During World War I Sweden sought to weaken the link between
gold and domestic currency in an effort to tame inflationary forces. Sweden’s
policy was unprecedented, considering that the gold standard usually receives
strongest support from those quarters where inflation is most feared. The
nineteenth century had seen several countries abandon a silver standard to avoid
currency depreciation, reacting to the depreciation of silver relative to gold,
which was a stronger metal monetarily and clearly the preferred bulwark against
inflation.
Sweden had adopted the gold standard in 1873. A gold standard country must
stand ready to buy and sell gold at an official price in its own currency. A
country’s commitment to sell gold at an official price in its own currency puts
a strict limit on the volume of paper money issued, acting as a guard against
the issuance of inflationary levels of paper money. When a country suspends gold
payments, as often happens during times of fiscal stress, such as wars, the
country expects to see its currency depreciate, and domestic prices go up.
The other side of the gold standard is the commitment to buy gold at an
official price, a commitment that Sweden suspended in February 1916. During
World War I Sweden supplied war materials and supplies to the belligerents and
often received gold in payment. Foreign currencies sold at a discount relative
to the Swedish krone, and gold would have sunk in value relative to the
krone if the Swedish central bank had not been committed to buy gold at the
official price. The influx of gold and foreign currencies would not have created
difficulties if Sweden’s opportunities for importing foreign goods had increased
proportionately with its accelerating opportunities for export. Wartime
conditions, however, favored exports over imports.
Sweden found itself faced with a swelling domestic money supply, fueled by
gold inflows, and a shrinking supply of goods for domestic consumption as
exports rose relative to imports. The Swedish central bank saw itself having to
buy large quantities of gold that paid no interest. Also gold was sinking in
price worldwide, which acted to drag down the values of gold-standard
currencies, such as the Swedish krone. These difficulties converged to push
Sweden into unhinging itself from the gold standard.
Freed from an obligation to buy gold at an official price and to mint all
gold brought to the mint, Sweden continued to import gold, but at reduced
prices, and to augment the domestic money supply. Between the first quarter of
1916 and the last quarter of 1917 the circulation of paper money increased 62
percent and prices climbed 65 percent.
Although nullifying the gold standard did not spare Sweden from a bout of
inflation, it restrained the levels that inflation reached. In the Stockholm
foreign exchange market, the Swedish krone rose in value relative to the U.S.
dollar, the Swiss franc, and the British pound. The krone rose about 10 to 25
percent above the value it commanded when it was on a strict gold standard, and
Swedish coins were worth 10 to 25 percent more than the value of their gold
content.
The Swedish experience of World War I was a reminder that precious metals do
not offer fail-safe protection against inflation, as Europe discovered after the
influx of gold and silver from the New World.
See also:
References:
Cassel, Gustav. 1922. Money and Foreign Exchange after
1914.
Lester, Richard A. 1939. Monetary Experiments.