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Front Page arrow Titles (by Subject) arrow 343.: ricardo to place1[Reply to 342] - The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, Vol. 8 Letters 1819-June 1821

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343.: ricardo to place1[Reply to 342] - David Ricardo, The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, Vol. 8 Letters 1819-June 1821 [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. 8 Letters 1819-1821.

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.


343.

ricardo to place1
[Reply to 342]

Dear Sir

I have looked carefully at the passage which you quote from Dr. Hamilton, but do not see that the Dr. shews that there cannot be a sinking fund from taxes.

The case he supposes of borrowing money at simple interest and lending it at compound interest, I do not clearly understand. If the nation borrows a loan of a million, for which it taxes itself 50000£ pr. Annm., to pay the interest, and then employs the million at compound interest in the discharge of debt, it will the first year discharge the debt of the million, and will from that time employ £50000 pr ann. at compound interest in the discharge of old debt. In fact it taxes itself £50000 pr. Annm. for a Sinking Fund. When a nation or an individual borrows money at simple interest, and lends it at compound interest, it has the interest to pay every year, but never receives any thing in return while it continues2 the original loan, or which is the same thing, the annual interest of it, at compound interest. So far from this case proving your proposition, it appears to me to establish mine. A nation taxes itself £50000 pr. Annm. without increasing its expenditure. If the revenue and expenditure were before equal this surplus of £50000 pr. Annm. being devoted to the payment of debt, will produce the same effects, as if it were lent to A or B at compound interest, and when arrived at a certain sum were employed for the payment of debt. Do you mean to say (I am sure Dr. Hamilton does not) that if our income exceeds our expenditure £50000 pr. Annm., and is devoted to the payment of debt, that it will not diminish our debt at a compound rate of interest? Shall we not be less in debt by £50000 the first year, £52500, the second, £55125 the third and so on. Call this a S F or what you please, for I will not dispute about a name, will not this be the result? If you say it will what is our difference? On this subject I agree entirely with Dr. Hamilton—pray look at Page 53, and following pages of the last edition of his book.—

I am Sincerely Yrs

David Ricardo

I am very much obliged to you for sending me the account of the proceedings at the Westminster election—I have read it with a great deal of interest1 .

[1 ]Addressed: ‘F. Place Esqr. / Charing Cross / London’.

MS in British Museum, Add. 27,836, fols. 117–18.—Economic Journal, June 1893, pp. 292–3; Letters to Trower, XXX.

[2 ]‘to lend’ is del. here.

[1 ]An Authentic Narrative of the Events of the Westminster Election, London, Stodart, 1819, a volume of pp. vii, 412, compiled by John Cam Hobhouse and Francis Place.