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Bullionism is an theory that defines by the amount of owned.

(2015). 9781136805783, Routledge. .
Bullionism is an early and perhaps more primitive form of . It was derived, during the 16th century, from the observation that the Kingdom of England, because of its large trade surplus, possessed large amounts of and —despite the fact that there was not any mining of precious metals in England.


History
Bullionism was born in what now is known as . Following the , the region fell victim to a deep economic slump. This prompted local scientists to look for ways to revive the region's economy. Some noted that had accumulated vast reserves of gold and silver thanks to its trade surplus, and established a link between the possession of precious metals and the wealth of the country.
(2020). 9782361066291, Sciences Humaines. .

Although the supporters of Bullionism did not write theoretical treatises on the subject (unlike the precursors of the classical school in the following century), they did mobilize many leaders. In 1558 Ortiz wrote a memoir to the king to prevent the exits of gold. The doctrine was developing mainly in this region, because the influx of precious metals from America led to a sharp increase in purchasing power in the short term, which the authors saw as an implicit confirmation of their theory. King Charles V of latter Spain and his son King Philip II did follow the bullionist recommendations.


Examples of bullionists
Thomas Milles (1550–1627) and others recommended that England increase exports to create a trade surplus, convert the surplus into precious metals, and hinder the drain of money and precious metal to other countries. England did restrict exportation of money or precious metals around 1600, but Milles wanted to resume using (ports where incoming foreign merchants were required to offer their goods for sale before anywhere else) to force merchants from abroad to use their assets to buy English goods and prevent them from transferring gold or silver from England homewards. Milles's opinions, however, were not widely valued. One of his contemporaries wrote, "Milles was so much out of step with the time that his pamphlets had little influence."

Gerard de Malynes (1586–1641), another bullionist, published a book named A Treatise of the Canker of England's Common Wealth, that asserted that the exchange of foreign currency had been a trade of value rather than exchanging the weight of metals. Therefore, the unfair exchanging of precious metals by and money changers would cause a deficit in the English balance of trade. To ban the flow of , he demanded the strict fixing of exchange rates for , only by the concentration of precious metals and weights, and for strict regulation and monitoring of foreign trade. He failed, however, to convince his contemporaries “...that the cambists were responsible for gold outflow or to elicit enthusiasm for a sale of exchange, par pro pari, by the royal exchanger." He did succeed in creating one of the first economic controversies, and opposed him in 1623 in his book The Circle of Commerce: Or, the Balance of Trade.


See also

  • Irvin L. Jeffery (2008). “Paradigm and Praxis: Seventeenth-Century Mercantilism and the Age of Liberalism” Ph.D. diss., University of Toledo.

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