THEIR MORAL AND ECONOMIC SIGNIFICANCE
No more severe reflection could be
passed upon the moral and political capacity of the
human species than this: Five thousand years after
the invention of writing, three thousand after
the invention of money, and (nearly) five hundred
since the invention of printing, governments
all over the world are employing the third invention
for the purpose of debasing the second; thereby robbing
millions of innocent individuals of their property
on a scale so extensive that previous public confiscations
of private property through the adulteration of money in
ancient Rome, in Ireland under James the Second, in
Prussia during the Seven Years’ War, in the American
colonies and the United States, in Portugal, in Greece,
in various republics of Central and South America,
even the assignats of the French Revolution seem
pigmy frauds in comparison with the present vast inundation
of counterfeit paper money.
In these times, when so much attention
is given to what I may call the prehistoric history
of mankind, it would ill become me, a mere adventurer
in anthropology, to discuss the origin of money or
to attempt an explanation of the curious fact that
the art of coining money was invented and perfected
a thousand years before the art of printing.
The coins struck by the best cities of ancient Greece
are a model and a reproach to our modern mints; and
being for the most part of good silver, they fulfilled
the two main functions of currency as a
measure of value and a medium of exchange.
Silver was well adapted for the purposes
of currency by its ductility, durability, divisibility,
portability, and value. Its value depended on
three things. In the first place, it was scarce;
in the second, it was much in demand for the arts
and manufactures; and in the third place, its intrinsic
value was increased and stabilized by the needs and
demands of the mints.
Gold had similar qualifications, but
it was too scarce and too precious until the nineteenth
century, in the course of which (for reasons which
I need not enter upon here), most of the great commercial
nations adopted a gold standard. Copper possessed
in a less degree the qualifications of gold and silver,
but it was the first metal to be coined into money
in ancient Rome. The Roman as or pondo
weighed a Roman pound of good copper, therefore
possessed the two principal attributes of good money,
a definite weight and a definite fineness. It
was divided like our troy pound into twelve ounces
of good copper.
The English Troyes or Troy pound was
first used in the English mint in the time of Henry
the Eighth. Edward the First’s pound sterling
was a Tower pound of silver of a definite fineness.
Charlemagne’s livre was a Troyes pound
of silver of definite fineness. The old English
Scotch pence or pennies contained originally a real
pennyweight of silver, one twentieth of an ounce and
one two hundred and fortieth of a pound. The
famous pre-war English sovereign, now demonetized and
misrepresented by the depreciated paper pound, was
itself also a weight; but the twenty shillings and
two hundred and forty pence which exchanged for it
were token coins depending for their value upon the
gold sovereign.
From the time of Charlemagne among the
French, and from that of William the Conqueror
among the English [wrote Adam Smith in 1776], the
proportion between the pound, the shilling and the
penny, seems to have been uniformly the same as
at present, though the value of each has been
very different; for in every country of the world,
I believe, the avarice and injustice of princes
and sovereign states, abusing the confidence of
their subjects, have by degrees diminished the
real quantity of metal which had been originally contained
in their coins. The Roman as, in the latter ages
of the republic, was reduced to the twenty-fourth
part of its original value, and, instead of weighing
a pound, came to weigh only half an ounce.
The English pound and penny contain at present about
a third only; the Scots pound and penny about
a thirty-sixth; and the French pound and penny
about a sixty-sixth part of their original value.
By means of those operations, the princes and sovereign
states which performed them were enabled, in appearance,
to pay their debts and fulfil their engagements
with a smaller quantity of silver than would otherwise
have been requisite. It was indeed in appearance
only; for their creditors were really defrauded of
a part of what was due to them. All other
debtors in the state were allowed the same privilege,
and might pay with the same nominal sum of the
new and debased coin whatever they had borrowed in
the old. Such operations, therefore, have
always proved favourable to the debtor, and ruinous
to the creditor, and have sometimes produced a greater
and more universal revolution in the fortunes of private
persons, than could have been occasioned by a very
great public calamity.
