During the late-18th-century Industrial Revolution, the Royal Mint produced essentially no silver and almost no copper coins despite rapidly growing demand, creating a severe small-coin shortage that threatened industrialization by leaving industrialists unable to pay workers and merchants unable to make change.

causalpending

Speaker

George Selgin

Evidence Quote

you have growing demand and close to zero output and the result is a chain shortage a coin shortage and money shortage... by the last decades of the 18th century

Source

George Selgin on Free Banking 11/17/2008EconTalk
Created: 6/15/2026, 9:20:23 AM

My Notes

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