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Re: [socialcredit] Jim
Re: [socialcredit] Tim Knig
Re: [socialcredit] socred
Re: [socialcredit] socred
Message to John He Wallace
Re: [socialcredit] Radu Ses
Re: [socialcredit] Radu Ses
Re: [socialcredit] Joe Thom
The Alberta Presen william_
Re: [A draft reply W. Curti
Re: [socialcredit] Radu Ses
Re: [socialcredit] Jim
Re: The MacMillan William
Re: [socialcredit] Radu Ses
Re: [socialcredit] Timothy
Re: The MacMillan William
Replying to Tim William
Re: [socialcredit] Jim
Re: [socialcredit] Jim
Re: [socialcredit] Timothy
Re: [socialcredit] william_
Re: [socialcredit] Radu Ses
in closing William
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in reply william_
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In continuing repl william_
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In continuing repl William
Re: [socialcredit] Jim
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Re: [socialcredit] Jim
The Alberta Presen William
Re: [socialcredit] socred
Re: [socialcredit] Jim
Banque WIR William
Re: [socialcredit] socred
Z<jschroeder@shaw. Jim
RE: OWNERSHIP: Re: Ed Dodso
Dictatorship by Ta William
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Re: [socialcredit] Jim
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"Chinese appetite W. Curti
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Malthusian Pessimi William
RE: OWNERSHIP: Mal Ed Dodso
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RE: OWNERSHIP: Mal Jessop S
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Subject:Re: [socialcredit] The MacMillan Presentation
Date:Sunday, February 13, 2005  15:31:49 (+1000)
From:socred <socred @.......au>

Please distinguish between financial capital and REAL capital. In the same manner let there be no confusion between financial costs and REAL costs.
 
On another point may I suggest that one looks at the REAL and PHYSICAL aspects of our accounting system. Anyone who understands very simply the items shown on a Balance Sheet are shown in "sumbols". In Australia this is a $ which is a very differnet thing to that in the United States which is also a $. In other countries there are different symbols. These symbols represent (for want of a better word) the value of items shown.
 
Now if one also accepts that the modern bookkeeping system that every debit shown is also reflected by a corresponding credit somewhere else in someone else's books.
 
Using a little lateral thinking, suppose that all debts were paid out, this would mean that all financial items shown on the books would be eliminated and the only items left would be "physical assets" or REAL ASSETS or to put it another way "REAL CAPITAL".
 
I see the problem with many on this discussion group as being a problem of attempting to put "Social Credit" principles, ideas, and policies into an orthodox economic basket, and this cannot be done. It is necessary to forget orthodox economics and concentrate on social Credit aspects to ascertain whether or not they are true and correct (to use a financial accounting expression)
Vic Bridger
----- Original Message -----
From: Jim
Sent: Friday, February 11, 2005 8:03 AM
Subject: Re: [socialcredit] The MacMillan Presentation

Bill, I would like a copy of this presentation in PDF format if you wouldn't mind.
 
In a previous email to Radu, you state:
 
 
[REPLY]  No.  Capital costs are real costs that have
to be expensed into the price of retail goods in any
conceivable accounting system.  It's just that with
labor displacement (shorthand for lengthening and
broadening to the structure of production with
INCREASING capitalization in the broadest possible
sense) the rate-of-flow of purchasing power being
paid to final consumers is falling in respect to the
rate-of-flow of costs being impressed (expensed) to
the point of retail.  It is nothing more than an
accounting flaw amenable to conscious adjustment. 
Simply put, that adjustment requires the introduction
of a national credit (or capital) account to the
economy as a whole, from which dividends will be paid
in supplement to the ordinary (corporate) sources of
personal income.  It will allow the books to balance
for the economy as a whole.

 
Now Major Douglas states in the presentation you just email us that:
 
 
4486. [Mr. KEYNES] And if in the interval you had to
have new machines to replace old ones you would have
to have individuals to produce them.  How does that
differ from any other form of consumption?--
[Major DOUGLAS] Because you are not starting from
zero.  You are starting from a world as it is.
4487. [Mr. KEYNES] How does that bear on the matter?--
[Major DOUGLAS] It bears on the matter that you have a tremendous amount of real capital which at the present time is creating prices and which has not contributed anything like that amount of purchasing
power.
4488. [Mr. KEYNES] Do you mean that the receipts of capital are greater than the amount it pays out in
dividends?--
[Major DOUGLAS] Yes; that is an obvious statement of
fact; the accounts of any company will show that.
4489. PROFESSOR GREGORY: What happens to the
difference?--
[Major DOUGLAS] It is represented by the fixed assets in the company which it cannot distribute in the form of money...
 
Again, this is why I disagree with your assertion that labour displacement forms the crux of A+B.  I believe this dissertation by Douglas forms the crux of A+B.  Simply, the receipts of capital are greater than they pay out in dividends, and the difference represents the fixed assets of the company which it cannot distribute in the form of money.
 
Sincerely,
 
Jim Schroeder

----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, February 10, 2005 11:14 AM
Subject: [socialcredit] The MacMillan Presentation

A couple of years ago Victor Bridger graciously sent
me a vintage copy of Douglas's presentation to the
MacMillan Committee of 1930 that was published some
years ago in Australia.  I've just gotten around to
converting it into a photocopy in PDF format, an
approximately 2.5MB file which I'll be glad to email
to anyone who requests it.
-
Evidence Submitted to the MacMillan Committee of
Finance and Industry by C. H. Douglas, M.I.E.E.,
M.I.M.E., M.I.Mech.E.
(Reprinted from the Official Minutes of Evidence)
TWENTY-FOURTH DAY
Thursday, 1st May, 1930
Present:
The Rt. Hon. LORD MACMILLAN, Chairman
-
Sir THOMAS ALLEN.
The Rt. Hon. LORD BRADBURY, G.C.B.
The Hon. R. H. BRAND, C.M.G.
Professor T. E. GREGORY, D.Sc.
Mr. J. M. Keynes, C.B.
Mr. LENNOX B. LEE.
Mr. CECIL LUBBOCK.
The Rt. Hon. REGINALD McKENNA.
Mr. J. FRATER TAYLOR.
Mr. A. A. G. TULLOCH.
Sir FREDERICK LEITH-ROSS, K.C.M.G., C.B.
Mr. G. ISMAY, Secretary.
Major CLIFFORD HUGH DOUGLAS, M.I.Mech.E., M.I.E.E.
called and examined...
-
An excerpt:
4461. PROFESSOR GREGORY: May I go back to the motor-
car?  You say if the motor-car costs me £100 I will
get a chit, which I deposit with Mr. McKenna's bank,
and he finally deposits it with the Treasury, and by
a series of book-keeping entries 25 per cent. of
additional purchasing power is created?--
[Major DOUGLAS] That is one form of mechanism.
4462. [PROFESSOR GREGORY] That is one form of
mechanism, but I do not want to pay too much
attention to the consumers' side--what is the
position of the manufacturer?  Are you assuming that
the car costs the manufacturer £100, or that it costs
the manufacturer more than £100?  Is the actual cost
price to the manufacturer what you pay for it?--
[Major DOUGLAS] Do you mean, is he making a profit?
4463. [PROFESSOR GREGORY] No, I am asking is he
covering his cost if he sells at £100?--
[Major DOUGLAS] Oh! yes.
4464. [PROFESSOR GREGORY] You are assuming that he is
carrying on his business on a perfectly definite
commercial basis?--
[Major DOUGLAS] Absolutely.  He is selling in
competition with other people who may sell at £99.
4465. [PROFESSOR GREGORY] Your £25 does not really go
to that motor-car manufacturer at all?--
[Major DOUGLAS] No.
4466. [PROFESSOR GREGORY] It is added to the general
borrowing or purchasing power of the community. 
Well, I do not see, in those circumstances, how you
can prevent prices from rising?--
[Major DOUGLAS] I cannot see, as a matter of fact,
how it can possibly cause prices to rise, again as a
matter of mechanism, by this process.  Supposing they
do rise, your subsidy becomes inoperative.
4467. [PROFESSOR GREGORY] Let us suppose in a given
period of time, one month, the total turnover of
consumable goods in this country is £1,000,000,000,
and let us take your figure of 25 per cent.; that
means that at the beginning of next month there would
be £1,250,000,000 of purchasing power available.  I
am only using your own figure of 25 per cent.--
[Major DOUGLAS] No, that is not quite true.  I should
not regard it, incidentally, as very important if it
were true.
4468. [PROFESSOR GREGORY] Let us clear up that point
first?--
[Major DOUGLAS] The result of your having done this
is greatly to increase the total amount of sales in
the country.  Now, the whole of the price which is
collected from the public becomes an item for
cancellation, just as it does at the present time.
4469. [PROFESSOR GREGORY] How do you get it back? 
You get it from the consumer, you pay it into the
bank, who pay it into the Treasury, who get
additional credit from some source, but you never do
get that back?--
[Major DOUGLAS] I will pursue this subject as far as
you like, but I am frankly much more interested in
making you see that the thing is perfectly possible. 
If you would really like me to get out a considered
report as to the mechanism by which it can be done I
shall be delighted to do it, my services are entirely
at the disposal of the Committee, but the point that
I want to hammer home is that it is inconceivable
that you cannot get a mechanism which will enable you
to equate purchasing power to the capacity to
deliver.
4470. Mr. KEYNES: Is it not probable that those of us
who are criticising are not inclined to accept the
inherent difficulty which you develop in paragraph 16
of your Memorandum.  You divide payments there into A
and B payments?--
[Major DOUGLAS] Yes.
4471. [Mr. KEYNES] The cost of production to the
manufacturer is A plus B.  Of that A goes to the
public and is spent by them on manufactured goods,
but B goes elsewhere?--
[Major DOUGLAS] Yes.
4472. [Mr. KEYNES] Where does it go?--
[Major DOUGLAS] I felt sure that this would arise,
because it generally does arise.  May I put it this
way?  The wording of this statement is very careful. 
I always make the wording very careful.  I say "Since
A will not purchase A + B, a proportion of the
product at least equivalent to B must be distributed
by a form of purchasing-power which is not comprised
in the description grouped under A."  I have not said
it must be paid.
4473. [Mr. KEYNES] I did not want to go on as far as
that.  Just previous to that you see "Group B," which
includes raw material; I assume you mean imported raw
material; is that right?--
[Major DOUGLAS] "Group B. All payments made to other
organisations (raw materials, bank charges, and other
external costs)".  Yes; simply what we should call in
a company, bills payable at the end of the month.
4474. [Mr. KEYNES] If they are paid through another
business then that business will pay the amount as
part of its cost of production to individuals?  Is
that it?--
[Major DOUGLAS] Yes, I quite understand the
difficulty.  The real weight to be attached to this
undoubted statement of fact--as it stands it is
simply a statement of obvious fact--is whether the
transfers from one firm to another are financed by
either trade credit or from the firm's own credit,
let us say its working capital, or by a bank's
credit.  The exact weight which that has in the whole
of the statement depends to a very large extent on
that.  If the B payments are really financed from
working capital then that working capital must, I
think, inevitably have been obtained by the process
of investment which is criticised under (b) in the
same précis.  That is to say, the whole of the
savings which have formed the working capital of that
concern must previously have appeared in the cost of
production.
4475. [Mr. KEYNES] That would be true, but I thought
the emphasis here was on the phrase "other
organisations," and what you are saying has no
bearing on that.--
[Major DOUGLAS] I am sorry!  I missed that.
4476. [Mr. KEYNES] I thought the force of the
argument here was that it was a payment made by this
manufacturing firm to other organisations?--
[Major DOUGLAS] Yes.
4477. [Mr. KEYNES] Its working capital is required to
meet its expenditure under Group A during the period
of  production just as much as under Group B, so what
you are saying now does not seem to me to distinguish
between Group A and Group B?--
[Major DOUGLAS] Yes, it does, because in Group A you
paying out to the consumer; all the payments under
Group B are purchasing power; which, if it was
obtained by re-investment, was originally in the
hands of the public and never gets back into the
hands of the public at all.
4478. [Mr. KEYNES] Other organisations which were
receiving money under Group B are getting back that
amount from this first one?--
[Major DOUGLAS] Yes, that is the case; but there is a
large amount of purchasing power which is permanently
retained purely in the productive system, and never
gets out into the consumers' system.
4479. [Mr. KEYNES] If all firms were united in a
single firm would your difficulties be overcome?--
[Major DOUGLAS] That is the obvious remedy for the
financial difficulty but not necessarily the right
remedy.  Even from the purely financial standpoint it
is a little difficult to say; you understand a time
lag comes in.
4480. [Mr. KEYNES] You think it would vanish?--
[Major DOUGLAS] No, I do not think it would
completely vanish.
4481. [Mr. KEYNES] Why not?--
[Major DOUGLAS] Because there would be a considerable
amount of money being paid out in wages for delayed
production, and your hypothesis assumes that the
distributed costs of a given week are the total
prices of the goods for sale in the same week.
4482. [Mr. KEYNES] It would be diminished?--
[Major DOUGLAS] It probably would be diminished I
think, yes.
4483. [Mr. KEYNES] Insofar as the fact that you have
a differentiation in industry means that some people
have to have bank accounts which they pay to others,
it means you have to create a certain amount of
credit, and really it acts as a revolving fund?--
[Major DOUGLAS] Yes.
4484. [Mr. KEYNES] If a revolving fund has been
established, why do you have to add to it?--
[Major DOUGLAS] If the revolving fund is as large as
the total amount of money required to finance the
whole of all business from the time the first process
takes place to the time the article goes out to the
consumer--it is possible--I should not be inclined to
admit it offhand--that the question might disappear;
but that is certainly nothing like the actual case.
4485. [Mr. KEYNES] If you once raise the volume of
credit to whatever level may be required by your
profit in relation to the volume of production you
have only to go on increasing it in proportion as
production increases?--
[Major DOUGLAS] No; there are all sorts of questions
that would still arise.  The question of turnover,
depreciation, and the fact that the purchasing power
of credit, or whatever you like to call it, which has
been transformed into price values of fixed assets in
the industrial system would in existing circumstances
have to enter into the cost of the goods--and cost
items of that type would always raise the price of
the articles above the amount of purchasing power.
4486. [Mr. KEYNES] And if in the interval you had to
have new machines to replace old ones you would have
to have individuals to produce them.  How does that
differ from any other form of consumption?--
[Major DOUGLAS] Because you are not starting from
zero.  You are starting from a world as it is.
4487. [Mr. KEYNES] How does that bear on the matter?--
[Major DOUGLAS] It bears on the matter that you have
a tremendous amount of real capital which at the
present time is creating prices and which has not
contributed anything like that amount of purchasing
power.
4488. [Mr. KEYNES] Do you mean that the receipts of
capital are greater than the amount it pays out in
dividends?--
[Major DOUGLAS] Yes; that is an obvious statement of
fact; the accounts of any company will show that.
4489. PROFESSOR GREGORY: What happens to the
difference?--
[Major DOUGLAS] It is represented by the fixed assets
in the company which it cannot distribute in the form
of money...
-

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