviously useful, may have moral disless so
;
. . .
advantages." The matter could not be better expressed, and we have thought it of interest to give these full extracts from M. Leroy-Beaulieu's work, not only as supplying an appreciation of the Act of 1844, but as giving an excellent summary of the working of the English banking system. At the same time, while recognising that much current criticism is unduly violent, we must avoid falling into the exaggerated optimism of thinking that, in reference to the Bank of England, all is for the best in the best possible world, and that there remains nothing for the future to fear or to improve. In the first place, the fact that important financial institutions, and even important foreign countries, have considerable gold deposits at London, has given rise to the fear of a possible sudden withdrawal of a quantity of gold. It is difficult to say whether any such danger actually exists. Mr. Jackson had tried to prove that a withdrawal 2 of this kind is neither possible nor probable in any case,
:
p.
a
606.
in
in
the first place the foreign institution must already have the This money cannot be idle, it must have question in England. been employed or invested in one way or another. But long before the securities into which it has been converted, were sold, or the money withdrawn from the market, the effect of the withdrawal on the prices of the securities or of the money would be such that the foreign institution would abandon its scheme on account of the loss involved in carrying it out. In any case, there would be time to attract gold from abroad into England. Op.
For
money
cit., p.
14.
386
he considers that the attempt would be criminal and would 1 hardly prove successful. But Mr. Palgrave shows much anxiety as regards this matter, and various other people whose opinion I have asked, have seemed to be afraid that, in this age of trusts and gigantic combines, the danger is more serious than ever. They believe that it is of the utmost
importance
to strengthen the
reserve
and
to give greater
difficulty
meet the
can solve
Leaving on one side a problem which experience alone and hitherto no such attempt has ever been made we must pass on to consider whether the present organi-
sation of the
Bank
of
drawbacks.
Some such drawbacks are already familiar to the reader, since we have dealt at length with the artificial nature of the Act of 1844. By separating the Bank into two departtends to increase the fluctuations in the discount rate. The same result follows from the clause obliging the Bank to buy all the gold offered to it. This latter provision indeed, leads to unforeseen accumulations of bullion and tc abnormal reductions in the Bank rate. have alsc how much it is to be that a out pointed regretted separat statement of the bankers' current accounts is no longe
it
ments
We
published, and have referred to the justice of the argument in favour of making these bankers responsible for th expense of maintaining some portion of the reserve Finally, in the course of our study we have made no secre " " strait jacket of our lack of sympathy with the imposec 2 upon the note issue by Peel's Act. No doubt, so far as th metallic reserve tends to exceed the notes in circulation, reform such as we demand would have merely a speculativ interest, but, after all, it is not certain, but only probable that the present policy will be persisted in, and there is n
1
op.
tit., p.
215.
Act in this respect are due to the fact that hinders the extension of the circulation at the very times when it would t most valuable, and this is so true that the mere suspension of the Act of 184 has been sufficient on several occasions to allay public anxiety.
effects of the
The bad
If
-E v 1 UNIVERSITY I
^x
PRESENT POSITION.
387
guarantee that a crisis analogous to that of 1866 will never occur again. In 1890 this was only averted by the prudence and courage of Mr. Lidderdale. In addition to these drawbacks which have already been examined, others have been pointed out from an administrative point of view. The administration of the Bank is, it is alleged, somewhat costly, and its management might with 1 advantage be more permanent.
The management
of the
Bank
of
England
is
entrusted to
a body of directors chosen from amongst the principal bankers and financiers of the City. This body, whose composition varies but slightly from year to year, has at its head a Governor who is appointed for two years only. This system has been criticised, as we have said, for its lack of 2 continuity and it has sometimes been suggested that a permanent Governor would be in a better position to man-
age the affairs of the Bank. This idea has been frequently put forward, and even Bagehot thought that the appointment of a permanent " would give the decisions of the Bank Deputy-Governor that foresight, that quickness and that consistency in which 3 It is more those decisions are undeniably now deficient." curious to find the same view expressed in the Report of the Committee of Inquiry of the House of Lords in 1848.* The objections,*' so the Report runs, " which have been often urged against the Bank, are a Want of Permanence and of Consistency derived from its system of periodical Elections of Governors and Deputy-Governers the evil Consequences of filling these high and important Offices by a mere Rotation of Seniority and the intimate Connection subsisting between the Directors and the Commercial World of London, which may cast on them a Degree of Pressure difficult at Times to be resisted. It appears further to be apparent from the Evidence that the immediate
'
For the
is risky if one governor authorises advances upon Consols in times of difficulty, while another governor adopts a different policy.
it
8
Thus
p.
3 88
pecuniary Interest of the Proprietors may at Times supersede or control larger and higher Considerations. This
." ought not to be. We have felt obliged as impartial historians, to state these criticisms, which condemn somewhat severely the
.
lack of continuity in the management of the Bank resulting from the system of appointment by election. It is difficult
for a foreigner to decide
in these accusations.
what exact degree of truth there is But it is evident that the mere fact
that they are thus reproduced after an interval of nearly sixty years by competent persons and well-known writers gives
them a
certain weight.
APPENDIX.
HISTORY OF THE RELATIONS BETWEEN THE BANK OF ENGLAND AND THE TREASURY.
Various ways which such banks pay for their privileges. Advantages gained by the English Government from the privileges granted to the Bank. Summary of these advantages Business connected with the Treasury and the public money, the administration of the national debt. Management of the revenues (a) The management of the revenues before the Act of 1834, (&) The Act of 1834, (c) Modifications made in the Act of 1834. Present position. The Act of 1848. Management of the expenditure. The Paymaster General. Simple and practical management of the accounts. The administration of the national debt. The Bank and the administration of the permanent debt. The Act of 1751. The Act of The Bank undertakes 1834. Deficiency bills and deficiency advances.
:
payment of interest, but also the administration of the The Bank and the administration of the floating debt (issue, circulation, redemption of exchequer bills and bonds and of The Act of 1709 and those of 1834 a "d l86 6 The treasury bills). exchequer bills and bonds and the treasury bills. Indemnity paid to the Bank in return for the administration of the permanent and floating
.
debts.
CHARTERED bank of
for
This payment privilege accorded to it. assumes various forms a loan, a tax, a share in the profits, the undertaking of certain duties connected with the cash account of the Treasury, most generally the administration
State
the
of the floating or
We
permanent debt.
is
without interest,
of issuing notes
made for the privilege that the negotiation of a loan was the primary cause explaining the establishment of the principal European banks of issue, and in particular of the Bank of
and
England.
1
M.V
Leroy-Beaulieu, Science des Finances, pp. 106-107. See above, p. 80. Compare du Hays du Gassart DCS prets consentis Etats par Ics Banques de Circulation, pp. 1-43.
390
it
corresponds theory to a stamp duty on commercial bills, the application of which to bank notes has certain drawis usually exempted, either as in France, or in return for a definitely fixed yearly payment, as in England. Sometimes a compound system is adopted, the note circulation is exempt from taxation up to a fixed total issue, but if this total is exceeded
a
is
tax,
and frequently a very heavy tax, has to be paid. This the system in Germany and Belgium. share in the profits may take two forms : it may be
normal
profits, or
a share in extra-
from an abnormal
the State may secure an indirect return by the bank of issue with certain duties connected entrusting with financial administration or the Treasury.
DERIVES
those which
small when compared with some other European States obtain in return concession of similar privileges, and this is a matter
profits are relatively
1
on which English legislation is deserving of the highest If a monopoly of issue is granted, it should be praise. because the Government considers this system to be for the public welfare, and especially because it involves least risk.
The public interest is the only justification nowadays for a monopoly of this kind; hence the State ought to endeavour to lessen the drawbacks which inevitably attend
any monopoly, instead
of increasing
them by appropriating
1 In France these profits amounted to 8,785,269 francs in 1900, and tc 6,977,345 in 1901, i.e., respectively 18 and 20 per cent, of the net proceeds. In Germany for the same years these profits were 25,859,799 anc 12,770,445 marks, i.e., 76 and 49 per cent, of the net proceeds.
i.e.,
63 and 51 pe;
Hence both France and England may be classed among the States whicl do not make undue profits out of the concession of a monopoly of issue.
APPENDIX.
profits
391
whose
which must ultimately be paid by the public, for monopoly was established. In actual fact the advantages which the Treasury derives from the Bank of England are the following (a) It is exempt from paying interest on its debt to the
benefit the
:
Bank
(b)
is
continued.
180,000. (c) Should the Bank be authorised to exceed the statutory limit of its issues, it is usually stipulated that its discount rate should be raised and that the profits resulting from the
;
receives an annual
payment
of
expenses and
amount required to cover the should to risks, Treasury. go (d) Certain duties connected with public finance are entrusted to the Bank, such as the administration of the
first
national debt, for which however payment is made. Enough has already been said with regard to the three points; it is only necessary to recollect that
the
annuity of ; 180,000 is partly paid in return for exemption from the stamp tax, and that the arrangement by which the State shares in any profits made from supplementary issues was not inspired by a desire for gain, but was made lest the Bank, tempted by high profits, should acquiesce in useless
and dangerous
issues.
the only profit made by the State from the concession of the Bank charter is, so far, the non-payment of
interest
Thus
on a capital of about
;n, 000,000.*
This, at the
an annual sum
f * 2 75>ooo, and it may be remarked, by the way, that this portion of the law of 1844 nas been severely criticised by
the only one that the connection between the Bank and the Treasury and the way in which the Bank assists and even replaces the latter.
last point,
is
which
really interesting
and
characteristic.
It relates to
are here faced by one of those gradual processes of evolution which are so characteristic of English nature, as in fact, they are characteristic of Nature in general. can see an organism the ancient Exchequer gradu-
We
We
Corrigendum.
The
392
ally
and without any sudden break, eliminated and replaced almost entirely by another the Bank. This somewhat
peculiar process has played as important a part in the history of the Bank of England as the Act of 1844 itself; the two
together
institution.
making it the subject of this Appendix. We hope in this way, if we cannot avoid the risk of confusing the question of the issues of the Bank with that of its duties in regard to the
Treasury, at any rate to escape the introduction of further complications into a book to which it has already proved
difficult
have completely modified the character of the Considering the importance of this process and the difficulty of describing it piecemeal each time in the course of the years that a stage in its evolution has been reached, we have decided to deal with it separately by
The
to give some degree of unity. question of the relations between the Bank
enough
and the
Treasury when thus limited and defined, divides itself naturally into two parts (a) The duties connected with the Treasury and the
:
public money.
(6)
The
propose to describe these duties in succession and 1 complete our study by a few short comments.
1
We
Martinuzzi (Pietro), La banco, d' Inghilterra nei riguardi del servizio del tesoro ; and C. Perazzi, Memorie intorno alia contabilita dello stato in Sella, the famous Italian Inghiltera, a supplement to the Sella scheme. financier, wished, like many of his countrymen, to introduce the English system into Italy. Several analogous attempts have been made in France under the July monarchy projects with this object were brought forward by Benoit Fould and Mauguin, while under the third Republic complete schemes were drawn up by MM. Herv de Saisy, in 1873, and C. Dreyfus, in a superintendent of direct taxes even wrote a work embodying a 1885 scheme in no less than 113 articles. See Rejorme des Services de Tresorerie, by R. Lemercier de Jauvelle. With regard to the question as raised in France and Germany see an essay by M. Dartiguenave, Relations de la Banque de France avec le Tresor, and a publication of the Inspector-General of Finance, Mission en Allemagne, Organisation et fonctionnement de la Banque de I'Empire allemand. Finally, with regard to Belgium, where (in 1850) a system very similar to the English one was introduced, see Noel, Banques d' Emission, etc., pp. 546For the Belgian Law of 1900, which was later than Noel's book, see 567. Dartiguenave, pp. 179-180.
:
question.
As might be expected, there is no book in English on this important Two Italian works may however be consulted with advantage
:
APPENDIX.
(a)
393
It is
customary
in
England
of the various receipts to special commissioners, who undertake all the business of assessing the different taxes; when
this is done the taxes are paid to local receivers, who hand them over to the Receivers-General, by whom they are paid into the Bank of England; whereas formerly they used to be paid into the Exchequer, which was until 1834 tne State
Treasury.
(a)
The Management
to the
of the
Revenue
1834.
Act of Restriction, 2 Bank notes were When, owing in at accepted par payment of taxes, the Bank had to send a representative to the Exchequer to examine and take away the notes which were paid in there. Shortly afterwards, by a series of Acts passed in George 3 III.'s reign, it was enacted that the Bank's representatives must take the notes direct from the various receivers, of the Customs, of the Excise, of the Stamp Duties, etc., and enter them to the credit of those receivers as though the payments had been made straight to the Bank in coin. In addition, it gradually grew into a custom for the Bank to take charge
through its representatives at the Exchequer, not only of the revenues fixed by special laws, but of all the sums paid to the Government from whatever source. The general use of
the notes paper money had made this plan necessary presented at the Exchequer had to be verified in order that the latter might safely take the responsibility of accepting
;
them
in
payment
of the taxes.
1 For what follows see also in Boucard and Jeze, Elements de Science de Finances et de Legislation Financiere francaise t the part dealing with the Exchequer account at the Banks of England and Ireland, p. 1185.
8
3
I.,
p.
