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  • Title: Indian Currency and Finance
  • Author: John Maynard Keynes
  • Release Date: June 7, 2015 [EBook #49166]
  • Language: English
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  • INDIAN CURRENCY AND FINANCE
  • [Illustration]
  • MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
  • LONDON · BOMBAY · CALCUTTA
  • MELBOURNE
  • THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
  • NEW YORK · BOSTON · CHICAGO
  • DALLAS · SAN FRANCISCO
  • THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, LTD.
  • TORONTO
  • INDIAN CURRENCY
  • AND FINANCE
  • BY
  • JOHN MAYNARD KEYNES
  • FELLOW OF KING’S COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE
  • MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
  • ST. MARTIN’S STREET, LONDON
  • 1913
  • COPYRIGHT
  • PREFACE
  • When all but the last of the following chapters were already in type,
  • I was offered a seat on the Royal Commission (1913) on Indian Finance
  • and Currency. If my book had been less far advanced, I should, of
  • course, have delayed publication until the Commission had reported,
  • and my opinions had been more fully formed by the discussions of the
  • Commission and by the evidence placed before it. In the circumstances,
  • however, I have decided to publish immediately what I had already
  • written, without the addition of certain other chapters which had been
  • projected. The book, as it now stands, is wholly prior in date to the
  • labours of the Commission.
  • J. M. KEYNES.
  • KING’S COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE,
  • _12th May 1913_.
  • CONTENTS
  • CHAPTER I
  • PAGE
  • THE PRESENT POSITION OF THE RUPEE 1
  • CHAPTER II
  • THE GOLD–EXCHANGE STANDARD 15
  • CHAPTER III
  • PAPER CURRENCY 37
  • CHAPTER IV
  • THE PRESENT POSITION OF GOLD IN INDIA AND PROPOSALS FOR A GOLD
  • CURRENCY 63
  • CHAPTER V
  • COUNCIL BILLS AND REMITTANCE 102
  • CHAPTER VI
  • THE SECRETARY OF STATE’S RESERVES AND THE CASH BALANCES 124
  • CHAPTER VII
  • INDIAN BANKING 195
  • CHAPTER VIII
  • THE INDIAN RATE OF DISCOUNT 240
  • INDEX 261
  • CHART SHOWING THE RATE OF DISCOUNT AT THE PRESIDENCY
  • BANK OF BENGAL _Face page_ 240
  • CHAPTER I
  • THE PRESENT POSITION OF THE RUPEE
  • 1. On the broad historical facts relating to Indian currency, I do
  • not intend to spend time. It is sufficiently well known that until
  • 1893 the currency of India was on the basis of silver freely minted,
  • the gold value of the rupee fluctuating with the gold value of silver
  • bullion. By the depreciation in the gold value of silver, extending
  • over a long period of years, trade was inconvenienced, and Public
  • Finance, by reason of the large payments which the Government must make
  • in sterling, gravely disturbed; until in 1893, after the breakdown of
  • negotiations for bimetallism, the Indian Mints were closed to the free
  • mintage of silver, and the value of the rupee divorced from the value
  • of the metal contained in it. By withholding new issues of currency,
  • the Government had succeeded by 1899 in raising the gold value of the
  • rupee to 1s. 4d., at which figure it has remained without sensible
  • variation ever since.
  • 2. There can be no doubt that at first the Government of India did not
  • fully understand the nature of the new system; and that several minor
  • mistakes were made at its inception. But few are now found who dispute
  • on broad general grounds the wisdom of the change from a silver to a
  • gold standard.
  • Time has muffled the outcries of the silver interests, and time has
  • also dealt satisfactorily with what were originally the principal
  • grounds of criticism, namely,—
  • (1) that the new system was unstable,
  • (2) that a depreciating currency is advantageous to a country’s
  • foreign trade.
  • 3. The second of these complaints was urged with great persistency
  • in 1893. The depreciating rupee acted, it was said, as a bounty to
  • exporters; and the introduction of a gold standard, so it was argued,
  • would greatly injure the export trade in tea, corn, and manufactured
  • cotton. It was plainly pointed out by theorists at the time (_a_) that
  • the advantage to exporters was largely at the expense of other members
  • of the community and could not profit the country as a whole, and (_b_)
  • that it could only be temporary.
  • The recent spell of rising prices in India has shown clearly in how
  • many ways a depreciating currency damages large sections of the
  • community, although it may temporarily benefit other sections. In fact,
  • some recent complaints against the existing currency policy have been
  • occasioned by the tendency of prices to rise; whereas it is plain that
  • the great change of 1893 must have tended to make them fall, and that
  • rupee prices would, in all probability, be higher than they now are, if
  • the change had not been effected.
  • With regard to the temporary nature of the effect on exporters,
  • experience has decisively supported theory. The nature of this
  • experience was admirably summed up by Mr. J. B. Brunyate in the
  • Legislative Council (February 25, 1910), speaking in reply to the
  • similar line of argument brought forward by the Bombay mill–owning
  • interests in connexion with the imposition in 1910 of a duty on
  • silver.[1]
  • 4. The criticisms of 1893, therefore, are no longer heard, and the
  • Currency Problems with which we are now confronted are new. The
  • evolution of the Indian currency system since 1899 has been rapid,
  • though silent. There have been few public pronouncements of policy
  • on the part of Government, and the legislative changes have been
  • inconsiderable. Yet a system has been developed, which was contemplated
  • neither by those who effected nor by those who opposed the closing of
  • the Mints in 1893, and which was not favoured either by the Government
  • or by the Fowler Committee in 1899, although something like it was
  • suggested at that time. It is not possible to point to any one date at
  • which the currency policy now in force was deliberately adopted.
  • The fact that the Government of India have drifted into a system
  • and have never set it forth plainly is partly responsible for a
  • widespread misunderstanding of its true character. But this economy
  • of explanation, from which the system has suffered in the past, does
  • not make it any the worse intrinsically. The prophecy made before the
  • Committee of 1898 by Mr. A. M. Lindsay, in proposing a scheme closely
  • similar in principle to that which was eventually adopted, has been
  • largely fulfilled. “This change,” he said, “will pass unnoticed, except
  • by the intelligent few, and it is satisfactory to find that by this
  • almost imperceptible process the Indian currency will be placed on a
  • footing which Ricardo and other great authorities have advocated as the
  • best of all currency systems, viz., one in which the currency media
  • used in the internal circulation are confined to notes and cheap token
  • coins, which are made to act precisely as if they were bits of gold by
  • being made convertible into gold for foreign payment purposes.”
  • 5. In 1893 four possible bases of currency seemed to hold the field:
  • debased and depreciating currencies usually of paper; silver;
  • bimetallism; and gold. It was not to be supposed that the Government
  • of India intended to adopt the first; the second they were avowedly
  • upsetting; the third they had attempted, and had failed, to obtain by
  • negotiation. It seemed to follow that their ultimate objective must
  • be the last—namely, a currency of gold. The Committee of 1892 did
  • not commit themselves; but the system which their recommendations
  • established was generally supposed to be transitional and a first step
  • towards the introduction of gold. The Committee of 1898 explicitly
  • declared themselves to be in favour of the eventual establishment of a
  • gold currency.
  • This goal, if it was their goal, the Government of India have never
  • attained. The rupee is still the principal medium of exchange and is
  • of unlimited legal tender. There is no legal enactment compelling any
  • authority to redeem rupees with gold. The fact that since 1899 the
  • gold value of the rupee has only fluctuated within narrow limits is
  • solely due to administrative measures which the Government are under
  • no compulsion to undertake. What, then, is the present position of the
  • rupee?
  • 6. The main features of the Indian system as now established are as
  • follows:—
  • (1) The rupee is unlimited legal tender and, so far as the law
  • provides, inconvertible.
  • (2) The sovereign is unlimited legal tender at £1 to 15 rupees, and is
  • convertible at this rate, so long as a Notification issued in 1893 is
  • not withdrawn, _i.e._, the Government can be required to give 15 rupees
  • in exchange for £1.
  • (3) As a matter of administrative practice, the Government is, as a
  • rule, willing to give sovereigns for rupees at this rate; but the
  • practice is sometimes suspended and large quantities of gold cannot
  • always be obtained in India by tendering rupees.
  • (4) As a matter of administrative practice, the Government will sell in
  • Calcutta, in return for rupees tendered there, bills payable in London
  • in sterling at a rate not more unfavourable than 1s. 3–29/32d. per
  • rupee.
  • The fourth of these provisions is the vital one for supporting the
  • sterling value of the rupee; and, although the Government have given no
  • binding undertaking to maintain it, a failure to do so might fairly be
  • held to involve an utter breakdown of their system.
  • Thus the second provision prevents the sterling value of the rupee from
  • rising above 1s. 4d. by more than the cost of remitting sovereigns to
  • India, and the fourth provision prevents it from falling below 1s.
  • 3–29/32d. This means in practice that the extreme limits of variation
  • of the sterling value of the rupee are 1s. 4⅛d. and 1s. 3–29/32d.
  • 7. The important characteristics of the Indian system are so much
  • a matter of notification and administrative practice that it is
  • impossible to point to single Acts which have made the system what
  • it is. But the following list of dates may be useful for purposes of
  • reference:—
  • 1892. Herschell Committee on Indian Currency.
  • 1893. Act closing the Indian mints to the coinage of silver on private
  • account. Notifications by Government fixing the rate, at which rupees
  • or notes would be supplied in exchange for the tender of gold, at the
  • equivalent of 1s. 4d. the rupee.
  • 1898. Fowler Committee on Indian Currency. Exchange value of rupee
  • touched 1s. 4d.
  • 1899. Act declaring the British sovereign legal tender at 1s. 4d. to
  • the rupee.
  • 1899–1903. Negotiations for coinage of sovereigns in India (dropt
  • indefinitely Feb. 6, 1903).
  • 1900. Gold Standard Reserve instituted out of profits of coinage.
  • 1904. Secretary of State’s notification of his willingness to sell
  • Council Bills on India at 1s. 4⅛d. the rupee without limit.
  • 1905. Act authorising the establishment of the Currency Chest of
  • “earmarked” gold at the Bank of England as part of the Currency
  • Reserve against notes,[2] and the investment of a stated part of the
  • Currency Reserve in sterling securities.
  • 1906. The Notification withdrawn which had directed the issue of
  • rupees against the tender of gold (as distinguished from British gold
  • coin).
  • 1907. Rupee branch of the Gold Standard Reserve instituted.
  • 1908. Sterling drafts sold in Calcutta on London at 1s. 3–29/32d. the
  • rupee, and cashed out of funds from the Gold Standard Reserve.
  • 1910. Act rendering Currency notes of Rs. 10 and 50 universal legal
  • tender,[3] and directing the issue of notes in exchange for British
  • gold coins.
  • 1913. Royal Commission on Indian Finance and Currency.
  • 8. In § 6 I have stated the practical effect of these successive
  • measures. But the legal position is so complicated and peculiar, that
  • it will be worth while to state it quite precisely. Previous to 1893
  • the Government were bound by the Coinage Act of 1870 to issue rupees,
  • weight for weight, in exchange for silver bullion. There was also in
  • force a Notification of the Governor–General in Council, dating from
  • 1868, by which sovereigns were received at Government Treasuries as
  • the equivalent of ten rupees and four annas. This Notification, which
  • had superseded a Notification of 1864 fixing the exchange at ten
  • rupees, had long been inoperative (as the gold exchange value of ten
  • rupees four annas had fallen much below a sovereign). The Act of 1893
  • was merely a repealing Act, necessary in order to do away with those
  • provisions of the Act of 1870 which provided for the free mintage of
  • silver into rupees. At the same time (1893) the Notification of 1868
  • was superseded by a new Notification fixing fifteen rupees as the
  • rate at which sovereigns would be accepted at Government Treasuries;
  • and a Notification was issued under the Paper Currency Act of 1882,
  • directing the issue of currency notes in exchange for gold at the Rs.
  • 15 to £1 ratio. The direct issue of rupees against the tender of gold
  • also has been regulated by a series of Notifications, of which the
  • first was published in 1893, up to 1906 rupees being issued against
  • either gold coin or gold bullion; and since 1906 against sovereigns and
  • half–sovereigns only. Apart from Notifications, an Act of 1899 declared
  • British sovereigns legal tender at the Rs. 15 to £1 ratio, an indirect
  • effect of which was to make it possible for Government, so far as Acts
  • are concerned, to redeem notes in gold coin and refuse silver. And
  • lastly, the Paper Currency Act of 1910 bound the Government to issue
  • notes against the tender of British gold coin.
  • The convertibility of the sovereign into rupees at the Rs. 15 to £1
  • ratio is not laid down, therefore, in any Act whatever. It depends
  • on Notifications withdrawable by the Executive at will. Further, the
  • management of the Gold Standard Reserve is governed neither by Act nor
  • by Notification, but by administrative practice solely; and the sale of
  • Council Bills on India and of sterling drafts on London is regulated by
  • announcements changeable at administrative discretion from time to time.
  • All this emphasises the gradual nature of the system’s growth, and
  • the transitional character of existing legislation. As matters now
  • are, there is something to be said for a new Act, which, while leaving
  • administrative discretion free where there is still good ground for
  • this, might consolidate and clarify the position.
  • 9. As a result of these various measures, the rupee remains the local
  • currency in India, but the Government take precautions for ensuring its
  • convertibility into international currency at an approximately stable
  • rate. The stability of the Indian system depends upon their keeping
  • sufficient reserves of coined rupees to enable them at all times to
  • exchange international currency for local currency; and sufficient
  • liquid resources in sterling to enable them to change back the local
  • currency into international currency, whenever they are required to
  • do so. The special features of the system, although, as we shall see
  • later, these features are not in fact by any means peculiar to India,
  • are: first, that the actual medium of exchange is a local currency
  • distinct from the international currency; second, that the Government
  • is more ready to redeem the local currency (rupees) in bills payable
  • in international currency (gold) at a foreign centre (London) than to
  • redeem it outright locally; and third, that the Government, having
  • taken on itself the responsibility for providing local currency in
  • exchange for international currency and for changing back local
  • currency into international currency when required, must keep two kinds
  • of reserves, one for each of these purposes.
  • I will deal with these characteristics in successive chapters. It
  • is convenient to begin with the second of them and at the outset to
  • discuss in a general way the system of currency, of which the Indian
  • is the most salient example, known to students as the _Gold–Exchange
  • Standard_. Then we will take the first of them in Chapters III. and IV.
  • on _Paper Currency_ and on the _Present Position of Gold in India and
  • Proposals for a Gold Currency_; and the third in Chapter VI. on the
  • _Secretary of State’s Reserves_.
  • 10. But before we pass to these several features of the Indian system,
  • it will be worth while to emphasise two respects in which this system
  • is _not_ peculiar. In the first place a system, in which the rupee is
  • maintained at 1s. 4d. by regulation, does not affect the level of
  • prices differently from the way in which it would be affected by a
  • system in which the rupee was a gold coin worth 1s. 4d., except in a
  • very indirect and unimportant way to be explained in a moment. So long
  • as the rupee is worth 1s. 4d. in gold, no merchant or manufacturer
  • considers of what material it is made when he fixes the price of his
  • product. The _indirect_ effect on prices, due to the rupee’s being
  • silver, is similar to the effect of the use of any medium of exchange,
  • such as cheques or notes, which economises the use of gold. If the
  • use of gold is economised in any country, gold throughout the world
  • is less valuable—gold prices, that is to say, are higher. But as
  • this effect is shared by the whole world, the effect on prices in
  • any country of economies in the use of gold made by that country is
  • likely to be relatively slight. In short, a policy which led to a
  • greater use of gold in India would tend, by increasing the demand for
  • gold in the world’s markets, somewhat to lower the level of world
  • prices as measured in gold; but it would not cause any alteration
  • worth considering in the _relative_ rates of exchange of Indian and
  • non–Indian commodities.
  • In the second place, although it is true that the maintenance of the
  • rupee at or near 1s. 4d. is due to regulation, it is not true, when
  • once 1s. 4d. rather than some other gold value has been determined,
  • that the volume of currency in circulation depends in the least upon
  • the policy of the Government or the caprice of an official.[4] This
  • part of the system is as perfectly automatic as in any other country.
  • The Government has put itself under an obligation to supply rupees
  • whenever sovereigns are tendered, and it often permits or encourages
  • the tender of sovereigns in London as well as in India; but it has no
  • power or opportunity of forcing rupees into circulation otherwise. In
  • two matters only does the Government use a discretionary power. First,
  • in order that it may always be possible to fulfil this obligation, it
  • is necessary to keep a certain reserve of coined rupees, just as some
  • authority in this country—in point of fact the Bank of England—must
  • keep some reserve of token silver and coined sovereigns and not hold
  • in its vaults too large a proportion of uncoined or foreign gold.
  • The magnitude of this reserve is within the discretion of the Indian
  • Government. To a certain extent they must anticipate probable demands
  • on the output of the Mint. But if they miscalculate and mint more than
  • they need, the new rupees must lie in the Government’s own chests until
  • they are wanted, and the date at which they emerge into circulation
  • it is beyond the power of the Government to determine. In the second
  • place, the Government can postpone for a short time a demand for rupees
  • by refusing to supply them in return for sovereigns tendered in London
  • and by insisting upon the sovereigns being sent to Calcutta. Sometimes
  • they do this, but very often it is worth their while, for reasons to
  • be explained in detail later on, to accept the tender of sovereigns in
  • London. In either of these cases the permanent effect of their action
  • one way or the other on the volume of circulation is inconsiderable.
  • The kind of difference it makes is comparable to the difference which
  • would be made if it lay within the discretion of a government to charge
  • or not, as it saw fit, a small _brassage_ not much greater than the
  • cost of coining.[5]
  • CHAPTER II
  • THE GOLD–EXCHANGE STANDARD
  • 1. If we are to see the Indian system in its proper perspective, it is
  • necessary to digress for a space to a discussion of currency evolution
  • in general.
  • My purpose is, first, to show that the British system is peculiar
  • and is not suited to other conditions; second, that the conventional
  • idea of “sound” currency is chiefly derived from certain superficial
  • aspects of the British system; third, that a somewhat different type of
  • system has been developed in most other countries; and fourth, that in
  • essentials the system which has been evolved in India conforms to this
  • foreign type. I shall be concerned throughout this chapter with the
  • general characteristics of currency systems, not with the details of
  • their working.
  • 2. The history of currency, so far as it is relevant to our present
  • purpose, virtually begins with the nineteenth century. During the
  • second quarter of this century England was alone in possessing an
  • orthodox “sound” currency on a gold basis. Gold was the sole standard
  • of value; it circulated freely from hand to hand; and it was freely
  • available for export. Up to 1844 bank notes showed a tendency to
  • become a formidable rival to gold as the actual medium of exchange.
  • But the Bank Act of that year set itself to hamper this tendency and
  • to encourage the use of gold as the medium of exchange as well as the
  • standard of value. This Act was completely successful in stopping
  • attempts to economise gold by the use of notes. But the Bank Act
  • did nothing to hinder the use of cheques, and the very remarkable
  • development of this medium of exchange during the next fifty years led
  • in this country, without any important development in the use of notes
  • or tokens, to a monetary organisation more perfectly adapted for the
  • economy of gold than any which exists elsewhere. In this matter of
  • the use of cheques Great Britain has been followed by the rest of the
  • English–speaking world—Canada, Australia, South Africa, and the United
  • States of America. But in other countries currency evolution has been,
  • chiefly, along different lines.
  • 3. In the early days of banking of the modern type in England, gold was
  • not infrequently required to meet runs on banks by their depositors,
  • who were always liable in difficult times to fall into a state of panic
  • lest they should be unable to withdraw their deposits in case of real
  • need. With the growth of the stability of banking, and especially with
  • the growth of confidence in this stability amongst depositors, these
  • occasions have become more and more infrequent, and many years have
  • now passed since there has been any run of dangerous proportions on
  • English banks. Gold reserves, therefore, in Great Britain are no longer
  • held primarily with a view to emergencies of this kind. The uses of
  • gold coin in Great Britain are now three—as the medium of exchange for
  • certain kinds of out–of–pocket expenditure, such as that on railway
  • travelling, for which custom requires cash payment; for the payment of
  • wages; and to meet a drain of specie abroad.
  • Fluctuations in the demand for gold in the first two uses are of
  • secondary importance, and can usually be predicted with a good deal
  • of accuracy,—at holiday seasons, at the turn of the quarter, at the
  • end of the week, at harvest. Fluctuations in the demand in the third
  • use are of greater magnitude and, apart from the regular autumn drain,
  • not so easily foreseen. Our gold reserve policy is mainly dictated,
  • therefore, by considerations arising out of the possible demand for
  • export.
  • To guard against a possible drain of gold abroad, a complicated
  • mechanism has been developed which in the details of its working is
  • peculiar to this country. A drain of gold can only come about if
  • foreigners choose to turn into gold claims, which they have against us
  • for immediate payment, and we have no counterbalancing claims against
  • them for equally immediate payment. The drain can only be stopped
  • if we can rapidly bring to bear our counterbalancing claims. When we
  • come to consider how this can best be done, it is to be noticed that
  • the position of a country which is preponderantly a creditor in the
  • international short–loan market is quite different from that of a
  • country which is preponderantly a debtor. In the former case, which
  • is that of Great Britain, it is a question of reducing the amount
  • lent; in the latter case it is a question of increasing the amount
  • borrowed. A machinery which is adapted for action of the first kind
  • may be ill suited for action of the second. Partly as a consequence
  • of this, partly as a consequence of the peculiar organisation of
  • the London Money Market, the “bank rate” policy for regulating the
  • outflow of gold has been admirably successful in this country, and yet
  • cannot stand elsewhere unaided by other devices. It is not necessary
  • for the purposes of this survey to consider precisely how changes
  • in the bank rate affect the balance of immediate indebtedness. It
  • will be sufficient to say that it tends to hamper the brokers, who
  • act as middlemen between the British short–loan fund and the foreign
  • demand for accommodation (chiefly materialised in the offer of bills
  • for discount), and to cause them to enter into a less volume of new
  • business than that of the short loans formerly contracted and now
  • falling due, thus bringing to bear the necessary counterbalancing
  • claims against foreign countries.
  • 4. The essential characteristics of the British monetary system are,
  • therefore, the use of cheques as the principal medium of exchange,
  • and the use of the bank rate for regulating the balance of immediate
  • foreign indebtedness (and hence the flow, by import and export, of
  • gold).
  • 5. The development of foreign monetary systems into their present
  • shapes began in the last quarter of the nineteenth century. At that
  • time London was at the height of her financial supremacy, and her
  • monetary arrangements had stood the test of time and experience.
  • Foreign systems, therefore, were greatly influenced at their inception
  • by what were regarded as the fundamental tenets of the British system.
  • But foreign observers seem to have been more impressed by the fact
  • that the Englishman had sovereigns in his pocket than by the fact
  • that he had a cheque–book in his desk; and took more notice of the
  • “efficacy” of the bank rate and of the deliberations of the Court
  • of Directors on Thursdays, than of the peculiar organisation of the
  • brokers and the London Money Market, and of Great Britain’s position
  • as a creditor nation. They were thus led to imitate the form rather
  • than the substance. When they introduced the gold standard, they set
  • up gold currencies as well; and in several cases an official bank rate
  • was established on the British model. Germany led the way in 1871–73.
  • Even now apologists of the Reichsbank will sometimes speak as if its
  • bank rate were efficacious by itself in the same manner as the Bank of
  • England’s. But, in fact, the German system, though ostensibly modelled
  • in part upon the British system, has become, by force of circumstances,
  • essentially different.
  • It is not necessary for this survey to consider individual systems in
  • any detail. But, confining ourselves to European countries, whether we
  • consider, for example, France, Austria–Hungary, Russia, Italy, Sweden,
  • or Holland, while most of these countries have a gold currency and an
  • official Bank Rate, in none of them is gold the principal medium of
  • exchange, and in none of them is the bank rate their only habitual
  • support against an outward drain of gold.
  • 6. With the use of substitutes for gold I will deal in Chapter IV. in
  • treating of the proper position of gold in the Indian system. But what
  • props are commonly brought to the support of an “ineffective” Bank
  • Rate in countries other than Great Britain? Roughly speaking, there
  • are three. A very large gold reserve may be maintained, so that a
  • substantial drain on it may be faced with equanimity; free payments in
  • gold may be partially suspended; or foreign credits and bills may be
  • kept which can be drawn upon when necessary. The Central Banks of most
  • European countries depend (in varying degrees) upon all three.
  • The Bank of France uses the first two,[6] and her holdings of foreign
  • bills are not, at normal times, important.[7] Her bank rate is not
  • fixed primarily with a view to foreign conditions, and a change in it
  • is usually intended to affect home affairs (though these may of course
  • depend and react on foreign affairs).
  • Germany is in a state of transition, and her present position is
  • avowedly unsatisfactory. The theory of her arrangements seems to be
  • that she depends on her bank rate after the British model; but in
  • practice her bank rate is not easily rendered effective, and must
  • usually be reinforced by much unseen pressure by the Reichsbank on
  • the other elements of the money market. Her gold reserve is not large
  • enough for the first expedient to be used lightly. Free payment in
  • gold is sometimes, in effect, partially suspended,[8] though covertly
  • and with shame. To an increasing extent the Reichsbank depends on
  • variations in her holding of foreign bills and credits. A few years ago
  • such holdings were of small importance. The table given below shows
  • with what rapidity the part taken by foreign bills and credits in the
  • finance of the Reichsbank has been growing. The authorities of the
  • Reichsbank have now learnt that their position in the international
  • short loan market is not one which permits them to fix the bank rate
  • and then idly to await the course of events.
  • REICHSBANK’S HOLDINGS OF FOREIGN BILLS (EXCLUDING CREDITS).
  • ┌─────────┬─────────────────────┬───────────────┬────────────────┐
  • │ │ Average for Year. │ Maximum. │ Minimum. │
  • ├─────────┼─────────────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────┤
  • │ 1895 │ £120,000 │ £152,000 │ £100,000 │
  • │ 1900 │ 1,270,000 │ 3,540,000 │ 160,000 │
  • │ 1905 │ 1,580,000 │ 2,490,000 │ 970,000 │
  • │ 1906 │ 2,060,000 │ 2,990,000 │ 830,000 │
  • │ 1907 │ 2,223,000 │ 3,000,000 │ 1,130,000 │
  • │ 1908 │ 3,544,000 │ 6,366,000 │ 977,800 │
  • │ 1909 │ 5,362,000 │ 7,978,000 │ 2,824,800 │
  • │ 1910(a) │ 7,032,000 │ 8,855,000 │ 4,893,300 │
  • └─────────┴─────────────────────┴───────────────┴────────────────┘
  • (a): Since 1910 these figures have not been stated in the Reichsbank’s
  • annual reports.
  • REICHSBANK’S HOLDINGS OF FOREIGN BILLS AND CREDITS WITH FOREIGN
  • CORRESPONDENTS ON LAST DAY OF EACH YEAR.
  • ┌─────────────┬───────────────┬──────────────┬───────────────┐
  • │ 31st Dec. │ Bills. │ Credits. │ Total. │
  • ├─────────────┼───────────────┼──────────────┼───────────────┤
  • │ 1906 │ £3,209,000 │ £993,000 │ £4,202,000 │
  • │ 1907 │ 1,289,000 │ 503,000 │ 1,792,000 │
  • │ 1908 │ 6,457,000 │ 1,234,000 │ 7,691,000 │
  • │ 1909 │ 6,000,000 │ 3,369,000 │ 9,369,000 │
  • │ 1910 │ 8,114,000 │ 4,205,000 │ 12,309,000 │
  • │ 1911 │ 7,114,000 │ 1,439,000 │ 8,553,000 │
  • │ 1912 │ ... │ ... │ ... │
  • └─────────────┴───────────────┴──────────────┴───────────────┘
  • 7. If we pass from France, whose position as a creditor country is not
  • altogether unlike Great Britain’s, and from Germany, which is at any
  • rate able to do a good deal towards righting the balance of immediate
  • indebtedness by the sale of securities having an international market,
  • to other countries of less financial strength, we find the dependence
  • of their Central Banks on holdings of foreign bills and on foreign
  • credits, their willingness to permit a premium on gold, and the
  • inadequacy of their bank rates taken by themselves, to be increasingly
  • marked. I will first mention very briefly one or two salient facts, and
  • will then consider their underlying meaning, always with an ultimate
  • view to their bearing on the affairs of India.
  • 8. To illustrate how rare a thing in Europe a perfect and automatic
  • gold standard is, let us take the most recent occasion of
  • stringency—November 1912. The Balkan War was at this time at an
  • acute stage, but the European situation was only moderately anxious.
  • Compared with the crisis at the end of 1907, the financial position
  • was one of comparative calm. Yet in the course of that month there was
  • a premium on gold of about ¾ per cent in France, Germany, Russia,
  • Austria–Hungary,[9] and Belgium. So high a premium as this is as
  • effective in retaining gold as a very considerable addition to the
  • bank rate. If, for example, the premium did not last more than three
  • months, it would add to the profits of a temporary deposit of funds for
  • that period as much as an addition of 3 per cent to the discount rate;
  • or, to put it the other way round, there would need to be an additional
  • profit of 3 per cent elsewhere if it were to be worth while to send
  • funds abroad.
  • 9. The growing importance of foreign bills in the portfolios of the
  • Reichsbank has been shown above. The importance of foreign bills
  • and credits in the policy of the Austro–Hungarian Bank is of longer
  • standing and is better known. They always form an important part of
  • its reserves, and the part first utilised in times of stringency.[10]
  • It was supposed that in the third quarter of 1911 the Bank placed
  • not less than £4,000,000 worth of gold bills at the disposal of
  • the Austro–Hungarian market in order to support exchange. Amongst
  • European countries, Russia now keeps the largest aggregate of funds
  • in foreign bills and in balances abroad—amounting in November 1912
  • to £26,630,000.[11] Account being taken of their total resources,
  • however, the banks of the three Scandinavian countries, Sweden, Norway,
  • and Denmark, hold the highest proportion in the form of balances
  • abroad—amounting in November 1912, for the three countries in the
  • aggregate, to about £7,000,000. These are enough examples for my
  • purpose.
  • 10. What is the underlying significance of this growing tendency on
  • the part of European State Banks to hold a part of their reserves in
  • foreign bills or foreign credits? We saw above that the bank–rate
  • policy of the Bank of England is successful because by indirect means
  • it causes the Money Market to reduce its short–period loans to foreign
  • countries, and thus to turn the balance of immediate indebtedness in
  • our favour. This indirect policy is less feasible in countries where
  • the Money Market is already a borrower rather than a lender in the
  • international market. In such countries a rise in the bank–rate cannot
  • be relied on to produce the desired effect with due rapidity. A direct
  • policy on the part of the Central Bank, therefore, must be employed.
  • If the Money Market is not a lender in the international market, the
  • Bank itself must be at pains to become to some extent one. The Bank of
  • England lends to middlemen who, by holding bills or otherwise, lend
  • abroad. A rise in the bank rate is equivalent to putting pressure on
  • these middlemen to diminish their commitments. In countries where the
  • Money Market is neither so highly developed nor, in relation to foreign
  • countries, so self–supporting, the Central Bank, if it is to be secure,
  • must take the matter in hand itself and, by itself entering the
  • international money market as a lender at short notice, place itself in
  • funds, at foreign centres, which can be rapidly withdrawn when they are
  • required. The only alternative would be the holding of a much larger
  • reserve of gold, the expense of which would be nearly intolerable.
  • The new method combines safety with economy. Just as individuals have
  • learnt that it is cheaper and not less safe to keep their ultimate
  • reserves on deposit at their bankers than to keep them at home in
  • cash, so the second stage of monetary evolution is now entered on, and
  • nations are learning that _some part_ of the cash reserves of their
  • banks (we cannot go further than this at present) may be properly kept
  • on deposit in the international money market. This is not the expedient
  • of second–rate or impoverished countries; it is the expedient of all
  • those who have not attained a high degree of financial supremacy—of
  • all those, in fact, who are not themselves international bankers.
  • 11. In the forty years, therefore, during which the world has been
  • coming on to a gold standard (without, however, giving up for
  • that reason its local currencies of notes or token silver), two
  • devices—apart from the bullion reserve itself and the bank rate—have
  • been evolved for protecting the local currencies. The first is to
  • permit a small variation in the ratio of exchange between the local
  • currency and gold, amounting perhaps to an occasional premium of
  • ¾ per cent on the latter; this may help to tide over a stringency
  • which is seasonal or of short duration without raising to a dangerous
  • level the rate of discount on purely local transactions. The second
  • is for the Government or Central Bank to hold resources available
  • abroad, which can be used for maintaining the gold parity of the local
  • currency, when there is the need for it.
  • 12. We are now more nearly in a position to come back to the currency
  • of India herself, and to see it in its proper relation to those
  • of other countries. At one end of the scale we have Great Britain
  • and France—creditor nations in the short–loan market.[12] In an
  • intermediate position comes Germany—a creditor in relation to many of
  • her neighbours, but apt to be a debtor in relation to France, Great
  • Britain, and the United States. Next come such countries as Russia and
  • Austria–Hungary—rich and powerful, with immense reserves of gold, but
  • debtor nations, dependent in the short–loan market on their neighbours.
  • From the currencies of these it is an easy step to those of the great
  • trading nations of Asia—India, Japan, and the Dutch East Indies.
  • 13. I say that from the currencies of such countries as Russia
  • and Austria–Hungary to those which have explicitly and in name a
  • Gold–Exchange Standard[13] it is an easy step. The Gold–Exchange
  • Standard is simply a more regularised form of the same system as
  • theirs. In their essential characteristics and in the monetary logic
  • which underlies them the currencies of India and Austria–Hungary (to
  • take these as our examples) are not really different. In India we
  • know the extreme limits of fluctuation in the exchange value of the
  • rupee; we know the precise volume of reserves which the Government
  • holds in gold and in credits abroad; and we know at what moment the
  • Government will step in and utilise these resources for the support of
  • the rupee. In Austria–Hungary the system is less automatic, and the
  • Bank is allowed a wide discretion. In detail, of course, there are a
  • number of differences. India keeps a somewhat higher proportion of her
  • reserves in foreign credits, and keeps some part of these credits in
  • a less liquid form. She also keeps a portion of her gold reserve in
  • London—a practice made possible by the fact that for India London is
  • not strictly a foreign centre. On the other hand, India is probably
  • more willing than the Bank of Austria–Hungary to supply gold on demand.
  • If we are to judge from the experience of recent years, India inclines
  • to use her gold reserves, Austria–Hungary her foreign credits, first.
  • But in the essentials of the Gold–Exchange Standard—the use of a local
  • currency mainly not of gold, some degree of unwillingness to supply
  • gold locally in exchange for the local currency, but a high degree of
  • willingness to sell foreign exchange for payment in local currency
  • at a certain maximum rate, and to use foreign credits in order to do
  • this—the two countries agree.
  • 14. To say that the Gold–Exchange Standard merely carries somewhat
  • further the currency arrangements which several European countries
  • have evolved during the last quarter of a century is not, of course,
  • to justify it. But if we see that the Gold–Exchange Standard is not,
  • in the currency world of to–day, anomalous, and that it is in the
  • main stream of currency evolution, we shall have a wider experience,
  • on which to draw, in criticising it, and may be in a better position
  • to judge of its details wisely. Much nonsense is talked about a gold
  • standard’s properly carrying a gold currency with it. If we mean by
  • a gold currency a state of affairs in which gold is the principal
  • or even, in the aggregate, a very important medium of exchange, no
  • country in the world has such a thing.[14] Gold is an international,
  • but not a local currency. The currency problem of each country is
  • to ensure that they shall run no risk of being unable to put their
  • hands on international currency when they need it, and to waste as
  • small a proportion of their resources on holdings of actual gold
  • as is compatible with this. The proper solution for each country
  • must be governed by the nature of its position in the international
  • money market and of its relations to the chief financial centres,
  • and by those national customs in matters of currency which it may be
  • unwise to disturb. It is as an attempt to solve this problem that the
  • Gold–Exchange Standard ought to be judged.
  • 15. We have been concerned so far with transitional systems of
  • currency. I will conclude this chapter with a brief history in outline
  • of the Gold–Exchange Standard itself. It will then be time to pass from
  • high generalities to the actual details of the Indian system.
  • The Gold–Exchange Standard arises out of the discovery that, so long as
  • gold is available for payments of _international_ indebtedness at an
  • approximately constant rate in terms of the national currency, it is
  • a matter of comparative indifference whether it actually _forms_ the
  • national currency.
  • The Gold–Exchange Standard may be said to exist when gold does not
  • circulate in a country to an appreciable extent, when the local
  • currency is not necessarily redeemable in gold, but when the Government
  • or Central Bank makes arrangements for the provision of foreign
  • remittances in gold at a fixed maximum rate in terms of the local
  • currency, the reserves necessary to provide these remittances being
  • kept to a considerable extent abroad.
  • A system closely resembling the Gold–Exchange Standard was actually
  • employed during the second half of the eighteenth century for
  • regulating the exchange between London and Edinburgh. Its theoretical
  • advantages were first set forth by Ricardo at the time of the
  • Bullionist Controversy. He laid it down that a currency is in its most
  • perfect state when it consists of a cheap material, but having an
  • equal value with the gold it professes to represent; and he suggested
  • that convertibility for the purposes of the foreign exchanges should
  • be ensured by the tendering on demand of gold _bars_ (not coin) in
  • exchange for notes,—so that gold might be available for purposes
  • of export only, and would be prevented from entering into the
  • internal circulation of the country. In an article contributed to
  • the _Contemporary Review_ of 1887, Dr. Marshall again brought these
  • advantages to the notice of practical men.
  • 16. The first crude attempt in recent times at establishing a standard
  • of this type was made by Holland. The free coinage of silver was
  • suspended in 1877. But the currency continued to consist mainly of
  • silver and paper. It has been maintained since that date at a constant
  • value in terms of gold by the Bank’s regularly providing gold when it
  • is required for export and by its using its authority at the same
  • time for restricting so far as possible the use of gold at home. To
  • make this policy possible, the Bank of Holland has kept a reserve, of
  • a moderate and economical amount, partly in gold, partly in foreign
  • bills.[15] During the long period for which this policy has been
  • pursued, it has been severely tried more than once, but has stood the
  • test successfully.
  • It must be noticed, however, that although Holland has kept gold
  • and foreign bills as a means of obtaining a credit abroad at any
  • moment, she has not kept a standing credit in any foreign financial
  • centre. The method of keeping a token currency at a fixed par with
  • gold by means of credit abroad was first adopted by Count Witte for
  • Russia in the transitional period from inconvertible paper to a gold
  • standard;—in the autumn of 1892 the Department of Finance offered
  • to buy exchange on Berlin at 2·18 marks and to sell at 2·20. In the
  • same year (1892) the Austro–Hungarian system, referred to above, was
  • established. As in India their exchange policy was evolved gradually.
  • The present arrangements, which date from 1896, were made possible
  • by the strong preference of the public for notes over gold and by the
  • provision of the law which permitted the holding of foreign bills as
  • cover for the note issue. This exchange policy is the easier, because
  • the Austro–Hungarian Bank is by far the largest dealer in exchange in
  • Vienna;—just as the policy of the Government of India is facilitated
  • by the commanding influence which the system of Council Bills gives it
  • over the exchange market.
  • 17. But although India was not the first country to lead the way to a
  • Gold–Exchange Standard, she was the first to adopt it in a complete
  • form. When in 1893, on the recommendation of the Herschell Committee,
  • following upon the agitation of the Indian Currency Association, the
  • Mints were closed to the free coinage of silver, it was believed that
  • the cessation of coinage and the refusal of the Secretary of State to
  • sell his bills below 1s. 4d. would suffice to establish this ratio of
  • exchange. The Government had not then the experience which we have now;
  • we now know that such measures are not by themselves sufficient, except
  • under the influence of favouring circumstances. As a matter of fact the
  • circumstances were, at first, unfavourable. Exchange fell considerably
  • below 1s. 4d., and the Secretary of State had to sell his bills for
  • what he could get. If there had been, at the existing level of prices,
  • a rapidly expanding demand for currency at the time when the Mints
  • were closed, the measures actually taken might very well have proved
  • immediately successful. But the demand did not expand, and the very
  • large issue of currency immediately before and just after the closure
  • of the Mints proved sufficient to satisfy the demand for several years
  • to come;—just as a demand for new currency on an abnormally high scale
  • from 1903 to 1907, accompanied by high rates of discount, was followed
  • in 1908 by a complete cessation of demand and a period of comparatively
  • low rates of discount. Favourable circumstances, however, came at
  • last, and by January 1898 exchange was stable at 1s. 4d. The Fowler
  • Committee, then appointed, recommended a gold currency as the ultimate
  • objective. It is since that time that the Government of India have
  • adopted, or drifted into, their present system.
  • 18. The Gold–Exchange Standard in the form in which it has been adopted
  • in India is justly known as the Lindsay scheme. It was proposed and
  • advocated from the earliest discussions, when the Indian currency
  • problem first became prominent, by Mr. A. M. Lindsay, Deputy–Secretary
  • of the Bank of Bengal, who always maintained that “they _must_ adopt my
  • scheme despite themselves.” His first proposals were made in 1876 and
  • 1878. They were repeated in 1885 and again in 1892, when he published
  • a pamphlet entitled _Ricardo’s Exchange Remedy_. Finally, he explained
  • his views in detail to the Committee of 1898.
  • Lindsay’s scheme was severely criticised both by Government officials
  • and leading financiers. Lord Farrer described it as “far too clever
  • for the ordinary English mind with its ineradicable prejudice for an
  • immediately tangible gold backing to all currencies.” Lord Rothschild,
  • Sir John Lubbock (Lord Avebury), Sir Samuel Montagu (the late Lord
  • Swaythling) all gave evidence before the Committee that any system
  • without a visible gold currency would be looked on with distrust.
  • Mr. Alfred de Rothschild went so far as to say that “in fact a gold
  • standard without a gold currency seemed to him an utter impossibility.”
  • Financiers of this type will not admit the feasibility of anything
  • until it has been demonstrated to them by practical experience. It
  • follows, therefore, that they will seldom give their support to what is
  • new.
  • 19. Since the Indian system has been perfected and its provisions
  • generally known, it has been widely imitated both in Asia and
  • elsewhere. In 1903 the Government of the United States introduced a
  • system avowedly based on it into the Philippines. Since that time it
  • has been established, under the influence of the same Government,
  • in Mexico and Panama. The Government of Siam have adopted it. The
  • French have introduced it in Indo–China. Our own Colonial Office have
  • introduced it in the Straits Settlements and are about to introduce
  • it into the West African Colonies. Something similar has existed in
  • Java under Dutch influences for many years. The Japanese system is
  • virtually the same in practice. In China, as is well known, currency
  • reform has not yet been carried through. The Gold–Exchange Standard
  • is the only possible means of bringing China on to a gold basis, and
  • the alternative policy (the policy of our own Foreign Office) is to be
  • content at first with a standard, as well as a currency, of silver.
  • A powerful body of opinion, led by the United States, favours the
  • immediate introduction of a gold standard on the Indian model.
  • It may fairly be said, therefore, that in the ten years the
  • Gold–Exchange Standard has become the prevailing monetary system of
  • Asia. I have tried to show that it is also closely related to the
  • prevailing tendencies in Europe. Speaking as a theorist, I believe that
  • it contains one essential element—the use of a cheap local currency
  • artificially maintained at par with the international currency or
  • standard of value (whatever that may ultimately turn out to be)—in the
  • ideal currency of the future. But it is now time to turn to details.
  • CHAPTER III
  • PAPER CURRENCY
  • 1. The chief characteristics of the Indian system of currency have
  • been roughly sketched in the first chapter. I will now proceed to a
  • description of the system of note issue.
  • 2. In existing conditions the rupee, being a token coin, is virtually
  • a note printed on silver. The custom and convenience of the people
  • justify this, so far as concerns payment in small sums. But in itself
  • it is extravagant. When rupees are issued, the Government, instead of
  • being able to place to reserve the whole nominal value of the coin, is
  • able to retain only the difference between the nominal value and the
  • cost of the silver.[16] For large payments, therefore, it is important
  • to encourage the use of notes to the utmost extent possible,—from the
  • point of view of economy, because by these means the Government may
  • obtain a large part of the reserves necessary for the support of a
  • Gold–Exchange Standard, and also because only thus will it be possible
  • to introduce a proper degree of elasticity in the seasonal supply of
  • currency.
  • 3. By Acts of 1839–43 the Presidency Banks of Bengal, Bombay, and
  • Madras were authorised to issue notes payable on demand; but the use of
  • the notes was practically limited to the three Presidency towns.[17]
  • These Acts were repealed in 1861, when the present Government Paper
  • Currency was first instituted. Since that time no banks have been
  • allowed to issue notes in India.
