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Georg Friedrich Knapp (March 7, 1842 – February 20, 1926) was a German economist who in 1905 published The State Theory of Money, which founded the chartalist school of monetary theory, which argues that money's value derives from its issuance by an institutional form of government rather than spontaneously through relations of exchange. Knapp was born on March 7, 1842. His father was the acclaimed chemist Friedrich Ludwig Knapp. Knapp studied in Munich, Berlin and Göttingen, and in 1867 became director of the Statistical Bureau of Leipzig. In 1869 he was appointed assistant professor of economics and statistics in the University of Leipzig. In 1874 he was appointed a professor of political economy at the University of Strasbourg, where he remained until 1918. He was also rector at Strasbourg in 1891 -1892 and 1907 - 1908. In 1886, he founded the periodical Abhandlungen aus dem staatswissenschaftlichen Seminar zu Strassburg. Knapp was the father of Elly Heuss-Knapp, the future wife of Theodor Heuss, the first President of the Federal Republic of Germany. He raised his two daughters alone, uncommon at the time, after their
Georgian-born mother, Knapp's wife Lydia v. Karganow, became mentally
ill. Knapp is mostly remembered for this book which was translated into English by the Royal Economic Society and published for the first time in the United Kingdom in 1924, nineteen years after its first publication in German. The State Theory of Money sets about to build a theory
which could encompass indifferent monetary systems based on precious
metals or paper money. Knapp's approach is naturalistic. As a theorist,
he does not want to recommend what the monetary ought to be, nor does he
explore how money could be put to use in order to attain certain goals.
Drawing almost entirely on examples set in 19th century Europe, he
derives from them a genetic and then a functional classification. In the
process, the book reveals that some of what had been previously thought
to be 'specie' money, was simply what he calls 'chartal hylogenic
money'. An avowed Chartalist, Knapp does not advocate paper money pure
and simple, he points out effectively that the Metallists with their
theory cannot effectively explain some observed phenomena which they
call 'anomalies'. To the contrary, Knapp thinks his theory is able to
explain the manifold monetary systems mentioned in the book. Apart from
its theoretical insights, the book is particularly interesting in that
it is a very detailed source of information on 19th century European
monetary history, focusing on the following countries: England, France,
Holland, Austria and Germany. Due to a lack of financial means, the
Royal Economic Society voluntary omitted the translation of Chapter IV
which contains a historical review of England, France, Germany, Austria,
and appendices containing specific case studies. All the same, even in
its abridged English version The State Theory of Money depicts
precisely the many changes which happened during the course of the 19th
century: a general move from bimetallism to monometallism, the
appearance and disappearance of paper money systems (in particular the
Austrian one of 1866), the almost systematic use of paper money by the
State in case of war alongside existing means of payment, the emergence
of bank-notes and the use of Giro payments etc. |