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Front Page arrow Titles (by Subject) arrow 395.: malthus to ricardo1[Reply to 392.—Answered by 402] - The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, Vol. 8 Letters 1819-June 1821

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395.: malthus to ricardo1[Reply to 392.—Answered by 402] - 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.


395.

malthus to ricardo1
[Reply to 392.—Answered by 402]

My dear Ricardo,

As it [is]2 possible that the note of M. Say, if such note there be, may contain something which requires an answer; I shall be obliged to you to open the packet, and if you find anything of the kind inclose it to me. Of course I am in no hurry for the work itself.3

I shall be very happy to renew our old discussions on the interesting topics which have been so often the subject of our conversations. I also fancy that I am fortified with new arguments to prove demonstratively that a neat revenue is absolutely impossible under the determination to employ the whole produce in the production of necessaries, and consequently that if there is not an adequate taste for luxuries and conveniences, or unproductive labour, there must necessarily be a general glut. But I want more particularly to talk to you about these parts of the subject where you think I have misconceived and mistaken you. You know I would not do it intentionally; but I think there may be some parts where the words will fairly bear out my construction, and yet you may not have intended to be so understood, in which case I may not be so much to blame. I am preparing a new edition4 and shall be glad of any corrections and suggestions which you will give me, both in reference to those parts which relate to you, and any others.

With regard to your new definition of the objects of Political Economy, I own it appears to me very confined; and if it be just, I should say that political economy would be at once converted from a science which I have always considered as the most practically useful in the whole circle, into one which would merely serve to gratify curiosity. In the same manner when you reject the consideration of demand and supply in the price of commodities and refer only to the means of supply, you appear to me to look only at the half of your subject. No wealth can exist unless the demand, or the estimation in which the commodity is held exceeds the cost of production: and with regard to a vast mass of commodities does not the demand actually determine the cost? How is the price of corn, and the quality of the last land taken into cultivation determined but by the state of the population and the demand. How is the price of metals determined? And why are the prices of wood poultry hogs &c according to Adam Smith so much higher than formerly.1

Do fifty oak trees valued at 20£ each contain as much labour as a stone wall in Gloucestershire which has cost 1000£. But the Post waits

In great haste.

Ever Yours

T R Malthus

[1 ]Addressed: ‘D. Ricardo Esqr MP. / Gatcomb Park / Minchinhampton / Gloucestershire’. Postmark, 1820.

MS in R.P.

[2 ]Omitted in MS.

[3 ]See letter 393, postscript. A letter from Ricardo is evidently wanting.

[4 ]The second edition of Malthus’s Principles of Political Economy was published posthumously in 1836.

[1 ]Wealth of Nations, Bk. 1, ch. xi, pts. ii and iii; vol. i, pp. 166–7 and 224–5.