The
Currency Of Money

Just as "commodity fetishism" turns things on their heads, so
that what is in reality a relation between Men(an exchange of the
labour-time of one for that of another) appears as a relation between
things (20 yards of linen = 1 coat), so the same here. What is
really a process of circulation of commodities appears as being a
movement of money.
“Again,
money functions as a means of circulation only because in it the
values of commodities have independent reality. Hence its movement,
as the medium of circulation, is, in fact, merely the movement of
commodities while changing their forms.” (p 117)
Although commodities take part in this circulation, they continually
fall out of it, as they are consumed. Money, on the other hand,
remains within the sphere of circulation, which begs the question of
how much money is absorbed by it. Marx once again elaborates this
not just as a logical but as an historical process.
We are still at the stage, he says, where we are considering commodity
exchange in its initial stages – petty commodity production. The
process is described like this.
The money commodity (gold) acts as the general equivalent form of value. So, it is the unit of measurement of the value of
commodities, which takes the form of their money price. In other
words, the Value of say 20 yards of linen can be considered in a
purely imaginary way (i.e. I do not have to actually exchange it to
put a price on it, I do not have to physically set an amount of gold
against it) as being equal to 2 oz. gold, now given the name £2.

But, we have seen that the Value of the gold, as with every other
commodity, is determined by the labour-time required for its
production. And, the prices of commodities are a function, not just
of their own Values, but also the Value of the Gold. Exchange Value or Price is a relative not an absolute measure.
So, if the value of commodities remains constant, but the Value of
gold falls (because say the California Gold Rush means less
labour-time is required to produce a given amount of gold) then the
Exchange Value and prices of commodities will rise. If an oz. of
gold can now be produced in half the time, then 20 yards of linen
will equal 4 oz. gold its price will be doubled to £4, and vice
versa.
But, things do not end there. If the fall in the Value of gold by
half causes prices to double then by the same token, the amount of
currency in circulation will also need to double in order that there
is enough to buy all the commodities at their new higher prices.
To stress once more, the VALUE of these commodities has not changed.
Only their Exchange Value vis a vis gold has changed. If previously
1000 yards of linen were in the market, with an exchange value of
£100 = 100 oz. gold, now this 1000 yards of linen will have an
Exchange Value of £200, requiring 200 oz. gold money. In other
words, the fall in the Value of the gold money has caused an
inflation of all commodity prices except gold.

Marx also sets out how this process plays out historically. At this
stage of petty commodity production, barter continues as far as the
gold producers are concerned, because their commodity is money
itself! They exchange their gold directly for the commodities they
require.
If the Value of gold falls because less labour-time is required for
its production, then competition amongst gold producers means they
will have to hand over more gold to obtain those commodities than
they did previously. In the rest of the economy, where commodity
producers are not exchanging directly with the gold producers, this
change may not be seen or known about. As a consequence, prices for
these other commodities may remain unaltered.

It is not the increased supply of gold which causes its Value to fall
and prices of other commodities to rise. It is the fall in its Value
which causes the supply of it as money to rise.

For the ease of argument, Marx assumes a constant Value of gold. In
that case the amount of money needed for circulation is determined by
the sum of all prices. If the values of other commodities remain
constant, then an increase in the number to be sold will require more
money. If the number sold remains constant an increase in their
prices will require more money and vice versa. Similarly, if only
some commodities increase in price it will require more money. And,
if some prices fall and others rise, it will depend on whether the
sum of the rises is greater or lesser than the sum of the falls.

“the
quantity of money functioning as the circulating medium is equal to
the sum of the prices of the commodities divided by the number of
moves made by coins of the same denomination. This law holds
generally.” (p 121)
The different types of transactions increase or decrease this
velocity. Some transactions consist of just a sale and a purchase,
the money then standing idle. Others result in a whole series of
transactions. The higher the velocity the less money actually needed
in circulation and vice versa.
With money based on precious metals, circulation can only tolerate as
much money as is required. If more money is put into circulation
than is required, its velocity slows down, and ultimately the metal
is withdrawn. In the Contribution to a Critique of Political
Economy, Marx refers to the historical facts in this regard. Where
coins were simply accumulating, so that the Value of the coins fell
below the value of the metal, the metal was melted down, and sold.
The velocity of circulation is a reflection of the speed with which
commodities are themselves being exchanged, and, therefore, of the
state of economic activity. But, Marx also elaborates,
“Herrenschwand’s
fanciful notions amount merely to this, that the antagonism, which
has its origin in the nature of commodities, and is reproduced in
their circulation, can be removed by increasing the circulating
medium. But if, on the one hand, it is a popular delusion to ascribe
stagnation in production and circulation to insufficiency of the
circulating medium, it by no means follows, on the other hand, that
an actual paucity of the medium in consequence, e.g.,
of bungling legislative interference with the regulation of currency,
may not give rise to such stagnation.” (Note 1 p 122)

“The
erroneous opinion that it is, on the contrary, prices that are
determined by the quantity of the circulating medium, and that the
latter depends on the quantity of the precious metals in a country;
this opinion was based by those who first held it, on the absurd
hypothesis that commodities are without a price, and money without a
value, when they first enter into circulation, and that, once in the
circulation, an aliquot part of the medley of commodities is
exchanged for an aliquot part of the heap of precious metals.” (p
125-5)
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