Canada’s economic growth and strong commitment to the gold standard all came crashing down 1914 with the beginning of World War 1. As tension built between countries, Canada officially suspended its convertibility of bank notes into gold. Because of this, there was an immediate meeting between the Government of Canada and the Canada Bankers Association to discuss the crisis. What followed was a new legislation called “An Act to Conserve the Commercial and Financial Interests of Canada”. This new legislature essentially gave the government the power to act as a lender of last resort to the banking system – one of the powers you see today with our central bank.
It was widely presumed that after the war, all major countries would return to the gold standard. Following the US and the United Kingdom, Canada did indeed go back onto the gold standard but this was short-lived. The monetary operations under the revised Financial Act of 1923, which was created during the paper money period, was inconsistent with maintaining a gold standard. This Financial act, in addition to the excessive monetary expansion that Canada underwent, is what most