The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Value of Money
Title: The Value of Money
Author: Benjamin M. Anderson
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Language: English
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HARVARD COLLEGE
LIBRARY
FROM THE
QUARTERLY JOURNAL
OF ECONOMICS
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
NEW YORK · BOSTON · CHICAGO · DALLAS
ATLANTA · SAN FRANCISCO
MACMILLAN & CO., Limited
LONDON · BOMBAY · CALCUTTA
MELBOURNE
THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, Ltd.
TORONTO
THE
VALUE OF MONEY
BY
B. M. ANDERSON, JR., Ph. D.
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF ECONOMICS, HARVARD UNIVERSITY
AUTHOR OF "SOCIAL VALUE"
New York
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
1917
All rights reserved
Copyright, 1917
By THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
Set up and electrotyped. Published May, 1917.
To
B. M. A., III
AND
J. C. A.
WHO OFTEN INTERRUPTED THE WORK
BUT NONE THE LESS INSPIRED IT
PREFACE
The following pages have as their central problem the value of money. But the value of money cannot be studied successfully as an isolated problem, and in order to reach conclusions upon this topic, it has been necessary to consider virtually the whole range of economic theory; the general theory of value; the rôle of money in economic theory and the functions of money in economic life; the theory of the values of stocks and bonds, of "good will," established trade connections, trade-marks, and other "intangibles"; the theory of credit; the causes governing the volume of trade, and particularly the place of speculation in the volume of trade; the relation of "static" economic theory to "dynamic" economic theory.
"Dynamic economics" is concerned with change and readjustment in economic life. A distinctive doctrine of the present book is that the great bulk of exchanging grows out of dynamic change, and that speculation, in particular, constitutes by far the major part of all trade. From this it follows that the main work of money and credit, as instruments of exchange, is done in the process of dynamic readjustment, and, consequently, that the theory of money and credit must be a dynamic theory. It follows, further, that a theory like the "quantity theory of money," which rests in the notions of "static equilibrium" and "normal adjustment," abstracting from the "transitional process of readjustment," touches the real problems of money and credit not at all.
This thesis has seemed to require statistical verification, and the effort has been made to measure the elements in trade, to assign proportions for retail trade and for wholesale trade, to obtain indicia of the extent and variation of speculation in securities, grain, and other things on the organized exchanges, and to indicate something of the extent of less organized speculation running through the whole of business. The ratio of foreign to domestic trade has been studied, for the years, 1890-1916.
The effort has also been made to determine the magnitudes of banking transactions, and the relation of banking transactions to the volume of trade. The conclusion has been reached that the overwhelming bulk of banking transactions occur in connection with speculation. The effort has been made to interpret bank clearings, both in New York and in the country outside, with a view to determining quantitatively the major factors that give rise to them.
In general, the inductive study would show that modern business and banking centre about the stock market to a much greater degree than most students have recognized. The analysis of banking assets would go to show that the main function of modern bank credit is in the direct or indirect financing of corporate and unincorporated industry. "Commercial paper" is no longer the chief banking asset.
It is not concluded from this, however, that commerce in the ordinary sense is being robbed by modern tendencies of its proper banking accommodation, or that the banks are engaged in dangerous practices. On the contrary it is maintained that the ability of the banks to aid ordinary commerce is increased by the intimate connection of the banks with the stock market. The thesis is advanced—though with a recognition of the political difficulties involved—that the Federal Reserve Banks should not be forbidden to rediscount loans on stock exchange collateral, if they are to perform their best services for the country.
The quantity theory of money is examined in detail, in various formulations, and the conclusion is reached that the quantity theory is utterly invalid.
The theory of value set forth in Chapter I, and presupposed in the positive argument of the book, is that first set forth in an earlier book by the present writer, Social Value, published in 1911. That book grew out of earlier studies in the theory of money, in the course of which the writer reached the conclusion that the problem of money could not be solved until an adequate general theory of value should be developed. The present book thus represents investigations which run through a good many years, and to which the major part of the past six years has been given. On the basis of this general theory of value, and a dynamic theory of money and exchange, our positive conclusions regarding the value of money are reached. On the same basis, a psychological theory of credit is developed, in which the laws of credit are assimilated to the general laws of value.
In a final section, the constructive theory of the book is made the basis for a "reconciliation" of "statics" and "dynamics" in economic theory—an effort to bring together the abstract theory of price (i. e., "statics") which has hitherto chiefly busied economists, and the more realistic studies of economic change (i. e. "dynamics") to which a smaller number of economists have given their attention. These two bodies of doctrine have hitherto had little connection, and the science of economics has suffered as a consequence.
