PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION
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The outward guise assumed by the questions with which banking and
currency policy is concerned changes from month to month and from year to year.
Amid this flux, the theoretical apparatus which enables us to deal with these
questions remains unaltered. In fact, the value of economics lies in its
enabling us to recognize the true significance of problems, divested of their
accidental trimmings. No very deep knowledge of economics is usually needed for
grasping the immediate effects of a measure; but the task of economics is to
foretell the remoter effects, and so to allow us to avoid such acts as attempt
to remedy a present ill by sowing the seeds of a much greater ill for the
future.
Ten years have elapsed since the second German edition of the
present book was published. During this period the external appearance of the
currency and banking problems of the world has completely altered. But closer
examination reveals that the same fundamental issues are being contested now as
then. Then, England was on the way to raising the gold-value of the pound once
more to its pre-war level. It was overlooked that prices and wages had adapted
themselves to the lower value and that the reestablishment of the pound at the
prewar parity was bound to lead to a fall in prices which would make the
position of the entrepreneur more difficult and so increase the disproportion
between actual wages and the wages that would have been paid in a free market.
Of course, there were some reasons for attempting to reestablish the old parity,
even despite the indubitable drawbacks of such a proceeding. The decision should
have been made after due consideration of the pros and cons of such a policy.
The fact that the step was taken without the public having been sufficiently
informed beforehand of its inevitable drawbacks, extraordinarily strengthened
the opposition to the gold standard. And yet the evils that were complained of
were not due to the resumption of the gold standard, as such, but solely to the
gold value of the pound having been stabilized at a higher level than
corresponded to the level of prices and wages in the United Kingdom.
From
1926 to 1929 the attention of the world was chiefly focused upon the question of
American prosperity. As in all previous booms brought about by expansion of
credit, it was then believed that the prosperity would last forever, and the
warnings of the economists were disregarded. The turn of the tide in 1929 and
the subsequent severe economic crisis were not a surprise for economists; they
had foreseen them, even if they had not been able to predict the exact date of
their occurrence.
The remarkable thing in the present situation is not the
fact that we have just passed through a period of credit expansion that has been
followed by a period of depression, but the way in which governments have been
and are reacting to these circumstances. The universal endeavor has been made,
in the midst of the general fall of prices, to ward off the fall in money wages,
and to employ public resources on the one hand to bolster up undertakings that
would otherwise have succumbed to the crisis, and on the other hand to give an
artificial stimulus to economic life by public works schemes. This has had the
consequence of eliminating just those forces which in previous times of
depression have eventually effected the adjustment of prices and wages to the
existing circumstances and so paved the way for recovery. The unwelcome truth
has been ignored that stabilization of wages must mean increasing unemployment
and the perpetuation of the disproportion between prices and costs and between
outputs and sales which is the symptom of a crisis.
This attitude was
dictated by purely political considerations. Gov ernments did not want to cause
unrest among the masses of their wage-earning subjects. They did not dare to
oppose the doctrine that regards high wages as the most important economic ideal
and believes that trade-union policy and government intervention can maintain
the level of wages during a period of falling prices. And governments have
therefore done everything to lessen or remove entirely the pressure exerted by
circumstances upon the level of wages. In order to prevent the underbidding of
trade-union wages, they have given unemployment benefits to the growing masses
of those out of work and they have prevented the central banks from raising the
rate of interest and restricting credit and so giving free play to the purging
process of the crisis.
When governments do not feel strong enough to
procure by taxation or borrowing the resources to meet what they regard as
irreducible expenditure, or, alternatively, so to restrict their expenditure
that they are able to make do with the revenue that they have, recourse on their
part to the issue of inconvertible notes and a consequent fall in the value of
money are something that has occurred more than once in European and American
history. But the motive for recent experiments in depreciation has been by no
means fiscal. The gold content of the monetary unit has been reduced in order to
maintain the domestic wage level and price level, and in order to secure
advantages for home industry against its competitors in international trade.
Demands for such action are no new thing either in Europe or in America. But in
all previous cases, with a few significant exceptions, those who have made these
demands have not had the power to secure their fulfillment. In this case,
however, Great Britain began by abandoning the old gold content of the pound.
Instead of preserving its gold value by employing the customary and
never-failing remedy of raising the bank rate, the government and parliament of
the United Kingdom, with bank rate at four and one-half percent, preferred to
stop the redemption of notes at the old legal parity and so to cause a
considerable fall in the value of sterling. The object was to prevent a further
fall of prices in England and above all, apparently, to avoid a situation in
which reductions of wages would be necessary.
The example of Great Britain
was followed by other countries, notably by the United States. President
Roosevelt reduced the gold content of the dollar because he wished to prevent a
fall in wages and to restore the price level of the prosperous period between
1926 and 1929.
