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2 - SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES OF CHANGES IN THE VALUE OF MONEY (1923)

from II - INFLATION AND DEFLATION

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2012

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Summary

A shortened version of the first chapter of A Tract on Monetary Reform (1923), ‘The Consequences to Society of Changes in the Value of Money’. Much of the material of this chapter originally appeared as an article published under the same title in the Manchester Guardian Commercial Supplement, Reconstruction in Europe, No. v, 27 July 1922.

Money is only important for what it will procure. Thus a change in the monetary unit, which is uniform in its operation and affects all transactions equally, has no consequences. If, by a change in the established standard of value, a man received and owned twice as much money as he did before in payment for all rights and for all efforts, and if he also paid out twice as much money for all acquisitions and for all satisfactions, he would be wholly unaffected.

It follows, therefore, that a change in the value of money, that is to say in the level of prices, is important to society only in so far as its incidence is unequal. Such changes have produced in the past, and are producing now, the vastest social consequences, because, as we all know, when the value of money changes, it does not change equally for all persons or for all purposes. A man's receipts and his outgoings are not all modified in one uniform proportion. Thus a change in prices and rewards, as measured in money, generally affects different classes unequally, transfers wealth from one to another, bestows affluence here and embarrassment there, and redistributes Fortune's favours so as to frustrate design and disappoint expectation.

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Publisher: Royal Economic Society
Print publication year: 1978

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