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[Rudiments sheet]
3 July 1800
Ann. y Notes
Wealth
Means of encreasing.
Brouillon.
I Natural Sources
1. Land dry { Surface - Bowels
2 Land covered with Water
1 Surface improvement
2. Bowels - discovery of more productive Mines.
3. Water - Discovery of more productive Fishing Spots
II Conveyance
Charge of an ingredient in the expence of every thing
Conveyance Means or Instruments of
1. Fixed Roads
Rivers
Canals
Bridges
Harbours
2. Moveable 1. Carts &c
2. Coaches &c
3. Ships &c
III. Custody - Instruments of
Receptacles 1 Moveable Se Conveyance, Instruments of
2 Fixed
Fixed
1. Houses Dwelling
2. Workhouses
3. Inclosed Fields &c
4. Household receptacles, viz. Chest of Drawers &c
2. Boxes & other Packages &c
IV. Goods of immediate use
2. Of instrumental use - subservient to the production of heads of immediate use.
Lessening the expence or real price of articles of immediate use by
1. Discarding articles of instrumental use
2. Substitution of less expensive articles of intrumentary use
V. Labour Augmenting
1. The quantity of
2. The effect of -
Quantity - on the part of hands
1. Already employd
2. - as yet unemploy’d -
Augmentation of the effect of Labour as affected by
1. Diminishing the quantity of materials necessary to the production of a given effect.
2. D o the value necessary
3. D o the quantity of labour necessary
4 D o the value or expence of labour necessary &c.
Quantity is diminished by
1. Division of tasks distribution of operations
2. Substitution /Introduction/ of Machinery to diminish the quantum of human
1. Exertion of body necessary
2. Attention or exertion of mind necessary -
5. Diminution of the quantity of time requisite for the operation or process.
Ex. gr. in
1. Blacking
2. Tanning
6. Thence of the interest of money employd in
1. Receptacle
2 Tools & other implements.
VI. Acquisition
National Modes of
1. Internal production
2. Importation in consequence of
1. Exchange
2. Capture
3. Receipt by Gift ex. gr. by Treaty
VII. Value is
1. Intrinsic, or independent of fancy. Ex. gr. capacity of affording nourishment to the sustentation[?] of life for a certain time
2. Fantastic - dependent on fancy. Ex. gr. Colonies and texture of apparel
N.B. Fantastic value can be measured only by reference to Intrinsic value in the way of exchange.
Intrinsic value can never fall nor rise.
Fantastic value is liable to fall and rise continually.
Capital Employments of.
1. Inclosing Waste Land
2. Improving inclosed land.
3. Opening or extra-working Mines.
4. Erection or Improvement of Manufactories.
5 Construction and improvement of immoveable instruments of conveyance as Roads, Canals, Bridges, Harbours.
6 - D o moveable as Ships, Carts &c
7. Erection or Enlargement of Warehouses.
8. D o of Dwelling Houses.
Similar Items
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Title: [1823. March 29. S. 9. V. Interior]Description: 1823. March 29. S. 9. V. Interior communication Minister's functions. Article 1. Saving exceptions, to the interior communication Minster belong the three functions relatively to all such instruments of communication between any part and any other of the territory of the state, as are at the disposal of Government. Article 2. Examples of such as are fixt are the following. 1. Roads, whether in the open country or in town. 2. Lakes, Rivers, and the beds of both when dry. 3. Artificial Canals, with the Locks, Tunnels, and other works thereto belonging. 4. Bridges and dry Tunnels. 5. Aqueducts. 6. Toll-houses, for the collection of Toll money for the use of any of the above instruments of communication. 7. Letter Post Houses. 8. Carriage Post Houses. 9. Inns for the use of Travellers. Article 3. Examples of moveable instruments of communication are the following. 1. Vehicles of all sorts, habitually employed in the conveyance of Passengers, or Goods, or both. 2. Beasts of saddle and draught of all sorts so employed. Article 4. Exceptions are all such Instruments of the above sorts as by the Executive Chief shall have been placed at the disposal of 1. the Army Minister, 2. the Navy Minister, 3. the Preventive Service Minister, 4. the indigance Relief Minister, 5. the Education Minister, or 6. the National Domain Minister. Article 5. So the Statistic and melioration-suggesting functions, relatively to all such instruments of communication as are at the disposal of any Sub-Legislature, or of any individual or body of individuals.
