THE PROBLEM OF THE RUPEE - Page 475

460 DR. BABASAHEB AMBEDKAR : WRITINGS AND SPEECHES

“Within twenty years from 1877 to 1897, it could

probably be correctly stated that the power of money

to earn dividends was reduced to one-half, or in nearly

that proportion. That reduction of the earning power of

capital affected injuriously everybody who depended upon

investments for a living. It affected also the profits and

enterprises of the captains of industry and the kings of

finance. In England and in France the price of Government

securities rose to a point which made it no longer possible

for the man of small means to invest in them and acquire

an adequate support during his declining years.”*

It is, of course, open to doubt whether the conclusion drawn is the right one. But the fact remains that owing to monetary disturbances the field for the investment of English capital had become considerably restricted. And, as a way of getting a living, capital investment was an important resource to the English people.

To mend such a situation there were convened one after another three International Monetary Conferences to establish a bimetallic par between gold and silver. The first International Monetary Conference was convened at Paris in the year 1878 at the invitation of the United States. The second met at the same place in 1881 at the joint call of France and the United States. The third and the last assembled by the wish of United States in Brussels during the year 1892.

From the gravity of the situation nothing could have been more natural than to expect these Conferences to fructify into an agreement upon the consummation of the project for which they were called into being. But, far from reaching any agreement, the deliberations of these Conferences proved to be entirely futile. Only the second Conference showed any sign of agreement. The first and the third marked a strong deviation in the opposite direction. The advance, if any, that was made, as a result of these deliberations, was summed up in the pious opinion that it was necessary to retain and enlarge the monetary use of silver. But so weak on the whole was the response that practice failed to testify as to the sincerity of this solemn declaration.

1903, p. 101.