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4 Novr.1800
Brouillon
Paper Mischief
1*/5
* [Column 1]
Sinking Fund if a self-supporting Fund = Redemption of debt.
Provision is made by Government for the removal of the load of debt at the end
of a period of 40 or 50 years: Why not against[?] a cause of impoverishment of
([...?] partial as to classes affected) so much more powerful than national
debt?
Vendible
1. Individual
2. Aggregate
Aggregate
1. Physical—Land & Building
2. Ideal. Annuities &c.
Prefat. 1. Introd. Co-effects become[?] indexes—
When political economy is thoroughly understood and the relations between the
several phænomena/the matters of fact which constitute the subject matter of it
is clearly made out, and effects branching out from one & the same cause,
are traced to this their source each one of every such system of connectd
effects, will serve as a diagnostic and index to the rest.
By this means by means of a few [...?]/matters of fact [...?] public[?] in their
nature to be concealed, the eye of the politician may be able to penetrate into
the unknown[?] [...?] of affairs in a hostile state.
[Column 2]
Coining-Quasi
It is time to reclaim this stray prerogative which has thus long and thus
incautiously been suffered/to be [...?]/left in the hands of individuals.
The robbery committed by Bankers is peculation pro ratâ
A distinction that whether observed or no ought never to be unobserved by
criminalists, is that between peculation in toto and peculation pro ratâ. The
crime of Bankers, if it were one belongs to the latter head.
Revolution
A revolution in property—of the quiet kind—and yet setting aside the mischief of
disturbance &c little less extensive than the most turbulent ones known.
Fixed reduction of General rate of Interest.
Produces the mischief of encrease of money without the benefit.
[Column 3]
Price—measure of
The price of a particular article may rise to any degree without any addition to
the quantity of money in the country: do of all articles, not: but only in
proportion to the money.
No addition to the quantity of money would raise prices, supposing the addition
to wealth proportionable: therefore from the absolute addition to money must be
deducted the quantity equivalent to wealth, in estimating the cause and measure
of the rise.
Money Increase Ê Interest Decrease
An excess in the quantity of money serves to counter balance and check the
mischief resulting from the reduction of the rate of interest, which arises out
of the augmentation in the quantity of stock.
French Assignats
Produced the effect of money according to the price they were taken at
[Column 4]
Prices—how obtained
The quantity of money in circulation i:e: actually employd in buying can never
be worth more or less than quantity of commodities bought with/by it
The price of any sort of goods in two different years is the same thing with the
quantities of money given in the two respective years for the same quantity of
goods.
Therefore if in the second year the price of goods is double what it was in the
first) it follows and shews that the same quantity of money was in the second
year worth in goods but half of what it was in the first: if the whole of one[?]
quantity of money was worth the whole quantity of goods, the half of the money
is/was worth but the half of the goods of the same year and a given sum in the
second year was worth but half what
[Column 5]
what the same sum was worth in the first year.
A. Smith
Admitted that paper may have a tendency in a certain degree to expell cash but
not to its own amount: and so much as it fails of expelling to its own amount by
so much it must rise prices
It tends to expell cash—because as money grows cheap in the country and other
vendible commodities grow dear in proportion to what they are in other
countries, it becomes advantageous to send the money out to other countries in
exchange for goods. This is particularly the case of provisions of which the
real cost of production can not be so much diminished by machines as that of
Cloaths and furniture.
But in England this tendency is counteracted at both ends—
1. by the laws against exporting cash.
2. —against importing provisions.
[Column 6]
{A. Smith’s position is disproved to intuitive certainty by the simple fact of
the rise of prices}
What are the prices meant?
The prices given by consumers, the ultimate prices—or those given by Dealers the
intermediate or preliminary prices. or both together?
Semble the ultimate: these are what bear ration to income—so that the sum of
them is equal to the sum of income minus money saved and unemployd[?]
These ultimate prices, are the only prices felt.
The intermediate if they did not fall upon the ultimate would do no harm:—but
that is impossible.
No addition to wealth can be effected by any addition to money any otherwise
than by encreasing the proportion of enriching to impoverishing expenditure.
But in as much as fresh-inflowing paper money is added
[Column 7]
added in the first instance to capital i:e: employd in enriching expenditure,
does it not appear from hence that paper money adds something to wealth upon the
whole.
Error Sources.
{1. Case of individuals.
2. Sophistry of the language detracting from the value of paper money
3. —and of metallic money.
4. Accidental connection between encrease of money metal and paper and encrease
of wealth.}
5. Money raisable by paper which could not have been raisable without. ex. gr.
Bank of England. It is a mode of taxing without possibility of opposition to the
tax.
Coin
Forbidding export or melting of coin was in fact an act of Bankruptcy—stripping
the metal of its value—and reducing it to the condition of bad paper.
[Column 8]
A case might be put in which an addition to the quantity of money shall be not
merely accompanied by, but productive of an addition to wealth: and this without
any addition to prices or at least without a proportionable addition to
prices.
But the case thus put would not quadrate with the real state of things in
England.
Suppose money imported into the Scotch[?] Isles and employd[?] in fisheries.
Cases as between money and wealth.
1. Wealth encreasing money encreasing in the same proportion—No rise.
2. Wealth encreasing money encreasing in greater proportion—Rise.
3. Wealth encreasing. money encreasing but in less proportion—No rise but
fall.
4. Wealth encreasing—money decreasing—Greater fall.
[Column 9]
Cases continued
1. Wealth decreasing money decreasing in the same proportion—No fall
2. Wealth decreasing—Money decreasing in greater proportion—Rise.
3. Wealth decreasing—money decreasing but in a less proportion—No fall—but Rise.
Return of a state of things in which money should be stationary or
decreasing—
If the decrease were gradual no inconvenience would ensue—The[?] Rents would be
lowered—but prices of provisions would have been lowered first {Goods being
sold} The money as well as real price of exportable goods being lowered goods
would be exported to a larger amount or a revenue might be drawn from foreign
nations by taxes on Exports
[...?] bread basket stops.
[Column 10]
Data as between 2 points of Time 1750 & 1800
1. Quantity of wealth.
2. Quantity of money less—equal—or greater
3. Prices—higher—equal—or lower.
Known antecedently
1. Wealth/Income of 1750
2. Wealth/Income of 1800
3. Prices of 1750
4. Prices of 1800
5. Money of 1750
Known by inference
6. Money of 1800
Cases continued
1. Wealth stationary money stationary. No rise nor fall.
2. Wealth stationary—money encreasing. Rise
3. Wealth stationary money decreasing—Fall.
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