John Stuart Mill follows his master
in exposing and denouncing what he calls this “least
covert of all forms of knavery which consists in calling
a shilling a pound.” But the opinions of
Mill, the saint of rationalism, deserve and demand
citation as they bring us directly to our subject.
He writes:
When gold and silver had become virtually
a medium of exchange, by becoming the things for
which people generally sold, and with which they
generally bought, whatever they had to sell or buy;
the contrivance of coining obviously suggested
itself. By this process the metal was divided
into convenient portions, of any degree of smallness,
and bearing a recognised proportion to one another;
and the trouble was saved of weighing and assaying
at every change of possessors, an inconvenience
which on the occasion of small purchases would
soon have become insupportable.
Governments found it their interest
to take the operation into their own hands, and
to interdict all coining by private persons; indeed,
their guarantee was often the only one which would
have been relied on, a reliance however which
very often it ill deserved; profligate governments
having until a very modern period seldom scrupled,
for the sake of robbing their creditors, to confer
on all other debtors a licence to rob theirs, by
the shallow and impudent artifice of lowering
the standard; that least covert of all modes of
knavery, which consists in calling a shilling a pound,
that a debt of a hundred pounds may be cancelled
by the payment of a hundred shillings. It
would have been as simple a plan, and would have
answered just as well, to have enacted that “a
hundred” should always be interpreted to
mean five, which would have effected the same
reduction in all pecuniary contracts, and would not
have been at all more shameless. Such strokes
of policy have not wholly ceased to be recommended,
but they have ceased to be practised, except occasionally
through the medium of paper money, in which case
the character of the transaction, from the greater
obscurity of the subject is a little less barefaced.
A few illustrations from the past
may help us to a critical contemplation of the present
monetary conditions on the continent of Europe, which
constitute fraud and robbery on the most wholesale
scale ever practised by governments (with the style
and title of democracies!) upon the miserable victims,
called citizens, and supposed to be endowed with the
blessings of self-determination.
Those who believe that war, if not
a divine institution, is at least an inevitable feature
of human society may plead in extenuation of this
species of fraud that it is usually the last desperate
resource of a government which has pledged all its
taxes and credit for war or armaments.
I remember reading in the Roman historian Sallust of a
financial crisis which was ended by debts contracted in silver being paid off in
copper argentum
aère solutum est.
A few years before Adam Smith wrote
his chapter on money, Frederick the Great, during
the Seven Years’ War, resorted to the Jew, Ephraim,
who coined tin silver:
Outside noble, inside slim,
Outside Frederick, inside
Ephraim.
But Frederick, wiser and more honest
than our European belligerents, made it his first
care after the peace to restore an honest silver coinage.
A lively example from English, or
rather Irish, history is supplied by Macaulay and
belongs to the year 1689. It is one of the incidents
in James the Second’s brief and luckless government
of Ireland:
It is remarkable that while the King
[James II] was losing the confidence and good
will of the Irish Commons by faintly defending against
them, in one quarter, the institution of property,
he was himself, in another quarter, attacking
that institution with a violence, if possible
more reckless than theirs.
He soon found that no money came into
his Exchequer. The cause was sufficiently
obvious. Trade was at an end. Floating capital
had been withdrawn in great masses from the island.
Of the fixed capital much had been destroyed,
and the rest was lying idle. Thousands of
those Protestants who were the most industrious and
intelligent part of the population had emigrated
to England. Thousands had taken refuge in
the places which still held out for William and
Mary. Of the Roman Catholic peasantry, who were
in the vigor of life, the majority had enlisted
in the army or had joined gangs of plunderers.
The poverty of the treasury was the necessary effect
of the poverty of the country: public prosperity
could be restored only by the restoration of private
prosperity; and private prosperity could be restored
only by years of peace and security. James
was absurd enough to imagine that there was a more
speedy and efficacious remedy. He could,
he conceived, at once extricate himself from his
financial difficulties by the simple process of calling
a farthing a shilling.
