5ZS A ^ : 4 4 9 The Theory of Inflation By '^nrey •-d ":■ ,: .'jiHVWSai' .^, UNIVERSITY OFCALIFORNI AT LOS ANGELES ^- ' THE THEORY OF INFLATION. A Critical Exarnimition of a Ruinous Popular Fallacy. Reprinted from the Philadelphia Evening Telegraph of November 8, 1873. To the Editor of the Evening Telegraph : — More tliaii a century ago David Hume published liis Esmy on Honey, which consists of a succession of brilliant but disjointed thoughts, part truths, i)art fallacies, so intermingled, and so plainly inconsistent one with anotiier, that the reader is at times at a loss to know whether the author be a believer in the advantages of a constant, an increasing, or a decreasing volume of money in any community or country. However, the so-called principles, the assumed-to-be truths of the contractionist are derived from tliis very source, which is the real and original fountain- head of this contractionist's monetary philosophy. This philosophy has i)ut little even to-day to offer us which is not drawn from Hume, and in the main it is but the carrying out to its logical conclusion of a single one of his leading propositions. Senator Sherman, for instance, deeply imbued with this one doctrine, hiis in an official paper committed himself in the fullest manner to it and its consequences, and from him we may learn to what extent these conse- ([uences go. In reference to the reissue of the so-called " reserve" of $44,000,000, Mr. Sherman, in a report of the Senate Finance Commit- t;;e, January, 1S73, said that "the full e.xercise of such a i)ower would undouljtedly ulVect the nominal value of all i)roperty in the United States to the fc.xlent of at least 10 ]ier cent., and the real value or burden as between deblur and creditor at least 10 per cent, on all contracts to be jtcrformed in fnturoy ^ liCt us now see how this would work in actiwil practice. The value of all the property in the United Stales in 1870 was $:;0,000,000,000, so its increase Ijy 10 percent would add to it $;{, 000,000, 000. Can any more extraordinary assumption well Ite imagined, than that $44,000,000 of currency should have the power to add to the value oC the existing 2 property of this country $;5, 000,000, 000, or over sixty eij-Iil limes its own volume ? From wlint ohservntiou of fnets, nnd 1iy wlmt form mul nuiuuer of reasoning, ean this conehision he iirriveil at ? Why, firsl hy the gratuitous assumi)tion of Hume, that the ))riees of all things in any country, al any and at all times, are lixed as they so stand in that country "l)y the proportion between commodilies and money" in tliat country, and then, further, by the easy step that any increase of money, witliout an increase of commodities, must increase prices in exact proportion. But if i)rices depend solely upon "the proportion between commodi- ties and money," how is it tiiat with but $750,000,000 of currency in this country, we find $30,000,000,000 of commodities and other pro- }ierty ? According to the dictum of the school, we should look for and lind but $750,000,000. It will not do to tell us that this money circu- lates, and thereby gives value to $30,000,000,000 of commodities and other property. This is not in harmony, I)ut in direct conflict v\'ilh the teachings of the school. With it money is, as it were, but an inert, lifeless mass, possessing what may be termed statical, but not dynamical qualities — a mere yardstick or dead-weight, which by its own simple and single length or ponderosity, acts as an inflexible, unyielding deter- miner of the value of the total mass of the commodities in a country. To tell ns that it circulates, and tlius has a new power, a new function, a new office, is to change the very terms of the proposition. But even if this new factor be thus dragged in, it must be on the necessary condi- tion that at all times, and in all places, and among all peoples, money circulates at a given and constant rate of velocity. There can be no possible escape from this necessity. Ui)on which horn of the dilemma then, will the contractionist hang — that of asserting of money that it ])0ssesses no life-giving property, or that, while possessing such power, that power always and everywhere acts with equal force? One or the other he must take, and each is equally opposed to experience as well as to common sense. But, further, with his inflexilde effect of the " proportion between commodities and money," the disciple of Hume is forced into the addi- tional and necessary logical position of maintaining that no increased amount in the production of commodities, by the application of steam and machinery; by the subjugation of new lands to the control of man, or the improvement of the old ones; by the discoveries of science, or by the arts of civilization ; by the increase of population or of intelli- gence; even be the results such as to give a yield of ten, twenty, or fifty | fold, as compared with that of the past, ean add one dollar to the • » • 4 • • 4t «<.