In central Europe, the first country to follow Great
Britain's example was the Republic of Czechoslovakia. In the years immediately
after the war, Czechoslovakia, for reasons of prestige, had heedlessly followed
a policy which aimed at raising the value of the krone, and she did not come to
a halt until she was forced to recognize that increasing the value of her
currency meant hindering the exportation of her products, facilitating the
importation of foreign products, and seriously imperiling the solvency of all
those enterprises that had procured a more or less considerable portion of their
working capital by way of bank credit. During the first few weeks of the present
year, however, the gold parity of the krone was reduced in order to lighten the
burden of the debtor enterprises, and in order to prevent a fall of wages and
prices and so to encourage exportation and restrict importation. Today, in every
country in the world, no question is so eagerly debated as that of whether the
purchasing power of the monetary unit shall be maintained or reduced.
It
is true that the universal assertion is that all that is wanted is the reduction
of purchasing power to its previous level, or even the prevention of a rise
above its present level. But if this is all that is wanted, it is very difficult
to see why the 1926-29 level should always be aimed at, and not, say, that of
1913.
If it should be thought that index numbers offer us an instrument
for providing currency policy with a solid foundation and making it independent
of the changing economic programs of governments and political parties, perhaps
I may be permitted to refer to what I have said in the present work on the
impossibility of singling out any particular method of calculating index numbers
as the sole scientifically correct one and calling all the others scientifically
wrong. There are many ways of calculating purchasing power by means of index
numbers, and every single one of them is right, from certain tenable points of
view; but every single one of them is also wrong, from just as many equally
tenable points of view. Since each method of calculation will yield results that
are different from those of every other method, and since each result, if it is
made the basis of prac tical measures, will further certain interests and injure
others, it is obvious that each group of persons will declare for those methods
that will best serve its own interests. At the very moment when the manipulation
of purchasing power is declared to be a legitimate concern of currency policy,
the question of the level at which this purchasing power is to be fixed will
attain the highest political significance. Under the gold standard, the
determination of the value of money is dependent upon the profitability of gold
production. To some, this may appear a disadvantage; and it is certain that it
introduces an incalculable factor into economic activity. Nevertheless, it does
not lay the prices of commodities open to violent and sudden changes from the
monetary side. The biggest variations in the value of money that we have
experienced during the last century have originated not in the circumstances of
gold production, but in the policies of governments and banks-of-issue.
Dependence of the value of money on the production of gold does at least mean
its independence of the politics of the hour The dissociation of the currencies
from a definitive and unchangeable gold parity has made the value of money a
plaything of politics. Today we see considerations of the value of money driving
all other considerations into the background in both domestic and international
economic policy. We are not very far now from a state of affairs in which
"economic policy" is primarily understood to mean the question of influencing
the purchasing power of money. Are we to maintain the present gold content of
the currency unit, or are we to go over to a lower gold content? That is the
question that forms the principal issue nowadays in the economic policies of all
European and American countries. Perhaps we are already in the midst of a race
to reduce the gold content of the currency unit with the object of obtaining
transitory advantages (which, moreover, are based on self-deception) in the
commercial war which the nations of the civilized world have been waging for
decades with increasing acrimony, and with disastrous effects upon the welfare
of their subjects.
It is an unsatisfactory designation of this state of
affairs to call it an emancipation from gold. None of the countries that have
"abandoned the gold standard" during the last few years has been able to affect
the significance of gold as a medium of exchange either at home or in the world
at large. What has occurred has not been a departure from gold, but a departure
from the old legal gold parity of the currency unit and, above all, a reduction
of the burden of the debtor at the cost of the creditor, even though the
principal aim of the measures may have been to secure the greatest possible
stability of nominal wages, and sometimes of prices also.
Besides the
countries that have debased the gold value of their currencies for the reasons
described, there is another group of countries that refuse to acknowledge the
depreciation of their money in terms of gold that has followed upon an excessive
expansion of the domestic note circulation, and maintain the fiction that their
currency units still possess their legal gold value, or at least a gold value in
excess of its real level. In order to support this fiction they have issued
foreign-exchange regulations which usually require exporters to sell foreign
exchange at its legal gold value, that is, at a considerable loss. The fact that
the amount of foreign money that is sold to the central banks in such
circumstances is greatly diminished can hardly require further elucidation. In
this way a "shortage of foreign exchange" ('Devisennot') arises in these
countries. Foreign exchange is in fact unobtainable at the prescribed price, and
the central bank is debarred from recourse to the illicit market in which
foreign exchange is dealt in at its proper price because it refuses to pay this
price. This "shortage" is then made the excuse for talk about transfer
difficulties and for prohibitions of interest and amortization payments to
foreign countries. And this has practically brought international credit to a
standstill. Interest and amortization are paid on old debts either very
unsatisfactorily or not at all, and, as might be expected, new international
credit transactions hardly continue to be a subject of serious consideration. We
are no longer far removed from a situation in which it will be impossible to
lend money abroad because the principle has gradually become accepted that any
government is justified in forbidding debt payments to foreign countries at any
time on grounds of "foreign-exchange policy." The real meaning of this
foreign-exchange policy is exhaustively discussed in the present book. Here let
it merely be pointed out that this policy has much more seriously injured
international economic relations during the last three years than protectionism
did during the whole of the preceding fifty or sixty years, the measures that
were taken during the world war included. This throttling of international
credit can hardly be remedied otherwise than by setting aside the principle that
it lies within the discretion of every government, by invoking the shortage of
foreign exchange that has been caused by its own actions, to stop paying
interest to foreign countries and also to prohibit interest and amortization
payments on the part of its subjects. The only way in which this can be achieved
will be by removing international credit transactions from the influence of
national legislatures and creating a special international code for it,
guaranteed and really enforced by the League of Nations. Unless these conditions
are created, the granting of new international credit will hardly be possible.