The right of coining was undoubtedly
a flower of the prerogative; and, in his view,
the right of coining included the right of debasing
the coin. Pots, pans, knockers of doors, pieces
of ordnance which had long been past use, were
carried to the mint. In a short time lumps
of base metal, nominally worth near a million sterling,
intrinsically worth about a sixtieth part of that sum,
were in circulation. A royal edict declared
these pieces to be legal tender in all cases whatsoever.
A mortgage for a thousand pounds was cleared off
by a bag of counters made out of old kettles.
The creditors who complained to the Court of Chancery
were told by Fitton to take their money and be
gone.
But of all classes, the tradesmen of
Dublin, who were generally Protestants, were the
greatest losers. At first, of course, they raised
their demands; but the magistrates of the city took
on themselves to meet this heretical inclination
by putting forth a tariff regulating prices.
Any man who belonged to the caste now dominant
might walk into a shop, lay on the counter a bit of
brass worth threepence, and carry off goods to
the value of half a guinea. Legal remedies
were out of the question. Indeed the sufferers
thought themselves happy if, by the sacrifice of their
stock in trade, they could redeem their limbs and
their lives. There was not a baker’s
shop in the city round which twenty or thirty
soldiers were not constantly prowling. Some persons
who refused the base money were arrested by troopers
and carried before the Provost Marshal, who cursed
them, swore at them, locked them up in dark cells,
and, by threatening to hang them at their own doors,
soon overcame their resistance. Of all the
plagues of that time none made a deeper or a more
lasting impression on the minds of the Protestants
of Dublin than the plague of brass money. To the
recollection of the confusion and misery which
had been produced by James’ coin must be
in part ascribed the strenuous opposition which,
thirty-five years later, large classes firmly attached
to the House of Hanover, offered to the government
of George the First in the affair of Woods’
Patent.
But paper money offers far more extensive
facilities to knavery than a metallic currency.
In his Essays on the Monetary History of the United
States, Mr. Charles J. Bullock has described
in sufficient detail the “carnival of fraud
and corruption” which attended the paper money
coined or rather printed by most of the American colonies
in the century preceding the American Revolution.
Thus, about the middle of the eighteenth century,
the paper money of Massachusetts fell to an eighth
of its original value. People were driven to barter,
and one writer observed that “the morals of
the people depreciate with the currency.”
Parties were divided into debtors and creditors, and
a New England writer in 1749 noted: “The
Debtor side has had the ascendant ever since anno
1741 to the almost utter ruin of the country." To
this writer belongs the credit of discerning, at a
time when even Benjamin Franklin was in error, that
“the repeated large emissions of Paper Money”
were responsible for its depreciation.
“Not worth a Continental”
is an expression which brings us to the next chapter
in American experience of inconvertible paper currencies.
The so-called Continental money was the means by which
the Continental Congress and the individual colonies too
timid to tax endeavored to finance the
Revolutionary War. By 1781, a paper dollar was
worth less than two cents in specie, and soon afterward
it became practically worthless. Robbery was legalized;
rogues flourished; and their frauds were encouraged
and protected by a government whose policy enabled
debtors to pay their debts in valueless money.
We hear of creditors running away from their debtors
and being paid off “without mercy.”
Stories were told of creditors in Rhode Island leaping
out of back windows to escape the attentions of their
debtors. In short, the law became an engine of
oppression and destroyed the fortunes of thousands
who had put their confidence in it. In the words
of Breck, a friendly critic, “... the old debts
were paid when the paper money was more than seventy
to one ... widows, orphans and others were paid for
money lent in specie with depreciated paper.”
sues at one fortieth of their pretended or
nominal value.
The astonishing thing is that all
this knavery was devised, or winked at, not only by
low class politicians but by statesmen of renown.
