THE BORSODI CONSTANT AN INFLATION-FREE CURRENCY
Dr. Ralph Borsodi (see the Plowboy Interview in MOTHER NO.
26) is chiefly famous for his successful experiments in
self-sufficient living. There's another side to the man,
however, that is of increasing importance in this time of
runaway prices: his long-term interest in inflation, its
causes and cures.
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To be downright blunt about it, Borsodi does not believe
that a steadily shrinking dollar (or yen or mark or franc
or whatever) is quite the "accident" that politicians
usually make it out to be. Quite the contrary. In his view,
governments cynically and stupidly debase the purchasing
power of their currencies on purpose by printing
too much paper money. Why? Because modern politicians and
the economists who advise them are—in the
main—rather weak-willed animals who lack either the
power or the fortitude to run a country on a strictly
pay-as-we-go basis.
"It wasn't always this way," Borsodi points out. "During
most of the last century, the majority of economists
preferred gold and silver or currencies that were solidly
backed—unit for unit—by such real wealth. The
prevailing doctrine among those economists was that the
worst possible kind of money was 'printing press' money . .
. currency backed by nothing except the word of the
government which issued it. They called this fiat
money. They didn't have much regard for it.
"All right. Along came John Maynard Keynes. He was a very
influential economist in England from about 1915 to 1946
and he invented the idea that we can insure prosperity by
'controlled inflation'.
"Keynes' theory, you see, is that a government can steadily
expand a country's economy, even during periods of what
would otherwise be a recession or depression, by pumping a
little 'extra' money—a little printing press
currency—into circulation.
"Now Keynes knew that this would dilute the purchasing
power of every unit of money already in circulation. If you
have more units of money trying to buy the same amount of
goods and services, you know, prices inevitably go up. You
have inflation.
"Keynes was willing to accept this debasement of currency,
however, because he thought that a government could inflate
its currency just a little bit and just once. Then, as the
Good Times began to roll in that country once more, the
government could stop pumping the extra units of money into
the nation's economy.
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