This book was not written with the college student primarily in mind. None the less, I incline to the view that the book, with the exception of the chapter on "Marginal Utility," is suitable for use as a text with juniors and seniors in money and banking, if supplemented by some general descriptive and historical book on the subject, and that the whole book may very well be used with such students in advanced courses in economic theory. I think that bankers, brokers, and other business men who are interested in the general problems of money, trade, speculation and credit, will find the book of use. Naturally, however, it is my hope that the special student of money and banking, and the special student of economic theory will find the book of interest. The book may interest also certain students of philosophy and sociology, who are concerned with the applications of philosophy and social philosophy to concrete problems.
My obligations to others, running through a good many years, are very great. With Professor E. E. Agger, I talked over very many of the problems here discussed, in the course of two years of close association at Columbia University, and gained very much from his suggestions and criticisms. Professor E. R. A. Seligman has read portions of the manuscript, and given valuable advice. Professor H. J. Davenport has given the first draft an exceedingly careful reading, and his criticisms have been especially helpful. Professor Jesse E. Pope supervised my investigations in the quantity theory of money in 1904-5, in his seminar at the University of Missouri, and gave me invaluable guidance in the general theory of money and credit then. More recently, his intimate first hand knowledge of European and American conditions, both in agricultural credit and in general banking, has been of great service to me. Mr. N. J. Silberling, of the Department of Economics at Harvard University, has been helpful in various ways, particularly by making certain statistical investigations, to which reference will be made in the text, at my request. Various bankers, brokers, and others closely in touch with the subjects here discussed have been more than generous in supplying needed information. Among these may be especially mentioned Mr. Byron W. Holt, of New York, Mr. Osmund Phillips, Editor of the Annalist and Financial Editor of the New York Times, Messrs. L. H. Parkhurst and W. B. Donham, of the Old Colony Trust Company in Boston, various gentlemen in the offices of Charles Head & Co., and Pearmain and Brooks, in Boston, Mr. B. F. Smith, of the Cambridge Trust Company, Mr. W. H. Aborn, Coffee Broker, New York, Mr. Burton Thompson, Real Estate Broker, New York, Mr. Jas. H. Taylor, Treasurer of the New York Coffee Exchange, Mr. J. C. T. Merrill, Secretary of the Chicago Board of Trade, DeCoppet and Doremus, New York, and Mr. F. I. Kent, Vice President of the Bankers Trust Company, New York. My greatest obligations are to two colleagues at Harvard University. Professor F. W. Taussig has given the manuscript very careful consideration, from the standpoint of style as well as of doctrine, and has discussed many problems with me in detail. Professor O. M. W. Sprague has placed freely at my service his rich store of practical knowledge of virtually every phase of modern money and banking, and has read critically every page of the manuscript. None of these gentlemen, of course, is to be held responsible for my mistakes. I also make grateful acknowledgment of the aid and sympathy of my wife.
In the course of the discussion, frequent criticisms are directed against the doctrines of Professors E. W. Kemmerer and Irving Fisher, particularly the latter, as the chief representatives of the present day formulation of the quantity theory. Both their theories and their statistics are fundamentally criticised. I find myself in radical dissent on all the main theses of Professor Fisher's Purchasing Power of Money, and at very many points of detail. To a less degree, I find myself unable to concur with Professor Kemmerer. But I should be sorry if the reader should feel that I fail to recognize the distinguished services which both of these writers have performed for the scientific study of money and banking, or should feel that dissent precludes admiration. I acknowledge my own indebtedness to both, not alone for the gain which comes from having an opposing view clearly defined and ably presented, but also for much information and many new ideas. My general doctrinal obligations in the theory of money and credit are far too numerous to mention in a preface. My greatest debt in general economic theory is to Professor J. B. Clark.
B. M. Anderson, Jr.
Harvard University, March 31, 1917.
