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Front Page arrow Titles (by Subject) arrow III: GENERAL COURT OF PROPRIETORS OF THE BANK OF ENGLAND18 February 1816 - The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, Vol. 5 Speeches and Evidence

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III: GENERAL COURT OF PROPRIETORS OF THE BANK OF ENGLAND18 February 1816 - David Ricardo, The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, Vol. 5 Speeches and Evidence [1819]

Edition used:

The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, ed. Piero Sraffa with the Collaboration of M.H. Dobb (Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2005). Vol. 5 Speeches and Evidence 1815-1823.

Part of: The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, 11 vols (Sraffa ed.)

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III

GENERAL COURT OF PROPRIETORS OF THE BANK OF ENGLAND1
8 February 1816

Mr. Mellish, the Governor, stated that the object for which the Court was called together, was to consider a letter from the Government applying for an extension for two years of the loan of three millions now existing without interest, and for a new loan of six millions at 4 per cent for two years. Ministers intended to propose to Parliament that the restriction on cash payments be continued for one year. The Directors proposed complying with the application of Government. The Governor reminded the Court that ‘their engagements with the country, in so far as it regarded their chartered rights, were now near a termination, and therefore it was absolutely necessary that some understanding should be come to with Government’, in order to effect an arrangement, based on equity and good faith.

Mr. Ricardo wished to know whether it was understood that, at the expiration of the period of the loan, the Bank would continue in the custody of the money of the government? He was led to this inquiry by a paper laid before the House of Commons, in which the Directors seemed to claim the custody of the money as a right.2 Now, however, they seemed to have abandoned this claim.

Mr. Mellish ‘declined entering into any discussion on the topic alluded to by the hon. proprietor. He could not be expected to say what would happen two years hence. In the mean time a bargain must be a bargain.’

The motion was put and was ‘carried by a very large majority, there being only two or three hands held against it.’

[1 ]Report in The Times, 9 Feb.1816. Ricardo refers to this Court in ed. 2 of Economical and Secure Currency, above, IV, 88, n. Cp. his letter to Malthus of 7 Feb. 1816, below, VII, 19.

[2 ]Mr. Mellish’s Resolutions, which are discussed by Ricardo and reprinted in Economical and Secure Currency, above, IV, 86 and 138.