How Fiscal Policy Affects Prices: Britain’s First Experience with Paper Money
Journal article: For almost 25 years between 1797 and 1821, the gold standard in Britain was suspended in order to finance the Napoleonic Wars, creating a paper pound or a fiat currency. Suspension was accompanied by substantial inflation and the accumulation of public debt. By identifying shifts in the spot exchange rate of paper pounds for gold, I document how contemporaries' expectations of how debt would be stabilized in the future shaped the pound's internal value. Thus, it is argued that during the “paper pound” period, fiscal prospects provided a third mechanism, beyond monetary and real factors, affecting the price level.
Author(s)
Pamfili M. Antipa
Journal
- The Journal of Economic History
Date of publication
- 2016
Keywords
- Fiscal policy
Pages
- 1044-1077
URL of the HAL notice
Version
- 1
Volume
- 76