184 MODERN MONETARY SYSTEMS
units of other countries on a gold currency.! But this does
not mean that the exchange value of this monetary unit in
relation to all goods and services is nowadays determined
by any market rate for gold, since the latter, as we have
seen, no longer has a market rate.
In the last analysis the idea of a standard comes down to
that of the unit of account by which the exchange value of
various commodities in relation to the currency, and hence
their exchange value among each other, is measured. And
this is the meaning which we have in mind when we attempt
to find a suitable standard of values. A monetary unit,
whether it circulates after being embodied in some form
of matter or whether it is used abstractly in some form of
accounts, is perfectly adequate as a measure of values at
any given moment. One object is worth 10 francs, another
20, another 30; from this observation it follows that the
second object is worth twice the first and the third is worth
three times the first and one and a half times the second.
But it is commonly stated in addition that money is a
standard which varies from one period to another ; for the
same sum of money does not represent the same quantity
of goods at different periods. In this form the observation
is perhaps not quite accurate. If a hat which was worth
5 francs before the war is worth 20 francs to-day, the
estimate, expressed in monetary units at different periods,
exactly expresses the difference in exchange value of the
commodity in relation to the currency at these two periods.
Units of currency will accurately measure this difference
over a lapse of time. The same applies to all commodities
and we only have to take the average price level at the two
periods under consideration in order to measure exactly
any change which has taken place in the exchange value of
all commodities in relation to the monetary unit.
1 This stable exchange ratio is not only due to the amount of gold in
each monetary unit, but to the fact that owing to free coinage and free
export and import the gold currency of one country is convertible ad
Libitum in the other. This is shown by the dislocation of exchanges which
happens between countries on a gold currency when gold can no longer
move freely from one country to another and the currency of one can no
longer be freely transformed into that of the other.