CONTINUOUS BORROWING 229
borrowing. The readiness with which British investors have
co-operated with Australian governments in the past, in order
to obtain the mutual advantages to be gained from the part-
nership has been sufficiently obvious. So, also, has been the
distressing dislocation caused in the business of this country
whenever the dominant partner has temporarily lost faith in
the articles of the borrowing creed, or has lacked the financial
ability to implement it. For this reason alone the British de-
mand for an ‘orderly marketing’ of loan issues should find a
ready response in the Commonwealth.
But far more than regulative action on the part of the lender
seems to be indicated by the necessities of the case as here
presented ; and much of the plausible argument comparing the
constitution of the British and the Australian national debt
quite begs the main question. For the real economic criterion,
and the chief test which may be legitimately applied to the
justification of Australian loan policy, has reference to the effect
on the balance between the cost of indebtedness and national
income. The comparison of productivity with indebtedness per
head is the true economic criterion; and economic opinion
would be inflexible on this, that the safety-point in borrowing
has been passed when the increase in productivity is less than
sufficient to provide a surplus adequate to sustain the annual
charge at a normal rate of taxation.
Before, however, proceeding to investigate this phase of the
problem, the very important effects upon a community of
continuous supplies of cheap loan money must be considered.
For the nation, as for the individual, it is still a truism,
despite our twentieth-century technique in disguising the true
inwardness of the case, that ‘borrowing dulls the edge of
husbandry’; and the effects of unrestricted lending must be
discussed, therefore, in its psychological, political, and economic
bearings.!
Every episode we have examined confirms the fact that
cheap loan money has inevitably led to over-expansive schemes
of national development, to that national attitude of mind
which we can only describe as the abandonment of the prin-
© Of. Bastable, op. cif., p. 657: ‘One general fact is discernible in the course of
the modern history of debts, viz. the universal tendency to increase. and in some
rases to press dangerously on the limits of national solvency.’