Online Encyclopedia

DECIMAL COINAGE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 913 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DECIMAL COINAGE  .' Any currency in which the various denominations of

coin are arranged in multiples or submultiples of ten (
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Lat. decem) , with reference to a standard unit, is a decimal
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system . Thus if the standard unit be 1 the higher coins will be ro, Too, moo, &c., the
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lower •1, •ot, •oo1, &c . In a perfect system there would be no breaks or interpolations, but the actual currencies described as " decimal " do not show this rigid symmetry . In France the standard unit—the franc—has the io
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franc and the too franc pieces above it; the to centime below it; there are also, however, 50 franc, 20 franc, 5 franc, 2 franc pieces as well as 5o and 20 centime ones . Similar irregularities occur in the German and
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United States coinages, and indeed in all countries in which a decimal system has been established . Popular convenience has compelled this departure from the strict decimal form . Subject to these
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practical modifications the leading countries of the
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world (
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Great Britain and India are the chief exceptions) have adopted decimal coinage . The United States led the way (1786 and 1792) with the
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dollar as the unit, and France soon followed (1799 and 1803), her system being extended to the countries of the Latin Union (1865) . The German
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empire (1873), the Scandinavian States(1875),Austria-Hungary (187o,
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developed in 1892) and Russia (1839 and 1897) are further adherents to the decimal system . The Latin-
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American countries and
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Japan (1871) have also adopted it . In England proposals for decimalizing the coinage have long been under discussion at intervals . Besides the inconvenience of altering the established currency, the difficulty of choosing between the different schemes propounded has been a consider-able obstacle .

One

plan took the farthing as a
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base: then 10 farthings=t doit (22d.), to doits=l florin (2s . 1d.), to florins= 1 pound (2os. tod.) . The advantages claimed for this scheme were (I) the preservation of the smaller coins (the penny= 4 farthings); and (2) the avoidance of interference with the smaller
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retail prices . Its great disadvantage was the destruction of the existing unit of value—the pound—and the consequent disturbance of all accounts . A second proposal would retain the pound as unit and the florin, but would subdivide the latter into For " decimal " in general see ARITHMETIC . roo " units " (or farthings reduced 4 %) and introduce a new coin = ro units (2.4d.) . By it the unit of account would remain as at
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present, and the
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shilling (as 5o units) would continue in use . The alteration of the
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bronze and several
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silver coins, and the need of readjusting all values and prices expressed in pence, formed the
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principal difficulties . A third scheme, which was connected with the assimilation of
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English to French and American
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money, proposed the establishment of an 8s. gold coin as unit, with the tenpenny or franc and the penny (reduced by 4 %) as sub-divisions . The new coin would be
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equivalent to ro francs or (by an anticipated reduction of the dollar) 2 dollars . None of these plans has gained any great amount of popular support .

End of Article: DECIMAL COINAGE
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