  • Proposals for a Government Paper Currency were instituted in 1859 by
  • Mr. James Wilson on his going out to India as the first Financial
  • Member.[18] Mr. Wilson died before his scheme could be carried into
  • effect, and the Act setting up the Paper Currency scheme, which became
  • law in 1861, differed in some important respects from his original
  • proposals.[19] The system was eventually set up under the influence
  • of the very rigid ideas as to the proper regulation of note issue
  • prevailing, as a result of the controversies which had culminated
  • in the British Bank Act of 1844, amongst English economists of that
  • time. According to these ideas, the proper principles of note issue
  • were two—first, that the function of note issue should be entirely
  • dissociated from that of banking; and second, that “the amount of notes
  • issued on Government securities should be maintained at a fixed sum,
  • within the limit of the smallest amount which experience has proved to
  • be necessary for the monetary transactions of the country, and that
  • any further amount of notes should be issued on coin or bullion.”[20]
  • These principles were orthodox and all others “unsound.” “The sound
  • principle for regulating the issue of a Paper Circulation,” wrote the
  • Secretary of State, “is that which was enforced on the Bank of England
  • by the Act of 1844.” In England, of course, bankers immediately set
  • themselves to recover the economy and elasticity, which the Act of
  • 1844 banished from the English system, by other means; and with the
  • development of the cheque system to its present state of perfection
  • they have magnificently succeeded. In foreign countries all kinds of
  • new principles have been tried for the regulation of note issue, and
  • some of them have been very successful. In India the creed of 1861
  • is still repeated; but by unforeseen chance the words have changed
  • their meanings, and have permitted the old system to acquire through
  • inadvertence a certain degree of usefulness. The coin, in which the
  • greater part of the reserve had to be held, was, of course, the rupee.
  • In 1861 this was a freely minted coin worth no more than its bullion
  • value. When the rupee became an artificially valued token, rupees
  • tacitly remained the legitimate form of the reserve (although after
  • a time sovereigns were added as an optional alternative). Thus the
  • authorities are free, if they like, to hold the whole of the Currency
  • Reserve in rupee–tokens, and this reserve has become, therefore (as
  • we shall see below), an important part of the mechanism by which the
  • supply of silver rupees to the currency is duly regulated. While,
  • however, the note issue has managed to evolve an important function
  • for itself, I think the time has come when the usefulness of the
  • Currency Reserve may be much increased by a deliberate consideration
  • of the place it might fill in the organism of the Indian Money Market.
  • I return to this later in the chapter. In the meantime I pass to a
  • description of the Paper Currency as it now is—insisting, however,
  • that when we come to consider how it may be improved, the circumstances
  • of its origin be not forgotten.
  • 4. For the first forty years of their existence the Government notes,
  • though always of growing importance, took a very minor place in the
  • currency system of the country. This was partly due to an arrangement,
  • now in gradual course of abolition, by which for the purposes of paper
  • currency India has been divided up in effect into several separate
  • countries. These ‘circles,’ as they are called, now seven[21] in
  • number, correspond roughly to the principal provinces of India, the
  • offices of issue being as follows:—
  • Calcutta for Bengal, Eastern Bengal, and Assam.
  • Cawnpore ” the United Provinces.
  • Lahore ” the Punjab and North–West Frontier Province.
  • Madras ” the Madras Presidency and Coorg.
  • Bombay ” Bombay and the Central Provinces.
  • Karachi ” Sind.
  • Rangoon ” Burma.
  • The currency notes[22] are in the form of promissory notes of the
  • Government of India payable to the bearer on demand, and are of the
  • denominations Rs. 5, 10, 50, 100, 500, 1000, and 10,000. Thus the
  • lowest note is of the face value of 6s. 8d. They are issued without
  • limit from any Paper Currency office in exchange for rupees or British
  • gold coin, or (on the requisition of the Comptroller–General) for gold
  • bullion.[23]
  • 5. Up to 1910 the following arrangements were in force.
  • Every note was legal tender in its own circle. Payment of dues to
  • the Government could be made in the currency notes of any circle;
  • and railway companies could, if they accepted notes of any circle
  • in payment of fares and freight, recover the value of them from the
  • Government.
  • But, until recently, no notes were legal tender outside their own
  • circle, and were payable only at the offices of issue of the town from
  • which they were originally issued.
  • Beyond this the law imposed no obligation to pay. For the accommodation
  • of the public, however, notes of other circles could be cashed at any
  • Paper Currency office to such extent as the convenience of each office
  • might permit. In ordinary circumstances every Government treasury, of
  • which there are about 250, has cashed or exchanged notes if it could do
  • so without inconvenience; and when this could not be done conveniently
  • for large sums, small sums have generally been exchanged for travellers.
  • 6. It is easy to understand the reasons for these restrictions. India
  • is an enormously large country, over which the conditions of trade
  • lead coins to ebb and flow within each year. At the beginning of the
  • busy season when the autumn crops are harvested, rupees flow in great
  • volume from the Presidency towns up country; in early spring they are
  • carried to Burma for the rice crop; and so on—slowly finding their way
  • back again to the Presidency towns during the summer. If the Government
  • had made its notes encashable at a great variety of centres, it would
  • have been taking on itself the expense and responsibility of carrying
  • out these movements of coin at different seasons of the year. When a
  • country is habituated to the use of notes for making payments, they
  • can be very usefully employed for purposes of remittance also. But
  • a note–issuing authority puts itself in a difficulty if it provides
  • facilities for remittance before a general habit has grown up of using
  • notes for other purposes. If, on the other hand, the notes had been
  • made universal legal tender, but only encashable at Presidency towns,
  • there would undoubtedly have been a premium on coin at certain times of
  • the year. And this would have greatly hindered the growth of the notes’
  • popularity.
  • The Government, therefore, did what it could to make the notes useful
  • and popular for purposes other than those of remittance; and it
  • facilitated remittance so far as the proceeds of taxation, accumulating
  • in its treasuries, permitted it to do this without expense. But it
  • shrank from taking upon itself further responsibility. Its practice may
  • be compared with that of the branches of the Reichsbank.
  • On the other hand, the objections to a policy, which divided the
  • country up for the purposes of paper currency, are also plain. The
  • limitation of the areas of legal tender and of the offices where the
  • notes were encashable on demand greatly restricted the popularity of
  • the notes. It might well have seemed worth while to popularise them,
  • even at the expense of temporary loss. As soon as the public had
  • become satisfied that the notes could be turned into coin readily and
  • without question, their desire to cash them would probably have been
  • greatly diminished. It is not certain that Government would have lost
  • in the long–run if it had undertaken the responsibility and expense of
  • regulating the flow of coin to the districts where it might be wanted
  • at the different seasons of the year.
  • 7. After the establishment of the Gold–Exchange Standard the importance
  • of enlarging the functions of the note issue became apparent; and
  • since 1900 the question of increasing the availability of the notes
  • has been constantly to the front. In 1900 the Government issued a
  • circular asking for opinions on certain proposals, including one for
  • “universalising” the notes or making them legal tender in all circles.
  • Some authorities thought that notes of small denominations (Rs. 5 and
  • Rs. 10) might be safely universalised, without risk (on account of the
  • trouble involved) of their being used for remittance on a large scale.
  • It is on these lines that the use of the notes has been developed. In
  • 1903 five–rupee notes were universalised except in Burma—that is to
  • say, five–rupee notes of any circle were legal tender and encashable at
  • any office of issue outside Burma; and in 1909 the Burmese limitation
  • was removed.
  • In 1910 a great step forward was taken, and the law on the subject
  • was consolidated by a new Act. Notes of Rs. 10 and Rs. 50 were
  • universalised; and power was taken to universalise notes of higher
  • denominations by executive order. In pursuance of this authority notes
  • of Rs. 100 were universalised in 1911. “At the same time the receipt of
  • notes of the higher denominations in circles other than the circle of
  • issue, in payment of Government dues and in payments to railways, post
  • and telegraph offices, was stopped by executive orders”; and “with a
  • view to minimise any tendency to make use of the new universal notes
  • for remittance purposes, it was decided concurrently with the new Act
  • to offer facilities to bankers and merchants to make trade remittances
  • between the currency centres by means of telegraphic orders granted by
  • Government at a reduced rate of premium.”[24] In the following year
  • the Comptroller of Paper Currency reported that no difficulty whatever
  • was experienced as the result of universalising the Rs. 10 and Rs.
  • 50 notes; and the inconveniences, the fear of which had retarded the
  • development of the note system for many years, were not realised.
  • 8. The effect of these successive changes has been to make the old
  • system of circles virtually inoperative. With notes of Rs. 100
  • universal legal tender it is difficult to see what can prevent the
  • public from using them for purposes of remittance if they should wish
  • to do so. The “circles” can no longer serve any useful purpose, and it
  • would help to make clear in the public mind the nature of the Indian
  • note issue if they were to be abolished in name as well as in effect.
  • 9. There must have been many occasions under the old system, on which
  • ignorant persons suffered inconvenience through having notes of
  • foreign circles passed off on them; and a long time may pass before
  • distrust of the notes, as things not readily convertible, bred out
  • of the memories of these occasions, entirely disappears. But, in
  • combination with other circumstances, the universalising of the notes
  • has had already a striking effect on the volume of their circulation,
  • as is shown in the figures given below. It should be explained that
  • by _gross_ circulation (in the Government Statistics) is meant the
  • value of all notes that have been issued and not yet paid off; that
  • the _net_ circulation is this sum less the value of notes held by
  • Government in its own treasuries; and that the _active_ circulation is
  • the _net_ reduced by the value of notes held by the Presidency banks
  • at their head offices.[25] For some purposes the _active_ circulation
  • is the most important. But it is the reserve of rupees held against
  • the _gross_ circulation which is the best indication of the surplus
  • volume of coined silver available, if necessary, for the purposes of
  • circulation. The following table gives for various years the average
  • of the circulation on the last day of each month:—
  • ┌───────────┬───────────────────────┬────────────────────────┐
  • │ │ (In lakhs of rupees.) │(In £ million at 1s. 4d.│
  • │ │ │the rupee throughout.) │
  • │ ├───────┬───────┬───────┼────────────┬───────────┤
  • │ │Gross. │ Net. │Active.│ Gross. │ Active. │
  • ├───────────┼───────┼───────┼───────┼────────────┼───────────┤
  • │ 1892─1893 │ 2710 │ 2333 │ 1953 │ 18 │ 13 │
  • │ 1893─1894 │ 2829 │ 2083 │ 1785 │ 19 │ 12 │
  • │ 1899─1900 │ 2796 │ 2367 │ 2127 │ 18½ │ 14 │
  • │ 1900─1901 │ 2888 │ 2473 │ 2205 │ 19½ │ 14½ │
  • │ 1902─1903 │ 3374 │ 2735 │ 2349 │ 22½ │ 15½ │
  • │ 1904─1905 │ 3920 │ 3276 │ 2811 │ 26 │ 18½ │
  • │ 1906─1907 │ 4514 │ 3949 │ 3393 │ 30 │ 22½ │
  • │ 1908─1909 │ 4452 │ 3902 │ 3310 │ 29½ │ 22 │
  • │ 1909─1910 │ 4966 │ 4535 │ 3721 │ 33 │ 25 │
  • │ 1910─1911 │ 5435 │ 4648 │ 3875 │ 36 │ 26 │
  • │ 1911─1912 │ 5737 │ 4949 │ 4189 │ 38 │ 28 │
  • └───────────┴───────┴───────┴───────┴────────────┴───────────┘
  • The following table gives in £ million the gross circulation of
  • currency notes on March 31 of each year:—
  • £ million. £ million.
  • 1900 19 1909 30½
  • 1902 21 1910 36½
  • 1904 25½ 1911 36½
  • 1906 30 1912 41
  • 1908 31½ 1913 46
  • The following table gives the average monthly gross circulation in £
  • million (at 1s. 4d. the rupee throughout):—
  • £ million.
  • Five years ending 1880–1881 8½
  • ” ” 1885–1886 9½
  • ” ” 1890–1891 11½
  • ” ” 1895–1896 19
  • ” ” 1900–1901 17½
  • ” ” 1905–1906 24
  • ” ” 1910–1911 32
  • The year 1911–1912 38
  • 10. The rules governing the reserves which must be held against
  • currency notes are very simple. A certain fixed maximum, the amount of
  • which is determined from time to time by law, may be held invested,
  • chiefly in Government of India rupee securities. Up to 1890 the
  • invested portion of the reserve amounted to 600 lakhs (Rs. 600,00,000).
  • This was increased to 700 lakhs in 1891, to 800 lakhs in 1892, to 1000
  • lakhs in 1897; to 1200 lakhs, of which 200 lakhs might be in English
  • Government securities, in 1905; and to 1400 lakhs (£9,333,000), of
  • which 400 lakhs (£2,666,000) might be in English securities, in 1911.
  • The interest thus accruing on the invested portion of the reserve,
  • less the expenses of the Paper Currency Department, is credited to the
  • general revenues of the Government under the head “Profits of Note
  • Circulation.” This interest now amounts to £300,000 annually.
  • Up to 1898 the whole of the rest was held in silver coin in India.
  • Under the Gold Note Act of 1898 the Government of India obtained
  • authority to hold any part of the metallic portion of the reserve in
  • gold coin. An Act of 1900 gave authority to hold part of this gold
  • in London; but this power was only intended to be used for purposes
  • of temporary convenience, and, although some gold was held in London
  • in 1899 and 1900, this was not part of a permanent policy. An Act of
  • 1905, however, gave full power to the Government to hold the metallic
  • portion of the reserve, or any part of it, at its free discretion,
  • either in London or in India, or partly in both places, and also in
  • gold coin or bullion, or in rupees or silver bullion, subject only to
  • the exception that all coined rupees should be kept in India and not
  • in London. The actual figures, showing where the gold reserve has been
  • held at certain dates, are given below.
  • GOLD IN PAPER CURRENCY RESERVE (£ MILLION).
  • ┌───────────┬───────────┬────────────┬────────┐
  • │ March 31. │ In India. │ In London. │ Total. │
  • ├───────────┼───────────┼────────────┼────────┤
  • │ 1897 │ nil │ nil │ nil │
  • │ 1898 │ ¼ │ nil │ ¼ │
  • │ 1899 │ 2 │ nil │ 2 │
  • │ 1900 │ 7½ │ 1½ │ 9 │
  • │ 1901 │ 6 │ nil │ 6 │
  • │ 1902 │ 7 │ nil │ 7 │
  • │ 1903 │ 10 │ nil │ 10 │
  • │ 1904 │ 11 │ nil │ 11 │
  • │ 1905 │ 10½ │ nil │ 10½ │
  • │ 1906 │ 4 │ 7 │ 11 │
  • │ 1907 │ 3½ │ 7 │ 10½ │
  • │ 1908 │ 2½ │ 3½ │ 6 │
  • │ 1909 │ nil │ 1½ │ 1½ │
  • │ 1910 │ 6 │ 2½ │ 8½ │
  • │ 1911 │ 6 │ 5 │ 11 │
  • │ 1912 │ 15½ │ 5½ │ 21 │
  • │ 1913 │ 19½ │ 6 │ 25½ │
  • └───────────┴───────────┴────────────┴────────┘
  • DISTRIBUTION OF RESERVE, MARCH 31, 1913.
  • Rupees £11,000,000
  • Gold in India 19,500,000
  • Gold in London 6,000,000
  • Securities 9,500,000
  • —————–
  • £46,000,000
  • ===========
  • 11. Gold was originally accumulated in the reserve in India through
  • the automatic working of the rule by which rupees could be obtained
  • in exchange for sovereigns. After exchange touched par in 1898, we
  • see from the above table that gold began to flow in. When in 1900 the
  • accumulations reached £5,000,000, attempts were made, in accordance
  • with the recommendations of the Fowler Committee, to force it into
  • circulation.[26] After the comparative failure of this attempt, and
  • the passing of the Act of 1905, as described above, the Paper Currency
  • Chest in England was instituted, and by 1906 about two–thirds of the
  • gold which had been accumulated up to that time was transferred to this
  • fund. This stock is kept at the Bank of England, but is not included in
  • the Bank of England’s own reserve. Gold which is thus transferred is
  • said to be “ear–marked.” The fund is under the absolute control of the
  • Secretary of State for India in Council, and transferences to it are,
  • so far as the accounts of the Bank of England are concerned, reckoned
  • as exports. Policy as to how much of the gold should be kept in London
  • and how much in India has fluctuated from time to time. I shall discuss
  • it in Chapter VI.
  • 12. These are the chief relevant facts of law. Important considerations
  • of policy do not lie so plainly on the surface. Since 1899 the
  • circulation of notes has more than doubled, but the invested portion
  • of the reserve has been increased by only 40 per cent. As the note
  • issue has become more firmly established and more widely used, a
  • growing and not a diminishing proportion of the reserves has been kept
  • in liquid form. This is due to a deliberate change of policy, and
  • to the use of the liquid part of the reserve for a new purpose. The
  • bullion reserve is no longer held solely with the object of securing
  • the ability to meet the obligation to cash notes in legal tender
  • (rupees or gold) on demand. It is now utilised for holding gold by
  • means of which the Secretary of State can support exchange in times of
  • depression and maintain at par the gold value of the rupee. For the
  • sake of this object the Government are content to forego the extra
  • profit which might be gained by increasing the investments, and have
  • steadily increased instead (as shown in the table on p. 49) the gold
  • portion of the reserve. The Paper Currency Reserve is thus used to
  • provide the gold which is the first line of defence of the currency
  • system as a whole, and hence can hardly be distinguished from the
  • resources of the Gold Standard Reserve proper.
  • It is not profitable to discuss the reserve policy of the Paper
  • Currency under existing conditions in isolation from the other reserves
  • which the Government now hold. The whole problem of the reserves,
  • regarded as a current practical question, is dealt with in Chapter VI.
  • In this chapter I wish to look at the matter from a broad standpoint,
  • with an eye to the proper policy in a future, possibly remote.
  • 13. The present policy was designed in its main outlines at a time when
  • notes formed an insignificant part of the country’s currency, and when
  • the system of circles still greatly restricted their usefulness. The
  • notes were at first, and were intended to be, little more than silver
  • certificates. The rules governing the Reserve were framed (see § 3) at
  • a time which, to the modern student of currency, is almost prehistoric,
  • under the influence of the Bank of England’s system of note issue and
  • of the British Bank Act,—an Act which had the effect of destroying
  • the importance of notes as a form of currency in England, and which it
  • has been found impossible, in spite of some attempts, to imitate in
  • the note–using countries of Europe. As has been urged in Chapter II.,
  • England is in matters of currency the worst possible model for India;
  • for in no country are the conditions so wholly different. A good deal
  • of experience with regard to note issues has now been accumulated
  • elsewhere which ought some day to prove useful to India if her English
  • rulers can sufficiently free themselves from their English traditions
  • and preconceptions. Let me first give a short account of the nature of
  • the seasonal demand for money in India; and then discuss the salient
  • respects in which her system of note issue differs from those of
  • typical note–using countries.
  • 14. In contrast to what happens in the case of most note systems, the
  • _gross_ circulation in India diminishes instead of increasing during
  • the busy seasons of autumn and spring. This is due to the fact that the
  • Government Treasuries, the Presidency Banks, and possibly other banks
  • and large merchants, use the notes as a convenient method of avoiding
  • the custody of large quantities of silver during the slack season when
  • rupees are not wanted.[27] That is to say, they deposit their surplus
  • rupees during the summer in the Currency Reserve, holding their own
  • reserves in the form of notes; and when the drain of rupees begins up
  • country for moving the crops these notes have to be cashed. Thus in
  • the dull season currency is largely in the hands of a class of persons
  • and institutions which finds it most convenient to hold it in the form
  • of notes, and in the busy season it is dissipated through the country
  • and is, temporarily, in the hands of smaller men—cultivators who have
  • sold their crops, small moneylenders and others, who habitually deal in
  • small sums for which the rupee is the most convenient unit, or who do
  • not yet understand the use of notes and still prefer, therefore, to be
  • paid in actual coin.
  • 15. Notes themselves, however, are used also, and to an increasing
  • extent, for moving crops; and, although the _gross_ circulation
  • falls during the busy season for the reasons just given, the _active_
  • circulation (_i.e._, excluding the holdings of the Government
  • Treasuries and the Presidency Banks) does, as we should expect,
  • _increase_ at this time of year. When, therefore, we are considering
  • what proportion of liquid reserves ought to be maintained, or what part
  • the note issue plays in supplying the much needed element of elasticity
  • in the busy season, it is of the active rather than of the gross
  • circulation that we must take account. The figures are given below in
  • lakhs of rupees:—
  • ┌────────────┬───────────────┬───────────────┬───────────────┐
  • │ Months of │ 1906–1907. │ 1907–1908.(a) │ 1908–1909. │
  • │ Minimum ├───────┬───────┼───────┬───────┼───────┬───────┤
  • │and Maximum │ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • │ active │ 1. │ 2. │ 1. │ 2. │ 1. │ 2. │
  • │circulation.│ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • ├────────────┼───────┼───────┼───────┼───────┼───────┼───────┤
  • │Min.— │ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • │ June │ 31,15 │ 14,41 │ 35,04 │ 13,01 │ 31,13 │ 14,12 │
  • │ July │ 32,43 │ 12,87 │ 34,43 │ 15,89 │ 31,58 │ 16,52 │
  • │ August │ 32,11 │ 13,59 │ 34,30 │ 17,47 │ 31,90 │ 12,71 │
  • │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • │Max.— │ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • │ January │ 35,54 │ 9,11 │ 33,20 │ 8,62 │ 33,67 │ 8,54 │
  • │ Feb │ 36,07 │ 9,42 │ 33,28 │ 9,38 │ 34,36 │ 9,50 │
  • │ March │ 36,45 │ 10,50 │ 32,61 │ 14,28 │ 34,95 │ 10,54 │
  • └────────────┴───────┴───────┴───────┴───────┴───────┴───────┘
  • ┌────────────┬───────────────┬───────────────┬───────────────┐
  • │ Months of │ 1909–1910. │ 1910–1911. │ 1911–1912. │
  • │ Minimum ├───────┬───────┼───────┬───────┼───────┬───────┤
  • │and Maximum │ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • │ active │ 1. │ 2. │ 1. │ 2. │ 1. │ 2. │
  • │circulation.│ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • ├────────────┼───────┼───────┼───────┼───────┼───────┼───────┤
  • │Min.— │ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • │ June │ 34,19 │ 15,10 │ 36,58 │ 20,37 │ 38,44 │ 19,78 │
  • │ July │ 34,31 │ 17,22 │ 36,56 │ 22,60 │ 39,15 │ 21,14 │
  • │ August │ 35,49 │ 16,25 │ 36,86 │ 21,20 │ 40,99 │ 18,70 │
  • │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • │Max.— │ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • │ January │ 41,47 │ 10,37 │ 39,67 │ 11,45 │ 44,14 │ 10,56 │
  • │ Feb │ 41,45 │ 9,12 │ 40,95 │ 12,57 │ 44,58 │ 12,61 │
  • │ March │ 39,98 │ 14,43 │ 40,17 │ 14,82 │ 44,61 │ 16,75 │
  • └────────────┴───────┴───────┴───────┴───────┴───────┴───────┘
  • Columns(1): Active circulation. Columns(2): Holdings of Treasuries and
  • Presidency Banks, _i.e._, _excess_ of gross over active circulation.
  • (a) An abnormal year.
  • We see, therefore, that, while the notes held by the Presidency Banks
  • and the Treasury fall in the busy season by 700 to 1000 lakhs below
  • their highest figure in the slack season, the _active_ circulation
  • _increases_ in the busy season over its lowest figure in the slack
  • season by about 400 lakhs (in the latest year for which we have
  • figures, 1911–1912, by more than 600 lakhs). Of course this is not a
  • very high proportion of the total increase in the volume of currency
  • which is required in the busy season. But it is an amount well worth
  • considering, and these figures put the note issue in a more favourable
  • light as a source of currency in the busy season than is usually
  • realised. The relative importance of notes and rupees[28] in supplying
  • the seasonal needs of trade is well shown in the following table:—
  • NET ABSORPTION (IN LAKHS OF RUPEES) OF CURRENCY INTO CIRCULATION
  • (+) OR RETURN OF CURRENCY FROM CIRCULATION (–).(a)
  • Key
  • R. = Rupees.
  • N. = Notes.
  • ┌─────────┬───────────┬───────────┬───────────┬───────────┬───────────┐
  • │ │ April to │ July to │ Oct. to │ Jan. to │ │
  • │ │ June. │ Sept. │ Dec. │ March. │Whole Year.│
  • │ Year. ├─────┬─────┼─────┬─────┼─────┬─────┼─────┬─────┼─────┬─────┤
  • │ │ R. │ N. │ R. │ N. │ R. │ N. │ R. │ N. │ R. │ N. │
  • ├─────────┼─────┼─────┼─────┼─────┼─────┼─────┼─────┼─────┼─────┼─────┤
  • │1905─1906│– 116│+ 83│+ 339│+ 58│+1139│+ 175│+ 88│+ 101│+1450│+ 417│
  • │1906─1907│– 24│– 148│+ 600│+ 220│+1068│+ 310│+ 156│ 0│+1800│+ 382│
  • │1907─1908│+ 182│– 141│+ 145│+ 29│+ 735│– 126│– 670│– 146│+ 392│– 384│
  • │1908─1909│– 798│– 148│– 718│+ 198│+ 339│+ 112│– 311│+ 72│–1488│+ 234│
  • │1909─1910│+ 47│– 76│– 58│+ 286│+1065│+ 130│+ 268│+ 163│+1322│+ 503│
  • │1910─1911│– 287│– 340│– 100│+ 147│+ 722│+ 144│– 1│+ 68│+ 334│+ 19│
  • │1911─1912│– 130│– 173│+ 220│+ 262│+ 499│+ 356│+ 565│– 1│+1154│+ 444│
  • └─────────┴─────┴─────┴─────┴─────┴─────┴─────┴─────┴─────┴─────┴─────┘
  • (a) In this table rupees (but not notes) in the Presidency Banks are
  • treated as being in circulation. It would be a troublesome piece of
  • work to exclude them, and would make, I think, very little difference
  • to the result. The main variable element in the reserves of the
  • Presidency Banks is the notes, and these are duly allowed for in the
  • above table.
  • The above table is exceedingly instructive. It shows that the notes
  • supply an increasingly important proportion of the seasonal demand for
  • additional currency. It shows also that the demand for notes from one
  • year to another has been of a steadier character than the demand for
  • rupees. In the period of depression from the winter of 1907 until
  • the autumn of 1908 the active rupee circulation was much harder hit
  • than the active note circulation; for in the six months January to
  • June 1908 the rupee circulation fell by 1468 lakhs, while the active
  • note circulation fell by 294 lakhs, and for the nine months January to
  • September 1908 the former fell by 2186 lakhs, while the latter fell by
  • only 96 lakhs.[29]
  • 16. Let me now turn to three salient characteristics, all closely
  • connected with one another, and chiefly distinguishing the Indian
  • system of paper currency from those of most note–using countries.
  • In the first place, the function of note–issue is wholly dissociated
  • in India from the function of banking. To discount bills is one of the
  • functions of banks. Where there are Central Banks with the right of
  • note issue, they are usually able, subject to various restrictions, to
  • increase their note issue at certain seasons of the year in order to
  • discount more bills.
  • In the second place, as there is no Central Bank in India, there is
  • no Government Banker. It is true that the Government keep some funds
  • (rather more than £2,000,000, as a rule) at the three Presidency Banks.
  • But the bulk of their floating resources is held either in London
  • or in cash in their own Treasuries in India. Thus, as in the United
  • States, the Government maintains an independent Treasury system. This
  • means, just as it does in the United States, that, at certain seasons
  • of the year when taxes are flowing in fastest, funds may sometimes be
  • withdrawn from the money market. The difficulty and inconvenience to
  • which this system has given rise in the United States are well known
  • to those who are acquainted with the recent financial history of that
  • country. The ill effects of it are to a certain extent counteracted,
  • in the case of India, by a transference of these funds to London and
  • a release of the accumulating currency in India through the sale of
  • Council Bills. But this is not a perfect solution.
  • The third and most important point arises out of the first two. The
  • Indian currency is internally (_i.e._, apart from the import of funds
  • from foreign countries) absolutely inelastic. There is no method
  • whatever by which the volume of currency can be _temporarily_ expanded
  • by some credit device _within_ the country to meet the regularly
  • recurrent seasonal demands of trade. Cheque–using countries meet the
  • difficulty by increasing the volume of credit created by the banks;
  • most note–using countries meet it by the Central Bank’s discounting
  • a greater volume of home bills than usual, and thus increasing its
  • note circulation temporarily, without a corresponding increase in its
  • metallic reserves. Except for a certain proportion of the business
  • which is transacted by cheque (chiefly in the Presidency towns), there
  • is nothing corresponding to this in India. Additional currency,
  • whether notes or rupees, can be obtained in two ways only—by buying
  • Council Bills in London or by bringing in sovereigns. Additional notes
  • or rupees can be obtained in payment of Council Bills or in exchange
  • for sovereigns, but not otherwise. The fact that a temporary increase
  • in the media of exchange can only be obtained by bringing in funds from
  • abroad partly explains the high rate of discount in India during the
  • busy season. This question will be more fully dealt with in Chapter
  • VIII. But the main point can be put briefly thus:—If funds are to be
  • attracted from abroad for a short period (say three months), the rate
  • of interest must be high enough to repay the cost of remittance _both_
  • ways, which in the case of places so remote from one another as India
  • and London is considerable. If there were some authority which could
  • create credit money in India during the busy season, it would not be
  • necessary for the rate of discount to rise so high.
  • 17. The objections to the existing arrangements largely arise,
  • therefore, out of the absence of a State Bank. This question is further
  • discussed in Chapters VI. and VII. I feel little doubt that India
  • ought to have a State Bank, associated in a greater or less degree
  • with the Government. The Government is drifting year by year into
  • doing more business of an essentially banking character; and as time
  • goes on it will become increasingly objectionable to dissociate some
  • of the functions of modern State Banking from others. But there is a
  • considerable weight of opinion in favour of the view that the time for
  • the establishment of a Central Indian Bank is not yet ripe. In the
  • meantime is any partial remedy possible for the evils dealt with above?
  • 18. I am inclined to think that such a remedy is possible. The manner
  • in which the reserve against the note issue must be kept is needlessly
  • restricted. Apart from that portion which is permanently invested, the
  • whole must be kept in gold and silver. This is in imitation of the
  • rules governing the Bank of England’s note–issue. But the note–issuing
  • banks of Europe afford a better model. It might be proper to prescribe
  • by law the holding of a certain proportion of the reserve (say
  • one–third[30]) in gold or silver coin. A further amount might be held,
  • as at present, permanently invested in Government of India securities.
  • With regard to the rest the Government should, I think, permit itself
  • much greater latitude. It should be free to lend it out on suitable
  • security, either in India or London, for periods not exceeding three
  • months. In London it should be lent out on the same conditions as the
  • Cash Balances and the Gold–Exchange Standard (see Chapter VI.) are lent
  • out at present. To lend in London would be technically convenient (for
  • the reasons given on p. 172), but it would not cure the inelasticity
  • of the Indian system. Part of the reserve should, therefore, be lent
  • out _in India_. Suitable security for this purpose would be Government
  • of India securities (which would have indirectly the effect of
  • increasing the market for Rupee Paper) and Bills of Exchange of the
  • highest class. It is not worth while to discuss here in detail the
  • precise methods which it would be proper for the Government to adopt in
  • lending out funds in India either from the Cash Balances or from the
  • Paper Currency Reserve. Whether it were done through the Presidency
  • Banks only, or whether an approved list of borrowers of Government
  • funds were to be drawn up for India as is already the case for London,
  • the effect on the Indian Money Market would be much the same. The
  • needed element of elasticity would be obtained, and the present
  • absolute dependence of India on London for an expansion of currency
  • would be modified. I shall return to this proposal again in Chapters
  • VI. and VIII. Its full force cannot be shown until we have discussed
  • the question of the Secretary of State’s reserves as a whole, and have
  • studied in detail the movements of the Indian bank rate.
  • A good deal of opinion has been expressed in India lately in favour
  • of loans being made there from the Government’s Cash Balances. In so
  • far as this opinion demands some new machinery by which on suitable
  • occasions the Government can lend out funds in India herself, the
  • evil which it seeks to remedy is a real one. And the method proposed
  • above is, I believe, the right way in which to approach the problem’s
  • solution.
  • 19. The discussion of this question will be concluded in Chapters VI.,
  • VII., and VIII. But it will be well to say a few words at once with a
  • view to avoiding misunderstandings on two points. It has been necessary
  • in the immediate past to use the Paper Currency Reserve as a part of
  • the general reserves held for ensuring the absolute stability of the
  • rupee. I do not advocate the lending out in India of any part of this
  • reserve, or of the Cash Balances, at the expense of the stability of
  • the Gold Standard, or until adequate measures can be taken in other
  • ways to ensure this. But I think the time has practically arrived when
  • the whole of the liquid portion of the Paper Currency Reserve is not
  • required, in addition to the Gold Standard Reserve proper, for this
  • purpose. A busy season will soon come when the Government might lend
  • some part of its reserves in India without endangering in the least the
  • stability of its system and to the great advantage of Indian trade. It
  • ought, at least, to have the power to do this.
  • 20. The remaining point is this. A provision of the above kind for
  • introducing some degree of elasticity into the Indian currency system
  • would not be very useful in a season such as that of the autumn and
  • winter of 1905–6 or of the autumn of 1912–13, when there was a demand
  • for rupees on so great a scale that it could only be met from the
  • Mint. Additions to the currency of this kind can only be made by
  • importing funds from abroad. But these are permanent not temporary
  • additions. Every such addition makes a similar demand for new coinage
  • in succeeding seasons less likely. They are abnormal, and recent
  • history seems to show that these permanent additions to the Indian
  • currency are not made by slow and steady accretions year by year, but
  • in great bursts of activity at considerable intervals. In years of
  • normal activity, therefore, there may be considerable stores of rupees
  • lying idle in the reserves beyond what is required for the safety
  • of the currency. Indian bankers and merchants can only get at these
  • rupees, so as to obtain a net addition to the currency, by buying
  • sovereigns or Council Bills in London. If the use for the additional
  • currency is only temporary, the cost of transport or remittance is
  • great enough to make it not worth their while to get this addition
  • until the Indian rate of discount has been forced up to a high level.
  • If the Government were free on such occasions to lend out some part of
  • the rupees, against high–class security, at 5 or even 6 per cent, this
  • would be profitable to the Government, and would prevent the discount
  • rate from reaching a level which is caused, not by anxiety, but merely
  • by the expense arising out of the distance between London and Calcutta.
  • CHAPTER IV
  • THE PRESENT POSITION OF GOLD IN INDIA AND PROPOSALS FOR A GOLD CURRENCY
  • 1. The Fowler Committee of 1898 avowed themselves in favour of the
  • ultimate establishment of a gold _currency_ in India as well as a gold
  • _standard_. Paragraph 54 of their Report runs as follows:—
  • We are in favour of making the British sovereign a legal tender and
  • a current coin in India. We also consider that, at the same time,
  • the Indian mints should be thrown open to the unrestricted coinage
  • of gold on terms and conditions such as govern the three Australian
  • branches of the Royal Mint. The result would be that, under identical
  • conditions, the sovereign would be coined and would circulate both
  • at home and in India. Looking forward as we do to the effective
  • establishment in India of a gold standard and currency based on the
  • principles of the free in–flow and out–flow of gold, we recommend
  • these measures for adoption.
  • The first part of their proposal was carried out immediately, and, in
  • 1899, British gold was declared legal tender at the rate of a sovereign
  • to 15 rupees. It appeared at first as if their further object of a gold
  • currency might soon be attained also. The principle of minting gold in
  • India was accepted both by the Secretary of State and by the Viceroy’s
  • Council, and in 1900 Sir Clinton Dawkins actually announced that it
  • had been decided to constitute a branch of the Mint at Bombay for this
  • purpose. In the meantime an attempt was made, described in §4, to force
  • sovereigns into circulation. But the attempt failed, and Sir Clinton
  • Dawkins’s proposal was never carried out. As Sir G. Fleetwood Wilson
  • explained in the Legislative Council in 1911—
  • A number of technical and other difficulties were raised by the
  • Royal Mint, which ultimately wore out the patience of Lord Curzon’s
  • Government. In the interval the Kolar gold mining companies had mostly
  • entered into agreements for the sale of their produce in England; and
  • the prospect of their bringing their gold to be refined and coined
  • at Bombay—which was to be the _pièce de résistance_ of our gold
  • mint—was thus deferred. In the circumstances it was decided in 1902
  • to drop the project, and to wait until a stronger demand for a local
  • gold coinage should arise.
  • This account of the matter, however, scarcely does justice to the part
  • played by the British Treasury in defeating the project. The official
  • correspondence lately published,[31] shows that for two years (from
  • 1899 to 1901) they made, as Sir G. F. Wilson states, a succession of
  • technical difficulties in a spirit of scarcely veiled hostility to the
  • whole proposal. But eventually (in May 1901) a scheme was arranged,
  • acceptable both to the Mint at home and to the authorities in India.
  • At this point in the negotiations the natural instincts of the Treasury
  • officials became uncontrollable, and respect for the independence of
  • the India Office had to be abandoned. Their first line of defence in
  • the form of technical difficulties having been overcome, they fell back
  • upon open argument as to the wisdom from the Indian point of view of
  • the whole project:—
  • While expressing their satisfaction that an agreement has now been
  • reached, my Lords think it desirable, before practical steps are taken
  • to carry out the scheme, to invite Lord George Hamilton to review
  • the arguments originally advanced in favour of the coinage of the
  • sovereign in India, and to consider whether the course of events, in
  • the two years which have elapsed since the proposal was made, has
  • not tended to diminish their force, and to render such advantages as
  • are likely to accrue from the establishment of a branch mint wholly
  • incommensurate with the expense to be incurred.... The gold standard
  • is now firmly established, and the public requires no proof of the
  • intention of the Indian Government not to go back on their policy,
  • which is beyond controversy. Sovereigns are readily attracted to India
  • when required under existing conditions.... On the other hand, the
  • estimates of the Government of India of gold available for coinage in
  • that country are less than was anticipated, nor is any considerable
  • increase expected, at any rate for some time.... The staff would
  • have to be maintained in idleness for a large part of the year at
  • considerable cost to the Indian Exchequer.... It is of course for Lord
  • George Hamilton to decide whether, in spite of these objections, the
  • scheme is to be proceeded with.
  • The India Office answered thus:—
  • The establishment of a mint for the coinage of gold in India is the
  • clearest outward sign that can be given of the consummation of the
  • new currency system; and to abandon the proposal now must attract
  • attention and provoke criticism and unrest.... His Lordship is not
  • inclined to abandon the scheme at the stage which it has now reached.
  • The Treasury’s reply was cogent:—
  • My Lords cannot believe that the position of the gold standard in
  • India will be strengthened, or public confidence in the intentions
  • of the Government confirmed, by providing machinery for obtaining
  • gold coins which is neither demanded nor required by the mercantile
  • community; while, on the other hand, the failure or only partial
  • success of a gold mint would undoubtedly be pointed to by the
  • opponents of the gold standard policy (although without justification)
  • as evidence of the breakdown of that policy.
  • The Treasury’s arguments were, as they deserved to be, successful.
  • After consultation with the Government of India, who drew attention to
  • the agreements (referred to by Sir G. F. Wilson above) entered into by
  • the mining companies, the Secretary of State agreed (Feb. 6, 1903) to
  • the project’s indefinite postponement. “No public explanation was given
  • in India of this sudden recession from what has hitherto been regarded
  • as an essential feature of the currency policy inaugurated in 1893 and
  • definitely established on the recommendations of the Currency Committee
  • of 1898.”[32]
  • 2. From 1903 up to 1910 little was heard of proposals for an active
  • encouragement of the circulation of gold. But the intention had never
  • been repudiated, and in the Budget debate of 1910 Sir James Meston,
  • then Financial Secretary to the Government, spoke as follows:—
  • The broad lines of our action and our objects are clear and
  • unmistakable, and there has been no great or fundamental sacrifice of
  • consistency in progress towards our ideal. Since the Fowler Commission
  • that progress has been real and unbroken. There is still one great
  • step forward before the ideal can be reached. We have linked India
  • with the gold countries of the world, we have reached a gold–exchange
  • standard, which we are steadily developing and improving. The next
  • and final step is a true gold currency. That, I have every hope, will
  • come in time, but we cannot force it. The backwardness of our banking
  • arrangements, the habits and suspicions of the people, the infancy of
  • co–operation—all stand in the way. But the final step will come when
  • the country is ripe for it. I trust that will not long be delayed;
  • for when it comes, it will obliterate all the mistakes, all the
  • inconveniences, all the artificialities, of our present position.
  • In March 1911 matters were carried a step further, Sir Guy Fleetwood
  • Wilson replying in the Legislative Council to Sir Vithaldas Thackersey
  • (who had argued that a 10–rupee gold coin ought to be minted and put
  • into active circulation in India) that “much has happened since 1902
  • which justifies the reopening of the question.” In a despatch to
  • the Secretary of State, dated May 16, 1912, the Government of India
  • proposed to open the Bombay Mint to the coinage of sovereigns. This is
  • an exceedingly confused document. It is mainly directed to showing that
  • an increased use of gold as currency in India would be advantageous to
  • the system. But, apart from the validity of this argument, it is not
  • clearly shown in what way the establishment of a mint would effect the
  • desired purpose; indeed it is explicitly admitted that “in proposing to
  • open a gold mint it is not our intention to induce thereby an increased
  • flow of gold to India. Indeed were that our purpose we recognise
  • that it would certainly fail.” The despatch reads as though it were
  • an attempt to reconcile divergent and contradictory views which had
  • received expression. The British Treasury, however, has again come to
  • the rescue. They have stipulated either that the branch mint should
  • be under Imperial management, which would be inconvenient, or that it
  • should be wholly separate, which would be expensive. Accordingly, in a
  • despatch, dated October 18, 1912, the Secretary of State suggested to
  • the Government of India that instead of sovereigns Indian gold coins
  • of the nomination of, say, 10 rupees should be coined at Bombay. The
  • Government of India have replied that they prefer this proposal to the
  • conditions demanded by the Treasury, and that they contemplate making
  • inquiries as to Indian opinion on it. This is how the matter stands at
  • present.
  • The actual policy of the Government of India since 1900 as regards gold
  • currency has been, in my opinion, well judged. But these negotiations
  • show that the authorities are still doubtful as to the advantages of
  • the existing system.
  • 3. Up to 1870 the English currency system was the envy of the rest
  • of the world, and it was supposed that the excellencies of the
  • practical working of this system were due to the fact that the actual
  • circulating medium of the country was gold. This, it was thought,
  • must be the only really safe way of maintaining absolute stability.
  • Germany, accordingly, when she instituted her gold standard, prohibited
  • the issue of notes of a less denomination than 100 marks, in order
  • that gold might actually circulate from hand to hand to a maximum
  • possible amount. For similar reasons the business community showed
  • themselves immovably hostile to Lord Goschen’s proposals for the
  • issue of one–pound notes in England. While other countries, who have,
  • with few exceptions, found the expense of a gold medium of exchange
  • prohibitively heavy, have nevertheless envied those who could afford
  • it, and have adapted their laws, even when they could not afford to
  • adapt their practice, to a currency of gold.
  • But in recent years the evolution of currency has, for reasons which
  • I have elaborated in Chapter II., embarked upon a new stage of
  • development, and all this is changed. In England the use of a cheque
  • currency has grown so universal that the composition of the metallic
  • coin has become a matter of secondary importance. In Germany the
  • policy of 1876 has been deliberately reversed by a recent revision of
  • the Bank Act, and 20–mark notes are now issued with the deliberate
  • object of keeping as much gold as possible in the bank and wasting as
  • little as possible in circulation. This new policy is likely to be
  • extended in the future. The President of the Reichsbank, addressing the
  • Budget Committee of the Reichstag in January 1913, argued that the rule
  • laid down in 1906, forbidding the free issue of 20–and 50–mark notes to
  • an amount exceeding £15,000,000, would have to be repealed, the issue
  • of these notes in 1912 having exceeded the limit by £11,500,000; and
  • he went on to say that they must, in the interests of sound policy,
  • increase the issue of notes and thus hold a larger quantity of gold in
  • their reserves.
  • In other countries, where actual currency is the principal medium of
  • exchange, the attempt to introduce gold as the medium passing from
  • hand to hand has been for the most part abandoned. A great part of
  • the new gold has flowed, during the last ten years, into the reserves
  • of the State Banks, and a comparatively small amount only can have
  • found its way into circulation. In Austria–Hungary, for example,
  • after the currency reform of 1892, attempts were made to force gold
  • into circulation just as they were in India. They luckily failed. The
  • authorities of the Austro–Hungarian Bank now keep all the gold they
  • can in their central reserves, and they are not likely to make another
  • attempt to dissipate it. The same kind of thing occurred in Russia.
  • After establishing with difficulty a gold standard, they began with
  • the theory, and have since abandoned it, that a gold currency was the
  • natural corollary. Other examples could be given. A gold standard is
  • the rule now in all parts of the world; but a gold currency is the
  • exception. The “sound currency” maxims of twenty or thirty years ago
  • are still often repeated, but they have not been successful, nor ought
  • they to have been, in actually influencing affairs. I think I am right
  • in saying that Egypt is now the only country in the world in which
  • actual gold coins are the principal medium of exchange.[33]
  • The reasons for this change are easily seen. It has been found that
  • the expense of a gold circulation is insupportable, and that large
  • economies can be safely effected by the use of some cheaper substitute;
  • and it has been found further that gold in the pockets of the people
  • is not in the least available at a time of crisis or to meet a foreign
  • drain. For these purposes the gold resources of a country must be
  • centralised.