The maxim salus populi suprema lex was relied
upon not for the first or last time as a sufficient
excuse for a crime far more pernicious than that of
a private forger. But we have not yet realized,
in our minds or in our penal codes, that public vices
ought to be punished at least as vigorously as private
crimes.
That, even as a desperate last resort
for financing war, a flood of paper money defeats
its own object was conclusively proved a few years
later during the French Revolution. The French
assignats “have taken their place in history
as the classical example of paper money made worthless
by over-issue. After their final collapse in 1796,
French finance reverted perforce to a metallic basis.”
So Mr. Hawtrey, a British Treasury official, who has
given us recently a lucid and sufficiently detailed
account of this extraordinary incident extraordinary
but no longer singular, for the same course with the
same results has been pursued during and since the
war of 1914-1918 by Russia and Poland, and in a greater
or less degree by most of the European belligerents.
The issue of French assignats
began in 1789 because the assembly would not vote
adequate taxation, and Necker, the minister of finance,
was unable to borrow enough to cover the deficit.
In the two years from 1789 to 1791, the public revenue
was 470 millions, and the public expenditures, 1719
millions, of livres. The deficit was covered by
assignats, or paper livres, bearing interest,
in denominations varying from 1000 to 5 livres.
Thus the assignats may be regarded as a floating
debt currency. In November, 1791, the assignats
were worth 52 per cent of their face value. In
June, 1792, after the declaration of war on Austria,
they rose to 57. After the victory of Valmy, in
September, they rose to 72 and remained there till
December. In January, 1793, the king was guillotined,
and war was declared on England. By August, after
violent fluctuations, the assignat had fallen to 15
per cent of its face value. Thereafter the laws
enforcing the acceptance of assignats were strengthened.
It became an offence to sell coin, or
to differentiate between coin and assignats
in any transaction, or to refuse payment in assignats,
or to negotiate assignats at a discount.
By a decree of the 5th of September the death
penalty itself was imposed. Here was a forced
currency indeed.
For a few months an artificial improvement
was effected in the value of the assignat by these
ferocious measures; but in 1795, after the Terror,
the system and the paper money collapsed. The
gold and silver money, which had been hoarded, returned
to circulation. In June, 1795, the quotation
of the assignat oscillated violently. On one day
a louis of 24 livres would buy 450 paper livres,
on another, 1000. Paper notes which fluctuated
so violently were useless as money. They could
not serve either as a medium of exchange or as a measure
of value. Country people expressed their contempt
for the assignats by calling them l’argent
de Paris.
A new currency of mandats was
tried, into which assignats were made convertible.
It was a complete failure. The assignats
were wound up in 1796, and in February, 1797, there
was “a general demonetisation of paper money."
The holders got practically nothing. France returned
to hard cash, as Mexico has done recently. In
1918, when Mr. Hawtrey wrote, he was able to describe
the decline and full of the assignats as an ‘almost
unique’ instance of “the currency of a
great nation fading away into nothing.”
The Russian paper rouble has performed the same feat
since 1918. So has the Polish mark. And now
(December, 1921) the German paper mark is also fading
into nothingness. In Austria and in most of the
new states of Europe, the inconvertible paper legal
tender currency has lost almost the whole of its value,
in comparison with the pre-war coin which it pretends
to represent.
The real difference between the present
monetary conditions and the American continentals,
or the French assignats, is a difference not
of kind, but of degree and extent. The causes
and the consequences, the motives of those who work
the mint, the ruin and demoralization of the victims,
the effects upon public and private debts and credit
are the same. But a whole continent populated
by four hundred millions of people is concerned.
The commercial and moral fabric of European civilization
is tottering. Three years have passed since the
war ended; but the currencies and exchanges of Europe
are in a much worse condition than when peace was
being negotiated.
At the end of June, 1921, I walked
from my office in the Strand down to Messrs. Hands
& Co., who deal in foreign money at Charing Cross.