187.
Lawson,
394
the
The payments were actually made at the Exchequer, but Bank took an increasingly important share in the manof these payments.
agement
Besides this, since 1725 the Bank had held on deposit and been answerable for certain funds which, although belonging to private individuals, are yet under the control of the Court of Chancery, such as the securities belonging to the suitors of this Court. In 1786, as soon as the Commission for the reduction of the national debt, or in other words the
of the
Sinking Fund, was constituted, the Bank had to take charge sums resulting from the annuity which was granted with a view to the redemption. In 1802 the money produced
by the redemption or purchase of the land taxes was entrusted to the Bank, and in 1828 it likewise took charge of the funds belonging to the Savings Bank, and subsequently of
many
was added the business connected with the national debt, which the Bank had long carried on, and the extra work due to the Act of 1827 (7 and 8 George IV., c. 53), in consequence of which the Receiver-General had to pay the receipts from the Excise into the Bank, where
all
To
this
" The account they were entered as a special account called of the public money of the Receiver-General of the Excise." The gradual transfer of all this business to the Bank suggested to the Government the advisability of reorganising the old Court of the Exchequer and prepared the way
1
for the
Act of 1834.
(b)The
Act of 1834
(4
William IV.,
c. 15).
This Act reorganised the Exchequer and established the office of the Comptroller-General of the receipt and issue of his Majesty's Exchequer, to which were transferred the
1 The Act of 1841 (4 and 5 Viet., c. 20) concerning the Excise made practically no alteration in the method of dealing with the receipts or in the administration of the tax.
In 1847 (10-11 Viet., c. 42) the duties on horses, carriages, etc., were transferred from the Commissioners of Stamps and Taxes to those of Excise and were administered like the latter; and in 1849 (12-13 Viet., c. i) the two Boards of Excise were amalgamated into the single Board of Commissioners of Inland Revenue. The receipts forming the Inland Revenue are entered by the Bank to the account of the Receiver-General of the Inland Revenue and are transferred thence day by day to the general account of the Exchequer.
APPENDIX.
1
395
The powers belonging to the different offices abolished. Commissioners of the Treasury were to " establish and " direct what books, etc., should be used in the Exchequer, " and the forms thereof, as well as the forms of all warrants and other documents " in use. An important change was made by this Act of May 22nd,
. . .
June following, all Exchequer money, etc, which had hitherto been entrusted to the four tellers, should be paid in to the Bank of England, where they were credited to the
1834,
providing
nth
of
account of his Majesty's Exchequer." At the same time, and this was still more important, all public moneys which had hitherto been payable at the Exchequer were in future to be paid to the Bank and entered by it to the credit of the Exchequer. At the end of each day the Bank was to send to the Comptroller-General a summary of all the amounts paid in and entered to the Government account. All sums thus entered to the account of the Exchequer were to be regarded as constituting a fund for the payment
of the various expenses arising out of the public service.
"
The Comptroller-General was empowered by the Commissioners of the Treasury to authorise the Bank to open
accounts with the
officials.
by the Commissioners of the Treasury, dated September 26th, 1834, formed the supplement to this law. This document repeated what we have just said, viz.,
circular issued
that all public receipts, from whatever source, must be sent as soon as received to the respective Receivers-General in London, who must pay the money each day to the Bank of
England.
credit
at
of
the
and
also of
the
In this
way
Kingdom.
Those of the Auditor of the Exchequer, of the Tellers of the Exchequer The officials holding these posts received unof the Clerk of the Pells. dul> large salaries and the posts themselves, which had become mere sinecures, were of no use except as a provision for the relatives of ministers (Sir William Anson, The Law and Custom of the Constitution, Vol. II., pp. 330and
3301
396
Such is the outline of the Act of 1834. This Act was the outcome of a series of events, such as the granting of the status of legal tender to Bank of England notes in 1833,
the persistent increase in the taxes, which rendered necessary a more complicated system of control, and so on.
It
must be noted
in particular,
r
that
when
the Act
was
passed
many
of
provisions w ere already in force and that only co-ordinated and united into a single
its
(c)
Present
The Act
c
-
39)>
which
of 1834 was modified by that of 1866 (29-30 Viet., in the first place established the office of the
Auditor-General of his Majesty's Exwhich official took the place of the old Comptrollerchequer, General and of the Commissioners for auditing the public accounts. It also provided that the Commissioners of the Customs 1 and of the Inland Revenue and the PostmasterGeneral should pay
in to the
Comptroller and
Bank
and
that the
Bank should
.
enter
them
to
be notified daily
to the
money thus credited to the Exchequer must be a general fund out of which the Comptroller as regarded and Auditor-General can order transfers to enable accounts to be opened with the various officials, whose business it is
to
make payments in connection with the public offices. Four times a year the Treasury draws up a scheme of the
forming the
the
"
receipts
1
consolidated fund
c.
"2
36.
exact explanation of the term " Consolidated Fund "? Since 1786 the English Budget has been divided into two parts, the one consisting of what may be called the permanent grants, the due payment of which is authorised by Parliament from time to time, but which are entirely in the hands of the Chancellor of the Exchequer as regards all details of time " Conand method of collection this first section of the Budget forms the solidated Fund." The other part consists, on the contrary, of payments voted annually and thus remaining under the direct periodical control of Parliament See Alphaeus Todd, Parlic this section is known as the Annual Supply.
8
What
is
mentary Government
of
England, Vol.
I.,
pp. 733~737-
APPENDIX.
397
quarter and the expenses to be paid out of these funds during the same period. If the receipts are insufficient to cover the expenses, the Comptroller and Auditor-General notifies the
amount of the deficit to the Bank, which is authorised to make advances up to the sum indicated at the request of the Treasury. The principal and interest of these advances
are paid out of the receipts forming the consolidated funds for the next quarter.
II.
of the expenditure was definitely but as early as 1817 certain payments 1848, organised were undertaken by the Bank of England.
The
The Act of 1848' (11 and 12 Viet., c. 55) abolished the various officials hitherto entrusted with the paying out of money, and substituted a single official, his Majesty's Paymaster-General.
regards the Bank, it was decided that the different to the accounts of the officials thus suppressed should be transferred to the recently opened account of the Paymaster-General. In order to ensure complete control, it is provided that the person ma-king a payment to the Bank must first be authorised to do so by the Paymaster-General. All the accounts held by the Bank in the name of the Paymaster-General must be regarded, as has been already stated with regard to the Exchequer account, as a general fund to be used in the payment of current expenses. The Paymaster-General has also to send to the Commissioners of the Treasury a weekly statement of the condition of his account with the Bank, and each month he must submit detailed accounts to them. In order that its dealings with the Paymaster-General may be as clear as possible, the Bank keeps two supply accounts, in which it enters all sums which have to be placed
As
sums entered
Paymaster.
The
1
first
Exchequer
credit account,
December
22, 1848.
sums
credited to the Paymaster-General by the Bank. cheque or order for payment can be drawn on these accounts; such payments are managed by daily transfers
No
of
sums
to
drawing account," or the current account for cheques, and the "bills account," or the current account for bills. " " This transfer of sums to the is made working accounts through orders from the Paymaster-General. The amount of such transfers must not exceed that of the payments for
the day. The control of expenditure
receipts.
is
"
viz.,
the
The Comptroller-General
control
by comparing the accounts of the PaymasterGeneral stating the various transfers that he orders, with
:
the daily returns made by the Bank of its own transfers, the progress of the expenditure can be continually supervised. Subsequent control is carried on by verification of
the warrants, cheques and bills which have run out and by the examination of the various returns. In addition, it should be noted that a clear distinction is made between the
supplying of the funds to be used in the payment of the various public expenses and the actual employment of these funds.
(b)
A
and
I.
national debt consists of two portions, the permanent will consider these in turn. the floating debt.
We
The Bank
of
of the
Before the English debt was consolidated in 1751, the was paid by the Exchequer at that date the Bank 1 first undertook the administration of the national debt.
interest
;
1
See above,
p. 153.
APPENDIX.
399
1 After the reorganisation of the Exchequer the payment of the expenses connected with the debt were managed by
the
Commissioners
The
happened
it interest is paid out of the consolidated fund. that this account was not large enough for the
When
purpose, the difference was met by the issue of special In 1866 an Exchequer bills called deficiency bills.
analogous but simpler plan was adopted and deficiency advances were substituted for these bills, which advances must be refunded in the following quarter. The Bank is not only entrusted with the payment of the interest on the debt, it also acts as intermediary between the Treasury and the public with respect to the business of
actual administration of the national debt.
direct
Thus
it
receives
payments " " in the and opens special accounts to their credit Journal " in the Grand Livre " of the national debt. Subsequently it manages the various formalities of transfer which may be required through stock-brokers and bill-brokers. To these 2 different transactions, M. Noel remarks, it devotes an enormous area containing about 1,700,000 registers, which are kept up to date by more than 400 clerks.
What
is
paid for
all
these services
Bank
has received from the Government as indemnity for the expenses of administering the national debt (i) ^325 a 100 year on every million pounds up to ^500,000,000; (2) a year only for every million in excess of this sum. Thus the total indemnity amounts to about ^160,000. Formerly
1 For further details as to the administration of the debt before 1834 see Lawson, p. 184, and MartinuzzS, p. 130.
Op. cit.. p. 39. Before this date the Bank was paid a much larger sum. At first the indemnity was 340 per million up to .600,000,000 beyond this amount the commission was only Afterwards it was lowered on a similar 300. Bulletin de statistique et de Legislation plan to ,300 and .150 respectively.
3
;
for a fresh reduction of the indemnity paid for the administration of the national debt, but, on the other hand, this Act increased the commission which the Bank received for the issue of
Treasury
bills.
p.
401.
400
it
came
still
earlier
times, ,250,000. In France the English system was formerly imitated. The Bank of France was entrusted with the payment of the
on the national debt and with the management of with its redemption for this it received a commission of ij per cent. It was considered with reason that this commission was too high, and, after
interest
it
was
the Government.
II.
The Bank of England and the Administration of the Floating Debt (Issue, Circulation and Redemption of Exchequer Bills and Bonds and of Treasury Bills).
of the
most important of the services rendered by England to the Government has been the cir2 culation of Exchequer bills. An account of the manner in which this used to be done
the
One
Bank
of
cashier of the
evidence of Abraham Newland, the chief Bank of England, before the Committee of 3 Secrecy on March 28th, I797When the Exchequer was re-constituted in 1834, a Comptroller-General was appointed, as we have seen, and the duty
is
given
in the
of preparing, issuing
devolved on him.
1
and numbering the Exchequer bills But the Act of 1866, which consolidated
Dartiguenave, pp. 157-158. In 1897 M. Guillemet proposed to hand over Bank once more, but this time without payment. It was rightly thought that such a heavy charge could not be imposed on the Bank without indemnity and that if, on the other hand, it was necessary to pay an indemnity, it would be better to leave the matter in the hands of the We may note, Government, which had organised it economically enough. however, that in consequence of an Act of 1897 (art. 8 and 9), the Bank of France has to cash gratuitously for the benefit of the Treasury, both in Paris and in the provinces, the bearer coupons of the French Rentes and the bills of The Bank of France also helps gratuitously in the the French Treasury.
issue of treasury bills.
a The Bank undertook this circulation in 1709 (see above, p. will be remembered that the first Exchequer Bills were issued by in 1696.
3
122).
It
Montague
sonality of 167-173.
Compare Lawson, p. 167. With regard to the somewhat original perNewland see Stephens' notice at the end of his Bibliography,
APPENDIX.
and amended
all
401
Exchequer bills and bonds should be prepared and paid at the Bank. The Act of 1866 distinguishes exchequer bills and exchequer bonds. The difference between the two is the the Exchequer bonds, which were first introfollowing duced by Gladstone in 1853, are issued for a definite period of time, generally for three years, and bear interest at a
that in future all
:
on the Exchequer bills, which determined and published every quarter by the Treasury, varies according to the rate of interest prevailing on the market at the time.
fixed rate, whilst the interest
is
In addition
to
Exchequer
bills
bills
time in
bills
These new
only
differ
from Exchequer
to replace entirely
in
that they are issued for a maximum period of twelve and generally for a much shorter time.
months,
to all
The business
these
different
of the
Bank
is
the
securities.
:
Consequently
receives
for the issue, circulation and redemption 1 of the various bills and bonds it is paid at the rate of ^aoo
uniform payment
for
first
in
every million pounds in bills or bonds in existence on the of December in each year, on which day the payment question is calculated.
1 This sum was increased from 100 to ^200 by the Act of 1892, which reduced the indemnity received by the Bank for the administration of the
national debt. In France, since the Act passed in 1897 (art. 8), the Bank shares in the This arrangebusiness of issuing Treasury bills, but this service is unpaid. the expenses of ment, moreover, does not seem to be a very useful one issue are not diminished thereby, because the Bank only serves as intermediary and in actual fact the bills can easily be floated without its assistance. In 1901, when bills to the value of 589,342,266 francs were issued by the Treasury, the Bank of France only received 13,647,000 francs
;
in
subscriptions (Dartiguenave, p.
152).
c-2
CONCLUSION.
THE
has occupied
history of the Bank of England, the relation of whic these two volumes, has been admirably
in
summarised
here.
