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30 Aug. 1801
Polit. Economy
A1
Method
I. Sponte Acta
5
20
The habit /practice/ of exchange being established, each modification of the
matter of wealth to which soever of the three abovementioned divisions it
belongs, is in virtue of that practice, convertible with more or less facility
and certainty into every other.
The richer a community, the better secured it is thereby against hostility and
famine.}
A stock of instruments of mere enjoyment presupposes on the part of each
individual a pre-assured stock of the articles of subsistence. The stock of
articles of subsistence capable of existing /being produced and kept up/ in a
country in any other wise than that of exchange has its limits: it can never
extend much beyond the stock necessary for the subsistence of the inhabitants
the stock of instruments of mere enjoyment is without limit.
It is only in respect and in virtue of the quantity of the stock of instruments
of mere enjoyment that one country can exceed another in wealth. The quantity of
wealth in any /every/ country is as the quantity of its instruments of
enjoyment.
[Marginal rubric:] A pine apple contains for one particle of subsistence a
hundred of mere enjoyment x potatoe
+ Note
To '.1[?]. Objects Note concluded
It is in consequence of {the} interconvertibility abovementioned that wealth in
any one shape is wealth in every other: that every instrument of mere enjoyment
{is} a pledge of security: and that national power, so far as depends upon
wealth, is in proportion not to absolute, but only to relative opulence: not to
the absolute quantity of the matter of wealth in a nation, but to its ratio to
the mass of population. For, of the aggregate value of the aggregate mass of the
matter of wealth in a nation, the part dedicated to enjoyment is the only
disposable part: the only part applicable to the purpose of defence. What is
necessary to subsistence must be applied to subsistence, or the man must starve.
Hence, the reason why France, so much superior to Britain not only in population
but in absolute wealth, is yet inferior in power, except with relation to
countries, so near adjacent, that the expence of invading them, may be more or
less defrayed by the contributions made in them.
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