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The Gold Standard
goes international
Between 1871 and 1900 every major country except
China left their silver or bimetallic standard for a full gold standard. () The reason is, after the
Franco-German war of 1871, the victorious Germans asked for a very heavy "war
indemnity" to be paid in gold by France. They used this gold to finance a new gold
standard for their country. The effect was to increase the demand for gold and to unload
tons of silver on the neighboring countries. These countries decided to follow Germany, in
fear of silver inflation.The silver freed by Germany was now far cheaper on the market
than at the mint, and if they had kept their bimetallic standard, no one would have been
using gold as money anymore and the abundant silver supply would have caused outright
inflation. That was, at least, the reason invoked to institute a Gold Standard.
Please take note, as Roy Davies remarked, that England
already was on a gold standard since 1816, and thus do not figure in the table below,
because it was not part of the wave of the last quarter of the century that killed once
for all the bimetallic standards. |