On the way I passed the shop of a tailor, who had
placarded on his shop window the announcement that
he would give a hundred thousand roubles to every
customer who bought a suit of clothes from him.
He added that at the pre-war rate of exchange the
one hundred thousand roubles would be worth ten thousand
pounds. He did not add that they were at that
time worth only two shillings. On arriving at
my destination, I asked to see specimens of the most
debased currencies and eventually laid out ten shillings,
or, to be exact, 9_s_/10_d_. Here is the bill:
| Ten German marks |
cost me one shilling |
| A hundred Austrian crowns |
cost me one and sixpence |
| A hundred Polish marks |
cost me sixpence |
| Twenty-five Russian (Czar)
|
cost me sixpence |
| Two Italian lire |
cost me eightpence |
| Two Greek drachmas |
cost me eightpence |
| Two Roumanian lei |
cost me sixpence |
| Five Yugoslav dinars |
cost me one shilling |
| Ten Czechoslovakian crowns |
cost me one shilling |
| Five Bulgarian levas |
cost me sixpence |
| Five Finnish marks |
cost me one shilling |
| Five Esthonian marks |
cost me one shilling |
| Five Latvian roubles |
cost me sixpence |
To show that my friend, the exchange
dealer, made a decent profit out of this retail transaction,
I quote some of his selling rates for the day on which
he based his charges:
| |
Rates of Exchange |
June 29, 1921 |
| Austrian paper crowns |
2400-2600 |
for 1 |
| Finnish marks |
220-240 |
for 1 |
| German marks |
265-275 |
for 1 |
| Polish marks |
6000 (selling rate) |
for 1 |
| Greek drachmas |
62-65 |
for 1 |
| Italian lire |
76-77 |
for 1 |
| Roumanian lei |
230-250 |
for 1 |
The last I heard from Vienna was that
they had been varying from ten thousand to fifteen
thousand to the paper pound!
The difference in the rates depended,
of course, upon whether the customer was buying or
selling the foreign money. If he was buying Austrian
notes, he would get twenty-four hundred paper crowns
for a pound. If he was selling them, he would
receive a pound in exchange for twenty-six hundred
paper crowns.
All these paper notes are called after,
and profess to represent, silver coins, which were
themselves before the war, tokens, and passed current
at more than their intrinsic value because of their
relation to gold.
Thus the pre-war parity of marks was
about twenty to the gold pound; of Austrian crowns,
about twenty-four; of francs, lire, etc., about
twenty-five. On the day of my purchase, therefore,
the exchange value of the German mark was less than
one thirteenth, of the Austrian crown less than one
one hundredth, and of the Polish mark, one two hundredth,
of its pre-war status. But this underestimates
the depreciation; for the British pound is no longer
a gold sovereign, and even gold has been depreciated.
The paper pound in June, 1921, was, I think, about
the equivalent of twelve pre-war shillings in purchasing
power. The gold dollar, which would only buy
a little more than four shillings before the war,
would buy five at the beginning of December, 1921.
Although an inconvertible paper currency
has no intrinsic value, it can (in accordance with
the quantity theory of money) be maintained at a fairly
stable ratio to gold or commodities by an honest government
if the total issue is fixed, or kept between reasonable
maximum and minimum limits. The rise of prices
since the war, in each country where reliable statistics
are available, has been in proportion to the expansion
of the paper currency, allowance being made for the
scarcity of commodities. Of course a decline
in purchasing power follows an expansion of
circulation. The stability of the British paper
pound since a limit was imposed illustrates the correctness
of the quantity theory of money. Its increase
in purchasing power (like that of the gold dollar)
during the first half of 1921 is, of course, due to
the fact that the supply of utilities had overtaken
the demand.
At first sight it seems difficult
to understand how any government, however bad, can
deliberately issue flood upon flood of inconvertible
paper money, seeing that its printing operations are
ruinous to both public and private credit. To
obtain the same amount of revenue, each new issue,
each new dose, has to be much larger than the preceding.
