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24 Aug. 1801
C2
Polit. Economy
Method
III Non Agenda.
Encouragement
72
7
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Note to last page
It may however happen in some instances that a branch of industry which if
pursued would be more profitable than any other requires a mass of capital of
such magnitude, as individuals separately taken or in small numbers are not able
to raise. But where this happens it can only be in consequence of some positive
regulation of government, which in contemplation of the mischief apprehended
from over grown masses of capital in certain cases forbids limits or endeavours
/seeks/ to limit the quantity of capital that shall be applied under one
management to any branch of industry, by limiting the number of individuals who
shall be allowed to contribute to it, or by not suffering a man to embark in
trade any part of his property without embarking the whole. In giving an
encouragement of this sort /in this shape/, government does little or nothing
more than remove discouragements /obstacles/ of its own creating, and the good
it does if any is done at no expence.
When by the assistance /exertions of/ government a mass of capital which
otherwise would have gone into a branch of productive industry producing but 15
per Cent is directed into a branch producing 16 per Cent, the profit by those
exertions is not the 16 per Cent, but the difference between that and the 15 per
Cent, viz: the one per cent. It is for the 16 per cent however and not the one
percent that credit is commonly taken by those statesmen who go to market for
glory with the merit of affording encouragement to trade: and if 10
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