36 MODERN MONETARY SYSTEMS
In other words, a new monetary system was set up in this
way which included a silver currency, to some extent
fiduciary in character, and had the advantage of the gold
standard for foreign payments. This is the system which
the Americans have called the “gold exchange standard”
and which we may describe as the “System of the Gold
Reserve!
Thanks to the gold reserve thus constituted and to the
fact that the Indian Government issued drafts upon it at
the same rate at which it was prepared to exchange pounds
sterling for rupees, the value of the rupee could hence-
forward (from 1900 onwards) be stabilised at 16 pence,
even at times, as, for instance, between 1907 and 1908 and
again in 1914, when the trade balance of India showed a
large deficit.
We thus observe the curious fact that the stabilisation
of the rupee was carried out at the very time when the
Government was abandoning its policy of monetary con-
traction and, having resigned itself to a resumption of the
coinage of rupees, was issuing annually between 100 and
200 million new rupees, not counting those put back
into circulation in exchange for gold imported from
abroad.
The significance of the monetary reform thus carried
out in India is obvious, and gives rise to the following
practical conclusions, the theory of which is reserved for
a later chapter. It is possible to stabilise an internal silver
currency in relation to gold at an arbitrary rate superior
to the market value of the metal contained in the coin,
by giving it a semi-fiduciary character, if the following
measures are adopted :
(1) The suppression, not indeed of all minting—for the
Government 1s bound to maintain a currency adequate to
1 This system, set up by the Indian Government as an experiment and
in self-defence, realised on the whole Mr. Lindsay’s project, which had
been considered Utopian (see Kemmerer, “Modern Currency Reforms”).
The law of 1898, under which a gold reserve had been constituted in
London, was originally a provisional measure of secondary importance, but
it was prolonged in 19oc and its main clauses became permanent from
1902 onwards.