1
we ask
leave to quote
now
appearance, like a second Minerva, invincible and completely armed. Its birth was heralded by long-continued misfortunes and its history is marked by romantic incidents and dramatic adventures, intimately connected with the political history
its first
bank
in the world,
did not
make
of
is in
England. no way
different
In this respect the development of the Bank from the evolution and completion of
all
other social and political institutions in England. Their foundations have been laid piece by piece at the dictates of practical needs, instead of being planned as a whole according to abstract principles. And on these foundations the buildings themselves have been practically raised, curious in form, no doubt, and irregular, but remarkable in theii
solidity,
imposing in their appearance and excellent in theii working." The accuracy and insight of these observations are easil) demonstrated by the account of the circumstances undei which the Bank was founded and a recollection of the sligh degree of resemblance which, from the outset, existec between it and other modern national banks. In the first place, the Bank of England, founded by i Scotchman, Paterson, under the patronage of a foreigr It: prince, William III., had no monopoly of issue.
practical
These lines, whose force and vividness is much weakened by translation are quoted from an article published in the Greek paper, Nea Himera (No for September 8/21, 1901), at the time of the publication of the first editioi of a portion of the present work. The article was written by an eminen authority, whose identity will be easily recognised by many in spite of hi
anonymity.
1
CONCLUSION.
43
original charter merely allowed it to circulate notes up to the value of its capital, which capital was lent in a lump sum to the Government. Not only then had the Bank no
its
modern guarantees
proportion of the issue. The first notes issued were much more analogous to treasury bills than to the present bank notes. They were not legal tender, but, on the other hand, they bore interest
easily,
though
it
led to
Gradually the Bank secured a monopoly of issue, at first London and its neighbourhood, then extended in 1844 to the whole of England; by degrees, too, its notes acquired their modern form; they were not made legal
limited to
Bank of France, the existence England has been remarkably agitated. Hated by some, passionately supported by others, developing in a country still hardly ripe for public freedom, whose
Bank
of
inhabitants were thrown by the thirst for gain into the maddest of speculations, the "Old Lady of Threadneedle " Street passed a stormy youth, literally crammed with
Her adventures and dramatic experiences. maturity was hardly more peaceful and it is only in recent years that she has known tranquillity. From 1694 to 1870 twenty-five years have never passed without some serious danger threatening the Bank of England. Twice over (in 1696 and 1797) the Bank was forced to suspend cash payments on the first occasion owing to the confusion in the metallic currency, on the second owing to that in the paper currency. At other times there were " often runs," produced by political troubles or commercial
romantic
crises resulting from insane speculation, which shook the institution to its very foundations. It will be remembered
it was at the conclusion of one of these crises, a crisis which lasted for three years, and during which the Bank of England had to seek assistance from the Bank of France,
that
4 o4
that the Act of 1844 was passed that Act which largely modified the character of the Bank, deprived it of its discretionary powers in the matter of issue and reduced it, by the formation of an issue department working automatically, to the position of a great banking house, with the Government for its principal customer and the other banks for practically its only other customers. What explanation can be given, considering that their
positions
are
first
now very
Banks
it
histories of the
In the
place
will
is
owing
to the dates of their respective foundations. The Bank of France had the benefit of the experience gained in the past
last century the principles were political economy beginning to be recognised, Govern ments were better instructed and hence less likely to b attracted by the deceptive dreams of a Hugh Chamberlai or of a Law. 1
At
doubt; but, unfortunately, this explanation, howeve may be with regard to the periods when the Bank were founded, will not serve to account for the events o the igth century, during which the Bank of France \va able to withstand the most serious revolutions and the mos cruel national disasters, whilst from 1819 to 1870 the Ban
true
it
No
England came to the verge of bankruptcy every te years. Another explanation must be sought, and I believ
of of the
will be found rather in the different characteristic two nations than in the different organisations of th two Banks. The French nation is prudent and economical, the Englis nation is enterprising and speculative; the one grows ric
that
it
through saving, the other through business. What is tru individuals is true also of the commercial corr munities. When interest goes down the English commerci; world, unable to reduce its mode of life, deserts its usu< business in favour of more profitable, but, on that ver
of the
this, it must not be forgotten that the Caisse d'Escompt 1776, collapsed during the financial troubles of the Revolutio and that the liatn[uc Generate founded by Law in 1716, only survived f four years.
1
Besides
in
founded
CONCLUSION.
account,
405
of interest
4<
more risky undertakings. If the decline in the rate is great and seems likely to continue, John Bull, who according to that old saying which we have already
can stand many things, but he cannot stand 2 per quoted, into speculation. rushes But in England, as elsecent.," to disaster and ultimately to crises, leads where, speculation
the brunt of which must in the end be borne by the central bank. This has been the history of all the great crises which have occurred during the century that is just completed.
These
crises might,
it
the accumulation of a very large stock of specie. For, as Lord Goschen has remarked, the thing needed above every-
thing in a crisis is cash. But to amass money and to forego its use in ordinary times involves a heavy expense; and the occasional risks of a crisis have been found preferable. Even nowadays the tendency to prefer the pursuit of a gain which, while involving some risks, is yet immediate, to a
troublesome prudence, has not altogether disappeared. It is true that such a tendency is no longer to be traced in the administration of the Bank of England, but when it was proposed with entire justice, that the joint-stock banks should share in the formation of a metallic reserve, the prompt reply was, that however wise such a policy might be, it must mean a decrease in the shareholders' dividends, and this answer was sufficient to put a stop to further
discussion.
Another characteristic feature is that in England no attempt is made to prevent or even to regulate the export of gold. This exposes the country to obvious dangers, but, on the other hand, it has made London, the only free market
for gold,
into
the financial
capital
of
the
world.
The
English consider that this advantage fully makes up for the risks to which they are exposed, whilst the other European nations envy without daring to imitate them. In conclusion, it may be said that to write the history of
the
Bank
of
the commercial
England is, in some degree, to attempt to write and financial history of the English nation.
this is not the least of the difficulties involved
For a foreigner
406
in
1 undertaking; as we observed at the outset, this necessity of following the history of England, besides demanding studies of a sufficiently complicated kind, adds many confusions to the narrative of the events which con-
cern the
Bank of England. Under these circumstances, to give to our account that quality of unity so essentially
demanded
historical qualifications
desirable,
which we do
not possess, whilst the second volume has needed a practical knowledge of business which also we do not possess. For want of this it has been difficult to arrive at definite conclusions and we have been obliged to give somewhat
hesitating answers to the questions which
raise.
8
we
felt
bound
to
This
only
is
a fact which
later on,
we did not realise at the outset, but when we had already thrown ourselves into
the task with an eagerness which so often goes with inexperience, and when the work was already far advanced.
The kindly
reader will think more of the trouble taken than and will perhaps consider that, in work has at least the merit of having prepared the ground and made the way easy for studies which shall be really worthy of the great institution whose
history
1
it
See above, pp. 10-12. are somewhat comforted by finding similar hesitation persisting among many persons whose theoretical training and practical knowledge of were Often during the past four years we all that could be desired. business have asked English economists and bankers for their opinions on Robert It has been Peel's Act and on the reforms in it which had been proposed. but seldom that we have received a decisive answer. One of those questioned, bolder than the rest, ultimately confessed that he thought the Act of " a truth which we had " a bit clumsy already partly suspected. 1844 On the other hand, I have frequently heard foreigners solve the problem without any hesitation. Unfortunately I have also noticed that this excess of certainty has not always proceeded from an excess of knowledge.
'
We
"1
SUPPLEMENT
I.
Murray.
THE chief legislative measure of 1844 was the well-known Act which after more than half a century still governs our currency and banking. In 1819 Sir Robert Peel had passed a Bill establishing the principle that all bank notes should be payable on demand in But five-and-twenty years' experience had proved that in gold. commercial crises legal obligation to pay did not ensure actual failed to cash their notes, payment in gold. County banks had and even the Bank of England " had been exposed to great " in 1825, and again in 1839. On this account the danger House of Commons had appointed in 1840, and in 1841, Committees which had taken important evidence, but as yet with no result. Sir Robert Peel now took the work in hand. In a " three paper submitted to the Cabinet he shows that there are courses open for consideration," and presents " a general outline of the arguments for and against each of them."
CABINET
I.
MEMORANDUM
leading
(EXTRACT).
principles
of
Maintenance of the
this
the
present
safely
system.
For
course
it
may be contended
that
we may
;
calculate interests
upon the success of a proposal to that effect. Many and many prejudices would be in favour of it sufficient
probably to command a large Parliamentary majority. Against the course it would be argued that the system is a dangerous one; that the Bank of England has very imperfect control over the issues of paper that the nominal convertibility of paper into gold, where there is unlimited competition as to issue, does not ensure the value and practical convertibility of the paper that the Bank has more than once been exposed to great danger in respect to the exhaustion of its treasures, and for the purpose of averting it has been compelled to make sudden and violent contractions of the currency that the effect even of such contractions has not immediately told upon other issuers of paper that they have occasionally increased their circulation
:
408
SUPPLEMENT
I.
at the time when the Bank was taking measures for the redi tion of its own, and by such counteraction of the views and measures of the Bank have aggravated the ultimate pressure upon the country. It will be strongly contended in argument that it is discreditable for the Executive Government, with the experience of the past before it, to rely upon mere numerical majorities, upon the prejudices and interests of their supporters, and sanction and advise for another ten years the continuance of a system which
they cannot in argument defend. II. The next course is the opposite extreme, the prohibition for the future of all issues of paper payable to bearer on demand, by the Bank of England and every other bank whatever. That course proceeds upon the assumption that the issue of money is a prerogative of Sovereignty that paper convertible into gold at the standard price at the will of the holder partakes of all the properties of coin, is equally the measure of value, and that it is the duty of the the common instrument of exchange Sovereign to protect the holders of such paper from the injurious and that any profit which may be consequences of its discredit derived from the issue of such paper justly belongs to the State. The effect of the adoption of this course would be to make a complete separation between the various departments of bankBy money I ing and the department for the issue of money. mean coin, and notes payable to bearer, convertible on demand
;
into coin.
A Board would be constituted independent of the Government but responsible to Parliament, charged with the issue of paper, There would be no convertible into gold, to be a legal tender. necessary interference with banks, excepting so far as regards the power of issue. Government paper would be supplied by the public department of issue to the Bank of England and to other banks, and they would use this paper in purely banking transactions, in the same way in which they use their own paper. In favour of this plan it would be contended that it is in that it deals impartially with conformity with strict principle
;
capable of application to all parts of the that it shows no favour to any one powerful United Kingdom that, if it interferes with corporation like the Bank of England private interests, it interferes with all in an equal degree, and
all
interests,
and
;
is
on the broad intelligible principle of interference for the public good. If compensation to such private interests be due, it may be made more equitably and more easily under this plan than under any other, by giving to the existing issuers of paper an advantage over others in respect to the terms on which an amount of Government paper equal to the average amount of their past issues should be supplied to them. If we were about to establish in a new state of society a
SUPPLEMENT
system
of
I.
409
difficult
currency,
it
would be
very
to
contest
theoretically the principles on which this plan is founded or the equity of the practical application of them. The chief arguments against the plan are the risk of applying at once to three constituent parts of a great Empire, in each of which there is a different system of currency, any unbending the impolicy of disregarding altogether the feeluniform rule
;
ings and habits that long prescription has interwoven with the modes of transacting business, and of rejecting the use of every the presumption instrument which is ready made to your hand of concluding in a matter of so much uncertainty as this that you can infallibly command the public confidence for a perfectly novel and exclusive paper currency, and the tremendous hazard you incur in the event of failure. It will be contended, and not without reason, that however safe for commercial purposes such a system of currency may be, yet that a paper circulation resting altogether on Government security a purely Government paper is much more likely in times of political danger to be distrusted and discredited than that paper for which it would be the
;
substitute. Of this
method of solving the difficulties of the may, I think, be justly observed that many persons who, if they were responsible for the conduct of public affairs, would shrink from the proposal of it as a practical measure, will make abundant use of it in argument, in contrast with any other measure, for the purpose of showing its superior merit, on account of its conformity with strict principle, and the impartiality of its application to all interests which it may affect. III. The third and remaining course is an intermediate one between complete acquiescence in the present system and radical subversion of it. It would consist in enactments of which the following is an outline
second
question
it
:
Prohibit for the future the establishment in any part of the United Kingdom of any new bank of issue. Separate the department of issue of the Bank of England from every other department. Keep a separate account of the profits of issue. Let it be understood that the whole of these profits shall be accounted for to the Government that they shall be applied in the first instance to the substitution generally of Bank of England paper, by holding out inducements to existing banks of issue to transact their banking business with this paper in preference
;
to their
own.
;
Require constant publicity of all accounts connected with the department of issue the quantity of bullion, the amount of notes,
the
amount
of securities.
Permit the continuance of existing banks, either permanently for a definite period of years but claim the right, if they are
;
410
SUPPLEMENT
I.
banks of issue, of subjecting them equally with the Bank of England to strict regulations as to the exercise of their privilege
of issue.
Insist
upon publicity of
form as
may
be
Deal
in so
new banks
of issue.
