Econlib

The Library

Other Sites

Front Page arrow Titles (by Subject) arrow 265.: mcculloch to ricardo1[Answered by 267] - The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, Vol. 7 Letters 1816-1818

Return to Title Page for The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, Vol. 7 Letters 1816-1818

265.: mcculloch to ricardo1[Answered by 267] - David Ricardo, The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, Vol. 7 Letters 1816-1818 [1816]

Edition used:

The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, ed. Piero Sraffa with the Collaboration of M.H. Dobb (Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2005). Vol. 7 Letters 1816-1818.

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

About Liberty Fund:

Liberty Fund, Inc. is a private, educational foundation established to encourage the study of the ideal of a society of free and responsible individuals.


265.

mcculloch to ricardo1
[Answered by 267]

Dear Sir

I take the liberty to send you herewith a copy of a critique on your work on the “Principles of Political Economy and Taxation”, which I have written for the next number of the Edinburgh Review.2 It will, I hope, meet with your approbation—And I shall consider myself as having done no small service to the science if I have succeeded in giving a correct view of the leading doctrines contained in your great work, and if I shall have been anywise instrumental in attracting to it that share of the public attention to which it is so justly entitled—

There is no part of your work which I admire more than that in which you treat of the theory of taxation—But although I am fully convinced that the more your general principles on this subject are inquired into, the more correct they will be found; still it appears to me that you give as it were a reluctant assent to those arguments, and they are of the most decisive nature, which shew the impolicy and ruinous effects of a heavy taxation—Such at least is the impression which a repeated perusal of this part of your work has made upon me—I regret this exceedingly—All governments are but too much inclined to tax and overburden their subjects; and when a philosopher has pointed out the bad effects of excessive taxation in general, it is quite uncalled for and can serve no good purpose for him to attempt by afterwards modifying his expressions to apologise for the mischief by which it must in every case be attended—I have not alluded to this in the Review because I consider [it]1 as a matter of only secondary importance—But when you come to print a second edition, I am not without hopes you will revise this part2 ; and that you will see the impropriety of contaminating a work destined to be immortal, with any thing that can be construed into an excuse or palliation of that system of profligate extravagance according to which the economical affairs of the different European nations have long been managed—

I know you will forgive the freedom with which I have made these remarks—It is because I entertain the most profound admiration for the “Principles of Political Economy” and for its author, that I have thus candidly stated my opinion respecting what I consider as almost the only blemish in the former

I am Dear Sir Yours respectfully and sincerely

J. R. McCulloch

David Ricardo Esqre

[1 ]MS in R.P.—Received by Ricardo on 20 August (see below, p. 287).

[2 ]June 1818 [published in August], Art. II.

[1 ]Omitted in MS.

[2 ]Cp. below, p. 353.