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This article commemorates the grisly end of Baron George Heinrich de Goertz
- a good man who found himself in the central banker's hot-seat at the wrong
time.
Sweden in the 17th century was not the peaceable country of today. Enjoying
the best metalworking and gunmaking technology of the day the Swedes were the
military masters of northern Europe. There were frequent wars against Russia,
Denmark, Poland or Germany. They were expensive too.
In 1604 an equivalence of bullion to coined money was enacted in Sweden, but
it established a 15% premium on coins, a profit which would have accumulated
to the treasury and helped to finance the Swedish army.
This was a steep cost and it made the scheme ineffective. Swedish silver bullion
simply exited to Amsterdam to be coined by cheaper Dutch banks into Florins.
These were used to buy trade goods which were in turn sold back in Sweden.
Sweden's silver quickly disappeared overseas and the relationship of money
to silver was soon lost.
Thereafter, in the absence of anything better, and because Sweden controlled
the world's best copper mines, an old currency of highly overvalued copper
coins started to circulate.
The Swedes were running on empty as regards precious metal, but they were
still a mighty military force, and these copper coins were further issued in
large numbers by Gustavus II in 1625 to finance yet another war, this time
against the reputedly vengeful and expansionist Ferdinand II of Germany who
was on a mission to impose his version of Rome's will on the protestant
north.
But now the military debts of the Swedish state combined disastrously with
a substantially overvalued copper coinage, and a legislative structure designed
for commodity money which meant that there was no limit on the amount of money
in circulation. It launched Sweden into an absurd copper currency system.
Mined copper was minted to achieve its overvalued status, and promptly sunk
the money to its commodity production cost, which in a country rich in copper
mines was small. The savings of the population - one of the few European peoples
not to have been oppressed under serfdom - were wiped out.
Gustavus' daughter Christina who ascended the throne aged 6, had 12 years
of childhood to comprehend these monetary mysteries before her majority at
18, whereupon she instructed the issue of copper backed exchequer bills called
assignats which circulated as money, and then a bank was incorporated which
took in copper and issued receipts called transport notes, which were the origin
of the modern banknote. The notes were pleasing to use and - a problem with
early paper - easy to forge.
For a while this
popular paper filled the bank with copper. But the paper lost credibility and
demand swerved back to the solidity of metal. So the vaulted copper was cut
into sheets, roughly stamped, and issued back into circulation as money in
sheets weighing as much as 15 kilograms [the example shown, from the British
Museum, is dated 1658 and about 65 cm long].
People had to walk the streets carrying these great slabs balanced on their
heads. It was only inconvenient at first, but then the world market dumped
the commodity copper price as Swedish mines lost their dominance and the money
became useless as a store of value as well. The people suffered; not least,
one imagines, from neck ache.
It eventually fell to Baron George Heinrich de Goertz to offer his services
as central banker and sort out the mess.
He minted a new representative currency in copper, validated with the kings
head and a legal tender face value of a "daler" - the original dollar. He neither
limited the issue nor ensured the quality of the coins, which were beneath
the technical capabilities of the day. Moreover he attempted this exercise
on behalf of an administration which had lost virtually all financial credibility
with its population; an error he then compounded by allowing to develop a widely
held belief that at some unspecified time in the future tax collectors would
refuse the coins as legal tender payment of dues. His currency became detested
and soon sloshed around the Swedish economy depreciating rapidly.
Goertz had been a successful minister in other areas of government and he
never profited from the debacle, but he was still blamed for the financial
misery and the associated irreversible decline in Swedish power.
He was eventually charged with "ruining public credit with imaginary money".
He put up a brave and articulate defence - on his own behalf because he was
denied counsel. It was not enough. He was the modern world's first central
banker to be beheaded, on March 3rd 1719, and the punishment was generally
popular.
Articles in the series include :-
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