There are fundamentally two possible changes in an economy that will each cause inflation unless other compensating changes also occur. These changes are either reductions in the supply of goods and services or increases in demand. In a pre-banking economy the quantity of money available, and hence the level of demand, is equivalent to the quantity of gold available.
If the statements above are true, then it is also true that in a pre-banking economy
any inflation is the result of reductions in the supply of goods and services.
if other factors in the economy are unchanged, increasing the quantity of gold available will lead to inflation.
if there is a reduction in the quantity of gold available, then, other things being equal, inflation must result.
the quantity of goods and services purchasable by a given amount of gold is constant.
whatever changes in demand occur, there will be compensating changes in the supply of goods and services.
呃,不要把gold和good看混了
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