The Division of Labour is the precondition for exchange. In primitive co-operative communities the Division of Labour arises (firstly between men and women) and production is increased accordingly, but without trade occurring. The male hunters do not trade their products with those of the females, but the whole produce is a collective produce to be shared out equally. Trade only begins as a peripheral activity between tribes rather than within them. However, once trade between tribes commences, then, together with the establishment of classes within society, trade begins to take place within the society too. A precondition for trade within the society is the establishment of private property as a replacement for communal or collective property.

This basis of calculating the rate of exchange also provides the basis for setting aside one commodity, which can act as a universal equivalent. If I take the sequence A = 2B, B = 3C, C = 2D I can replace these individual rates of exchange with the single A = 2B, 6C, 12D. The underlying relationship of each commodity based on the labour-time required for its production can now be subsumed under the relationship of each commodity to the universal equivalent A. The exchange value of each commodity can now be expressed as so much A. A does not have to be physically present for this calculation to occur it is merely an abstraction – it has become a unit of account. This is the first stage in the development of money.
Benjamin Franklin described the situation,

And “trade in general being nothing else but the exchange of labour for labour, the value of all things is, as I have said before, most justly measured by labour.”
Ben Franklin “A Modest Inquiry into the Nature and Necessity of a Paper Currency” pp 265 and 267.
Franklin should have pointed out that, of course, the particular labour of the silver miner and the grain farmer are as different as the silver and the grain they each produce. It is not this particular labour that is the measure, but generalised social labour in the abstract. And what determines the average amount of this labour that is socially necessary – competition.

The question then arises how much of this medium of exchange is required. This depends upon the amount of commodities being traded, their prices, and the relation of these prices to the value of the medium of circulation.
The Economist July 10th 1858 gives the output of the mint as 1855 £9,245,000; 1856 £6,476,000; 1857 £5,298,858, and says that during 1858 the mint had scarcely anything to do. The different figures were due to the varying quantities of commodities in circulation in each year.
“Much will be manufactured when it is wanted; and little when little is wanted.” it said.
(A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy, Karl Marx p 106.)
And in Holland, after the discovery of gold in California, its gold currency was replaced with silver currency which meant that 15 times more silver was required than gold. Although, the velocity of circulation of the medium of exchange will affect how much needs to be put into circulation, and different denominations circulating in different spheres will have different velocities – an increase in velocity reducing the amount and vice versa – changes in the velocity are determined by technical considerations, which mean that this does not have a marked effect in the short term. In short the quantity of gold or silver coins put into circulation is determined by the quantity of commodities to be circulated, and the relative values of those commodities. So, for example, after the discovery of new gold mines, the relative value of gold fell and consequently more had to be put into circulation.
And in Holland, after the discovery of gold in California, its gold currency was replaced with silver currency which meant that 15 times more silver was required than gold. Although, the velocity of circulation of the medium of exchange will affect how much needs to be put into circulation, and different denominations circulating in different spheres will have different velocities – an increase in velocity reducing the amount and vice versa – changes in the velocity are determined by technical considerations, which mean that this does not have a marked effect in the short term. In short the quantity of gold or silver coins put into circulation is determined by the quantity of commodities to be circulated, and the relative values of those commodities. So, for example, after the discovery of new gold mines, the relative value of gold fell and consequently more had to be put into circulation.

“At this very time, even the silver money in England is obliged to the legal tender for part of its value; that part which is the difference between its real weight and its denomination. Great part of the shillings and sixpences now current are by wearing become 5,10, 20 and some sixpences even 50% too light. For this difference between the real and the nominal you have no intrinsic value; you have not so much as paper, you have nothing. It is legal tender with the knowledge that it can easily be repassed for the same value, that makes three pennyworth of silver pass for a sixpence.” (Remarks and Facts Relative to the American Paper Money, 1764 p 348)

“When the decline of the metal content has affected a sufficient number of sovereigns to cause a permanent rise of the market price of gold over the mint price, the coins retain the same names of account but these henceforth stand for a smaller quantity of gold. In other words, the standard of money will be changed, and henceforth gold will be minted in accordance with this new standard. Thus, in consequence of its idealisation as a medium of circulation, gold in its turn will have changed the legally established relation in which it functioned as the standard of price. A similar revolution would be repeated after a certain period of time: gold both as the standard of price and the medium of circulation in this way being subject to continuous changes so that a change in the one aspect would cause a change in the other and vice versa.”
(A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy, Karl Marx p 110.)

The inflation of prices does not arise as a result of an increase in the supply of money, but from an increase in the number of tokens circulating which represent money. A confusion exists because of the nature of theories concerning the determination of value, and because of a concentration on the role of money merely as a means of circulation. Suppose the value of gold remains constant i.e. its cost of production does not change. More gold coins are put into circulation than are required to circulate the given amount of commodities in the economy at their given values. This increased money supply does not result in an inflation of prices because if it did the value of gold as a commodity would itself rise above the value of gold as medium of exchange – 1 ounce of gold would trade for more than a 1 ounce gold coin.
This is because the value of gold both as commodity and as money is determined not by demand and supply (though its price may be in the short term) as the neo-classical school maintain, but by the labour time required for its production. A surplus of gold coins would consequently not result in an increase in the prices of other commodities, but in the surplus of those coins being withdrawn from circulation and hoarded as stores of value either in the form of coins, or by being melted down and sold as bullion.

“It is thus evident that a person who restricts his studies of monetary circulation to an analysis of the circulation of paper money with a legal rate of exchange must misunderstand the inherent laws of monetary circulation. These laws indeed appear not only to be turned upside down in the circulation of tokens of value but even annulled; for the movements of paper money, when it is issued in the appropriate amount, are not characteristic of it as token of value, whereas its specific movements are due to infringements of its correct proportion to gold, and do not directly arise from the metamorphosis of commodities.”
(ibid p 122)
Marx demonstrates what really happens with the issue of coins as opposed to paper money.

(A Contribution to a Critique of Political Economy, Karl Marx p 113)
“The circulation of commodities can absorb only a certain amount of gold currency, the alternating contraction and expansion of the volume of money in circulation manifesting itself accordingly as an inevitable law, whereas any amount of paper seems to be absorbed by circulation.”
(ibid p 122)

(ibid p 121-2)
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