Since all nations have an equal interest in the restoration of international
credit, it may probably be expected that attempts will be made in this direction
during the next few years, provided that Europe does not sink any lower through
war and revolution. But the monetary system that will constitute the foundation
of such future agreements must necessarily be one that is based upon gold. Gold
is not an ideal basis for a monetary system. Like all human creations, the gold
standard is not free from shortcomings; but in the existing circumstances there
is no other way of emancipating the monetary system from the changing influences
of party politics and government interference, either in the present or, so far
as can be foreseen, in the future. And no monetary system that is not free from
these influences will be able to form the basis of credit transactions. Those
who blame the gold standard should not forget that it was the gold standard that
enabled the civilization of the nineteenth century to spread beyond the old
capitalistic countries of Western Europe, and made the wealth of these countries
available for the development of the rest of the world. The savings of the few
advanced capitalistic countries of a small part of Europe have called into being
the modern productive equipment of the whole world. If the debtor countries
refuse to pay their existing debts, they certainly ameliorate their immediate
situation. But it is very questionable whether they do not at the same time
greatly damage their future prospects. It consequently seems misleading in
discussions of the currency question to talk of an opposition between the
interests of creditor and debtor nations, of those which are well supplied with
capital and those which are ill supplied. It is the interests of the poorer
countries, who are dependent upon the importation of foreign capital for
developing their productive resources, that make the throttling of international
credit seem so extremely dangerous.
The dislocation of the monetary and
credit system that is nowadays going on everywhere is not due—the fact cannot be
repeated too often—to any inadequacy of the gold standard. The thing for which
the monetary system of our time is chiefly blamed, the fall in prices during the
last five years, is not the fault of the gold standard, but the inevitable and
ineluctable consequence of the expansion of credit, which was bound to lead
eventually to a collapse. And the thing which is chiefly advocated as a remedy
is nothing but another expansion of credit, such as certainly might lead to a
transitory boom, but would be bound to end in a correspondingly severer
crisis.
The difficulties of the monetary and credit system are only a part
of the great economic difficulties under which the world is at present
suffering. It is not only the monetary and credit system that is out of gear,
but the whole economic system. For years past, the economic policy of all
countries has been in conflict with the principles on which the nineteenth
century built up the welfare of the nations. International division of labor is
now regarded as an evil, and there is a demand for a return to the autarky of
remote antiquity. Every importation of foreign goods is heralded as a
misfortune, to be averted at all costs. With prodigious ardour, mighty political
parties proclaim the gospel that peace on earth is undesirable and that war
alone means progress. They do not content themselves with describing war as a
reasonable form of international intercourse, but recommend the employment of
force of arms for the suppression of opponents even in the solution of questions
of domestic politics. Whereas liberal economic policy took pains to avoid
putting obstacles in the way of developments that allotted every branch of
production to the locality in which it secured the greatest productivity to
labor, nowadays the endeavor to establish enterprises in places where the
conditions of production are unfavorable is regarded as a patriotic action that
deserves government support. To demand of the monetary and credit system that it
should do away with the consequences of such perverse economic policy, is to
demand something that is a little unfair.
All proposals that aim to do
away with the consequences of perverse economic and financial policy, merely by
reforming the monetary and banking system, are fundamentally misconceived. Money
is nothing but a medium of exchange and it completely fulfills its function when
the exchange of goods and services is carried on more easily with its help than
would be possible by means of barter. Attempts to carry out economic reforms
from the monetary side can never amount to anything but an artificial
stimulation of economic activity by an expansion of the circulation, and this,
as must constantly be emphasized, must necessarily lead to crisis and
depression. Recurring economic crises are nothing but the consequence of
attempts, despite all the teachings of experience and all the warnings of the
economists, to stimulate economic activity by means of additional
credit.
This point of view is sometimes called the "orthodox" because it
is related to the doctrines of the Classical economists who are Great Britain's
imperishable glory; and it is contrasted with the "modern" point of view which
is expressed in doctrines that correspond to the ideas of the Mercantilists of
the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. I cannot believe that there is really
anything to be ashamed of in orthodoxy. The important thing is not whether a
doctrine is orthodox or the latest fashion, but whether it is true or false. And
although the conclusion to which my investigations lead, that expansion of
credit cannot form a substitute for capital, may well be a conclusion that some
may find uncomfortable, yet I do not believe that any logical disproof of it can
be brought forward.
LUDWIG VON MISES
Vienna
June 1934
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