The Reservation Inflation of Hard Money: Gold-Standard Deflation and the Real Expansion of Nominal Claims, 1873-1896
TLDR
Gold standard deflation (1873-1896) led to "reservation inflation," where the real value of nominal claims rose despite falling consumer prices.
Key contributions
- Tests the "reservation inflation" aspect of the SCR theory using historical data.
- Examines the 1873-1896 gold-standard deflation in Britain and the United States.
- Finds consumer prices fell (negative circulation inflation) in both countries.
- Shows real value of fixed nominal claims rose significantly (positive reservation inflation).
Why it matters
This paper redefines inflation, showing it can manifest as rising real value of nominal claims even when consumer prices fall. It supports a phase-dependent view, suggesting hard money changes inflation's expression rather than abolishing it. This challenges conventional understanding of monetary effects.
Original Abstract
The original SCR theory proposed that inflation has two distinct expressions: circulation inflation, measured by rising transaction prices, and reservation inflation, measured by the rising real weight of monetary symbols, debt contracts, reserve claims, and other nominal stores of value relative to physical goods. A companion Japan paper tested one side of this theory by showing that, after money entered a reserve-dominant phase, monetary-base expansion no longer translated strongly into consumer-price inflation. This paper tests the other side of SCR: whether reservation inflation can arise when monetary issuance is constrained and circulation inflation is absent. The classical gold-standard deflation of 1873-1896 provides a clean historical setting. Using long-run British retail price data and the Minneapolis Fed historical U.S. CPI series, I show that the price level declined in both economies. Between 1873 and 1896, Britain's price index fell from 18.0 to 14.7, while the U.S. historical CPI fell from 36.0 to 25.0. Yet this deflation mechanically increased the real value of fixed nominal claims. A fixed-claim reservation index rose by 22.4% in Britain and 44.0% in the United States. Thus, the episode combines negative circulation inflation with positive reservation inflation. The result suggests that hard money does not abolish inflationary pressure in the SCR sense; it changes its domain of expression. Together with the Japan case, this paper supports a phase-dependent view of inflation in which CPI is only one observable expression of the monetary-material asymmetry.
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