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3 - THE FRENCH FRANC (1926, 1928)

from II - INFLATION AND DEFLATION

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2012

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Summary

First published in the Nation and Athenaeum, 9 January 1926, with the title ‘The French Franc: An Open Letter to the French Minister of Finance (whoever he is or may be)’. This essay was republished in France as part of a collection entitled Réflexions sur le franc et sur quelques autres sujets (1928).

AN OPEN LETTER TO THE FRENCH MINISTER OF FINANCE (WHOEVER HE IS OR MAY BE) (January 1926)

Monsieur—When I read in my daily paper the daily projects of yourself and your predecessors to draft new budgets and to fund old debts, I get the impression that Paris discusses very little what seems to me in London to be the technical analysis of your problem. May I, therefore, divert your attention for a moment from your Sisyphean task of rolling budgets up Parliament Hill back to certain fundamental calculations?

I have written about the French franc many times in recent years, and I do not find that I have changed my mind. More than two years ago I wrote: ‘The level of the franc is going to be settled in the long run, not by speculation or the balance of trade, or even the outcome of the Ruhr adventure, but by the proportion of his earned income which the French taxpayer will permit to be taken from him to pay the claims of the French rentier.’ I still think that this is the root idea from which your plans ought to develop.

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Publisher: Royal Economic Society
Print publication year: 1978

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