177
The actual charge suggested by Gesell was 1 per mil. per week, equivalent to 5.2 per cent per
annum. This would be too high in existing conditions, but the correct figure, which would have to
be changed from time to time, could only be reached by trial and error.
The idea behind stamped money is sound. It is, indeed, possible that means might be found to apply
it in practice on a modest scale. But there are many difficulties which Gesell did not face. In
particular, he was unaware that money was not unique in having a liquidity-premium attached to it,
but differed only in degree from many other articles, deriving its importance from having a
greater
liquidity-premium than any other article. Thus if currency notes were to be deprived of their
liquidity-premium by the stamping system, a long series of substitutes would step into their shoes—
bank-money, debts at call, foreign money, jewellery and the precious metals generally, and so forth.
As I have mentioned above, there have been times when it was probably the craving for the
ownership of land, independently of its yield, which served to keep up the rate of interest;—though
under Gesell's system this possibility would have been eliminated by land nationalisation.
VII
The theories which we have examined above are directed, in substance, to the constituent of
effective demand which depends on the sufficiency of the inducement to invest. It is no new thing,
however, to ascribe the evils of unemployment to the insufficiency of the other constituent, namely,
the insufficiency of the propensity to consume. But this alternative explanation of the economic
evils of the day—equally unpopular with the classical economists—played a much smaller part in
sixteenth- and seventeenth-century thinking and has only gathered force in comparatively recent
times.
Though complaints of under-consumption were a very subsidiary aspect of mercantilist thought,
Professor Heckscher quotes a number of examples of what he calls 'the deep-rooted belief in the
utility of luxury and the evil of thrift. Thrift, in fact, was regarded as the cause of unemployment,
and for two reasons: in the first place, because real income was believed to diminish by the amount
of money which did not enter into exchange, and secondly, because saving was believed to
withdraw money from circulation.' In 1598 Laffemas (
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: