In 1872, Guatemala’s currency situation was characterized by profound instability and transition, rooted in the economic policies of the Conservative regime that had ruled for decades. The country operated on a bimetallic standard in law, but in practice, the circulating medium was dominated by debased silver coinage, particularly the
real. Years of fiscal shortfalls, often addressed by cutting the silver content in coins, had led to a severe loss of public confidence in the currency. This erosion of value created a complex system where old, higher-content coins traded at a premium over newer, lighter ones, complicating all commercial transactions and hindering economic growth.
This monetary confusion occurred within a specific political context. The liberal
Reforma under President Miguel García Granados, which began in 1871, was actively dismantling the structures of the former Conservative government. While 1872 was a year of ongoing civil war and consolidation of liberal power, the new regime recognized the chaotic currency as a major obstacle to its modernizing project and to attracting foreign investment. The financial system was also strained by the government's issuance of
vales (promissory notes) to fund its military campaigns, further flooding the market with instruments of uncertain value.
Consequently, 1872 stands as the immediate prelude to a major monetary reform. The liberal government, laying the groundwork for the changes fully implemented by Granados's successor, Justo Rufino Barrios, was already planning a fundamental overhaul. This would culminate in the 1874 adoption of the
peso as the new unit of currency, a decisive shift toward a decimal system, and the establishment of a gold standard in an effort to stabilize the economy, integrate Guatemala into global trade, and symbolize the break with the conservative past. Thus, the currency situation of 1872 was one of endemic disorder, directly prompting the transformative reforms that defined the late 19th century.