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Title: [31[?] Polit. Economy. Analysis 29 Aug 1801]Description: 31[?] Polit. Economy. Analysis 29 Aug 1801 [Col. 2] 56. Labour {encreasing {diminishing All other circumstances given the quantity of wealth produced within a given time will be as the quantity of labour {performed within that time.} 57. But taking each branch of industry separately, the quantity of wealth produced by labour within a given time being given the quantity of wealth produced in the whole community in that time, will naturally be inversely as the quantity of labour exerted in that branch: becasue the less labour is bestwoed in any particular branch or say the greater the quantity of labour withdrawn from any particular branch The quantity of wealth produced in it not being thereby diminished—the more is left free to be employd in other branches. [col. 3] 57. This gives the solution of what otherwise might seem a paradox: viz that wealth is encreased, as well by /diminishing/diminution of/ labour as by the encrease of it. [Col. 4] 58. Labour(Quantity (Efficiency In every instance where an encrease in the quantity of wealth has been produced, an encrease in the quantity of labour bestowed has been {an eff} contributory to that encrease—or say an efficient cause of it or not: if not if the encrease has not been in the quantity of labour so bestowed, it has been in /the effect/the efficiency/ of the quantity of labour so bestowed. The division is therefore an exhaustive one. [Col. 5] 59. Large Scale Ways in which the concentration of a large mass of capital in one set of hands—that is under one management—is favourable to the encrease of wealth. N o 15 1. Division of Labour. thence encrease of skill in regard to each operation. A. Sm N o 16. II. 4 2. Division of Labour—thence saving goings and comings—expence of conveyance in minute distances. A. Sm. A. Sm II. 5 3. Introduction of machinery—thence substitution of agents less expensive than man in the character prime movers (sources of motion) and guides. N o 0 4. Saving in respect of receptacles: the ratio of containing matter to contained space being less and less in proportion as the recptacle is greater and greater. [Col. 6] 59. 5. Saving in respect of fragments of labour on the part of the managing hands, and other hands whose whole time is constantly paid for. If there In a small establishment if there is more work than can be done by two, three must be retained, although there be not /half/a quarter/ enough work to fill up the time of the third. N o 0 6. Like saving in respect of cattle and dead instruments (tools or machines) which are but occasionally in use. N o 0 7. Saving in respect of the employment of refuse articles: articles which if disposed in several establishments and situations would be hardly worth collecting but which possess a value worth regarding when ready collected in one. [Col. 7] 59. Large Scale N o 23 8. Saving by purchases made at wholesale price. Not only the profit of the intermediate class or classes of dealers is thus saved, but the expence of conveyance from one to the other. N o 16 9. Employment of cheaply paid hands. By means of the division of labour, employment may be found for hands of imperfect ability for whom employment could not have been otherwise found to advantage. Hence the labour of these hands may be obtained at a cheap rate with reference to the expence of the particular master, and perhaps even for nothing with reference to the expence of the community taken together: for the labourer thus maintained /out of/by/ the pay for which he [...?] pays in labour might otherwise have been to be kept for nothing. [Col. 8] 59. Large Scale Apply this not to large manufactories only but to large Farms. N o 0 10. Applying to each work the hands best adapted to that work. The faculty of doing this will be as the choice of hands, and that as the number of hands. 11. In Agriculture the faculty of making improvements rising one above another indefinitely in respect of the mass of capital required: ex gr: Manuring, draining, making Roads and other Communications. So in regard to mining: [Col. 9] 60. Ways in which and means whereby the expence (real expence) attending the /extraction[?]/production/ of any article at the place where it is wanted to be employd may be reduced. [Col. 10] Preservation is 1.—for consumption as in cases of articles that are of use no otherwise than as consumed—as food drink &c. 2.—against consumption or say deperition as in cases of Houses furniture, cloaths &c.
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Title: [Polit. Econ. Analysis 20 June 1801]Description: Polit. Econ. Analysis 20 June 1801 [Col 1] According to these topics the same articles be ranged in different orders. I. Subject matter of operation. Original—Land 1. Uncovered with water. 2. Covered with water.(All Sea, [...?], Rivers and Lakes. II. Operator or Agent Principal/Orignal—Man—by Labour 2. Subordinate 1. Animate—Cattle 2. Inanimate—Machines Topics Ends in view or Uses to which encrease of wealth is subservient. 1 Subsistence 2. Enjoyment 3. Security or defence. *II. Subject Matters I. Natural state 1. Mineral 2. Vegetable 3. Animal II. Improved state 1. Unmixt, as above. 2. Compunded or mixt without alteration. 3. Modified by fabrication. ______________________ III. Principal Operations 1. Discovery 2. Extraction[?] 3. Production or Naturalization[?] 4. Improvement 5. Preservation 6. Employment or Use 7. Land conveyance 8. Exchange IIII. Agents 1. Individuals 2. Government V. Means of action or influence on the part of Government 1. Encouragement 2. Discouragement 1. Unoptional—prohibition 2. Optional—Taxation To Col V [Col 5] Topics continued from Col I VI. Taxation an operation not formative/conducive to but obstructive of encrease of wealth, yet every where employ’d through necessity for the purpose of defence. Will/inclination[?]