Published January 1, 2020 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Money and monetary stability in Europe, 1300-1914

  • 1. Bogazici Univ, Dept Econ, TR-34342 Istanbul, Turkey
  • 2. Altinbas Univ, Dept Econ, TR-34217 Istanbul, Turkey

Description

This paper investigates the determinants of monetary stability in Europe from the late medieval era until World War I. Through this period, the anchor for monetary policy was the silver or gold value of the monetary unit. States, however, frequently abandoned this anchor, some depreciating their monetary units against silver and gold less than 10-fold and others more than 10,000-fold between 150 0 and 1914. To understand the determinants of these differences, we compile a new and comprehensive monetary history dataset for all major states in Europe and test alternative theories. We find strong evidence that political factors, and in particular, fiscal capacity, political regime and warfare explain patterns of monetary stability. This finding is robust to addressing endogeneity, controlling for the instability induced by the mechanics of the monetary system and accounting for the impacts of new monetary technologies and the advent of fiat standard. (c) 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Files

bib-82304dc3-3fa8-4787-911f-467a7c16fbb0.txt

Files (155 Bytes)

Name Size Download all
md5:12acd022cea219dc8f39edabacc62687
155 Bytes Preview Download