ANALYTICAL TABLE OF CONTENTS
PART I. THE VALUE OF MONEY AND THE GENERAL THEORY OF VALUE
| CHAPTER I ECONOMIC VALUE | |
|---|---|
| PAGE | |
| Problem of value of money special case of general theory of value; present chapter concerned with general theory | 1 |
| Formal and logical aspects of value: value as quality; value as quantity; value and wealth | 5-6 |
| Absolute vs. relative conceptions of value: value of money vs. "reciprocal of price-level"; value prior to exchange; value and exchangeability; do prices correctly express values? | 6-12 |
| Doctrine so far in accord with main current of economic opinion | 12-14 |
| Causal theory of value new: marginal utility, labor theory, etc., rejected | 14-16 |
| Social explanation required: "individual" a social product, both in history of individual and in history of race | 16-19 |
| And above individual impersonal psychic forces, law, public opinion, morality, economic values | 19-20 |
| Three types of theory have dealt with these: theory of extra-human objective forces; extreme individualism; social value theory | 20-21 |
| Illustrated in jurisprudence, ethics, and economic theory | 21-26 |
| Law, morals, and economic values generically alike, but have differentiæ | 26-28 |
| But not differentiated on basis of states of consciousness of individual immediately moved by them, because many minds in organic interplay involved | 28-33 |
| Economic social value (a) of consumers' goods and services: "utility" and scarcity; "marginal utility"; social explanation of marginal utility; marginal utilities the conscious focus of economic values of consumers' goods; but only minor part of these values; individuals, classes and institutions heavily weighted by legal, moral, and other social values, in power over economic values of consumers' goods | 33-38 |
| Economic social value (b) of labor, land, stocks, bonds, "good will," etc.; based only in part on values of consumers' goods; partially independent, directly influenced by contagion, and centers of power and prestige | 38-41 |
| Pragmatic character of theory | 41-43 |
| Relation of social values to individual values | 43-45 |
| CHAPTER II SUPPLY AND DEMAND, AND THE VALUE OF MONEY | |
| Hiatus between general theory of value and theory of value of money | 46-47 |
| Partly because former has been developed by different writers from those who have developed latter | 47-49 |
| But chiefly because supply and demand, cost of production, etc., assume fixed value of money, and are theories of price, rather than value | 49 |
| Supply and demand useful but superficial formula, common property of many value theories | 49-50 |
| Crude and unanalyzed in Smith and Ricardo; first made precise by J. S. Mill, who gives essentials of modern doctrine | 49-51 |
| Böhm-Bawerk's pseudo-psychology spoils Mill's clean-cut doctrine | 51-52 |
| Supply and demand assumes fixed value of money-unit, and hence inapplicable to money itself | 52-56 |
| But supply and demand does not assume fixed price-level | 56-57 |
| Cairnes vs. Mill | 57-58 |
| Mill's unsuccessful effort to apply supply and demand to money | 59-62 |
| Walker's attempt | 62 |
| Supply and demand in the "money market" | 62-63 |
| CHAPTER III COST OF PRODUCTION AND THE VALUE OF MONEY | |
| Types of cost theory: modern cost doctrine is "money costs" doctrine, and inapplicable to value of money | 64 |
| Labor cost: Smith; Ricardo; Ricardo's confession of failure; "real costs" in Senior and Cairnes; Mill's "money-outlay" cost doctrine, and Cairnes' criticism; but "money-cost" has survived | 64-67 |
| Because "real cost" doctrine does not square with facts | 67-69 |
| "Money-cost" of producing money-metal | 69-70 |
| Austrian cost doctrine runs still in money terms, assuming value, money, and fixed value of money | 70-71 |
| "Negative social values" as "real costs" | note, 71 |
| CHAPTER IV THE CAPITALIZATION THEORY AND THE VALUE OF MONEY | |
| Money as "capital good," and "money-rates" as rentals | 72-73 |
| Capitalization theory; formula; capital value passive resultant of annual income and rate of discount | 73-74 |
| But in case of money, rental and rate of discount not independent variables | 74-76 |
| And in case of money, capital value not passive shadow, but active cause of income | 76 |
| Capitalization theory assumes money, and fixed value of money | 76-77 |
| Assumed fixed value of money absolute, and not relative | 77-78 |
| Capitalization theory, in current formulation, inapplicable to value of money | 78-79 |
| CHAPTER V MARGINAL UTILITY AND THE VALUE OF MONEY | |
| Marginal utility theory usually thinly disguised version of supply and demand, and hence inapplicable to money | 80 |
| View that money is unique in having no utility per se | 81-83 |
| Marginal utility and "commodity theory" of money-value | 81-82 |
