THE ROLE OF THE NATIONAL FINANCIAL SYSTEM
The following material is not particularly important to a thorough
understanding of Henry Ford’s business and management system, but it
is noteworthy that Ford published it about seven years before the 1929
162 • The Expanded and Annotated My Life and Work
stock market crash. Fluctuation and, even worse, speculation on currency
exchange rates leads to dysfunctional effects that are totally unrelated to
the creation of actual wealth.
* * *
Now, let me say at once that my objection to bankers has nothing to do with
personalities. I am not against bankers as such. We stand very much in need
of thoughtful men, skilled in finance. The world cannot go on without bank-
ing facilities. We have to have money. We have to have credit. Otherwise
the fruits of production could not be exchanged. We have to have capital.
Without it there could be no production. But whether we have based our
banking and our credit on the right foundation is quite another matter.
It is no part of my thought to attack our financial system. I am not in
the position of one who has been beaten by the system and wants revenge. It
does not make the least difference to me personally what bankers do because
we have been able to manage our affairs without outside financial aid. My
inquiry is prompted by no personal motive whatsoever. I only want to know
whether the greatest good is being rendered to the greatest number.
No financial system is good which favors one class of producers over
another. We want to discover whether it is not possible to take away power
which is not based on wealth creation. Any sort of class legislation is perni-
cious. I think that the country’s production has become so changed in its
methods that gold is not the best medium with which it may be measured,
and that the gold standard as a control of credit gives, as it is now (and I
believe inevitably) administered, class advantage. The ultimate check on
credit is the amount of gold in the country, regardless of the amount of wealth
in the country.
I am not prepared to dogmatize on the subject of money or credit. As
far as money and credit are concerned, no one as yet knows enough about
them to dogmatize. The whole question will have to be settled as all other
questions of real importance have to be settled, and that is by cautious,
well-founded experiment. And I am not inclined to go beyond cautious
experiments. We have to proceed step by step and very carefully. The ques-
tion is not political, it is economic, and I am perfectly certain that help-
ing the people to think on the question is wholly advantageous. They will
not act without adequate knowledge, and thus cause disaster, if a sincere
effort is made to provide them with knowledge. The money question has
first place in multitudes of minds of all degrees or power. But a glance at
most of the cure-all systems shows how contradictory they are. The major-
ity of them make the assumption of honesty among mankind, to begin
with, and that, of course, is a prime defect. Even our present system would
work splendidly if all men were honest. As a matter of fact, the whole
Money: Master or Servant? • 163
money question is 95 per cent human nature; and your successful system
must check human nature, not depend upon it.
The people are thinking about the money question; and if the money mas-
ters have any information which they think the people ought to have to pre-
vent them going astray, now is the time to give it. The days are fast slipping
away when the fear of credit curtailment will avail, or when wordy slogans
will affright. The people are naturally conservative. They are more conserva-
tive than the financiers. Those who believe that the people are so easily led
that they would permit printing presses to run off money like milk tickets do
not understand them. It is the innate conservation of the people that has kept
our money good in spite of the fantastic tricks which the financiers play—and
which they cover up with high technical terms.
The people are on the side of sound money. They are so unalterably on the
side of sound money that it is a serious question how they would regard the
system under which they live, if they once knew what the initiated can do
with it.
The present money system is not going to be changed by speech-making or
political sensationalism or economic experiment. It is going to change under
the pressure of conditions—conditions that we cannot control and pressure
that we cannot control. These conditions are now with us; that pressure is
now upon us.
The people must be helped to think naturally about money. They must be
told what it is, and what makes it money, and what are the possible tricks of
the present system which put nations and peoples under control of the few.
Money, after all, is extremely simple. It is a part of our transportation
system. It is a simple and direct method of conveying goods from one person
to another. Money is in itself most admirable. It is essential. It is not intrinsi-
cally evil. It is one of the most useful devices in social life. And when it does
what it was intended to do, it is all help and no hindrance.
But money should always be money. A foot is always twelve inches, but
when is a dollar a dollar? If ton weights changed in the coal yard, and peck
measures changed in the grocery, and yard sticks were to-day 42 inches and
to-morrow 33 inches (by some occult process called “exchange”) the people
would mighty soon remedy that. When a dollar is not always a dollar, when
the 100-cent dollar becomes the 65-cent dollar, and then the 50-cent dollar,
and then the 47-cent dollar, as the good old American gold and silver dollars
did, what is the use of yelling about “cheap money,” “depreciated money”? A
dollar that stays 100 cents is as necessary as a pound that stays 16 ounces and
a yard that stays 36 inches.
The bankers who do straight banking should regard themselves as natu-
rally the first men to probe and understand our monetary system—instead
of being content with the mastery of local banking-house methods; and if
164 • The Expanded and Annotated My Life and Work
they would deprive the gamblers in bank balances of the name of “banker”
and oust them once for all from the place of influence which that name gives
them, banking would be restored and established as the public service it
ought to be, and the iniquities of the present monetary system and financial
devices would be lifted from the shoulders of the people.
There is an “if” here, of course. But it is not insurmountable. Affairs
are coming to a jam as it is, and if those who possess technical facility do
not engage to remedy the case, those who lack that facility may attempt
it. Nothing is more foolish than for any class to assume that progress is an
attack upon it. Progress is only a call made upon it to lend its experience for
the general advancement. It is only those who are unwise who will attempt to
obstruct progress and thereby become its victims. All of us are here together,
all of us must go forward together; it is perfectly silly for any man or class
to take umbrage at the stirring of progress. If financiers feel that progress is
only the restlessness of weak-minded persons, if they regard all suggestions
of betterment as a personal slap, then they are taking the part which proves
more than anything else could their unfitness to continue in their leadership.
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