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Hi Wallace
Thank you for your detailed and comprehensive analysis of the present position.
What you have said clarifies several anamolies that I perceived in the present
system, and explains to me why inflation per se is not a good thing for the
economy. It also clarifies something I have suspected for some time. From what
you say it appears that inflation is one direct consequence of our
present mismanaged economy, and that, no matter what the "orthodox" economists
do, it will remain a bogey to haunt them while the present system persists.
Inflation is a consequence of ever increasing indeptedness. I like the analogy
to the treadmill. Correct me if I am wrong, for my interpretation of your
discourse implies that nothing our present economic managers can do will
reverse the inflationary trend if they continue to follow present economic
theories. The system itself demands inflation to continue to operate. I am
putting your notes into a special file to peruse at my leisure because I am sure
there is much more I can gain from your observations. Incidently you views
coincide very closely with my good friend John Rawson of whom I believe you are
acquainted. His critique of my ideas followed the same line. I am also gratified
to realise that you confirm for me the principle that Social Credit is a radical
departure from " orthodox" economic theory, and, as such, is incompatible with
the present approach to economic management. However it wasn't until now that I
realised how radical. I can also understand now why the banking system is so vehemently opposed to it. Thank you for your
help.
regards
Bill McGunnigle
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, November 28, 2007 11:02
PM
Subject: Re: [socialcredit] Re: Request
for William B. Ryan
Hello Bill McGunnigle,
You have asked for my views on inflation. I consider it to be a
violation of the natural law of cost as Douglas defined the latter--and
therefore a violation of natural law, as such. Inflation is properly
regarded as a financial information indicator of economic inefficiency and is
a continuous and increasing misrepresentation and denial of the historical
progress of the industrial arts, derived from the "Unearned Increment of
Association" and the "Cultural Heritage" as described by C. H. Douglas, in
terms of its stupendous advances in process efficiency achieved by the
augmenting of limited human efficiency with--so far as we know--the unlimited
efficiency of advancing refinements of technological process, that is, the
ability to derive increasing units of physical output with decreasing units of
physical input. While old debts may become easier to liquidate for the
borrower consequent to inflation of prices and payment of larger incomes, this
is a "losing game" because the manner in which the current price-system
operates in conjunction with the banking or credit system requires that even
more debt is required to carry on the processes of production and consumption
because prices generated are increasingly greater than financial incomes to
liquidate them. Society is on a financial treadmill upon which it must
run ever faster while slipping backward as the treadmill is being continuously
raised to a steeper angle. While often advantageous to speculators, a
continuous rise in prices is ruinous to those on fixed incomes and drives them
into financial privation. It makes planning by individuals, businesses,
institutions and governments an uncertain and hazardous enterprise.
Social Credit aims to establish economic security for all persons--so,
as Douglas put it, they can sit under their own fig tree unafraid.
Inflation derives from debt and acceptance of debt is acceptance of
something which from a personal standpoint is immoral. If I take from
another person's substance how can I guarantee with certainty that I will be
able to restore that substance to its original owner? Of course, under
the present system any attempt to restrict the creation of credit (namely,
debt) will diminish monetary demand, making it impossible for consumers to
purchase past production and, thereby, restricting sales which is followed by
restriction of production and often bankruptcy for the producer. That is
the intrinsic nature and design of the orthodox monetary and price system.
But Social Credit policy is to ensure that effective demand is always
maintained at an optimum level to ensure that consumer cannot only access
production fully but provide the financial means of liquidating all the
financial cost of production through consumer credits which liquidate former
debt but do not register as new debt. Social Credit policy is
counter-inflationary without being economically restrictive. A Social
Credit dispensation should not be confused or intermingled with the existing
order--inasmuch as they are two different and incompatible systems and
attempting to reconcile the two generates hopeless confusion.
International trade is overemphasized under the present system which is
driven to increasingly destructive competition for export markets, primarily
to alleviate the inherent shortage of purchasing-power which exists in each
nation state or political jurisdiction. Nations should not be driven to
attempt to export more of their real wealth than they receive in return merely
to compensate for internal monetary deficiency. International trade
should be a relaxed system of exchange, essentially a system of
"barter"--unlike the phrenetic struggle to export which exists at present and
is the major cause of world conflict culminating in war. Inflation leads
to increasing failure of smaller units of economic function and their
absorption by larger units, quite aside from actual relative efficiency.
It is therefore contributory to the centralization of power and wealth
and to the increasing intervention and expansion of the state as governments
increase their spending to compensate the deficiency of earned incomes as
compared with rising prices in the private sector.
I append below in red a
letter which I have just sent out to our county mayor and all councillors:
(Seemingly appreciative replies are coming in.)
Letters Editor
November 25,
2007
Sherwood Park News
Re the outrageous increase in property
taxes and utility rates proposed by the County of Strathcona for 2008, largely
justified because of the escalation of price inflation, I submit that
inflation is a violation of natural law and that public officials accept it as
a natural phenomenon to which society must passively adjust is a
major error leading
to increasingly calamitous consequences.
Moreover, the goal of
a balanced budget under the existing system of banking and
cost accountancy is a fundamental error which makes unavoidable a growing tax
burden. Technically, it implies that the economy is static, that we
consume all of our physical capital currently and that the issuer of credit,
i.e., the banking system, owns all capital.
Further, blaming
price inflation on monetary demand overlooks the faulty financial accountancy
underlying the fundamental problem which is excess financial cost
accumulation--which results in a non- self-liquidating price
system.
Consumer prices include allocated capital
charges, additions to price which are necessary from an accountancy standpoint
but which do not distribute equivalent incomes within the same cycle of
production. That is, money is collected from consumers prematurely, and
cancelled in repayment of bank debt incurred previously by loans issued to
producers, as if to represent that our real capital is being consumed
currently, whereas it is actually consumed or depreciated over a considerable
period of time.
The resultant disparity, i.e., “gap”,
growing increasingly as capital replaces labour as a factor of
production, between final consumer prices and distributed effective consumer
income, is currently ‘bridged’ by ever expanding issues of credit issued, or
created, via repayable bank loans. This is the faulty approach bequeathed to
us by the late economist John Maynard Keynes.
Of course, it means
that financial costs in respect of one cycle of production are not fully
liquidated within that cycle but merely passed on, or ‘carried over,’ as an
inflationary charge to be recovered from future cycles of production. That is,
one cannot liquidate, formally and finally, financial charges of today by
issues of bank credit (i.e. debt) which become a further charge carried
forward against future cycles of production. Such issues of credit may allow a
large measure of consumer access to final consumer goods, at the expense of
exponentially burgeoning debt with decreasing financial liquidity and
progressive price inflation, but they do not cancel the financial costs
of production as currently accounted—even though the real, i.e., physical,
costs of production have been fully met when consumer goods take their
finalized form and are ready for purchase.
The essential problem is that the
consumer is charged in prices, quite properly, with capital depreciation, but,
quite wrongly, not credited with capital appreciation, which latter
historically greatly exceeds the former. Realistically, we should have over
the passage of time a falling price-level with a growing source of income
received independently of any incomes earned through paid work by
participation in commerce or industry.
The core mechanisms proposed by the late
Cliffford Hugh Douglas to rectify this revealed progressive error in national
accountancy were the National Dividend and the Compensated Price (compensation
of consumer prices at point of retail sale) financed by non- cost-creating
consumer ‘credits’ issued, without being recorded as repayable debt, from
outside the price-system to increase financial independence for the individual
citizen and to effect a continuously falling price-level as the true physical
cost of production falls over time.
The true cost of production is the mean
ratio, measured in monetary units, of national consumption divided by that of
production--always becoming increasingly less than a numerical value of one,
as real efficiency increases with the use of new technology. Inflation of
prices thus will be seen to be a fundamental misrepresentation of physical
reality. Money is essentially an information system. Inflation of prices is an
indication of inefficiency or economic failure and is an abstract financial
denial of the magnificent real advances which modern civilization has made in
the realm of actual physical production efficiency.
These new "Social Credit" consumption
credits advocated by Douglas would as always already have
previous debt claims against them in retail prices and will be cancelled, just
as money issued via consumer bank loans at present is cancelled, when
businesses receive them via retail sales and use them to repay their issuing
banks in settlement of their earlier commercial loans contracted in the usual
manner for the facilitation of business operations. Money recovered by
industry via price and replaced to capital reserve has an effect similar to
its use for repayment of existing bank loans inasmuch as it is no longer
available as consumer income and can only again become so by reissue for a new
cycle of production which creates a whole new and additional set of financial
costs.
Social Credit challenges the historic
orthodox acceptance of Say's Law which states axiomatically that for every
financial cost of production incurred an equivalent amount of financial
purchasing power is issued and no overall deficiency of income can exist.
While it may be true that "at one time or another" in the past an equivalent
amount of financial payments may have been issued, this is of little help or
consolation to consumers driven into increasing reliance on debt because an
increasing proportion of such income has been prematurely cancelled as
effective income and is no longer available for purchase of goods which are
currently emanating from the production system.
How long is the suffering general public
going to tolerate the burden of escalating debt, price inflation and
increasing taxation without demanding a reversal through implementation of a
realistic financial policy?
Yours
faithfully
Wallace M.
