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Inflation
Chart Shows New Causes
(Continued from Page 9)
The accompanying chart throws a
revealing light on this new cause of in-
flation. The statistics from which this
chart was prepared are all from Federal
government sources. There is nothing
new on this chart except that related
facts are brought together so that any
one can see not only that they are re-
lated, but also how closely they are
related.
There are on this chart three major
significant graphs showing the trends,
respectively, from 1939 down to the
early part of this year, of "Average
Hourly Factory Wage Rates"; "Con-
2. Our government's deficit spendings
over a long period of years has not
merely increased the public debt, the
payments of interest and of principal,
but has also had the effect, to some ex-
tent, of shaking the confidence of the
people in the government's securities. A
firm policy of a balanced budget, a pay-
as-you-go fiscal plan, would promptly
correct this lack of confidence in the
government's obligations.
3. Credit, particularly bank credit, has
been over-extended for speculative rather
than for productive purposes. This has
also added greatly to the money supply
of the country. The U. S. Treasury De-
partment's policy of forcing the Federal
Reserve System and its member banks
to purchase bonds, which are, in turn,
used as legal reserves against which bank
credits may be extended on the average
of five or six times, is, of course, highly
inflationary. The government's method
of getting funds by unloading its bonds
on the banks has made the banks, even
against their better judgment, advocates
and agencies of further inflation. The
sale of government bonds to banks
should be sharply restricted and the
extension of credits by banks except for
purposes of defense production and for
purposes of increasing civilian produc-
tivity should be checked.
4. The farm parity price system con-
tributes to inflation. Farmers can not be
blamed for seeking parity prices if the
outlook is for more inflation. Parity
prices assure farmers increasing dollar
revenues as the prices of the goods they
buy rise. In the meantime, the costs and
the prices of the products that farmers
sell continue to rise. This is inflation and
needs to be stopped.
5. Wage increases unaccompanied by
increases in productivity constitute a
very substantial cause of inflation.
Most students of inflation have con-
sidered only modifications of govern-
mental fiscal and monetary policies, as
remedies, just as if these corrections
would be all that is needed. Sound fiscal
and monetary policies are certainly es-
sential, but in this inflation they will not
prove sufficient. There is a new factor in
the present inflation that was not a part
of former inflations, namely, excessive
increases in money wages unaccom-
panied by increases in productivity.
Monetary and fiscal policies have little
or nothing to do with this cause of infla-
tion. Other specific remedies must be
found and applied to stop this overflow
of money in the form of unearned, un-
economic and unsound wage rates.
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW, SEPTEMBER, 1951
sumers' Prices"; and "Actual Factory
Output per Man-Hour".
The information presented in the
graphs showing the trends of "Average
Hourly Factory Wage", and of "Con-
sumers' Prices", come directly from the
statistics compiled and published by the
Bureau of Labor Statistics. The graph
showing the trends of "Actual Factory
Output Per Man-Hour" is computed
from the Index of Factory Production
compiled by the Federal Reserve Board.
In the preparation of these graphs all
figures have been computed to begin
with the average of 1939—100. All three
graphs are considered as starting to-
gether at the same level in 1939. By this
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