Chronic Specie Scarcity and Efficient Barter: The Problem of Maintaining an Outside Money Supply in British Colonial America

61 Pages Posted: 19 May 2012 Last revised: 15 Jun 2026

See all articles by Farley Grubb

Farley Grubb

University of Delaware - Economics; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

Date Written: May 2012

Abstract

Colonial Americans complained that gold and silver coins (specie) were chronically scarce. These coins could be acquired only through importation. Given unrestricted trade in specie, market arbitrage should have eliminated chronic scarcity. A model of efficient barter and local inside money is developed to show how chronic specie scarcity in colonial America could prevail despite unrestricted specie-market arbitrage, thus justifying colonial complaints. The creation of inside paper monies by colonial governments was a welfare-enhancing response to preexisting chronic specie scarcity, not the cause of that scarcity.

Suggested Citation

Grubb, Farley, Chronic Specie Scarcity and Efficient Barter: The Problem of Maintaining an Outside Money Supply in British Colonial America (May 2012). NBER Working Paper No. w18099, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2062732

Farley Grubb (Contact Author)

University of Delaware - Economics ( email )

Newark, DE 19716
United States

National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

1050 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02138
United States

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