/ to the encrease of wealth can not be wanting on the part of any individual: tho’ in some instances it is overpowered by the will to spend it, yet in the most unfrugal community the spendthrifts are in but small proportion. But in the struggle for encreasing wealth each to his utmost it will happen that one man shall give encrease to his wealth in such manner as shall occasion a more than equivalent decrease on the part of others:—here then comes the demand for the interposition of the law. [Col. 2] Quantity of wealth is absolute or relative—Relative involves population, of which separately. Wealth is the produce of /labour and/ land and labour—of labour operating upon land itself or the produce of it. Note. Encreasing the quantity of land will not encrease the quantity of wealth, unless it encreases either the quantity of labour or the effect of it. ______________ Every means employed for the encrease of wealth may therefore be resolved into encrease of 1. the quantity of labour. 2. the effect of it. ______________ Wealth itself is of no value but as an instrument of either 1. Subsistence. 2. Security or defence. 3. Enjoyment. The value of a given mass of wealth to be measured must be measured with reference to these several objects. [Col. 3] Subsistence affords an exact measure of the value of a mass of wealth—With reference to Subsistence, the value of a mass of the means of subsistence, is as the number of individuals it will subsist for a certain time. With reference to Security, the value of a mass of wealth adapted to that purpose does not admitt of any such measure—It is still, however, the joint ratio of the quantity of the labour employ’d in the production of it—and the effect of it. All instruments of Subsistence are instruments of enjoyment: but there are instruments of enjoyment which are not instruments of subsistence. [Col. 4] Enjoyments distinguished according to their Seat or Inlet are 1. Sensual 2. Mental 3. Mixt Sensual enjoyments, by the principle of association are rendered mental also, and by that means mixt. The enjoyment derived from objects in any degree sensual depends upon— 1.The state of the sense or organ to which the object is applied. 2. The nature of the object or instrument by which, when applied to the organ, the enjoyment is produced. On the part of the object—the mass of enjoyments is encreased by every addition to the variety of the collection of instruments of enjoyment taken together—by novelty on the part of any one. [Col. 6] Materials of wealth considered as employd for the purpose of encreasing the quantity or value of a mass of wealth are called Capital. The national wealth is the aggregate of the wealth of individuals. Wealth and Capital is real or pecuniary. Pecuniary capital is money employd in the way of exchange in purchasing the labour, [...?] materials or land of which real capital is composed. Capital or wealth acts no otherwise than as far as it acts on labour. It encreases wealth no otherwise than as far as it encreases either the quantity or the effect of labour. [Col. 7] II. Subject Matters —with reference to the mode of their subserviency to use. 1. Ground. 2. Materials to be improved. 3. Instruments 4. Receptacles 5. Productions in a state for use. __________ Receptacles 1. Stationary, viz: Buildings. 2. Moveable or /Ambulatory/occasional. viz: 1. Carriages 2. Navigable vessels. Receptacles are 1. Particular; such as such as vessels, chests, boxes &c. 2. General—or buildings in which the particular vessels are contained. __________ Proportional-quantity-stocking principle Example Guns in one shop Shot in another Powder in a third. [Col. 8] Means of encrease, their Comparative Importance. 1. articles of Subsistence 2. Defence—the denand for which varies with the danger. 3. Enjoyment, not contributing to subsistence. __________ Productive Capital is composed of 1. Land with its improvements. 2. The aggregate mass of articles of subservient use )( immediate use. __________ Opulence degree of (relative) is as the sum of labourer’s incomes to d o of all incomes as between nation and nation, the real value of labourer’s wages being supposed the same in each. Ceteris paribus a populous country will be the cheaper by a saving on the aggregate expence of conveyance. [Col. 9] Materials Rude Produce, Application of Labour thereto I. Extraction 1. Separation from the natural source—Land or Water. 1. Minerals—Discovery, digging, [...?], extracting, smelting. 2. Vegetables 1. Discovery 1. Felling Timber 2. Cutting herbs 3. Gathering fruits 3. Animals Housing[?] Water 4. Fishing 1. catching 2. Curing. II. Conveyance. __________ Finance Where a tax acts purely as a prohibition, that prohibition or diminution of consumption is only relative: so much as it takers from the consumption of the article tax[ed], so much it adds to the consumption of other articles: except so far as the aggregate of taxes takes from the aggregate of consumption of articles of enjoyment, to add to that of the articles of defence for which the [...?] is raised. [Col. 10] Unproductive taxes I. Indirect income tax by encrease of money. II. All measures encreasing the quantity of unprofitable labour; and thence diminishing the effect of profitable labour. viz. 1. Prohibition of export of money, thence unprofitable labour to collect the money by stealth, [...?] and find means to evade the tax. 2. Prohibition or [...?] direct trade between country and country: thence unprofitable labour &c. attendant on circuitous trade. Finance In proportion to the disadvantageousness of the terms on which money is borrowed it adds to [...?] though at the expence of intermediate comfort.
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