« .«k SZ5 3 aggregate value of those commodities unless accompanied by an increase of currency! Will even our American contractionist seriously maintain a proposition so utterly absurd, so notoriously false ? Let us now inquire what are the real forces at work in governing prices? They are — the quantities of the commodities, the cost of re- production, the number of the persons desiring to possess such commo- ^ dities, and the means at the command of such persons towards such -0 possession. Hence we find that in all countries almost exclusively en- «r- gaged in agriculture, the prices of agricultural products and of labor are low. There being l)ut few persons not engaged in agriculture, there can <3C be but a limited demand for its products, and for the same reason — an ^ absence of a diversified industry — there is but a feeble societary life, and but little demand for labor. And here we instance India, in which have been mined for perhaps twenty centuries, and into which have flowed from al)road for a century, in a large and of late years, in an immense volume, the precious metals. Tliese phenomena are accompanied, too, by low prices for laljor and for almost every native product. Here it is evident that the distribution of the precious metals is so unequal that, while vast in amount, these metals give purchasing power to but few. It is clear then that in India, at least, the great principle of "inflation" does not work ! Real principles work uniformly, each in its own man- ner and form, while false ones do not ; and here is an unfailing touch- stone Ijy which to test the truth of any and all such claiming to be real and true ones. That of inflation, when thus tried, is found wanting. ^ The cost of reproduction of manufactured articles is comparatively low in all countries in which a diversified industry has been developed ^ to a high degree, and in which labor-saving machinery takes the place ^ of the lal)or of unaided Innnan hands. Into such countries — into \^ Germany, France, and Belgium, for instance — the precious metals have J for many years flowed in one continuous stream, and have there accumu- lated, while labor has risen in value, by reason of the increased demand f(jr it ; l)ut the prices of manufactured }>rodiicts have largely fallen, be- • cause of the increasing jiower of steam and machinery. Manufactured ^^ goods flow out (jf these countries, in an ever-increasing volume, to lands ^ which have not developed their industries, and in wiiicli labor is low, and which export their precious metals. Surely, Germany, France, and IJclgium, with their immense acquisitions of the jirecious metals, and each with the addition of a large circulation of notes, do not present a single fact going to su|>porl the theory of inflation. In the numljcr of persons in a country desiring to |)ossess, by pur- chase, commodities tho productions of their own countrymen, we have 403503 ^ nil almost niicrrinj]^ mcssure of tlictlivcrsiGcation of cMiiploj'mcntR in tliat country, for tlu> {greater the diUcreiices the greater niitl the mure rapid will be the intercourse and the deniaiul for sueli eonunodities. J)ul hero the money question only enters so far as that money succeeds in cjuickcn- injr societarylife into vij;orons and healthful action. The function hero exhibited is not that of the mere yiirdsiick or the pound weight, but is closely analogous to that of the blood that courses freely through the veins and arteries of the healthy animal organism. In such a state we have not alone consum})tion, but ])rodi'iction, the two constituting a liappy and a hnrmonious balance of forces — nii exhibition of phenomena entirely the reverse of the discords so confidently held I)y the disciples of Hume. During the late War of the Rebellion this balance was greatly disturbed l)y the abstraction of a large number of able-bodied men from production, and by the enormous demands of the government for subsistence, clothing, and the materials of war generally. From this cause and from excessive taxation — a nieiisure, in part, of the de- mands of the government for commodities — prices rapidly advanced, and yet the schoolman could see nothing in these results but an evidence of the truth of his delusion — inflation. Having seen that prices cannot be governed by " the proportion be- tween commodities and money," but that they are largely dependent upou the quantities of commodities, the cost of reproduction, and the number of persons desiring to possess such conmiodities ; let us now inquire how the means at tht^ command of such persons towards such possession affect prices and how far it is possible, by legislative