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The Phase Structure of Metallic Money: An MPTT Framework for the Spanish Price Revolution

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  • Ran Huang

Abstract

The Spanish Price Revolution is usually treated as a classic case in which American bullion inflows expanded the money supply and generated inflation. This view captures the first phase of the episode but fails to explain why the same monetary expansion did not continue to produce proportional price growth after 1600. We develop a two-phase Money Phase Transition Theory (MPTT) model in which the classical monetary relation is recovered before a transition point, while a second-phase correction term modifies the money-price transmission coefficient after the transition. Using annual Spanish CPI and reconstructed money-supply data, we show that 1500-1600 was a high-transmission metallic inflationary phase: CPI increased approximately 3.35-fold while money supply increased approximately 3.73-fold. After 1600, money supply continued to rise, increasing approximately 1.82-fold during 1600-1650, while CPI rose only approximately 1.22-fold. A classical one-phase model fitted on 1500-1600, therefore, overpredicts post-1600 prices when extrapolated forward. The MPTT two-phase model with transition point tau=1600 estimates beta_1=0.949, gamma=-0.812, and beta_2=beta_1+gamma=0.137, indicating a sharp post-transition weakening of monetary transmission. An unrestricted break scan identifies a deeper BIC-minimizing break around 1636. These results suggest that the Spanish Price Revolution was not a single monotonic bullion-inflation process but the rise and exhaustion of high-transmission metallic money inflation.

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  • Ran Huang, 2026. "The Phase Structure of Metallic Money: An MPTT Framework for the Spanish Price Revolution," Papers 2605.08788, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2605.08788
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Ran Huang, 2026. "A phase transition in monetary function explains expansion without inflation," Papers 2604.24035, arXiv.org.
    2. Mauricio Drelichman & Hans‐Joachim Voth, 2011. "Lending to the Borrower from Hell: Debt and Default in the Age of Philip II," Economic Journal, Royal Economic Society, vol. 121(557), pages 1205-1227, December.
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    4. Milton Friedman & Anna J. Schwartz, 1963. "A Monetary History of the United States, 1867–1960," NBER Books, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc, number frie63-1, January.
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