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E.R. Campbell said:...The first modern financial bubble started in Paris in around 1719 and spread to London before bursting in 1721....
And this maybe a contributing factor to the antipathy of the French Elite towards Anglo-Saxon banking.
Louis XIV had just died and his Great-Grandson Louis XV was on the throne as a child. He had a regent, Phillip of Orleans - his uncle, ruling in his place. The Brits had just quashed the latest Bourbon-Stewart attempt to reclaim the British Crowns at Sheriffmuir. The Masons had openly united as the United Grand Lodge of England and declared themselves to be not at odds with the crown or the state. Gold, which had been a monopoly of the Crown was being freely traded in the London markets. Lloyds and the London Stock Exchange were finding their feet. Britain was wealthy. And at the back of it all was the Bank of England, founded by Huguenots and other Calvinists and sold to the English by a Scotsman, William Paterson, who died in that year of 1719.
France, as a combined result of Louis XIV's wars and Colbert's dirigisme was broke and with no prospects of recouping their losses except the old fashioned way. Go forth and conquer. Except that the French weren't up for it. They were ill, dead-tired or just plain dead after Louis' wars.
Into this fray marches another Scot peddling his wares. This time promising to do for France what Paterson had done for England and Britain. John Law of Lauriston promised to create a Bank of France on Dirigiste lines. And on to Wikipedia,
....He had the idea of abolishing minor monopolies and private farming of taxes and creating a bank for national finance and a state company for commerce and ultimately exclude all private revenue. This would create a huge monopoly of finance and trade run by the state, and its profits would pay off the national debt. The French Conseil des Finances, merchants, and financiers objected to this plan.
The wars waged by Louis XIV left the country completely wasted, both economically and financially. And the resultant shortage of precious metals led to a shortage of coins in circulation, which in turn limited the production of new coins. It was in this context that the regent, Philippe d'Orléans, appointed John Law, as Controller General of Finances.
Contemporary political cartoon of Law from Het Groote Tafereel der Dwaasheid (1720); text reads "Law loquitur. The wind is my treasure, cushion, and foundation. Master of the wind, I am master of life, and my wind monopoly becomes straightway the object of idolatry. Less rapidly turn the sails of the windmill on my head than the price of shares in my foolish enterprises."In May 1716 the Banque Générale Privée ("General Private Bank"), which developed the use of paper money was set up by Law. It was a private bank, but three quarters of the capital consisted of government bills and government accepted notes. In August 1717, he bought the Mississippi Company, to help the French colony in Louisiana. In 1717 he also brokered the sale of Thomas Pitt's diamond to the regent, Philippe d'Orléans. In the same year Law floated the Mississippi Company as a joint stock trading company called the Compagnie d'Occident which was granted a trade monopoly of the West Indies and North America. The bank became the Banque Royale (Royal Bank) in 1718, meaning the notes were guaranteed by the king. The Company absorbed the Compagnie des Indes Orientales, Compagnie de Chine, and other rival trading companies and became the Compagnie Perpetuelle des Indes on 23 May 1719 with a monopoly of commerce on all the seas. The system however encouraged speculation in shares in 'The Company of the Indies' (the shares becoming a sort of paper currency) and inflation. The system was based on Law trading shares in the Mississippi Company in return for government debt. The Banque Royale was created by default as a result of Law attaining the majority of the government issued notes (debt). It effectively became the Central bank of France. In 1720 the bank and company were united and Law was appointed Controller General of Finances to attract capital. Law's pioneering note-issuing bank was extremely successful until it collapsed and caused an economic crisis in France and across Europe. The collapse was staved off by a constant trading off between national debt and shares of the Misissippi company. New shares were issued to dilute the value of each share, and the new capital was used to purchase more government notes. The speculation continued to build, and the companies two brances, the trading arm, and the bank arm, collapsed simultaneously.
Law exaggerated the wealth of Louisiana with an effective marketing scheme, which led to wild speculation on the shares of the company in 1719. In February 1720 it was valued for a very high future cash flow at 10,000 livres. Shares rose from 500 livres in 1719 to as much as 15,000 livres in the first half of 1720, but by the summer of 1720, there was a sudden decline in confidence, leading to a 97 per cent decline in market capitalization by 1721. Predictably, the 'bubble' burst at the end of 1720, when opponents of the financier attempted en masse to convert their notes into specie. By the end of 1720 Orleans dismissed Law, who then fled from France.
Law's Bank turned on its head everything that the Bank of England was. It was different in every detail except that it was a Central Bank promoted by a Scot. But I am inclined to think that Law had the same impact on the French consideration of banking that Stalin had on the American consideration of communism or Yeltsin had on the Russian consideration of democracy. A cautionary tale never to be repeated despite the fact that execution failed to match theory.
And Edward, I disagree that Bretton Woods works. Between 1694 and 1944 there was a solid golden wire running through the world's economy that instilled market discipline. The Bank of England and the Gold Standard backed by HMG and the RN. Recessions and depressions happened and wars were financed but the market always seemed to right itself.
With Bretton Woods that discipline was shredded until it finally broke in 1971 under Nixon. At that point the Western Governments took themselves off of the Gold Standard and started issuing Scrip - worth whatever the market deems it to be worth. But the market never went off the Gold Standard, nor did most third world dictatorships. All that happened was that Governments believed themselves to be beyond the discipline of the Market.
The Market is now reminding Governments that they are not beyond the Market.
And that is the most frightening thought of all to the Dirigistes.
Britain succeeded for so long because it figured out how to work within the constraints of the rules imposed by the market while at the same time allowing some room for movement within the system.
Degrees of freedom:
Bear on a chain;
Bear in a cage;
Bear in a zoo compound;
Bear in a park;
Bear in a preserve.
In all cases, no matter how much freedom the Bear perceives, the consequences of breaking the containment are the same - death.
Likewise, even in the most destitute, socialist, command economy people survive through capitalism - through individuals trading toilet paper for shoes.
Capitalism and the Market set the rules. Governments have to learn to abide by the rules.
They can no more control the Market than Louis XIV could make Europe an extension of his well manicured gardens at Versailles.
Bretton Woods was an American swing of the pendulum to the opposite extreme.
Bretton Woods was an attempt to free the market of constraints, with the Americans thinking that Britain had been setting the rules to its advantage for 250 years. If only the market were allowed to work freely then everything would level out over time. I don't believe that the current "crisis" (behind us in 24 months) is the result of laisser faire economics but neither do I believe that the Market is a self regulating and thus benevolent environment.
I don't think the Market is any different to the Weather, the Sea or one of the McGarrigle Sisters "white waters where the log drivers learn to step lightly". They are environment and can't be controlled. They have to be accomodated. It doesn't do any good to look for root causes in the hope that you can control the environment. You are best put to husband your resources to deal with the symptoms, the effects.
I believe the Brits didn't set the rules. They just accepted and exploited the rules.
Perhaps Canada with its pragmatism is the true inheritor of that philosophy.
In today's National Post George Jonas finished with this quote from Ecclesiastes: "The race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, neither yet bread to the wise. Time and chance happens to them all.” Or as Burns would hae "the best laid schemes o' mice and men gang aft agley".