Table of contents for The big problem of small change / Thomas J. Sargent, Francois R. Velde.


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Counter List of Illustrations xiii
List of Tables xv
Preface xvii
Acknowledgments xxi
Part I: A Problem and Its Cure
Chapter 1. Introduction 3
Paper and gold. The enduring problem of small change. A model. Supply side: the mint. Demand side: the coin owner. Shortages. Price level determination. Remedies. A history. Structure of subsequent chapters.
Chapter 2. A Theory 15
Valuation by weight or tale. A basic one-denomination theory. Multiple denominations. Supply. Demand. Interactions of supply and demand. Economics of interval alignments. Perverse dynamics. Spontaneous debasements: invasions of foreign coins. Costs and Temptations. Opportunity cost. An open market operation from Castile. An open market operation for the standard formula. Transparency of opportunity cost. Trusting the government with bi = 0.
Chapter 3. Our Philosophy of History 37
History and theory. Clues identified by our model. Cures. Our history.
Part II: Ideas and Technologies
Chapter 4. Technology 45
Small coins in the Middle Ages. The purchasing power of a small coin. The medieval technology: hammer and pile. Production costs and seigniorage. Mechanization. The screw press. The cylinder press. Other inventions. The steam engine. Counterfeiting, duplicating, imitating. Technologies and ideas.
Chapter 5. Medieval Ideas about Coins and Money 69
Medieval jurists as advocates of Arrow-Debreu. Romanists and Canonists. Construction of the medieval common doctrine. Sources and methods of the romanists. Money in a legal doctrine of loans. Tests in a one-coin environment. Multiple currencies and denominations. Multiple denominations. Multiple metals. Fluctuating exchange rates: the stationary case. Multiple units of accounts. Demonetization. Overdue payments and extrinsic value. Trends in exchange rates. Debasements and currency reforms. A question from public law: setting seigniorage rates. Sources of the canonists. Debasements and seigniorage rates. Qualifications, exceptions, and discoveries. Early statement of double coincidence. Romanists repair the breach. Canonists versus romanists on seigniorage. Another breach. Philosophers help. The cracks widen: debasements and deficit financing. Concluding remarks.
Chapter 6. Monetary Theory in the Renaissance 100
Precursors of Adam Smith. Debt repayment, legal tender, and nominalism. Dumoulin the revolutionary. Dumoulin's impact. Dumoulin the conservative. Fiat money. Fiat money in theory: Butigella. Double coincidence of wants revisited. Other formulations. Fiat money in practice. The conditions for valued fiat money. Restrictions on fiat money. Limited legal tender. Quantity theory. Lessons from the Castilian experience: fiat money. In Spain: Juan de Mariana (1609). Forecasting inflation. In France: Henri Poullain (1612). Concluding remarks.
Part III: Endemic Shortages and "Natural Experiments"
Chapter 7. Clues 123
Shortages of small change and bullion famine. Shortages and invasions of coins. Ghost monies and units of account. Free minting. The evidence.
Chapter 8. Medieval Coin Shortages 131
England. France. Shortages elsewhere. Concluding remarks.
Chapter 9. Medieval Florence 139
Turbulent debut of large coins in Tuscany. The Quattrini affair. Ghost monies as legal tender and unit of account. Florentine ghost monies: details. Concluding remarks. Appendix A: mint equivalents and mint prices. Minting. Appendix B: a price index for fourteenth-century Florence.
Chapter 10. Medieval Venice 160
Four episodes. Piccolo and grosso, 1250 to 1320. Evolving units of account. Silver and gold, 1285 to 1353. Adaptation of units of account. Soldino and ducat, 1360 to 1440. Rehearsing fiat money. The torneselli in Greece. Expansion near Venice. Concluding remarks. Appendix: mint equivalents and mint prices.
