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24 Aug. 1801
Polit. Economy
Method
III. Non Agenda
1 Money
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6
{individuals, each to double his money in the same time: neither the aggregate of
real wealth, nor any man's share in it would thereby receive any encrease. Every
encrease of money by paper money, produces a correspondent depretiation in the
value of the pre-existing mass of money, and operates thereby as an indirect tax
upon pecuniary income; a tax the benefit of which is reaped by the issuer, and
the burthen borne by the possessors of what is called fixed income. If in
issuing it, he employs it in a non-commercial way, i:e: pays it away as a man
not in trade pays away the money by the spending of which he is said to spend
his income -ploy'd in expenditure of pecuniary income, the profit is all his
own, and it adds nothing to the mass of real wealth: if in issuing it, he
employs it in a commercial way,: viz. as money is employ'd in the shape of
capital, i:e: in making those purchases of things and labour of which real
productive capital is composed, the profit in this case too is all his own, he
adds to the national stock of present wealth (real wealth) to the amount of that
capital, and to growing wealth to the amount of the current rate of gross profit
upon stock or capital: if in issuing it he lends it to another who employs it
/by whom it is employ'd/ in the shape of capital as above, the borrower gets
profit upon stock deducting interest, and the lender interest, and the addition
to real wealth is as before.
In Britain the whole mass of pecuniary income may be about three times the mass
of money in existence, of which a part only, though the greater part, by passing
in the course of the year through a number of hands, greater by some number, but
not a great number, than those, constitutes the above mass of pecuniary income.
If then each added mass}
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