  • This view has long been maintained by economists.[34] Ricardo’s
  • proposals for a sound and economical currency were based on the
  • principle of keeping gold out of actual circulation. Mill (_Political
  • Economy_, Bk. III. chap. xxii. § 2) argued that “gold wanted for
  • exportation is almost invariably drawn from the reserves of banks, and
  • is never likely to be taken from the outside circulation while the
  • banks remain solvent.” While Goschen spoke as follows in 1891 before
  • the London Chamber of Commerce:—
  • We only have as an effective circulation that which is required for
  • the daily wants of the people. You cannot tap that to any extent so
  • as to increase your central stock of gold. You may raise your rate of
  • interest to 6 per cent or 8 per cent, but the bulk of the people will
  • not carry less gold in their pockets than they did before, and I doubt
  • whether, from other quarters, you would be able to get much addition
  • to your central store.
  • But while it is no new theory that gold in the pockets of the people
  • is absolutely useless for the purposes for which a currency reserve
  • is held, all but the highest authorities have believed until fairly
  • recently that no gold standard can be really stable, unless gold
  • actually circulates in the country. The contrary view was distrusted
  • by practical financiers, and only of late years has it become powerful
  • enough to dictate policies. At last, however, Governments have been
  • converted to it, and it is now as much their anxiety to keep gold out
  • of circulation and in their reserves as it was formerly the opposite.
  • A preference for a tangible gold currency is no longer more than a
  • relic of a time when Governments were less trustworthy in these matters
  • than they are now, and when it was the fashion to imitate uncritically
  • the system which had been established in England and had seemed to work
  • so well during the second quarter of the nineteenth century.
  • 4. Let us now apply these general considerations to the case of India.
  • In 1900 an attempt was seriously made to get sovereigns into active
  • circulation, in accordance with the recommendations of the Committee
  • of 1898. It was decided to pay out gold to the public as soon as
  • the stock should exceed five millions sterling, and such payments
  • commenced on January 12, 1900, at the currency offices in Calcutta,
  • Madras, and Bombay. The instructions issued were to tender gold to
  • all presenters of notes, but to give rupees if they were preferred.
  • Later on the Comptroller–General was authorised to send sovereigns to
  • the larger district treasuries. And in March the Post Offices in the
  • Presidency towns began to give gold in payment of money orders, and the
  • Presidency Banks were requested to issue sovereigns in making payments
  • on Government account. These arrangements continued in force throughout
  • the financial year 1900–1901, and by March 31, 1901, the amount put
  • into the hands of the public reached the considerable total of
  • £6,750,000. But of this amount part was exported, not far short of half
  • was returned to Government, and it was supposed that the greater part
  • of the remainder went into the hands of bullion dealers.[35] Further
  • attempts to force gold into circulation were, therefore, abandoned, and
  • a large part of the gold which had accumulated in the currency reserve
  • in India was, a little later on, shipped to England in order to be held
  • “ear–marked” at the Bank of England.
  • Since that time the provisions of the Indian system regarding gold (as
  • already given in Chapter I.) have been as follows:—(1) The sovereign
  • is legal tender in India at 15 rupees to £1; (2) the Government has
  • bound itself by Notification to give rupees for sovereigns at this
  • rate; (3) it is willing, as a rule, to give sovereigns for rupees at
  • this rate, but is under no legal obligation to do so, and will not
  • always exchange large quantities.
  • 5. The defeat of the experiment of 1900–1901 was due to a variety of
  • causes, but mainly, I should suppose, to the long habituation of the
  • Indian public to the use of silver, and to the unsuitability of the
  • sovereign, by reason of its high value, for so poor a country as India.
  • But it is not by any means so certain that an attempt at the present
  • time to put a 10–rupee gold coin into circulation would not meet with
  • more success. Its value would be somewhat less. But, more important
  • than this, the taste of India for gold, as against silver, has been
  • very considerably developed during the last ten years. It will be worth
  • while to summarise the available evidence as to the present position of
  • gold in India.
  • 6. We know, of course, what the annual net addition to the total stock
  • of gold in India (_i.e._, the imports and the production less the
  • exports) approximately is—although the amount of the steady leakage
  • across the land frontiers is usually neglected.[36] We know also how
  • much of this addition is in the form of sovereigns, and how much in the
  • form of gold bars. By making allowance, therefore, for the increase or
  • decrease of sovereigns in the Paper Currency Reserve and the Government
  • Treasuries, we can calculate how many sovereigns have found their way
  • each year into the hands of the public. But as to the uses to which
  • the public put the sovereigns our information is exceedingly vague and
  • unprecise. By far the most careful and valuable discussions of the
  • question are to be found in the Reports of the Comptroller–General
  • of Paper Currency for 1910–11 (written by Mr. R. W. Gillan) and for
  • 1911–12 (written by Mr. M. F. Gauntlett); and I have made free use of
  • these in what follows. First, it will be useful to have before us the
  • statistical information referred to above:—
  • ┌──────────┬────────────┬────────────┬───────────┬─────────┬──────────┐
  • │ │ (1)=(2)+(3)│ (2) │(3)=(4)+(5)│ (4) │ (5) │
  • │ │ │Net Addition│ │ │ │
  • │ │ │ to Gold │ Net │ Net │ Net │
  • │ │Net Addition│ in Paper │ Addition │Addition │ Addition │
  • │ │to Stock of │ Currency │ to Stock │ to │ to │
  • │ │ Gold:— │ Reserve │ of │ Bullion │Sovereigns│
  • │ │ Imports – │ and │ Gold │ in Hands│ in │
  • │ │ Exports + │ Treasuries.│ in Hands │ of │ Hands of │
  • │ │ Production.│ (a) │ of Public.│ Public. │ Public. │
  • ├──────────┼────────────┼────────────┼───────────┼─────────┼──────────┤
  • │ │ £ │ £ │ £ │ £ │ £ │
  • │1901–02 │ 3,223,000 │ –5,000 │ 3,228,000│2,261,000│ 967,000│
  • │1902–03 │ 7,882,000 │ 2,870,000 │ 5,012,000│2,814,000│ 2,198,000│
  • │1903–04 │ 8,963,000 │ 944,000 │ 8,019,000│4,741,000│ 3,278,000│
  • │1904–05 │ 8,841,000 │ 38,000 │ 8,803,000│5,866,000│ 2,937,000│
  • │1905–06 │ 2,698,000 │–6,840,000 │ 9,538,000│5,806,000│ 3,732,000│
  • │1906–07 │ 12,061,000 │ –193,000 │ 12,254,000│7,098,000│ 5,156,000│
  • │1907–08 │ 13,677,000 │ –993,000 │ 14,670,000│7,243,000│ 7,427,000│
  • │1908–09 │ 5,022,000 │–2,843,000 │ 7,865,000│4,422,000│ 3,443,000│
  • │1909–10 │ 16,620,000 │ 6,347,000 │ 10,273,000│7,407,000│ 2,866,000│
  • │1910–11 │ 18,153,000 │ 71,000 │ 18,082,000│9,991,000│ 8,091,000│
  • │1911–12 │ 27,345,000 │ 9,347,000 │ 17,998,000│9,117,000│ 8,881,000│
  • │1912–13(b)│ 24,551,000 │ 4,231,000 │ 20,320,000│9,320,000│11,000,000│
  • └──────────┴────────────┴────────────┴───────────┴─────────┴──────────┘
  • (a) Since 1908 the whole of this has been held in sovereigns.
  • (b) Estimate.
  • 7. The enormous amount of wealth which the Indian people are now
  • devoting to the barren accumulation of gold is brought out very
  • strikingly by the figures in the third column. We know that it is
  • hoarded, used as jewellery, as gilding, even (according to Messrs.
  • Samuel Montagu) as medicine. But these figures are not relevant to our
  • present purpose, and we must turn to the figures in the last column,
  • giving the flow of sovereigns into the hands of the public. What part
  • of this total is employed for ornament, what part for hoarding, what
  • part is melted down, and what part is left truly to serve as currency?
  • In the first place it is estimated that about £1,000,000 “shield”
  • sovereigns are now imported annually. These are sought after for
  • purposes of ornament and stand at a premium.[37] It may be safely
  • assumed, therefore, that they are not used as currency. Further, it
  • is certain that a large number are melted every year and used as
  • bullion. There are two causes of this. “As regards melting,” writes Mr.
  • Gillan,[38] “it is to be noted that for certain purposes the sovereign
  • has at all times an advantage. Gold being sold in 5–and 10–ounce bars,
  • if a jeweller wants only a small quantity, a full–weight sovereign
  • meets his purpose very well, as he knows its exact weight, fineness,
  • and value, and has no trouble in obtaining it. And the sovereign is
  • presumably cheaper than the same quantity of gold in out–of–the–way
  • parts.” There is also another cause, connected with the exchanges;[39]
  • at some times of year the cheapest way of getting gold is to buy
  • sovereigns for rupees from the Government. This explanation is borne
  • out by the fact that there is a steady demand for sovereigns from the
  • Government’s reserves during the summer months. This is the time when
  • the exchanges make it most advantageous to get gold in this way, and
  • when there is least likely to be a demand for sovereigns as a medium
  • of exchange. Many sovereigns, therefore, are melted. But we should be
  • making rather a random guess if we were to attempt to say how many.
  • There must still remain, as the result of recent importations, a
  • large number of sovereigns retained in the hands of the public in
  • that form. But we cannot assume that even this reduced total is truly
  • employed as a medium of exchange. There is a good deal of evidence for
  • supposing that in some parts of the country sovereigns are displacing
  • rupees for the purpose of hoards. This may be the case even when in
  • the first instance the gold is used for currency. The crops may be
  • sold for gold, because the cultivator wants gold for his hoard. “It is
  • quite conceivable,” Mr. Gillan points out, “that the acceptance by the
  • cultivator of gold in payment of his crops is in the nature of barter;
  • that is to say, he takes the gold not as coin merely but for some other
  • purpose, and the return of gold in payment of revenue may be no more
  • than the return of so much as he finds himself unable to retain.”
  • 8. It is clear, then, that we must not fly from a glance at column
  • (1) of the table on p. 76, or even from a glance at column (5), to
  • extravagant conclusions as to the present position of the sovereign in
  • the Indian currency system. Many heavy deductions must be made from the
  • first totals. What direct evidence is there as to the use of gold as
  • currency?
  • “The best indication” (to quote Mr. Gillan again) “of the extent to
  • which sovereigns have established themselves as a regular part of the
  • currency, is to be found in the figures of receipts at Post Offices and
  • Railways.” These have been as follows:—
  • ┌─────────┬───────────────┬───────────────┐
  • │ │ Post Offices. │ Railways. │
  • ├─────────┼───────────────┼───────────────┤
  • │ 1906–07 │ £553,000(a) │ £468,000(a) │
  • │ 1907–08 │ 1,358,000 │ 1,045,000 │
  • │ 1908–09 │ 1,001,000 │ 710,000 │
  • │ 1909–10 │ 265,000 │ 134,000 │
  • │ 1910–11 │ 638,000 │ 597,000 │
  • │ 1911–12 │ 1,363,000 │ 1,222,000 │
  • └─────────┴───────────────┴───────────────┘
  • (a) Second half–year only.
  • It has been estimated by the Paper Currency Department[40] that in
  • 1907, as a result of the absorption of earlier years, not less than
  • two millions were in circulation. But it is supposed that by the end
  • of 1908 nearly the whole of that amount had disappeared. Owing to
  • the depression of that year and the low level of the exchanges, the
  • most profitable employment of the sovereigns was as bullion. This
  • is strikingly borne out by the almost negligible receipts of gold
  • (given below) by Post Offices and Railways in 1909–10. Until 1910
  • the absorption of sovereigns was not sufficient to restore them to a
  • position of any importance as currency. We have chiefly to consider,
  • therefore, the imports of sovereigns since 1910. It is from this source
  • that the sovereigns now circulating as currency are likely to have come.
  • 9. When we proceed to detail, it appears that there are several
  • important parts of India in which the use of the sovereign is still
  • negligible—in Bengal, Eastern Bengal, Assam, the Central Provinces,
  • and Burma. In these provinces it has not begun to make any serious
  • headway. In the United Provinces (for the purchase of wheat) and in
  • certain districts of Madras, on the other hand, sovereigns seem to
  • circulate to some extent, to be received freely by the general public,
  • and to be increasing, though at no sensational rate. In Bombay and the
  • Punjab, particularly in the latter, their use is, however, much more
  • important. Most of the detailed evidence, which is available, refers to
  • the Punjab; and care must be taken not to apply to the whole of India
  • opinions from witnesses in that province as to the present position
  • of gold. The following extract from a resolution passed by the Punjab
  • Chamber of Commerce on June 4, 1912, is interesting. The Chamber “are
  • able to state authoritatively that sovereigns are becoming popular and
  • that their circulation is increasing. They are accepted as legal tender
  • in the bazaars, and this may be attributed to the intelligence of the
  • people and to the fact that all over the East (in China and the Straits
  • Settlements), where the Punjab Sepoys serve in the army and the police,
  • the sovereign is popular. These men remit their earnings in gold, and
  • as there is hardly a village in the Punjab that has not sent a man to
  • these services, it is not surprising that the value of the sovereign
  • is understood It is difficult to say to what extent sovereigns are
  • being hoarded, but that they are held up by the well–to–do to a very
  • considerable amount is undoubtedly the case; and hoarding will continue
  • among the rural population for years to come. With regard to the
  • probable effect this importation of sovereigns may have on exchange,
  • they are of opinion that Government should not rely on the sovereigns
  • that are being absorbed by the districts in exchange for produce and in
  • the shape of savings coming out at any time in any appreciable quantity
  • to support the stability of the rupee.” In 1911–12 the Comptroller
  • of Currency collected a number of district reports as to the growing
  • popularity of gold in the Punjab. They completely corroborate the above
  • summary.
  • 10. Before we pass on to other aspects of the question, a word may be
  • added with special reference to the very large gold imports of quite
  • recent date (_i.e._, in 1912). Popular attention has been attracted
  • by the figures for that year, which are indeed truly remarkable.[41]
  • The gold imports of 1911–12 and 1912–13 (see table on p. 76) were
  • noteworthy as compared with those of former years by reason of their
  • huge aggregate amount; but they were even more noteworthy if regard be
  • had to the very high proportion of sovereigns.
  • I do not believe, however, that a conclusion can fairly be drawn
  • from these figures as to any startling change in the position of the
  • sovereign in India has experienced two very good seasons and has been
  • able, therefore, to accumulate savings unusually large extent for
  • investment in gold ornaments and hoards. Is this altogether inadequate
  • a partial explanation of the recorded figures? I do not, for the
  • following reasons, think it is.
  • In the first place the gold imports for 1911–12 fall short of, and
  • those for 1912–13 do not much exceed, those for 1910–11 if we exclude
  • the additions to the Paper Currency Reserve. Imports of gold for
  • this purpose are, for reasons to be explained in Chapter V., quite
  • independent of the effective desire of India for gold, and occur merely
  • because gold happens in some circumstances to be a cheaper means of
  • remittance to India than Council Bills or any other method. In the
  • second place the conditions of 1912 were somewhat abnormal on account
  • of the unusually large supplies of gold which were available from
  • Australia and Egypt, it is a matter of importing gold from England,
  • those who want it for bullion purposes will generally find it cheaper
  • to buy gold bars than to buy gold coin. But if there are sovereigns
  • on their way from Australia and ready to be diverted to India, or if
  • there are surplus sovereigns available for export at Alexandria, it
  • may be a good deal cheaper to buy these sovereign than to get gold
  • bars from London. The explanation of this, depending on the foreign
  • exchanges, is fully discussed in Chapter V. I suspect, therefore, that
  • a higher proportion than usual of the sovereigns imported in 1912 were
  • put to non–currency uses for which gold bars would have served just
  • as well. If sovereigns rather than bars are imported _from London_
  • it is reasonable to draw the conclusion that the importer (since he
  • must pay a higher price) definitely prefers them. But if sovereigns
  • are imported from Egypt or Australia rather than bars from London, no
  • such conclusion can be drawn. Of the £21,500,000 sovereigns imported
  • into India in 1912 only about £5,000,000 came from London—the rest
  • from Egypt and Australia.[42] From the gross figures of gold imports
  • into India in 1912 even heavier deductions than usual must be made,
  • therefore, before we have an indication of the extent to which
  • additional sovereigns have really found their way into the currency.[43]
  • 11. Perhaps we may fairly sum this evidence up by saying that it goes
  • to show the existence in India at the present time of an enormous
  • demand for gold bullion, a very considerable demand for sovereigns for
  • purposes of hoarding, and a relatively smaller demand for them, chiefly
  • confined to the United Provinces, the Punjab, Madras, and Bombay, for
  • purposes of currency.
  • Those who think that this tendency to use gold coins should be
  • further encouraged have advocated three methods of doing so: by
  • making arrangements for the coinage of sovereigns at Bombay; by the
  • mintage there of some distinctively Indian coin of the denomination
  • of 10 rupees; by a deliberate attempt on the part of Government, as
  • in 1900–1901, to force sovereigns into circulation and to familiarise
  • parts of the country with them where they are at present unfamiliar,
  • even to the extent of refusing to issue more rupees on demand.
  • 12. I have placed these proposals in the order of their probable
  • efficacy to effect their purpose. I see no reason why the first—the
  • coinage of sovereigns at Bombay—should have any effect at all towards
  • increasing the use of sovereigns as currency. Four types of occasion
  • can be distinguished on which gold bars might be presented at Bombay
  • for coinage:—
  • (_a_) Gold might be deliberately imported from England for the purpose;
  • or it might occasionally happen that importers of gold bars, having
  • temporarily miscalculated the demand for bars, would wish to sell
  • these bars to the Government.
  • (_b_) Owners of Indian gold mines might conceivably find it worth their
  • while to suspend the arrangements they have made in recent years with
  • English refiners and might sell their gold (about £2,000,000 annually)
  • to the Bombay Mint. Whether or not they would find it worth while to do
  • this would presumably depend on the facilities for refining in India
  • and the terms offered by the Bombay Mint.
  • (_c_) The habits of the people might be changing, the importation of
  • new bars from England ceasing, and the people wishing to get rid of the
  • bars and ornaments they already had.
  • (_d_) In times of famine or depression the people might sell their bars
  • and ornaments to the Mint when they were driven to turn their ultimate
  • resources into money.
  • Provided the Bombay Mint did not offer to coin on more favourable terms
  • than the British Mint, which presumably it would not do, it seems
  • exceedingly unlikely that bar gold would be imported from England on
  • purpose to be coined in India rather than in England. But if this
  • were to happen, it would have no consequences worth thinking about.
  • The place of mintage is a matter of indifference. In all the other
  • eventualities, suggested above, the gold is brought to the Mint, not to
  • satisfy a demand for new gold currency, but because the owners of the
  • gold wish to sell it. The sellers would take payment in sovereigns,
  • notes, or rupees (since the former can always be exchanged for the
  • latter), as might suit their convenience. In cases (_c_) and (_d_) the
  • Government would probably be forced in the end to export the sovereigns
  • it had itself minted, and to bear the cost of export as well as the
  • cost of minting.
  • The chief result of mintage at Bombay, therefore (assuming that the
  • terms for coming were substantially the same as in England), would be
  • a small saving of expense to sellers of gold in India. Importers of
  • gold bars would be saved occasionally a small loss of interest due to
  • miscalculation; owners of Indian gold mines might conceivably pay, at
  • the expense of Government, infinitesimally higher dividends; the people
  • turning their hoards into money would be able to save the expense of
  • sending the gold to England. A corresponding cost would fall on the
  • Government, for mintage in the first instance and sometimes for export
  • afterwards. These consequences, whether desirable or not, have very
  • little to do with currency questions. The last of them—the making it
  • easier to turn hoards into money—is very likely desirable. But all
  • of them could be brought about more cheaply without the establishment
  • of a Bombay Mint. It would be sufficient if the Government were to
  • publish terms on which it was ready to buy gold bars. It might be a
  • real convenience if Government notified its readiness to purchase
  • bars tendered in India at Rs. 58 annas 5 per ounce[44] (payable in
  • silver or notes or sterling drafts on London or in sovereigns, on the
  • present system, if they were available).[45] The Government would be
  • involved, from time to time, in the cost of export; but this cost it
  • would have to bear, I believe, just as often if there were a mint,
  • while the cost of the mint itself would be saved. Such a notification,
  • as is suggested above, would be much more in the true spirit of the
  • Indian currency system than the establishment of a gold mint would be;
  • and it would serve the convenience of the public just as efficiently,
  • at less expense to Government. The establishment of a Mint, however,
  • would flatter at small expense an ignorant vanity. The Government by
  • granting it in response to popular appeal (though I doubt whether, in
  • fact, there is any such appeal) would have a pleasant feeling of being
  • democratic on an occasion when to yield involves no more evil than any
  • other expenditure on a piece of fairly cheap ostentation.
  • 13. To the second proposal for the mintage of a distinctively Indian
  • gold coin many of the above comments apply equally. But the existence
  • of a 10–rupee gold piece (13s. 4d.) might very possibly do something
  • to popularise the use of gold as currency, largely because it would
  • be of a smaller and therefore more convenient denomination.[46] It is
  • very difficult to prophesy with regard to the local popularity of a new
  • coin. On the other hand—apart from the general objections, to be dealt
  • with later, against popularising gold—it is generally a bad thing
  • to introduce a new coin and add to the confusion of currencies. For
  • purposes of export, at times of depression, the 10–rupee piece would
  • be worth less than two–thirds of a sovereign. The sovereign, moreover,
  • is fast becoming the international gold coin _par excellence_ far
  • beyond the bounds of the British Empire. In 1911, 43,305,722 British
  • sovereigns were minted, or a good deal more than the whole gold coinage
  • in that year of the rest of the world, viz. £33,375,455. A rival coin
  • ought not to be set up in India unless some evident advantage is to be
  • obtained from it.
  • 14. The third policy—that of active measures on the part of Government
  • to get more gold into circulation—is not likely to be adopted. If it
  • were, it is difficult to say if it would be successful or not. To force
  • a coin on people is not always the best way to popularise it; and if
  • rupees were to be refused, there would probably be a small premium on
  • them or a small discount on gold—a position which would not help gold.
  • 15. It is probably the case, however, that if it were desirable to
  • popularise the use of gold, a means could be found of effecting this
  • in some degree. The main question is whether this is, in fact, the
  • right policy. Lord Crewe looks forward (see his speech in the House of
  • Lords, November 14, 1912) “with some confidence to the increased use of
  • gold currency in India among the people, although it may be a long and
  • indefinite time before it becomes the habitual and favourite coin in
  • the country at large.” Ought he to expect this result with satisfaction
  • as well as confidence?
  • My own answer to this question is unhesitatingly in the negative. The
  • principal arguments against such a policy are two,—first, the general
  • argument that it is extravagant and wasteful to have gold coins as the
  • actual media of circulation, and second, the argument, more especially
  • applicable to India, that it would diminish, and not, as its advocates
  • claim for it, increase the stability of the currency system as a whole.
  • 16. Let us consider first how heavy a loss and expense the popularity
  • of a gold currency might involve. During the last twelve years the
  • Government have been able to accumulate a sum of about £21,000,000
  • sterling from the profits of rupee coinage; and the interest on the
  • invested portion of the Paper Currency Reserve is now about £300,000
  • annually. Thus the annual income, derivable from the interest on the
  • sums set free by the use of cheap forms of currency, amounts already to
  • about £1,000,000. With the rapidly increasing use of notes, this income
  • should show a steady growth in the future. Both these sources of profit
  • would be gravely jeopardised if the introduction of an Indian gold coin
  • were to meet with any considerable measure of success. It would be
  • specially unfortunate if a competitor to the paper currency were to be
  • introduced, before the virtual abolition of the system of circles has
  • had time to have its full effect in the direction of popularising the
  • use of notes.
  • 17. Advocates of a gold currency, however, would not, I think, deny
  • that it might involve the country in some extra expense. They support
  • their policy on the ground that it would do a great deal to ensure the
  • stability of the currency system, and that it is worth while to incur
  • some expense for this object. I think it is possible to show that such
  • a policy is likely on the whole to have an exactly opposite effect.
  • It is suggested that the currency should be composed of rupees, gold,
  • and paper, with rupees still predominating, but consisting of gold in a
  • considerably higher proportion than at present. This greater infusion
  • of gold would necessarily be at the expense either of the Currency
  • Reserve or of the Gold Standard Reserve. If the gold replaced notes,
  • the former would be diminished, and, if it replaced rupees, the latter.
  • It is tacitly assumed that the greater part of what has to be withdrawn
  • from the circulation at a time of crisis would come from the gold
  • portion of the circulation.
  • This assumption seems to me to be unwarranted and contrary to general
  • experience. At a time of crisis it is the fiduciary coins with which
  • the public are most eager to part. Bankers and others would keep as
  • much of their surplus currency as they possibly could in the form of
  • gold, and it would be rupees (in great part) and not gold that would be
  • paid into the Government Treasuries.
  • Thus the infusion of more gold into the circulation would necessarily
  • weaken the existing reserves and would not correspondingly reduce the
  • amount of such reserves which Government ought in prudence to keep.
  • When it became necessary to contract the volume of currency, Government
  • would be in a _worse_ position than at present, unless the greater part
  • of what was withdrawn came from the gold portion of the circulation and
  • not from the rupee or paper portion. This is not an expectation upon
  • which it would be prudent to act.
  • I have already quoted the late Lord Goschen’s authority in support of
  • the centralisation of gold reserves. A further passage from the address
  • he delivered on the same occasion (in proposing a scheme of one–pound
  • notes for England) is relevant here:—“I would much prefer for national
  • and monetary purposes to have £20,000,000 of gold under our command
  • at the Bank of England than 30,000,000 sovereigns in the hands of the
  • public.... If the issue (of one–pound notes) took place, and were taken
  • up, we should have £20,000,000 more _central_ gold—an immeasurably
  • stronger reserve than 30,000,000 sovereigns on which we could not place
  • our hands.”
  • 18. There are, in fact, two ways of maintaining stability in a country
  • whose demand for currency varies widely from year to year—_either_
  • it must consist almost _wholly_ of gold, or a sufficient reserve must
  • be _concentrated_ in the hands of Government. If only one–quarter or
  • one–fifth of the circulation consists of gold, I do not think that a
  • Government can rely on getting more than a _fraction_ of this, when
  • it becomes necessary to contract the circulation by one–sixth or
  • one–seventh; whereas if the gold is in the Government’s reserves, the
  • _whole_ of it is available.
  • For obvious reasons of convenience and of economy the greater part of
  • the Indian circulation must continue in any case to consist of rupees.
  • It is vain to suppose that the advantages of a true gold currency can
  • be obtained by the compromise of somewhat increasing the gold element.
  • If the Government dissipates some part of its sterling resources over
  • the country—and any proposal for a greater infusion of gold into the
  • currency amounts to this—it must plainly stand in a weaker position to
  • meet a crisis than if they are concentrated in its own chests.
  • 19. The encouragement of gold, therefore, would involve expense, and,
  • at the same time, diminish safety. There is a further argument against
  • it, connected nevertheless with the above, which is of great importance.
  • If gold were to supplant rupees only and not notes, and were to
  • supplant them to so great an extent that sovereigns would tend to flow
  • out of the currency at times of depression, there might be something to
  • be said for it. It is certainly the case that it is a disadvantageous
  • thing for India to have so large a part of her currency in the form
  • of expensive tokens,—the issue of rupees strengthens the reserves
  • by less than a half of their nominal value. The degree of damage to
  • the Government’s reserves, therefore, would be much less if the gold
  • were to supplant rupees than if it were to supplant notes. But this is
  • most unlikely to be the case. It is for comparatively large payments
  • that the sovereign may gradually come into use, and for these it is
  • essentially a rival to the note. For small payments, which in India
  • make in the aggregate an enormous total, the sovereign can no more
  • supplant the rupee than it can supplant the shilling in England.
  • Reports collected by the Comptroller of Currency in 1911–12 already
  • show in a striking way the tendency of gold to take the place which
  • is, or might be, occupied by notes. The rapidity with which gold is
  • becoming popularised in the Punjab is probably due in very great part
  • to the fact that notes have never become acclimatised there.[47] The
  • inconvenience of making large payments in silver is obvious;[48] and
  • facilities for obtaining gold are naturally welcomed. The events of the
  • last two or three years may have done very great harm in the direction
  • of postponing the development of the use of notes in Northern India. In
  • Bengal and Eastern Bengal, on the other hand, the slow progress made by
  • gold is to be explained by the fact that the people of these provinces
  • are much more accustomed to the use of notes, which are even used in
  • some cases for the purpose of hoarding (cf. p. 165). If the Government
  • were to attempt to further in any way the circulation of gold in the
  • Bengals, they would be aiming a dangerous blow at their own note issue;
  • whereas if notes could be encouraged in place of rupees in the jute
  • trade, there would be a huge increase in their circulation. It is also
  • reported that the use of gold in the rice trade in Burma would displace
  • notes mainly. The following quotations from the reports (collected in
  • 1911–12 by the Comptroller of Currency from districts in the Punjab),
  • referred to above, illustrate the point that gold is preferred to
  • silver because it is more convenient to carry, and that notes are
  • distrusted because there is no universally spread assurance of their
  • ready convertibility.[49]
  • _Gujranwala._—The zamindar prefers to have his price for the grain
  • in gold, as he can easily carry it and easily exchange it and, if
  • necessary, easily put it away. He shies at currency notes of any
  • value, as they cannot be easily exchanged, and to receive payment in
  • silver means cost of carriage and a greater risk of being robbed.
  • Contractors of the Canal Department are very glad to receive payment
  • of their cheques in gold. Some have remarked that sovereigns can be
  • exchanged even in the village most remote from civilisation, but
  • notes, even of the value of Rs. 5, are looked upon with distrust by
  • the village yokel and even by the village sahukar. With a sovereign
  • there is no trouble, no awkward questions are asked and no discount
  • taken.
  • _Jhang._—The people prefer gold because it is less troublesome than
  • silver money.
  • _Gurdaspur._—The facility of transit is the reason why corn merchants
  • prefer sovereigns to silver.
  • _Ambala._—Both in cities and villages, sovereigns are replacing notes
  • more than rupees.
  • _Bannu._—Gold is slowly but steadily replacing currency notes.
  • _Rohtak._—(With the increase of gold) a corresponding decrease in the
  • use of currency notes has been observed during 1911–12.
  • _Ludhiana._—(With the increase of gold) the issues of notes have
  • correspondingly decreased.
  • These particular statements are corroborated by general statistics. The
  • most recent statistics of the use of 10–rupee notes in the Punjab and
  • in Bombay, as compared with Bengal, strongly suggest that the recent
  • development of gold circulation in these provinces has been at the
  • expense of these notes. “In the Punjab it is reported (in 1911–12) that
  • large payments for agricultural produce are never made in notes, and
  • that gold is replacing notes to some extent even in ordinary payments
  • among merchants and traders.” In the light of these facts, it is a
  • wonderful tribute to the enduring power of the “sound” currency maxims
  • of the middle of last century that responsible officials should have
  • welcomed the outflow of gold as the salvation of their system.
  • Before leaving this topic I wish to emphasise, in close connexion with
  • it, a special reason why it is so important to develop the use of
  • notes in India at the present time. It is desirable to encourage the
  • popularity of the note issue, and to avoid encouraging its rivals, not
  • only for reasons of immediate economy or because, by the centralisation
  • of the reserves, the stability of the currency is increased, but also
  • because, in a country where cheques are not likely for many years to
  • come to be used to a dominating extent, it is only thus that a proper
  • degree of seasonal elasticity in the currency can possibly be secured.
  • This question has been already raised in Chapter III., and I shall
  • return to it again in Chapters VI. and VII.
  • 20. One minor indirect consequence of the existing system is worth
  • reference. Gold flows into the Currency Reserve when this is a cheaper
  • way of getting notes or rupees than by buying Council Bills or
  • Transfers (see Chapter V.). It flows out of the Currency Reserve when
  • sovereigns are wanted for circulation or for hoarding, or when this is
  • the cheapest way in which bullion dealers can get gold. There is reason
  • for thinking that a good deal flows out for the last reason, and it is
  • the occasion of this outflow which I wish to examine in a little more
  • detail. The Currency Department publishes figures which show the number
  • of sovereigns withdrawn from the Treasuries each month. It appears from
  • these that, while some are withdrawn in the winter months during the
  • busy season, when the demand for currency and for hoarding (since it is
  • then that the cultivators sell their crops and realise their savings
  • in coin) is at its height, there is in the summer also, when it is
  • most improbable that an extra supply is required for these purposes,
  • a steady and, in the aggregate, a heavy drain. A brief arithmetical
  • calculation provides what must, I think, be the explanation of this.
  • Since the price of bullion in London is (normally) £3:17:9. per oz.,
  • while the price of sovereigns is £3:17:10½, the bullion import
  • point of Indian exchange will be a little below the sovereign import
  • point. Thus when exchange is fairly high, an Indian purchaser of gold
  • finds it more profitable to buy drafts on London, purchase gold in
  • the bullion market and ship it to India, than to purchase sovereigns
  • from the Treasury at 1s. 4d.; but when exchange is low, the reverse is
  • the case and it is cheaper to get as much gold as the Treasury will
  • let you have at 1s. 4d. I do not know exactly where the dividing line
  • comes;[50] but when telegraphic transfers are at 1s. 4⅛d. it is
  • certainly more profitable to get gold bullion in London, and when they
  • are at 1s. 4-1/32d. it may pay to get it in India.
  • These considerations are modified in practice by the fact that many
  • Indian purchasers of bullion have a preference for small gold bars
  • which are manufactured in England. Thus these bars are worth more than
  • an equivalent weight of sovereigns, and consequently importation of
  • bullion in this form takes place throughout the year. But for many
  • non–currency purposes sovereigns are as good or nearly as good as other
  • forms of bullion, and for these purposes the Indian Treasury is the
  • bullion dealer’s cheapest source of supply when exchange is relatively
  • low. Thus in the summer months the bullion dealers will always draw
  • their supplies from the Treasury, so long as the Treasury is willing
  • to supply them. Whenever, therefore, gold in India is available to
  • the public throughout the year, the Government will lose during the
  • summer months whatever amount the bullion dealers require. On every
  • sovereign thus drawn out, the Government loses about 1½d. For the
  • gold could have been kept in England by selling bills at a rate more
  • advantageous than the par of exchange by about this amount. The annual
  • amount which is drawn out by bullion dealers when gold is available all
  • the year round is probably not less than £2,000,000. Thus an important
  • indirect effect of the present practice is to allow bullion dealers in
  • the summer months to get their gold at the Government’s cost slightly
  • cheaper than they otherwise could.
  • 21. India, as we all know, already wastes far too high a proportion
  • of her resources in the needless accumulation of the precious metals.
  • The Government ought not to encourage in the slightest degree this
  • ingrained fondness for handling hard gold. By the elimination of both
  • precious metals, to the utmost extent that public opinion will permit,
  • from amongst the hoards and the circulation of the country, they ought
  • to counteract an uncivilised and wasteful habit.
  • It is interesting to reflect that India’s love of the precious metals,
  • ruinous though it has been to her own economic development, has
  • flourished in the past to the great advantage of Western nations. Every
  • one knows Jevons’s description of India as the sink of the precious
  • metals, always ready to absorb the redundant bullion of the West and
  • to save Europe from the more violent disturbances to her price level.
  • In very recent years, while the South African mines have been reaching
  • the zenith of their production, she has been fulfilling to perfection
  • her rôle of sink. Prices have been rising, as it is, much faster
  • than is healthy and in a way very disadvantageous to such a creditor
  • nation as Great Britain, to whom large sums fixed in terms of gold are
  • annually due. It is reasonable to think that without the assistance of
  • the Indian demand, they would have risen still faster. From its very
  • short period point of view the City is sometimes cross when this Indian
  • demand shows itself in an inconvenient week; but if we take a longer
  • view the Indian demand is, at a time of plentiful gold supply like the
  • present, a true friend to the City and an enemy of inflation.
  • On the other hand, if a time comes when Indians learn to leave off
  • their unfertile habits and to divert their hoards into the channels of
  • productive industry and to the enrichment of their fields, they will
  • have the money markets of the world at their mercy. A surfeit of gold
  • can do at least as much damage as a shortage. During the past sixty
  • years India is supposed to have absorbed, in addition to her previous
  • accumulations, more than £300,000,000 of gold (apart from enormous
  • quantities of silver). We may presume that, if India ceases to demand
  • fresh gold and begins to disgorge some part of her huge stock, she
  • will do so gradually. Yet if the change comes at a time of big new
  • production, she may involve the world, nevertheless, in a very great
  • inflation of gold prices.
  • If, however, India is thus to turn the tables on the West, she must
  • not delay too long. The time may not be far distant when Europe,
  • having perfected her mechanism of exchange on the basis of a gold
  • standard, will find it possible to regulate her standard of value on a
  • more rational and stable basis. It is not likely that we shall leave
  • permanently the most intimate adjustments of our economic organism at
  • the mercy of a lucky prospector, a new chemical process, or a change of
  • ideas in Asia.
  • CHAPTER V
  • COUNCIL BILLS AND REMITTANCE
  • 1. Remittance by means of what are termed Council Bills is a feature
  • peculiar to the Indian system, and is not, so far as I know, to be
  • paralleled elsewhere. It arises partly from the historical circumstance
  • that the Government of India is the successor of a trading company,
  • partly from the necessity under which the Government lies of making
  • very large annual remittances to England.
  • 2. The Home Charges, that is, the payments which the Government of
  • India must make _in England_, for interest on debt, pensions, payments
  • to the War Office, Government stores (not chargeable to capital), etc.,
  • amount to £19,000,000 or £20,000,000 annually. But the amount which
  • it is necessary to remit, apart from extraordinary remittances to be
  • dealt with later, is usually less than this; for the amount of new
  • capital raised by Government in England usually exceeds their capital
  • expenditure in this country on repayments and on railway materials,
  • etc. Thus the amount which it is necessary to remit to England annually
  • is from £15,000,000 to £18,000,000. Rupees to this amount, being
  • part of the revenue from taxation, etc., accumulate in the Indian
  • Treasuries. This value is remitted to England by selling for sterling
  • in London bills which can be cashed in rupees in Calcutta. Thus the
  • Government of India pays out rupees in Calcutta when the bills are
  • presented, and the Secretary of State’s balances at the Bank of England
  • are swelled by a corresponding amount.
  • The Government is, therefore, one of the largest dealers in foreign
  • exchange, and does for itself business, which Colonial Governments, for
  • example, who have a certain amount of similar transactions to carry
  • through (though on a far smaller scale), would do through a bank. But
  • while the Government saves for itself the commission which it would
  • otherwise have to pay to a bank, it is not, in any real sense, a
  • competitor with the banks for business. In the first place, it sells
  • exchange, save in exceptional circumstances, in one direction only.
  • And in the second place, the Secretary of State’s method of selling
  • exchange results in his dealing exclusively with the Exchange Banks
  • and financial houses, and not directly with the trading public. The
  • Secretary of State is in effect the ultimate source of supply for
  • bills on India, and the banks, after securing what private bills are
  • available, even up their demands for remittance to India by buying
  • bills from him,—provided he is selling them at a rate which makes
  • this form of remittance cheaper than the alternative one of sending
  • sovereigns. The method by which these bills are sold is as follows.
  • 3. The bills are offered in London for tender at the Bank of England
  • every Wednesday morning, the Secretary of State for India in Council
  • (or, for short, the India Council, whence the name Council Bills)
  • having previously announced the amount (70 lakhs, say) for which
  • tenders are invited. There is a reserve price (not published) below
  • which he will not sell, but this reserve price is seldom operative.[51]
  • The tenders name the amount tendered for and the number of pence per
  • rupee which is offered. The total amount of 70 lakhs is then allotted
  • to the highest bidders, the allotment at the minimum rate accepted
  • being proportionate to the amount applied for at that rate.
  • If the demand is large and the minimum rate of allotment high (say 1s.
  • 4–3/32d.), the amount offered for tender the following week (which is
  • announced at the same time as the result of the previous allotment)
  • is likely to be increased. In the interval between the allotments on
  • successive Wednesdays, the Secretary of State is usually willing to
  • sell what are known as “specials” at a rate 1/32d. higher than the
  • highest rate of allotment on the preceding Wednesday.
  • 4. It should be added that cash must be paid for the bills in London
  • as soon as they are allotted; but, on account of the time taken by
  • the mail, they cannot be changed into rupees at Calcutta for about a
  • fortnight. A fortnight’s interest is therefore lost, and it is worth
  • paying extra to obtain what are called “telegraphic transfers,” by
  • means of which rupees can be obtained at Calcutta almost as soon as the
  • sovereigns are paid into the Secretary of State’s account at the Bank
  • of England.
  • The Secretary of State, therefore, is usually willing to sell
  • telegraphic transfers at a rate 1/32d. per rupee higher than the rate
  • for bills.[52] If the purchaser chooses transfers, the effect to him
  • is that he gets his rupees a fortnight earlier in India and pays for
  • this privilege a sum equal to 5 per cent on the money for a fortnight.
  • The question, whether it is worth the purchaser’s while to pay this
  • extra sum, chiefly depends upon the Indian bank rate, because this
  • governs the amount of interest which can be gained by having the money
  • immediately available in India. It may happen, of course, that a
  • particular bank may have a special urgency for funds in India, or that
  • the rate for fortnightly loans does not closely agree with the bank
  • rate. Generally speaking, however, if the purchaser can lend money out
  • at no higher rate than 3 per cent in India, he will certainly prefer
  • bills; but if he can lend at 7 per cent in India, it will be more
  • profitable for him to buy transfers.
  • Experience accords with these expectations. When the Indian bank rate
  • is high and the difference of 1/32d. between the two prices is in
  • force, the demand is almost entirely for transfers. This is convenient
  • to bankers, and, if he has the rupees waiting in India, profitable to
  • the Secretary of State.
  • 5. The bills and transfers are made payable at the option of the
  • purchaser at Calcutta, Bombay, or Madras. The amount drawn on Madras is
  • relatively small, and Calcutta comes first, with about 45 per cent of
  • the whole.
  • 6. Up to 1900 the volume of sales of Council Bills in any year was
  • mainly governed by the amount required to defray the Home Charges,
  • this amount partly depending on the volume of capital borrowings in
  • the year. But the sales also fluctuated, though within comparatively
  • narrow limits in most years, according to the Secretary of State’s
  • opportunities (depending on the activity of business and the balance
  • of trade) of selling his bills at a satisfactory rate. Since 1900,
  • however, the functions of the Council Bill system have been enlarged,
  • and it has now become a very important part of the general mechanism
  • for the maintenance of the Gold Exchange Standard.
  • 7. The way in which this has arisen is easily explained. On account
  • of the provision by which rupees can always be obtained in India in
  • exchange for sovereigns at the rate of 1s. 4d. per rupee, it can never
  • be worth while for the banks to buy Council Bills at a price which
  • exceeds 1s. 4d. by more than the cost of sending gold to India. This
  • cost varies considerably from time to time, but it seldom exceeds
  • ⅛d. If, therefore, the Secretary of State refuses to sell bills
  • at less than 1s. 4⅛d., when the banks are requiring to remit to
  • India, gold will flow. This gold will be presented at the Treasuries
  • in India to be exchanged for rupees or notes. Thus the only effect of
  • the Secretary of State’s refusing to sell remittances at a price which
  • suits the banks is that sterling resources accumulate in his Treasuries
  • in India instead of in England. This may not be convenient to him.
  • For example, if the banks are sending gold to India on a large scale
  • and are exchanging it for rupees, a time may come when this demand
  • can only be met by minting more rupees; the silver for this must be
  • purchased in London and the profit on the coinage must be credited
  • to the Gold Standard Reserve which, for reasons to be discussed in
  • the next chapter, is kept for the most part in London; thus the gold
  • has eventually to be shipped back again to England to pay for the
  • silver and to be credited to the Gold Standard Reserve. In this case
  • a double loss is involved—the cost of sending the gold to India (for
  • the Secretary of State could probably have got 1s. 4⅛d. per rupee
  • if he had sold transfers, whereas if gold flows he gets only 1s. 4d.)
  • and the cost of bringing it back again, say, 3/32d.; thus a refusal to
  • sell bills would mean an eventual loss of nearly ¼d. per rupee or
  • about 1½ per cent. Or, again, the policy of holding some part of the
  • gold in the Currency Reserve in London for possible use in emergency,
  • may lead to the Secretary of State’s preferring gold to accumulate in
  • London rather than in India; otherwise it will have to be sent back
  • again, in pursuance of this policy, and a double loss incurred, as in
  • the former case. Lastly, if the Secretary of State has considerable
  • cash balances in India, it may be worth his while for a time to cash
  • additional Council Bills out of these, thus in effect transferring his
  • balances to London. The reasons that may make him inclined to do this
  • are, first, that to increase the proportion of his cash balances held
  • in sterling puts him in a stronger position in a case of emergency;
  • second, that selling Council Bills at a good price now will enable
  • him to meet the Home Charges later on when he might not be able to
  • sell his Bills at so good a price (in this case the transference of
  • cash balances from India to London is only temporary); third, that it
  • may put him in a stronger position for carrying out impending loan
  • transactions at the most favourable moment; and fourth, that cash
  • balances held in London can be made to earn a small rate of interest.
  • All these considerations being taken into account, it can only be
  • worth the Secretary of State’s while to refuse to sell bills within the
  • gold export price, when he deliberately wishes either to increase his
  • cash balances in India at the expense of his balances in London, or to
  • replenish that part of the gold portion of the Currency Reserve which
  • is kept in India.
  • Thus he will endeavour to make as certain as possible of selling within
  • the year the amount budgeted for (_i.e._, the Home Charges adjusted
  • with reference to the probable capital transactions of the year and the
  • state of the cash balances); but he will sell more than this if the
  • demand for remittance is so great that, on his refusal to sell, the
  • price of remittance will rise to the gold export point In the words
  • of the annual budget, “the _estimate_ of Council drawings is for the
  • amount necessary to provide for the Secretary of State’s requirements,
  • but additional bills will be sold if needed to meet the demands of
  • trade.”
