AN ELASTIC CURRENCY
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notes issued in discounting short and real commercial paper can
have no disastrous elasticity. Bank notes when so issued, it was
commonly stated, cause the currency to vary in quantity exactly
as it would were it entirely metallic, and any divergence from this
was regarded as harmful! Not a few were skeptical of achieving
the ideal of a currency composed partly of bank notes that would
at all times conform in quantity to what would obtain were the
currency of precious metals alone. These, accordingly, proposed
a return to purely metallic money, or urged that bank notes be
issued only against an equivalent amount of coin. The dominant
theory was that “in every respect the law of money is the same,
whether it exist in the shape of metal or in the shape of paper.” 2
No less indicative of failure to apprehend the province of a
properly elastic bank currency were the views of those who urged
the issue of a fixed amount of government paper. The notion, to
which Adam Smith had subscribed, that the volume of currency
which every country needs bears a more or less definite proportion
to the magnitude of its annual trade, or to its population, was
widely accepted. One fifth of the annual product of industry
seems to have been a fairly popular standard,® while a committee
of the Rhode Island legislature compromised on one eighteenth
of the annual product, being the mean between one fifth and one
thirtieth, the two extremes suggested. Charles Carroll regarded
one twenty-fifth of the aggregate property of the country as the
correct proportion and thought that this ratio was “so well de-
termined by natural laws, that if I would estimate the whole
amount of property of the United States, I would rather know
the sum of the currency, and multiply it by 25, than to have the
most elaborate statistics otherwise prepared.” 3
{ Appleton, Remarks on Currency and Banking (1841), p. 16; Lord, Principles
of Currency and Banking (1859), p. 29.
? Barnard, Speeches (1838), pp. 168, 169.
3 See Mississippi Governor's message accompanying the bank commissioner’s
report (1838), 25th Congress, Second Session, Senate Document, No. 471, p. 74;
also 26th Congress, First Session, House Document, No. 172, p. 476.
{ Rhode Island, Report of Commitiee on Currency (1826).
5 Carroll, “New Views of the Currency Question,” Bankers’ Magazine (1859),
gill, 820.