Klinck
. . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
Sherwood Park,
AB T8H 2C5
Tel (780)
467-4885
On 27-Nov-07, at 3:37 PM, William Hugh McGunnigle wrote:
Hi Wallace
Thanks for your endorsement of my comments. I will send them to Peter, but
do not have an e-mail address for Kristof. I have posted the comments on
elistas and, hopefully, he will see them from that source. I am still having
trouble accessing some of the e-mails not placed on my "white list". This is
wonderful when the e-mails are spam rubbish, but annoying when I am trying
to establish a discourse with a new person over the internet. Generally I
can get John Rawson to post them on to me through his computer.
Incidently what are your
views on inflationary pressures? I am not convinced that all inflation
is a bad thing. Provided that incomes keep pace with inflationary pressures,
in the long term, debts, like mortgages, become a progressively smaller and
smaller percentage of your disposable income, and disposable income is the
driving force behind consumer spending. Thus, over time, your ability to
"consume" must increase, and this will alleviate some of the problems
involved in the "production gap". The
only loser here appears to be the "lender" ie the banking system. I have
noticed that it is the banking fraternity that makes the biggest noise about
keeping inflation down. Do you feel that this is significant?
I do feel that, given the way our
present banking system operates, that prosperity for all relies on constant
slow inflation under that system. Bankers of course would always baulk at
any process that systematically removes from them the ability to control
currency issue to their disadvantage. Inflationary pressures do exactly
that. Is my reasoning faulty? I have met with mixed reception to the idea
that some inflation is a good thing under the present financial operators.
Are we being brainwashed by the financial operators into thinking that
inflation is bad? Would appreciate your comments? I believe that curbing
inflation in our present financial climate is financial sucide, and certain
to cause international trade stagnation. I am far from certain about these
conclusions because they appear to be totally contary to all that is
presently taught about financial management. However the present system does
have major drawbacks many of which revolve around the money supply which of
course is directly involved in inflationary pressures.
regards
Bill McGunnigle
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, November 27, 2007 9:50
PM
Subject: Re: [socialcredit] Re: Request
for William B. Ryan
Yes, Bill (McGunnigle). Following are my comments re
an exchange between Bill Ryan and Peter Challen wherein Bill referred
critically to Gary North's anti-Social Credit "diatribe" Social Credit:
Salvation through Inflation:
Thanks, Bill. (Attention
Peter)
That's right, I bought North's book shortly after it
appeared on the market and my impression was that it was intemperate,
non-objective and motivated by an almost blind ideological/theological
bias against, amounting almost to an outrage at--the prospects of anyone
getting "something for nothing." Hence his regard for the Social
Credit "consumption credits" with such outright and uncompromising
disdain. I was in contact with his office and attempted to introduce
some reasoned moderation into the discourse. While being treated
politely, I am sure that not the smallest dent was made in the prevailing
ideological armour at that location. I believe, Peter, that in a
recent communique you stated that interest, per se, was the fundamental
fault in the financial system. I would agree with Bill and different
Social Credit authors that this is a red herring, unfortunately all too
frequently promoted, because it neglects Douglas's discussion of the more
basic accountancy flaw related to financial cost creation as this ensues
under orthodox finance with the replacement of human labour by non-human
capital factors. Interest is just another element in the overall
flows of costs and incomes. If suitable corrections to the financial
system were implemented the question of consumer debt would cease to be a
problem and the burden of interest (or "usury") consequently would no
longer be of significance. I think it would be a fatal error,
when being pursued by a horse-drawn chariot to attempt to detach the horse
while still standing in front of the free-wheeling chariot. Perhaps,
Bill, you would like to forward to Peter your comments today to another
correspondent, viz., Kristof Levandovski--of Poland, I
believe.
Sincerely Wally
On 26-Nov-07, at 6:03 PM, William Hugh
McGunnigle wrote:
Hi Subsequent to the
comments by Kristof and Bill Ryan The
observations by Bill are very valid. Much of the present world imbalance
in trade is the result of the so called "Free Trade" reforms that are
being foisted upon the world by transnational companies. The effect is
to move the centres of production away from areas with high production
costs due to high labour costs eg North America, Europe and
paradoxically Japan into areas where labour costs are considerably less
eg China and India. Removal of tarrifs puts countries with high labour
costs at a distinct disadvantage. Furthermore a large percentage of the
lower labour costs in places like China and India is bought at a
considerable environmental price because companies in those countries do
not adher to the strict and stringent environmental laws prevalent in
places like Europe and parts of North America. There is a hidden problem
too in the "deskilling" of the previous world industrial leaders labour
force as the industries are moved away. This causes widespread
unemployment and this is a harbinger of civil unrest. Unemployment
always breeds crime and civil
disorder. Although a many monetary reformers
think along the lines that Bill mentions ie abolition of interest etc.
This, in itself, does not address the fundamental problem namely that
consumption is dependant upon disposable income and the only source of
disposable income for the vast bulk of society is salaries and wages.
