7 4. For a single country a chronic tendency for relative wage cost to increase in relation to other countries might be a reason for tax favours to industry. For all industrial countries taken together this reason does not apply. It goes without saying that the restrictionist policy since 1974 and especially 1979 and 1980 has added to all these reasons for a weakening of the stimulus to invest a further and particularly strong one. Also the burden of the public debt has become vastly increased by the high interest policy. The list of causes does not necessarily suggest how one could undo them, but it gives perhaps food for thought. II. Just as budget deficits and taxation also inflation has started to be troublesome only after a time. In various countries there has been a fairly long period of full employ ment with moderate inflation rates - say of the order of 3 p.c. The theoretical reflection of this has been the structural theory of inflation which explains why a certain degree of inflation must necessarily accompany full employment (when wages are pulled up in industries with high productivity growth the wages in other industries follow so that the growth rate of