[1] Locke p. 31. upon interest, and p. 1. upon money.
I cannot conceive how different nations could agree to put an imaginary value upon any thing, especially upon silver, by which all other goods are valued; or that any one country would receive that as a value, which was not valuable equal to what it was given for; or how that imaginary value could have been kept up. but, suppose France receiving silver at an imaginary value, other nations received it at that value, because received so in France: then for the same reason a crown passing in France for 76 Sols, should pass in Scotland for 76 pence, and in Holland for 76 Stivers. but on the contrair, even in France where the crown is raised, ’tis worth no more than before when at 60 Sols.
It is reasonable to think silver was barter’d as it was valued for its uses as a mettal, and was given as money according to its value in barter. the additional use of money silver was applied to would add to its value, because as money it remedied the disadvantages and inconveniencies of barter, and consequently the demand for silver increasing, it received an additional value equal to the greater demand its use as money occasioned.
And this additional value is no more imaginary, than the value silver had in barter as a metal, for such value was because it served such uses, and was greater or lesser according to the demand for silver as a mettal, proportioned to its quantity. the additional value silver received from being used as money, was because of its qualities which fitted it for that use; and that value was according to the additional demand its use as money occasioned.
If either of these values are imaginary, then all value is so, for no goods have any value, but from the uses they are apply’d to, and according to the demand for them, in proportion to their quantity.
Thus silver having a value, and qualities fitting it for money, which other goods had not, was made money, and for the greater convenience of the people was coined.
The names of the different pieces might have been number 1. number 2. and so on; number 60 would have been the same as a crown; for the name and stamp was only to certify, that the piece had such a quantity of silver in it, of such a fineness.
Goods of any other kind that have the same qualities might then, and may now be made money equal to their value. gold and copper may be made money, but neither with so much convenience as silver. payments in copper being inconvenient by reason of its bulk; and gold not being in so great quantity as to serve the use of money. in countries where gold is in great quantity, it is used as money; and where gold and silver are scarce, copper is used.
Gold is coined for the more easie exchange of that metal, and copper to serve in small payments; but silver is the measure by which goods are valued, the value by which goods are exchanged, and in which contracts are made payable.
As money encreased, the disadvantages and inconveniences of barter were removed; the poor and idle were employed, more of the land was laboured, the product encreased, manufactures and trade improved, the landed-men lived better, and the people with less dependance on them.