  • 8. Let us sum up the argument so far, and enforce at the same time
  • the contention, brought up at the end of Chapter I., that the volume
  • of currency circulating in India does not depend, as some critics
  • have maintained, on the caprice of the India Office in the amount
  • of Council Bills that it offers for sale. So far as Council Bills
  • are sold for the ordinary purposes of remittance of Government funds
  • from India to London, they are cashed in India out of the general
  • balances of Government. But when they are sold in larger quantities,
  • to obviate the necessity of sovereigns being sent, sufficient rupees
  • are not forthcoming from this source. One expedient is to pay out some
  • of the rupees in the Paper Currency Reserve or in the silver branch
  • of the Gold Standard Reserve, and to pay an equivalent sum into the
  • branches of these reserves which are held in London, “earmarked” at
  • the Bank of England,[53] or in other sterling forms. If, on the other
  • hand, the India Council had refused to sell bills freely, gold would
  • have been exported to India, taken to the Paper Currency Department,
  • and exchanged for rupees in notes or silver. In either case there
  • is a similar increase in the volume of currency in India not held
  • by the Government. The volume of currency which finds its way into
  • circulation in India is, therefore, quite independent of the Secretary
  • of State’s action. Exceptional amounts of Council Bills are only sold
  • when exchange has reached a point at which it is nearly as profitable
  • to remit gold; and if Council Bills were not sold sovereigns would
  • go instead (the expense of sending them being lost), for which the
  • Government of India would have to give rupees in exchange. This point
  • is important, for it is often assumed in controversy regarding the
  • currency and its relation to prices that the issue of rupees into
  • circulation depends in some way upon the amount of Council Bills sold
  • by the Government, and can, therefore, be expanded or contracted by
  • them at will, according to the policy of the moment. Broadly speaking,
  • this is false. Even if the Government were to hasten the flow of
  • rupees into circulation by selling an exceptional quantity of bills
  • at a relatively low rate (which would be equivalent to lowering by
  • a fraction of a penny the normal value of the rupee as measured in
  • sterling), and were to pursue this policy over a long period, the
  • permanent effect could be no more than in proportion to the amount by
  • which they had thus lowered the par value of the rupee in terms of
  • sterling. This is the amount of their conceivable executive power, if
  • the Government were to exercise it. In fact, it has not been exercised.
  • If, however, the stock of rupees in the reserves is running low (for a
  • considerable quantity of rupees must always be kept there in order to
  • ensure the ready convertibility of the notes in terms of rupees), and
  • more Council Bills are sold in London than can be conveniently cashed
  • in Calcutta in the above ways, more rupees must be issued from the
  • Mint. The silver out of which they are minted is purchased in England
  • out of the proceeds of selling the additional Council Bills, and the
  • surplus due to the fact that rupees are worth more than the silver they
  • contain, is credited to the Gold Standard Reserve. According to the
  • present practice the process in these circumstances also is, therefore,
  • automatic, and the amount of new rupees put into circulation does not
  • depend on the arbitrary action of the Secretary of State in selling
  • or withholding Council Bills. If he did not sell bills, sovereigns
  • would be sent to India, new rupees would have to be coined to meet the
  • obligation under which the Government of India has placed itself of
  • giving rupees in exchange for sovereigns on demand, and a great part of
  • the sovereigns would have to be credited in some form or other to the
  • Gold Standard Reserve or shipped back to England again to pay for the
  • silver.
  • It is true that, if a different practice were adopted (a practice
  • which was adopted in part in 1907), and if the profits on the coinage
  • of rupees, instead of being credited to the Gold Standard Reserve,
  • were turned into rupees and spent by the Government in India on
  • goods and services (whether for capital or any other purpose), more
  • rupees would be in circulation for the time being than would have
  • been the case otherwise. But even in this case the effect on the
  • volume of circulation must be temporary, so long as the provisions
  • for the maintenance of the rupee at 1s. 4d. are in operation.
  • For this additional issue of rupees would, eventually, have the
  • effect of delaying additional demands for coinage in the future
  • or of precipitating an occasion for the withdrawal of rupees from
  • circulation.
  • While, therefore, it is to a certain extent within the power of
  • Government (though not at present according to their usual practice)
  • to urge a certain number of rupees into circulation _more rapidly_
  • than is necessary, they cannot _permanently_ increase the circulation
  • without depreciating its gold value, that is, they cannot permanently
  • increase the circulation beyond what it would otherwise be and at the
  • same time maintain the rupee at 1s. 4d. It may be added that a release
  • of rupees from any other reserve, or even a temporary increase in the
  • amount of capital funds annually raised by Government abroad for use
  • in India, would have a similar effect to the release of rupees from
  • the Gold Standard Reserve. But, however all this might be, at present
  • the Government of India do _not_, in fact, exert such discretionary
  • powers as they possess for affecting, even temporarily, the volume of
  • circulation.
  • 9. I have said that the cost of sending gold to India does not
  • generally exceed ⅛d. per rupee. The Secretary of State has,
  • therefore, a standing notification (since January 1904) that he will
  • sell bills at 1s. 4⅛d. Up to January 1900 he undertook to sell
  • telegraphic transfers at 1s. 4–5/32d. without limit of quantity, and
  • since that time he has usually been willing to do so.[54] The cost of
  • sending gold to India depends, however, on complex causes, varying
  • considerably from time to time, and is often a good deal less than
  • ⅛d. It is not easy, therefore, for the Secretary of State to know
  • at exactly what price gold will become a serious competitor of bills
  • as a means of remittance; and not infrequently Council Bills are,
  • unintentionally, at a price which makes it cheaper to send gold. It
  • will be interesting to consider briefly the kinds of causes which
  • influence the gold import point.[55]
  • 10. The expense of remitting gold from one country to another is made
  • up of insurance, freight, and loss of interest. Even the first item is
  • sometimes capable of variation. For example, after the recent robbery
  • of sovereigns in transit from London to Alexandria, the ordinary rate
  • quoted on gold, consigned by the route (Bremen and Trieste) by which
  • the stolen gold had been sent, was doubled, rising from 1s. 3d. to 2s.
  • 6d. per cent. Again, on one recent occasion, it was stated that more
  • gold would have been shipped if it had not been for the fact that the
  • mail–boat was already carrying a million and a half sterling in gold
  • and silver, the underwriters requiring a higher premium than usual if
  • they were to insure a larger sum than this on a single voyage. But if
  • it is a matter of shipping sovereigns _from England_ the variations in
  • the cost of insurance and freight are relatively small. The _main_ part
  • of variation in the gold point arises either out of the possibility of
  • getting sovereigns _from other sources_, or from variations in the rate
  • of interest.
  • These other sources are either sovereigns in transit from Australia or
  • sovereigns ready for export from Egypt. As India lies between Australia
  • and England, it is naturally cheaper (mainly on account of the smaller
  • loss of interest) to send sovereigns from Australia to India than from
  • Australia to England. Let us suppose that the state of the Australian
  • exchanges is such that it pays to remit sovereigns from Australia to
  • London anyhow, and assume, for the sake of simplicity (and without, in
  • fact, any substantial sacrifice of truth), that the cost of freight
  • and insurance from Australia to London is the same as from Australia
  • to India. Now if, when the Australian sovereigns are off India, the
  • bank which is remitting them can receive cash in London against their
  • delivery in India, it will get its money at least a fortnight sooner,
  • and will probably accept, therefore, about 1s. 3–31/32d. in London
  • for 1s. 4d. delivered in India (1/32d. being the interest on 1s. 4d.
  • for a fortnight at 5 per cent per annum). Gold bought in this way for
  • immediate delivery in India is as good as a telegraphic transfer,
  • _i.e._, is worth 1/32d. per rupee more than Council Bills. If,
  • therefore, Council Bills are at a price in excess of 1s. 3–15/16d.,
  • gold about to be shipped from Australia competes with them as a means
  • of remittance to India. Normally, of course, an Australian bank is able
  • to get more than 1s. 3–15/16d. for gold delivered in India. I mean
  • only that the Secretary of State cannot hope to undercut Australian
  • gold, when it is available for export in large quantities, unless he is
  • prepared to put down his price for Council Bills to this level. If, in
  • these circumstances, he wants the gold in England rather than in India,
  • his cheapest course, therefore, is to buy the gold in transit himself
  • for delivery in England, selling for it telegraphic transfers at a
  • suitable rate.[56] This was done on a large scale in 1905–6 and 1906–7.
  • Surplus gold from Egypt is not capable of undercutting Council Bills
  • so seriously as surplus gold from Australia; for in this case it
  • is Egypt which lies between. If we assume, for the sake of precise
  • illustration,[57] that the cost of sending gold from Egypt to London is
  • nearly the same as that of sending it from Egypt to India, an Egyptian
  • bank, about to ship sovereigns in any case, will take any price in
  • excess of 1s. 4d.[58] paid in London for the delivery in India of the
  • value in gold of a rupee. This is the extreme case. If Council Bills
  • are at a higher rate than 1s. 4d., say at 1s. 4–1/16d., the Alexandrian
  • exchanges may be at a level which makes it profitable to ship gold from
  • Egypt to India for payment in London, when it is not profitable to ship
  • gold from Egypt to London. If we still make the above illustrative (but
  • not exactly accurate) assumption, when Council Bills are at about 1s.
  • 4–1/16d. and the Alexandrian exchange on London below par, Egyptian
  • gold competes with Councils as a means of remittance to India. Of
  • course the supply of remittance from this source is usually somewhat
  • limited; when some Egyptian gold has flowed away to India under the
  • influence of the above conditions, this is likely to have the effect
  • of strengthening the Alexandrian exchange, and therefore, by modifying
  • the conditions, of making the continuance of a flow less likely. The
  • Egyptian gold is of great practical importance, because the busy season
  • in Egypt comes rather earlier than the busy season in India, so that in
  • the winter months the gold which has served the purpose of moving the
  • crops in Egypt can be sent on to be changed into rupees which are to
  • serve the same purpose in India. Of the gold, therefore, which flows
  • from London to Egypt every autumn, very little finds its way back again
  • to London; what is not kept by the cultivators in Egypt travels on in
  • due course to India. The precise moment at which this movement takes
  • place and its extent depend, as we have seen above, on the rate at
  • which Council Bills are being sold in London, and also upon whether
  • the Egyptian cotton crop is dealt with late or early. But when towards
  • the end of their busy season the Egyptian banks find themselves with
  • more gold than they need, Council Bills must be sold at a relatively
  • low rate if the flow of this gold to India is to be prevented. The
  • dealings between the Egyptian and the Indian banks must thus present
  • very delicate problems of arbitrage.
  • It is probably within the power of the Secretary of State, if he
  • wishes, to regulate the flow of gold direct from London to Bombay by
  • means of the sales of Council Bills. But when gold is available in
  • Australia or Egypt, the matter is not susceptible of such easy control.
  • The remaining element which determines the cost of
  • remittance—variation in the market rate of interest—has been dealt
  • with already, 1/32d. represents the interest on 1s. 4d. for a fortnight
  • at 5 per cent per annum. It is easy to calculate how the gold export
  • point is affected by fluctuations in the market rate of discount in
  • India on either side of 5 per cent.
  • 11. So far we have been dealing with the upper limit of exchange and
  • with the results of a heavy demand for Council Bills. The effects at
  • the lower limit differ in this important respect, that the Government
  • are under no legal obligation to prevent the depreciation of the
  • rupee, and have not undertaken to give sovereigns for rupees in the
  • way that they have undertaken to give rupees for sovereigns. There
  • is nothing in law, therefore, to prevent exchange from falling
  • indefinitely. There has been no change in law in this respect since
  • 1895, when exchange actually did fall below 1s. 1d. The Government
  • has, however, practically pledged its word to do all in its power to
  • prevent the depreciation of the gold value of the rupee and to prevent
  • exchange from falling below the lower limit of 1s. 3–29/32d. The
  • business community would rightly regard it as a breach of faith if the
  • Government were to permit exchange to fall below this rate, unless all
  • reasonable resources had been exhausted.
  • 12. We now see how intimately the management of Council Bills and of
  • Government remittance is bound up with the Gold–Exchange Standard. The
  • disadvantages from the point of view of regulating a Gold–Exchange
  • Standard, which arise out of there being no Government bank, are partly
  • compensated by the Secretary of State’s being the largest dealer in
  • foreign exchange. By regulating the amount of bills he offers for
  • tender, he is able to regulate to a great extent the level of exchange.
  • When exchange is falling below par he can support it by greatly
  • restricting his offers; and if he cannot get at least 1s. 3–29/32d.
  • for his bills, he withdraws from the market. In the meantime, of
  • course, he has payments to make in England, while on the other hand
  • rupees accumulate in India, as the revenue flows in and no Council
  • Bills are presented for payment. If the cash balances in London are
  • not sufficient to stand the drain on them, gold at the Bank of England
  • may be “un–earmarked” and placed to the Secretary of State’s current
  • account, rupees in India being transferred at the same time from
  • the Government balances to the silver portion of the Paper Currency
  • Reserve—the reverse process from that which has been described already
  • as the result of exceptionally large sales of Council Bills.
  • If the Secretary of State’s withdrawal from the market and the
  • consequent scarcity of bills on India is insufficient to support
  • exchange at 1s. 3–29/32d., more drastic measures are necessary. The
  • method adopted on the last occasion of this kind was the offer by the
  • Government of India in Calcutta of _sterling bills on London_ at the
  • rate of 1s. 3–29/32d., these bills being cashed in London out of the
  • Gold Standard Reserve.
  • These measures were sufficient during the severe crisis of 1908. Their
  • sufficiency for the future will be discussed in Chapter VI. in dealing
  • with the Secretary of State’s Reserves.
  • 13. If we turn from the mechanism of remittance to the question of
  • Government remittance as a whole, this can be explained most clearly
  • by reference to a hypothetical India Office balance–sheet. The whole
  • account for the year balances out in some such manner as this:—
  • PAYMENTS
  • Home Charges _x_
  • Gold “earmarked,” or securities bought for
  • Currency Reserve in London _y_
  • Cost of silver + profit on coinage credited
  • to Gold Standard Reserve in London _z_
  • Expenditure on stores in London for capital
  • purposes in India _v_
  • Transfer of cash balances from India to London ± _w_
  • —————————————–
  • _x_ + _y_ + _z_ + _v_ ± _w_
  • ===========================
  • RECEIPTS
  • Council Bills cashed from balances in India _x_ – _u_ + _v_ ± _w_
  • Council Bills cashed from rupees in Currency
  • Reserve in India _y_
  • Council Bills cashed from new coinage _z_
  • ————————————————–
  • Total Council Bills drawn _x_ + _y_ + _z_ – _u_ + _v_ ± _w_
  • Net capital borrowings in London _u_
  • ————————————————–
  • Total receipts in London _x_ + _y_ + _z_ + _v_ ± _w_
  • =================================
  • 14. I will conclude this chapter with some statistics.
  • ┌────────────────────────┬─────────────┬──────────┬──────────┬──────────┐
  • │ │ 1909–10. │ 1910–11. │ 1911–12. │ 1912–13 │
  • │ │ │ │ │(revised │
  • │ │ │ │ │ estimate)│
  • ├────────────────────────┼─────────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
  • │ │ £ │ £ │ £ │ £ │
  • │Home Charges (net)(a) │18,763,000 │18,003,000│18,333,000│18,986,000│
  • │Capital expenditure │ │ │ │ │
  • │ in England on material│ │ │ │ │
  • │ for railways and │ │ │ │ │
  • │ irrigation works │ 5,748,000 │ 5,188,000│ 5,083,000│ 7,077,000│
  • │Credited to Gold │ │ │ │ │
  • │ Standard Reserve │ │ │ │ │
  • │ in England(b) │ 8,090,000 │ 600,000│ ... │ 1,200,000│
  • │Credited to Paper │ │ │ │ │
  • │ Currency Reserve │ │ │ │ │
  • │ in England │ 1,000,000 │ 2,545,000│ 1,988,000│ 400,000│
  • │Purchase of silver │ ... │ ... │ ... │ 7,059,000│
  • │Addition to Cash │ │ │ │ │
  • │ Balances in England(c)│ 4,815,000 │ 3,898,000│ 1,693,000│ ... │
  • ├────────────────────────┼─────────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
  • │ │38,416,000 │30,234,000│27,097,000│34,722,000│
  • │ ╞═════════════╪══════════╪══════════╪══════════╡
  • │ │ │ │ │ │
  • │Council Bills and │ │ │ │ │
  • │ Transfers │27,096,000(d)│26,783,000│27,058,000│25,760,000│
  • │Gold from India │ ... │ ... │ ... │ 1,928,000│
  • │Net debt incurred in │ │ │ │ │
  • │ England(e) │11,320,000 │ 3,451,000│ 39,000│–2,983,000│
  • │Reduction of Cash │ │ │ │ │
  • │ Balances in England │ ... │ ... │ ... │10,017,000│
  • ├────────────────────────┼─────────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
  • │ │38,416,000 │30,234,000│27,097,000│34,722,000│
  • └────────────────────────┴─────────────┴──────────┴──────────┴──────────┘
  • (a) After deduction of certain small sources of revenue in England and
  • various minor adjustments.
  • (b) Apart from dividends earned and reinvested in England.
  • (c) Excluding balances in Gold Standard Reserve.
  • (d) Deducting bills on London sold in India.
  • (e) Excluding reduction of debt by annuities and sinking funds included
  • in Home Charges.
  • The table given above analyses the Home Accounts in a way which
  • brings out the essential facts more clearly than the Government’s own
  • published accounts. These actual figures may be compared with the
  • hypothetical balance–sheet given in § 13.
  • The principal items of the Home Charges are analysed below. As these
  • do not vary much from year to year it has been thought sufficient to
  • give the figures of one recent year, namely, 1911–12. It will be seen
  • that in that year about £5,000,000 was spent on pensions and leave
  • allowances, £11,000,000 on debt services, and £2,250,000 on military
  • services (excluding pensions). Other expenses were of a very small
  • amount.
  • ANALYSIS OF HOME CHARGES IN 1911–12
  • Superannuation and pensions (Civil) £2,063,100
  • ” ” (Military)(net) 2,471,400
  • Furlough allowances 426,500
  • Interest on ordinary debt 2,284,700
  • Interest on railway debt and on capital deposited by
  • companies 5,268,600
  • Railway annuities and sinking funds 3,623,600
  • Military services (apart from pensions) 2,277,400
  • Miscellaneous 1,130,200
  • ——————————–
  • £19,545,500
  • Revenue from interest £448,000
  • Miscellaneous revenue 141,600
  • ————————
  • 589,600
  • ——————————–
  • £18,955,900
  • ═══════════
  • The total drawings of Council Bills, the average, maximum and minimum
  • rates of allotment, and the fluctuation between the maximum and minimum
  • in recent years were as follows:—
  • ┌——────——┬————────────————–┬—────———┬—────———┬——────——┬——──────————┐
  • │ │ Total Drawings │ Average│ Maximum│ Minimum│Fluctuation.│
  • │ │of Council Bills.│ Rate. │ Rate. │ Rate. │ │
  • ├——────——┼————────────————–┼—────———┼—────———┼——────——┼——──────————┤
  • │ │ £ │ d. │ d. │ d. │ d. │
  • │1901–02 │ 18,500,000 │ 15·987 │ 16·125 │ 15·875 │ ·250 │
  • │1902–03 │ 18,500,000 │ 16·002 │ 16·156 │ 15·875 │ ·281 │
  • │1903–04 │ 23,900,000 │ 16·049 │ 16·156 │ 15·875 │ ·281 │
  • │1904–05 │ 24,400,000 │ 16·045 │ 16·156 │ 15·970 │ ·186 │
  • │1905–06 │ 31,600,000 │ 16·042 │ 16·156 │ 15·937 │ ·219 │
  • │1906–07 │ 33,400,000 │ 16·084 │ 16·1875│ 15·937 │ ·250 │
  • │1907–08 │ 15,300,000 │ 16·029 │ 16·1875│ 15·875 │ ·312 │
  • │1908–09 │ 13,900,000 │ 15·964 │ 16 │ 15·875 │ ·125 │
  • │1909–10 │ 27,400,000 │ 16·041 │ 16·156 │ 15.875 │ ·281 │
  • │1910–11 │ 26,500,000 │ 16·061 │ 16·156 │ 15·875 │ ·281 │
  • │1911–12 │ 27,100,000 │ 16·082 │ 16·156 │ 15·937 │ ·219 │
  • │1912–13 │ 25,700,000 │ 16·058 │ 16·156 │ 15·970 │ ·186 │
  • └——────——┴————────────————–┴—────———┴—────———┴——────——┴——──────————┘
  • CHAPTER VI
  • THE SECRETARY OF STATE’S RESERVES AND THE CASH BALANCES
  • 1. The Indian authorities have undertaken a double responsibility. They
  • must be prepared to supply rupees in payment for Council Bills or in
  • exchange for sovereigns. And on the other hand they must be prepared
  • also to supply sterling or sterling drafts in exchange for rupees. The
  • maintenance of the Indian system depends on their ability to fulfil
  • this double obligation to whatever extent may be required of them.
  • The objects to be attained are simple, but the methods of the
  • Government are, largely for historical reasons, exceedingly
  • complicated. I will discuss, first, the nature of the existing methods;
  • second, their adequacy for their purpose; third, some proposals for
  • making them more orderly and intelligible; and lastly, the management
  • of the cash balances.
  • 2. From the profits of rupee coinage[59] a reserve has been built up
  • expressly for the purpose of supporting exchange. This is known as the
  • Gold Standard Reserve. As the reserve is used in practice, not only
  • for holding sterling reserves but also for holding a part of the rupee
  • reserve, this title is a misnomer.[60]
  • For some years after the closing of the Mints no fresh coinage was
  • undertaken. By 1900 it had become necessary to mint additional rupees,
  • and from that time until 1907 the profits on coinage rapidly raised
  • the Gold Standard Reserve to a respectable total. The crisis of
  • 1907–8 made it necessary to withdraw a great number of rupees from
  • circulation, and no further coinage was necessary on a significant
  • scale until the autumn of 1912. By October 1912 the aggregate profits
  • arising from coinage amounted to about £18,600,000. Of this, however,
  • about £1,100,000 was diverted in 1907 for capital expenditure on
  • railways—leaving about £17,500,000 for the Gold Standard Reserve.
  • In addition to this the receipts on account of interest on that part
  • which was invested amounted to about £3,250,000, against which is to be
  • set about £1,000,000 depreciation in the value of the investments in
  • October 1912 as compared with their original cost. Thus at that date
  • this reserve stood at about £19,750,000, allowing for depreciation.
  • During the winter of 1912–13 profits on the heavy issues of coinage
  • caused a further increase, and we may conveniently think of the Gold
  • Standard Reserve as being worth about £21,000,000 net at the end of
  • 1912.
  • Of this total the greater part was held in sterling securities—about
  • £16,000,000 (market price). In recent times the policy has been
  • followed of holding at least half of this in securities of the most
  • liquid possible type. On March 31, 1912, £4,500,000 was held in British
  • Treasury Bills, and £4,735,600 in Exchequer Bonds. Of the rest about
  • £7,000,000 (face value) was in Consols and other stock guaranteed by
  • the British Government, and about £1,500,000 (face value) in various
  • Colonial Government Securities.
  • Apart from the £16,000,000 thus invested, about £1,000,000 was, at
  • the end of 1912, lent at short notice in the London Money Market;
  • about £3,750,000 was held in India in rupees; and £250,000 in gold was
  • “earmarked” at the Bank of England. The holding of some part in actual
  • gold in England was an innovation introduced in November 1912.
  • It has been announced that the Gold Standard Reserve is to be allowed
  • to accumulate through coinage profits and interest receipts until it
  • stands at £25,000,000, and that £5,000,000 of this will be held in
  • gold.[61] It is possible that when this figure has been reached, some
  • part of its income may be applied to capital expenditure on railways.
  • This would be a reversion to the policy of 1907–8, since abandoned,
  • when one–half of the profits of coinage was thus diverted.
  • The form in which the Gold Standard Reserve is held has been subject to
  • much criticism. But it will not be useful to consider this until we are
  • in a position to deal with the reserves as a whole.
  • 3. The second reserve is the Paper Currency Reserve held against the
  • note issue. The constitution of this has been explained in Chapter III.
  • The invested portion may not exceed a stated maximum, of which a part
  • only may be held in sterling securities and the rest must be placed
  • in rupee securities. The whole of the balance must be held in gold or
  • silver bullion, rupees, or sovereigns. But the gold may be held either
  • in London or in India. The actual form in which the Currency Reserve
  • was held at the end of December 1912 was approximately as follows:—
  • Sterling securities £2,500,000
  • Rupee securities 6,500,000
  • Gold in London 7,250,000
  • Gold in India 17,500,000
  • Rupees in India 8,500,000
  • Silver bullion in India or in transit 1,500,000
  • ─—————–────
  • £43,750,000
  • ─────—————–
  • 4. The Government’s remaining reserve source of supply of cash in the
  • form of rupees or sterling is the Cash Balances. Both the total of
  • these and the proportions held in rupees and sterling respectively vary
  • within wide limits from time to time. Their total amount fluctuates
  • according to the volume of taxes coming in at different seasons of the
  • year, the recency with which loans have been contracted for capital
  • expenditure, the proximity of extraordinary expenditure impending, the
  • receipts of windfalls of income (as, recently, from the opium revenue),
  • the general prosperity of the country, and the degree of caution or
  • optimism which, in the opinion of those responsible for the finances,
  • the general situation warrants. The proportions held in rupees and
  • sterling respectively depend even more on considerations of temporary
  • convenience,—recent or impending capital transactions in London, the
  • likelihood of sterling funds being wanted for the purchase of silver,
  • and trade demands for Council Bills as a means of remittance. The
  • totals of the cash balances at various dates are given below.
  • CASH BALANCES(a)
  • ┌——────────——————┬————──────——┬———──────———┬——──────————–┐
  • │ │ In India. │ In London. │ Total. │
  • ├————────────————┼—————──────—┼——──────————┼————──────——–┤
  • │ March 31, 1901 │ £8,767,687 │ £4,091,926 │ £12,859,613 │
  • │ ” 1903 │ 12,081,388 │ 5,767,786 │ 17,849,174 │
  • │ ” 1905 │ 10,597,770 │ 10,262,581 │ 20,860,351 │
  • │ ” 1907 │ 10,026,932 │ 5,606,812 │ 15,633,744 │
  • │ ” 1908 │ 12,851,413 │ 4,607,266 │ 17,458,679 │
  • │ ” 1909 │ 10,235,483 │ 7,983,898 │ 18,219,381 │
  • │ ” 1910 │ 12,295,428 │ 12,799,094 │ 25,094,522 │
  • │ ” 1911 │ 13,566,922 │ 16,696,990 │ 30,263,912 │
  • │ ” 1912 │ 12,279,689 │ 18,390,013 │ 30,669,702 │
  • │ ” 1913 │ 19,543,900 │ 8,372,900 │ 27,916,800 │
  • └——────────——————┴————──────——┴———──────———┴——──────————–┘
  • (a) Excluding balances held in the Gold Standard Reserve.
  • It may be added that the Indian cash balances are kept partly in
  • District Treasuries all over the country, partly in Reserve Treasuries,
  • and partly on deposit at the Presidency Banks. The District Treasuries
  • do not usually contain more resources than they require for ordinary
  • transactions, and the balances in excess of immediate requirements,
  • which are transferred to the Reserve Treasuries, are mainly held in the
  • form of notes. Thus the Government has no large surplus stock of rupees
  • outside the Currency Reserve. The London Balances are held partly at
  • the Bank of England and partly on loan for short periods with certain
  • financial houses on an approved list.[62] No more than a working
  • balance (about £500,000) is ordinarily held at the Bank of England, and
  • this has been reckoned for many years now (though not formerly) amongst
  • the “other” deposits, not amongst the “public” deposits. It will be
  • seen from the table given above that the London Balances fell to a low
  • level in 1908, the Secretary of State making free use of them to aid
  • him in supporting exchange during the critical months of that year. On
  • October 30, 1908, these balances had sunk to £1,196,691. In 1911 and
  • 1912, on the other hand, they reached a very high figure, and in June
  • of both these years exceeded £19,000,000. By the end of 1912 they had
  • sunk again to a more normal level. This abnormally high level in the
  • first half of 1912 gave rise to much criticism in regard both to the
  • amount of the balances and also to the method adopted of lending them
  • out in the London Money Market. Something will be said about this in
  • the concluding paragraphs of this chapter.
  • 5. We are now in a position to see exactly what resources in sterling
  • and rupees respectively the Indian authorities have, on which to draw
  • for the fulfilment of their currency obligations. Since the surplus
  • balances in India, beyond those required by the District Treasuries and
  • those deposited with the Presidency Banks, are mainly held in notes, we
  • may neglect them for the present purpose.
  • _Rupee Reserves_ are held partly in the Currency Reserve, partly in the
  • Gold Standard Reserve. In December 1912 the amounts were approximately
  • as follows:—
  • Currency Reserve(a) £10,000,000
  • Gold Standard Reserve 3,750,000
  • ─────—————–
  • £13,750,000
  • (a) Including silver bullion in India or in transit.
  • _Sterling Reserves_ are held partly in the Currency Reserve, partly in
  • the Gold Standard Reserve, and partly in the London Cash Balances. The
  • forms in which they are held are gold (in the Currency Reserve, both in
  • India and London, and to a small extent in the Gold Standard Reserve),
  • money lent at short notice (in the Gold Standard Reserve and in the
  • Cash Balances), and sterling securities (in the Currency Reserve
  • and in the Gold Standard Reserve). In December 1912 the amounts were
  • approximately as follows:—
  • _Gold_—
  • Currency Reserve in India £17,500,000
  • Currency Reserve in London 7,250,000
  • Gold Standard Reserve in London 250,000
  • ─────—————–
  • £25,000,000
  • ═══════════
  • _Money at Short Notice_—
  • Gold Standard Reserve in London £1,000,000
  • Cash Balances in London 7,500,000
  • ─────—————–
  • £8,500,000
  • ═══════════
  • _Sterling Securities_—
  • Currency Reserve £2,500,000
  • Gold Standard Reserve 16,000,000
  • ─────—————–
  • £18,500,000
  • ═══════════
  • _Aggregate Sterling Resources_—
  • Gold £25,000,000
  • Money at Short Notice 8,500,000
  • Securities 18,500,000
  • ─────—————–
  • £52,000,000
  • ═══════════
  • 6. Before we consider the adequacy of these reserves for their
  • purposes, it will be useful to recall the circumstances of the two
  • recent occasions on which their resources were severely taxed. The
  • Government were hard pressed to supply sufficient rupees in 1906, and
  • hard pressed to supply sufficient sterling in 1908. We can deal with
  • both these occasions in a continuous narrative.
  • The coinage of rupees recommenced on a significant scale in 1900. For
  • the five years following there was a steady annual demand for fresh
  • coinage (low in 1901–2, high in 1903–4, but at no time abnormal) and
  • the Mints were able to meet it with time to spare, though there was
  • some slight difficulty in 1903–4. In 1905–6 the demand quickened, and
  • from July 1905, when the Government’s silver reserves stood at what was
  • then considered the comfortable figure of 1837 lakhs[63] (£12,250,000),
  • it quite outstript the new supplies arising from the mintage of the
  • uncoined silver reserve. The Government were very slow to buy more
  • silver and, in fact, do not seem to have taken steps to do so until,
  • in December 1905, their bullion reserve was quite exhausted. They had
  • then to buy silver in London hurriedly and at rather a high price.
  • In the meantime the rupee reserves had sunk to the very low figure
  • of 761 lakhs (_i.e._, about 40% of the holdings six months earlier),
  • and the demand for Council Bills in London, which would have to be
  • cashed in rupees in India, showed no signs of abating. In order to give
  • themselves breathing space, and to allow time for the silver recently
  • bought in London to reach India and be coined, the Government had to
  • raise the price of telegraphic transfers to what was then the unusually
  • high figure of ¼–5/32. This was the worst that happened. The new
  • coinage very quickly overtook and passed the demand, and by the end of
  • March 1906 the available silver reserves were double what they had been
  • in January.
  • This slight scare, however, was more than sufficient to make the
  • Government lose their heads. Having once started on a career of furious
  • coinage, they continued to do so with little regard to considerations
  • of ordinary prudence—though their sins did not overtake them
  • immediately. Without waiting to see how the busy season of 1906–7
  • would turn out, they coined heavily throughout the summer months, and,
  • there being more silver in hand than could be conveniently held in the
  • Currency Reserve, it was maintained, at the expense of the sterling
  • resources, in the Gold Standard Reserve. In July 1906 the silver
  • reserve stood at about 3200 lakhs. As a matter of fact the season of
  • 1906–7 turned out well, and the demand for rupees was on a large scale.
  • Yet the available silver in India hardly fell below 2000 lakhs—nearly
  • three times the minimum at the most critical moment of the preceding
  • year. The more than adequacy of their reserve at the busiest moment
  • of the very busy season 1906–7 did not check, however, the impetuous
  • activity of the Mints. During the summer of 1907, as in the summer of
  • 1906, they continued to coin without waiting until the prosperity of
  • the season 1907–8 was assured. In September 1907 their silver holdings
  • in one form or another stood at the excessive figure of 3148 lakhs.
  • This time they got what they deserved. The season of 1907–8 was a
  • failure, and at the end of 1907 came the crisis in America. In place
  • of there being a demand for new rupees, it was necessary to withdraw
  • from circulation an immense volume of the old ones; and the sterling
  • reserves, not the rupee reserves, were in danger of insufficiency. This
  • leads us to the next chapter of the history.
  • 7. The coinage policy of the Government of India from 1905 to 1907
  • suggests one obvious reflection. A succession of years, in which there
  • is a heavy demand for currency, makes it less likely that the heavy
  • demand will persist in the year following. The effects of heavy coinage
  • are cumulative. The Indian authorities do not seem to have understood
  • this. They were, to all appearances, influenced by the crude inductive
  • argument that, because there was a heavy demand in 1905–6, it was
  • likely that there would be an equally heavy demand in 1906–7; and, when
  • there actually was a heavy demand in 1906–7, that this made it yet more
  • likely that there would be a heavy demand in 1907–8. They framed their
  • policy, that is to say, as though a community consumed currency with
  • the same steady appetite with which some communities consume beer. In
  • so far as the new currency is to satisfy the demands, not of hoarding,
  • but of trade, it is hardly necessary to point out the fallacy.
  • Moreover, even a superficial acquaintance with the currency history of
  • India brings experience to the support of reason. Even when the rupee
  • was worth no more than its bullion value, so that it was hoarded and
  • melted much more than it is now, years of unusually heavy coinage were
  • nearly always followed by a reaction. India has taken her coinage in
  • great gulps, and it need not have been difficult to see that the demand
  • of 1905–7 was one of these.
  • 8. The Government of India’s silver policy during the early part of
  • 1907 left them, therefore, in a somewhat worse position to meet the
  • crisis which came at the end of the year, than need have been the case.
  • But their sterling reserves were nevertheless fairly high. On September
  • 1, 1907, they seem to have been, approximately, as follows:—
  • _Gold_—
  • Currency Reserve in India £4,100,000
  • Currency Reserve in London 6,200,000
  • ——————————–
  • £10,300,000
  • ═══════════
  • _Money at Short Notice_—
  • Gold Standard Reserve in London £50,000
  • Cash Balances in London 5,150,000
  • ——————————–
  • £5,200,000
  • ═══════════
  • _Sterling Securities_—
  • In Currency Reserve £1,300,000(a)
  • In Gold Standard Reserve 14,100,000(a)
  • ——————————–
  • £15,400,000
  • ═══════════
  • _Aggregate Sterling Reserves_—
  • Gold £10,300,000
  • Money at Short Notice 5,200,000
  • Securities 15,400,000
  • ——————————–
  • £30,900,000
  • ═══════════
  • (a) Book value.
  • Thus, to take a round figure, the crisis found the Secretary of State
  • with about £31,000,000 in hand. The storm was soon on him. By the
  • end of October 1907 it had become plain that the Indian harvest would
  • be a bad one, and the financial crisis in the United States was fast
  • developing. On November 4 the Bank of England raised its rate to 6 per
  • cent, and on November 7 (for the first time since 1873) to 7 per cent.
  • On November 6 the Secretary of State could only manage to sell even 30
  • lakhs of rupees by allowing the rate to drop to the minimum figure of
  • 1s. 3–29/32d. For several weeks following, at a time of year when the
  • demand for Council Bills is usually strong, he sold none at all. But
  • beyond withdrawing from the market he took no further steps for the
  • support of exchange. This measure was inadequate to effect its purpose,
  • and there is a good deal to be said for the view that he ought to have
  • taken at once the more drastic steps for maintaining the gold value of
  • the rupee which he had to take a few months later. However, it was a
  • perplexing and unprecedented time for every one, and that it was some
  • weeks before his advisers found their bearings is not to be wondered at.
  • So inadequate was his action that at first the fall in exchange was
  • scarcely stayed at all. Tumbling day by day, it reached on November
  • 25 the rate of ⅓–11/16. This is below the gold export point (from
  • India), and it could not have fallen so low if the Government had made
  • gold freely available in India. But, as can be seen from the preceding
  • table, their Indian gold reserve was not large. Individuals were not
  • permitted, therefore, to take out more than £10,000 at a time; and
  • in this manner the gold dribbled slowly away over a period of a few
  • months. It would probably have been of more use if it had been allowed
  • to disappear in a week at the moment when it was most badly wanted.
  • In the meantime the Secretary of State, deprived of his usual source of
  • income from the sale of Council Bills, was meeting his normal expenses
  • from the gold portion of the Currency Reserve in London. But the Gold
  • Standard Reserve, although about £1,000,000 worth of Consols was sold
  • out in order to be ready for use in a more liquid form, was kept so far
  • intact.
  • Thus matters went on until the end of December 1907, when the
  • authorities nerved themselves, although the immediate necessity had
  • temporarily disappeared through a slight strengthening of exchange, to
  • take whatever drastic steps might be necessary to maintain the gold
  • value of the rupee. It was announced that they would sell in India
  • telegraphic transfers on London at a fixed rate. Before the need arose
  • for acting on this announcement, it was changed into an offer to sell
  • sterling bills on London at the fixed minimum rate of ⅓–29/32.
  • By March 1908 the reserves of actual gold were nearly exhausted, but
  • the securities and cash at short notice had not yet been trenched
  • on. Early in April exchange was again weak, and the offer referred
  • to above came into active operation. At first £500,000 a week, and
  • later £1,000,000 a week of sterling bills on London were sold in
  • India at ⅓–29/32. These were cashed in London from the proceeds of
  • selling securities from the Gold Standard Reserve. By August 1908 about
  • £8,000,000 of bills had been cashed in this way. At the beginning of
  • September 1908 the sterling reserves, which I give for comparison with
  • the amounts in September 1907 quoted above, were, approximately, as
  • follows:—
  • _Gold_—
  • Currency Reserve in India £150,000
  • Currency Reserve in London 1,850,000
  • ——————————–
  • £2,000,000
  • ═══════════
  • _Money at Short Notice_—
  • Gold Standard Reserve in London _nil._
  • Cash Balances in London £1,850,000
  • ——————————–
  • £1,850,000
  • ═══════════
  • _Sterling Securities_—
  • In Currency Reserve £1,300,000
  • In Gold Standard Reserve 6,000,000
  • ——————————–
  • £7,300,000
  • ═══════════
  • _Aggregate Sterling Resources_—
  • Gold £2,000,000
  • Money at Short Notice 1,850,000
  • Securities 7,300,000
  • ——————————–
  • £11,150,000
  • ═══════════
  • 9. Thus the Secretary of State’s sterling resources sank in the
  • course of a year from about £31,000,000 to about £11,000,000. But
  • these figures do not supply by themselves a complete explanation of
  • the manner in which he had financed himself in London during this
  • period. Between September 1907 and September 1908 railway loans to
  • the aggregate amount of about £12,500,000 and a loan of £2,000,000
  • for “general purposes”[64] were raised in sterling.[65] A large part
  • of the former was required for the discharge of some previously
  • existing railway debentures, and for the purchase in England of railway
  • materials chargeable to capital account. In so far as the loan was
  • used for these purposes it did not help the general position. But in
  • so far as it was used for railway construction which could be paid
  • for by rupees in India, it had the effect of increasing the Secretary
  • of State’s sterling resources by a corresponding amount. Altogether,
  • during the period under review, the net assistance obtained by loans
  • amounted, I think, to about £4,500,000; so that the total deterioration
  • in the Secretary of State’s position during the first year of the
  • depression was not far short of £25,000,000.
  • After October 1908 the market still showed some hesitation. If the
  • season had turned out poorly, it is clear that the Secretary of State
  • must have had recourse to borrowing on a fairly heavy scale. In fact
  • the harvest was satisfactory, and by December 1908 the demand for
  • Council Bills was strong. It may be added to complete the story, that
  • in August and September 1909 there was a short period of weakness when
  • it was again necessary to offer sterling bills in Calcutta. Since that
  • time India has enjoyed a period of very great prosperity, and, so far
  • from the reserves being tested, it has been possible to build up the
  • very strong position analysed above.
  • 10. I have looked at the crisis so far from the point of view of its
  • effect in depleting the sterling resources of the Secretary of State.
  • To the authorities in India it presented its other face. There it was
  • a question of how many rupees they would be able to withdraw from
  • circulation. Unless there is a deficiency in the revenue from taxation,
  • and apart from loans, the extent to which the Secretary of State can
  • draw on sterling resources must exactly equal the extent to which the
  • Government of India can withdraw rupees from circulation. For every
  • transfer from the sterling branch of any of the reserves must be
  • balanced by a corresponding transfer into the rupee branch. The amount
  • of the sterling reserves is a measure of the ability of the authorities
  • to withdraw rupees; and conversely, the volume of rupees which can be
  • spared from the circulation (or from hoards) in bad times sets an upper
  • limit to the extent to which they can be compelled to draw on their
  • sterling reserves for the support of the currency.
  • Regarded from this standpoint, the facts were as follows:—By March
  • 1908 nearly 115 million rupees had been withdrawn into the currency
  • reserve by the release of gold, and by December 1908 the figure had
  • risen to 154 million. Up to March 1908 it had not been necessary to
  • take rupees into the Gold Standard Reserve; but by the end of November
  • 1908 about 130 million rupees had been withdrawn in this way. There
  • was also a small increase of rupees in that part of the Indian Cash
  • Balances which is held in rupees and not in currency notes. Thus the
  • active circulation was reduced altogether by about 285 million rupees
  • (£19,000,000). This figure agrees closely enough with the figures we
  • reached by studying the state of the sterling resources.
  • 11. This completes the narrative of events up to the end of the crisis
  • of 1908. I have given only such details as are relevant to my main
  • topic—the adequacy of the reserves to fulfil their purpose.
  • 12. Let us consider, first, the adequacy of the reserve of coined
  • rupees. The governing facts of the situation are that every addition
  • to the rupee reserve diminishes to an equivalent extent the amount
  • available for the sterling reserve; that if the rupee reserve
  • is insufficient, nothing worse can happen than some delay and
  • inconvenience to merchants at a time of boom, whereas, if the sterling
  • reserve is insufficient, a dangerous crisis may be aggravated to the
  • pitch of panic; that at the last moment the rupee reserve can always
  • be replenished with no very great delay from the resources of the
  • sterling reserve, whereas the reverse is not the case (the silver
  • being not so saleable at a crisis as the gold is in a boom); and that,
  • therefore, it is desirable to keep the rupee reserve at the lowest
  • possible point consistent with probability and ordinary prudence. The
  • practical information chiefly required for settling the proper policy
  • is in regard to the ease with which new rupees can be supplied as they
  • are wanted—as to how far, that is to say, the Government can safely
  • pursue the policy of living from hand to mouth. This depends upon how
  • fast silver can be bought by the Government without its submitting to
  • extravagant charges, and how fast, in relation to the maximum rates of
  • new demand so far experienced, the Indian Mints can turn the silver
  • into rupees.
  • 13. The Government of India’s recent attempt to solve the first part of
  • the problem unhappily involved its officers in a good deal of obloquy.
  • The silver market is a very narrow one and can only be dealt in through
  • the agency of one or other of a very small number of brokers. A ring of
  • speculators lay waiting to force prices up as soon as the Government
  • should appear as a buyer. Apart from the brokers who acted for the
  • ring, there was only one firm in a position to buy large quantities of
  • silver with the secrecy which was necessary if the speculators were to
  • be defeated. Unfortunately the head of this firm was closely related
  • by blood to the Parliamentary Under–Secretary of State. Two courses
  • were open: to buy openly and pay such extra price as the speculators
  • might find themselves in a position to demand, or to risk charges
  • of venality from any one who might have an interest in discrediting
  • the Government—disappointed speculators, currency malcontents, or
  • members of the political party in opposition. The officials, thinking
  • (bureaucratically) more of the Indian Exchequer and the Indian taxpayer
  • than of the House of Commons, chose, in fact, the second of the two
  • alternatives—in a spirit, perhaps, of too great innocence, bred of
  • long immunity from charges of personal corruption. It turned out that
  • they had made insufficient allowance for the deep interest which the
  • House of Commons takes in suggestions of personal scandal. The question
  • of Indian currency became almost interesting. Members asked one another
  • what the Gold Standard Reserve might be, and, when writers in the Press
  • told them, were duly horrified to learn that it contained no gold.
