Page 61 of 62
[137] Ricardo, "Principles of Political Economy", p. 432.
[138] David Ricardo, "Reply to Mr. Bosanquet's Practical Observations, etc." p. 49. "That commodities would rise or fall in price, in proportion to the increase or diminution of money, I assume as a fact which is incontrovertible."
[139] David Ricardo, "The High Price of Bullion," etc. "Money would have the same value in all countries." p. 4. In his Political Economy Ricardo modified this statement, but not in a way to affect what has been said here.
[140] l. c. p. 3-4.
[141] l. c., p. 4.
[142] Ricardo, l. c., p. 11-12.
[143] Ricardo, l. c., p. 14.
[144] l. c., p. 17.
[145] Ricardo, l. c., p. 74-75. "England, in consequence of a bad harvest, would come under the case of a country having been deprived of a part of its commodities, and, therefore, requiring a diminished amount of circulating medium. The currency which was before equal to her payments would now become super-abundant and relatively cheap, in proportion ... of her diminished production; the exportation of this sum, therefore, would restore the value of her currency to the value of the currencies of other countries." His confusion of money and commodity, and of money and coin borders on the ludicrous in the following passage: "If we can suppose that after an unfavorable harvest, when England has occasion for an unusual importation of corn, another nation is possessed of a super-abundance of that article, but has no wants for any commodity whatever, it would unquestionably follow that such nation would not export its corn in exchange for commodities: but neither would it export corn for money, as that is a commodity which no nation ever wants absolutely, but relatively." l. c., p. 75. Pushkin in his hero poem makes the father of his hero incapable of comprehending that commodities are money. But that money is a commodity, the Russians have understood from times of yore as is proven not only by the English corn imports in 1838-1842, but by the entire history of their commerce.
[146] Conf. Thomas Tooke, "History of Prices," and James Wilson, "Capital, Currency and Banking." (The latter work is a reprint of a series of articles which appeared in the London Economist in 1844, 1845 and 1847.)
[147] James Deacon Hume: "Letters on the Corn Laws." London, 1834, p. 29-31. [Letter by H. B. T. on the Corn Laws and on the Rights of the Working Classes. Transl.]
[148] Thomas Tooke, "History of Prices," etc. London, 1848, p. 110.
[149] Conf. W. Blake's above quoted "Observations etc."
[150] James Mill: "Elements of Political Economy." [London, 1821, p. 95-101 passim. Transl.]
[151] A few months before the outbreak of the commercial crisis of 1857, a committee of the House of Commons was in session to inquire into the effect of the bank-laws of 1844 and 1845. Lord Overstone, the theoretical father of these laws, delivered himself of this boast in his testimony before the committee: "By strict and prompt adherence to the principles of the act of 1844, everything has passed off with regularity and ease; the monetary system is safe and unshaken, the prosperity of the country is undisputed, the public confidence in the wisdom of the act of 1844 is daily gaining strength; and if the committee wish for further practical illustration of the soundness of the principles on which it rests, or of the beneficial results which it has assured, the true and sufficient answer to the committee is, look around you; look at the present state of trade of the country, look at the contentment of the people; look at the wealth and prosperity which pervades every class of the community; and then, having done so, the committee may be fairly called upon to decide whether they will interfere with the continuance of an act under which these results have been developed." Thus did Overstone blow his own horn on the fourteenth of July, 1857; on the twelfth of November of the same year the Ministry had to suspend on its own responsibility the wonderful law of 1844.
[152] Tooke was entirely ignorant of Steuart's work, as may be seen from his "History of Prices for 1839-1847," London, 1848. where he reviews the history of the theories of money.
[153] Tooke's most important work besides the "History of Prices" which his co-worker Newmarch published in six volumes, is "An Inquiry into the Currency Principle, the Connection of the Currency with Prices" etc., 2nd edition, London, 1844. Wilson's book we have already quoted. Finally there is to be mentioned John Fullarton's "On the Regulation of Currencies," 2d edition, London, 1845.
[154] "We ought to ... distinguish ... between gold ... as merchandise, i. e. as capital, and gold ... as currency" (Tooke, "An Inquiry into the Currency Principle, etc." p. 10). "Gold and silver may be counted upon to realize on their arrival nearly the exact sum required to be provided ... gold and silver possess an infinite advantage over all other description of merchandize ... from the circumstance of being universally in use as money.... It is not in tea, coffee, sugar or indigo that debts, whether foreign or domestic, are usually contracted to be paid, but in coin; and the remittance, therefore, either in the identical coin designated, or in bullion which can be promptly turned into that coin through the mint or market of the country to which it is sent, must always afford to the remitter, the most certain, immediate, and accurate means of affecting this object, without risk of disappointment from the failure of demand or fluctuation of price." (Fullerton, l. c. p. 132-133.) "Any other article (except gold or silver) might in quantity or kind be beyond the usual demand of the country to which it is sent." (Tooke: "An Inquiry, etc.")