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Money and Trade

Money and Trade
John-law-money-and-trade.jpg
Author John Law
Country Edinburgh, Scotland
Language English
Genre Economics, Philosophy
Publisher Nella Stamperia Simoniana
Publication date
1705

Money and Trade Considered: With a Proposal for Supplying the Nation with Money is an early economics text written by John Law of Edinburgh, published in 1705. In it, he attempts to compare the prosperity of other countries with that of Scotland, and advocates a "land bank" system of paper money backed by real estate as a commodity instead of gold or silver.

John Law examines what he finds to be problems with monetary theory in Scotland. This topic had been growing in attractiveness for the previous 150 years, as Europe had suffered an increasing crisis known as the price revolution, where the value of gold had been fluctuating wildly, and falling overall, in large part because of the influx of additional gold plundered from the New World.

Law describes the scarcity of money as being essential for its value, a lesson learned by that crisis of the previous two centuries.

He describes the evolution of money this way:

Because silver, the common money in Scotland at the time, is falling in value, he proposes land, whose value is more stable, as a replacement backing for currency.

Regarding the Price Revolution, Law says:

The Spainiards bring as great Quantities into Europe as they can get wrought out of the Mines

Thus, he says, the value of metal currency has been diluted.

Remarkable in his work is the assertion that money is not something invented by government authority, which was the popular view of government authorities at the time. But he cedes, as was probably legally required of him, that government (the King) owns all money, as he owns all roads and land. He also points out that money is not actually traded for its own value, but as a tool for obtaining goods themselves.

This book helped John Law convince the Crown to implement a paper money system, one of the earliest in Europe, based on similar ventures in France, Sweden, Holland, and elsewhere. Unfortunately, his implementation of this system was particularly poorly managed, suffering first extreme speculation and then rampant inflation, until failing some years later.



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