  • Closer inquiry elicited further facts unsuspected hitherto. It was
  • discovered that a number of the most prominent members of the London
  • Money Market were Jews, and that the Government of India’s holdings of
  • Consols had depreciated in market value since they were bought. But
  • attention was specially concentrated on the fact that the cash balances
  • held in London, after fluctuating considerably from time to time, had
  • risen for a year past to an unusually high level, and had been lent
  • out at low rates of interest to persons many of whom bore foreign
  • names. How was the ordinary member of Parliament to be sure that some
  • cosmopolitan syndicate of Jews was not fattening at the expense of
  • the ryots of India, whose trustee he had often declared himself to
  • be? Indian currency is too complicated a subject to be mastered at a
  • moment’s notice; and many persons, without paying much attention to
  • random charges of corruption, felt, quite legitimately, that there was
  • a great deal going on of which they had no conception, and that they
  • would like to be fully satisfied for themselves, and not merely on
  • the word of the officials, that everything was really in order. The
  • situation in its fundamentals has arisen before, and will arise from
  • time to time in the future so long as the relations of the House of
  • Commons to India combine in a high degree responsibility and ignorance.
  • 14. The circumstances themselves are of very transient importance,
  • but they are likely to have some permanent effect on the particular
  • question which we are now discussing. It will be too much to expect the
  • officials to expose their personal reputations again to a suspicion,
  • however ill–founded, even in the interests of the Indian Exchequer.
  • Next time that the Government of India have to buy silver on a large
  • scale, it is likely that they will do so publicly and pay such extra
  • price as this policy involves. It is not worth a Government’s while to
  • risk its transactions falling into suspicion in order to save half a
  • million pounds. Assuming, therefore, that in future the Government will
  • have to buy publicly, we have to consider whether it is likely to be
  • cheaper for them to buy when the price of silver seems low, and hold
  • stocks in hand, or to wait until the last moment and buy at whatever
  • price is then ruling. I am inclined to think that the second of these
  • two policies is the better—though it is plainly a matter on which it
  • is not possible at present to see one’s way clearly. It is outside the
  • ordinary run of Government officials’ duties to judge whether or not
  • a given time is a good one at which to buy silver. The speculative
  • business of estimating the future of silver is best left to experts
  • in the matter, even though the price ultimately paid has to include
  • some commission to them for their services or their foresight. In the
  • second place the history of the recent speculative ring in silver,
  • so far as it can be known to an outsider, does not suggest that such
  • a transaction is a very easy or profitable thing to carry through,
  • or that the speculators have had a sufficiently striking success to
  • encourage similar attempts on a large scale in the future. I do not
  • know with what profit the ring have emerged from the transaction; but
  • the expense of carrying silver for a long period is great, and the rise
  • in its price in the last two years, though substantial, has not been
  • enough—so far as one can judge—to leave a surplus of profits at all
  • commensurate with the great risks run. In the third place, it does not
  • seem certain that the urgent demands for fresh coinage of rupees, to
  • which India is subject from time to time, will be as frequent in the
  • future as they have been in the immediate past. On the one hand the
  • heavy coinages since 1900 are cumulative in their effect and render
  • further coinages in the future less probable; and on the other hand an
  • increased use (it is to be hoped) of other media of exchange will allow
  • an urgent demand for currency to be met in other ways.
  • 15. I do not think, therefore, that the Government need show a very
  • long foresight lest they should have to buy silver dear. But when their
  • stocks are falling low and there are apparently signs of demand in the
  • _immediate_ future, how long can coinage be delayed safely? To answer
  • this we need to know the maximum rate of output of the Mints, and the
  • maximum rate of absorption of new currency so far experienced.
  • 16. The rates of absorption of rupees in various years have been
  • given in the Table on p. 55. The maximum absorption in the October
  • to December quarter was 11·39 lakhs in 1905–6, and the maximum in
  • the January to March quarter was 2·68 lakhs in 1909–10. It has been
  • estimated that the Indian Mints can turn out 2·25 lakhs of rupees per
  • month without overtime, and 4·50 lakhs per month with overtime. There
  • seems little reason, therefore, for over–anxiety lest the Government
  • be caught short of rupees. If they were to start the busy season with
  • a surplus of 500 or 600 lakhs over what was considered a safe minimum,
  • the reasonable demands of prudence would have been fully satisfied.
  • The safe minimum in question must necessarily depend on circumstances,
  • especially on the volume of the note issue and on the amount of gold
  • held in India; it is impossible to suggest any figure which would
  • be permanently suitable. I am dealing merely with the surplus over
  • this minimum which, on the basis of experience, the Government might
  • reasonably take pains to have in stock at the beginning of a busy
  • season. The calculation refers throughout to their _aggregate_ rupee
  • resources in the Currency Reserve and Gold Standard Reserve combined.
  • 17. We now come to the much more important question of the adequacy of
  • the sterling reserves.
  • I do not think it has ever been thought out quite clearly for what
  • precise purposes these reserves are held. The difficulty can be put
  • shortly in this question,—Are they held purely as a currency reserve,
  • or are they to fulfil also the purpose of a banking reserve? Is their
  • only purpose, that is to say, to make certain that the Government
  • will always be able to exchange for sterling such rupees and notes as
  • may be presented to them, or are they also intended to ensure India’s
  • being able to meet her international obligations at a time of dangerous
  • crisis? The two purposes are plainly not identical. If all bankers
  • and merchants keep adequate reserves in rupees and notes, then it
  • will be sufficient if the Government are always able to turn these
  • rupees and notes into sterling. But if in a financial crisis the Indian
  • Money Market as a whole is in fact unable to meet its international
  • obligations without Government assistance, is it the Government’s
  • intention to stand calmly aside and permit (for example) a suspension
  • of cash payments by the three Presidency Banks, or will they, if
  • necessary, use their sterling reserves to give some support to the
  • Indian Money Market _in extremis_?
  • If the Government’s Reserve is held purely to support the currency,
  • then the maximum volume of rupees and notes, which could, so far as
  • one can anticipate, be spared from the circulation and tendered to the
  • Government for exchange, sets an upper limit to the necessary amount
  • of this Reserve. If, on the other hand, it is intended to act as a
  • banking reserve and to ensure India’s ability to meet her international
  • obligations at all times, then its upper limit is set by the probable
  • maximum amount of the adverse balance which could arise against India
  • for immediate payment.
  • 18. I will begin by discussing this question on the first
  • hypothesis—that what the Government has been accumulating is intended
  • to serve as a currency reserve only—and will return later to the
  • problem of a reserve held for wider purposes, and of the possible
  • magnitude of the balance of international indebtedness against India.
  • 19. To estimate the demand that the reserves might have to meet merely
  • in order to support the currency, the existing volume of currency is
  • what we chiefly require to know. For this sets, or suggests, a limit
  • to the maximum amount which can possibly be spared from the active
  • circulation.
  • Attempts to estimate the rupee circulation of India have been the
  • occasion of some very interesting calculations. For many years past
  • (since 1875) an annual census of rupees has been taken by examining in
  • each Government Treasury a bag containing 2000. This enabled Mr. F. C.
  • Harrison, when he was Comptroller of Currency, to apply the Jevonian
  • method very fully; and he was also able to corroborate his estimates by
  • reference to the numbers of the older issues, 1835 and 1840 (_e.g._),
  • actually withdrawn from circulation on the occasions when the Mint
  • recalled them. Mr. Harrison’s results were checked by the labours of
  • a later Comptroller of Currency, Mr. Adie, who applied to the same
  • material two alternative methods of much greater technical complexity
  • than Mr. Harrison’s.[66]
  • Jevons’s method is based on the assumptions that the proportions of
  • coins issued at different dates found in the given samples roughly
  • correspond to their proportions in the circulation at large, and that
  • the numbers in circulation of the latest issues do not much differ
  • from the numbers issued from the Mint. In short, if we know the
  • relative proportions of coins of 1860 and of 1912 in the circulation,
  • and if we know, approximately, the absolute number of coins of 1912,
  • we can calculate the absolute number still circulating of the coins of
  • 1860. In applying this method to the Indian data, we are assuming that
  • the proportions of rupees of each date found in the bags examined in
  • a great number of scattered Government Treasuries are a fair sample
  • of the proportions still in circulation throughout the country. In a
  • country such as India, however, there may be great stagnancy in a part
  • of the circulation, and the coins finding their way to the Government
  • Treasuries may be a sample rather of the floating surplus of coinage,
  • which has a relatively high velocity of circulation, than of the
  • total stock, which includes semi–hoards passing from hand to hand
  • comparatively seldom. Since these samples are likely, therefore, to
  • contain an undue proportion of recent issues, estimates of the total
  • circulation, which are based on them, may be expected to fall short
  • of the truth rather than to exceed it. There is reason, also, for
  • supposing that in some cases the officials charged with the duty of
  • examining the samples did not always deal with them conscientiously. A
  • tendency was noticed for the returns of one year to resemble those of
  • the previous year more closely than they should, and not infrequently a
  • batch of coins would be attributed to a year in which it is known that
  • none were minted. Nevertheless the calculations of Mr. Harrison and Mr.
  • Adie, and the data on which they are based, seem on the whole coherent,
  • and bear, so far as one can judge, the marks of substantial accuracy.
  • A quite different method of estimating the circulation has been
  • adopted by Mr. F. J. Atkinson.[67] His method is direct; and consists
  • in a calculation or estimate of the additions to the currency and
  • the losses from export, melting, etc., year by year, from 1831 when
  • the modern coinage first began. Some of the items in the calculation
  • are definitely known, but others, the amount annually melted, for
  • example, are almost entirely a matter of guesswork. The fact that his
  • calculations contain altogether a great number of separate guesses
  • does not prevent his final result from being a guess too. For the
  • period previous to the closing of the Mints some of his estimates for
  • the amount melted seem very low, and this may possibly explain why
  • his final results yield a much higher total for the circulation than
  • those of Mr. Harrison and Mr. Adie. In recent times, _i.e._ since the
  • closing of the Mints, and specially since the new equilibrium which
  • was reached in 1900, Mr. Atkinson’s method is much more satisfactory
  • than for earlier years and, since the doubtful items are in these later
  • years a far smaller proportion of the whole, much less likely to lead
  • us wrong. For the earlier years, therefore, I am inclined to prefer
  • Mr. Harrison’s conclusions; but I think they can be brought up to date
  • by a year–to–year method resembling Mr. Atkinson’s. The increase in
  • Mr. Atkinson’s estimate during the ’nineties is due to the fact that,
  • as his figures purport to exclude rupees in hoards, he must make large
  • allowance for the coins from this source then entering into circulation.
  • The actual figures are as follows:—
  • ESTIMATE OF THE RUPEE CURRENCY IN CRORES (10,000,000) OF RUPEES
  • ┌——────——┬—————─────–┬———──────———┬———──────———┬————───────———┐
  • │ │ Harrison. │ Adie, │ Adie, │ Atkinson.(a) │
  • │ │ │ 1st method │2nd method. │ │
  • ┼——────——┼—————─────–┼———──────———┼———──────———┼————───────———┼
  • │ 1881 │ { │ 108 │ ... │ 135 │
  • │ 1882 │ { │ 111 │ 108 │ 133 │
  • │ 1883 │ { about │ 113 │ 110 │ 136 │
  • │ 1884 │ { 115 │ 106 │ 107 │ 136 │
  • │ 1885 │ { │ 104 │ 105 │ 139 │
  • │ 1886 │ { │ 106 │ 110 │ 145 │
  • │ 1887 │ ... │ 109 │ 108 │ 148 │
  • │ 1888 │ 120 │ 106 │ 106 │ 152 │
  • │ 1889 │ ... │ 112 │ 112 │ 154 │
  • │ 1890 │ ... │ 121 │ 115 │ 159 │
  • │ 1891 │ ... │ 121 │ 116 │ 166 │
  • │ 1892 │ 125 │ 129 │ 121 │ 167 │
  • │ 1893 │ 128 │ 132 │ 130 │ 173 │
  • │ 1894 │ ... │ 129 │ 126 │ 176 │
  • │ 1895 │ ... │ 128 │ 127 │ 169 │
  • │ 1896 │ ... │ 121 │ 120 │ 172 │
  • │ 1897 │ ... │ 116 │ 116 │ 178 │
  • │ 1898 │ 120 │ 118 │ 113 │ 183 │
  • │ 1899 │ ... │ 118 │ 112 │ 178 │
  • │ 1900 │ ... │ ... │ ... │ 177 │
  • │ 1901 │ ... │ ... │ ... │ 189 │
  • └——────——┴—————─────–┴———──────———┴———──────———┴————───────———┘
  • (a) Of Mr. Atkinson’s two separate calculations, made in 1897 and 1903,
  • I have taken the latter. His calculation explicitly excludes rupees
  • in hoards, currency reserves, and Government balances; and is not,
  • therefore, entirely comparable with the others. If it were, the excess
  • would be considerably greater than it actually appears above.
  • 20. These are the _data_. It is very difficult to estimate the extent
  • to which rupees may have emerged from hoards during the period which
  • succeeded the closing of the Mints. Mr. Atkinson’s figures suggest
  • that rupees from this source not only made good the natural wastage in
  • the active circulation but actually brought about a large increase in
  • it. Judging from the course of prices, I think he must have made an
  • excessive allowance under this head. The figures of Mr. Harrison and
  • Mr. Adie, on the other hand (which refer to the _total_ circulation),
  • point to a more moderate influx out of hoards into current use. I
  • propose to take a middle course, nearer, however, to Mr. Harrison than
  • to Mr. Atkinson, and to assume a _public_ circulation in 1900 (_i.e._,
  • excluding rupees in the Currency Reserve and Government Balances) of
  • 120 crores of rupees. This estimate is probably near enough to the
  • truth for our purpose. If it is incorrect, I think it is more likely to
  • be an underestimate than an overestimate.
  • Starting from this assumption, I have worked out the details given
  • in the following table as a guide to the probable circulation at the
  • present time. By _public_ circulation, whether of rupees or notes, I
  • mean the whole circulation not in the hands of the Government—_i.e._,
  • including that in the hands of the banks. I am primarily concerned with
  • the circulation of rupees; but the public circulation of notes has been
  • added in the last column but one, as it is useful to know at the same
  • time the _total_ public circulation of currency.
  • CURRENCY IN LAKHS OF RUPEES
  • Total Currency
  • in the hands────────────────────────────────────────────–┐
  • of the Public │
  • on March 31.(d) │
  • │
  • Public circolation │
  • of Notes on──────────────────────────────────────–┐ │
  • March 31. │ │
  • │ │
  • Public circolation │ │
  • of Rupees on──────────────────────────────┐ │ │
  • March 31.(d) │ │ │
  • │ │ │
  • Net(c) Export.────────────────────–┐ │ │ │
  • │ │ │ │
  • Rupees released │ │ │ │
  • from Currency, │ │ │ │
  • Gold Exchange────────────────┐ │ │ │ │
  • Standard, │ │ │ │ │
  • and Treasur │ │ │ │ │
  • Reserves. │ │ │ │ │
  • │ │ │ │ │
  • New Coinage less │ │ │ │ │
  • Recoinage,(a)────────–┐ │ │ │ │ │
  • etc.(b) │ │ │ │ │ │
  • │ │ │ │ │ │
  • Public │ │ │ │ │ │
  • Circolation────┐ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • of Rupees │ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • on April 1. │ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • │ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • Financial │ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • Year, │ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • April 1– │ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • March 31. │ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • ┌────┴───–┬───┴──┬───┴──┬───┴──┬──┴─–┬───┴──–┬───┴──┬───┴──–┐
  • │1900–1901│120,00│+13,60│– 4,66│– 35│=128,59│+23,79│=152,38│
  • │1901–1902│128,59│+ 2,04│– 2.72│–1.42│=126,49│+24,24│=150,73│
  • │1902–1903│126,49│+ 60│– 58│–2,23│=124,28│+28,87│=153,15│
  • │1903–1904│124,28│+11,42│– 45│+ 40│=135,65│+31,54│=167,19│
  • │1904–1905│135,65│+ 6,88│+ 55│– 61│=142,47│+33,73│=176,20│
  • │1905–1906│142,47│+16,11│– 2,11│– 78│=155,69│+37,90│=193,59│
  • │1906–1907│155,69│+22,88│– 4,88│–1,28│=172,41│+41,20│=213,61│
  • │1907–1908│172,41│+15,48│–11,56│– 41│=175,92│+38,65│=214,57│
  • │1908–1909│175,92│+ 2│–14,90│– 29│=160,75│+39,23│=199,98│
  • │1909–1910│160,75│+ 8│+13,14│–1,39│=172,42│+46,51│=218,93│
  • │1910–1911│172,42│– 42│+ 3,76│–1,72│=174,04│+45,68│=219,72│
  • │1911–1912│174,04│– 7│+11,61│–1,13│=184,41│+53,24│=237,65│
  • │1912–1913│184,41│ │ │ │ │ │ │
  • └────────–┴──────┴──────┴──────┴────–┴──────–┴──────┴──────–┘
  • (a) This column is derived from the figures given by the Currency
  • Department, and the total of net coinage issued in individual years
  • differs somewhat from the total amount minted as stated in the Mint
  • Statistics.
  • (b) In one or two of the earlier years deduction is made on account of
  • an appreciable sum in rupees paid out to native states. This deduction
  • is in accordance with the practice of the reports of the Currency
  • Department.
  • (c) For Bahrain Islands, Ceylon, Arabia, Mauritius, and East African
  • Coast.
  • (d) Not allowing for natural wastage of rupees (see below).
  • This calculation makes no allowance for the general wastage through
  • loss and various causes, or for the steady drain of rupees across the
  • land frontiers. This last item is probably considerable and is not
  • adequately accounted for in the trade returns. The recorded statistics
  • of trade overland show a large annual balance against India, which
  • is probably met by an unrecorded export of gold, silver bullion, and
  • rupees. In the case of Nepal, for example, the recorded statistics
  • show a considerable net balance of imports of treasure _into_ India;
  • and in the case of Tibet, Afghanistan and, in fact, all the land
  • frontiers, the official statistics of the export of treasure do not
  • tally with what we know of the circulation of the rupee beyond the
  • frontiers. Taking all these causes of loss together, I do not think
  • we should overestimate the wastage of rupees from the circulation in
  • placing it between half a crore and a crore annually. For the twelve
  • years 1900 to 1912, therefore, I propose to make an aggregate deduction
  • of 941 lakhs.
  • This leaves us with a public circulation of 175 crores of rupees
  • (£116,500,000) on March 31, 1912, and a total public circulation,
  • including notes, of 228 crores[68] (£152,000,000), being an increase
  • since 1900 of 46 per cent in the rupee circulation and of 58 per cent
  • in the total circulation. If Mr. Atkinson’s estimate of the circulation
  • in 1900 is nearer the truth than Mr. Harrison’s, then the public rupee
  • circulation in 1912 may have been as much as 200 crores. In the course
  • of 1912 there was a good deal of fresh coinage, of which, at the time
  • of writing, accurate statistics are not yet available. For our present
  • purpose it will be quite sufficiently cautious to think of the public
  • rupee and note circulation together as amounting to not more than 250
  • crores.
  • 21. How much of this could possibly be spared from circulation at a
  • time of crisis? In 1908 the rupee circulation fell (at its lowest
  • point) by somewhat less than 30 crores, or less than 20 per cent of the
  • estimated rupee circulation at that time. The note circulation (see p.
  • 55) fell much less seriously. It does not seem to me likely that the
  • Government could be called on at the present time to redeem more than
  • 25 per cent of the total circulation (notes and rupees together), or,
  • on the basis of the foregoing calculations, 60 crores (say) of rupees
  • (£40,000,000). If the Government were to keep in one way or another a
  • reserve of this amount for purely currency purposes, I think they would
  • have done as much as reasonable prudence could require. I do not say
  • that it is impossible that they should be called on to redeem a greater
  • amount than this. But it would be extravagant to maintain a reserve
  • adequate for all conceivable emergencies, since there is a further
  • resort of which use might fairly be made without great reluctance.
  • Unless the London Money Market has collapsed as well as the Indian, it
  • is always open to the Secretary of State to borrow by means of India
  • Bills. There would be nothing shameful in this—though possibly some
  • expense. But the expense, even if the Secretary of State had to pay a
  • rate of interest appropriate to Turkey or China, would be much less
  • than the expense of maintaining a very great reserve against unlikely
  • emergencies.[69]
  • 22. So much for the proper magnitude of the Reserve, regarded as a
  • Currency Reserve. The question of its use as a Banking Reserve raises
  • two problems—a problem of policy and a problem of statistics. Ought
  • the Government to allow its Reserve to be used as a Banking Reserve? If
  • so, how large ought this Reserve to be? Let us consider policy first.
  • 23. There are three kinds of crises by which the Indian Money Market
  • might be assailed—a purely internal crisis, in which the banks have
  • difficulty in meeting a run on them by their Indian depositors; a
  • purely external crisis, in which India owes, and is called on to pay,
  • large sums in the London Market, but is free from serious banking
  • trouble at home; and a general crisis, in which the features of an
  • internal and an external crisis are combined.
  • A purely internal crisis of the first kind might require assistance
  • from the resources of Government, but would involve no claims on their
  • sterling resources specifically, as distinguished from their rupee
  • resources. The trouble would probably begin with a boom of the usual
  • type, heavy commitments on the part of the banks, large importations
  • of foreign goods, and (in the future) a good deal of internal company
  • promoting. If, early in the autumn, a serious failure of the monsoon
  • became apparent, a widespread suspension on the part of the numerous
  • bubble banks, which have been springing up lately all over India,[70]
  • would be a probable consequence. Indian depositors generally might take
  • alarm and hoard money in their own houses on a large scale. Exchange
  • Banks have such large deposits in India and so little cash there[71]
  • that they would probably require to import funds from London as fast as
  • possible. The Indian Joint Stock Banks, however, are now so important
  • that the part played by the Exchange Banks might not be adequate to
  • save the situation. The Government would then be called on to make
  • advances to the Presidency Banks. This has happened from time to time
  • in the past, the last occasion being in April 1898, when the Bank of
  • Bombay, whose bank rate was then at 13 per cent, asked the Government
  • for an advance of 25 lakhs.[72]
  • This raises the first question of policy—whether the Government should
  • help the bankers’ reserves on an occasion of internal crisis by making
  • rupee advances to them. But it is hardly relevant to the question of
  • the Government’s _sterling_ resources; and, unless the Government
  • Savings Banks were to be in trouble at the same time, it is not likely
  • that there would be any difficulty in helping the bankers, if it were
  • thought right to do so.
  • A crisis of the second kind, due to general depression or bad harvests,
  • in which India has to meet a heavy adverse balance in London,
  • provided that, as in 1907, it is not accompanied by internal banking
  • difficulties of the kind just described, causes, it is true, a drain on
  • the Government’s sterling resources through the necessity of providing
  • remittance on London, but only in proportion to the volume of notes and
  • rupees which are brought to the Government for encashment or in payment
  • of sterling drafts.
  • At first, therefore, in such a case, there is no question of the
  • Government’s using its reserves otherwise than as currency reserves;
  • and the banks will have plenty of notes and rupees with which to buy
  • the Government’s sterling drafts. Only if the depression is very
  • prolonged, and one bad harvest follows another, is the need likely to
  • arise for sterling advances from Government, otherwise than against a
  • corresponding face value of notes and rupees.
  • It is not very improbable, however, that in the future there might be
  • a general crisis of the third kind—a heavy adverse balance against
  • India, and an internal banking crisis at the same time. It is in these
  • circumstances that the most difficult question of policy arises. The
  • Indian Money Market would need to remit funds to London, but, on
  • account of the internal banking crisis and an outbreak of hoarding
  • amongst depositors, would not have even rupee resources with which to
  • do it. Consequently the Government’s offer to sell sterling drafts in
  • Calcutta, or to release gold from the Currency Reserve would not meet
  • the case. If general distrust of banking was widely spread, and notes,
  • gold, and rupees were being hoarded in the old–fashioned way on a large
  • scale, the banks would not be able to put their hands on sufficient
  • cash resources of any kind to enable them to pay for the Government’s
  • drafts on a scale adequate to their necessities. The position would be
  • that the Indian Money Market was on the verge of general insolvency
  • with the Presidency Bank Rates at (say) 12 per cent, and that the
  • Indian Government had (say) £40,000,000 sterling resources in hand with
  • demands on only a modest scale for the encashment of notes and rupees.
  • The Government would be vehemently urged to save the situation by
  • making sterling advances, not simply in exchange for notes or rupees,
  • but on some other non–monetary security.
  • 24. We now have the possibilities before us. If in any of these sets
  • of circumstances the Government were faced with demands for advances
  • either in rupees or sterling, what line would it be proper to take?
  • On the one hand the policy of advances may introduce into the Indian
  • Money Market a serious element of weakness,—an element, perhaps,
  • inseparable from a system where there is no central banking authority
  • and where the currency authority stands, normally, outside the money
  • market. It is not the business of the Government to hold any of the
  • reserves which the bankers ought to hold. But if the Government does,
  • in fact, for another purpose hold large reserves in its hands, and if
  • it is believed that it will in case of extreme necessity come to the
  • market’s rescue, the bankers may tend to keep somewhat lower reserves
  • than they ought, and than they otherwise would. We have over again
  • the situation which has long existed, to its detriment, in the United
  • States. There, as in India, the Government, with immense currency
  • reserves of gold, is normally aloof from the money market. There
  • also they have no central banking authority. The expectation that
  • the Government will bring some of its gold to the rescue in extreme
  • circumstances, has always been said to exert an enervating influence
  • on the banks themselves in the matter of the precautions they take
  • for times of crisis. The ultimate solution probably lies in the
  • establishment of a Central Bank for India which shall be the Government
  • Bank and shall hold the banking and currency reserves at the same
  • time.[73]
  • In the meantime, in spite of this consideration, the Government will
  • not, I think, be able to resist the pressure on them in a crisis to
  • come to the assistance of the market. Indeed, I do not know that they
  • ought to resist it. It would be absurd to have large reserves in hand,
  • and not to use them to avert a general calamity. The awkwardness of the
  • situation is intrinsic, and cannot be avoided so long as the present
  • divorce is maintained between the banking and the currency authorities.
  • The plans of the Government ought, therefore, to be laid accordingly.
  • 25. If there is force in this contention, and unless the Government
  • of India have definitely made up their minds that their sterling
  • reserves are to be used in no circumstances except for the support of
  • exchange and of the sterling value of their currency, it is important
  • to understand that immediate action is essential, and that to delay
  • action for a few weeks may be fatal. I would emphatically apply to
  • India the well–known doctrine which the powerful advocacy of Mr.
  • Bagehot raised in England, many years ago, to an impregnable position
  • in the unwritten constitution of this country—the doctrine, namely,
  • that in a time of panic the reserves of the Bank of England must, at
  • a suitably high rate, be placed at the disposal of the public without
  • stint and without delay. There is a danger that the matter may not
  • be thought out until, quite suddenly, the financial crisis comes,
  • and that then, while the decision is being taken and the best advice
  • sought, an inadvertent delay will intervene. If there were signs of a
  • general banking crisis in India, and particularly if the position of
  • the Exchange Banks were weakening in England, I am inclined to think
  • that it would be a wise policy on the part of Government to make an
  • immediate announcement that they would place up to (say) £10,000,000 at
  • the disposal of the Presidency Banks (or other approved borrowers) at a
  • rate of (say) 10 per cent. If this action stayed, as it well might, the
  • run on the banks in India, and the difficulties of the Exchange Banks
  • in raising temporary loans in London, the Government might with a very
  • moderate loss of funds (the mere announcement that they were available
  • being sufficient) find itself in a far more favourable position for
  • dealing with the subsequent depression; whereas after a delay a similar
  • announcement might eventually be forced upon them, and if the panic had
  • then gained impetus, the £10,000,000 quickly lapt up.
  • 26. Two points connected with the above may be emphasised before we
  • pass on to the statistical problem. In the first place, in the event of
  • a _financial_ crisis, accompanied by numerous bank failures, I do not
  • think it likely that the Government would be overwhelmed with demands
  • for the encashment in sterling of notes and rupees. It would be much
  • more in accordance with what we know of similar crises elsewhere to
  • expect hoarding on a large scale, rather than a diminished demand for
  • currency and an ability to export it. In this matter the experience
  • of 1907–8, when the monetary position in India was easy throughout,
  • may prove, I think, misleading. During the eventful weeks in November
  • 1907, when the Bank of England rate stood at 7 per cent, the Bank of
  • Bengal rate did not rise above 6 per cent.[74] No tendency whatever was
  • apparent for there to be withdrawals of money from the banks in India,
  • or for hoarding to reassert itself amongst the class which is learning
  • to bank. On the other hand, the comparative failure of the crops
  • left financiers with considerable rupee funds in their hands which
  • they could not use. The banks had, therefore, no special difficulty
  • in putting their hands on rupees and notes, and the only problem was
  • for the Government to turn these into sterling. The easiness of the
  • internal money market at that time and the total absence of banking
  • trouble have produced the impression that there will be plenty of
  • rupee funds available at a crisis, and that the only question will be
  • as to whether the Government can turn these into sterling. The great
  • development of Indian Joint Stock Banking since that time on not
  • perfectly sound lines makes it doubtful whether bank troubles will be
  • absent in an equal degree on the next occasion of difficulty.
  • There is no one now living in England within whose memory hoarding has
  • been a normal thing. But in countries where the tradition is but lately
  • dead or still lingers, it is apt to revive with astonishing vitality
  • at the least sign of danger. The extent to which the people resorted
  • to hoarding in France, Germany, and Austria (especially in the latter
  • country) during the Balkan War was very remarkable, and has exhibited
  • a danger to which the banking systems of those countries are still
  • subject, although some had begun to forget it. If this is the case in
  • European countries, there cannot be much doubt as to what would happen
  • in India. Some banking failures, a hint of political trouble,—and the
  • old habits will come back, whatever progress banking may seem to have
  • made in a time of prosperity.
  • But, secondly, assuming a sharp financial crisis to be accompanied by
  • increased hoarding, it would plainly be better if it were a hoarding
  • of rupees and notes rather than of gold. It is not impossible that
  • this might be the case. A trust in the Government’s capacity to meet
  • its obligations will persist some time after all confidence in private
  • institutions has been dissolved. In Austria, for example, the hoarding
  • was not so much of gold or silver as of notes. I believe that in some
  • parts of India, especially in those where gold has made relatively
  • little progress, hoards are sometimes held already to a fair extent in
  • notes. I know, for example, a very conservative Brahmin family, small
  • landowners in Eastern Bengal, where this is the case. Once a week the
  • head of the family will retire privately to a corner of the roof of the
  • house, take out the little hoard of notes with ritual care, count and
  • check them, dust each with a feather brush, and lay them out in the sun
  • to air and to recover from any trace of damp. If a note shows signs of
  • age or wear, it is taken to the nearest currency office and changed
  • for a new one. In troubled times such a family would hoard more notes
  • or silver, not gold. This, however, is no more than an illustration of
  • the point I have already dwelt on and emphasised—the manner in which
  • any increase in the popularity of gold diminishes the stability of the
  • currency.
  • 27. Returning from these digressions, I conclude that the Government
  • will not be able in practice to restrict its responsibility to the
  • currency, and may have to take a part in moderating the consequences
  • of rash or unfortunate banking, and in meeting an adverse balance of
  • indebtedness. This conclusion brings us to the statistical problem.
  • Is the £40,000,000, which I put forward as a safe maximum for the
  • reserves, so far as the convertibility of the currency is concerned,
  • still adequate when the possible magnitude of India’s adverse balance
  • of indebtedness is our test of sufficiency?
  • This problem is even less capable than the former of exact solution.
  • The _variable_ elements in India’s international balance–sheet are
  • chiefly (i.) the excess of exports over imports, including treasure,
  • _i.e._ the trade balance; (ii.) the amount of _new_ fixed capital lent
  • to India by European capitalists; and (iii.) the amount of short–period
  • loans afforded to India by the European Money Market.
  • We require to know the magnitude of possible _variation_ in these
  • items, rather than the absolute amount of the various annual payments
  • which India has to make, in order to gauge the possible balance of
  • indebtedness against her. The greatest stress is commonly placed on
  • the first of them—the trade balance. But in the normal state of
  • affairs receipts and payments only balance after account has been
  • taken of capital transactions; and if a certain amount of new capital
  • has been flowing in every year, a slackening of this flow affects the
  • balance as adversely as a reduction in the volume of exports affects
  • it. In 1907–8 the adverse balance of indebtedness was largely due to
  • a change in the trade balance;—on the one hand, goods ordered during
  • the boom continued to pour into Bombay for some weeks after they had
  • become unsaleable, thus continuing for a time a large supply of bills
  • on India, while, on the other hand, the failure of the monsoon and
  • consequent anticipations of a scanty harvest cut off a considerable
  • part of the normal supply of trade bills on London. But even on this
  • occasion the adverse balance arose to a considerable extent out of
  • changes in capital transactions under items (ii.) and (iii.). The
  • acute stringency in the international money markets, occasioned by the
  • position in America, made it necessary for Exchange Banks and others to
  • reduce below their normal level their short–period borrowings (direct
  • or indirect) in London for use in India; and this stringency also
  • caused the flow of new investment to India to fall short of its usual
  • volume.
  • Thus, of the adverse balance of some £25,000,000 which had to be met
  • between September 1907 and September 1908, perhaps £18,000,000 was due
  • to a change in the trade balance and £7,000,000 to a diminution of
  • new capital transactions and to the non–renewal of some short–period
  • loans.[75] It is not easy, however, to argue from the experience of
  • 1907–8 as to what will happen in the future. The volume of trade has
  • expanded very greatly since that time,[76] and the absolute variation
  • in the favourable balance between good years and bad is likely to
  • be correspondingly greater. In addition, the growth of banking in
  • the intervening period has been on a very great scale; and there is,
  • therefore, greater room for disturbance in the short–period loan
  • market. If, moreover, the internal banking position in India is as weak
  • as in Chapter VII. I make it out to be, a serious breakdown there may
  • embarrass the Exchange Banks in London, however intrinsically sound the
  • position of these Banks may really be, in their efforts to assist the
  • Indian market.
  • 28. These are the relevant considerations. But any conclusion as to
  • the possible magnitude of the adverse balance at which one can arrive
  • on the basis of them is little better than a guess. I will give my
  • guess for what it is worth. I think the £40,000,000, which I have
  • fixed as the maximum figure of what is required for the redemption
  • in sterling of such notes and rupees as may be presented, is more
  • than sufficient to meet the adverse balance that is at all likely to
  • emerge in any single year. But I do not think it certain that this
  • sum would be adequate to the necessities of two successive bad years.
  • On the other hand, it is necessary to bear in mind that by the second
  • bad year there would have been time for a very great reduction in the
  • volume of imports, on account of the greatly reduced purchasing power
  • of the people, and that this might go a long way towards righting
  • the balance; also that, if there was a considerable liquidation of
  • short–period loans in the first year, it would not be necessary to
  • repeat this to anything like the same extent in the second year. In
  • short, the _natural_ forces tending towards equilibrium would begin in
  • the second year to show themselves more strongly. Nor is it necessary
  • to accumulate reserves in advance for every eventuality. Two bad years
  • in succession are not very likely; and, if they do come, the Secretary
  • of State will have ample time to make his arrangements for borrowing.
  • I think it a sufficient concession, therefore, if the £40,000,000 be
  • given as the proper limit, not as before of the aggregate sterling
  • resources of all kinds, but of the Gold Standard Reserve and the
  • sterling branch of the Paper Currency Reserve (_i.e._ excluding the
  • Cash Balances).
  • In a country such as India, where all available resources are required
  • for capital expansion, and where it is not sound or humane policy to
  • burden the present overmuch for the sake of the future, it is nearly
  • as important to avoid extravagance in the reserve policy as to avoid
  • undue parsimony. As the rupee and note circulation is increased, the
  • proportion of reserves ought to grow, of course, _pari passu_. But in
  • existing circumstances to hold much more than £40,000,000 in sterling
  • in the Gold Standard Reserve and the Paper Currency Reserve together
  • would border on extravagance. If the reserves were somewhat lower than
  • this, I do not think it would necessarily be blameworthy to leave them
  • so, provided it would prove a very burdensome thing to raise them. For
  • the expedient of a loan is always available.[77] My conclusion, rather,
  • is that the reserves should be allowed to reach some such figure as
  • this by the natural processes of growth, before sums are diverted from
  • them to other purposes.
  • A very few years ago hopes of reaching so secure a position as this
  • would have seemed chimerical. But the details given on p. 131 show that
  • in December 1912 the sterling reserves already amounted to somewhat
  • more than this. It is not yet clear, however, that their present amount
  • is normal. If it turns out to be so, then a position of adequate
  • strength has been attained already. But the form in which these
  • reserves are held is open to much criticism, and this must be my next
  • topic.
  • 29. The criticisms which have had most popular vogue have been mainly
  • directed against the absolute amount of the Gold Standard Reserve,
  • against the investment of a large part of this reserve in securities,
  • and against the maintenance in London of some part of the gold in the
  • Currency Reserve.
  • In regard to the amount of the Gold Standard Reserve, Lord Curzon, in
  • 1904, was inclined to think that £10,000,000 would be a proper figure.
  • In 1905 Sir E. Law, the Financial Member of the Viceroy’s Council,
  • suggested £20,000,000. In 1906 Sir E. Baker thought £20,000,000 a
  • suitable minimum. More recently, in 1912, £25,000,000 is the amount
  • which responsible officials have announced that they are aiming at.
  • Sir E. Law and Sir E. Baker both based their estimates on the amount
  • which the Secretary of State would require for his Home Charges if he
  • had to curtail his drawings of Council Bills by one–third or one–half
  • for a considerable period. I do not think that this is the most useful
  • point of view from which to approach the question, or that the proper
  • magnitude of the Gold Standard Reserve can be discussed without
  • reference to the magnitude of the other reserves.
  • 30. The other two criticisms quoted above lead on to the general
  • question of how the sterling resources should be held and how they
  • should be divided between the several Reserves. The second of these
  • questions is mainly a matter of book–keeping, but has nevertheless
  • some importance. The Government of India’s present system has no
  • logical basis, is exceedingly difficult to understand, and has often
  • led, in consequence, to a good deal of misunderstanding. The ideal
  • system should be as simple and logical as is compatible with leaving
  • the authorities a free hand to shift and adjust as the necessities
  • of the moment may require. The present system is the outcome partly
  • of historical origins, partly of the authorities not having allowed
  • themselves by law a perfectly free hand. The much criticised practice,
  • for example, of holding six crores of coined rupees in the Gold
  • Standard Reserve is probably due to the provision by which that
  • portion of the Currency Reserve, which is held in London, can be
  • held only in gold. If rupees have to be released hurriedly from the
  • silver portion of the Gold Standard Reserve in India, the authorities
  • have a completely free hand as to the form in which they make the
  • corresponding addition to their sterling reserves in London; whereas,
  • if they are released from the Currency Reserve, the corresponding
  • transference in London must be made wholly in gold coin—a course which
  • may sometimes be exceedingly inconvenient at the moment.
  • 31. If the authorities allowed themselves more latitude as to the
  • manner in which the Currency Reserve might be held, it would be a mere
  • book–keeping transaction to transfer to this reserve the rupees now
  • held in silver in the Gold Standard Reserve and to replace them by a
  • corresponding transfer of gold; but such an arrangement would be more
  • logical and easier to understand.
  • 32. I think, therefore, that there might be considerable advantages
  • in the adoption of some general scheme for the reserves such as the
  • following:—
  • (1) While it would be legal to hold the Gold Standard Reserve in
  • _any_ form—gold, securities, bills of exchange, loans, or rupees—it
  • should be normal in good times to hold, say, £11,000,000 in sterling
  • securities and the rest in gold either in London or India, but
  • preferably in London.
  • (2) Power should be taken to invest a larger amount of the Currency
  • Reserve than at present (say £7,500,000 sterling securities in addition
  • to the rupee securities instead of £2,500,000 as at present), and to
  • hold a prescribed maximum proportion (say one–third) of it in bills of
  • exchange or on loan at short notice either in India or London.
  • All this, after the necessary change of law, could be effected by a
  • change in book–keeping; and in December 1912 the account would have
  • stood as follows (compare the actual state of affairs as given on p.
  • 131):—
  • _Gold_—
  • Gold Standard Reserve in London £7,500,000
  • Gold Standard Reserve in India 2,500,000
  • Currency Reserve in India 15,000,000
  • ——————————–
  • £25,000,000
  • ═══════════
  • _Money at Short Notice_—
  • Currency Reserve in London £1,000,000
  • Cash Balances in London 7,500,000
  • ——————————
  • £8,500,000
  • ═══════════
  • _Sterling Securities_—
  • Currency Reserve £7,500,000
  • Gold Standard Reserve 11,000,000
  • ——————————–
  • £18,500,000
  • ═══════════
  • _Rupees_—
  • Currency Reserve £13,750,000
  • ═══════════
  • 33. Some changes of substance might be added to these changes in
  • book–keeping and are naturally suggested by them. There is, first, the
  • question whether the gold portion of the reserves ought to be held in
  • India or in London. Readers of Chapter IV. will know that there are,
  • in my opinion, no advantages in keeping gold in India, and that such
  • a policy involves a direct money loss through the cost of originally
  • carrying the gold to India and the cost of bringing it back again to
  • London when, at a later date, it is required to support exchange.
  • But Indian opinion views with suspicion the holding in London of
  • the greater part of India’s gold reserve, and this opinion, though
  • ill–founded, is likely to persist for some time to come. The amount of
  • expense involved in keeping gold in the Indian reserves is, in relation
  • to the issues involved, not great; and it might be well worth while
  • to incur it in order to avoid the currency system’s falling under a
  • suspicion, however ill–founded. It might be a satisfactory compromise,
  • therefore, if, as a normal practice (but not as a legal requirement),
  • the gold in the Gold Standard Reserve were held “ear–marked” at the
  • Bank of England, but the gold in the Currency Reserve retained in
  • India. It may be added that the authorities seem, in fact, to be moving
  • somewhat in this direction; for it is understood to be their intention
  • to accumulate £5,000,000 in gold “earmarked” for the Gold Standard
  • Reserve.
  • If, however, a large part of the gold be held in India, it is of the
  • utmost importance, in the event of a crisis, that the gold should be
  • shipped by the Government to London and sterling drafts on London
  • sold against it, or, if it were released in India, that the banks
  • only should be allowed to get it, and on an undertaking to export it.
  • Otherwise, if it were made freely available in India, a part might be
  • lost and wasted (so far as the support of exchange is concerned) in
  • hoards.
  • 34. The suspicion which is felt with regard to the holding of Indian
  • gold in London is exceedingly natural, and can be completely dissipated
  • only by a fuller knowledge of the currency system and of the mechanism
  • of the foreign exchanges, than the generality is likely to possess.
  • It is natural to think that this gold is more at the disposal of the
  • London Money Market than it would be if it were in India, and that the
  • Secretary of State, under corrupt or interested pressure, can easily
  • place it at the disposal of London financiers. Apart from the question
  • how far the Secretary of State is really open to such pressure, it may
  • be doubted whether he is likely to be exposed to it, because at a time
  • of real stringency it will prove easy, I believe, for the London Market
  • to get hold of some part of the Indian gold, whether held in London
  • or in India, by perfectly legitimate means. India is normally in the
  • position of owing London money; this debt is discharged partly by the
  • consignment of goods, partly by the renewal at frequent intervals of
  • short loans or credits made by the London Market to the Indian Market
  • on bills of exchange or through the Exchange Banks, and partly by new
  • permanent loans. If there is great stringency in the London Market and
  • London is in urgent need of funds, the use of the last two methods can
  • be so much restricted that India can be practically forced to pay
  • what is owing in gold. It is, in fact, precisely because she is open
  • to this pressure that it is necessary for a considerable gold reserve
  • to be kept. So long, therefore, as the gold is freely available either
  • in India or in London for the support of exchange, it is unlikely
  • that it can be withheld from the London Money Market if this Market
  • really wants it. If it is in London, India will be able, by the sale
  • of telegraphic sterling transfers in Calcutta, to discharge her due
  • obligations cheaply and without delay; if it is in Calcutta, additional
  • charges and a loss of time must be incurred.
  • A feeling of jealousy on a country’s part, lest some other country
  • should have a lien on its gold reserve, is frequently liable to arise
  • at the present time, but is essentially opposed in spirit to the whole
  • purpose and meaning of keeping gold reserves at all. Gold reserves
  • are meant to be used in times of difficulty, and for the discharge of
  • pressing obligations. It is absurd for a man with a large balance at
  • his bank to default to his creditors, because a feeling of jealousy,
  • in regard to any one in whose favour he draws a cheque, prevents him
  • from ever drawing one. Mr. Bagehot certainly did England a great
  • service in dissipating from the minds of her financiers this primitive
  • prejudice;—for wonderfully few other countries have yet learnt that
  • gold reserves, although no doubt they serve some purpose when they are
  • held for show only, exist to much better purpose if they are held for
  • use also.
