ABSOLUTE DIFFERENCES IN COST 11 a country, will be considered more at length as we proceed. The first and the main consequence in international trade is indicated in the simplest form by the figures just given. Barter terms of trade may emerge, and rewards to labor under which much more advantage accrues to one country than to another. And, to repeat, under the conditions here supposed, the difference in gain to the countries may be very great. The United States may gain a great deal from the trade and Germany but little; or Germany may gain a great deal and the United States but little. The barter terms may be highly favorable to Germany and but little favorable to the United States; or may be highly favorable to the United States and but little favorable to Germany. We proceed now to modify the suppositions still further for Case I, in such way as to come a step nearer the realities. Countries do not exchange products for products thru mass meeting votes or any other process of conscious bargaining. Goods are sold for money. To quote Ricardo’s phrase, “every transaction in com- merce is an independent transaction.” Linen will be sent from Germany to the United States only if it sells for a less price in Germany ; and copper will be sent from the United States to Ger- many only if it in turn sells for a less price in the United States. Our next step is to introduce the mechanism of money and prices. In doing so we still simplify the case. Suppose the circulating medium In the two countries to be the same, and to be gold. Assume that copper and linen are both sold for gold in the two countries, and that gold as well as the commodities moves freely from one country to the other. Go further with the process of preliminary simplification. Assume not only that gold is the currency of both countries, but also that the greater or less plenty of gold money affects prices. More money means higher prices, less money lower prices. We shall assume, in other words, the validity of what is called the quantity theory of money. It is not material whether we accept also another proposition which goes with the quantity theory, namely that prices rise or fall in precise proportion to the increase or decrease of the monetary supply. It suffices for the present