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- 20 Feb. 1923 (Creation)
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Clarifies his ideas about the provision of free public services, and discusses Pell’s book The Riddle of Unemployment.
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20th. February, 1923.
Dear Keynes,
Thank you very much for your letter of the 14th inst. {1} in reply to mine.
I quite understand your point of caution with regard to offering public services to people below cost. This would of course not occur if the public relief was confined to payment of interest on capital already expended. In the case of the road it actually goes beyond this and covers current capital expenditure. I think probably I shall attack the problem in a very general way and consider simply the question of “Prices under National Ownership”. Assuming there is going to be no move in the direction of Socialism this is certainly a very important question.
If I put anything together suitable for “The Economic Journal” I will let you see it in case you care to use it. In the meanwhile if you happen to have in mind the name of any special book on Municipal Finance and Municipal Trading which bears on the subject, you might put it on a postcard and let me have it.
I have just been reading Pell’s book on “The Riddle of Unemployment” {2} which all boils down to his proposal that prices should be kept stabilised through manipulation of the bank rate with an inconvertible paper currency. If you are reviewing it yourself in “The Economic Journal” I shall be interested to see your views about it; if not I should like to know some time what you think of it. It is somewhat arrogantly written but it seemed to me offhand a very valuable suggestion. The two points of criticism that occur to me are, firstly, that there would be considerable opposition among business men to raising the bank rate just at the very time trade began to revive and prices show their first upward tendency, and secondly, whether even this proposal would in fact keep prices stationary or only make the oscillations in prices less intensive than at present. In the metaphor which I used in my little book on prices published by the Oxford Press {3}, would Pell’s machinery produce a completely sensitive governor?
Don’t trouble to reply to this if you are too busy.
Yours sincerely,
[blank]
J. Maynard Keynes Esq.,
46, Gordon Square,
W.C.1.
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{1} PETH 2/198.
{2} The Riddle of Unemployment and its Solution (1922), by Charles Edward Pell.
{3} Why Prices Rise and Fall (1920). A revised edition was issued in 1923.
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This description was created by A. C. Green in 2020.