AMERICAN PROSPERITY AND BRITISH DEPRESSION 133
when exactly this policy was pursued? We make no
such assumption when the increase in bank credit
is due to certain purely fortuitous circumstances
which have nothing to do with the requirements of
British trade. For example, when the Bank of Eng-
land buys more gold as a result of a decline in the
Indian or German demand, the increase in bank
cash, and consequently in the volume of credit,
gives rise to no alarm. It is accepted as an axiom
that an influx of gold into the Bank of England
stimulates trade here. The stimulus, however, is not
due to the Bank having more or less bullion buried
in its vaults, but to the additional bank cash which
the purchase of gold creates. The effect on the total
of bank cash is precisely the same whether the Bank
buys gold or bills or War Loan or bricks and
mortar, whether it lends to the Government, the
Bank of France or any other of its private cus-
tomers. The Bank may buy from policy, with a
steadfast eye on the needs of British trade, just as
readily as it buys under compulsion when gold is
tendered to it. But if gold does not flow in, and
if without additional gold credit is not permitted
to expand, full employment for our workpeople
cannot be secured.
Let me call your attention once more to an
illustration from the United States of the fact that
credit may be expanded without being based upon
any influx of gold and without resultant inflation.
I have not the full figures for any later date than
November 1926, but if we compare these with the
corresponding figures for November 1924 we shall
see that during the intervening period the mone-
tary stock of gold in the United States has dimin-
ished, the deposits of reporting member banks
have considerably increased, and prices have