Assume
will be to
encourage existing banks of issue in England to make voluntary arrangements for the substitution of Bank of England paper for their own and that the ultimate effect will be such a degree of control by the Bank over the general issues of the country as to enable it to regulate the currency by gradual contraction and gradual expansion according to the state of the exchange. The argument in favour of this plan it that it violates no exist;
ing right; that it takes precautions against future abuses; that it ensures by gradual means the establishment of a safe system of currency. It is impossible not to foresee that it will be encountered by a formidable combination. It will be resisted by those who are for the rigid application of sound principle without reference to times or circumstances, and who think that all paper issues should proceed directly and exclusively from the Government by those of the opposite opinion, who think there ought to be unlimited competition as to issue, provided there be the security of the immediate convertibility into gold by those who charge the Bank of England with being the chief cause of the past derangements of the currency and consider that on that account it is entitled to no favour by the country bankers and those whom the country banks can influence. The Cabinet must weigh deliberately the several considerations which present themselves. My advice is that they should determine to propose the course which they may conscientiously believe to reconcile in the greatest degree the qualities of being consistent with sound principle and suited to the present condition of society, and should encounter the risk which it is impossible not to foresee must attend any proposal for guarding against eventual dangers at the expense of personal interests and in disregard of private feelings. The Cabinet adopted, as Peel intended, the third course, in
;
England and Wales, and in 1845 f r Scotland and There was no serious opposition. His own speech in " the Parliamentary introducing his Bill has been well called the all sound foundation of subject, and the most thinking upon
1844
f
Ireland.
currency.
SUPPLEMENT
THE BANK CHARTER
7
II.
&
8 VICTORIA, CAP.
An
Act to regulate the Issue of Bank Notes, and for giving to the Governor and Company of the Bank of England certain Privileges for a limited Period. [igth July 1844.]
I. That from and after the Thirty-first Day of August One thousand eight hundred and forty-four the Issue of Promissory Notes of the Governor and Company of the Bank of England, payable on Demand, shall be separated and thenceforth kept wholly distinct from the General Banking Business of the said Governor and Company and the Business of and relating to such Issue shall be thenceforth conducted and carried on by the said Governor and Company in a " The Issue Department of the separate Department to be called Bank of England," subject to the Rules and Regulations hereinafter contained and it shall be lawful for the Court of Directors of the said Governor and Company, if they shall think fit, to appoint a Committee or Committees of Directors for the Conduct and Management of such Issue Department of the Bank of England, and from Time to Time to remove the Members, and define, alter, and regulate the Constitution and Powers of such Committee, as they shall think fit, subject to any Byelaws, Rules, or Regulations which may be made for that Purpose Provided nevertheless, that the said Issue Department shall always be kept separate and distinct from the Banking Department of the said Governor and Company.
;
; :
II. There shall be transferred, appropriated, and set apart by the said Governor and Company to the Issue Department of the Bank of England Securities to the Value of Fourteen million Pounds, whereof the Debt due by the Public to the said Governor and Company shall be and be deemed a Part; and there shall also at the same Time be transferred, appropriated, and set apart by the said Governor and Company to the said Issue Department so much of the Gold Coin and Gold and Silver Bullion then held by the Bank of England as shall not be required by the Banking Department thereof; and thereupon there shall be
delivered out of the said Issue Department into the said Banking Department of the Bank of England such an Amount of
412
SUPPLEMENT
II.
increase the Amount of Securities for the Time being in the said Issue Department, save as herein-after is mentioned, but it shall be lawful for the said Governor and Company to diminish the Amount of such Securities, and again to increase the same to any Sum not exceeding in the whole the Sum of Fourteen million Pounds, and so from Time to Time as they shall see Occasion; and from and after such Transfer and Appropriation to the said Issue Department as aforesaid it shall not be lawful for the said Governor and Company to issue Bank of England Notes, either into the Banking Department of the Bank of England, or to any Persons or Person whatsoever, save in exchange for other Bank of England Notes, or for Gold Coin or for Gold or Silver Bullion received or purchased for the said Issue Department under the Provisions of this Act, or in exchange for Securities acquired and taken in the said Issue Department under the Provisions herein contained Provided always, that it shall be lawful for the said Governor and Company in their Banking Department to issue all such Bank of England Notes as they shall at any Time receive from the said Issue Department or otherwise, in the same Manner in all respects as such Issue would be lawful to any other Person or Persons. III. It shall not be lawful for the Bank of England to retain; in the Issue Department of the said Bank at any One Time an Amount of Silver Bullion exceeding One Fourth Part of the Gold Coin and Bullion at such Time held by the Bank of England in the Issue Department. IV. All Persons shall be entitled to demand from the Issue Department of the Bank of England Bank of England Notes in exchange for Gold Bullion, at the Rate of Three Pounds Seventeen Shillings and Ninepence per Ounce of Standard Gold: Provided always, that the said Governor and Company shall in all Cases be entitled to require such Gold Bullion to be melted and assayed by Persons approved by the said Governor and Company, at the Expense of the Parties tendering such Gold
: 1
Bank of England Notes as, together with the Bank of England Notes then in circulation, shall be equal to the aggregate Amount of the Securities, Coin, and Bullion so transferred to the said Issue Department of the Bank of England and the whole Amount of Bank of England Notes then in circulation, including those delivered to the Banking Department of the Bank of England as aforesaid, shall be deemed to be issued on the Credit of such Securities, Coin, and Bullion so appropriated and set and from thenceforth it apart to the said Issue Department shall not be lawful for the said Governor and Company to
; ;
Bullion.
Provided always, That if any Banker who on the Sixth May One thousand eight hundred and forty-four was his own Bank Notes shall cease to issue his own Bank issuing
V.
Day
of
SUPPLEMENT
Notes,
it
II.
413
shall
after the Cessation of such Issue, upon the Application of the said Governor and Company, to authorize and empower the said Governor and Company to increase the Amount of Securities in the said Issue Department beyond the total Sum or Value of
Fourteen million Pounds, and thereupon to issue additional Bank England Notes to an Amount not exceeding such increased Amount of Securities specified in such Order in Council, and so Provided always, that such increased from Time to Time Amount of Securities specified in such Order in Council shall in no Case exceed the Proportion of Two Thirds the Amount of Bank Notes which the Banker so ceasing to issue may have been and every authorized to issue under the Provision of this Act such Order in Council shall be published in the next succeeding
of
: ;
London Gazette.
of the Amount of Bank of England Notes Department of the Bank of England, and of Gold Coin and of Gold and Silver Bullion respectively, and of Securities in the said Issue Department, and also an Account of the Capital Stock, and the Deposits, and of the Money and Securities belonging to the said Governor and Company in the Banking Department of the Bank of England, on some Day in every Week to be fixed by the Commissioners of Stamps and Taxes, shall be transmitted by the said Governor and Company weekly to the said Commissioners in the Form prescribed .... and shall be published by the said Commissioners in the next succeeding London Gazette in which the same may be con-
VI.
An Account
veniently inserted.
VII. The Bank of England shall be released and discharged from the Payment of any Stamp Duty, or Composition in respect of Stamp Duty, upon or in respect of their Promissory Notes payable to Bearer on Demand, and all such Notes shall thenceforth be and continue free and wholly exempt from all Liability to any Stamp Duty whatsoever. VIII. Requiring the Bank to allow to the public ^"180,000 per annum, repealed by 37 and 38 Victoria, cap. 96. IX. In case, under the Provisions herein-before contained,
the Securities held in the said Issue Department of the Bank of England shall at any Time be increased beyond the total Amount of Fourteen million Pounds, then and in each and every Year in which the same shall happen, and so long as such Increase shall continue, the said Governor and Company shall, in addition to the said annual Sum of One hundred and eighty thousand Pounds, make a further Payment or Allowance to the Public, equal in Amount to the net Profit derived in the said Issue Department during the current Year from such additional Securities, after deducting the Amount of the Expenses occasioned by the additional Issue during the same Period, which
414
Expenses
SUPPLEMENT
II.
shall include the Amount of any and every ComposiPayment to be made by the said Governor and Company Banker in consideration of the Discontinuance at any Time hereafter of the Issue of Bank Notes by such Banker;
tion or to any
of
No Person other than a Banker who on the Sixth Day May One thousand eight hundred and forty-four was lawfully issuing his own Bank Notes shall make or issue Bank Notes in
X.
Provided always, that it shall Partner or Member therefrom not be lawful for any Company or Partnership now consisting of only Six or less than Six Persons to issue Bank Notes at any Time after the Number of Partners therein shall exceed Six in the whole. If any Banker in any Part of the United Kingdom who XII. after the passing of this Act shall be entitled to issue Bank Notes shall become bankrupt, or shall cease to carry on the Business of a Banker, or shall discontinue the Issue of Bank Notes, either by Agreement with the Governor and Company of the Bank of England or otherwise, it shall not be lawful for such Banker at any Time thereafter to issue any such Notes. XIII. Every Banker claiming under this Act to continue to
:
give England or Wales shall, Commissioners of Stamps and Taxes then at their Head Office in London of such Claim, the said Commissioners shall proceed to ascertain the average Amount of the Bank Notes of such Banker which were in circulation during the said Period of Twelve Weeks preceding the and it shall be Twenty-seventh Day of April last;
issue
Bank Notes
in
in
Notice
Writing
to the
.... ....
SUPPLEMENT
:
II.
415
lawful for every such Banker to continue to issue his own Bank Notes after the passing of this Act Provided nevertheless, that such Banker shall not at any Time after the Tenth Day of
circulation
October One thousand eight hundred and forty-four have in upon the Average of a Period of Four Weeks, to be ascertained as herein-after mentioned, a greater Amount of Notes than the Amount so certified. XIV. Provided always, and be it enacted, that if it shall be made to appear to the Commissioners of Stamps and Taxes that any Two or more Banks have, by written Contract or Agreement become united within the Twelve Weeks next preceding such Twenty-seventh Day of April as aforesaid, it shall be lawful for the said Commissioners to ascertain the average Amount of the Notes of each such Bank in the Manner herein-before directed, and to certify the average Amount of the Notes of the Two or more Banks so united as the Amount which the united Bank shall thereafter be authorized to issue, subject to the Regulations of this Act. XV. The Commissioners of Stamps and Taxes shall, at the Time of certifying to any Banker such Particulars as they are
. . .
>,
herein-before required to certify, also publish their Certificate thereof in the next succeeding
a Duplicate of
London Gazette.
XVI. In case it shall be made to appear to the Commissioners of Stamps and Taxes, at any Time hereafter, that any two or more Banks have, by written Contract or become united subsequently to the Agreement passing of this Act, it shall be lawful to the said Commissioners, upon the Application of such united Bank, to certify in manner herein-before mentioned, the aggregate of the Amounts of Bank Notes which such separate Banks were previously authorized to and every such Certificate issue, and so from Time to Time shall be published in manner herein-before directed and from and after such Publication the Amount therein stated shall be and be deemed to be the Limit of the Amount of Bank Notes which such united Bank may have in circulation Provided always, that it shall not be lawful for any such united Bank to issue Bank Notes at any Time after the Number of Partners therein shall exceed Six in the whole. Sections 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22 state the administrative conditions which must be fulfilled by all private banks continuing to issue notes. Sections 23, 24, 25, 26 state the conditions under which the right to issue notes may be taken over by the Bank. XXVII. The Bank of England shall have and enjoy such exclusive Privilege of Banking as is given by this Act, upon such Terms and Conditions, and subject to the Termination thereof at such Time and in such Manner, as is by this Act provided and specified subject nevertheless to Redemption upon
....
....
416
SUPPLEMENT
;
II.
their Successors of the Sum of Eleven million fifteen thousand and one hundred Pounds, being the Debt now due from the Public to the said Governor and Company, without any Deduction, Discount, or Abatement whatsoever, then and in such Case, and not till then, the said exclusive Privileges of Banking granted by this Act shall cease and determine at the Expiration of such Notice of Twelve Months and any Vote or Resolution of the House of Commons, signified under the Hand of the Speaker of the said House in Writing, and delivered at the public Office of the said Governor and Company, shall be deemed and adjudged to be a sufficient
the Terms and Conditions following (that is to say,) at any Time upon Twelve Months Notice to be given after the First Day of August One thousand eight hundred and fifty-five, and upon Repayment by Parliament to the said Governor and Com-
pany or
....
Notice.
SUPPLEMENT
III.
THE Bank of England performs two operations of banking which ire quite distinct and have no necessary connection with each
)ther:
it
it
issues a paper currency as a substitute for a metallic advances money in the way of loan to merchants and
That these two operations of banking have no necessary :onnection will appear obvious from this that they might be carried on by two separate bodies without the slightest loss of Advantage, either to the country or to the merchants who receive tccommodation from such loans. Suppose the privilege of issuing paper money were taken away rom the Bank and were in future to be exercised by the State >nly, subject to the same regulation to which the Bank is now iable of paying its notes on demand in specie, in what way vould the national wealth be in the least impaired? should hen, as now, carry on all the traffic and commerce of the country vith the cheap medium, paper money, instead of the dear nedium, metallic money; and all the advantages which now ow from making this part of the national capital productive in he form of raw material, food, clothing, machinery and implelents, instead of retaining it useless in the form of metallic loney, would be equally secured. The public, or the Government on behalf of the public, is idebted to the Bank in a sum of money larger than the whole mount of Bank notes in circulation for the Government not nly owes the Bank fifteen millions, its original capital, which is ;nt at 3 per cent, interest, but also many more millions which
We
advanced on Exchequer bills, on half-pay and pension and on other securities. It is evident, therefore, that the Government itself were to be the sole issuer of paper loney instead of borrowing it of the Bank, the only difference ould be with respect to the interest the Bank would no longei '^ceive interest and the Government would no longer pay it; ut all other classes in the community would be exactly in the
re
nnuities,
D-2
418
SUPPLEMENT
III.
