[194] The chapter on "Dodo-Bones," supra, and the chapter on "The Quantity Theory and World Prices," infra.
[195] Loc. cit., p. 156.
[196] Ibid., p. 160.
[197] Or organs for pianos, etc. A common practice—less common in the North than formerly—is the payment of bills at country stores in produce. There is not a little barter at secondhand stores in New York City.
[198] Mr. Burton Thompson, of No. 7 Wall St., who knows the real estate situation there intimately, states that while dealers do not like to "swap" real estate, and do little of it when business is good, they are forced to do it extensively when business is sluggish, "as has been the case for the past four or five years."
[199] Cf. E. S. Meade, Corporation Finance, p. 376, and passim.
[200] The same thing often happens when a bond issue is paid off—bond-holders may take their pay in new bonds. "Conversions" of bonds into stocks, or of preferred into common stock, are also barter transactions. $220,000,000 of the $420,000,000 which Mr. Carnegie and his associates received from the Steel Trust for their plants, etc., was paid, not with money and checks, but with bonds. Vide Stevens, Industrial Combinations and Trusts, p. 101.
[201] The foregoing had been written before the discussion in the Annalist of Feb. and March, 1916 (pp. 183-184, 245-272, 313-317, 344, 377), in which Professor Fisher and the present writer joined issue with reference to Professor Fisher's estimate, 387 billions, for the volume of trade in the United States in 1909. The present writer contended that the banking transactions which Professor Fisher took as representative of trade greatly overcounted trade, since they included loans and repayments, taxes, several checks in one transaction, gifts, etc., etc. Professor Fisher contended that the overcounting was offset by undercounting, and instanced particularly the clearing-house arrangements in the speculative exchanges, where checks are in part dispensed with, and the offsetting in "running accounts" through book-credit. This indicates a substantial change in Professor Fisher's view as compared with that set forth in the Purchasing Power of Money, where he maintains, as shown above, that barter is virtually non-existent, that money and checks are "for all practical purposes and all normal cases," "necessities of modern trade," (p. 160), and that book-credit merely postpones, and does not dispense with, the use of money and checks (p. 370).
The extent of the offsetting by barter, clearing-houses in the exchanges, and book-credit, though very great, is quite small as compared with Professor Fisher's 387 billions, and does not nearly offset the overcounting. The writer has obtained some fairly definite data on this point, which will be presented in the chapter on "Statistical Demonstrations of the Quantity Theory," in discussing the volume of trade.
[202] Miscellaneous Articles on German Banking, Report of National Monetary Commission, p. 175. Cf. infra, pp. 288-290.