  • Vague stirrings of the original sin of mercantilism always inherent in
  • the mind of the natural man and urging him to regard gold as beyond
  • everything essential wealth; jealousy of the too powerful magnates of
  • the London Money Market obtaining what should belong to India’s Market
  • for their own purposes; jealousy of the Secretary of State seeming,
  • like a man who invests abroad, to seek in this way an independence
  • of India in case of trouble; jealousy of Great Britain, who might
  • use or regard India’s “ear–marked” gold as her own war–chest;—all
  • combine to make a powerful, natural, and yet unfounded prejudice
  • which it is exceedingly difficult to combat. Nothing is commoner than
  • to read incitements against malevolent financiers who would seek to
  • deprive India of her “fair share” of the world’s new gold. India must
  • be allowed, I suppose, to hug her sterile favourite. In spite of the
  • notorious fact that the Bank of England holds less gold than the
  • Central Bank of any other first–class Power,—far less even than the
  • Caja of the Argentine,—the belief will continue that the amount of
  • gold a country holds at home, rather than the degree of promptness
  • and certainty with which at all times it can meet its international
  • engagements, is the measure of its financial strength.
  • 35. What other changes of substance might be made usefully? By far the
  • most important is connected with the proposed power to make advances
  • from the Currency Reserve on bills of exchange and other approved
  • security, as briefly described in Chapter III.
  • The policy pursued during 1912 of holding large cash balances in London
  • and of lending them out in the London Market provoked widespread
  • criticism both in India and at home. The line of thought underlying
  • this criticism appears to me to be entirely reasonable. If the
  • Government of India hold in London a penny more than is required to
  • establish the stability of their financial system, they are certainly
  • diverting resources from India, where they are greatly required, to
  • the detriment of India’s own trade. I do not think, however, that the
  • authorities are in fact open to any serious blame up to the present
  • time. The holding of such large balances in London has not been
  • part of a permanent policy, and was due in 1912 to a combination of
  • circumstances which could not easily have been foreseen. And further,
  • the Government have not until quite lately held more sterling resources
  • altogether than have been required for the stability of the system.
  • Public feeling points, nevertheless, in the direction of what, in
  • the future, will be the right policy. If I am right in thinking that
  • about £40,000,000 in the sterling Reserves is in present circumstances
  • adequate, further accumulations in the hands of Government ought to
  • be put at the disposal of the Indian Money Market and not converted
  • into sterling. At present there is no machinery for doing this; and
  • the absence of the appropriate arrangements constitutes a serious gap
  • in the country’s financial system. What would be thought in France or
  • Germany, or in any other European country, if an expansion of the note
  • issue could not be made against the discount of home bills, but only
  • against a corresponding deposit in cash cent per cent? Yet this is the
  • position in India. The Government (apart from their deposits in the
  • Presidency Banks, which will be dealt with later on) have no choice
  • between allowing the funds which accumulate in their hands to lie
  • absolutely idle in India and transferring them to London to earn a low
  • rate of interest there.
  • If the use of notes continues to increase, and if £40,000,000 is an
  • adequate figure for the sterling Reserves, a considerable sum may soon
  • be available in India from the funds of the Paper Currency Reserve.
  • Every addition, moreover, to the Gold Standard Reserve reduces to some
  • extent the need for holding large amounts of sterling in the Paper
  • Currency Reserve. Great advantages may be obtained if the surplus
  • funds in the Paper Currency Reserve be used, not as a permanent or
  • quasi–permanent loan to Indian traders, but to provide _elasticity_
  • in the seasonal supply of currency and to make possible the increase
  • in the stock of purchasing power in the form of money which is
  • _temporarily_ required in the busy season, without having to raise it
  • in London. _Permanent_ additions to the currency must be obtained in
  • the future as they are at present. But _temporary_ additions, due to
  • seasonal demand, ought to be provided by a suitable organisation of
  • credit money in India herself.
  • The advances from the Currency Reserve, therefore, must be made at
  • a fairly high rate of interest and for periods not exceeding three
  • months; and they should be so arranged that the Government would
  • regain possession of its funds and the advances be reduced to nil in
  • each slack season. Thus the Government would begin each busy season
  • with their funds intact; and they would not lend until the success of
  • the season was assured, and it was plain that the general position
  • warranted it. The advances would be made in notes or rupees, according
  • to the demand. These prosperity advances, therefore, are to be sharply
  • distinguished from the adversity advances, discussed on pp. 160–163,
  • which would be made in sterling drafts, and which would be governed by
  • wholly different considerations.
  • 36. There remains for discussion the question of the Government’s Cash
  • Balances.[78] I will begin with the method of managing that part of
  • them which is held in India. It will be useful to know in what way this
  • method has grown up.[79]
  • When, in 1862, the right of note issue was taken away from the
  • Presidency Banks, they were given as part recompense the use of the
  • whole of that part of the Government balances which would otherwise
  • have been received at the General Treasury, or at places where the
  • Banks had branches, provided that sums in excess of a prescribed amount
  • (70 lakhs in the case of the Bank of Bengal), if not held in cash,
  • should be invested in Government paper and other authorised securities.
  • Difficulties very soon arose (in 1863) through the Government’s
  • requiring the use of its funds at a time when the Bank of Bengal
  • could only sell out the securities in which it had invested them at
  • a considerable loss. The system of virtually compelling the Banks to
  • lock up the Government funds in securities, not easily saleable at all
  • times, was plainly vicious, and in 1866 a new arrangement was made by
  • which the Banks were permitted to use the whole of the balances, placed
  • with them for the time being, for banking purposes. This seems to have
  • worked satisfactorily up to 1874. In that year there was a famine in
  • Bengal, and the Government had to buy rice in Burma and send it to
  • Bengal for relief purposes. The rice had to be paid for in cash; but
  • when the Government intimated to the Bank of Bombay that they would
  • have to draw out about 30 lakhs (£300,000), their balance at the Bank
  • then being about a crore (£1,000,000), the Bank was unable to let
  • them have the money. In the correspondence which the Viceroy (Lord
  • Northbrook) raised in regard to this, the Secretary of State (Lord
  • Salisbury) suggested that the Government should release themselves
  • from their engagement to leave their whole balances with the Banks
  • and that they should retain the surplus in their own Treasury, or
  • “lend it for short terms under suitable conditions as to interest and
  • security.” This interesting suggestion, closely anticipating more
  • recent proposals, was not acted on, the Indian authorities thinking it
  • improper that the Government should appear to enter into competition
  • with the Banks. But in 1876 the Reserve Treasury system was set up, the
  • Government undertaking to leave, ordinarily, certain minimum amounts at
  • the Banks and diverting the bulk of the rest of their funds into their
  • own Reserve Treasury. In 1878 it proved inconvenient to divert from the
  • Banks immediately the whole of the proceeds of a newly raised loan,
  • and the Comptroller–General was told that he “would be at liberty, to
  • the extent to which he could conveniently do so, to accommodate the
  • Banks with temporary advances from the Reserve Treasury, provided they
  • were willing to pay interest on such advances at the current rates.”
  • No special security was taken from the Banks for the sums thus lent to
  • them. For some time loans were freely given in this way. In 1889 the
  • Government declared “that any assistance in relief of the Money Market
  • which may be afforded by means of the Treasury Reserve can only be
  • made (1) through the Bank, (2) at its published rate of discount, (3)
  • in relief of temporary stringency.” Up to 1892, however, loans were
  • made as before. From 1892 to 1899 loans were made very rarely. In 1899
  • the Secretary of State wrote to the authorities in India:—“I see no
  • objection to your lending to the Presidency Banks, on the security of
  • Government paper, at such rates of interest from time to time and for
  • such periods as you think best. I am inclined to think that the rate
  • should, as a rule, be not below the Bank rate.” Between 1899 and 1906
  • such loans were made on four or five occasions; but since 1906 there
  • have been none. The balances left with the Banks without interest
  • normally exceed, however, the prescribed minima.[80]
  • The question of the proper employment of the Indian Cash Balances is,
  • therefore, a very old one, and one in regard to which the Government
  • have pursued no consistent policy. The effect of recent practice,
  • however, has been on the whole to divert more funds than formerly from
  • banking purposes. On the one hand the Government have been less willing
  • to allow the Banks loans in addition to the normal balances kept with
  • them, and on the other hand the general level of the cash balances has
  • been getting higher.
  • While the Government’s practice has become stricter, it is arguable,
  • I think, that there is less need for it. Originally, we have seen, the
  • Government banked with the Presidency Banks, and difficulties arose
  • because, the Government’s deposits bearing a high proportion to the
  • Bank’s total resources, it was not easy to release a large part of
  • these deposits suddenly. This would no longer be the case to nearly
  • the same extent, even if the Government were to place much larger sums
  • with the Banks. In 1870[81] the public deposits at £3,600,000 fell not
  • far short of the total private deposits and exceeded by 50 per cent
  • the capital and reserve of the Banks; in 1880 they were £1,900,000,
  • and were about one–third of the private deposits; in 1890 the figures
  • were £2,400,000, equal to about a quarter of the private deposits; in
  • 1900, £1,900,000, equal to less than a quarter; in 1912 the Government
  • deposits at £2,500,000 were not much more than a tenth of the private
  • deposits. Moreover, the capital and reserves of the Banks have doubled
  • since 1870.
  • 37. The portion of the Cash Balances deposited, under the above
  • arrangements, with the three Presidency Banks varies, of course, from
  • week to week. The amount normally placed with the Head Offices of the
  • Banks has fluctuated for some time in the neighbourhood of £1,000,000.
  • In addition to this, further sums, fluctuating about £1,500,000,
  • are held at branch offices of the Banks. These are deposited on a
  • different understanding (see p. 184, footnote) from that governing the
  • sums at the Head Offices, and are held literally at call, the amounts
  • at particular branches being subject to wide variations. The total sums
  • placed with the Banks, head and branch offices together, are usually
  • about £2,000,000, and the maximum deposits in recent years have been
  • about £3,000,000. On these deposits, as in the case of the Bank of
  • England and the British Government deposits, the Banks pay no interest.
  • The whole of the rest of the Government Balances is maintained in cash
  • (rupees, notes, or sovereigns) in the various Government Treasuries.
  • This is the present position. The Government are free in exceptional
  • circumstances, as we have seen above, to place additional sums with the
  • Presidency Banks on which interest is payable. But advantage has not
  • been taken of these powers recently.
  • 38. In view of the facts mentioned at the end of § 36, I am of opinion
  • that the Reserve Treasury system needs reconsideration and that at
  • present rather more funds, perhaps, than is necessary are withdrawn
  • from the use of the Money Market into the Treasuries.
  • But the critics referred to in § 35 are following a false track when
  • they argue that much offence lies in the present use of the Cash
  • Balances, and that the main remedy for the seasonal stringency of the
  • Indian Money Market is to be found in lending out these balances in
  • India during the busy season. In thinking that any substantial remedy
  • is to be obtained by loans from this source, they are paying too much
  • attention to the transient circumstances of a single year. I believe,
  • for the reasons given below, that the Indian Money Market cannot expect
  • very much assistance from the Cash Balances, and that they have much
  • more to hope for in the future from the growing resources of the Paper
  • Currency Reserve.
  • Only under one or other of two conditions could loans from the Cash
  • Balances be important: first, if the proceeds of taxation tended to
  • accumulate in the Government Treasuries in the autumn and winter months
  • so that the balances tended to be above their normal level at the busy
  • season; and second, if the Government were to pursue the foolish policy
  • of habitually keeping more ample balances than they really required.
  • The first of these conditions is not fulfilled to any important extent.
  • The land tax is collected, naturally, _after_ the harvest has been
  • sold, not during it; and at the end of the calendar year the surplus
  • balances are small. The totals of the Indian Balances on August 1 and
  • January 1 of recent years are shown below:—
  • (IN LAKHS OF RUPEES)
  • ┌────────–┬──────────–───────────────┬──────────–───────────────┐
  • │ │ August 1. │ January 1. │
  • │ ├──────────–┬──────────────┼──────────–┬──────────────┤
  • │ │ Reserve │Total Balances│ Reserve │Total Balances│
  • │ │Treasuries.│ in India. │Treasuries.│ in India. │
  • ├────────–┼──────────–┼──────────────┼──────────–┼──────────────┤
  • │1906–1907│ 5,26 │ 17,18 │ 1,60 │ 10,46 │
  • │1907–1908│ 5,18 │ 17,14 │ 3,20 │ 11,84 │
  • │1908–1909│ 7,41 │ 19,54 │ ,76 │ 9,33 │
  • │1909–1910│ 2,22 │ 13,61 │ 1,74 │ 10,16 │
  • │1910–1911│ 9,49 │ 21,43 │ 2,82 │ 13,18 │
  • │1911–1912│ 9,62 │ 22,66 │ 3,21 │ 15,18 │
  • │1912–1913│ 10,96 │ 24,58 │ 10,62 │ 21,99 │
  • └────────–┴──────────–┴──────────────┴──────────–┴──────────────┘
  • The total balances include the working balances in the innumerable
  • District Treasuries all over India and the sums already deposited with
  • the Presidency Banks. When, therefore, we are considering to what
  • extent the Government could lend at the height of the busy season, we
  • must chiefly pay attention to the sums in the _Reserve_ Treasuries on
  • January 1. The above figures show conclusively that, as a rule, the
  • Indian Money Market cannot expect substantial assistance from this
  • source at the time of year when it is most needed. Except in 1913,[82]
  • the resources of the Reserve Treasuries on January 1 have been in
  • recent years between £1,000,000 and £2,000,000.
  • After January 1, it is true, the revenue comes in rapidly.[83] But as
  • a matter of fact, the funds which accumulate from the proceeds of
  • revenue between January and April are quickly released and returned to
  • the Money Market, as matters now are, through the encashment of the
  • Council Bills which are generally sold in large quantities at this
  • time of year. If this money were to be released by loan instead of by
  • the encashment of Council Bills, the effect would be that less funds
  • would be remitted to London; and unless we assume that more funds are
  • being remitted to London than are really required, this would put the
  • Secretary of State to inconvenience in meeting the Home Charges. Only
  • in years when sufficient funds had been remitted to London earlier in
  • the financial year, therefore, would surplus funds be available in the
  • Indian Treasury to any important extent even in the latter half of the
  • busy season.
  • I do not say that the Government should not lend from the Cash Balances
  • in India whenever exceptional circumstances may lead to their being
  • at an unnecessarily high level in the busy season. But the sums which
  • could be lent in this way would not generally be important, and the
  • amount of elasticity which the financial system could gain by these
  • loans would be small compared with what it might acquire from a reform
  • of the Paper Currency Reserve. I should prefer, therefore, that the
  • Indian Cash Balances should be held, so far as possible, in notes, thus
  • increasing the capacity of the Currency Reserve, and that all advances
  • should be made in form from the Currency Reserve. The question of the
  • use of funds in the Cash Balances would then lapse into the question
  • of the use of funds in the Paper Currency Reserve. But if a different
  • system of book–keeping be preferred, no substantial change is involved
  • in what I propose. The method of loaning from the Currency Reserve is
  • applicable _mutatis mutandis_ to loans from the Cash Balances.
  • 39. Of the Cash Balances in London no more than a working account is
  • kept with the Bank of England. The manner in which the rest is dealt
  • with is best described in the words of an official memorandum issued by
  • the India Office in 1913 [Cd. 6619]:—
  • The practice followed since 1838 has been to keep a certain part of
  • the balance at the Bank (of England) and to lend the remainder at
  • interest. The usual method is to lend to certain banks, discount
  • houses, and stock–brokers of high standing, whose names are included
  • in an approved list, now containing sixty–two names. The list is
  • revised periodically, and applications for admission are carefully
  • considered with reference to the standing and resources of the
  • applicants and the nature of their business. Loans to borrowers on the
  • approved list are granted as a rule for periods from three to five
  • weeks, occasionally for six weeks, so that the whole balance could, if
  • needed, be called in within six weeks. The Accountant–General informs
  • the Secretary of State’s broker daily of the amount of loans that
  • may be renewed, the amount of new loans that may be placed, or the
  • amount that must be called. The broker is responsible for obtaining
  • the best possible rate of interest. The amount of a loan is not paid
  • out from the Secretary of State’s account at the Bank of England until
  • the security has been lodged at the Bank. In 1909 it was found that
  • the borrowers on the approved list could not take the full amount of
  • the balances available for loan; and, in order to obtain employment
  • for the funds, the broker was instructed, as a temporary measure, to
  • deposit the excess amount from time to time with leading London banks,
  • usually for periods of between one and three months.
  • 40. In the autumn of 1912 a determined attack was made, in the Press
  • and by means of questions in the House of Commons, on the management of
  • the English Balances, as described above, and on their amount. Many of
  • the questions were framed rather with some other object than to elicit
  • information. But they undoubtedly had the result that the authorities
  • published to the public much ampler details than were previously
  • available. A valuable summary of these will be found in the official
  • memorandum [Cd. 6619] from which I have just quoted.[84] As the outcome
  • of this very full inquisition into the whole subject, only two points
  • have emerged in which, in my opinion, the authorities are open to
  • criticism in detail—_i.e._, apart from wide questions of policy. They
  • renewed India Bills (which were eventually paid off in December 1912)
  • when they could have very well afforded to discharge them. If the
  • season of 1912–13 had been a bad one, or if their expectations had been
  • upset in any other way, it would always have been open to the India
  • Council to issue the Bills afresh. Their action appears to the outside
  • critic to have been one of ill–considered caution. The other point is a
  • trifle and reflects, perhaps, on a curiosity of our economic organism
  • rather than on the India Office. It was slightly shocking to discover
  • that the Government broker, who is not even a whole–time officer, and
  • has a separate business of his own besides his official duties, is the
  • highest paid[85] official of the Government with the sole exception of
  • the Viceroy. He has probably been paid too high even on current city
  • standards. But it suggests once again the old question how long it will
  • be found necessary to pay city men so entirely out of proportion to
  • what other servants of society commonly receive for performing social
  • services not less useful or difficult.
  • 41. Some of the conclusions of this chapter may be summarised. All
  • countries, since the practice has been generally adopted of employing a
  • medium of exchange composed of some cheaper material than the standard
  • of value, must keep a monetary reserve. Where there is a State bank,
  • the bank is usually entrusted with this duty. Where the State regulates
  • the currency and the note issue without the intervention of a bank, the
  • State must itself undertake it. The proper magnitude of the reserve
  • must depend upon the particular circumstances of each country. In India
  • the reserve must be unusually large, first, because India is a great
  • country specially liable to wide fluctuations in her prosperity and
  • trade on account of climatic conditions the character of which cannot
  • be easily foreseen; and second, because a large amount of foreign
  • capital is employed, not only in permanent investment, but in temporary
  • loans withdrawable at short notice, and because against these foreign
  • liabilities India holds no appreciable amount of international Stock
  • Exchange securities capable of easy realisation. I have argued that
  • £40,000,000 may be, perhaps, at present a suitable amount to be held
  • by Government in its sterling Reserves. These Reserves are most useful
  • if they are held in London, where they must necessarily be wanted
  • whenever there is need to make use of them. In deference to a public
  • opinion which does not clearly understand the purpose of the Reserves
  • or the limitations under which the Secretary of State must needs act
  • in managing his sterling resources, it may be worth while to allay a
  • groundless suspicion by the compromise of holding a fair proportion
  • of the reserve of actual gold coin in India herself. When a Reserve
  • of some such amount as the above has been firmly established, the
  • diversion of further funds into any form of sterling or into the London
  • Market should be deliberately avoided.
  • Stability has been attained already, or is about to be. So, on the
  • whole, has economy, though some current opinion in regard to the
  • use of gold puts it in jeopardy. The system still wants elasticity.
  • A machinery ought to be set up, therefore, by which further funds,
  • accumulating in the hands of Government through the increased use of
  • notes, may be used in India to afford the needed elasticity in the
  • seasonal supply of currency.
  • Let the Indian public learn that it is extravagant to use gold as a
  • medium of exchange, foolish to lessen the utility of their reserves
  • through suspicion of the London Money Market, and highly advantageous
  • to their own trade and to the resources of their own money market to
  • develop the use of notes; and their financial system may soon become
  • wonderfully well adapted to the particular circumstances of their
  • situation. The history of the last twelve years has been transitional.
  • The authorities have been—wisely—building up the reserves they ought
  • to have. This process has necessarily diverted funds from the Indian
  • Money Market, and has naturally excited some measure of opposition. But
  • the fruits of cautious growth may soon be reaped.
  • CHAPTER VII
  • INDIAN BANKING
  • 1. In passing from Currency and the Finance of Government to the
  • kindred topic of Banking, we come to a part of the subject where
  • statistics and other information are much less freely available to
  • the outside critic. The published figures are not adequate to tell us
  • much of what we require to know, and the literature of Indian Banking
  • is almost non–existent. I must run the risk, therefore, of sometimes
  • falling into errors of fact, and hope that, if these errors provoke
  • criticism, they will bring to light the true facts at the same time.
  • 2. The Money Market and Banking System of India comprises the following
  • as its four main constituents:—
  • (i.) The Presidency Banks; (ii.) the European Exchange Banks; (iii.)
  • the Indian Joint Stock Banks; and (iv.) the Shroffs, Marwaris, and
  • other private bankers and money–lenders.
  • The first two of these constitute what we may term the European
  • Money Market, and the rest, under the leadership of Marwaris and
  • Parsees, the Indian or Native Money Market,—up–country Banks such as
  • the Allahabad Bank and the Alliance Bank of Simla, which are Indian
  • Joint Stock Banks under European management, occupying, perhaps, an
  • intermediate position. The local money markets, outside the main towns
  • in which European business men have offices and where the bulk of the
  • foreign trade is handled, are entirely in the hands of Indians.
  • 3. How close a connexion exists between the two money markets—native
  • and European—how nearly the rates ruling in one agree with those in
  • the other, and how readily capital flows from one to the other, I am
  • not clear. Some evidence bearing on these points was laid before the
  • Fowler Committee of 1898, but such facts are now fifteen years old.
  • In the pre–1899 period it was not uncommon in times of stringency
  • for the bazaar rate to be appreciably lower than the Presidency Bank
  • rate, and the connexion between the two money markets seems to have
  • been very incomplete. The following quotation from a letter by Mr. J.
  • H. Sleigh, Secretary and Treasurer of the Bank of Bombay, written in
  • 1898 (reprinted in the Appendix to the Fowler Committee’s Report), is
  • interesting:—
  • During the last export season, Shroffs’ 60 days’ sight bills were
  • not obtainable over 8 per cent discount.... This was the rate then
  • ruling in the native bazaar both in Bombay and Calcutta, and that,
  • too, while the Exchange Banks were greedy to receive fixed deposits
  • for short periods at 9, 10, and even 11 per cent per annum, and
  • while the Presidency Banks were straining to meet the demands for
  • loans at 12 and 13 per cent per annum. But there is no singularity
  • in these facts. The same peculiarity has shown itself over and over
  • again during periods of financial pressure; and even at the present
  • moment (November 1898), while money is not by any means tight, there
  • exists a difference of about 2 per cent between the bazaar and the
  • Presidency Bank rates. I have ever found that when the official rate
  • rose abnormally high, the rate in the native market did not respond
  • to the full extent, but generally stopped at 7 or 8 per cent, though
  • the Presidency Banks’ rate might rise to 10 or 12 per cent. The
  • explanation is simple. The Shroffs, who finance nearly the whole of
  • the internal trade of India, rarely, if ever, discount European Paper
  • and never purchase foreign or sterling bills. Neither do they lend
  • money on Government Paper or similar securities, but confine their
  • advances to the discount of _hoondees_, to loans to cultivators, and
  • against gold and silver bullion. The _hoondees_ they purchase are for
  • the most part those of traders, small and large, at rates of discount
  • ranging from 9 to 25 per cent per annum, but the _hoondees_ they buy
  • and sell to each other, which are chiefly the traders’ _hoondees_
  • bearing the Shroffs’ own endorsements, rule the rates in the native
  • bazaar, and are generally negotiated, during the busy season, at from
  • 5 to 8 per cent discount. They also discount their endorsements pretty
  • largely with the Presidency Banks when rates are low, and discontinue
  • doing so when they rise above 6 per cent. They also speculate largely
  • at times in Government Paper, especially during the off season, but
  • rarely or ever hold it or lend on it.
  • I have seen no evidence for supposing that the general conditions
  • outlined in this quotation do not still hold; but in recent years
  • the Presidency Bank rates have not risen above 9 per cent, and
  • occasions for the operation of the tendencies described above have
  • been rarer. The conditions prevailing in the Indian Money Market in
  • the period immediately preceding 1898 were in many respects very
  • abnormal. I suspect that the rates in the two markets may appear to
  • be more different than they really are, and are explicable by the
  • difference of the conditions and of security, subject to which business
  • is transacted. It is, however, plain that the main movements of the
  • interest rate up and down, which result from the central facts of the
  • Indian seasons and harvests, must be the same in both markets, and that
  • the Native Money Market must ultimately depend on the European for
  • additional supplies of cash.
  • 4. As I am chiefly interested in the Indian Banking System, so far
  • as this book is concerned, from the point of view of its effect on
  • the remittance of funds to and from India, I shall be concerned for
  • the most part with what I have called the European Money Market—the
  • Presidency and Exchange Banks. But an Indian writer, in a position to
  • know the facts, could throw much useful light on a question where I
  • must necessarily be content with somewhat doubtful conjecture.
  • 5. The Presidency Bank of Bengal was opened in 1806 and received its
  • charter of incorporation from the East India Company in 1809.[86] The
  • first Bank of Bombay[87] was established under a similar charter in
  • 1840, and the Bank of Madras in 1843. The establishment of these Banks
  • in the other Presidencies put an end to the possibility that the Bank
  • of Bengal might become a Bank for all India. The Presidency Banks had,
  • at first, a semi–official character. At the foundation of the Bank of
  • Bengal, the East India Company contributed one–fifth (the proportion
  • became smaller subsequently) of the capital and appointed three of the
  • directors. Up to the time of the Mutiny the office of Secretary and
  • Treasurer was held by a Covenanted Civilian.
  • Up to 1862 the Banks had the right of note issue; but this right was
  • so hedged about by a restriction of the total liabilities payable on
  • demand to a certain multiple (at first three times, later four times)
  • of the cash reserve, and of the total liabilities of all kinds to the
  • amount of the Bank’s capital (up to 1839), or of the total note issue
  • to a fixed amount (from 1839 to 1862), that the note issue of the
  • Presidency Banks never became important. In 1862 the management of the
  • note issue was taken over by the Government in the manner described
  • in Chapter III. At the same time the right of note issue by private
  • Banks was finally abolished.[88] In 1876 the Government relinquished
  • their share of the capital of the Banks and their right of appointing
  • directors.[89] Since then the Presidency Banks have lost their official
  • character, but remain distinct from other Banks in that they are
  • governed by a special Charter Act (the Presidency Banks Act of 1876).
  • 6. The Presidency Banks have worked from the beginning under very
  • rigorous restrictions as to the character of the business which they
  • might undertake. These restrictions were originally due partly,
  • perhaps, to a feeling of jealousy on the part of the Court of Directors
  • of the East India Company lest the Banks should compete in business
  • (such as foreign exchange) which the Company regarded as its own;
  • but chiefly from a proper wish that semi–official institutions, in a
  • country so dangerous for banking as India, should be conducted on the
  • safest possible principles.[90] An exceedingly interesting history of
  • the restrictions is to be found in Mr. Brunyate’s _Account_. In 1862
  • they were greatly relaxed, but the most important limitations were
  • reimposed in 1876.[91] Since that time only minor charges have been
  • effected.
  • 7. The principal restrictions on the Presidency Banks are now the
  • following:—
  • (i.) The Banks may not draw, discount, buy, or sell bills of exchange
  • or other negotiable securities _unless they are payable in India_[92]
  • or in Ceylon; this restriction has cut off the Presidency Banks
  • completely from dealing in sterling drafts or any kind of foreign
  • exchange; (ii.) they may not borrow, or receive deposits payable,
  • outside India, or maintain a foreign branch or agency for this or
  • similar purposes, and they are thus prevented from raising funds in
  • London for use in India[93]; (iii.) they may not lend for a longer
  • period than six months[94]; (iv.) or upon mortgage, or in any other
  • manner upon the security of immovable property; (v.) or upon promissory
  • notes bearing less than two independent names; (vi.) or upon personal
  • security; (vii.) or upon goods, unless the goods, or the title to them,
  • are deposited with the Bank as security.
  • The fifth of these provisions allows a loophole by means of which the
  • rules can be made to work in practice less rigorously than appears on
  • paper. Any two names will satisfy the letter of the Presidency Banks
  • Act; but any two names are not necessarily very good security. After
  • getting two names to satisfy the Act, the authorities of the Banks can
  • then proceed to satisfy the dictates of cautious banking by taking, as
  • well, some of the other kinds of security upon which, technically, they
  • are forbidden to lend. It is an excellent instance of the consequences
  • of an attempt to control banking by an elaborate Act forty years old.
  • The last provision has led, I believe, to the Banks establishing a kind
  • of bonded warehouse for the reception of merchandise. In other cases
  • the borrower’s own mill or warehouse is made to serve the purpose by
  • the expedient of the Bank’s paying the wages of his watchman. Where
  • the personal security of the borrower is obviously good, there must be
  • a temptation to allow him to value the goods generously, rather than
  • to put the Bank to the inconvenience of housing or watching a greater
  • bulk of merchandise.
  • As some recompense for these restrictions, the Presidency Banks have
  • been allowed to hold a portion of the Government balances without
  • payment of interest. The use of these balances was first granted them
  • in 1862 as compensation for their being deprived of the right of
  • note issue. Up to 1876 the Presidency Banks held, subject to certain
  • conditions, the _whole_ of the Government balances which would have
  • been “paid in ordinary course into Government Treasuries at the
  • places where the head offices and branch offices of the Banks are
  • established.” But on more than one occasion the Banks made difficulties
  • when the Government desired to withdraw large sums at short notice. In
  • 1876, therefore, the Reserve Treasuries were established, and since
  • that time only a portion of the balances has been placed with the
  • Banks.[95]
  • 8. The present constitution of the Presidency Banks is to be explained,
  • therefore, by their long and complicated history. The restrictions
  • under which they work have in the past contributed, beyond doubt,
  • to their stability. The Bank of Bengal has seen the rise and fall
  • of numerous powerful rivals. Only by virtue of its being absolutely
  • precluded by law from the more speculative forms of business, has
  • this Bank survived the half–dozen or more violent crises by which the
  • Indian financial system has been assailed in the last hundred years.
  • And, in spite of the restrictions, the Presidency Banks have shown
  • great vitality and a power of expansion hardly less than that of the
  • Exchange Banks in the happier circumstances of the last decade. But
  • their constitutions are exceedingly out of date at the present time.
  • The considerations which originally gave rise to them are no longer
  • operative;—since the introduction of the Gold Standard, for example,
  • dealing in foreign exchange has ceased to be a highly speculative
  • business. And they do not play as useful a part in the Indian Financial
  • System, as with a different history behind them they might do.
  • 9. The principal statistics of the three Presidency Banks are as
  • follows[96]:—
  • ┌────────–┬────────────┬────────────┬────────────────┬──────────────–┐
  • │ │ Capital, │ │ │ │
  • │Dec. 31. │ Reserve, │ Public │ Private │ Cash. │
  • │ │ and Rest. │ Deposits. │ Deposits. │ │
  • ├────────–┼────────────┼────────────┼────────────────┼──────────────–┤
  • │ │ │ │ │ │
  • │ 1870 │ £2,412,000 │ £3,620,000 │ £4,264,000 │ £6,646,000 │
  • │ 1880 │ 2,702,000 │ 1,941,000 │ 5,662,000 │ 4,943,000 │
  • │ 1890 │ 2,984,000 │ 2,395,000 │ 9,842,000(a) │ 8,645,000(a) │
  • │ 1895 │ 3,267,000 │ 2,218,000 │ 8,747,000 │ 5,131,000 │
  • │ 1900 │ 3,731,000 │ 1,870,000 │ 8,588,000 │ 3,363,000 │
  • │ 1905 │ 4,156,000 │ 2,078,000 │ 14,842,000 │ 5,487,000 │
  • │ 1906 │ 4,266,000 │ 2,052,000 │ 18,301,000 │ 7,300,000 │
  • │ 1907 │ 4,366,000 │ 2,239,000 │ 18,742,000 │ 6,350,000 │
  • │ 1908 │ 4,461,000 │ 2,172,000 │ 19,077,000 │ 6,925,000 │
  • │ 1909 │ 4,521,000 │ 2,132,000 │ 21,767,000 │ 7,770,000 │
  • │ 1910 │ 4,607,000 │ 2,824,000 │ 21,563,000 │ 7,567,000 │
  • │ 1911(b) │ 4,650,000 │ 2,640,000 │ 23,250,000 │ 9,430,000 │
  • │ 1912(b) │ 4,900,000 │ 2,530,000 │ 24,000,000 │ 8,070,000 │
  • └────────–┴────────────┴────────────┴────────────────┴──────────────–┘
  • (a) An exceptional year, due to the excessive abundance of money.
  • (b) The figures for 1911 and 1912 are not taken from the same returns
  • as the rest, and are not quite strictly comparable with them in one or
  • two details.
  • These figures do not require much comment. The growth of private
  • deposits since 1900 (rising from £8,500,000 in 1900 to £15,000,000
  • in 1905 and £24,000,000 in 1912) is very noticeable. This has been
  • accompanied by a fair increase of Capital and Reserve and of Cash.
  • The Presidency Banks publish weekly statements of their affairs, and
  • it is scarcely possible, therefore, that they should “window–dress”
  • their balance sheets. The figures given above refer to December 31,
  • which falls in the busy season; and the proportion of cash held affords
  • no ground of complaint. It should be said, however, that, while the
  • public deposits at the head offices are stable and not liable to
  • sudden reduction, the public deposits at the branch offices stand in a
  • different position and are held literally at call. It is necessary for
  • the Banks to hold a considerable proportion of these in cash at the
  • branches in question, and this arrangement makes the cash held against
  • the private deposits appear in a somewhat more favourable light than it
  • should. It must also be remembered that the Presidency Banks are to a
  • certain extent Bankers’ Banks, and that the other Indian Banks reckon
  • their balances with the Presidency Banks (included in the private
  • deposits) as part of their cash.
  • 10. The two provisions of the Presidency Banks Act which have proved
  • fundamental in their effect on the development of the Indian Banking
  • System are those which prohibit the Presidency Banks from dealing in
  • foreign exchange and from raising funds in London. To transact these
  • two classes of business—though once established they have not limited
  • their transactions to them—a class of Banks has arisen known as the
  • Exchange Banks. Officially a Bank is an Exchange Bank if its head
  • office is located elsewhere than in India; but Banks in this category
  • coincide very nearly with Banks doing the class of business described
  • above. The Indian Specie Bank is the only Indian Joint Stock Bank
  • having a branch office in London; but this is probably in connexion
  • with its business in silver and pearls, and this Bank does not transact
  • any considerable volume of business of the kind undertaken by Exchange
  • Banks.
  • 11. The Exchange Banks proper fall into two groups—those doing
  • a considerable proportion of their total business in India, and
  • those which are no more than agencies of large banking corporations
  • doing business all over Asia. This second group includes the
  • Comptoir National d’Escompte de Paris, the Yokohama Specie Bank, the
  • Deutsch–Asiatische Bank, the International Banking Corporation, and the
  • Russo–Asiatic Bank. These Banks represent in India French, Japanese,
  • German, American, and Russian interests respectively. No figures are
  • published of the proportion of their total business which these Banks
  • transact in India. But I should be surprised if, even in the case of
  • the Yokohama Specie Bank, it would amount to more than five to ten
  • per cent; and in the case of some of them it must be much less than
  • this. In what follows, therefore, I shall leave these five Banks out of
  • account.
  • In the first group there are six Banks—the Delhi and London Bank
  • (1844), the Chartered Bank of India, Australia, and China (1853), the
  • National Bank of India (1863), the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking
  • Corporation (1864), the Mercantile Bank of India (1893[97]), and the
  • Eastern Bank (1910). The dates after these Banks give the years when
  • they were established. Of these, two, the Chartered and the Hong Kong
  • Banks, do a very large business in other parts of the East, especially
  • China[98]; but this does not prevent their Indian connexion from being
  • important. The other four are primarily Indian.[99] It is noticeable
  • that no entirely new Exchange Bank now surviving[100] was founded
  • between 1864 and 1910. This is in spite of the fact that most of the
  • above, especially in the last decade, have proved enormously successful
  • from the point of view of their shareholders. The Delhi and London
  • Bank,[101] the oldest established of all, has not shown the vitality
  • or power of expansion of the others; and the Eastern Bank, though it
  • seems to have made a good start, is still too young to pass judgment
  • on. But the shares of the rest, if the issue of bonus shares be allowed
  • for, stand at a premium of about 200 per cent or more. It is probable,
  • however, that it would be exceedingly difficult to start a new Exchange
  • Bank at the present time, except under the aegis of some important
  • financial house already established in a strong position in India.[102]
  • Indian Exchange Banking is no business for speculative or enterprising
  • outsiders, and the large profits which it earns are protected by
  • established and not easily assailable advantages.
  • 12. This summary leads us, therefore, to the important conclusion that
  • the business of financing Indian trade, so far as it is carried out by
  • Banks with their seat in London,[103] is in the hands of a very small
  • number of Banks. They stand, broadly speaking, in an exceedingly strong
  • financial position supported by large reserve funds. In this matter
  • India is now enjoying the fruit of past disasters and of conditions in
  • which the struggle for existence was too keen to allow any but the
  • fittest to survive. If the present spell of prosperity lasts too long,
  • she will no doubt lose it.
  • 13. I shall not attempt any complete account of the activities of a
  • typical Exchange Bank. Much of their business is very like that of
  • any other Bank. But it will be worth while to describe in rather more
  • detail the most characteristic part of their transactions and the part
  • which is most relevant to the topics of this book.
  • 14. In addition to its capital and the reserves accumulated from
  • profits, an Exchange Bank obtains its funds by receiving deposits
  • either for fixed periods or on current account. These deposits are
  • received both in India and in London; but it is a principal object of
  • Exchange Banks to obtain as much as they can in London, and they seek
  • to attract such deposits by offering better terms than an English Bank
  • will allow. On fixed deposits, received for a year or more, 4 or 3½
  • per cent will be paid; for shorter periods a more variable rate; and
  • on current accounts 2 per cent will be allowed on the minimum monthly
  • balance or on the amount by which the balance exceeds a certain fixed
  • minimum. Apart from the cash, money at call, and investments, which
  • every Bank must hold, a certain part of these funds are employed in
  • making loans either in India or elsewhere. But a large part is employed
  • in the purchase (or discount) of bills of exchange. Some of these
  • bills will be negotiated in London and drawn on India, but the bulk of
  • them will be negotiated in India and drawn on London. A busy Exchange
  • Bank discounts far more of these trade bills in India than it can
  • afford to hold until maturity. But as they are drawn on London houses
  • there is no difficulty in rediscounting them in London. As the majority
  • of the bills are bought by the Banks _in India_, while cash is received
  • for them, either at maturity or through rediscount, _in London_, the
  • Banks are constantly in the position of finding themselves in funds in
  • London and of wishing to have funds (for the purchase of more bills) in
  • India. They proceed, therefore, to even up their accounts as between
  • London and India by buying, in London, Council Bills (or transfers) or
  • sovereigns (from the Bank of England or from the agents of Egyptian or
  • Australian Banks) for delivery in India, or, perhaps, silver (though
  • their dealings in silver bullion are probably much less important than
  • formerly)[104] for remittance to India. The question of what determines
  • the relative advantages of these methods has been discussed in Chapter
  • V.
  • The demand for Council Bills, therefore, chiefly depends on how much
  • new business the Exchange Banks are entering into in India. The method
  • of telegraphic transfers enables them to act with great despatch on
  • receiving advices from their Indian agents. The Indian branches obtain
  • immediately the funds enabling them to take the trade bills, the offer
  • of which had seemed to them to be at sufficiently satisfactory rates
  • to make the transaction taken as a whole worth while. A few weeks
  • later the bills reach England, are duly accepted, and are capable of
  • being rediscounted if the Bank needs additional free funds to buy more
  • Council Bills and turn its money over again in another transaction of
  • the same kind.
  • We are now in a position to understand what the Secretary of State
  • means when he says that he has sold bills to meet the needs of trade.
  • If he withdraws the convenience of telegraphic transfers or forces
  • the Banks to put themselves in funds in India by sending sovereigns,
  • he causes delay or additional expense in the discounting of bills in
  • India. In other words, Indian traders are less easily able to turn the
  • goods they are exporting into money. On the other hand, if the Indian
  • season is a poor one and the exports fall off, the offer of bills for
  • discount is reduced and the need of the Exchange Banks in London to buy
  • Council Bills correspondingly less.
  • It is worth noticing that, from the point of view of the London Money
  • Market as a whole, it is a mere difference of machinery whether the
  • Exchange Banks finance the Indian trade by attracting deposits in
  • London and hold the bills themselves, or whether the Discount Houses
  • and London Banks attract the deposits and use them to rediscount bills
  • for the Exchange Banks. In so far as the Exchange Banks can attract
  • deposits themselves without paying too high a rate for them, this
  • alternative is usually the more profitable for them,—especially since,
  • if they are able to hold in this way a considerable proportion of the
  • bills they discount, they can afford to wait for a favourable moment
  • before rediscounting such bills as they have eventually to dispose of.
  • But, apart from private profits, the important point is the extent
  • to which Indian trade is financed by the purchase of Council Bills
  • in London with borrowed money, whether this money is supplied by the
  • depositors in Exchange Banks or by those who rediscount the bills.
  • 15. There is, _prima facie_, some danger to the stability of the
  • Indian financial system in the fact that its money market is largely
  • financed by funds raised, not permanently but for short periods, in a
  • far–distant foreign centre.[105] In order to judge accurately whether
  • this danger is in any way a real one, it would be necessary to have
  • before us certain facts which are not ordinarily published. We do not
  • know what proportion of the Exchange Banks’ total deposits are held in
  • England; or to what extent those which are so held are fixed for a
  • year or more and how far they are at call or short notice. As is often
  • the case when banking is under discussion in other countries, those
  • who are in a position to know are not in a position to speak, while
  • those who are in a position to speak are not in a position to know. I
  • will make my guess for what it is worth in § 18. In the meantime let us
  • discuss the principle which should guide us, had we knowledge.
  • It is plain that if Banks were to borrow money at short notice in
  • England and use it in India—certainly if they were to do this on a
  • large scale,—the situation might be dangerous. They might be called on
  • to return what they had borrowed in England, and unable at short notice
  • to bring back what they had lent in India. The principle of which we
  • are in search is, therefore, that the sums borrowed on relatively short
  • notice in either country should not exceed the assets located there.
  • Where, however, bills of exchange between England and India are in
  • question, it is not immediately plain what part of the Banks’ funds may
  • properly be regarded as located in England and what part in India. The
  • answer is, I think, that a bill which has been accepted in England, and
  • is payable there at maturity, is an English asset, wherever it may have
  • been originally negotiated. Thus in the case of Indian Exchange Banks,
  • their deposits in London (other than those fixed for long periods)
  • should be at least balanced by their short–term loans in London,
  • their cash in London, their portfolio of trade bills having a London
  • domicile, and such of their securities as may be readily marketable in
  • London. Similarly their liquid assets in India should at least balance
  • their short–period liabilities there.
  • 16. How far these conditions are as a matter of fact satisfied, it is,
  • as I have said above, impossible to know for certain. The Exchange
  • Banks do not distinguish in their published accounts between their
  • Indian and London deposits. They do, however, give private information
  • to the Indian authorities of their deposits in India and elsewhere
  • respectively in each year. These aggregates for all the Exchange Banks
  • together are published in the _Statistics of British India_, Part II.,
  • and are, therefore, available to the public two or three years after
  • the period to which they refer.[106]
  • So far as the Indian deposits are concerned, these returns are very
  • valuable. But the aggregate of deposits outside India is as nearly
  • as possible useless. For Exchange Banks of both groups—the Banks
  • primarily Indian and the agencies of huge European institutions doing
  • business in many parts of the world—are lumped together, so that
  • the total includes the whole of the French deposits of the Comptoir
  • National d’Escompte and of the deposits, in whatever country, of the
  • other Banks with Indian agencies enumerated on p. 206. The figures
  • are, therefore, hardly relevant to questions peculiarly Indian; and I
  • will content myself with quoting, from the table given in the official
  • statistics, the total deposits of Exchange Banks made _in India_, and
  • the cash balances held _in India_ against them.
  • EXCHANGE BANKS
  • ┌──────┬────────────────────┬────────────────────────–┐
  • │ │ Deposits in India. │ Cash Balances in India. │
  • ├──────┼────────────────────┼────────────────────────–┤
  • │ 1890 │ £5,000,000 │ £2,300,000 │
  • │ 1895 │ 6,900,000 │ 1,800,000 │
  • │ 1900 │ 7,000,000 │ 1,600,000 │
  • │ 1901 │ 7,900,000 │ 2,200,000 │
  • │ 1902 │ 9,100,000 │ 2,300,000 │
  • │ 1903 │ 10,800,000 │ 2,100,000 │
  • │ 1904 │ 10,900,000 │ 3,300,000 │
  • │ 1905 │ 11,400,000 │ 2,500,000 │
  • │ 1906 │ 12,100,000 │ 3,400,000 │
  • │ 1907 │ 12,800,000 │ 3,700,000 │
  • │ 1908 │ 13,000,000 │ 2,500,000 │
  • │ 1909 │ 13,500,000 │ 2,800,000 │
  • │ 1910 │ 16,200,000 │ 2,900,000 │
  • └──────┴────────────────────┴────────────────────────–┘
  • 17. Two facts emerge from this table with great plainness—the rapid
  • rate at which in recent years Exchange Banks have been able to increase
  • the funds raised by deposit in India herself, and the slow rate at
  • which they have thought fit to increase their Indian balances.[107] The
  • position has evidently changed a good deal in quite recent times. It is
  • tantalising to think that two years must elapse before we can know how
  • the Banks stood in these respects last December (1912). The _Statistics
  • of British India_ do not lend their aid to ruder hands than those of
  • the historian.
