not in the short run. We examine the short-run
impact of changes in the
quantity of money when we turn to economic fluctuations in Part Four of
this book.
■
4-3
Seigniorage: The Revenue
from Printing Money
So far, we have seen how growth in the money supply causes inflation. With
inflation as a consequence, what would ever induce a central bank to increase the
money supply substantially? Here we examine one answer to this question.
Let’s start with an indisputable fact: all governments spend money. Some of
this spending is to buy goods and services (such as roads and police), and some
is to provide transfer payments (for the poor and elderly, for example). A gov-
ernment can finance its spending in three ways. First, it can raise revenue through
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P A R T I I
Classical Theory:
The Economy in the Long Run
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