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22 Aug. 1801
Political Economy
{A}E
Method D.
Finance
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{17}
VIII Finance an appendix and inseparable accompaniment to Political Economy.
Taxes sacrifices made of {enjoyment} /wealth/ and opulence at the expence of
enjoyment, to security in respect of defence, and security in respect of
subsistence.
The end is pursued in a direct and primary way, by operating towards the maximum
of positive encrease: in an indirect and secondary, but not less efficient way,
by operating towards the minimum of decrease.
Taxes and other means of supply for the expenses of government - Wars with their
taxes and their devastations are means by which, of necessity, in a certain
degree, too often beyond the extent of the necessity - decrease in the amount of
wealth and population, is produced. In this way the field of Political Economy
includes within it the field of Finance.
A tax, in as far as the thing taxed is abstained from, operates as a
prohibition: as a discouragement to that branch of trade or production to which
the thing belongs, and as an encouragement to rural branches, that is more or
less to all other branches. Thence another head of connection between Finance
and Political Economy in its narrower sense. The same illusion which has
recommended the encouragement of particular branches of wealth as a means of
encrease to the whole, has led to the exaggeration of the bad
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