  • In the event of an internal financial crisis in India the Exchange
  • Banks are probably depending on the anticipation that they will be
  • able to remit funds from London by telegraphic transfer. In this case
  • they rely on not being hard pressed in India and in London at the same
  • time. An Indian reserve, such as they appear to keep, of from 18 to 20
  • per cent would be respectable, for example, in England. But in such a
  • country as India, where banking is ill–established and hoarding more
  • than a memory, the proportion held in reserve seems somewhat lower than
  • perhaps it ought to be. Possibly Exchange Banks have already been in
  • smooth waters longer than is for their good. There are famous dates in
  • the history of Indian banking which should serve as a _memento mori_.
  • 18. When we turn to the assets and liabilities of the Exchange Banks in
  • England we find reason for supposing a much stronger position; for the
  • bulk of the bills of exchange held are probably domiciled in London and
  • may be regarded, therefore, as liquid London assets.[108] The following
  • table sets out the figures relating to deposits, leaving out the Hong
  • Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, because, although its Indian
  • business is important, this can only be a small proportion of its total
  • business. I include all the other Banks given in my first group (see
  • p. 207) although the non–Indian business of the Chartered and National
  • Banks cannot be accurately allowed for.
  • FIXED AND CURRENT DEPOSITS (IN £1,000,000)
  • ┌───────────────–┬────–┬────–┬────–┬────–┬────–┬────–┬────–┬────–┬────–┐
  • │ Bank. │1900.│1905.│1906.│1907.│1908.│1909.│1910.│1911.│1912.│
  • ├───────────────–┼────–┼────–┼────–┼────–┼────–┼────–┼────–┼────–┼────–┤
  • │ │ £m.│ £m. │ £m. │ £m. │ £m. │ £m. │ £m. │ £m. │ £m. │
  • │Chartered │ 9¼ │ 11½ │ 13¼ │ 12¼ │ 12½ │ 13¾ │ 15½ │ 16¼ │ 18 │
  • │National │ 6 │ 9 │ 9¾ │ 10¼ │ 10¼ │ 11¾ │ 12¾ │ 13 │ 14 │
  • │Mercantile │ 1½ │ 2¾ │ 3¾ │ 3½ │ 3½ │ 4½ │ 5¼ │ 5½ │ 5½ │
  • │Delhi and London│ 1¼ │ 1¼ │ 1¼ │ 1½ │ 1¼ │ 1¼ │ 1½ │ 1½ │ 1½ │
  • │Eastern │ ... │ ... │ ... │ ... │ ... │ ... │ 1¼ │ 1¾ │ 2 │
  • ├───────────────–┼────–┼────–┼────–┼────–┼────–┼────–┼────–┼────–┼────–┤
  • │ Total │ 18 │ 24½ │ 28 │ 27½ │ 27½ │ 31¼ │ 36¼ │ 38 │ 41 │
  • └───────────────–┴────–┴────–┴────–┴────–┴────–┴────–┴────–┴────–┴────–┘
  • The total cash in hand and at bankers held by these five Banks at the
  • end of 1912 was about £m7¾. I estimate that in 1910 these Banks may
  • have held _outside India_ about £m23 in deposits and about £m5 cash in
  • hand and at bankers.
  • As to the proportion of these deposits which were held for long periods
  • there is no accurate information. The Chartered and Eastern Banks
  • are alone in distinguishing in their balance sheets between fixed
  • deposits and current accounts. In 1912 the Chartered Bank held £m10½
  • on current account, etc., and £m7½ on fixed deposit; the Eastern
  • Bank £m½ on current account and £m1½ on fixed deposit.[109]
  • More than half of the deposits of the Banks as a whole are probably
  • held on current account or at short notice. If we are to make a
  • guess, the Banks may have held in 1910 about £13,000,000 on current
  • account outside India; but by no means all of this (in the case of the
  • Chartered and National Banks especially) would be held in London. The
  • question of the amount of the London assets of the Banks does not lend
  • itself to statistical summary. But I do not think that there is the
  • least reason for supposing that the position is not a strong one.
  • 19. The principles which underlie the preceding analysis may be
  • illustrated by reference to a hypothetical balance sheet, simplified,
  • but less simplified than those commonly published.
  • £m. │ £m.
  • (i.) Capital and │ (vii.) Loans and Advances
  • Reserve Fund 1½ │ in London 3
  • │
  • (ii.) Fixed Deposits │ (viii.) Loans and Advances
  • in London 3½ │ in India 3
  • │
  • (iii.) Current Accounts │ (ix.) Trade Bills on London
  • in London 2½ │ negotiated in India 6½
  • │
  • (iv.) Fixed Deposits │ (x.) Trade Bills on India
  • in India 2 │ negotiated in London 1½
  • │
  • (v.) Current Accounts │ (xi.) Cash, etc., in London 1½
  • in India 2½ │
  • │ (xii.) Cash, etc., in India ½
  • (vi.) Trade Bills on │
  • London negotiated │ (xiii.) Securities 1
  • in India │
  • and rediscounted │ (xiv.) Miscellaneous assets
  • in London 5½ │ including silver
  • │ bullion ½
  • │
  • —————— │ ————
  • 17½ │ 17½
  • ══════ │ ════
  • This would probably be published as follows:—
  • £m. │ £m.
  • │
  • Capital and Reserve Fund 1½ │ Loans, Advances, etc. 6
  • Deposits, etc. 10½ │ Bills of Exchange 2½
  • │ Cash, etc. 2
  • │ Securities 1
  • │ Miscellaneous assets ½
  • —————— │ ——————
  • 12 │ 12
  • ══════ │ ══════
  • [Bills rediscounted and outstanding, £m5½.]
  • Acceptances have been omitted in the above, the amount of bills
  • payable is supposed to be deducted from cash, and various minor items
  • are omitted. The “capital employed in India” seems to be (viii.) +
  • (x.) + (xii.) = £m5. The “capital employed in London” is (vii.) +
  • (ix.)–(vi.) + (xi.) = £m5½.[110] The securities and miscellaneous
  • assets (xiii.) + (xiv.) = £m1½, may be regarded perhaps as equally
  • available in either centre. If there is a run in India, assets must
  • be available there in a liquid form equal to (v.). If there is a run
  • in London, liquid assets must be available there equal to (iii.). The
  • second condition, but not the first, is, in this hypothetical example,
  • fulfilled. If the Bank had to remit funds back from India to London,
  • this would be most simply effected by not entering into new business
  • under (ix.). It would not then be necessary to buy Council Bills,
  • and the trade bills already bought under (ix.), being rediscounted or
  • allowed to mature in London, would swell the available funds there
  • automatically. If it were possible to call in loans in India and
  • reduce (viii.), then it would be possible to buy more trade bills
  • under (ix.) in India (or Government sterling drafts if trade were
  • depressed), without having to buy Council Bills in London, and these
  • trade bills could then be rediscounted in London. If the Exchange Banks
  • are remitting funds back to London, this shows itself, therefore, in a
  • poor demand for Council Bills; and conversely when they are remitting
  • funds to India, there is a strong demand for Council Bills. Thus the
  • weakness of the demand for Council Bills in times of depression (and
  • the strength of the demand for Government sterling drafts) partly
  • depends on the action of the Exchange Banks. What their action would be
  • in a situation of acute stringency bordering on financial panic, it is
  • not easy to predict.
  • 20. So far the only apparent element of danger in the banking position
  • seems to lie in the growth of deposits attracted by the Exchange
  • Banks in India without a corresponding growth in their Indian cash
  • reserves. It would be a good thing if the Exchange Banks were compelled
  • to distinguish in their balance sheets between their Indian and
  • extra–Indian business, much in the manner set out in the hypothetical
  • balance sheet on p. 218, except that for “London” “outside India”
  • would have to be substituted.[111] They should also distinguish, as two
  • already do distinguish, between fixed deposits and accounts at call
  • or for short periods. When, as in the case of the Exchange Banks, we
  • have to deal with a small number of Banks of established position, an
  • insistence on due publicity, rather than compulsion or regulation in
  • matters of policy, is likely to be the proper remedy for any weaknesses
  • which may possibly exist.
  • 21. The next section of the Indian banking world comprises the Indian
  • Joint Stock Banks, _i.e._ those Banks, other than the three Presidency
  • Banks, registered in India and having their head offices there. This
  • is a confusing group, because a great number of small money–lending
  • establishments are registered as Banks under the Indian Companies
  • Act—in 1910–11 492 businesses were classified as Banks.[112] The
  • official statistics separate off, however, those of the Banks proper
  • which are of any considerable size,—those, namely, which have a
  • paid–up capital and reserve of at least 5 lakhs (£33,000).
  • The earlier Banks, coming under this description, were usually under
  • European management. Out of seven existing in 1870, only two now
  • survive,—the Bank of Upper India (1863) and the Allahabad Bank
  • (1865).[113] Between 1870 and 1894 seven more Banks, conforming on the
  • whole to this same type, were founded, of which four now survive,—the
  • Alliance Bank of Simla (1874), the Oudh Commercial Bank (1881),
  • the Punjab Banking Company (1889), and the Punjab National Bank
  • (1894).[114] All these Banks are on a very small scale compared with
  • the Presidency and Exchange Banks; but they are distinguished in type
  • from most of the more recent creations.
  • Between 1894 and 1904[115] no new Banks were founded with as much as
  • 5 lakhs of paid–up capital. But since 1904 there has been a great
  • outburst of fresh activity, and a type of Bank new to India has become
  • important. The way was led in 1904 by the foundation of the Bank of
  • Burma. This Bank failed in 1911, two directors and the general manager
  • being found guilty of cheating and sentenced to imprisonment in 1913.
  • In 1906 three Banks were founded, all of some importance,—the Bank of
  • India (under important Parsee auspices), the Bank of Rangoon, and the
  • Indian Specie Bank. Until 1910 these three Banks remained alone amongst
  • the new creations in having a paid–up capital in excess of 15 lakhs
  • (£100,000).[116] Since 1906 numerous Banks have been started, amongst
  • the most important of which in respect of paid–up capital may be
  • mentioned the Bengal National Bank (1907), the Bombay Merchants’ Bank
  • (1909), the Credit Bank of India (1909), the Kathiawar and Ahmedabad
  • Banking Corporation (1910), and the Central Bank of India (1911).
  • The main object of most of these Banks is, of course, to attract
  • deposits (though some of them are almost as much concerned at present
  • with placing a further part of their unissued capital). For deposits
  • fixed for a year the rate offered varies, as a rule, from 4½ to 5
  • per cent, the newer creations generally favouring the higher rate.
  • Some Banks offer 6 per cent. About the rates for shorter periods
  • there is more vagueness. On current accounts 2 per cent is generally
  • allowed, though the eagerness of some of the newest Banks has led
  • them to offer 2½. I have the advertisement before me of a Bank
  • which offers 3 per cent on the daily balance, and up to 6 per cent on
  • sums deposited for longer periods; at the head of the advertisement
  • appears in large letters—Capital, Rs. 50,000,000; but it appears below
  • that applications for shares are invited, and the paid–up capital is
  • probably negligible. Some Banks advertise such advantages as “Special
  • Marriage Deposits, 50 per cent added to Principal in five years’
  • time.”[117]
  • 4½ per cent on deposits fixed for a year and 2 per cent on current
  • accounts in excess of a certain minimum are very likely reasonable
  • rates to offer in Indian conditions, provided that the funds thus
  • attracted are not used for speculation and that adequate reserves
  • are maintained in a liquid form. It is in this respect that the more
  • substantial of these Banks are chiefly open to criticism. The official
  • statistics are, unfortunately, very much out of date. But for the
  • Banks which had a paid–up capital and reserve of at least 5 lakhs the
  • available figures up to 1910 are as follows:—
  • INDIAN JOINT STOCK BANKS
  • ┌──────┬────────┬──────────────────–┬────────────┬──────────–┐
  • │ │ No. of │ Capital, Reserve, │ Deposits. │ Cash │
  • │ │ Banks. │ and Rest. │ │ Balances. │
  • ├──────┼────────┼──────────────────–┼────────────┼──────────–┤
  • │ 1890 │ 5 │ £340,000 │ £1,810,000 │ £370,000 │
  • │ 1895 │ 9 │ 630,000 │ 3,780,000 │ 640,000 │
  • │ 1900 │ 9 │ 850,000 │ 5,380,000 │ 790,000 │
  • │ 1905 │ 9 │ 1,080,000 │ 7,990,000 │ 1,160,000 │
  • │ 1906 │ 10 │ 1,270,000 │ 7,700,000 │ 1,000,000 │
  • │ 1907 │ 11 │ 1,950,000 │ 9,340,000 │ 1,300,000 │
  • │ 1908 │ 14 │ 2,060,000 │ 10,840,000 │ 1,630,000 │
  • │ 1909 │ 15 │ 2,360,000 │ 13,660,000 │ 1,860,000 │
  • │ 1910 │ 16 │ 2,510,000 │ 17,110,000 │ 1,870,000 │
  • └──────┴────────┴──────────────────–┴────────────┴──────────–┘
  • 22. These figures reveal, in my opinion, an exceedingly serious state
  • of affairs. If they could be brought up to date, they would probably
  • appear even worse. As late as 1900 these Banks were comparatively
  • insignificant. Since that time they have succeeded in attracting so
  • large a volume of deposits as to make them an important part of the
  • banking system of the country. Only six of them date back long enough
  • to remember any real financial crisis in India (for the depression
  • of 1907–8 was not accompanied by the symptoms of financial crisis).
  • Growing up in smooth times, they have thought more of attracting
  • deposits than of retaining cash reserves; and in 1910 we find sixteen
  • Banks with deposits of £17,000,000 and cash reserves of not quite 11
  • per cent.[118] Even of these reserves the greater part is probably held
  • by the older and more established of the Banks belonging to this class.
  • In the case of the smaller Banks, dealing, as they are, with clients to
  • whom banking is a new thing and in a country where hoarding is still
  • dominant, the cash balances seem, from the available indications, to
  • be hopelessly inadequate; and it is hard to doubt that in the next bad
  • times they will go down like ninepins. If such a catastrophe occurs,
  • the damage inflicted on India will be far greater than the direct loss
  • falling on the depositors. The growth of banking habits in India is, of
  • course, of the utmost importance to the country’s economic development.
  • A startling series of failures will do much to retard it.
  • In this connexion the history of the Bank of Burma, the first Bank of
  • the new order to be founded, is instructive. This Bank was started
  • in 1904 under European management by a firm engaged in floating
  • oil companies and other highly speculative enterprises. The Bank’s
  • capital was £117,500, and by 1911, when it failed, deposits had been
  • attracted to the extent of £792,701, a large part of which is said to
  • have come from Bombay and Calcutta. To obtain these deposits the Bank
  • had offered interest at the rate of 6 per cent for deposits placed
  • with it for a year; and many persons, it seems, were deceived by its
  • title into believing that it was in some sense a Presidency Bank. In
  • the autumn of 1911, after a year in which the Burma rice crop had been
  • good and had sold at very high prices, and when the province generally
  • was prosperous, the Bank failed. The balance sheet turned out to be
  • false, and one–third of the assets had been advanced against worthless
  • security to a firm in which the directors were interested.
  • 23. Both in the case of the Exchange Banks and in that of the
  • Indian Joint Stock Banks, the “Cash Balances” include, I think,
  • balances held at other Banks.[119] It is impossible, therefore, to
  • summarise accurately the figures for the Indian Banking System as
  • a whole—Presidency Banks, Exchange Banks, and Joint Stock Banks
  • together. The figures given below state accurately the total of private
  • deposits; but in the total of cash balances some items must be counted
  • twice over.
  • ┌──────┬──────────────────–┬────────────–┬──────────–┐
  • │ │ Total Deposits in │ │ Cash Per │
  • │ │ India, excluding │ Total Cash │ Cent of │
  • │ │ Public Deposits. │ Balances. │ Deposits. │
  • ├──────┼──────────────────–┼────────────–┼──────────–┤
  • │ 1890 │ £16,650,000 │ £11,310,000 │ 68(a) │
  • │ 1895 │ 19,430,000 │ 7,570,000 │ 39 │
  • │ 1900 │ 20,970,000 │ 5,750,000 │ 23 │
  • │ 1905 │ 34,230,000 │ 9,150,000 │ 27 │
  • │ 1906 │ 38,100,000 │ 11,700,000 │ 31 │
  • │ 1907 │ 40,880,000 │ 11,350,000 │ 28 │
  • │ 1908 │ 42,920,000 │ 11,050,000 │ 26 │
  • │ 1909 │ 48,930,000 │ 12,430,000 │ 25 │
  • │ 1910 │ 54,870,000 │ 12,340,000 │ 22 │
  • └──────┴──────────────────–┴────────────–┴──────────–┘
  • (a) An exceptional year.
  • The steady deterioration of the position, as shown in the above
  • figures, is exceedingly marked. These figures flatter the Banks, rather
  • than the reverse. For I have excluded the Public Deposits (amounting in
  • 1910 to £2,820,000), and have included the whole of the cash balances
  • (at the branches as well as the head offices) held by the Presidency
  • Banks against them. If the figures could be worked out accurately, the
  • present proportion of cash available against the private deposits would
  • come out, I suspect, lower by far than appears superficially from the
  • above table.
  • 24. To complete the figures of Indian deposits,[120] it will be useful
  • to give at this point the deposits in the Post Office Savings Banks,
  • which have increased at a great rate, though not so fast as deposits in
  • Banks, since 1900:—
  • ┌──────────–┬──────────────────────–┬────────────┐
  • │ March 31. │ Number of Depositors. │ Deposits. │
  • ├──────────–┼──────────────────────–┼────────────┤
  • │ 1900 │ 785,729 │ £6,431,000 │
  • │ 1905 │ 1,058,813 │ 8,938,000 │
  • │ 1906 │ 1,115,758 │ 9,328,000 │
  • │ 1907 │ 1,190,220 │ 9,845,000 │
  • │ 1908 │ 1,262,763 │ 10,121,000 │
  • │ 1909 │ 1,318,632 │ 10,156,000 │
  • │ 1910 │ 1,378,916 │ 10,578,000 │
  • │ 1911 │ 1,430,451 │ 11,279,000 │
  • │ 1912(a) │ 1,500,834 │ 12,599,000 │
  • │ 1913(b) │ │ 13,860,000 │
  • └──────────–┴──────────────────────–┴────────────┘
  • (a) Limit of annual cash deposits raised from Rs. 200 to Rs. 500.
  • (b) Estimate.
  • As in England, the Government do not maintain any specific reserve
  • against these deposits. They are treated as unfunded debt and used
  • for capital expenditure. It is important, therefore, to remember that
  • the Government now hold in India nearly £14,000,000 of unfunded debt
  • repayable at short notice to 1,500,000 depositors. This constitutes a
  • not negligible claim on their general reserves.
  • 25. The figures of the preceding paragraphs, in their cumulative
  • effect, suggest the following reflection. Apart from any deterioration
  • in the proportion of reserves held, the question of Indian deposits
  • is now _important_. They stand for the first time at a figure which
  • is large in relation to the total trade of the country and to the
  • resources of the Government. If the Banks get into trouble, there
  • will be much more far–reaching effects than could have been the
  • case formerly. This is quite apart from the question whether they
  • are more _likely_ to get into trouble than formerly. The question
  • of the reserves they hold matters, therefore, more than it used.
  • The information which I have been able to convey in this chapter is
  • exceedingly incomplete. But, such as it is, it provides strong _prima
  • facie_ grounds for doubt and dissatisfaction.
  • 26. The last group of Banks for discussion—since I have no precise
  • _data_ relating to the private and unincorporated bankers or
  • money–lenders—consists of those numerous institutions registered as
  • Banks under the Indian Companies Act, but with a capital insufficient
  • or with activities too mixed for inclusion in the list of Indian Joint
  • Stock Banks proper, dealt with above.
  • The available statistics (approximate) are as follows:—
  • ┌──────────–┬─────────────────–┬──────────────────┐
  • │ March 31. │ Number of Banks. │ Paid–up Capital. │
  • ├──────────–┼─────────────────–┼──────────────────┤
  • │ 1900 │ 398 │ £2,000,000 │
  • │ 1905 │ 510 │ 2,200,000 │
  • │ 1906 │ 505 │ 2,000,000 │
  • │ 1907 │ 504 │ 1,900,000 │
  • │ 1908 │ 478 │ 2,800,000 │
  • │ 1909 │ 492 │ 3,100,000 │
  • │ 1910 │ 476 │ 3,400,000 │
  • └──────────–┴─────────────────–┴──────────────────┘
  • There are no statistics of their deposits. While the capital of these
  • Banks has increased rather rapidly since 1907, the above figures show
  • that it is not yet large.
  • Our interest in these Banks, however, arises not so much out of the
  • banking business which they may possibly transact, as out of certain,
  • almost Gilbertian, characteristics calculated to bring the name and
  • profession of banking into derision or disrepute. These Banks have
  • discovered that there is, or may be, a useful ambiguity in the public
  • mind between nominal capital and paid–up capital, and that nothing
  • is cheaper than to increase the former. When, therefore, a Bank is
  • registered, its promoters may just as well put down as its nominal
  • capital sums ranging from £100,000 to £1,000,000 as anything else. One
  • comic opera Bank registered in Calcutta in 1910 put down £20,000,000,
  • without having at the time of the last return any paid–up capital at
  • all. Apart from this exceptional venture, the 38 Banks registered
  • in 1910–11 had between them a nominal capital of £1,306,000 and a
  • paid–up capital of £19,500. With enormous nominal capitals they
  • combine high–sounding titles—the Bank of Asia, the East India Bank,
  • the Hindustan Bank, the United Bank of Commerce, and so forth. Once
  • established, their activities are not limited. One of these Banks has
  • included in its operations coach–building and medical attendance.
  • 27. Plainly these ventures are not to be taken too seriously. But the
  • recent activity of their promoters has raised some discussion in India
  • as to whether it would not be for the public good to restrain them by
  • legislation. In this matter, as is the case in so many (her governors
  • knowing no other model), the legislation of India has followed the
  • lines of Great Britain’s. Just as in this country there is no special
  • law relating to the incorporation of Banks, so in India Banks are
  • registered under the ordinary Joint Stock Companies Act. As a Bill
  • to amend this Act has been to the front for some time, discussion
  • has naturally centred round the question whether this opportunity
  • should not be taken of introducing some suitable restrictions relating
  • specifically to Banks.[121] While I am inclined to think that it would
  • be more convenient to deal with this matter in a separate Bill, the
  • important point is that decided action of some kind should be taken
  • with the least possible delay. The Upper Indian Chamber of Commerce, in
  • reply to an inquiry from Government in 1910, answered, very wisely, as
  • follows:—
  • The Committee feel very strongly that something more is needed
  • (_i.e._, than in other Companies) in the case of Banks where the
  • capital and confidence, not only of the shareholders but of the
  • depositors, are involved. New Banks are springing up with alarming
  • rapidity, with little share capital subscribed; these Banks are
  • trading on the confidence of the depositor who is little versed in
  • money matters but is attracted by the name “Bank” and wishes to earn
  • interest on his savings.... The fear is that if one of these mushroom
  • growths fails, others will follow, and the timid depositor, unable to
  • discriminate between the sound and the unsound concerns, will make
  • haste to get his money back from whatever Bank it is in, and his
  • confidence in banking institutions thus rudely checked will take
  • years to win back.
  • Various suggestions have been made as to what restrictions would be
  • proper. It has been proposed that it should not be permitted to combine
  • banking operations with other businesses; that the accounts of Banks
  • should be regularly audited and the results published; that fairly
  • detailed accounts[122] should be published in the local official
  • Gazette; that all institutions calling themselves Banks should be
  • required to publish certain specified particulars at the head of every
  • advertisement; and that capital and reserves should bear a certain
  • proportion to liabilities before dividends may be paid. The abuse of a
  • great disproportion between nominal and paid–up capital could be cured
  • by a stamp duty on registration proportioned to the nominal capital.
  • Provisions for due publicity will probably lead in the long–run to the
  • best results—though care must be taken that the form for publication
  • of accounts is well suited to bring to the light what is most relevant.
  • Regulations of other kinds are apt to have hampering results which
  • cannot be easily foreseen. During the infancy of Indian banking,
  • nevertheless, it will very likely be wise to have some precise rule as
  • to the kind and amount of the reserves.
  • 28. In conclusion, something must be said about proposals for a State
  • Bank. This is a proper subject for inquiry by a Royal Commission. I am
  • not prepared to discuss it here in detail.
  • The question is an old one. In 1836 “a large body of merchants
  • interested in the East Indies” submitted to the Court of Directors of
  • the East India Company a project for a “great Banking Establishment
  • for British India.” Such a Bank, “confining its transactions strictly
  • to Banking principles and business,” and “established by Act of
  • Parliament and possessed of adequate capital, would, under judicious
  • management and control, become an instrument of general good by
  • facilitating the employment of a portion of the redundant capital
  • of this country (England) for the general improvement of Indian
  • commerce, giving stability to the monetary system of India, and
  • preventing those occasional fluctuations to which it is at present
  • subject, and also by affording the Company facilities and advantages
  • in their future financial arrangements.” It was also to “facilitate
  • the receipt of the revenue and its subsequent diffusion through the
  • various channels of the public expenditure, furnish the remittance
  • to Great Britain of the sums required there for the Home Charges,
  • and enable the East India Company to act up to the instruction of
  • the legislature by keeping their Government entirely aloof from that
  • interference with the commerce of India which the present system of
  • remittance involves.... At present the basis of the Bank of Bengal
  • is too narrow for such a customer as the Government.” I quote this
  • from the _Account of the Presidency Banks_ by Mr. J. B. Brunyate, who
  • remarks on its appropriateness to present conditions. From 1860 to
  • 1876 the possibility of the Bank of Bengal’s developing into a “Bank
  • of India” was constantly in the air, successive financial Members of
  • Council being not unfriendly to the idea. In 1867 a specific proposal
  • for the amalgamation of the three Presidency Banks was laid before the
  • Government of India in a memorandum of complete grasp and mastery by
  • Mr. Dickson, celebrated (in his own time) for pre–eminent ability as
  • Secretary and Treasurer of the Bank of Bengal. The Viceroy’s minute was
  • unfavourable. “I submit,” he wrote, “that it is not for the interest
  • of a State that a great institution of the kind should grow up for
  • all India, the interests of which may in time be opposed to those
  • of the public, and whose influence at any rate may overshadow that
  • of the Government itself. A Bank of such a character would be very
  • difficult to manage. Few men in India would be found equal to the
  • task. And as regards the interests and convenience of the merchants of
  • Bombay and Madras, surely it is only natural that they should prefer
  • separate Banks for those important centres of commerce.” The Secretary
  • of State’s sole contribution to the discussion—no need to name
  • him, it is the eternal Secretary of State speaking, not a transient
  • individual—was as follows:—
  • Any proposition for changes of a fundamental character, such as
  • the establishment of a Central State Bank, or a return to the
  • system of Government Treasuries, which may hereafter be taken into
  • consideration, must be viewed in its general bearings, and not with
  • special reference to the circumstances, of a particular Presidency, or
  • of a particular crisis.
  • The project was smothered in the magnificent and empty maxims of
  • political wisdom.[123]
  • Before the Fowler Committee of 1898, there was some desultory
  • discussion of proposals for a Central Bank of India, which were
  • supported by a few of the witnesses; but, apart from Mr. Hambro’s
  • memorandum, no attempt was made to deal with the question in
  • detail.[124]
  • 29. At the present time the arguments in favour of a State Bank for
  • India are very strong,—far stronger than they were in 1867 or even
  • in 1898. The Government have taken over so many of the functions of a
  • Central Bank, that they cannot wisely neglect the rest. A note issue of
  • growing importance, the management of the Government’s cash balances,
  • the regulation of the foreign exchanges,—all these are controlled
  • together and treated as a whole in a compact and admirably conceived
  • scheme. But other benefits cannot be obtained easily, so long as
  • these functions are utterly divorced from those of banking proper. I
  • summarise the arguments thus:—
  • (i.) The existing divorce between responsibility for the note issue and
  • that for banking generally is contrary to modern banking practice, and
  • is, in several respects, a source of weakness.
  • (ii.) In particular it leads to the keeping of two distinct
  • reserves—the Government’s reserves and the bankers’ reserves—with
  • no clearly defined relation between them, so that the reserves of the
  • latter may be insufficient, without the assumption by the former of the
  • fact or the machinery of responsibility.
  • (iii.) It leads also to a want of elasticity in the system, since in
  • modern conditions this elasticity is most commonly provided by exactly
  • that co–operation between banking and note issue which is lacking in
  • India.
  • (iv.) The absence of a State Bank makes it difficult for the Government
  • to use its cash balances or any other part of its liquid funds to the
  • best advantage,—since it cannot prudently place the whole of its free
  • resources in the hands of a private institution.
  • (v.) The absence of a central banking authority leads to a general
  • lack of direction in the banking policy of the country: it is no one’s
  • business to look at the matter as a whole, to know the position of the
  • market’s component units, or to enforce prudence when it is needed.
  • There is a multiple reserve system in theory, but hardly an adequate
  • one in fact; and a danger exists that every one is reckoning, in a
  • crisis, upon every one else.
  • (vi.) The absence of the advice and experience, which the officers
  • of a State Bank would possess, is a source of weakness to Government
  • itself. There are no high officials whose business it is to make
  • finance the chief study of their life. The Financial Secretaryship is
  • an incident in the career of a successful civilian. A Financial Member
  • of Council is apt to come to the peculiar problems of his office with
  • a fresh mind. Thus the financial officers of Government spend five
  • years or so in mastering a difficult subject and have then reached
  • a seniority which warrants promotion to duties of some other kind.
  • So far as the Government of India is concerned, questions of finance
  • and currency are in the hands of intelligent amateurs who begin with
  • the timidity of ignorance and leave off just when they are becoming
  • properly secure of their ground. It is not astonishing that the centre
  • of power in these matters has tended to gravitate to the India Office
  • and the India Council in London. For the officials and advisers of
  • the Secretary of State have grown up in familiarity with the problems
  • of Indian currency. Control from the India Office is always looked
  • on, from an instinct often founded on wisdom, with jealousy and with
  • suspicion; but in questions of currency they are likely, as things now
  • are, to have the wider knowledge and experience. Yet the element of
  • continuity supplied by the India Office—though, as I read the history
  • of the last decade, it has been invaluable in guiding the evolution
  • of the currency—is no proper solution of the difficulty. With Indian
  • banking this authority cannot be adequately in touch, and it would be
  • much better if trained experience were to be found in India herself.
  • It is a remarkable thing that the two classical pronouncements on the
  • fundamental problems of Indian Finance, which have stood the test of
  • time—Mr. Dickson’s, in 1867, on the question of a Central Bank, and
  • Mr. A. M. Lindsay’s, in 1878 and subsequently, on the regulation of a
  • Gold Standard—should both have come from Secretaries of the Bank of
  • Bengal, not from high officials of State. (Yet this last argument for
  • a State Bank, though I have amplified it in my summary at greatest
  • length, is not at all the most important. The arguments given first are
  • those which govern the question.)
  • 30. On the other hand, a fairly good case can be made out against a
  • State Bank. Several of the defects, outlined above, could be remedied,
  • in part at least, by less drastic proposals. The reasons on this side
  • are mainly, nevertheless, those of conservatism and of caution (or
  • timidity). The question, as soon as one attempts to frame practical
  • suggestions, bristles with difficulties. The Government are naturally
  • afraid of so troublesome a proposal—and one so far removed from
  • what they are used to; while there is no important body which is
  • sufficiently interested in forcing it on their attention. The Banks
  • fear a possible rival; merchants are content with present prosperity;
  • and no one else knows anything about it. I shall be astonished,
  • therefore, if action is taken while times are good. Perhaps we may have
  • to wait for the lessons of a severe crisis. Only under some such strong
  • influence as this is it likely that the responsible Government will
  • nerve itself to the task, or the business community acquiesce in it.
  • 31. If some day sufficient constructive energy is stirred into activity
  • to undertake the task, let the framers of the new Bank’s constitution
  • put far from their minds all thoughts of the Bank of England. It is in
  • the State Banks of Europe, especially in that of Germany, or in those,
  • perhaps, of Holland or Russia, that the proper model is to be found.
  • CHAPTER VIII
  • THE INDIAN RATE OF DISCOUNT
  • 1. The Presidency Banks publish an official minimum rate of discount,
  • in the same manner as the Bank of England. As an effective influence
  • on the Money Market the Presidency Bank Rates do not stand, and do
  • not pretend to stand, in a situation comparable in any respect with
  • the Bank of England’s. They do not attempt to control the market and
  • dictate what the rate ought to be. They, rather, follow the market and
  • supply an index of the general position.
  • It is, therefore, as the best available index to variations in the
  • value of money in India that the Presidency Bank Rates are chiefly
  • interesting; and it is in this capacity that I shall make use of them
  • in this chapter.
  • [Illustration:
  • _H. Bellingham_,
  • _India Office_.
  • ]
  • If we are to use these rates, however, as an index, a few warnings are
  • first necessary. There is, of course, in India, just as there is in
  • England, not one single rate for money, but several rates according the
  • period of the loan required (or the maturity the bill negotiated) and
  • the character of the security offered. The published Bank Rate in India
  • represents, I believe, the rate charged day by day for a loan advanced
  • on such security as Government Paper. The interest on a loan of this
  • kind, that is to say, is calculated day by day at the published Bank
  • Rate prevailing on each day. It may be said to correspond, therefore,
  • to the London rate for some comparatively short period—say for
  • fortnightly loans. Because the Bank Rate is at 7 per cent, it does not
  • follow, therefore, that money can be used, or obtained, at this rate
  • for two or three months. The rate ordinarily charged for fine bills
  • of two or three months’ currency may be either higher or lower than
  • the published minimum Bank Rate. Further, the rates published by the
  • Presidency Banks may be from time to time more or less “effective.” The
  • Banks may not always be able, that is to say, to do any considerable
  • volume of business at their published minima. This would not be the
  • case, I believe, in the busy season, so much as in the slack season,
  • when the Banks do not let their published rates fall below 3 per cent,
  • although money may be practically unusable and they would probably
  • be glad enough to lend a large sum at 2 per cent. But these various
  • qualifications do not prevent the Presidency Bank Rates from affording
  • the best available index for measuring the relative ease or stringency
  • of the Indian Money Market. I append a chart giving the movements of
  • the Rate of Discount at the Presidency Bank of Bengal since 1893.[125]
  • 2. The rates, announced by the three Presidency Banks, are not always
  • identical, but seldom, if ever, differ by more than 1 per cent. Such
  • differences as there are chiefly reflect the differences in date at
  • which occur the various crop movements with which each Presidency is
  • mainly concerned. A wider difference of rate tends to be prevented,
  • not only by the possibility of moving funds from one part of India to
  • another, but also by the fact that the Secretary of State is willing to
  • make his Bills and Transfers payable at any of the Presidency towns at
  • the option of the purchaser. If there is relatively greater stringency
  • at one of them, the bulk of the Council Bills and Transfers sold in
  • London tend to be drawn on that one. The general appearance of the
  • chart would not, therefore, have been appreciably different if I had
  • chosen Bombay in place of Bengal.
  • The official rates move by 1 per cent at a time. There have been
  • occasions of movements by 2 per cent, but not recently. When the rate
  • is rising or falling, however, at the beginning or end of the busy
  • season, changes often follow one another in quick succession.
  • 3. An examination of the chart shows that the Indian Money Market
  • enjoys years of high and low average rates respectively, just as other
  • markets do. But these annual variations, while perfectly noticeable,
  • are relatively small in comparison with the seasonal changes, which are
  • very great and very regular, and which afford the most clear ground of
  • differentiation between the Indian Market and those with which we are
  • familiar in Europe.
  • Let us examine the annual fluctuations of the rate in recent years in
  • more detail:—
  • ┌───–┬────────────––───────────┬────┬─────────────────────────┐
  • │ │ Bengal Rate per Cent. │ │ Bengal Rate per Cent. │
  • │ ├────────────┬────────────┤ ├────────────┬────────────┤
  • │ │Max. rate in│Min. rate in│ │Max. rate in│Min. rate in│
  • │ │ February. │ August. │ │ February. │ August. │
  • │1900│ 8 │ 3 │1907│ 9 │ 3 │
  • │1901│ 8 │ 3 │1908│ 9 │ 3 │
  • │1902│ 8 │ 3 │1909│ 8 │ 3 │
  • │1903│ 8 │ 3 │1910│ 6 │ 3 │
  • │1904│ 7 │ 3 │1911│ 8 │ 3 │
  • │1905│ 7 │ 3 │1912│ 8 │ 3 │
  • │1906│ 9 │ 3 │1913│ 8 │ │
  • └────┴────────────┴────────────┴────┴────────────┴────────────┘
  • From this table and the chart it is safe to make the generalisation
  • that the Indian Rate may be expected to reach 8 per cent in the winter
  • or early spring, and to fall to 3 per cent in summer. Years differ
  • from one another chiefly in the length of time for which the high and
  • low rates prevail respectively. From 8 to 3 per cent is an enormous
  • range for the normal seasonal fluctuation. What is the explanation of
  • it? The Bank of England rate seldom exceeds 5 per cent, and in many
  • years falls short of this, even in the winter. If there is so regular
  • an expectation of obtaining 7 or 8 per cent in India on excellent
  • security, why is it not worth some one’s while to transfer funds
  • to India in the busy season on an ampler scale than is the case at
  • present, and thus secure the advantage of so wide a discrepancy between
  • the English and the Indian rates?
  • 4. The facts are to be explained, I think, as follows. High rates of 7
  • or 8 per cent are not obtainable in India all the year round. In normal
  • years they cannot be relied on to prevail for more than about three
  • months. The banker who raises funds in London in order to lend them
  • for short periods in India has to choose between leaving them in India
  • all the year round, waiting after one busy season for the next, and
  • bringing them back again to London after a comparatively short period.
  • He must either accept, that is to say, the rate obtainable in India
  • on the average of the whole year, or he must earn a high enough rate
  • in the brief busy season to compensate him for bearing the expense of
  • remittance _both ways_.
  • In considering the difference between two European Bank Rates as the
  • cause of a transfer of funds between the two centres, the cost of
  • remittance, as measured by the difference between the telegraphic
  • rate of exchange outwards at the beginning of the transaction and the
  • telegraphic rate of exchange back at the end of it, is not, of course,
  • to be neglected. But where the two centres are near together and there
  • is no reason to anticipate the suspension of a free market in gold,
  • this cost is, relatively, a minor consideration. The great distance,
  • however, between London and India makes it in their case a very
  • significant quantity, and a brief calculation shows that, measured in
  • terms of Bank Rate, the cost of remittance works out higher, perhaps,
  • than uninstructed common sense would anticipate. For, under present
  • conditions, the cost of remittance both ways can hardly be less than
  • 1/16d. per rupee, rising in most years as between certain dates as high
  • as 5/32d., and reaching occasionally as much as 3/16d. It would not be
  • prudent to act on the expectation of a less cost than 3/32d. Now 3/32d.
  • on a rupee is about ·6 per cent. If this loss on exchange (_i.e._ on
  • remittance) is to be recouped in three months (_i.e._ in a quarter of
  • a year), an additional rate of nearly 2½ per cent per annum must be
  • earned in India as compared with the rate in London. If a different
  • degree of loss in exchange is anticipated, and if the length of time
  • for which money can be used in India at a high rate is expected to
  • be more or less than three months, the calculation must be adjusted
  • accordingly. In any case the reason why the Indian and London Bank
  • Rates can differ from one another for short periods by large amounts
  • is adequately explained. If, for example, money can be employed in
  • India at the high rate for one month only, even if the double cost of
  • remittance for that period is so low as 1/16d., the difference between
  • the London and Indian rates must amount to 5 per cent per annum to make
  • a transfer of funds _prima facie_ profitable.
  • These illustrations show that what seems a very small fluctuation
  • in exchange can account for a very wide difference in the rate of
  • discount; and, apart from questions of unequal knowledge and unequal
  • security, it is this possibility of fluctuation that makes distinct
  • markets of the two centres. The underlying explanation is essentially
  • the same as that of the circumstance to which I called attention in
  • § 9 of Chapter II., namely, that a temporary premium of ¾ per cent
  • on gold in those European countries where gold is not always freely
  • obtainable, is as effective as a very great increase in the Bank Rate
  • in preventing the remittance of funds abroad and even in attracting an
  • inward flow of funds.
  • 5. This discussion will have served to make clear a distinction highly
  • important to the problem of the Indian Bank Rate. When we say that the
  • Indian Bank Rate is apt to be high, we mean, not that the _average_
  • effective rate over the whole year is high, but that the _maximum_ rate
  • in each year, effective for periods of shorter or longer duration, is
  • generally high. A high average rate and a high maximum rate are likely
  • to call for different explanations and, if a remedy is sought, for
  • different kinds of remedies. The available evidence does not suggest
  • that the average rate in India is at all unduly high for a country
  • in India’s stage of economic and financial development. Some of the
  • Exchange Banks, for example, do not find it worth their while to offer
  • more than 3½ per cent on Indian deposits fixed for a year. It is the
  • high maximum rate almost invariably reached which calls for enquiry.
  • The phenomenon under discussion is in no way peculiar to India and
  • does not arise out of those features of the Indian system which are
  • characteristic of a Gold–Exchange Standard. We find the same thing in
  • any country where the demand for funds for financing trade is to a
  • high degree seasonal and variable in amount throughout the year, and
  • where, at the same time, these funds have to be remitted from some
  • far distant foreign centre—in the countries of South America, for
  • example. In fact, by the establishment of a par of exchange between
  • the rupee and sterling; the severity of seasonal stringency has been
  • greatly moderated. The exceptionally high Bank Rates of 1897 and
  • 1898 were partly occasioned by a natural timidity on the part of the
  • Banks in importing funds at a rate of exchange which at that time was
  • exceptionally high. The Banks had no guarantee that exchange would
  • be maintained at or near the existing level, and if they imported
  • funds they ran the risk of having to bring them home again at a heavy
  • loss. Under present arrangements the maximum fluctuation in exchange
  • between the busy season and the slack is known and limited. But while
  • the stabilisation of the gold value of the rupee has done much for
  • the Indian Money Market, and has rendered a 12 per cent Bank Rate
  • most improbable except at a time of wide–spread crisis and panic, it
  • does not prevent an 8 per cent or even a 9 per cent Bank Rate from
  • being a comparatively common occurrence. Is it possible to conceive of
  • any remedy or moderating influence for the somewhat severe seasonal
  • stringency still experienced?
  • 6. It is clear that a remedy can be sought in one or other of two
  • ways only. Either the cost of remittance and the maximum range of
  • fluctuation in exchange must be reduced, or a new source for the
  • seasonal supply of funds must be found in India herself. I will discuss
  • these alternatives in turn.
  • It will help to make the points at issue plain if I begin by taking an
  • extreme case. Let us suppose that exchange between London and Calcutta
  • were fixed at 1s. 4d., in the sense that the Government were always
  • prepared to provide telegraphic remittance _in either direction_ at
  • this rate. Under such circumstances, the London and Indian Money
  • Markets would become practically one market, and the large differences
  • which can now exist between rates current in the two centres for loans
  • on similar security would become impossible. The effect of this on
  • the volume of remittance would be very great. Every year immense sums
  • would be remitted from London to India in the busy season and brought
  • back again at the end of it, since the fact which now diminishes the
  • profitableness of such transactions would have ceased to exist. The
  • following illustration shows on how large a scale these seasonal
  • movements to and fro would probably be. In July the cash reserves of
  • the Bank of Bengal might stand, as things now are, at, let us suppose,
  • about 1000 lakhs and its discount rate at 3 per cent. This reserve
  • might be 400 or 500 lakhs at least in excess of what prudence required.
  • But it would be useless to lower the Bank Rate; for the additional
  • funds were probably not loanable in India for the month of July at
  • any rate at all. Yet for the reasons already given it would not be
  • worth while in existing circumstances for any one to borrow this sum
  • and remit it to London, until such time as it may be again wanted in
  • Calcutta;—it is better to let it lie idle and wait for busier times.
  • But fix exchange at 1s. 4d. and all this would be changed. The Bank’s
  • customers would immediately remit the 400 or 500 lakhs to London,
  • knowing that they could be brought back without loss as soon as they
  • were wanted. Every one in India having loanable funds to spare would
  • act likewise.
  • What would be the effect on the Secretary of State if he were to lay
  • himself under such an obligation? In order to be in a position to act
  • as universal money–changer, and to be able to provide large quantities
  • of sterling in London in the slack season, and large quantities of
  • rupee funds in India in the busy season, it would be necessary for
  • him to keep very much larger reserves than he does at present in
  • both countries. It might even be necessary for him to remit gold
  • backwards and forwards himself, thus bearing the whole expense of
  • which the Exchange Banks were being relieved. At present the possible
  • fluctuation of exchange between what may fairly be termed the “gold
  • points” on either side of 1s. 4d., acts in some measure as a protection
  • to the currency and lessens the reserves which it is necessary for
  • the authorities to maintain; a falling exchange acts as a drag on
  • remittance from India and a rising exchange as a drag on remittance
  • from London, thus bringing the private interests of individuals and
  • the natural forces acting on the market into greater harmony with
  • the interests of the market as a whole, and with the efforts of
  • the Secretary of State to maintain the stability of the system. If
  • telegraphic exchange were fixed at 1s. 4d., the Indian Bank Rate would
  • closely follow London’s, but it would be at the expense of forcing the
  • Secretary of State enormously to increase his reserves.