| Quantity theorists and marginal utility of money | 81-82 |
| Money an instrumental good, and marginal utility no less applicable here than elsewhere; marginal utility invalid as general theory of value, hence invalid when applied to money | 82-120 |
| Wieser's theory of value of money | 83-88 |
| A circle in reasoning | 88-90 |
| Schumpeter's similar circle | 100 |
| But Schumpeter's general utility theory, though inapplicable to value of money, in form avoids a causal circle | 90-98 |
| Schumpeter's conspectus; different from Böhm-Bawerk and most utility theorists | 90-92, 113-120 |
| Defects and limitations of Schumpeter's general theory | 90-98 |
| Schumpeter's substitutes for social value concept | 98-99 |
| Von Mises sees circle of Wieser and Schumpeter | 100 |
| Seeks to avoid it by construing utility theory as historical, instead of static, theory | 101 |
| But this departs from fundamentals of utility theory; other difficulties | 101-110 |
| Kinley's doctrine | 110-111 |
| General criticism of utility theory | 111-115 |
| Davenport, Wicksteed, Fisher, Perry | 113-120 |
PART II. THE QUANTITY THEORY
| CHAPTER VI THE QUANTITY THEORY OF PRICES. INTRODUCTION | |
|---|---|
| Preliminary statement of quantity theory, and of critical theses to be developed in following chapters. Virtually every contention and every assumption of quantity theory to be challenged | 123-129 |
| CHAPTER VII DODO-BONES | |
| Quantity theory doctrine that valueless objects can serve as money; Nicholson's assumption: money made of dodo-bones | 130-131 |
| Fisher's view also | 130 |
| And Ricardo's | 131-132 |
| Will dodo-bones circulate? Dodo-bones and poker chips; circular reasoning | 132 |
| Both medium of exchange and standard of value must be valuable | 133 |
| Is inconvertible paper an exception? | 133-134 |
| Doctrine that money gives legal claim to things in general | 134 |
| Kemmerer's assumptions; money made of commodity, once valuable, now used only as money | 135 |
| Commodity theory requires present commodity value | 135 |
| Historical vs. cross-section view: possibility that such money would circulate | 135-136 |
| Value not tied up with marginal utility or commodities: social value theory; derived values often become independent of original presuppositions, in economic as well as legal and moral spheres | 136-139 |
| But this no basis for quantity theory: social psychology, not mechanics | 139 |
| "Banker's psychology" vs. psychology of blind habit: India, Austria, United States; monetary phenomena of war times; "credit theory" of Greenbacks | 139-142 |
| Question-begging definitions | 142-143 |
| Assumptions of quantity theory: blind habit and fluid prices | 143-144 |
| Extreme commodity theory denies that money-use adds to value of money; usually not true; analysis of money-functions | 144-150 |
| Hypothetical case in which whole value of money comes from commodity value | 150-152 |
| Money must have value apart from monetary employments, but, in general, gains additional value from employment as money | 152-153 |
| CHAPTER VIII THE "EQUATION OF EXCHANGE" | |
| Fisher leading, most consistent, most uncompromising quantity theorist: wide acceptance of his views | 154 |
| Taussig vs. Fisher | 155 |
| Fisher and dodo-bone doctrine: logical part of quantity theory; Fisher's value concept | 155-156 |
| "Equation of exchange": analysis of Fisher's version, typical of all | 156-171 |
| In what sense equality between two sides of equation? Meaning of "T" | 158-161 |
| No "goods side" to equation; both sides sums of money; equal because identical; equation meaningless | 161-162 |
| All factors in equation highly abstract | 162-163 |
| "P" and "T" cannot both be given independent definitions: P defined as weighted average, with T in denominator; and must be changed from year to year, as elements in T change, even though no prices change | 164-166 |
| This makes circular theory: problem defined in terms of explanation | 165-166 |
| Causal theory associated with equation of exchange | 166 |
| Equation amplified to include credit; not acceptable to Nicholson or Walker, and caricature of conditions in Germany and France | 166-170 |
| Book-credit, bills of exchange, etc., excluded | 167-170 |
| Why a one-year period? | 170-171 |
| CHAPTER IX THE VOLUME OF MONEY AND THE VOLUME OF CREDIT | |
| Mill thought credit acts on prices like money, and that this reduces quantity theory tendency to indeterminate degree; Fisher holds volume of money in circulation governs volume of credit, so that quantity theory stands | 172 |
| Fisher's arguments for fixed ratio, money to bank-deposits | 172-173 |
| Argument a non-sequitur, even if contentions true | 173-177 |
