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- From: Dale McMillen <dmcmillen@igc.apc.org>
- Newsgroups: alt.politics.greens
- Date: 20 Jan 93 07:02 PST
- Subject: Re: THE MONEY SUPPLY AND CURRENCIES
- Sender: Notesfile to Usenet Gateway <notes@igc.apc.org>
- Message-ID: <1678600143@igc.apc.org>
- References: <1678600108@igc.apc.org>
- Nf-ID: #R:cdp:1678600108:cdp:1678600143:000:1846
- Nf-From: cdp.UUCP!dmcmillen Jan 20 07:02:00 1993
- Lines: 39
-
-
- > Inflation is a political decision, it is not a per se consequence
- > of a monetary economy - you can also have deflation.
- > Historically, it has usually been farmers (as opposed to rentiers)
- > who have pushed for inflationary policies (eg the Free Silver
- > movement in US in 1890's; cf Bryan's "Cross of Gold" speech).
-
- Presumably you are referring to farmers who were trying to have
- a liveable lifestyle while trading with a centralized currency
- over which they had little control. Naturally, this would lead
- to inflationary tendencies. The suggestion is that these farmers
- would be better off if they traded in a currency which was directly
- tied to their labor and ability to feed and house themselves, rather
- than a currency that was tied to the interests of the wealthy
- industrialists on the east or the federal government whose interest
- was westward and world expansion.
-
- Your concerns about inflation are actually not relevant to this type
- of economy. If the currency were tied directly to the farmers labor,
- then 40 hours of work per week would be worth the same number of bags
- of rice, items of clothing, or boards for housing whether or not the
- Time Dollar (for instance) was denominated in hours, minutes or seconds
- or portions thereof.
-
- Lastly, isn't your example about farmers desiring inflation only
- considering the experience of Euro-American farmers in the last
- 100 years? Was inflation a desired policy for the colonial farmers,
- European farmers, or indigenous farming cultures?
-
- > Cash or barter has no effect on life-styles. In both cases, you
- > must produce surplus goods/services for exchange. The problem
- > for self-sufficient life-styles is that they are usually not
- > very good at producing sufficiency much less surpluses.
-
- The definition of a self-sufficient life-style is one that produces
- sufficiency.
-
- Dale
-
-