In the course of twelve months, for example, the exchange
value of the Polish mark was divided by ten, that
is, at the end of the period, ten times as much paper
money had to be printed as at the beginning, to get
the same revenue. Yet the Polish Government continued
upon its course with the approval and support of the
Polish Diet.
The following quotation is from the
Warsaw correspondent of the London Economist,
who wrote on July 28, 1921:
The effects of the last collapse of
the exchanges are beginning to make themselves
felt, and the Diet is already preparing fresh ground
for new currency inflation. By its last vote the
limit on the note circulation has been increased
to 118 milliards, and on the advances of
the Polish National Bank to the Government to 150
milliards.
The depreciation of the Polish mark
in June was followed by a rise of prices, and
this led immediately to a strike movement in almost
all industries. In the Lodz district 40,000
workmen have gone on strike, demanding a wage
increase of 120 per cent! The manufacturers
declare that they cannot raise wages by more than 20
per cent; that even under present conditions the
Polish textile industry is in a most difficult
position on the foreign markets, especially in
Roumania, the Baltic States, etc. Posnania
was menaced by an agrarian strike, but a settlement
has been reached. The strike of the municipal
workers in Warsaw was short-lived. Everywhere,
however, wages have been increased by more than 50
per cent. This naturally will entail a new
wave of rising prices, the Government will be
obliged to double the salaries of its officials, and
the printing press will work again under a higher pressure.
This is the vicious circle round which the country
has been travelling for three years.
Ex uno disce omnes. The monetary
policy of the Polish Government is merely a flagrant
example of the recent monetary history of all the
states of Europe northeast, southeast, east, of the
Rhine and of the Alps. There is only one real
remedy, the reestablishment of complete peace, disarmament,
the abolition of conscription, the drastic reduction
of bloated bureaucracies, and a wholesale lowering
of tariffs, which will allow the miserable and half-starved
populations to renew the arts of peace and the exchange
of their agricultural products and manufactures.
APPENDIX
THE BRUSSELS CONFERENCE
If all countries were included, a
general and proportionate reduction of the military
and naval establishments to one half of their present
cost would set free a fund of probably at least $3,000,000,000
to $4,000,000,000 annually for the purchase of food
and useful commodities, for the stabilization and
partial restoration of debased paper currencies, for
the payment of debt, the removal of public deficits,
the revival of credit, and the reduction of taxes.
Thus the road to recovery lies plain before us.
Will it be taken by the statesmen to whose hands the
peoples have intrusted their lives and fortunes?
DEFICITS THE RULE
In order to show that this view is
in conformity with the conclusions of experts, and
even of officials delegated for the purpose of examining
world finance by the governments themselves, I turn
to the conclusions unanimously arrived at by the Brussels
conference a year ago, after eighty-six financial
experts from thirty-nine countries had presented the
accounts and balance sheets of their respective governments.
In a general review of the situation they point out
that “the total external debt of the European
belligerents, converted into dollars at par, amounts
to about 155 milliard dollars, compared with about
17 milliard dollars in 1913.” They say that
the government expenditures of the European belligerents
amount to between 20 and 40 per cent of the total
incomes of the peoples. They say emphatically
that the restoration of real peace, with disarmament,
is “the first condition for the world’s
recovery.”
Four commissions were appointed.
The first dealt with public finance, and its resolutions
were adopted unanimously by the conference. The
following extract from its resolutions deserves attention:
Thirty-nine nations have in turn placed
before the International Financial Conference
a statement of their financial position. The
examination of these statements brings out the
extreme gravity of the general situation of public
finance throughout the world, and particularly
in Europe. Their import may be summed up in the
statement that three out of every four of the countries
represented at this conference and eleven out
of twelve of the European countries anticipate
a budget deficit in the present year. Public
opinion is largely responsible for this situation.
