The restoration of the Gold standard after the US Civil War: A volatility analysis

Meulemann Max, Uebele Martin, Wilfling Bernd


Abstract
This paper presents a new view on the gold price of greenbacks during and after the American Civil War by analyzing exchange-rate volatility rather than exchange-rate levels. Our empirical investigation detects regimes of high and low volatility alternating in a way that is consistent with a theoretical exchange-rate model in which the rate is primarily driven by investors' expectations and not by fundamentals. We interpret these findings as evidence that monetary policy makers were surprisingly able to credibly announce the resumption to gold half a year before it actually took place on January 1, 1879. Given the intense political debate about the appropriate design of the United States' financial system, this is a remarkable result. It indicates that the policy makers' ability to anchor investors' expectations is relevant to achieving asset-price stability as well as effectiveness of financial market regulation. The insights from this historical episode should therefore be of interest to policy makers and regulators combating financial crises like the ongoing current debt crises worldwide.

Keywords
Monetary history; 19th century; USA; greenback; Markov-switching GARCH models



Publication type
Research article (journal)

Peer reviewed
Yes

Publication status
Published

Year
2014

Journal
Journal of Financial Stability

Volume
12

Start page
37

End page
46

Language
English

ISSN
1572-3089