Skip to Content
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Newsroom
  • Museum
  • Careers
  • Banking
  • Research
  • Markets
  • Publications
    • Periodicals
    • Data Releases
    • Speeches
  • Events
  • Education
  • People
  • Region
A Model of Bimetallism
  • Share
  • Print
    • Text Size
    • Smaller
    • Larger
WP image
On This Page
WP 1998-08
  • Download Entire Publication
Last Updated: 09/28/1998

A Model of Bimetallism

François Velde, Warren E. Weber

Bimetallism has been the subject of considerable debate: Was it a viable monetary system? Was it a desirable system? In our model, the (exogenous and stochastic) amount of each metal can be split between monetary uses to satisfy a cash-in-advance constraint, and nonmonetary uses in which the stock of uncoined metal yields utility. The ratio of the monies in the cash-in-advance constraint is endogenous. Bimetallism is feasible: we nd a continuum of steady states (in the certainty case) indexed by the constant exchange rate of the monies; we also prove existence for a range of xed exchange rates in the stochastic version. Bimetallism does not appear desirable on a welfare basis: among steady states, we prove that welfare under monometallism is higher than under any bimetallic equilibrium. We compute welfare and the variance of the price level under a variety of regimes (bimetallism, monometallism with and without trade money) and nd that bimetallism can signi cantly stabilize the price level, depending on the covariance between the shocks to the supplies of metals.

Subscribe Now

Register to receive email alerts when new issues are published.

Subscribe
More by this Author

François Velde

  • An Alternative Measure of Inflation
  • Chronicles of a Deflation Unforetold

Warren E. Weber

  • A Model of Commodity Money, with Applications to Gresham's Law and the Debasement Puzzle
Related Topics
  • Index Shows Slower Economic Activity in January
  • CFNAI Shows Economic Growth Above Trend in February
  • 1994 Economic Outlook: Hopes Become Beliefs
  • Reserve Targeting and Discount Policy
View All

Follow Us:

FaceBook RSS Twitter YouTube
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Newsroom
  • Subscribe
  • Tours
  • Careers
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, 230 South LaSalle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60604-1413, USA. Tel. (312) 322-5322
Copyright © 2012. All rights reserved. Please review our
  • Privacy Policy
  • Legal Notices