enact- ment, to keep those means from the possession and control of the people. The general and wide dissemination of wealth among a people must exert a strong influence towards advancing prices among such people so far as consumption alone can do it, by increasing the body of con- sumers ; -.vhile, on the contrary, an equal amount of wealth concentrated in the hands of a few will exert less influence in that direction, for the reason that while these favored ones may live in luxury, the many may liardly be able to command the mere necessaries of life, and the great aggregate of consumption be thus limited. These two conditions are well illustrated, the first in the United States, and the last in Great Britain. However, even the effect of a large measure of consumption is to result in a conteracting one — production, which may and often does check any advance in prices. Now let us see how far a State can, by legislative enactment, so interpose its fiat as to succeed in preventing its people from purchasing and consuming, or holding for speculative ends, such coramodities as they are bent on having — for this is i-eally the question before us, once that we have disposed of the theory that prices depend upon " the pro- })ortion between commodities and money." Our illustrations and ex- amples shall be taken from Great Britain. That country has, for a century or more, in its financial affairs, been completely under the con- trol of men of the school of Hume, and during the latter half of this period she has maintained so-called specie payments. There, where every eflort has been made to carry out the system, may we look for the ripened fruit of it. In England all notes under £5 have been interdicted, and it has only been by reason of her native pluck and energy that Scotland has been enabled to obtain and retain them, after more than one severe contest. A recent intelligent English writer on finance and banking estimates The srold and silver in circulation in Great Britain at £70,000,000 $339,500,000 The circulation of the Bunk of England, Oct. 16, lb72. was 34,328,708 166,500,000 The notes in circulation in the United King- dom, other than those of the Bank of Kug- hind, September, 1872, were as follows : — England, £.o,057,'J10; Scotland, £5,313,560; Ireland, £7,242,081 17,613,551 85.425,000 Total $591,425,000 Tlere we have in less than $000,000,000, the circulating medium ex- pressly provided l»y the government for its people, either by its own coinage or through those institutions which it has yjermitted to issue circulating notes. But is this medium, with its capacity for vital work, a full measure of the imrcliasing jiower at the command of the people of Great Britain ? Has the Englishman Ijcen content to feel that here are the monetary instruments placed at his disposal by his Parliament and sovereign, and that with these alone and none others shall he work ? By no means ! 11. n. I. Palgrave, E^q , a recent able writer and slatisticinn, in a paper read before the Slalistical Society of Ijondon, of which he is a member, declares u|)on data admitted to l)e sound, that the deposits of the British l)anks amount to £584,000,000, or nearly $2,900,000,000. The same writer, in his NoIch on JlrmHiif/, from a very careful analysis of the sales of stamps for l)ills payable for a series of years, estimates the average amount of l)ills in existence at any one time in 1870-71 as fol- low.s : — Inland or ilomostic bills . . , £210.8r)0.n00 Foreign bills drawn on I'.nuliuul . . ;{(), 700,(1(10 .C-2tl.f>50,000 over $1,200,000,000 If, then, we consider the extent to wliieh tlic eredit system is enrried in [)riviite transndions in Knicland, and espeeiiilly the enorinons aeconnts rnn np by the nobility and riivate or other debts for which no bills are given 1,200,000,000 S.>,300,00(),000 $5,300,000,000 of purchasing power — nine times the volume of the currency of the country — almost wholly the result of the use of credit. By the aid of l)ai)k eliectks and clearing houses, this credit system is maintained with the smallest possible allowance of bank notes and specie — Mr. Palcrave placing the l)ank reserve of all Great Britain as low as four (4) per cent., $110,000,000, while the daily average clear- ings of the London Clearing House alone are nearly $100,000,000. The bank deposits, almost wholly the creation of the banks, through the loan of their credit, are, for all purposes of buying for consumption, trade, and speculation, as ellicient and as active as circulating notes. The bills of exchange and private debt-charges lack the activity of cir- culating notes and bank deposits, but are permanent and constant repre- sentatives of the power of purchase, until a crisis comes to contract their volumes. If these, then, be the results of repressive monetary legislation in