rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_3b0d8954-3c5f-5ebe-9d0b-7684c91ba2e3">1 Money in the Socialist Community
Chapter 7 The Concept of the Value of Money
1 Subjective and Objective Factors in the Theory of the Value of Money
2 The Objective Exchange Value of Money
3 The Problems Involved in the Theory of the Value of Money
Chapter 8 The Determinants of the Objective Exchange Value, or Purchasing Power, of Money
(I) The Element of Continuity in the Objective Exchange Value of Money
1 The Dependence of the Subjective Valuation of Money on the Existence of Objective Exchange Value
2 The Necessity for a Value Independent of the Monetary Function Before an Object Can Serve as Money
3 The Significance of Preexisting Prices in the Determination of Market Exchange Ratios
4 The Applicability of the Marginal-Utility Theory to Money
5 “Monetary” and “Nonmonetary” Influences Affecting the ObjectiveExchange Value of Money
7 The Stock of Money and the Demand for Money
9 Criticism of Some Arguments Against the Quantity Theory
10 Further Applications of the Quantity Theory
14 The Mechanism of the Market as a Force Affecting the Objective Exchange Value of Money
Chapter 9 The Problem of the Existence of Local Differences in the Objective Exchange Value of Money
2 Alleged Local Differences in the Purchasing Power of Money
3 Alleged Local Differences in the Cost of Living
Chapter 10 The Exchange Ratio Between Money of Different Kinds
1 The Twofold Possibility of the Coexistence of Different Kinds of Money
2 The Static or Natural Exchange Ratio Between Different Kinds of Money
Chapter 11 The Problem of Measuring the Objective Exchange Value of Money and Variations in It
3 Methods of Calculating Index Numbers
4 Wieser’s Refinement of the Methods of Calculating Index Numbers
5 The Practical Utility of Index Numbers
Chapter 12 The Social Consequences of Variations in the Objective Exchange Value of Money
1 The Exchange of Present Goods for Future Goods
2 Economic Calculation and Accountancy
3 Social Consequences of Variations in the Value of Money When Only One Kind of Money Is Employed
4 The Consequences of Variations in the Exchange Ratio Between Two Kinds of Money