| Contentions untrue: no fixed ratio between reserves and deposits, or reserves and demand liabilities, either in America or Europe | 177-182 |
| Taussig's views; virtually surrender of quantity theory in modern conditions | 182-185 |
| Bulk of quantity theorists in between Fisher and Taussig, but nearer to Fisher's view than to Taussig's | 185 |
| CHAPTER X "NORMAL" VS. "TRANSITIONAL" TENDENCIES | |
| Quantity theory qualified by distinction between "normal" and "transitional" effects of change in quantity of money, etc. | 186 |
| Meaning of distinction, and extent of qualification hard to determine: is "normal period" real period in time? How long is "transitional period"? Is it realistic, or hypothetical? Is equation of exchange realistic? Concrete vs. hypothetical price-levels | 186-189 |
| Legitimate and illegitimate abstraction | 189-190 |
| Causation and temporal order | 190-191 |
| Fisher admits very slight qualification of "normal theory" | 192 |
| Mill's quantity theory "short run" theory; Taussig's "long run" theory; radically different logic in the two | 192-193 |
| Fisher's theory sometimes "long run" and sometimes "short run" | 194-195 |
| CHAPTER XI BARTER | |
| Quantity theory spoiled if resort to barter possible and important | 196 |
| Extent of barter and other flexible substitutes for money and bank-credit; simple barter; different methods of corporate consolidations; flexibility, with state of money-market; clearing-house arrangements in speculative exchanges; offsetting book-credits | 197-200 |
| Barter made easier under money economy, by measure of value function of money | 201 |
| Bills of exchange; foreign trade | 201 |
| CHAPTER XII VELOCITY OF CIRCULATION | |
| Velocity conceived by quantity theory as causal entity, independent of quantity of money and prices; necessary assumption for law of proportionality | 203 |
| "Coin-transfer" vs. "person-turnover" concepts | 203-204 |
| Velocity really non-essential by-product, meaningless average | 204-205 |
| Doctrine that velocity independent of money; habit and convenience; hoarding; hoarding by banks | 205-209 |
| Velocity and volume of trade; vary together | 209-214 |
| Value of money causally governs velocity | 214-215 |
| CHAPTER XIII THE VOLUME OF MONEY AND THE VOLUME OF TRADE—TRADE AND SPECULATION | |
| Quantity theory doctrine that volume of trade, and volume of money (and credit), are independent; trade governed by physical and technical conditions, not money | 216-219 |
| View that quantity of money vitally affects production and trade | 219 |
| Walker, Sombart, Withers, Price, Holt | 219-222 |
| Increase of money increases trade, even on static theory: increase of money increase of capital; lowered margin in exchanges; money-rates and interest; money tool of exchange; elasticity of demand for money-service; in Arizona and New York City | 222-225 |
| Trade distinguished from production and from stock | 225-226 |
| Trade chiefly speculation; Fisher's $387,000,000,000 of trade in U. S. in 1909 analyzed; index of variation in trade; figure based on Kinley's returns from 12,000 banks; double-counting | 227-230 |
| Figure largely represents speculation; statistics of total wealth of U. S.; small rôle of wholesale and retail deposits; "all other deposits" bunched in speculative centers, especially New York; trifling "deposits" in country banks; evidence of bank-clearings: clearings and stock speculation; clearings and ordinary business | 230-241 |
| Measurement of "ordinary trade" | 241-248 |
| Volume of stock speculation | 248-251 |
| Commodity speculation | 251-252 |
| Unorganized speculation | 252-254 |
| Bill and note speculation | 255 |
| Fisher's and Kemmerer's indicia of trade variation wholly misleading | 255-257 |
| Production waits on trade; selling costs vs. "cost of production"; "good will"; are banks useless? | 257-262 |
| "Normal vs. transitional": statics vs. dynamics; money and credit make static assumptions possible; very little trade in "normal equilibrium" or static state; volume of trade depends on transitions and dynamic changes; functional theory of money and credit must be dynamic theory; abstraction from money by static theory; no static theory of money and credit possible; quantity theory misses whole point of money-functions | 262-266 |
| APPENDIX TO CHAPTER XIII THE RELATION OF FOREIGN TO DOMESTIC TRADE IN THE UNITED STATES | |
| Ambiguity of "domestic trade": figures comparable with export and import figures cannot include turnovers; net income of United States, minus imports on retail basis, counted as domestic trade; exports on retail basis counted as foreign trade; net income for 1910; index of variation for other years; cautions and qualifications; ratio of foreign to domestic trade, 1890-1916 | 267-278 |
| CHAPTER XIV THE VOLUME OF TRADE AND THE VOLUME OF MONEY AND CREDIT | |