The close connection between these budget deficits
and the cost of living, which is causing such
suffering and unrest throughout the world, is far
from being grasped. Nearly every government is
being pressed to incur fresh expenditure; largely
on palliatives which aggravate the very evils
against which they are directed. The first step
is to bring public opinion in every country to
realize the essential facts of the situation and
particularly the need for reestablishing public
finances on a sound basis as a preliminary to the execution
of those social reforms which the world demands.
Public attention should be especially
drawn to the fact that the reduction of prices
and the restoration of prosperity is dependent on
the increase of production, and that the continual
excess of government expenditure over revenue
represented by budget deficits is one of the most
serious obstacles to such increase of production,
as it must sooner or later involve the following consequences:
(a) A further inflation
of credit and currency.
(b) A further depreciation
in the purchasing power of the
domestic currency, and a still
greater instability of the foreign
exchanges.
(c) A further rise
in prices and in the cost of living.
The country which accepts the policy
of budget deficits is treading the slippery path
which leads to general ruin; to escape from that path
no sacrifice is too great. It is therefore imperative
that every government should, as the first social
and financial reform, on which all others depend:
(a) Restrict its ordinary
recurrent expenditure, including the
service of the debt, to such
an amount as can be covered by its
ordinary revenue.
(b) Rigidly reduce
all expenditure on armaments in so far as such
reduction is compatible with
the preservation of national security.
(c) Abandon all unproductive
extraordinary expenditure.
(d) Restrict even productive
extraordinary expenditure to the
lowest possible amount.
The Supreme Council of the Allied Powers
in its pronouncement on the eighth of March declared
that “armies should everywhere be reduced
to a peace footing; that armaments should be limited
to the lowest possible figure compatible with
national security and that the League of Nations
should be invited to consider, as soon as possible,
proposals to this end.”
The statements presented to the conference
show that, on an average, some 20 per cent of
the national expenditure is still being devoted
to the maintenance of armaments and the preparations
for war. The conference desires to affirm
with the utmost emphasis that the world cannot
afford this expenditure. Only by a frank policy
of mutual cooperation can the nations hope to regain
their old prosperity, and in order to secure that
result, the whole resources of each country must
be devoted to strictly productive purposes.
The conference accordingly recommends
most earnestly to the Council of the League of
Nations the desirability of conferring at once with
the several governments concerned, with a view to securing
a general and agreed reduction of the crushing
burdens which on their existing scale armaments
still impose on the impoverished peoples of the
world, sapping their resource and imperiling their
recovery from the ravages of war. The conference
hopes that the Assembly of the League, which is
about to meet, will take energetic action to this
end.
The above recommendations were ignored
by the League of Nations and by practically all the
governments concerned. Consequently the debts
and deficits of most European countries are larger
at the present time than they were a year ago, and
most of the paper currencies have depreciated some
very heavily during the last twelve months.
THE DANGERS OF INFLATION
I turn next to the resolutions proposed
by the second commission which had to examine problems
of currency and foreign exchange.
From its resolutions, which also were
adopted unanimously by the conference, I extract the
following:
The currencies of all belligerent and
of many other countries, though in greatly varying
degrees, have since the beginning of the war been
expanded artificially, regardless of the usual restraints
upon such expansion to which we refer
later and without any corresponding
increase in the real wealth upon which their purchasing
power was based; indeed in most cases in spite of a
serious reduction in such wealth.
It should be clearly understood that
this artificial and unrestrained expansion, or
inflation, as it is called, of the currency or
of the titles to immediate purchasing power does not
and cannot add to the total real purchasing power
in existence, so that its effect must be to reduce
the purchasing power of each unit of the currency.
It is in fact a form of debasing the currency.
The effect of it has been to intensify,
in terms of the inflated currencies, the general
rise in prices, so that a greater amount of such
currency is needed to procure the accustomed supply
of goods and services. Where this additional
currency was procured by further inflation that
is, by printing more paper money or creating fresh
credit there arose what has been called
a vicious spiral of constantly rising prices and
wages and constantly increasing inflation, with
the resulting disorganization of all business,
dislocation of the exchanges, a progressive increase
in the cost of living, and consequent labor unrest.
