以形成一个更完善的货币联盟

Arthur J. Rolnick, B. Smith, Warren E. Weber
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引用次数: 16

摘要

为什么各州同意美国宪法禁止它们发行自己的货币?本文认为,对这个问题的两个常见答案——对通货膨胀的恐惧和对法定货币的控制——与事实不符。这篇文章提出了一个更好的答案:希望形成一个可行的货币联盟,既消除了各种货币之间汇率的可变性,又避免了固定汇率制度中出现的铸币税问题。支持这一观点的证据来自美国历史的三个时期:殖民时期(1690-1776)、独立战争时期(1776-83)和联邦时期(1783-89)。本文改编自即将出版的新书《货币改革的多样性:通往货币联盟之路的教训和经验》中的一章,该书由皮埃尔·西克洛斯编辑,将由Kluwer学术出版社出版。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
In order to form a more perfect monetary union
Why did states agree to a U.S. Constitution that prohibits them from issuing their own money? This article argues that two common answers to this question—a fear of inflation and a desire to control what money qualifies as legal tender—do not fit the facts. The article proposes a better answer: a desire to form a viable monetary union that both eliminates the variability of exchange rates between various forms of money and avoids the seigniorage problem that otherwise occurs in a fixed exchange rate system. Supporting evidence is offered from three periods of U.S. history: the colonial period (1690–1776), the Revolutionary War (1776–83), and the Confederation period (1783–89). This article is adapted from a chapter prepared for a forthcoming book, Varieties of Monetary Reforms: Lessons and Experiences on the Road to Monetary Union, edited by Pierre Siklos, to be published by Kluwer Academic Publishers.
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