24 MODERN MONETARY SYSTEMS
anyone desiring to sell silver on the London market at a
price considerably higher than that given by the legal ratio
of the Latin Union would have elicited the following reply
from an intending purchaser : “I shall import it at my own
expense ; in the end it will be cheaper.” Thus the possi-
bility of drawing on the stocks of bimetallist countries
fixed a maximum price for silver, at any rate so long as
these stocks did not approach a point of exhaustion.
Conversely, during the same period anyone holding silver
who was offered a price for his bullion considerably lower
than that given by the legal ratio could reply: “At your
price I should prefer to take it to a mint, in Paris or
Brussels, for instance.” And this reply held good so long as
there was vacant space in the mints.
A decisive influence on price stability must therefore have
necessarily been exerted by the limits imposed by Bimetallism
upon the conditions of the silver marke:.
Hence the following observations may be made at once
without attempting to draw all the theoretical conclusions
which in our view follow from the experience of 1gth-
century Bimetallism.
Contrary to the expectations of the legislators of the
year XI, it was possible for nearly three-quarters of a
century to maintain the legal ratio between gold and silver
without modification in France and without important
changes in other bimetallist countries. Internally, there
was never a moment when a 20-franc louis could not be
exchanged for four silver crowns. Moreover, even outside
bimetallist countries and in particular in London where
the world market for silver was situated, the value of silver
expressed in terms of gold only oscillated very slightly
about the point given by the legal French ratio. Thus, in
the light of the above considerations, the facts show
that the silver market was strangled by bimetallism ; and
the right of the public authorities to fix the respective
prices of the two chief monetary metals began to be
exercised at the very moment when they thought proper
to abandon the attempt.
It may be added that the monetary legislation of France