In 1773, Chile was a captaincy-general within the Spanish Empire, and its currency situation was characterized by severe scarcity and reliance on a chaotic mix of foreign and improvised coins. The Spanish Crown consistently failed to supply sufficient official coinage, particularly the silver reales and gold escudos minted in Peru and Mexico, to meet the colony's economic needs. This chronic shortage stifled trade and daily transactions, forcing the local economy to adapt through largely informal means.
The primary mediums of exchange were a jumble of coins from other Spanish American mints, alongside significant quantities of clipped, worn, and counterfeit pieces that circulated at discounted values. Most notably, due to trade routes across the Andes and the Pacific, Peruvian and Mexican coins dominated, but even these were insufficient. In the absence of sufficient small change, merchants and large estates often resorted to using
boletas or
fichas—private tokens made of copper, leather, or even wood—as IOUs for local use, especially for paying laborers. This created a fragmented and unreliable monetary system.
This problematic situation existed within the broader framework of Spanish mercantilist policy, which aimed to extract precious metals from the colonies while restricting their commercial autonomy. The local authorities had little power to mint coins or formally regulate value, leaving the market to determine the worth of each irregular piece. The year 1773 fell within a period of administrative reform under the Bourbon monarchs, but tangible monetary relief for Chile would not come until the establishment of a royal mint (
Casa de Moneda) in Santiago decades later, in 1749, highlighting how the scarcity of 1773 was a persistent, long-standing crisis.