  • 7. I have taken this extreme case in order to make emphatic the
  • principles involved in all such proposals. But no one is likely to
  • propose the above as a practical policy. More moderate proposals of the
  • same kind, however, deserve consideration. Some critics, for example,
  • have suggested that the Secretary of State should never sell Council
  • Bills in London below 1s. 4d. This would lessen to a certain extent
  • the probable range of fluctuation in exchange and might, therefore,
  • diminish the risk of loss involved in remitting to India when exchange
  • is high; but the Secretary of State’s withdrawal from the market would
  • not necessarily prevent exchange from falling below 1s. 4d. Moreover,
  • in normal times the policy actually followed already approximates
  • closely to this proposal; in the last three years the occasions on
  • which Council Bills have been sold below 1s. 4d. have been very rare.
  • And in exceptional times it may be some protection to the sterling
  • reserves if Council Bills can be sold at a lower rate if necessary. I
  • conclude, therefore, that the advantage of such a policy would not be
  • great, probably not great enough to outweigh the cost.
  • Thus it is not easy to find a remedy for high Bank Rate by any method
  • of diminishing the maximum range of fluctuation in exchange. Indeed
  • so long as the currency arrangements are at all like those now in
  • force, this maximum range may fairly be said to be determined by forces
  • outside Government control, namely, by the forces governing the cost of
  • remittance of gold. Though the burden of this cost may be shifted, it
  • cannot be easily avoided altogether.
  • 8. We must fall back, therefore, on the second alternative, the
  • discovery of a new source for the seasonal supply of funds in India
  • herself. A proposal, having this object in view, has already been put
  • forward in more than one passage in the preceding pages. I believe
  • that, in future, the Government of India may have in the busy season
  • a considerable stock of rupee funds available in the Paper Currency
  • Reserve and, occasionally, a surplus stock in the Indian Cash Balances.
  • If a proper machinery is set up for lending these out in India, I
  • anticipate some appreciable relief to the Bank Rate at the season of
  • greatest stringency. Assuming that such a policy is practicable on
  • other grounds, let us try to compare its precise effect as compared
  • with the existing state of affairs.
  • 9. Broadly speaking, surplus Government funds in India can at present
  • be released only by the sale of Council Bills in London. When these
  • bills are sold at a fairly high rate, the Government gain the premium
  • over and above 1s. 4d. and are in a position to put out at interest
  • funds in London. If the funds in India, instead of being released
  • through the encashment of Council Bills, are lent out there direct, the
  • interest obtained in India takes the place of the two sources of gain
  • distinguished above. In the first case money is first borrowed from
  • the London Money Market (by the Exchange Banks or otherwise) for the
  • purchase of Council Bills, and is then lent back again to that Market
  • by the Secretary of State. In the second case, instead of a double
  • transaction in London there is a single transaction in India. It might
  • be argued that the two methods come in the end to much the same thing;
  • that there can be no relief to the Money Market unless the Government
  • of India accept a lower rate of interest for sums lent out in India
  • than is the equivalent of what they would make if they were to sell
  • Council Bills at a premium and lend out the funds in England; and that
  • the second method involves no net addition to the resources available
  • in India. For the following reasons, however, I do not think that this
  • way of looking at the matter would be correct.
  • In the first place there would be an elimination of risk. If the
  • average loss from exchange on funds sent out to India for the busy
  • season works out at (say) 2 per cent per annum, the Banks, in order to
  • recompense themselves for the risk of fluctuations beyond the average,
  • would be able to make a difference of more than 2 per cent between
  • the current Indian and English rates. In the case of funds borrowed
  • in terms of rupees and repayable in terms of rupees, this element of
  • risk is absent; and the elimination of it provides a source of net
  • gain. If the effect of Government lending in India were to mitigate the
  • seasonal stringency there, some lowering of the normal upper limit of
  • fluctuation of exchange might result. In so far as this was the case,
  • in normal years the consequences would be outwardly similar to those
  • of the first alternative, discussed and rejected above, whilst the
  • Government would not have bound themselves by any undertaking capable
  • of turning out burdensome.
  • Secondly, the rate of interest which the Secretary of State can earn on
  • loans in London is appreciably lower, on account of the short period
  • for which he lends and the nature of the security he requires, than
  • the normal rate at which the Exchange Banks would raise their funds
  • there, and a good deal lower than what would be obtained by direct
  • lending in India. (It should be admitted, on the other hand, that
  • the practice of lending funds in India would probably involve some
  • sacrifice of perfect safety as compared with the present arrangements.)
  • And, thirdly, it is not clear that it might not sometimes be feasible
  • to lend out in India sums additional to those which would in fact be
  • released under the present system, so that there would be some net
  • addition to the resources available in India.
  • 10. In addition, therefore, to the grounds for making loans in India
  • from the Paper Currency Reserve which I have given in earlier chapters,
  • I believe that it is in this direction that the best hope lies of a
  • remedy for the high level which the Indian Bank Rate commonly reaches
  • in the course of each busy season. I do not feel in a position to say
  • anything very decided as to the manner in which such loans could be
  • best made. But there is a presumption, I think, that, in the absence
  • of a State Bank, they must be made, mainly if not entirely, through
  • the Presidency Banks. And I believe that the Government would act
  • advisedly if, as a general rule, 5 or 5½ per cent were the highest
  • rate they ever chose to exact from the Banks. In financial matters of
  • this kind there is a danger lest Governments prove too jealous of the
  • profits of private persons. In a case where the co–operation of private
  • persons is necessary, they must be allowed a reasonable share of the
  • profits of the transaction. In their past relations with the Presidency
  • Banks in the matter of temporary loans, the Government of India have
  • sometimes seemed to attach more importance to preventing the Banks
  • from making any profit out of the loans than to any other aspect of
  • the transaction. I may repeat that the loans I contemplate are to be
  • for the busy season only, and that they should not be made until the
  • expectation of a normal or successful harvest is reasonably assured.
  • 11. In the nature of a postscript to the above proposals, it may be
  • instructive to consider them in the light of the actual circumstances
  • of the season 1912–13. The peculiarity of this season from the point
  • of view of the Indian Money Market was the combination of a high Bank
  • Rate in India for a comparatively long period[126] with a relatively
  • low rate of exchange and only a moderate demand for Council Bills and
  • gold. At the end of 1912 the situation could have been described as
  • normal. The Bank Rate was at the somewhat high level usual at that
  • time of year; exchange was high (the minimum rate for the allotment of
  • Council Bills being 1s. 4–3/32d.); and the demand for Council Bills was
  • on a large scale. But from January to March, although the Bank Rate
  • remained at a high level and trade was active, the demand for Council
  • Bills fell away, slowly at first and rapidly during March, exchange
  • dropping _pari passu_ until, during the latter half of March, the
  • minimum rate at which Council Bills were allotted fell so low as 1s.
  • 3–31/32d. The combination of so low a rate of exchange with an 8 per
  • cent Bank Rate at Bombay was very abnormal.
  • It is dangerous for a writer who is not in touch with the practical
  • side of the Money Market to venture on an explanation of current
  • events. But I will give my explanation for what it is worth. The poor
  • demand for Council Bills in March 1913 is not to be explained by the
  • competition of gold as a means of remittance; for the low level of
  • exchange did not favour the importation of sovereigns (even from Egypt,
  • except earlier in the season), and as a matter of fact the import of
  • them was on a very much smaller scale than in the previous year. It
  • must have been due, therefore, to an unwillingness on the part of the
  • Exchange Banks and others to lay out money in London for the purchase
  • of remittance to India. This unwillingness was due to a variety of
  • causes. The lock–up of funds in silver and opium, and the freedom with
  • which India was purchasing foreign goods, probably had something to do
  • with it; and an important contributory influence was the dearness[127]
  • of money in London combined with a sufficient expectation of cheaper
  • money soon, to provide an incentive to delay, wherever delay was
  • possible. A precise diagnosis of the causes of the unwillingness on
  • the part of the Banks to buy Council Bills is not necessary, however,
  • to the lesson I seek to enforce. For whatever reason, Indian Bank
  • Rates of 7 and 8 per cent, even in combination with a very low level
  • of exchange, did not in fact tempt the Banks to buy Council Bills on
  • any considerable scale. What was the effect on the Government Balances
  • in India? The ordinary method, by which the rupees accumulating in
  • the Reserve Treasuries from the proceeds of taxation are quickly
  • released and given back to the Money Market, the encashment, namely,
  • of large volumes of Council Bills, had failed. The position was
  • aggravated by the large realised surplus, much of which was to be
  • devoted to expenditure only in the _next_ financial year, and which in
  • the meantime was swelling the Government Balances in any case beyond
  • their usual dimensions. So far, therefore, from assisting the market,
  • the Government were busy increasing the stringency by taking off the
  • market, week by week, rupees which for the moment they did not in the
  • least want. Already at the end of 1912 (see table on p. 188) the sums
  • lying idle in the Reserve Treasuries were unusually high. By the end
  • of February 1913, the total Government Balances in India had risen to
  • £17,400,000, and the end of March to £19,300,000, of which £8,000,000
  • lay in the Reserve Treasuries. What Money Market in the world could
  • have seen such sums taken out of its use and control at one of the
  • busiest moments of the year without suffering a loss of ease?
  • The situation was not due, in my judgment, to any ignorance or
  • incompetence on the part of the executive officers of Government, but
  • to a system which provided them with no sort of appropriate machinery
  • for dealing with the position. The “Independent Treasury System” and
  • the traditional aloofness of Government from the Money Market were seen
  • at their worst. Millions of rupees were lying idle in the Government
  • Treasuries at the time of year when there was most work for them to do
  • outside. The sort of arrangements I have outlined in earlier paragraphs
  • might have done something, I feel sure, to ease the situation. One can
  • point, therefore, to the first quarter of 1913 as a specific occasion
  • on which Government could have lent sums in India with profit to
  • itself, with advantage to the Money Market, and without incurring any
  • risk of which it need have been afraid.
  • 12. I have now completed my discussion of these questions. Two points
  • I would end by emphasising. The first affects my general treatment of
  • the subject matter. I have tried to bring out the fact that the Indian
  • system is an exceedingly _coherent_ one. Every part of the system
  • fits into some other part. It is impossible to say everything at once,
  • and an author must needs sacrifice from time to time the complexity
  • and interdependence of fact in the interests of the clearness of his
  • exposition. But the complexity and the coherence of the system require
  • the constant attention of anyone who would criticise the parts. This is
  • not a peculiarity of Indian Finance. It is the characteristic of all
  • monetary problems. The difficulty of the subject is due to it.
  • My second point affects the kinship of Indian arrangements to those
  • lately developed in other parts of the world. Indian affairs are
  • so exclusively studied by those whose knowledge and experience is
  • preponderantly Indian or English, that the true perspective of India’s
  • development is sometimes lost; and the value of foreign experiences
  • neglected. I urge that, in her Gold–Exchange Standard, and in the
  • mechanism by which this is supported, India, so far from being
  • anomalous, is in the forefront of monetary progress. But in her banking
  • arrangements, in the management of her note issue, and in the relations
  • of her Government to the Money Market, her position _is_ anomalous; and
  • she has much to learn from what is done elsewhere.
  • INDEX
  • Adie, Mr., 149 ff.
  • Atkinson, F. J., 151 ff.
  • Australian sovereigns, remittance of, to India, 115–116
  • Austro–Hungarian Bank, 24, 32, 33, 70
  • Bagehot, W., 162, 177
  • Balances. _See_ Cash Balances
  • Balkan War, effect of, on gold markets, 23, 165
  • Bank Rate in India, 105, 163, 164, 196–198, 240 ff.
  • Banking in India, 195 ff.
  • Banking Reserves in India, 147, 160, 161, 204–205, 215–218, 224–227, 232
  • Banks with small paid–up capital, 230–232
  • Bengal, Bank of, 182, 198 ff., 234
  • Bombay, Bank of, 182, 199 ff.
  • Bombay, proposed mintage of gold at, 64, 67–68, 84–87
  • British monetary system, 15–19, 69
  • Brunyate, J. B., 3, 38 _n._, 181 _n._, 199 _n._, 201, 234
  • Burma, Bank of, 222, 225–226
  • Cash Balances in India, 60–61, 127–129, 131, 181–190
  • Cash Balances in London, 128–129, 143–144, 190–192
  • Central Bank for India, 58–59, 161, 233–239
  • Cheque system, 16, 39
  • China, Currency for, 36
  • Circles of issue for Paper Currency, 40–46
  • Co–operative Credit Societies, 227 _n._
  • Council Bills, 102 ff., 132, 210 ff., 255–257
  • Crewe, Lord, 89
  • Crisis of 1907–8, 135–141, 159, 164, 167–168
  • Currency Reserve. _See_ Paper Currency Reserve
  • Currency notes of India. _See_ Paper Currency
  • Dadabhoy, Hon. Mr., 13 _n._
  • Dawkins, Sir Clinton, 64
  • Depreciating rupee, effects of, 2–3
  • Dickson, Mr., 234, 238
  • Egyptian gold shipped to India, 116–118
  • Egyptian system of currency, 29 _n._, 71 _n._
  • Elasticity of Indian currency system, 57–58, 60–62, 180–181, 251–254
  • English and Indian Bank Rates, their differences accounted for, 243–246
  • English institutions, influence of, on Indian, 38–39, 52, 59, 201 _n._,
  • 231, 239, 259
  • Exchange Banks, 103, 158, 163, 206–221
  • Fowler Committee, 4, 7, 34, 50, 63, 196, 235
  • France, Bank of, 20–21
  • Gauntlett, M. F., 76
  • German Reichsbank, 19–22, 70, 239
  • Gillan, R. W., 76, 77, 78
  • Gold, amount of, circulating in India, 75–84
  • Gold Currency in India, 63–101
  • Gold, methods of checking a foreign drain of, 17 ff.
  • Gold, premium on, 23, 26–27, 246
  • Gold, 10–rupee coin, 68, 84, 87–88
  • Gold–Exchange Standard, 10–11, 30–36, 106 ff., 119–120
  • Gold–Exchange Standard, transition to, 27–30
  • Gold import point, 114 ff.
  • Gold not the principal circulating medium in countries having a gold
  • standard, 69–71
  • Gold Note Act of 1898, 48
  • Gold Reserves, division of, between India and London, 28, 48–50,
  • 126–127, 131, 174–178
  • Gold Standard Reserve, 8, 90, 107, 110 ff., 125–127, 130–131, 137, 143,
  • 170 ff.
  • Goschen, Lord, 69, 72, 91
  • Hambro, E., 235
  • Harrison, F. C., 149 ff.
  • Herschell Committee, 7, 33
  • Hoarding, 77–78, 81, 85–86, 99–101, 153, 158–160, 165–166, 225
  • Holland, Bank of, 32, 239
  • Home Charges, 102, 120–122, 171–172
  • Indian Bank Rate. _See_ Bank Rate in India
  • Indian Banking, 195 ff.
  • Indian currency system, 1893–1899, 1–3;
  • since 1899, 4–6, 8–10;
  • main features as now established, 6–7, 10–11;
  • reference dates, 7–8;
  • future development, 194, 258–259
  • Indian Joint Stock Banks, 221–226
  • Indian Money Market, 195–198, 240 ff.
  • Indian Treasury. _See_ Reserve Treasury System
  • Japanese system of currency, 27, 28 _n._
  • Java, currency of, 27, 35
  • Jevons, W. S., 99, 149
  • Lindsay, A. M., 5, 34, 72 _n._, 238
  • Madras, Bank of, 199 ff.
  • Marshall, A., 31
  • Meston, Sir James, 67
  • Mill, J. S., 72
  • Northbrook, Lord, 182
  • Note circulation in India. _See_ Paper Currency, volume of
  • Note currency of India. _See_ Paper Currency
  • Note issue by Banks, 38, 199–200
  • Paper Currency, 37 ff.
  • Paper Currency, volume of, 46–47, 53 ff.
  • Paper Currency Reserve, 40, 48 ff., 89, 97, 127, 130–131, 170 ff.,
  • 189, 254
  • Post Office Savings Banks, 158, 227–228
  • Presidency Bank Rates. _See_ Bank Rate in India
  • Presidency Banks, 38, 53 _n._, 56, 60, 158, 163, 181–186, 198–206, 234,
  • 240–243
  • Reserves of Government. _See_ Rupee Reserves, and Sterling Reserves
  • Reserves of Indian Banks. _See_ Banking Reserves in India
  • Reserve Treasury System, 56–57, 129, 181–189, 257–258
  • Ricardo, 31, 72
  • Rothschild, Lord, 35
  • Rupee, legal position of, 6–10
  • Rupee circulation of India, 149–155
  • Rupee Reserves of Government, 132–133, 141–147
  • Rupees, coinage of, 131–135
  • Rupees, profit on coinage of, 36, 124–126
  • Russian Finance and Currency, 24, 27, 32
  • Salisbury, Lord, 183
  • Savings Banks. _See_ Post Office Savings Banks
  • Seasonal demand for money in India, 53–56, 57–58, 146–147,
  • 180–181, 242–244
  • Shroffs, 195–198
  • Silver purchases by Government, 132–135, 142–146
  • Sleigh, J. H., 196
  • Sovereigns, circulation of, in India, 6–10, 73–74, 76–84, 94–96, 115–118
  • State Bank for India, 233–239.
  • _See also_ Central Bank
  • Sterling Reserves, 137–140, 147–171, 193
  • Telegraphic transfers, 105, 137, 210–211
  • Thackersey, Sir Vithaldas, 67
  • United States Independent Treasury System, 56–57
  • Wilson, James, 38
  • Wilson, Sir G. Fleetwood, 64, 67
  • Wood, Sir Charles, 39 _n._
  • THE END
  • _Printed by_ R. & R. CLARK, LIMITED, _Edinburgh_.
  • FOOTNOTES:
  • [1] Mr. Brunyate spoke as follows:—“Many here will remember the
  • arguments used on behalf of the tea–planting industry. At that time
  • India and China had been competing together for years on the same
  • footing as regards currency. It was argued that the disturbance of
  • the exchange, the appreciation of the rupee and the depreciation of
  • silver, might not only result in India’s ascendancy in regard to tea
  • being wrested from her, but in the entire and irretrievable ruin of the
  • tea industry. I am quoting the words actually used by the Darjeeling
  • Planters’ Association in 1892. In the year before the closing of the
  • Mints India exported 115 million pounds of tea to foreign countries,
  • and by 1909 had a little more than doubled that amount. Almost exactly
  • the same arguments were used in regard to the cotton industry, and here
  • I must enter into more detail. What the mill–owners feared, and had
  • excellent reason for fearing, was an enormous depreciation in silver.
  • This actually took place. In 1892–93, the year before the Mints were
  • closed, the average value of silver per ounce was nearly 40d. The next
  • year it fell to 33⅓d.; the year after to about 29d.; and it stayed at
  • or below 30d. for some years. Surely here were the conditions in which
  • a disastrous stimulus to production in China might have been expected.
  • The so–called bounty in this case was not 2 per cent but 25 per cent.
  • It was not a temporary decline which might be counterbalanced by other
  • causes in the course of a single month. It continued for years, and as
  • we all know silver has not since returned to a price anything like 40d.
  • an ounce. In addition, just before the closing of the Mints occurred
  • there had been considerable overtrading, and the mills had actually
  • been working short time for some months before to enable the Chinese
  • markets to dispose of their accumulated stocks. There was, as a matter
  • of fact, a fall in exports in 1893–94 partly due to the dislocation
  • arising from the changes in our currency system and partly to the
  • existing glut of the Chinese market. The exports picked up, however,
  • in 1894–95, and it would appear that the adjustment of prices and
  • wages in China to the extraordinary new conditions began very quickly,
  • for I find it stated that by the first month of 1894 the mills were
  • again working steadily and profitably. I may perhaps give the actual
  • figures. In 1891–92 the exports of yarn had been 161 million pounds.
  • In 1892–93 the inflated year just preceding the closing of the Mints,
  • they rose to 189 million pounds. In 1893–94 they fell (as I have said)
  • to 134 millions, but went up again the following year to 159 millions.
  • In 1902–3 and 1903–4, though by this time the value of silver had now
  • fallen to 24d., the exports were about 250,000,000 pounds, and in
  • 1905–6 they reached the record figure of 298 millions. In the last two
  • or three years there has been a falling off, owing to various causes,
  • but the amount exported in 1908–9 was as much as 235 millions, and in
  • the exports to China in particular there was a marked improvement.”
  • [2] There had been temporary Acts to the same effect in 1898 and 1900.
  • [3] Notes of Rs. 100 were universalised in 1911 by Notification under
  • this Act.
  • [4] The Hon. Mr. Dadabhoy, speaking in the Legislative Council in 1910,
  • argued that “the harmful effects of a further fall in silver (_i.e._
  • in its bullion value) can be neutralised by Government by creating a
  • further contraction in the volume of the currency, and thus producing
  • a greater scarcity of the rupee, by maintaining the Gold Standard
  • Reserve at a higher figure, and, further, by more frequent withdrawal
  • of Council Bills from the market.” A contraction of the currency would
  • not, of course, have the effect supposed, but the Government could not,
  • in fact, bring about a contraction in the manner described.
  • [5] This question of the power of Government over the volume of
  • circulation is discussed in much greater detail in § 8 of Chapter V.
  • [6] For example, in November 1912, “no gold was handed across the
  • counter at the Bank of France except on the most urgent demand, and
  • then the highest sum paid in gold was 300 francs per head. The other
  • banks followed this example, and the most generous released 200 francs
  • in gold. All special wishes for payment in money were charged 1 per
  • cent premium. At the same time, deposits in gold were credited with 1
  • per cent premium” (see _Bankers’ Magazine_, December 1912, p. 794).
  • At the beginning of the month cashiers were charging a premium or
  • commission of 6 f. per 1000 f. for payments in gold instead of silver
  • (see _Economist_, November 9, 1912, p. 961).
  • [7] Although the Bank of France only holds an important quantity of
  • foreign bills (generally sterling), on exceptional occasions, _e.g._
  • at the beginning and end of 1907 and at the end of 1909, foreign paper
  • enters very largely, through the agency of the great Crédit Banks, into
  • the transactions of the French Money Market. These institutions take
  • foreign bills into their own portfolios, and obtain the necessary funds
  • by rediscounting inland bills at the Bank of France. Thus the French
  • mechanism is much more closely analogous to the British than appears
  • outwardly, and the influence of the Bank of France, like that of the
  • Bank of England, is mainly indirect. The possibility of this is no
  • doubt due to the fact that France, like Great Britain, is a creditor
  • nation in the international short–loan market.
  • [8] For example, in November 1912 there was a premium of nearly ¾ per
  • cent on gold for export.
  • [9] This premium was made possible by the Austro–Hungarian Bank’s
  • exercising its right to refuse to exchange its bank notes for gold
  • freely.
  • [10] In the abnormal conditions of recent times (1912–13), however, the
  • Bank has not found it possible to maintain this part of its reserves at
  • a high level.
  • [11] This does not include the funds held abroad on account of the
  • Russian Treasury. Speaking in March 1913, in the Budget Committee of
  • the Duma, the Minister of Finance stated that the total amount of
  • Russian State funds placed abroad was £60,000,000.
  • [12] I have throughout deliberately ignored the current practice
  • of the United States in these matters. Her development and present
  • position are anomalous, and have claimed no imitators. Her arrangements
  • would need a discussion to themselves, and would, I think, convey few
  • lessons of value to students of Indian affairs. In dealing with her
  • dependencies, she has herself imitated, almost slavishly, India.
  • [13] I may seem to speak as if Japan had in name a Gold–Exchange
  • Standard, which is not the case. There is not much publicity in regard
  • to her monetary arrangements. But I believe that they are, in fact,
  • such that it is as a Gold–Exchange Standard hers ought impartially to
  • be classified. The Finance Minister stated in the Diet in 1912 that
  • the gold funds held by the Government and the Bank of Japan in Europe
  • and the United States were about £37,000,000. The amount of gold
  • circulating in Japan herself is, I believe, inconsiderable.
  • [14] Unless it be Egypt.
  • [15] In the course of the last twenty years, however, the Bank of
  • Holland, having got rid of the greater part of her redundant stock of
  • silver coins, has gradually come to rely more on her holding of gold
  • and less on her holding of foreign bills than formerly. In 1892–93
  • foreign bills at £1,801,409 were about 16 per cent of her resources
  • (excluding silver coin); in 1911–12 they had fallen to £1,389,139
  • or about 5·5 per cent of her resources (excluding silver coin). But
  • the media of exchange are still notes and silver, and not less than
  • formerly does the Bank pursue the policy of keeping her gold for
  • purposes of export only and of withholding it from circulation. Almost
  • the whole of her stock of gold is in the form of bars and foreign
  • coin. (It should be added, however, that at the end of 1912 there
  • were proposals, in order to avoid fresh coinage of silver, for the
  • introduction of a 5 fl. gold piece.)
  • [16] The rupee contains ⅜ oz. of silver of eleven–twelfths fineness.
  • When standard silver is at 24d. per oz. the cost of a rupee to the
  • Government is about 9·181d.; at 32d. per oz. it is about 12·241d. The
  • average rate of profit on coinage of rupees from 1910 to May 1912 was
  • about 42% of the nominal value.
  • [17] See also pp. 199, 200.
  • [18] For this and other historical details see J. B. Brunyate, _An
  • Account of the Presidency Banks_.
  • [19] Mr. Wilson had proposed to invest a high proportion of the reserve
  • (perhaps two–thirds) in Government securities.
  • [20] I quote this from the Secretary of State’s despatch (Sir Charles
  • Wood, March 26, 1860) criticising Mr. Wilson’s original scheme.
  • [21] A rearrangement was made in 1910; previous to that date there
  • were four circles and four sub–circles. It is no longer worth while
  • to explain the relations which used to exist between the circles and
  • sub–circles.
  • [22] For the legal provisions outlined in the following paragraphs see
  • _Statistics of British India_, part iv. (a).
  • [23] For some further details see p. 9.
  • [24] Report of Comptroller of Paper Currency, 1910.
  • [25] Before 1893 these terms were used with a different significance.
  • The statistics are still a little ambiguous as to whether for the net
  • circulation the notes in Government reserve treasuries or the notes in
  • _all_ Government treasuries are to be deducted. I use the term in the
  • latter sense.
  • [26] For an account of this see p. 73.
  • [27] At all times the vast bulk of the funds held by the Presidency
  • Banks at their Head Offices are kept in notes, chiefly of high
  • denominations (Rs. 1000 and Rs. 10,000); _e.g._ on December 31, 1911,
  • £4,200,000 out of £4,800,000 was thus held.
  • [28] The part played by gold is discussed in Chapter IV.
  • [29] I estimate that at this date the total volume of the active rupee
  • circulation was between five and six times the total volume of the
  • active note circulation.
  • [30] The proper proportion would partly depend upon the policy pursued
  • in regard to the Gold Standard Reserve.
  • [31] H. of C. 495 of 1913.
  • [32] This quotation is from a letter addressed by the Government of
  • India to the Secretary of State, nine years later (May 16, 1912).
  • [33] The value of the token coins (silver, nickel, and bronze)
  • circulating in Egypt and the Sudan is estimated at no more than
  • £E3,600,000, and the notes of the National Bank of Egypt (chiefly
  • current in the large towns) at £E2,400,000. The whole of the rest of
  • the currency consists of gold coins (chiefly British sovereigns). The
  • existing position in Egypt is, therefore, the ideal at which many
  • Indian currency reformers seem to aim.
  • [34] See Lindsay’s evidence before Indian Currency Committee (1898), Q.
  • 3404.
  • [35] The above account is summarised from the Reports of the
  • Comptroller of Paper Currency for 1900 and 1901.
  • [36] This is probably very considerable. India must be the main source
  • of supply of gold for the whole of Central Asia. The following extract
  • from a report sent in to the Comptroller of Currency (1911–12) is
  • instructive:—“From Peshawar a considerable absorption of gold in
  • connection with the trans–border trade is reported; this trade is said
  • to have amounted during 1911–12 to the value of Rs. 30 lakhs. Gold so
  • taken seldom or never returns. The Amir’s subsidy is also largely paid
  • in gold.” It is also reported that gold is preferred by those who go on
  • pilgrimage to Mecca.
  • [37] Throughout 1911–12 the Bank of Bengal quoted them at a premium of
  • 4d.
  • [38] Report on Paper Currency, 1911–12.
  • [39] See pp. 97–99.
  • [40] See Report for 1909.
  • [41] In the _calendar_ year 1912 India increased her stock of gold by
  • £29,500,000, of which about £21,500,000 was in sovereigns.
  • [42] The fluctuations in the proportions for different years of the
  • figures in columns (4) and (5) of the table on p. 76 must certainly be
  • explained in part by the state of the exchanges, and not wholly by the
  • degree of deliberate preference for sovereigns.
  • [43] The Accountant–General, Bombay, has suggested (_see_ Paper
  • Currency Report, 1911–1912) that “the principal cause” of the heavy
  • importation of sovereigns has been a reduction in the rate of charge
  • (from 1/16 per cent to 1/32 per cent) for Telegraphic Transfers issued
  • upon Madras and Calcutta against gold imported into Bombay. No doubt,
  • this favours gold to a slightly greater extent than before, as against
  • Council Transfers, as a means of remittance from London to Madras and
  • Calcutta, but the difference seems too small in relation to the other
  • factors which determine the cheapest form of remittance, for the change
  • to have exerted any appreciable influence.
  • [44] This corresponds to the Bank of England’s normal price for gold
  • bullion.
  • [45] At present notes can be issued by currency offices, but only to
  • treasuries on the requisition of the Comptroller–General, in exchange
  • for gold bullion at the rate of 1 rupee for 7·53344 grains troy of fine
  • gold. Since April 1, 1907, the receipt at the Indian Mints of gold
  • bullion and gold coins other than sovereigns and half–sovereigns has,
  • in fact, been stopped by Government of India Notification.
  • [46] I have, however, seen no evidence which suggests that
  • _half_–sovereigns are specially popular on account of their lower
  • denomination.
  • [47] The Manager of the National Bank in the Punjab reported in
  • 1911–1912:—“The fact of currency notes having always been unpopular
  • throughout the Punjab and, excepting in Lahore, being cashed only at
  • a considerable discount, has no doubt conduced to the popularity of
  • the sovereign. A portable medium commanding its full face value was
  • urgently required and the sovereign has for the present met the want.”
  • [48] £6000 in rupees weighs more than a ton.
  • [49] The Government should probably instruct its officers to receive
  • and change notes with freedom on every possible occasion, in order to
  • dissipate this idea.
  • [50] See pp. 113–118 for an account of the cost of transporting bullion
  • to India.
  • [51] It was operative, however, in the middle of March 1913, when the
  • whole amount offered was not allotted, tenders below 1s. 4d. being
  • rejected; later in the month tenders below 1s. 4d. were accepted.
  • [52] The rule is supposed to be that the extra charge for transfers is
  • 1–32d. per rupee when the Indian bank rate is below 9 per cent, and
  • 1/16d. when it is 9 per cent or above. The last occasions, on which the
  • difference of 1/16d. was in force, occurred between December 1906 and
  • March 1907. In 1904 and formerly the 1/16d. difference came into force
  • when the Indian bank rate exceeded 6 per cent.
  • [53] Thus a probable effect of exceptionally large sales of Council
  • Bills is an earmarking of gold on Indian account at the Bank of
  • England. The extent to which the Indian system can be misunderstood is
  • well illustrated by the fact that in a money article recently published
  • in an important newspaper in this country, an increased offering of
  • bills by the India Council was given as a reason for expecting a
  • _postponement_ of the need for earmarking gold at the Bank on Indian
  • account.
  • [54] On two occasions this practice has been suspended—in January
  • 1900, when the price rose to 1s. 4⅜d., and in December 1906–March
  • 1907, when it rose to 1s. 4–3/16d. The reason for the suspension in
  • the second case was the operation of the rule by which the premium
  • charged for telegraphic transfers over the rate for bills depends on
  • the Indian bank rate (see p. 105). The statement made in answer to a
  • question on this subject in the House of Commons (April 30, 1912) by
  • the Parliamentary Under–Secretary was not quite correct.
  • [55] Old–fashioned treatises on the foreign exchanges often leave the
  • student with the impression that the gold import point is a known and
  • stable thing given for good in books of reference. How far this is from
  • the truth, the example of India well illustrates.
  • [56] It is worth his while to do this, because the cost of sending gold
  • from Australia to London in one transaction is less than the cost of
  • sending it first from Australia to India and then from India to London
  • in two separate transactions.
  • [57] I make this assumption, which is not exactly accurate, for
  • purposes of illustration only.
  • [58] Or less, if paid at the time of shipment and in advance of the
  • time of delivery.
  • [59] See p. 37 (footnote).
  • [60] The designation of the reserve was changed from “Gold Reserve” to
  • “Gold Standard Reserve” in 1906, when it was decided to hold a part in
  • silver; but the change of title has not really made the position much
  • clearer.
  • [61] At the end of March 1913, £1,620,000 in gold stood to the credit
  • of the Gold Standard Reserve in London.
  • [62] See also pp. 190, 191, below.
  • [63] Reckoning uncoined silver at its coined value.
  • [64] A further loan of £2,500,000 for “general purposes” was incurred
  • in December 1908.
  • [65] An unfunded debt of £6,000,000, which has been wiped off lately
  • out of the proceeds of the opium windfall, was incurred by the issue of
  • India Bills during this period.
  • [66] For details of the method applied in these various investigations
  • see Appendices to Reports of Head Commissioner of Paper Currency, 1894,
  • 1895, 1896, 1897, and 1900. See also Mr. Harrison’s article on the
  • “Rupee Census” in the _Economic Journal_ for 1891.
  • [67] _Stat. Journ._ March 1897 and March 1903.
  • [68] This represents a _per capita_ circulation of between Rs. 7 and
  • Rs. 8.
  • [69] In 1899, the Government of India contemplated the possibility
  • of a loan. See their despatch of August 24, 1899 (H. of C. 495 of
  • 1913, p. 13):—“If India were afflicted with famine or other adverse
  • circumstances in the earlier years of our new currency, and before an
  • adequate reserve had accumulated, circumstances might arise in which
  • borrowing to maintain the standard would become an absolute necessity.
  • We should have preferred to have been armed against such a contingency
  • ... not by actual borrowing but by obtaining power to borrow.... We
  • have learnt with satisfaction ... that your lordship has stated in the
  • House of Commons that borrowing would be resorted to if it should prove
  • to be necessary.”
  • [70] See Chap. VII.
  • [71] See p. 215.
  • [72] The Government was on the point of sanctioning this advance when
  • the urgent necessity for it came to an end, and the advance was not
  • actually made.
  • [73] I will recur to this proposal in Chapter VII.
  • [74] For the movements of the Indian bank–rate in the autumn and spring
  • of 1907–8, see the chart appended to Chap. VIII. Eventually, on January
  • 16, 1908, the Bengal rate did rise to 9 per cent (the Bombay rate did
  • not rise to this level until February 7); but this is not very abnormal
  • in the winter, and the average rate for money in 1907–8 was lower than
  • in the corresponding season of the two busy years 1905–6 and 1906–7.
  • [75] For a fuller discussion of this question in relation to the events
  • of 1907–8, see my article on “Recent Economic Events in India” in the
  • _Economic Journal_, March 1909.
  • [76] Aggregate exports of Indian produce and manufactures: 1906–7,
  • £115,625,135; 1911–12, £147,813,000.
  • [77] The Government of India stands in a particularly strong position
  • in this respect, because few countries have so good a market for their
  • loans at a foreign centre as India has.
  • [78] In continuation of what has been said in § 4.
  • [79] See Brunyate, _loc. cit._ chap. vii., from which the greater part
  • of what follows is summarised.
  • [80] All this refers to the balances at the Head Offices. “There is no
  • limit to the Government deposits at branch offices. But the latter are
  • held absolutely at call, and in actual practice are removed with the
  • utmost freedom.”—Brunyate, _loc. cit._ p. 98.
  • [81] See table given on p. 204.
  • [82] The exceptional circumstances of 1913 are dealt with in Chap. VIII.
  • [83] See Report of Comptroller of Currency, 1911–12: “In July the
  • balance generally reaches its highest level. From July onwards until
  • December the revenue collections are comparatively small and the
  • balances steadily go down till they reach their minimum level in
  • November or December. After December the surplus revenue receipts far
  • exceed the demands for expenditure.”
  • [84] See also Lord Inchcape’s letter to the _Times_ of November 12,
  • 1912. I forbear to enter in detail into what is not, in reality, one of
  • the truly vital aspects of Indian Government Finance.
  • [85] The payments to the Government broker, from which, no doubt, some
  • deduction has to be made for expenses, have been as follows:—
  • 1908 £2,642
  • 1909 6,396
  • 1910 12,728
  • 1911 10,544
  • 1912 (up to Dec. 14) 7,958
  • The principles governing the amount of these payments were explained in
  • the House of Commons on December 17, 1912, in answer to a question.
  • [86] See Mr. J. B. Brunyate’s _Account of the Presidency Banks_ (1900),
  • whence the historical details which follow have been chiefly derived.
  • Mr. Brunyate’s _Account_ is of the highest value to students of banking
  • history.
  • [87] The first Bank of Bombay went into liquidation in 1868, although
  • its liabilities were eventually paid up in full. A new Bank of Bombay
  • was formed in the same year.
  • [88] By 1862 such issues were of negligible account, but in earlier
  • times they had been important. “Probably the first banking institution
  • in India, on European lines, was the Bank of Hindustan, which was
  • established in Calcutta about 1770 by a private trading firm. The
  • notes of this Bank, though not recognised by the Government, obtained
  • a local circulation which occasionally reached forty or fifty lakhs
  • and generally averaged about half that amount.” It is said that they
  • were “received for many years at all the public offices in Calcutta
  • scarcely excepting the Treasury itself.” On two occasions, once in 1819
  • and again in 1829, the occurrence of a panic led to the presentation
  • for payment of about twenty lakhs’ worth of the notes, and the demand
  • was promptly met. (Brunyate, _loc. cit._ p. 55.) This Bank and others
  • disappeared in the commercial disasters of 1829–1832. “Out of their
  • ruin rose the Union Bank, a Joint Stock Bank created by co–operation
  • among all the leading Calcutta houses.” (Brunyate, _loc. cit._ p.
  • 59.) In 1834 the Bank of Bengal refused to accept the notes of its
  • formidable rival, and in 1848 the Union Bank disappeared.
  • [89] This was in some degree consequent on the failure of the Bank
  • of Bombay in 1868, the Government having found itself in the awkward
  • position of being a shareholder in a Bank, its liability for which was
  • not clearly defined.
  • [90] The way in which Indian institutions have been moulded on and
  • influenced by English is interestingly illustrated by the fact that
  • several of the provisions in the Charters of the Presidency Banks were
  • copied from the 1695 constitution of the Bank of England.
  • [91] This also was partly consequent on the failure of the Bank of
  • Bombay in 1868.
  • [92] Except for the use of principals for the purpose of certain
  • specified kinds of remittance.
  • [93] In 1877 the Banks pressed strongly for a relaxation of this
  • provision. But the Secretary of State held that “the concession of
  • a power of creating a foreign agency in England, such as would be
  • the result of entering into loan transactions of the nature of those
  • contemplated, would admit of the Banks locking up a large portion
  • of their capital at so great a distance as to render it practically
  • unavailable in the case of any emergency arising in India.” This
  • argument is not one which would be likely to be used at the present
  • time. The fear would rather be lest they should lock up funds in India.
  • [94] Up to 1907 the maximum period was three months.
  • [95] See §§ 36–38 of Chapter VI.
  • [96] The rupee has been converted at the uniform rate of 1s. 4d.
  • throughout.
  • [97] This is the date of the foundation of this Bank under its present
  • style, but it was formed out of the old Chartered Mercantile Bank of
  • India, London and China, which dates much further back.
  • [98] The Chartered Bank, in spite of its name, has never done business
  • in Australia.
  • [99] But not exclusively. The National Bank, for example, has a large
  • interest in East Africa; this coast has considerable trade connexions
  • with India, and the rupee has a fairly wide circulation there (see
  • figures of rupees exported given on p. 154).
  • [100] The New Oriental Bank, established in 1885 (the great Oriental
  • Bank Corporation had failed in 1884), went into liquidation in 1893.
  • [101] I fancy that it has more the character of an Indian Joint Stock
  • Bank and less of the character of an Exchange Bank than the others.
  • [102] The Eastern Bank was established under the auspices of Messrs.
  • E. D. Sassoon, while two important French Banks and Messrs. Brown,
  • Shipley, and Co. are represented on the board of directors.
  • [103] There is of course much business of a semi–banking character
  • transacted by financial and mercantile houses, some of them of the
  • first magnitude, with establishments both in India and London. But they
  • are private firms and publish no information about their business of
  • which it is possible to take account.
  • [104] Another method occasionally worth while employing is the purchase
  • of Government Rupee Paper in London and its sale in India.
  • [105] The volume of bills, drawn in India on London and outstanding,
  • is not, of course, a correct measure of the extent to which India
  • is being financed abroad. A bill may be used to finance the foreign
  • purchaser just as much as the Indian seller. For example, a dealer in
  • cotton in India might be paid by a 3 m/s Bank credit supplied by the
  • buyer, a Continental spinner; this spinner might get the cotton within
  • a fortnight of the acceptance of the bill, which would, therefore, be
  • really financing his cotton factory.
  • [106] The figures for 1910, for example, are in the issue which was
  • obtainable in England early in 1913.
  • [107] On the one hand, these balances are even weaker than they look,
  • because they include the Exchange Banks’ balances at the Presidency
  • Banks. On the other hand, the Exchange Banks often have sovereigns or
  • Council Bills in transit which they may fairly consider, perhaps, as
  • equivalent to cash.
  • [108] A certain proportion of their bills, no doubt, are drawn on the
  • London branches of Banks with a foreign domicile. These bills are not
  • always so readily discountable as London acceptances, the Bank of
  • England taking them unwillingly and charging ¼ per cent extra discount.
  • But for the present purpose they can, I think, be regarded none the
  • less as liquid London assets.
  • [109] I believe that the Eastern Bank offers rather better terms than
  • the other Banks for fixed deposits.
  • [110] The confusing point here is this: that (ix.) is the amount
  • advanced to Indian merchants, and (x.) the amount advanced to English
  • merchants; yet (ix.) must be reckoned an English asset and (x.) an
  • Indian asset. For (ix.) when it falls due is paid in England, although,
  • of course, the Bank has advanced money, through the purchase of it, in
  • India.
  • [111] It would be most useful to have a triple classification—India,
  • London, and elsewhere. But I do not see how the Indian authorities
  • could reasonably enforce this.
  • [112] The great majority (363) of these small money–lending
  • establishments were registered in Madras. Most of them are mutual
  • societies, and it would not be difficult to exclude them from the
  • official statistics.
  • [113] There is also, on a smaller scale, the Bangalore Bank (1868).
  • [114] There are a few others on a very small scale, such as the Kashmir
  • Bank (1882), and the Poona Mercantile Bank (1893).
  • [115] In 1901 the People’s Bank of India was founded, but it did not
  • reach the 5 lakhs’ limit until 1908.
  • [116] The Bank of India has a paid–up capital of 50 lakhs and a reserve
  • and rest of 5½ lakhs; the corresponding figures for the Indian Specie
  • Bank are 75 lakhs and 19 lakhs. The Bank of Rangoon is on a smaller
  • scale and has been less successful.
  • [117] This represents compound interest at the rate of about 8 per cent
  • per annum.
  • [118] Here again it is tantalising that no later figures should be
  • available.
  • [119] In the official statistics no definition is given of what
  • precisely is meant by “cash.”
  • [120] The Co–operative Credit Societies are not important in this
  • connexion, capital, reserves, loans, and deposits altogether being less
  • than £1,000,000.
  • [121] At the time of writing, this Bill has not yet passed through its
  • final stages.
  • [122] In the published balance sheet, which I have before me, of one of
  • the largest of these little Banks, the cash is lumped together with the
  • “investments,” _i.e._, with the Bank’s speculations.
  • [123] These quotations are derived from Mr. Brunyate’s _Account_, _loc.
  • cit._
  • [124] In their Despatch dealing with the Report of the Fowler
  • Committee (August 24, 1899) the Government of India went so far as to
  • declare that the constitution of a State Bank, by the amalgamation
  • and absorption of the three Presidency Banks, was desirable. For the
  • circumstances and discussions which led up to the ultimate abandonment
  • of these ideas, see “Papers relating to the Proposed Establishment of
  • a Central Bank in India (reprinted from the _Gazette of India_ and
  • _Supplement_, dated the 12th Oct. 1901).”
  • [125] I am indebted for the preparation of this chart to Mr. H.
  • Bellingham of the India Office.
  • [126] The Bengal Bank Rate was at 7 or 8 per cent from November 28,
  • 1912, to April 17, 1913, and the Bombay Bank Rate at no less than 8 per
  • cent from December 27, 1912, to April 8, 1913.
  • [127] The Bank of England’s rate was 5 per cent, with the market rate
  • well up to the Bank Rate; and the _difference_ between the current
  • rates for money in London and India was probably, for the time of year,
  • not much greater than usual.
  • TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE:
  • —Obvious print and punctuation errors were corrected.
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