12
Inflation and Stabilization
systematic. regulation of the supply of means of
payment. This regulation gives to the currency a
purchasing power corresponding to that of gold.
The simplest case is, of course, when gold itself
retains invariable purchasing power as against
commodities. Then it is only necessary to regulate
the currency so that its purchasing power remains
constant. But this is precisely the same thing that
we have to do when we wish to stabilize an ordi-
nary paper currency. If it is possible to attain
a stabilization at an increased value of the cur-
rency, it must a fortiori be possible to carry
through a stabilization at the present value of the
currency. If the currency is to be bound up with
gold and thus become a gold standard, stabiliza-
tion at the present gold value must be easier than
stabilization at a higher, pre-War gold parity and
cannot under any circumstances involve additional
difficulties. Quite a different thing is that a coun-
try may have greater difficulty in coming to
unanimity in the choice of a. reduced level of
stabilization than in a decision to restore the old
gold standard.
In one point the program of stabilization at
the present value requires more definiteness. We
are accustomed to measure the purchasing power
of our money by the aid of wholesale price index