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
Did Adhering to the Gold Standard Reduce the Cost of Capital?
  • Share
  • Print
    • Text Size
    • Smaller
    • Larger
cover
On This Page
No. 2010-13

A commonly cited benefit of the pre‐World War One gold standard is that it reduced the cost of international borrowing by signaling a country’s commitment to financial probity.

  • Download Entire Publication
Last Updated: 11/22/2010

Did Adhering to the Gold Standard Reduce the Cost of Capital?

Ron Alquist, Ben Chabot

A commonly cited benefit of the pre‐World War One gold standard is that it reduced the cost of international borrowing by signaling a country’s commitment to financial probity. Using a newly constructed data set that consists of more than 55,000 monthly sovereign bond returns, we test if gold‐standard adherence was negatively correlated with the cost of capital. Conditional on UK risk factors, we find no evidence that the bonds issued by countries off gold earned systematically higher excess returns than the bonds issued by countries on gold. Our results are robust to allowing betas to differ across bonds issued by countries off‐ and on‐gold; to including proxies that capture the effect of fiscal, monetary, and trade shocks on the commitment to gold; and to controlling for the effect of membership in the British Empire.

Subscribe Now

Register to receive email alerts when new issues are published.

Subscribe
More by this Author

Ron Alquist

  • Institutions, the Cost of Capital, and Long-Run Economic Growth: Evidence from the 19th Century Capital Market

Ben Chabot

  • Institutions, the Cost of Capital, and Long-Run Economic Growth: Evidence from the 19th Century Capital Market
  • Bank Panics, Government Guarantees and the Long-Run Size of the Financial Sector: Evidence from Free-Banking America
Related Topics
  • Antidumping Policy Under Imperfect Competition: Theory and Evidence
  • Technical correction: The inflation-adjusted index of the dollar
  • The Demise of the Gold Standard
  • Treasury to Invest Surplus Tax and Loan Balances
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