es only free pricing for goods and services and no other trade and property restrictions, either. 10. The popular view overlooks also how unnatural a condition of unemployment really is: it does not occur in a subsistence or barter economy. It appears only in monetary economies - when monetary exchanges are forcefully interfered with. In national and world economies unemployment is actually as unnatural as in private household economies. The demand for labour always tends to exceed the supply - or rather drives labour costs up until both balance for the time being, with all not so urgent work postponed to the future. "There is always more work to be done than there are persons to do it." Vsaid Leonard E. Read in: "Having My Way" FEE, p. 130. The demand for labour is tied only to the need for labour and its products. This need is unlimited and can be satisfied to the extent of the full working capacity of those having the need. Under monetary freedom, the needs, to the extent that they are backed by working ability and willingness can be transformed into effective demand (if shop foundation is, as usual, available for new issues of exchange media and effectively used for new issues by the holders of that shop-foundation). The unemployed would then get purchasing power into their hands - to the limits of their working ability and willingness and to the extent that they succeed in putting their notes into circulation or can make use of free clearing, to clear their requirements against their working power. Thus they would supply themselves with work, Clearing their working ability and willingness and effort against their consumer requirements. (All this could be arranged freely, naturally, through proper and specialized free clearing and banking methods, details of which were explained in Peace Plans 8-11.) In conclusion of this section I would like to say with - surprise, surprise, Karl Marx, in his "Criticism of Political Economy...