the home of David Ilume, and in the land in which his doctrines have so long reigned supreme, is it not entirely evident that all legislative at- tempts to control the trading and speculation of an active, enterprising, intelligent, and free people, Ijy imposing an arbitrary limit to the amount of their circulating medium are utterly futile? Is it not even worse than this ; for does not such legislation, while depriving those people of the power to deal for cash, force them to resort to the various forms of credit — at once the forerunner of financial crises and the food on which those crises feed? But, further, does not this particular system look some- what like injlation run mad, and is not the fact that under it all commodities are not dearer in Great Britain than in every other country in the world evidence conclusive against the soundness of the contrac- tioiiist's great theory ? Let any one for a moment consider what would be the practical results to England if its people had permitted themselves to be limited in their operations by the $600,000,000 of circulating medium furnished to them by or through their government. The prosecution of her im- mense manufactures and foreign trade would be an utter impossibility, and it would be entirely out of her power to negotiate the large loans to foreigners, which are paid for by her exports of manufactured goods, and the peTmonent carrying of xvliich loans is only possible by reason of the Biislence of this large volume of bank and other credits. Never- theless, this system of credit, which has grown out of persistent, long continued, and vicious legislation in regard to money, is top-heavy and essentially unsound and dangerous, and liable to topple over at any and at all times. During the war of the rebellion, througli our ample supply of currency and our great business activity, we were enabled to carry almost our entire government indebtedness, and it was not until peace came, and with it contraction of that currency, that it became necessary to seek foreign aid. Before that contraction commenced our people were more free from debt, in proportion to the volume of business, than at any previous period in our history.' All this is, alas ! now most sadly changed. The circulation of the Bank of France, October, 1873, was nearly $600,000,000, and although specie i)ayments have been suspended since Septemljer, 1870, gold and silver there circulate freely, the premium being but about ^ per cent., and there cannot be less than $700,000,000 of those metals in the country. The private deposits in the bank were less than $4f),000,000, and business is at all times largely done for real cash. In Germany a very similar state of things exists. Let Congress, then, as in duty bound, dismiss from its thoughts at once, and forever, any l)elief in the fallacy which Hume has given to the world, that prices are fixed " by the proportion between commodities and money," and in the sad delusion that it is in the power of any legislative body, in fixing an arbitrary limit to the circulating medium of a people like our own, or the English, to put a limit to their business transactions. "When once they shall have so far cleared their mental jjcrceptions, they will l)e prepared to give us a full supply of national jHiper money having the feature ofintercha/igeability {at the ojition of the holder) xcitit govern- ment bonds bearing a fixed raUi of interest. In such interchangeability there is "u subtle principle that will regulate the movements of finance and commerce as accurately as the motion of the btcum-enginc is rcgu- 8 Inted I)}' its jjovonior," and tliiis protoct tlic people mid the Stiite IVoin tlio diniijers incident td iill arliili'inv enipiiic;il liniitins^ of the cirenhitin}i^ iiH'diuni — in iTtjard to llic re(piisite vohiinc oi' which, im a /*r/07'/ jadfjjniont can enable any man or Ixxly of men to decide npon and lix correctly. ^Vhen once wo are freed from the practice of such einpiricisnt, then shall we have tinancial stability and secnrity against those terrible crises which liave so often visited (Jreat i>ritain and the United States, the two conn- tries, of all Christendoni, the most completely under the doininntion oi' the fallacies of iidhition, and of the power of lejjislative l)odics to liunt and control the business operations of a [teople. Then shall we have l>rosperity, hapi)iness, and real peace, and forever rid ourselves of that element in our system which, by creating panics and crises, is the most potent in making the rich richer and the poor poorer. HENRY CAREY BAIRD. PuiLADEU'iiu, November 7, 1873. UNiVEHSlTY OF CALIFORNIA AT LOS ANGELES LIBRARY UC SOUTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY iiiii iiii II III III 1 1 III nil III I II II II I AA 000 590 449 5 HG 525 B16t iJijK IMI