A New Banking System The Needful Capital for Rebuilding the Burnt District

CHAPTER IX.

Chapter 10589 wordsPublic domain

AMASA WALKER'S OPINION OF THE AUTHOR'S SYSTEM.

As Mr. Amasa Walker is considered the highest authority in the country, in opposition to all paper currency that does not represent gold or silver actually on hand, it will not be impertinent to give his opinion of the system now proposed.

He reviewed it in a somewhat elaborate article, entitled "_Modern Alchemy_," published in the _Bankers Magazine (N. Y.)_ for December, 1861.

That he had no disposition to do any thing but condemn the system to the best of his ability, may be inferred from the following facts.

After describing the efforts of the old alchemists to transmute the baser metals into gold, he represents all attempts to make a useful paper currency as attempts "_to transmute paper into gold_." He says that the idea that paper can be made to serve the purposes of money is "_a perfectly cognate idea_" with that of the old alchemists, that the baser metals can be transmuted into gold. (p. 407.)

He also informs us that--

"It is perfectly impracticable _to transmute paper into gold_ to any extent or degree whatever, and that all attempts to do so (beneficially to the trade and commerce of the world) are as absurd and futile as the efforts of the old alchemists to change the baser metals into the most precious." (p. 415).

These extracts are given to show the spirit and principle of his article, and the kind of arguments he employs against all paper that represents other property than coin; even though that property have equal value with coin in the market.

Yet he says:--

"One thing we cheerfully accord to MR. SPOONER'S system--_it is an honest one_. Here is no fraud, no deception. _It makes no promise that it cannot fulfil._ It does not profess to be convertible into specie [on demand]. It is the best transmutation project we have seen." (p. 413).

When he says that "it is the best _transmutation_ project he has seen," the context shows that he means to say that it _comes nearer to transmuting paper into gold_, than any other system he has seen.

This admission, coming from so violent an opponent of paper currency, may reasonably be set down as the highest commendation that _he_ could be expected to pay to any _paper_ system.

He also says:--

"Many schemes of the same kind have, at different times, been presented to the world; but none of them have been more complete in detail, or more systematically arranged, than that of MR. SPOONER. (p. 414).

But by way of condemning the system as far as possible, he says:--

"MR. SPOONER, however, can, we think, make no claim to originality, so far as the general principle is concerned. The famous bank of JOHN LAW, in France, was essentially of the same character." (p. 413.)

No, it was _not_ essentially of the same character. One difference--to say nothing of twenty others--between the two systems was this: that LAW'S bank issued notes that it had no means to redeem; whereas MR. WALKER himself admits that "MR. SPOONER'S _system makes no promises that it cannot fulfil_." That is to say, it purports to represent nothing except what it actually represents, viz.: property that is actually on hand, and can always be delivered, _on demand_, in redemption of the paper. Is not this difference an "essential" one? If MR. WALKER thinks it is not, he differs "essentially" from the rest of mankind. What fault was ever found with JOHN LAW'S bank, except that it could not redeem its paper? Will MR. WALKER inform us?

End of Project Gutenberg's A New Banking System, by Lysander Spooner