| Interdependence of trade, and money (and credit); increasing trade causes increase of money and credit | 279-281 |
| Quantity theory doctrine: Fisher vs. Laughlin | 281-282 |
| Quantity theory has no explanation of elastic bank credit: "Currency Theory" of deposits | 282-285 |
| Loans and deposits | 285-288 |
| Bills of exchange | 288-290 |
| Summary of quantity theory doctrine | 290-291 |
| CHAPTER XV THE QUANTITY THEORY: THE "PASSIVENESS OF PRICES" | |
| Heart of quantity theory: price-level cannot change without prior change in money, deposits, trade, or velocities: independently rising price-level, unable to alter trade or velocities, would drive money away, and so be unable to sustain itself; individual prices can rise independently, but other prices must fall to compensate | 292-295 |
| Criticism: argument impressive only because it assumes an uncaused rise in general price-level; when causes assigned, prices can independently rise, compelling modification in other factors in "equation of exchange"; "transitional" and "normal" effects: instances | 295-299 |
| Quantity theory conflicts with supply and demand: supply and demand holds good: particular prices and price-level | 299-300 |
| Generalization of conflict to include cost of production, capitalization theory, imputation theory | 300 |
| Capitalization theory vs. quantity theory; different psychological assumptions of the two theories | 300-306 |
| Cost of production vs. quantity theory; money-income vs. quantity of money | 306-308 |
| Quantity theory false, granting all its assumptions | 308-310 |
| Doctrine that price-level independent of particular prices, and presupposed by them, false; absolute value of money, not price-level, presupposed; price-level may change with value of money constant, through changes in absolute values of goods | 310-314 |
| CHAPTER XVI THE QUANTITY THEORY AND INTERNATIONAL GOLD MOVEMENTS | |
| Quantity theory holds that gold movements depend on price-levels; but price-level mere average, cause of nothing | 315-316 |
| Some prices, rising, tend to repel gold, but most prices have no such effect | 316-317 |
| Some prices, rising, bring in gold | 317-319 |
| Gold movements and money-rates | 319-320 |
| CHAPTER XVII | |
| THE QUANTITY THEORY vs. GRESHAM'S LAW | 321-323 |
| CHAPTER XVIII THE QUANTITY THEORY AND "WORLD PRICES" | |
| Types of quantity theory: world's volume of gold vs. quantity of money in given country; standard vs. token money; abandonment of dodo-bone theory and "equation of exchange" | 324-326 |
| Credit does not rest on money: measure of values vs. reserves; loans and wealth; value of money vs. price-level | 326-328 |
| Loose relation of reserves and credit in world as whole; no proportionality of quantity of gold to value of gold; no quantity theory needed to assert that value of gold related to its quantity | 328-330 |
| CHAPTER XIX STATISTICAL DEMONSTRATIONS OF THE QUANTITY THEORY—THE REDISCOVERY OF A BURIED CITY | |
| Criticism of quantity theory statistics yields constructive conclusions; Mitchell and Greenbacks; Kemmerer's and Fisher's statistics of "equation of exchange"; Kemmerer's criticism of earlier statistics | 331-335 |
| Kemmerer's and Fisher's figures all wrong except for volume of money and deposits, and prices in base year; if correct, would not prove quantity theory | 335-337 |
| Fisher's statistics, resting on Kemmerer's, chiefly studied: their relation to Kinley's "deposits" figures | 337-338 |
| M´V´ calculated: errors in calculation; New York very incomplete in Kinley's figures; private banks and trust companies; clearings and "deposits," in New York and outside; "total transactions" and clearings; Fisher exaggerates country checks by at least 116 billions, for 1909; major part of all "check deposits" in New York City | 348-353 |
| New York as "clearing house" for United States: extent of, and influence of on New York clearings, much overestimated; bulk of New York clearings and New York "deposits" grow out of New York business | 353-361 |
| Index of variation for M´V´ wrongly weighted; V´ wrongly calculated for all years; which upsets calculation of V | 361-363 |
| Volume of trade: greatly exaggerated by bank transactions, which include vast deal of duplications in checks, loans and repayments, etc. | 363-368 |
| Fisher's reply; undercounting offsets overcounting | 368-369 |
| Main items of undercounting in clearing houses of speculative exchanges; measurement of, in New York Stock Exchange, and Chicago Board of Trade; swamped by call loan transactions, which exceed security sales | 369-381 |
| Price-indexes of Kemmerer and Fisher, dominated by wholesale prices, have no relevance to their "equations of exchange" | 381-383 |
| In general, their figures bury speculation and New York City | 383 |