In 1877, Sweden was in the final stages of a complex monetary transition, operating under a de facto silver standard while formally adhering to the Scandinavian Monetary Union (SMU) established with Denmark in 1873 (and joined by Norway in 1875). The union created a common gold standard, with the Swedish
krona (crown) replacing the former
riksdaler riksmynt as the new unit of currency, pegged to gold at a rate of 2,480 kronor per kilogram of fine gold. However, the practical shift was gradual; older silver coins remained legal tender alongside the new gold coins, creating a period of bimetallic circulation.
The year 1877 itself was significant for a key legislative change within this framework. The Swedish
Riksdag passed a law that demonetized the old silver
riksdaler coins, which had continued to circulate at a fixed value relative to the new gold krona. This move was crucial for fully realizing the intent of the Monetary Union, as it aimed to remove the last major vestige of the previous silver-based system and solidify the gold standard as the sole basis for the currency. The goal was to achieve monetary uniformity and stability, both domestically and across the union's borders, facilitating trade and economic integration.
Despite this formal shift, the international economic landscape posed challenges. The late 1870s were a period of global deflation and falling silver prices, which put pressure on bimetallic systems worldwide. Sweden's commitment to gold within the SMU, reinforced by the 1877 law, insulated it from the direct disruptions of the silver glut but tied its economy to the international gold standard's discipline. This meant that Sweden's money supply and credit conditions were increasingly influenced by international gold flows rather than domestic policy, embedding the nation more deeply into the global financial system of the era.