It is of the utmost importance that
the growth of inflation should be stopped; and
this, although no doubt very difficult to do immediately
in some countries, could quickly be accomplished by
abstaining from increasing the currency in
its broadest sense, as defined above and
by increasing the real wealth upon which such currency
is based.
The cessation of increase in the currency
should not be achieved merely by restricting the
issue of legal tender. Such a step, if unaccompanied
by other measures, would be apt to aggravate the situation
by causing a monetary crisis. It is necessary
to attack the causes which lead to the necessity
for the additional currency.
The chief cause in most countries is
that the governments, finding themselves unable
to meet their expenditures out of revenue, have been
tempted to resort to the artificial creation of fresh
purchasing power, either by the direct issue of
additional legal-tender money or more frequently
by obtaining especially from the banks
of issue, which in some cases are unable and in others
unwilling to refuse them credits which
must themselves be satisfied in legal-tender money.
We say, therefore, that governments must limit
their expenditure to their revenue.
Here again we have excellent doctrines
and good practical advice from these financial experts
to the governments which appointed them. But
the doctrines have remained unapplied, and the advice
has been honored in the breach instead of in the observance.
WISE COUNSEL IGNORED
I pass next to the resolutions proposed
by the commission on international trade and adopted
unanimously by the conference, from which the first
two paragraphs will be quoted:
The International Financial Conference
affirms that the first condition for the resumption
of international trade is the restoration of real
peace, the conclusion of the wars which are still
being waged and the assured maintenance of peace for
the future. The continuance of the atmosphere
of war and of preparations for war is fatal to
the development of that mutual trust which is
essential to the resumption of normal trading relations.
The security of internal conditions is scarcely less
important, as foreign trade cannot prosper in a
country whose internal conditions do not inspire
confidence. The conference trusts that the
League of Nations will lose no opportunity to secure
the full restoration and continued maintenance of peace.
The International Financial Conference
affirms that the improvement of the financial
position largely depends on the general restoration
as soon as possible of good will between the various
nations; and in particular it indorses the declaration
of the Supreme Council of the eighth March last
“that the States which have been created
or enlarged as a result of the war should at once
reestablish full and friendly cooperation and arrange
for the unrestricted interchange of commodities
in order that the essential unity of European
economic life may not be impaired by the erection
of artificial economic barriers.”
Here again there is a full recognition
of the fact that peace is necessary to the renewal
of prosperity, and that the atmosphere of war preparations
is fatal to the growth of trade. But neither the
League of Nations nor the Supreme Council, so far
as I am aware, has made any effective response to
these appeals.
Fourthly and lastly, I come to the
commission on international credits. This commission
passed a number of resolutions, all of which were
adopted unanimously by the conference; but it will
suffice to cite the first two:
The conference recognizes in the first
place that the difficulties which at present lie
in the way of international credit operations arise
almost exclusively out of the disturbance caused by
the war, and that the normal working of financial
markets cannot be completely reestablished unless
peaceful relations are restored between all peoples
and the outstanding financial questions resulting
from the war are made the subject of a definite settlement
which is put into execution.
The conference is, moreover, of opinion
that the revival of credit requires as primary
conditions the restoration of order in public finance,
the cessation of inflation, the purging of currencies,
and the freedom of commercial transactions.
The resolutions of the commission on international
credits are therefore based on the resolutions
of the other commissions.
My argument then is fully endorsed
by the experts at Brussels. All the facts and
figures set forth in the voluminous records of that
remarkable conference indicate the urgency of peace
and disarmament. A year has passed.
The Brussels recommendations have
been ignored, and conditions in Europe as regards
its currencies, debts, trade and credit have deteriorated.
The Naval limitations proposed by Mr. Hughes at Washington,
even if they are ratified, will give practically no
relief to Europe.