It is evident too that position in which they now stand. there would be just as much money in circulation, for it could make no difference in that respect whether the sixteen millions of paper money now circulating in London were issued by Government or by a banking corporation. The merchants could suffer no inconvenience from any want of facility in getting the usual advances made to them in the way of discount or in any other manner; for, first, the amount of these advances must essentially depend upon the amount of money in circulation, and that would be just the same as before and secondly, of the amount in circulation the Bank would have precisely the same proportion, neither less nor more, to lend to the merchants. If it be true, as I think I have clearly proved, that the advances made by the Bank to the Government exceed the whole amount of the notes of the Bank in circulation, it is evident that part of its advances to Government, as well as the whole of its loans to other persons, must be made from other funds possessed or at the disposal of the Bank, and which it would continue to
same
possess after Government had discharged its debt to it, and after all its notes were withdrawn from circulation. Let it not then be said that the Bank charter, as far as regards the issuing of paper money, ought to be renewed for this reason, that if it be not the merchants will suffer inconvenience from being deprived of the usual facilities of borrowing, as I trust I have shown that their means of borrowing would be just as ample as before. It may however be said that, if the Bank were deprived of that part of its business which consists in issuing paper money, it would have no motive to continue a joint-stock company and would agree on a dissolution of its partnership. I believe no it would still have profitable means of employing such thing
;
But suppose I am wrong and that the company were dissolved, what inconvenience would commerce sustain from it? If the joint stock of the company be managed by a few directors chosen by the general body of proprietors, or if it be divided amongst the proprietors themselves and each share be managed by the individual to whom it belongs, will that make any difference in its real amount or in the efficacy with which it may be employed for commercial purposes? It is probable that in no case would it be managed by the individual proprietors, but that it would be collected in a mass or masses and managed with much more economy and skill than it is now managed by the Bank. A great deal too much stress has always been laid on the benefits which commerce derives from the accommodation I believe it to be quite afforded to merchants by the Bank. insignificant compared with that which is afforded by the private
its
own
funds.
know that at the present moment the funds of individuals. advances by the Bank to merchants on discount are of a very that trifling amount, and we have abundant evidence to prove
We
SUPPLEMENT
III.
419
at no time have they been great. The whole fund at the disposal of the Bank for the last thirty years is well known. It consisted of its own capital and savings, of the amount of deposits left with it by Government and by individuals who employed it as a
banker.
From
this
aggregate fund
of cash and bullion in the coffers of the Bank, the of advances to the holders of receipts for the loans contracted for during each year, and the amount of advances to
amount amount
Government
in every way. After making these deductions, the remainder only could have been devoted to commercial objects, and if it were ascertained, would, I am sure, be comparatively of a small amount. From papers laid before Parliament in 1797, in which the Bank gave a number as unit and a scale of its discounts for different years, it was calculated by some ingenious individual, after comparing this scale with other documents also laid before Parliament, that the amount of money advanced in the way of discount to the merchants for a period of three years and a half
previous to 1797, varied from two millions to ^3, 700,000. These are trifling amounts in such a country as this, and must bear a small proportion to the sum lent by individuals for similar In 1797 the advances to Government alone by the purposes. Bank, exclusive of its capital which was also lent to Government, were more than three times the amount of the advances to the whole body of merchants.
A Committee of the House of Commons was appointed last session of Parliament to inquire into the law of pledges and into the relation of consigners of goods from abroad to consignees. This Committee called before it Mr. Richardson, of the house of Richardson, Overend & Co., eminent discount brokers in the
City.
This gentleman was asked Are you not in the habit occasionally of discounting to a large extent bills of brokers and other persons given upon the
:
"
Q.
security of
goods deposited " A. Very large. 11 Q. Have you not carried on the business of a bill broker and money agent to a very large extent, much beyond that of other individual in this town? any 11 A. I should think very much beyond. " To the extent of some millions annually? Q. " A. A great many; about twenty millions annually, somenes more.*' The evidence of Mr. Richardson satisfactorily proves, I think, ic extent of transactions of this kind in which the Bank has no :ind of concern. Can anyone doubt that if the Bank were to break up its establishment and divide its funds among the individual proprietors, the business of Mr. Richardson and of others who are in the same line would considerably increase?
in their
hands?
420
SUPPLEMENT
III.
the one hand they would have more applications made t for money on discount, on the other many who would hav money to dispose of would apply to them to obtain employmer for it. The same amount of money and no more would b employed in this branch of business, and if not employed by th Bank or by the individual proprietors if they had the manage ment of their own funds, it would inevitably find its way, eithe by a direct or circuitous channel, to Mr. Richardson or t some other money agent, to be employed by him in promotin the commerce and upholding the trade of the country, for in n other way could these funds be made so productive to the partie
On
them
to
whom
view which I have taken of this subject be a corre< one, it appears that the commerce of the country would not t in the least impeded by depriving the Bank of England of th power of issuing paper money, provided an amount of sue money equal to the Bank circulation was issued by Governmen and that the sole effect of depriving the Bank of this privileg would be to transfer the profit which accrues from the intere of the money so issued from the Bank to Government. There remains, however, one other objection to which tl reader's attention is requested. It is said that Government could not be safely entrusted wi the power of issuing paper money that it would most certain abuse it and that on any occasion when it was pressed for mom to carry on a war it would cease to pay coin on demand for notes, and from that moment the currency would become forced Government paper. There would, I confess, be gre danger of this if Government that is to say, the Ministers we themselves to be entrusted with the power of issuing pap money. But I propose to place this trust in the hands of Coi missioners not removable from their official situation but by I propose also vote of one or both Houses of Parliament. prevent all intercourse between these Commissioners a: Ministers by forbidding every species of money transacti
If the
;
The Commissioners should never, on any pi tence, lend money to Government, nor be in the slightest degr under its control or influence. Over Commissioners so entin independent of them the Ministers would have much less po^ than they now possess over the Bank directors. Experier shows how little this latter body have been able to withstand t cajolings of Ministers, and how frequently they have be
between them.
induced to increase their advances on Exchequer bills a Treasury bills at the very moment they were themselves decl ing that it would be attended with the greatest risk to Fn stability of their establishment and to the public interest. a perusal of the correspondence between the Government and Bank previous to the stoppage of Bank payments in 1797, it v
1
'
i
'
SUPPLEMENT
be seen that the
III.
421
Bank attributes the necessity of that measure (erroneously in this instance, I think) to the frequent and urgent demands for an increase of advances on the part of Government. 1 ask then whether the country would not possess a greater security against all such influence over the minds of the issuers of paper as would induce them to swerve from the strict line of their duty, if the paper money of the country were issued by Commissioners on the plan I have proposed, rather than by the If Government Bank of England as at present constituted wanted money it should be obliged to raise it in the legitimate way, by taxing the people, by the issue and sale of Exchequer bills, by funded loans, or by borrowing from any of the numerous banks which might exist in the country ; but in no case should it be allowed to borrow from those who have the power of creating
money.
leave
Commissioners became so ample as to them a surplus which might be advantageously disposed of, let them go into the market and purchase publicly GovernIf on the contrary it should become ment securities with it. necessary for them to contract their issues without diminishing their stock of gold, let them sell their securities in the same way in the open market. By this regulation a trifling sacrifice would be made, amounting to the turn of the market which may be supposed to be gained by those whose business it is to employ their capital and skill in dealing in these securities, but in a question of this importance such a sacrifice is not worth considerIt must be recollected that from the great competition in ing. this particular business, the turn of the market is reduced to a very small fraction, and that the amount of such transactions could never be great, as the circulation would be kept at its just
If
level by allowing for a small contraction or extension of the treasure in coin and bullion in the coffers of the Commissioners. It would be only when, from the increasing wealth and prosperity of the country, the country required a permanently increased amount of circulation that it would be expedient to invest money in the purchase of securities paying interest, and only in a contrary case that a part of such securities would be required to be sold. Thus then we see that the most complete security could be obtained against the influence which, on a first and superficial view, it might be supposed Government would have over the issues of a National Bank, and that by organising such an establishment, all the interest which is now annually paid by Government to the Bank would become a part of the national resources. I would propose, then, some such plan as the following for the establishment of a National Bank i. Five Commissioners shall be appointed in whom the full power of issuing all the paper money of the country shall be exclusively vested.
:
422
2.
SUPPLEMENT
On
III.
the expiration of the charter of the Bank of England Commissioners shall issue fifteen millions of paper money, the amount of the capital of the Bank lent to Government, with which that debt shall be discharged. From that time the annual interest of 3 per cent, shall cease and determine. 3. On the same day ten millions of paper money shall be employed by the Commissioners in the following manner: With such parts of that sum as they may think expedient they shall purchase gold bullion of the bank or of other persons, and with the remainder, within six months of the day abovementioned, they shall redeem a part of the Government debt to the Bank on Exchequer bills. The Exchequer bills so redeemed shall thereafter remain at the disposal of the Commissioners. 4. The Bank shall be obliged with as little delay as convenient after the expiration of its charter, to redeem all its notes in circulation by the payment of them in the new notes issued by Government. It shall not pay them in gold, but shall be obliged to keep always a reserve of the new notes equal in amount to its own notes which may remain in circulation. 5. The notes of the Bank of England shall be current for six months after the expiration of the Bank charter, after which they shall no longer be received by Government in payment of the revenue. 7. Within six months after the expiration of the Bank charter the notes of the country banks shall cease to circulate, and the different banks which shall have issued them shall be under the same obligation as the Bank of England to pay them in Government notes. They shall have the privilege of paying their notes in gold coin if they prefer so to do. 8. For the greater security of the holders of Government notes residing in the country there shall be agents in the different towns, who shall be obliged on demand to verify the genuineness of the notes by affixing their signatures to them, after which such notes shall be exchangeable only in the district where they are so signed. 9. Notes issued in one district, or bearing the signature of an agent in one district, shall not be payable in any other but on the deposit of any number of notes in the office of the district where they were originally issued or where they were signed, agreeably to the last regulation, a bill may be obtained on any other district payable in the notes of that district. 10. Notes issued in the country shall not be payable in coin in the country but for such notes a bill may be obtained on London which will be paid in coin or in London notes at the option of the
in 1833 the
;
;
party presenting the bill in London. n. Anyone depositing coin or London notes in the London office may obtain a bill payable in the notes of any other district, And anyone to be named at the time of obtaining the bill.
SUPPLEMENT
depositing coin in the an equal amount.
III.
423
London
office
may
obtain
London notes
to
12. The Commissioners in London shall be obliged to buy any quantity of gold of standard fineness and exceeding one hundred ounces in weight that may be offered them, at a price not less than ^3 175. 6d. per ounce. 13. From the moment of the establishment of the National Bank the Commissioners shall be obliged to pay their notes and
on demand in gold coin. Notes of one pound shall be issued at the first establishment of the National Bank, and shall be given to anyone requiring them in exchange for notes of a larger amount if the person presenting them prefers such notes to coin. This regulation to continue in force only for one year as far as regards London, but to be a permanent one in all the country districts. 15. It must be well understood that in country districts the agents will neither be liable to give notes for coin nor coin for
bills
14.
notes.
The Commissioners shall act as the general banker to all public departments in the same manner as the Bank of England now acts, but they shall be precluded from filling the same office either to any corporation or to any individual what1
6.
the
ever.
On
would
first
regulation
I
They
they
have to perform and superintend. They should be appointed by Government but not removable by Government. The second regulation refers to the mode in which the new By the paper circulation should be substituted for the old. provision here made twenty-five millions of paper money will be issued. That sum will not be too large for the circulation of the whole country, but if it should be, the excess may be exchanged for gold coin, or the Commissioners may sell a portion of their Exchequer bills and thus diminish the amount of the paper cirThere are other modes by which the substitution of culation. the new notes for the old might be made if the Bank of England co-operated with the Commissioners, but the one here proposed It might be desirable that Government would be effectual. should purchase from the Bank at a fair valuation the whole of its buildings if the Bank were willing to part with them, and It would be but also take all its clerks and servants into pay. just to the clerks and servants of the Bank to provide employment and support for them, and would be useful to the public to have the services of so many tried and experienced officers to It is a part of my plan, too, that the conduct their affairs. payment to the Bank for the management of the National Debt should wholly cease at the expiration of the Bank charter, and
424
SUPPLEMENT
III.
that this department of the public business should be put under the superintendence and control of the Commissioners. The third regulation provides for a proper deposit of gold coin and bullion, without which the new establishment could not act. In fact, there would be fourteen millions instead of ten at the It has been seen by one of the disposal of the Commissioners. subsequent regulations that the Commissioners would act as banker to the public departments, and as it is found by experience that on the average these departments have four millions in their banker's hands, the Commissioners would have these four millions in addition to the ten millions. If five millions were devoted to the purchase of coin and bullion, nine millions would be invested in floating securities. If eight millions were invested in gold, six millions would remain for the purchase of Exchequer bills. Whatever debt remained due to the Bank after this second payment made by the Commissioners must be provided for by loan, or made the subject of a special agreement between the Government and the Bank of England. The fourth and fifth regulations provide for the substitution of the new paper money for the old, and protect the bank from the payment in specie of the notes which it may have outstandThis cannot be attended with any inconvenience to the ing. holders of those notes, because the Bank is bound to give them Government notes which are exchangeable on demand for gold
coin.
for the substitution of the notes. The country banks could have no difficulty in providing themselves with the new All their transactions finally settle in notes for that purpose. London, and their circulation is raised upon securities deposited there. By disposing of these securities they would furnish themselves with the requisite quantity of money to provide for the payment of their notes, consequently the country would at no time be in want of an adequate circulation. The circulation of the country banks is estimated at about ten millions.
