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MONEY
any considerable and rapid change in the currency
part of the want for the precious metals, especially
gold, comes from change in the policy of governments.
At one moment a government will accumulate
enormous sums in gold to impress its subjects or its
enemies with an appearance of solvency, and a few
years after it will spend the whole. For a century
a government will prohibit the issue of notes under
£5 and prescribe that gold must be kept against all
notes issued above a total of £20,000,000 or so, and
then will itself issue £1 and 10s. notes and multiply
the issue by six without increasing the reserve
at all.
Some find a great difficulty at this point. They
say they can appreciate in the abstract the argument
that increased want for coin and for the metal of
which the coin is composed must tend to raise the
value of both the coin and the uncoined metal, but
that they cannot see how the result comes about.
If more gold is wanted for dental plates, it seems
reasonable to expect that more will have to be paid
for it, but then it is paid for in gold sovereigns, and
cannot be worth more than before in them, for the
two are the same thing; so, too, if more coin is
wanted it is all very well to expect it to rise in
value, but how can it, seeing that you only give other
money for it, which money is equivalent to it ?
The answer is that we do not in fact buy gold with
gold, or coin with coin or even with money. We
obtain the gold or coin we want by giving other
commodities or services in exchange for them. If
I, a private person, wish to increase my average
holding of coin from £5 to £10, I cannot do it without
somehow or other sacrificing, giving up, not money
but other goods or services. I must work harder
and earn more, or I must reduce my expenditure, or
I must reduce my savings and consequently have