Consequently as the job market shrinks so does income. Fiddling with the
banking system and altering the rules will not alter that problem.
Similarly the Keyensian solution of deliberate government spending on (
possibly) infrastucture to provide work to enable people to have a
living income on a spend now pay later basis only creates a higher
degree of indeptedness. The prosperity enjoyed by the Western world
since the end of WW2 has been at the expense of Western governments and
their people becoming greater and greater deptors. The USA in particular
runs the highest level of indeptedness of all. Unfortunately the present
system cannot continue without that indeptedness increasing still
further due to the facts previously stated by Bill that wages and
salaries are always less than optimum industrial output. There will
always be a gap between the two ( Prodution
Gap) Social Credit is a viable and effective
way of providing the extra finance to bridge the " production gap" and
ensure that everyone can benefit from improvements in industrial
efficiency. I agree with Bill. The present system of accounting in
banking circles is very efficient. It does not need major alterations,
although I do baulk at saying it is perfect. Nevertheless it is
operating under axioms that operated in the 16th century and not the
21st century, and it does need to be updated so that the financial
shortages responsible for so much poverty in the world can be corrected.
I trust that my comments have been helpful in the
discussion Bill McGunnigle
----- Original
Message ----- From: <william_b_ryan@yahoo.com> To:
<socialcredit@elistas.com> Sent:
Tuesday, November 27, 2007 8:41 AM Subject: Re: [socialcredit] Re:
Request for William B. Ryan
I thought I gave you a serious answer,
Kristof. I
certainly didn't intend it to be a
joke.
The best financial reform is along the lines
of
Douglas' national dividend and retail
discount
programs.
I am quite disdainful of most of what passes
as
"monetary reform," which generally involves
some
fundamental change to the structure of the
financial
system, such as the abolition of interest,
and/or the
spending of money into circulation exclusively
by the
government. The structure of the present
financial
system is itself very nearly
perfect.
The problem is at the macreconomic level due
to a flaw
in accounting, where the costs of production
are being
expensed against retail sales at an
accelerating rate
in respect to sales, which is explained
through the A
+ B theorem, or something
similar.
The solution are rationally applied credits
from the
central bank to the accounts of final
consumers, in a
form of accounting adjustment, boosting
effective
demand, bringing the expensing of costs to the
point
of retail into proportionality with sales,
thereby
sustaining the rate of profit in the
dynamically
growing economy, with naturally occurring
labor
displacement.
The present continuous fall to the rate of
profit
induces entrepreneurs to continually pinch
off
production short of real demand and
productive
capacity, causing the permanency of poverty in
the
midst of plenty through much waste of
resources. It
is an illusion of scarcity due to
financial
inadequacy.
Beyond that I would suggest a protectionist
foreign
trade policy, protecting domestic industry
against
predatory foreign competition. The
strength of the
American economy was built during the
nineteenth
century behind a tariff wall, allowing free
trade and
competition between the states, with similar
cultures
and standards.
Bill
--- Swieto Radosci <radosc@radosc.x.pl>
wrote:
From: <william_b_ryan@yahoo.com>:
> I think I said, Kristof, that I do not
call myself
a
> social crediter, but do admit to being
profoundly
> influenced by the writings of . I
do not
> admit to agreeing with every word that
he wrote,
but
> admit to not understanding much of it.
One of the
> purposes of this list is to help us
gain an
> understanding of what he really wrote
and said.
The undrerstanding of what C. H. Douglas
wrote or
said is not of my
particular concern. More what today
reformists do
with his inspirations
and
inuitions.
I agree with Douglas's general idea of the
deficit
of purchasing power
in
the growing areas of the globe. I calculated
that
deficit on real
numbers
taken from Polish corporation where I served
as CEO
and for sure Douglas
was
right showing us this problem comparable to
the
unefficiency of
heart-pump
in human body. Purchasing power leaks out
of
producing communities
and
producers are forced to extend
specialization and
import-export
practicies.
If they don't, they alternatively hang on
growing
debt.
Now we have world-blood deficit in many
places and
plentitude of it
in
others - a zero balance situation from the
double
accounting point of
view,
but close to heart breake from the social
one. I
personally attribute
that
deficit of purchasing power to logistic
(energetic)
and educational
(informatic, including money as
information)
problems of our
civilization.
In my opinion local money could serve better
than
"retail discount
programs"
proposed by Douglas - as local by-passes on
global
defficiency in
money
distribution.
National dividend is ok but it strongly
affects the
way national budget
is
created, so it is not easy to implement
from
grassroots.
But, William, I asked you about your
personal
opinion on Douglas
proposals
in present socio-legal environment and you
answered
by a joke...
Please
answer seriously.
Kristof
Levandovski
____________________________________________________________________________________
Never miss a thing. Make Yahoo your home
page.
http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs
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