The seventh regulation provides new notes for the old country bank
regulation provides against fraud and forgery. instance paper money cannot be issued from each It is just, therefore, district but must all be sent from London. that some public agent should, in as many places as convenient, be prepared to verify the genuineness of the notes. After a time the circulation of each district would be carried on by notes issued in that district in forms sent for that purpose from
In the
first
The eighth
London.
The ninth regulation provides every possible facility for making remittances and payments to any district in the country. If a man at York wishes to make a payment of ^"1,000 to a person at Canterbury, by the payment of ^1,000 in notes issued at York to the agent in that town he may receive a bill for
SUPPLEMENT
III.
425
1,000 payable at Canterbury in the notes of that district. The tenth regulation provides for the payment of the notes If a man in York wants of every district in coin in London. 1,000 in coin Government should not be at the expense of sending it to him, he ought to be at that expense himself. This is a sacrifice which must be made for the use of paper money, and if the inhabitants of the country are not contented to submit to it, they may use gold instead of paper they must, nevertheless, be at the expense of procuring it. The eleventh regulation as well as the ninth provides for making remittances and payments to all parts of the country. The twelfth regulation provides against the amount of the paper currency being too much limited in quantity by obliging the Commissioners to issue it at all times in exchange for gold at the price of 3 175. 6d. per ounce. Regulating their issues It by the price of gold the Commissioners could never err.
;
might be expedient to oblige them to sell gold bullion at 173. Qd., in which case the coin would probably never be 3. exported, because that can never be obtained under 3 173. lojd. per ounce. Under such a system the only variations that could take place in the price of gold would be between the prices of 2 1 7 S 6d. and 3 175. gd., and by watching the market price and increasing their issues of paper when the price inclined to 2 I 7 S 6d. or under, and limiting them or withdrawing a small
-
portion
when
$ 175.
o,d.
or more, there
would not probably be a dozen transactions in the year by the Commissioners in the purchase and sale of gold, and if there were they would always be advantageous and leave a small As it is, however, desirable to be on profit to the establishment. the safe side in managing the important business of a paper money in a great country, it would be proper to make a liberal provision of gold, as suggested in a former regulation, in case it should be thought expedient occasionally to correct the exchanges with foreign countries by the exportation of gold as well as by the reduction of the amount of paper. The thirteenth regulation obliges the Commissioners to pay their notes on demand in gold coin. The fourteenth regulation provides for a supply of one pound
notes for the country circulation. On the first establishment of the National Bank, but not afterwards, these are to be issued in London, to be subsequently countersigned in the country. As a check on the country agents every description of note might After be sent to them from London, numbered and signed. receiving them, the agent should countersign them before they were issued to the public, and he should be held strictly responsible for the whole amount sent to him in the same manner as the distributors of stamps are responsible for the whole It is hardly necessary to amount of stamps sent to them.
426
SUPPLEMENT
III.
observe that the country agents ought to be in constant correspondence with the London district for the purpose of giving information of all their proceedings. Suppose a country agent i has given 100 notes of for a note of 100, he must give information of that fact, sending at the same time the larger note for which he has given them. His account in London would be credited and debited accordingly. If he receive 100 in notes and give a bill on another district he must give advice, both to the London district and to the district on which the bill is given, sending up the note as in the former instance. His account will be credited for this 100, and the agent of the other It is not requisite to go farther district will be charged with it. into details; I may already have said too much, but my object has been to show that the security for the detection of fraud is nearly perfect, as vouchers for every transaction would all be originally issued in London, and must be returned to London, or be in the possession of the country agent.
The
fifteenth regulation is
only explanatory of
some
of the
former regulations.
The sixteenth regulation directs that the Commissioners shall act as banker to the public departments and to the public departments only. If the plan now proposed should be adopted the country would probably, on the most moderate computation, save ^750,000 per annum. Suppose the circulation of paper money to amount to twenty-five millions and the Government deposits to four On all this millions, these together make twenty-nine millions. sum interest would be saved with the exception of six millions perhaps, which it might be thought necessary to retain as deposits in gold coin and bullion and which would consequently
be unproductive. Reckoning interest then at 3 per cent, only on twenty-three millions, the public would be gainers of 690,000. To this must be added 248,000 which is now paid for the 938,000. management of the public debt, making together Now supposing the expenses to amount to 188,000, there would remain for the public an annual saving or gain of 750,000. It will be remarked that the plan provides against any party but the Commissioners in London making an original issue of notes. Agents in other districts in the country, connected with the Commissioners, may give one description of notes for another; they may give bills for notes or notes for bills drawn on them, but in the first instance, every one of these notes must be issued by the Commissioners in London, and consequently
If from any cirthe whole is strictly under their cognizance. cumstances the circulation in any particular district should
become redundant, provision is made for the transfer of such redundancy to London, and if it should be deficient a fresh supply
SUPPLEMENT
is obtained from London. be redundant it will show
III.
427
the circulation of London should by the increased price of bullion and the fall in the foreign exchanges, precisely as a redundancy is now shown, and the remedy is also the same as that now in a reduction of circulation, which is brought operation, viz. about by a reduction of the paper circulation. That reduction may take place in two ways either by the sale of Exchequer bills in the market and the cancelling of the paper money which is obtained for them, or by giving gold in exchange for the paper, cancelling the paper as before and exporting the gold. The exporting the gold will not be done by the Commissioners that will be effected by the commercial operation of the merchants, who never fail to find gold the most profitable remittance when the paper money is redundant and excessive. If, on the contrary, the circulation of London were too low, there would be two ways of increasing it by the purchase of Government securities in the market and the creation of new paper money for the purpose, or by the importation and purchase by the Commissioners of gold bullion, for the purchase of which new paper money would be created. The importation would take place through commercial operations, as gold never fails to be a profitable article of import when the amount of
If
itself
:
currency
is deficient.
IN the Edition published at Paris in 1904, Appendix 4 is a translation in French of the Speeches of Sir Robert Peel in the House of Commons, May 6th and 2Oth, 1844, on the Renewal This has not been reprinted here of the Bank Charter.
;
students are referred to the following works, easily accessible in any large Public Library, where the Speeches are printed in
full
:
Hansard's Parliamentary Debates, Vol. 74, pp. 720, 1330. Speeches of Rt. Hon. Sir Robert Peel, 1810-1850, Vol. 4.
A
&
Corner
in
Money Laws.
1904.
P. S.
King
Son.
2s. 6d.
AUTHOR'S BIBLIOGRAPHY.
Dialogue between Dr. Hugh Chamberlain and a Country Gentleman. London, 1695. A Comparison between the proposals of the Bank and the South Sea Company. Wherein is shown that the proposals of the first are much more advantageous than that of the latter. London, 1720. A copy of the Correspondence between the Chancellor of the Exchequer and the Bank of England relative to the Renewal of the Charter of 1833. London, 1858. A description of the Office of Credit. With a plain demonstration
A Bank
how
man may
times his
stock.
London, 1665.
A
A A A
digest of the evidence on the Bank Charter, taken before the Committee of 1832. London, 1833. History of Banking in all Nations. 4 Vols. New York, 1896.
letter
London, 1700.
letter to
a friend concerning the credit of the Nation, and with relation to the present Bank of England, as now established by Act of Parliament. Written by a Member of the said Corporation for the public good of the Kingdom.
London, 1721. Arguments against prolonging the Bank with proposals for
letter to the
advancing the revenue of the Excise. In a letter to a of Parliament. London, 1708. A second part of a discourse concerning banks. London (undated, but certainly 1696 or 1697). ADDISON, RT. HON. J. The Spectator No. 3, March, 1701. An Account of the constitution and security of the General Bank of Credit. London, 1683. An Account of the Private League between the late King James II. and the French King. (In State Tracts). London,
Member
1705-
An Essay
By
A. V.
London,
1695.
430
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
Nation.
An Honest Scheme
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The Bank
England and their Present Method of Paying London, 1697. The Case of the Bank Contract. London, 1735. The Crisis of 1890. Economic Journal, Vol. I. The History of the Bank of England from the Establishment of that Institution to the Present Day. London, 1797. The Life and Adventures of the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street. London, 1832. The Mystery of the New-Fashioned Goldsmiths or Bankers Discovered. London, 1676. The Quarterly Journal of Economics published by the Harvard Boston, U.S.A. University. The Schemes of the South Sea Company and the Bank of England, as proposed to the Parliament for the Reducing of the National Debts. London, 1720. The Statutes at Large from Magna Charta to 1869. no Vols. London, 1762-1869. The Villany of Stock-jobbers Detected and the Causes of the late Run upon the Bank Discovered and Considered. London,
of
Defended.
1701.
THERY, EDMOND.
1899.
Europe
et litats
Unis d'Amerique.
Paris,
THIERS, A.
Histoire de Law. Paris, 1858. H. An Enquiry into the Nature and Effects of the THORNTON, Paper Credit of England. London, 1802. THURLOE, J. A Collection of State Papers from 1638 to the Restoration. London, 1742. 7 Vols. History of England from the Revolution to the TINDAL, N. Accession of King George II. London, 1743. TODD, ALPH. Parliamentary Government of England. 2 Vols. 2nd edition. London, 1887. TOOKE, THOMAS. History of Prices. 6 Vols. London, 18381857-
An Inquiry into the Currency Principle. London, 1844. TORRENS, ROBERT. A Letter to the Rt. Hon. Viscount Melbourne on the Causes of the recent derangement of the Money Market. London, 1837. The Principles and Practical Operation of Sir Robert Peel's Act of 1844, explained and defended. 3rd edition. London, 1858.
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
TRAILL, H. D.
Social England.
445
6 Vols. London, 1893-97. Letter to a Friend TUCKER, JOSIAH. concerning Naturalizations. London, 1753. TURNOR, TH. The Case of the Bankers and their Creditors, more fully stated and examined. London, 1675.
History of England principally Seventeenth Century. Oxford, 1875. VAUGHAN, RICE. A Discourse of Coin and of Coinage. don, 1675. VOLTAIRE. Histoire de Charles XII.
in
the
Lon-
WALPOLE, HORACE.
Mann.
9 Vols.
d.
In Schonberg
Handbuch
Italian translation, Biblioteca dell' Pol. Ockon mista. 3rd series, Vol. XII. Turin, 1886.
Econo-
WATSON, ROBERT.
1795-
The Life of Lord George Gordon, with a London, Philosophical Review of his Political Conduct.
Cours d' Economic Politique professe" a Lausanne. 2 Vols. Lausanne, 1896.
la
WILFREDO-PARETO.
Faculte" de
WILSON, JAMES.
Capital, Currency and Banking. 2nd edition. London, 1859. The Foreign Policy of England under WILLIAMS, BASIL. Walpole. English Historical Review, 1901. WISZNIEWSKI, ADAM. La me"thode historique applique"e a la
Histoire de la Banque Saint-George R6publique de Genes. Paris, 1865. WOLF, LUCIEN. The Resettlement of the Jews in England. London, 1888.
re"forme des banques.
la
de
WOLOWSKI,
Banques
1864.
2
Parts.
London,
INDEX.
ACCOMMODATION BILLS, 361 Acts of Parliament referred dates of
:
to,
Addington, i86ni, 210, 217 Agra and Masterman's Bank, 360 Agricultural and Commercial Bank,
265
129, 130 n 2, 137 n 144 Algeria, Bank of, 257 n 2 Alien Law, 32
1390... 46
1487. ..46
1 495...
