A Discourse of Coin and Coinage [34]
fineness, or else with infinite loss to the people, to
bring the price back again to an ancient standard.
One other Mischief that groweth by the raising of Money is
this, a very great part of the Gold which cometh into Europe, and
almost all the Silver doth first aboard in Spain: so that when
you raise the price of these mettals, you raise the proper
commodities of Spain, and by that means you encrease the
greatness and power of that King, of whose greatness and power,
of all others, you have cause to be most jealous and
apprehensive: And again, in a Kingdom as this is, which hath more
Commodities to vent into Forrein Commodities, and which hath no
materials of Money, as this hath not in any considerable
quantity, but must have all their Gold and Silver supplied by the
return of their Commodities, as ours is, it is most expedient to
keep the price of Money as low as may be, to the end your
Commodities may return you the greater quantity of these
materials in fineness and weight.
As for Example, If you should raise the ounce of sterling
standard to six shillings; then the Real of eight would be worth
near hand six shillings likewise; would it not then follow of
Necessity, that you should have by so much the fewer of them in
number, for the return of your Commodities? And the like may be
said of Gold.
Lastly, when you raise your Money, it bringeth a great
confusion.
First, by giving stop and hindrance to Trade and Commerce,
all men being fearful and doubtful how to make their Contracts
and Exchanges, until there be a settlement by time.
And again, if you coin new species of less intrinsical value
than the old either in weight or fineness, or both, there is
danger of melting or exporting the old; if you raise the price of
the old species, you introduce Fractions and Confusions in
reckoning, and do many times inforce him that pays to give more
than he intends, especially in reward and gratifications and
fees, which are more exactly defined.
Chapter 15
Examinations of the Reasons for the raising of Money.
The first Reason for the raising of Money, is the practise of
Antiquity: it is true, as I have shewed before, that the Grecians
and the Romans did successively raise the values of their Moneys,
but it was not to draw thereby the materials of Money from other
States unto theirs; but to supply the State, by that means on
great and desperate Necessities, of the Wages thereof; and of the
advantage, or disadvantage growing thereby to the Common wealth,
I intend to speak hereafter.
But this invention of raising of Money to draw a quantity of
gold and silver from your Neighbours, or to preserve our own from
being exhausted, is a conceit unknown to the ancient world, and
introduced long since the decay of the Roman Empire; when as
those Monarchies that are now settled in Europe, by succession
from those Northern Nations, which did over-throw the antient
Roman Empire, having together with many other necesary Arts, lost
the knowledge and orders of the Mint, were fain to use the
Subtilty and Industry of the Jews, and those of Genoa and Lucca
(who did succeed the Jews in this Trade) for the coining of their
Moneys, who for their own Advantage did (by subtil and specious
Reasons many times by a seeming and not considerable Profit as
Projectors use to do) allure Princes to make unnecessary
alterations in their Moneys, from whence this Art of robbing Gold
and Silver from one state to another is grown.
And therefore I will speak no more concerning the practise of
Antiquity, but will examine the other Reasons: as for the second
Reason, which is the Observation, that since King James raised
the Gold so much as he did, Gold is grown much more plentiful in
the Kingdom that it was before, but Silver having not been raised
in Proportion is grown much more scant and rare: --
It is confessed that the Observation is true in this, that
whensoever you raise the Material of (one sort of) Money, that
material will encrease, and the other will grow
bring the price back again to an ancient standard.
One other Mischief that groweth by the raising of Money is
this, a very great part of the Gold which cometh into Europe, and
almost all the Silver doth first aboard in Spain: so that when
you raise the price of these mettals, you raise the proper
commodities of Spain, and by that means you encrease the
greatness and power of that King, of whose greatness and power,
of all others, you have cause to be most jealous and
apprehensive: And again, in a Kingdom as this is, which hath more
Commodities to vent into Forrein Commodities, and which hath no
materials of Money, as this hath not in any considerable
quantity, but must have all their Gold and Silver supplied by the
return of their Commodities, as ours is, it is most expedient to
keep the price of Money as low as may be, to the end your
Commodities may return you the greater quantity of these
materials in fineness and weight.
As for Example, If you should raise the ounce of sterling
standard to six shillings; then the Real of eight would be worth
near hand six shillings likewise; would it not then follow of
Necessity, that you should have by so much the fewer of them in
number, for the return of your Commodities? And the like may be
said of Gold.
Lastly, when you raise your Money, it bringeth a great
confusion.
First, by giving stop and hindrance to Trade and Commerce,
all men being fearful and doubtful how to make their Contracts
and Exchanges, until there be a settlement by time.
And again, if you coin new species of less intrinsical value
than the old either in weight or fineness, or both, there is
danger of melting or exporting the old; if you raise the price of
the old species, you introduce Fractions and Confusions in
reckoning, and do many times inforce him that pays to give more
than he intends, especially in reward and gratifications and
fees, which are more exactly defined.
Chapter 15
Examinations of the Reasons for the raising of Money.
The first Reason for the raising of Money, is the practise of
Antiquity: it is true, as I have shewed before, that the Grecians
and the Romans did successively raise the values of their Moneys,
but it was not to draw thereby the materials of Money from other
States unto theirs; but to supply the State, by that means on
great and desperate Necessities, of the Wages thereof; and of the
advantage, or disadvantage growing thereby to the Common wealth,
I intend to speak hereafter.
But this invention of raising of Money to draw a quantity of
gold and silver from your Neighbours, or to preserve our own from
being exhausted, is a conceit unknown to the ancient world, and
introduced long since the decay of the Roman Empire; when as
those Monarchies that are now settled in Europe, by succession
from those Northern Nations, which did over-throw the antient
Roman Empire, having together with many other necesary Arts, lost
the knowledge and orders of the Mint, were fain to use the
Subtilty and Industry of the Jews, and those of Genoa and Lucca
(who did succeed the Jews in this Trade) for the coining of their
Moneys, who for their own Advantage did (by subtil and specious
Reasons many times by a seeming and not considerable Profit as
Projectors use to do) allure Princes to make unnecessary
alterations in their Moneys, from whence this Art of robbing Gold
and Silver from one state to another is grown.
And therefore I will speak no more concerning the practise of
Antiquity, but will examine the other Reasons: as for the second
Reason, which is the Observation, that since King James raised
the Gold so much as he did, Gold is grown much more plentiful in
the Kingdom that it was before, but Silver having not been raised
in Proportion is grown much more scant and rare: --
It is confessed that the Observation is true in this, that
whensoever you raise the Material of (one sort of) Money, that
material will encrease, and the other will grow