Ralph George Hawtrey Quote

To unstable money are to be traced nearly all our economic troubles since 1918: the unemployment of the inter-war period; the over-employment and scarcity of labour since the Second World War; the labour unrest incidental to perpetual wage demands; the hardships and dislocation caused by the declining value of small savings, annuities and endowments; the vexation of continual price rises even for those whose incomes on the whole keep pace with them; the collapse of the prices of Government securities through distrust of the unit in which they are valued.


'Foreword' (1961) to A Century of Bank Rate (1962, 2nd ed.), p. xxii. - A Century of Bank Rate (1938)


To unstable money are to be traced nearly all our economic troubles since 1918: the unemployment of the inter-war period; the over-employment and...

To unstable money are to be traced nearly all our economic troubles since 1918: the unemployment of the inter-war period; the over-employment and...

To unstable money are to be traced nearly all our economic troubles since 1918: the unemployment of the inter-war period; the over-employment and...

To unstable money are to be traced nearly all our economic troubles since 1918: the unemployment of the inter-war period; the over-employment and...