TO DISCOVER A STABLE STANDARD 191
rise in the rate of interest, whereas revenues increase more
nearly in proportion to the rise in prices.
But the tables may be turned when the public debt is
practically wiped out by the unlimited depreciation of the
currency and the Budget no longer contains any expendi-
ture except in respect of staff and material, items which
increase in direct proportion to the depreciation, whereas
the returns from taxation lag behind the movement of
prices.
As depreciation progresses and is accelerated, efforts
are multiplied to counteract its effects continually and
automatically in all relations between creditors and
debtors; scales of salary are set up which vary auto-
matically with the cost of living (internal purchasing
power of currency) or with the value of gold. Most
commercial and industrial transactions are based on gold—
In practice, on some foreign currency. As shown above,
gold loans are issued and taxes are collected in gold by the
same method.! This procedure approaches as nearly as
possible to the logical system of neutralising variations in
purchasing power of currency by applying coefficients pro-
portionate to such changes and also varying according to
the date at which payment is effected. But even apart from
the enormous accounting difficulties implied by such a sys-
tem, it hardly seems possible to apply it uniformly. Changes
in purchasing power are sometimes so rapid and so great
that even with scales of salaries which vary every fortnight
or every week, a workman cannot know for certain what
quantity of goods he will be able to purchase from one
day to another with the sum of money which is supposed
to support him until his next pay ‘day. Still worse, a
peasant who has sold his products on the market, what-
ever immediate profit he may have realised, does not know
! See the preceding account of the collection of taxes in Germany. The
same method was introduced in a more elaborate form in Poland, where the
“zloty” was introduced as a unit for measuring and assessing taxes; the
zloty was supposed to represent the purchasing power of the amount of
gold contained in a zloty as published officially in the index of wholesale
prices; this purchasing power is that of 1914 multiplied by a coefficient
corresponding to the index.