Aislabie,
i,
140,
46
Amsterdam, Bank
n
i
1689. ..55
in
of,
3,
of, 27, 51
3, 67,
i692...58n
115 63 n
3
2
1701. ..41 1709.. .121, 253 I7l6. ..124 1742. ..148, 171, 247, 1764.. .155
I773-ISS
1775. ..171 rt3, 201
1786.. .185 1793. ..191 1797, May ist...2oi 1797, May 3rd.. .201,
Annuity, deadweight, 268, 290 Argentine Republic, 363 365 Argyll, Duke of, 134 Ark wright, 163, 169, 204 Asiatic Bank, 361 n 5 Atterbury, 126 Austria, National Bank of, 80 n 3 Autumnal Drain, 314
210,
202,
236
1812. ..237
1819, c. 49. ..203, 241, 248 1819, c. 76. ..241 1822. ..248 1826.. .172, 246, 254, 255, 259
1827.. .394 1828. ..255
1
BACHELORS, tax on, 55 n 5 Banco del Giro, 77, 78, 84 n i Banco del Piazza del Rialto, 77 Bank Act of 1844
:
Bank
chief provisions of, 289 292 reliance on suspension of, 329, 365, 373 suspension of, 336, 348, 359
Charter,
124,
renewals
of,
109,
122,
Bank Act
ni
n
i
of 1844
154, 155, 206, 262 Bills, 23, 83, 108, 109 Money, 78, 81 of England :
155
401 n
448
Bank
loans
INDEX
England Continued. and advances of Government, 3, 65, 69, 88, in, 122, 124, 147,
of
158, 206Bills
of
exchange
to
84, 155, 199,
for
English
192, 194, 195, 209, 238, 241, 249, 403 management of, 74, 387, 388 policy of with regard to branch banks, 113, 170, 171, 254, 255, 263 n i publication of balance sheet of,
190
and foreign, 85 Births, Marriages and Burials, tax on, 55 n 5 Blackburn, Archbishop of York, 60 n 4 Black Friday, 150, 358
Blount, Sir John, 129, 130 Bodleian Library, 29 Bonrepaux, 56 n 2 Bosanquet, 158 n i, 191, 196 Bounties, 189 n i Brandenburg, Elector of, 62
280,
283, 288
n2, 290
See also Bank Return reports on financial position of,
199, 206 securities held by, 312, 319 separation of into two depart-
Duke
of,
134,
166
ments, 279
Bank Rate
188, 251, 261, 267, 268, 308, 314, 327, 334. 344. 350, 3Si. 357. 364. 365, 367, 377 fluctuations in, 313 317,
English, 85,
Brindley, 166, 167, 169, 204 Briscoe, John, 104 Brodrick, 129 n 3, 139 n 2 Bubble Act, 136 n i
Bubble Companies, 135, 136 Budget, 34, 58 n 4, 181, 396 n 2 Buenos Ayres Water Works Company, 365
Bullion
at
342,
the
1820
Tower,
seizure
of,
318, 364
Bullion, "sworn off," 92 n i Bullion Committee, 220, 221 Bullion Report, 7, 8, 196, 203, 205,
suggested, 82
290,
249 n 2
295
297,
220
229
i
291,
Burdett, Sir F., 233 n Bute, Lord, 127 Byng, Admiral, 127
Bank
Restriction Act, 9, 201, 203 206, 210, 214, 216, 252, 259, 393 Bank Stock, 7, 87 n 5, 89 n 2, 99, 103, 107, no, 113115, 130, 135 n 4 143, 184 Bank transfers, 76, 77, 82 Bankers' Debt, 41 Banking Principle, 270 273, 275 n i, 277, 327 n 2, 384
,
CAF.RMARTHEN, MARQUESS OF, 70 Caisse d'Escompte, 144, 404 n i Canals, 166, 167 Canning, Lord, 9, 223, 233, 234, 241, 284 Canonists, 46 n i Capital of the Bank of England, 73,
84, 155,
in,
192
122,
Banque
Ge'ne'rale,
Barcelona, Bank Baring Brothers, 268, 362, 363, 365 368 219, 220, 254 n i, Baring, Sir F. 329. 333 3, 339, 366 n i Barnard, Sir John, 152 Barned's Bank, 357 Bedford, Duke of, 127 Bedford, Lord, 198 Beer, tax on, 57 n 5 Belgium, Bank of, 257 n 2, 267, 315 n 2, 390
,
404 n i of, 80 n 3
2,
306
Caroline, Queen, 143 Carriages, Duties on, 394 n Carvajal, 31
i
Cash Payments
resumption
210,
of,
205,
206,
209,
Berthollet, 163
Bills discounted
suspension of, forbidden in New York, 347 n 3 suspension of, in Ireland, 214 Castlereagh, Lord, 233 Catherine of Braganza, 32 n 3 Catholics, 17, 30, 159 Chamberlain, Dr. Hugh, 50, 68,
237239, 242, 248 suspension of, n, 162, 176, 178 t3, 190, 195198, 205, 403
103108,
INDEX
Chambers, Mr., 222, 223 Chandos, Duke of, 134 Charles I., 14 19, 20 n i,
28 Charles
32, 35.
II.,
449
21, 22
i,
20, 24
5,
'.
25,
3739.
41 n
42
>
Cottington, 18 Cotton, Governor of the Bank, 329 Cotton industry, 162 164, 354 Cotton, Sir Robert, 18 n 3 Counterfeiting, 51, in, 112, 155,
103
Charles Spain, 115 Charles XII., 166 n 2 Chatham, Earl of, 199 n 2 Chauvelin, 176 Cheques, 171 n 2, 246, 258, 261, 276, 301, 302, 323, 356, 359, 398 Chieri, Bank of, 80 n 3 Child, Messrs, 150 n 6 Child, Sir Francis, 24 n i, 120 Chinese currency, 285 n i City of Glasgow Bank, 348, 362 Clarendon, Earl of, 361 Clearing House, 301, 302, 308 Clearing House Bankers, 325 Clifford, 39 Clipping, 22, 49, 91, 92, 95, 96 n i Cloth trade, 26, 27 Coal mines, output of, 165 Coat and Conduct, taxes of, 20 n i Cockburns & Co., 335 n 6 Coin, amount in circulation, 323 n 2
2, 115 II. of
172, 219, 237 failures of, 172, 188, 237 n 2, 252, 268, 287 issues of, 171, 188, 194, 196, 248, 254, 290, 292, 299, 328 tendency of, to disappear, 302
2
Craggs, Mr., 140 Credit MobilieY, Socie'te' de, 355 n 3 Crompton, 163 Cromwell, 24 ni, 25, 26, 30 33,
IJ 5
Currency
Coinage
18,
99,
English and Irish, 216, 217 forced, 65, 99 n i, 169, 186, 222, 236 Currency Principle, 273 278, 283, 285, 292 n 3 Currency Reform (U.S.A.), 265 Customs receipts, 15, 19, 114, 144 W 3. 306, 393
97,
102
89,
2,
61,
85,
96107,
109, 159,
239 n
240 Coins, penalties for debasing, 91 93. 95 Coins, weights of, 93, 94 Colbert, 40 Colonial Banks, 356 Colville, Mr., 215 Committees of Inquiry, 8, 91, 139,
198, 205, 214, 216, 220, 238, 256, 284. 338, 340, 35 i. 357. 400 Committees of Inquiry, Reports of,
8, 199, 206, 216, 220, 339, 341, 342, 387 Companies, limited liability, 354
Debt:
administered by Bank, 153, 245,
262, 391, 392, 394, 398, 399, 401 n i English, 3, 10, 41, 63, 84, 99 n i, 129, 131, 144713, i 4 6n i, 306, 398 floating, 3, 181, 193 n i, 207,
245. 398 French, 143 n 2, 400 increases in, 119 n i,
147 n 155 n i, 162, 169, 176, 183 reductions in, 175, 185 n 3 Deficiency advances, 307 n 2, 399 Deficiency bills, 307 n 2, 399 De Foe, Daniel, 64 n 2
i,
Banks
of,
14,
76,
81,
171
2,
259, 276
certificates of, 76, 79
Deposits
at the
Tower, 14
F-2
450
Deposits Continued. Bankers', 308, 324, 325 Bank of England's, 206 n
209, 276, 306,
etc.,
INDEX
Exchequer
2,
bills, 105, 109, no, 122, l88 *9 r n2 151, 155, 161, l8l O1 238, 335. 395, 399, 4<*>. 4
>
'
208,
323,
359,
360
Country, 356
Exchequer bonds, 401 Exchequer, Court of, 16, 41 n i, 394 Exchequer payments suspended, 39,
40, 42 Excise, 41, 121, 306, 393, 394
foreign, in London, 385 increase in, 276 interest on, 23, 35, obligation to keep, 81
39
3S 6
Other, 306
308
Treasury, 209 with the Goldsmiths, 23, 24, 45 De Ruyter, 36 Discount Rate, 334 See also Bank Rate, Bills Discounts, Bank of England's, 170, 193, 219, 360 Dividends Bank of England's, 66, 74, 99, 108110, 113, i47> 249 WI
:
FAIRFAX, 29 Financing, 355, 361 Finch, Lord Keeper, 15 Fishing trade, 26, 27 n i Fleetwood, 96 n i Foley, Mr., 104, 106 Forbes, Sir William, 195 n i Foster, Mr., 220 Fould, Benoit, 392 n i Fox, Charles, 179, 186, 188, 198, 210, 211, 217 France, Bank of a national bank, 3 n i authorised rate of discount at,
:
261
capital
of,
306, 405
compared
forbidden
305 with
Bank
lend
of
Engto
money
Dover, Treaty of, 37, 38 n i Dreyfus, M. C., 392 Dudley, Lord, 165 n 5 Duncombe, Charles, 58 n
114, i2on 3 Dupont de Nemours, 230 Durand, Colonel, 150 ni
Government, 230 freedom of issue enjoyed by, 13 gold, silver and notes at, 372,
i,
89 n
2,
379, 38o
Government
39 n
issue
l
profits
on issues
of,
4, 79, 80,
bills and, of Treasury 400 n i 401 n i loans on securities by, 384 loans to Bank of England, 268,
,
114, 138,
English,
86
management
and, 400
of
French
debt
3,
107 n
2,
114, 115
Edward Edward
Elizabeth,
17,
90,
97.
9. 109*2,
policy of in 1805. ..230 policy of in 1857... 348 securities held by, 319 system of accounts of, 297 See also Bank Rate, Bills
240
Mr., 339 Etruria, 166 n 5
Ellice,
Frankfurt,
Bank
of,
304
Exchange
with
of,
Amsterdam,
97
importance
of,
French banking system, 385 French Navy, 86 n 2 Genoa, Bank of, 75, 78 82 George I., 129, 130, 132, 136,
149
138,
214,
Exchanges
II.,
i
134
175,
III.,
^6,
2
197,
German
Navy, 86 n
:
192, 194, 196, 205, 206, 212, 220, 221, 224, 356
INDEX
Germany, Bank
gold,
.
45i
of
Continued.
at,
361
n5
on
Holland, 359 n i Hackney coaches, tax on, 55 n 5, 59 n I Halifax, Marquess of, 70 Halley, G., 96 n i Hamburg, Bank obtained money from, 268
Bank
Rate, Bills
Hamburg, Bank
of, 51
3,
in
n$
Gibbs, Mr. (Lord Aldenham), 325 n 2 Gilbart, 262 n i Gladstone, Mr., 99, 177, 181 n 2, 182 184, i86n3, 284, 359 n i, 360, 401 Godfrey, Michael, 61, 62, 87, 88, 89 n 2, 99 Godolphin, Lord, 62 n 2, 89 n 2, 121, 126
of,
Bank must
3i8
345
283,
290,
buy, 83,
discoveries of, 345 free market for, 317, 405 prices of, 96, 97 n i, 158, 159, 220, 224, 235, 237239 stocks of, at different Banks,
289 n Goldsmiths
i,
:
372, 379
accusations
business
against,
24,
done by, u, 21 23, 3 2 35, 44, 45, 92 interest asked by, 24, 34, 35, 40, 41, 47 loans of to Government, 25, 33 money owed to, 39, 40 opposition of to Bank, 68, 107
Goldsmiths' Company, 92 Goldsmiths' Hall, 92 n i Goldsmiths' Lawsuit, 41, 57 n i Goldsmiths' Notes, 23 Gordon, Lord George, 159, 160 Goschen, Mr., 152, 325, 326, 329, 37i, 375379, 405 Gower, Lord, 175 Grenfell, Mr., 208 Grenville, Lord, 176, 184, i86n2, 198, 200, 204 n i, 236 Gresham, Sir Thomas, 22 n i, 24 n i, 90 n 2 Grey, 188, 236 Grindley, Captain, 360 n 2 Guineas, prices of, 91, 96, 215 n i, 222223, 233, 236
w.4 95
25,
35
Henri IV., i66n 2 Henry VIII., 22 n i, 90 Hoare, Sir R., 120 n 2 Holland Bank's liabilities in, 109 English admiration of, 29 naval supremacy of, 26, 27 n i Holland, Bank of, 315 n 2 Holland, Lord, 22 n i, 236 Horner, 220, 229, 234 Horsey, Captain, 126 Houblon, Sir John, 87, 108 Houses, tax on, 98, 122, 306 Hudson's Bay Company, 57 n 4, 86 W3
:
Hungarian
Law
of i873...257
Income Tax,
350
191, 336, 349
i,
Compagnie
des,
53,
128, 143
Interest
24,
in
46,
47,
257,
27,
260
of, of,
Holland,
263,
405
on Bank's loans to Government, 65, 73, 122, 124, 143, 148 ni, 152, 153, 155, 207,
39i
452
Interest
INDEX
Kay, 163 n 5 Kendal, Duchess
of, 132 n i, 140 King, Lord, 9, 211, 235, 254 n 2 59 King, Melville & Co., 335 n 2 Knapp & Co., 335 Knight, 139
Continued. on notes, 85, 112, 193 ni, 281, 403 on tallies, 112 Ireland, 55, 56 n i, 57 n 2, 167, 194,
196, 214, 215, 217, 220, 221, 226, 265, 266, 331 Ireland, Bank of, 265 n 5 Iron industry, 165 Issue, Banks of, their function, 282 Issue Department suggested, 281,
i,
288 n
Issues
:
LABOUR LAWS, 99 n i, 168 Land Bank, 4, 50, 53, 66 n 3, 68, no, in n i, 119 83, 89, 99, 103 Land Tax, 55 n 5, 58, 59 ni, 88,
191 n2, 306, 394 Lang, Son & Fraser, 187 Lansdowne, Lord, 183, i86n2,
Bank
of
England's,
T 93 197. 206208, 237, 238, 251, 252, 333 n 2, 351 central system of, 247, 283, 288,
170, 213,
188,
198,
304
excessive, 157, 169, 204, 209, 217, 226, 227, 230, 254, 271, 272, 285, 286 foreign exchanges and, 238, 257 ni
free,
205, 231,
225,
236 Lauderdale, Lord, 250 Law, John, 128, 142, 144, 201, 209, 303, 404
Bank
199,
notes as,
202,
65,
5,
82, 83,
2,
212,
247 n
10,
12,
of,
freedom
legal
259261,
265 n
292,
Irish, 216,
217
limit of, exceeded, 349 Mr. Goschen's scheme for additional, 374 376 other banks', 173, 219, 237, 299 proper regulation of, 158, 195, 216, 226, 230, 247 n i, 257, 264, 270272, 274, 275, 279
403 gold and silver as, 323 Leslie, Alexander & Co., 335 n 2 Levinz, Sergeant, 74 n 3 Lidderdale, Mr., 325, 367, 368, 387 Liverpool, Lord, 171 n 3, 240 n i, 253 Loan Acts, 57 n 4
of, in of, in
Belgium, 390
to, 80,
389
19
Charles
32 foreign,
I.'s,
17
Cromwell's and
in
Charles JI.'s,
legal limit of, 84, 124, 289, 293, 298, 299, 330, 349, 350, 359, 373,
of,
German, 179
on commodities, 47 n
73, 85, 188 Pitt's, 176 178,
51, 53,
Bank
80 n 3
180
182,
203,
n,
57,
67,
116,
143
189
149
118
James James
Jean
le
Maingre, 78
Jekyll, 139
Jews, 19, 2832, 55 n 5 Joint-Stock Banks, 123, 171 n 2, 173, 2 5S 2 59 262, 263, 266, 282, 299, 3 25 34. 349 wit 352, 356, 359, 364, 384, 405 Joint-Stock Companies, 123, 171 n 2, 219. 363 Joint-Stock Discount Company, 357
William III.'s, 57, 116 Locke, 98 London Assurance Company, 133 n i London Bank, 252, 360 London and County Bank, 262 London and Westminster Bank, 262 London Joint-Stock Bank, 262 London merchants support Bank,
151, 198 Lottery, 59 n i Lottery Loan, 58, 65, 84 Louis XIII., ioon4 Louis XIV., 6, 37, 38, 43,
57, 67, 80, 115, 118,
56 n
2,
i66n2, 176
KAPNIKON, 55 n
INDEX
Lowe, Mr. (Lord Sherbrooke),
330 Loyalty Loan, 182 Luxembourg, 57 n 2
329.