Chapter 11. The Price Revolution in France 186
Relative price change as inflation. Disturbances to coin denominations. A three-coin model. Supply: movements in the relative prices of metals. Demand: within the intervals shortages. Anatomy of money and inflation. Types of coins and units of account. The price level. Supply: the relative price of gold and silver. Debasement of billon coins. Mysterious movements in exchange rates. Evidence of small coins shortages. Policy responses. Perception of the problem by the authorities. Unit of account and legal tender. Units of account and international trade: the fairs of Lyon. The reform of 1577. Collapse of the reform. Concluding remarks. Appendix: mint equivalents and mint prices.
Chapter 12. Token and Siege Monies 216
Precursors of the standard formula. Medieval tokens. Siege money. Convertible token currency: an early experiment. First attempt at standard formula.
Part IV: Cures and Side-effects
Chapter 13. The Age of Copper 227 The coinage of pure copper. Experiments in many countries.
Chapter 14. Inflation in Spain 230
Elements of the standard formula. The Castilian experiment. Monetary manipulations. Restamping. Crying down coins. Theory of the Castilian tokens. Additional notation. Multiple regimes. More learning: aspects of indeterminacy. The evidence. The end of the token coin experiment. Comparison with inflation during the French Revolution. Unintended consequence for Sweden. Concluding remarks. Appendix: money stocks and prices.
Chapter 15. Copycat Inflations in Seventeenth-Century Europe 254
France: flirting with inflation. Catalonia. Germany. Russia. The Ottoman empire.
Chapter 16. England Stumbles toward the Solution 261
Free-token and other regimes. Laissez-faire or monopoly: England's hesitations. Private monopoly (1613-44). Laissez-faire. The Slingsby doctrine. Government monopoly. The Great Recoinage of 1696. The monetary system under the Restoration (1660-88). The crisis. A model with underweight coins. The Locke-Lowndes debate. The Great Recoinage. Locke: genius or idiot?
Chapter 17. Britain, the Gold Standard, and the Standard Formula 291
The accidental standard. Laws and ceilings. The guinea and legal tender laws. Newton's forecasts. Gold becomes the unit of account. Underweight coins. Neglect the pence. Implementation of the standard formula.
Chapter 18. The Triumph of the Standard Formula 306
Germany's monetary union of 1838. Bimetallism versus the gold standard. Bimetallism in a small country. Worldwide bimetallism. Passage to gold. The United States. The Latin Monetary Union. Free riders in monetary unions. The accident of 1873. The standard formula limps into place.
Chapter 19. Ideas, Policies, and Outcomes 320
Evolutions of ideas and institutions. Our history. Experiments. Major themes. Beliefs and interests. Units of account and nominal contracts. Small change and monetary theory. Currency boards, dollarization, and the standard formula. Learning by markets and by governments.
Part V: A Formal Theory
Chapter 20. A Theory of Full-Bodied Small Change 335
Chapter 21. The Model 337
The household. Production. Production of goods. Production of coins. Government. Timing. Equilibrium. Analytical strategy. The firm's problem. Implications of the arbitrage conditions for monetary policy. Interpretations of o2. Full-weight and underweight coins. The household's problem.
Chapter 22. Shortages: Causes and Symptoms 350
Equilibria with neither melting nor minting. Stationary equilibria with no minting or melting. Small coin shortages. Small coin shortage, no minting or melting. Permanent and transitory increases in 6. Logarithmic example. Money shortages bring inflation. Shortages of small coins through minting of large coins. Shortages through melting of full-weight small coins. Perverse effects and their palliatives.
Chapter 23. Arrangements to Eliminate Coin Shortages 366
A standard formula regime. Variants of the standard formula. The standard formula without convertibility: the Castilian experience. Fiat currency.
Chapter 24. Our Model and Our History 373
Glossary 375
References 377
Legal Citations Index 393
Author Index 395
Subject Index 399


Library of Congress subject headings for this publication: Money Europe History, Coins Europe History, Mints Europe History