The Great Stop of the Exchequer or Stop of the Exchequer was a repudiation of state debt that occurred in England in 1672 under the reign of Charles II of England.
Causes
Under Charles II the state finances were in such a grievous condition that the Crown found itself no longer able to honour its debts. It was even unable to pay £400,000 owed to Sir Robert Vyner, who had made the replacement for the lost St Edward's Crown. The Stop occurred on Tuesday 2 January 1672. Payments were suspended upon: The period of the stop was to be one year, ending on 31 December 1672. In the interim the King intended that interest would be paid to all those who were owed payment of outstanding bonds that had become due "at the rate of six pounds per cent". People, such as the "Goldsmith bankers" who had entrusted their gold to the government for safe keeping were not allowed their gold when they asked for it - effectively their gold had been stolen by the government. Further background information on the causes and effects of the Stop of the Exchequer were revealed in a letter from Richard Langhorne to Lord Hatton:
The bankers of Lombard Street were asked for an 'advance' to the king to finance the fleet, they refused to make the loan.
Due to the pressing need for money the king and his council resolved to find the money for the fleet by cutting other parts of the treasury's budget - money that had been allocated for the repayment of bonds and securities were to be spent on the fleet and only interest paid with no repayment of principal that year.
There was great disruption and damage to the financial markets: "I believe it certain that the trade of bankers is totally destroyed by this accident".
Legacy
The short-term consequences of the Stop were disastrous. Gilbert Burnet wrote that "the bankers were broken, and multitudes who had put their money in their hands were ruined by this dishonourable and perfidious action". This seems to have been only a slight exaggeration: the goldsmith bankers were heavily hit, and some of the most prominent, including Edward Backwell and Robert Viner, went bankrupt. Danby, the Lord Treasurer, promised them compensation, but this was never forthcoming, leading to a lawsuit, The Goldsmith Bankers case, of almost unheard-of length. Eventually the Court of Exchequer Chamber gave judgment in favour of the bankers, but in 1696 Lord Somers, the Lord Chancellor, reversed the judgment on technical grounds which left a general feeling that an injustice had been done. The King himself came to regret it as a "false step". One important legacy of the Great Stop of Exchequer was the founding of the Bank of England in 1694. The primary purpose of the Bank was to raise and lend money to the State and in consideration of this service it received under its Charter and various Act of Parliament, certain privileges of issuing bank notes. A loan of £1.2m was made to the government; in return the subscribers would be incorporated as The Governor and Company of the Bank of England with long-term banking privileges including the issue of notes. The Royal Charter was granted on 27 July through the passage of the Tonnage Act 1694. The Bank of England was founded 22 years after the Exchequer Stop - the actual consequence of the Exchequer Stop, at the time, was that banks such as Hoare's bank emerged - where the gold was physically kept on the premises rather than being entrusted to the government. Hoare's bank still exists to this day. Public finances were in so dire a condition at the time that the terms of the loan were that it was to be serviced at a rate of 8% per annum, and there was also a service charge of £4000 per annum for the management of the loan. The founding of the Bank of England put an end to defaults such as the Great Stop of the Exchequer. From now on, the British Government would never fail to repay its creditors. Kenyon argues that the Stop was a failure simply because it had never been tried in England before. The French and Spanish Governments periodically repudiated their debts without undue difficulty; but from the time of Elizabeth I the English Crown had earned a reputation for paying its debts, and in spite of Charles II's notorious extravagance and carelessness about money, the City of London was quite unprepared for the Stop.