246,
453
Northcote, Sir Stafford, 361 North and Grey, Lord, 130 Norton, Sir Dudley, 23 n i Northern and Central Bank of chester, 266
Man-
MACKWORTH,
Norwich, Bank
Notes : below
255
of,
252
171
Malt tax, 191 n 2 Manasseh Ben Israel, Rabbi, 30, 31 Manning, Mr., 205 Marie Antoinette, 160 Marlborough, Duchess of, I5on6 Marlborough, Duke of, 24 n i, 86 n i, 121 Marshall, Mr., 215 n i
Maynell, 35
^5
1
forbidden, forbidden,
3,
below 217
171 n
3,
Mazarin, 30 Merchants, Committee of, 193 n i Michigan Central Railway, 347 Mid-Wales Railway, 358 Mine Adventurers, Company of, 123
260, 298 J&I...20I, 252, 254, 255, 373 376, 378 \0.. .104, 193, 298 2 and ^"3. ..192 n 2, 201 See also Paper Currency Notes, Bank of England, 52 n
^5. ..192,
i,
73 WI 53. 99. "o, 113, 120, 192, 207, 213, 218, 222, 238, 272, 390,
Mint
price and market price, 212, 213, 217 n 2, 221, 223, 224, 239,
Molesworth, Lord, 139, 339 Monmouth, Earl of, 70 Monopolies of Continental Banks, 80, 390
:
of,
70
OHIO LIFE INSURANCE AND TRUST Company, 346, 347 Orleans, Duke of, 149
Orphans' Fund, 49, 63 n 5, 89 n 2 Overend, Gurney & Co., 356 358 Overstone, Lord (S. J. Loyd), 247,
273 n 2
taxes on,
15
Monopoly of the Bank of England, no, 112, 113, 123, 148, 171, J83,
"247,
254,
Montague,
5759.
97,
Moor
Morris, Mr., 341 Morton, Petto & Betts, 359 n 3 Mulgrave, Earl of, 70
PALMER, MR. HORSLEY, 257, 261 n 3 Paper Currency advantages of, 48, 49, 203, 274 n 2, 285 n i averages of, in England, France and Germany, 301
:
169,
44,
176 ni,
47,
10,
207,
Naval
Bills, 181
i,
Navigation Act, 26, 27 n Navy, English, 86 n 2 Neale, Mr., 105 Neave, S., 344 Nelson, 169
Neufville Brothers, 156
43, 46
n 4
depreciated, 197, 215, 224, 227, 230232, 265 n 5 inconvertible, 192 n 2, 213, 224, 227, 240, proper regulation of, 257, 260, 274, 277, 293. 379 signs of depreciation 217 n 2, 232, 233
204,
353
216, 283,
213,
Newcastle,
Duke
of,
121,
150
Newdegate, Mr., 338 Newland, Abraham, 400 Newton, 7, 98 New York and Erie Railway, 347 New York Banks, 347 Norman, G. W., 247, 257, 261 n 3,
Paper tax, Parliamentary Debates on the appointment of a Committee of Inquiry in 1847... 339. 340 on the Bullion Report, 229 234 on the Crisis of 1825. ..253, 254 on the foundation of the Bank,
i
:
59 n
70,
71
454
INDEX
Re-coinage Act, 1696. ..96
Re-discounting, 266, 352
Parliamentary Debates Continued. on the introduction of the Act of 1833... 260 on the prolongation of the Bank
Restriction Act, 210, 211 on the South Sea crisis,
138,
Reichsbank
Reserve, Bank
character
and functions
of,
4,
139
on the South Sea project, 130 on the suspension of cash payments, 198 200 Parnell, Mr., 217 Paterson, William, 44, 49, 59 65,
87, 402 Paul, Lewis, 163 n 3 Pearse, Mr., 226 Pedlars, tax on, 55 n 5
246, 257, 258, 273, 307, 321 328, 365, 371, 384, 386, 405 compared with liabilities, 206, 264, 267, 268, 309, 323, 326 compared with note circulation, 83, 246, 294, 300, 385, 386 value of, at various dates, 170, 194, 208 n 4, 209, 248, 251, 265, 267, 268, 300, 326, 327, 334. 336, 344. 348, 359, 361,
grandfather of the Prime Minister, 163 n 5 Peel, Sir Robert, 9, 13, 99 n i, 196, 234 n i, 239, 240, 247, 253, 254, 260, 285288, 328, 329, 339, 340 Sir Robert, father of the Peel, Prime Minister, 99 n i, 168 n 5
Peel,
369 n i Reserve, Swiss Bank, 257 n 2 Reserves, bankers', 246, 300, 324 Rest, the, 82, 147, 291, 305 Revenue, 55, 144 n 3, 183 Ricardo, 9, 241 Richards, 261 n 3 Riot Act, 142 n 3 Robinson & Co., 335*12 Rochester, Earl of, 70 Rose, A., 229, 231 Ross, General, 139
308,
Rowe,
174186,
199 n
2,
236
Platen, Countess of, 140 Pollard, George, 262 n i Poll tax, 55, 56, 59 n i
Sir Thomas, 18 Roxburgh, Duke of, 134 Royal Bank of Liverpool, 336, 337 Royal Bank of Scotland, 188 Royal Exchange, 133 n i Royal Exchanger, 21, 22 n i Russia, Empress of, 157
Population, 161 n
i,
164,
168
Russia, excessive
issues
in,
231
*3
Prescott, Mr., 341 Price, Dr., 125
127 St. Paul's Cathedral, 29, 125 Saisy, M. Herve" de, 392 n i Salt, tax on, 15 n 2, 58, in, 112 Sardinia, national bank of, 80 n 3 Saunderson & Co., 335
Private
banks, 76, 172, 173, 197, 299. 307, 3 2 S. 326, 334, 352, 356 Proclamations, 36, 136 Protestant Association, 159
Pulteney, 207
n8ni,
149,
150,
314 ni, 327, 338, 348, 349 n Securities, international, 320 Sella, 392 n i
378
QUAKERS,
8,
30
4,
345,
346 Railways, investments in, 332 Real del Monte, the, 251
Seymour, 89 n 2 Shaftesbury, Earl of (Lord Ashley), 39 Shales, Henry, 56 n i Sharpe, Mr., 232 Sherridan, Mr., i86n2, 198, 199, 200, 220
Ship Money, 15
Silver
:
INDEX
Silver
455
Continued
of,
i
,
stocks
at
different
Banks,
289 n
380
Sinclair, Sir John, 188 Sinking Fund, 63, 175, 176 n i, 178 n 4, 184, 185, 186 Smith, William, 174 n 2
n n
2, 3,
177 394
Somers, Lord, 41 i, 97, 100 Somerset, Duke of, 121 South African War, 185 n 3, 344 South Sea Annuity, 41 South Sea Bubble, 4, 250 South Sea disaster, 107 n i South Sea Company, 128 145, 152 South Sea crisis, 9, 157 South Sea scheme, 53 South Sea stock, 135 n 5, 144 Spain, Bank of, 3 n i, 80 n 3 Spain, King of, 17, 202 n i Spanish Dollars, 202
Spanish War, 365 n
Speculation, 53, 54,
2
Trade
of,
1805-9...
growth Treasury bills, 172, 190 192, 320, 399 n 3, 400 n i, 401
Triple Alliance, 37, 143 Turin, Bank of, 80 n 3
1613-1858.. .168
194,
UFFICIO DI SAN GIORGIO, 79 Union Bank, 262 United States banking in the, 323, 346, 347
:
129, 131136, 143, 144, 156, 157, 249, 250, 253, 263, 264, 332, 333, 342, 343, 354,
Stamp
in the, 231 prosperity of, in 1847... 332 n United States, Bank of the, 265 Usury Laws, 46, 124, 261
excessive issues
of,
99,
102
Stanhope
VANE, 18 Vansittart, Mr. (Lord Bexley), 232, 234. 236 Vaughan, Richard, 51 n 6 Venice, Bank of, 25, 28, 75, 77, 78,
in
140,
Vyner,
Sir Robert, 40
fall in,
WAGES,
320
54, 135,
164 n
136, 146 n i, 155, 197, 233, 249 ni, 251. 358, 361 See also Bank Stock, Consols
of,
ngni
2
Stockholm, Bank of, 82 n i, 157 Strafford (Wentworth), 15, 16, i8n2, '9 Subsidies paid to the Allies, 177,
179, 180,
Sumptuary
Sutherland,
140, 141
Lord,
i
119 n
2,
130 n
2,
Sweden, excessive issues in, 230 Sweden, Bank of, 82, 230 Swedish Law of 1874. ..257*1 2
Sword Blade
112
87 n 4, 90, 97, 100 n i, 105, 107, 119, 159 115 240, 402 Wilson, Mr., 339 Window tax, 55, 98 Wood, Sir Charles (Lord Halifax), 336, 338 Woollen industry, 43, 162, 164 n 3 Wyatt, John, 163 n 3
Watt, forerunners of, 167 n Watt, James, 167 169, 204 Wedgwood, Josiah, 165 n i Wellington, 169, 204 Welsh Copper Company, 134 West of England Bank, 362 Western Bank, 348 Whitmore, Mr., 226 William III., 36, 24 n i, 31, 5457. 58 n i, 59m, 63,
m,
231
OF THE
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P.
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Revenue
An Account of the Revenue and Taxes raised in the United Kingdom, with a short history of each Tax and Branch of the Revenue. By W. M. J. " WILLIAMS, Author of Local Taxation," etc. Crown 8vo. cloth, 6s. net.
Average Prices
of
General Commodities
The Course of Average Prices of General Commodities, 1820 1907. By AUGUSTUS SAUERBECK, F.S.S. Royal 4to. With Folding Diagram. Is. net.
Co-operation at
An Account
countries.
of the
By C. R.
Co-operative Movement in Great Britain and other FAY, B.A., Fellow of Christ's College (late Scholar of
of
"A
or Professional
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anthropists in Office The Poor Law Charity Organisation Society Types of State Intervention Annexation Co-operation Supervision (ReformaInebriate Homes Cruelty to Children tories) Hospitals Tuberculosis
Public Health
Index.
By EDWIN
A.
British Railways,"
more
especially, in practice.
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