CHAPTER II
CURRENCY AND PRICE MOVEMENTS
S 1. General price movements and the Quantity Theory.
Or those economic phenomena which appear to be
closely connected with the working of monetary systems,
the first to be mentioned are the general movements of
prices.
As almost all transactions under the modern economic
system are effected by means of money, almost all goods
and service are exchangeable for money ; more accurately,
any unit of any given commodity or service is exchange-
able for a certain number of currency units ; this number
of currency units in its relation to the commodity or ser-
vice in question is called tke price ; the exchange value
which is created between each commodity or service and
the currency unit is usually expressed by the price. Thus
the exchange value of the commodity will increase if the
price rises, and that of the currency will correspondingly
decline, since more monetary units will be required in
order to obtain the same object—and vice versa. More-
over, it is possible to measure changes in the average
exchange value, or purchasing power, of a currency by the
movements of average prices. Thus a currency loses
purchasing power or depreciates when there is a rise in
prices ; its purchasing power increases, or it appreciates
in the opposite case. A rise in prices and currency de-
preciation are therefore equivalent, and express the same
phenomenon ; this also holds good of a fall in prices,
i.e., an appreciation of the currency, for the rise or fall
of the currency is in relation to goods or services.
This simple statement has its importance ; for often,
by mistaking this inevitable correspondence between two
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