Definition: Currency is the document of money, which is the right to acquire an indeterminate good in commerce.
Law: To raise the quantity of currency does not raise the quantity of money.
To raise the quantity of currency does not raise the quantity of money, but it may seem to raise it. The quantity of buyable goods will remain the same whether the quantity of currency diminishes or rises. There is no sense in a nation raising its supply of currency to get richer. Currency is just the relative measure by which one changes one's actual good by the faculty of buying another one in the future. A nation which has a great amount of gold in its treasury but whose global production is lower than other with lesser gold will fool itself if it considers itself richer. Considering that both nations ignore each other commercially, a small amount of gold on the second buys many more goods than in the first.
Normally, the currency has an insignificant value by itself. This is relatively true of gold, as the tragic fable of Midas shows, true of paper notes or of the number written on your bank account. But why, among these three, is gold the most reliable material for currency? Because it is the one that opposes more resistance to its increase of supply. Quantity of gold does not augment in two seconds. Gold should first be extracted from a mine still unexplored. To print paper money is easier and to write a number on your bank account even easier. Gold frustates the issuer of money when he wants to increase the supply of currency.
......
Money is the wealth of which one forgoes to obtain a medium of exchange, fungible because portable and durable. It is the unpayable credit the commerciant assumes so he can exchange in an easier way his goods. It is the agreement between the military-political and the entrepreneur castes.
A difference between credit and money is that the former can only be charged from the issuer, and the latter can be opposed against any commerciant.
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário