114 MODERN MONETARY SYSTEMS
during this period by any greater rise in prices than
occurred in countries with a constant circulation.! These
observations suggest that, with the disappearance of
causes such as war, which give rise both to abnormal
issues (the financial situation) and to a rise in prices
(under-production, exchange, etc.), it is no longer easy
to prove that simultaneous variation of these two kinds
of phenomena in which the Quantity Theory finds its
origin.
In any case it will be observed that it is not enough,
in order to justify the Quantity Theory and show that it
1s universally applicable, to rely on a few historical coinci-
dences; and it no longer appears, as at first sight, to
follow quite simply and inevitably from that interplay of
supply and demand which is a fact of common experience.
We will therefore now attempt to discover the logical
basis of this conception, which is at present imperfectly
established by the sum total of our observations of a few
experienced facts.
§ 3. The basis of the Quantity Theory; how far it is logically
valid.
If we are prepared, subject to further analysis, to
admit in its most general form the proposition contained
in the Quantity Theory, and if we hold it to be gener-
ally justified in extreme cases, we shall in particular note
that any considerable and persistent price movement
connoting an equally considerable and lasting change in
the circulation should be assumed to be connected with
that change and that the latter should be considered a
factor, and perhaps a predominant factor, in the price
movement.
But many authors go further than this; in the first
place, they state that the quantity of money will neces-
1 See above, p. 93. M. Aftalion, in the article already cited, points out
that in Poland, also, prices remained at about the same level from October
1921 to January 1922, in spite of a considerable increase in the note issue
(183 to 227) and at a time when the exchange was almost stable.