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Front Page arrow Titles (by Subject) arrow 538.: ricardo to mcculloch1[Answered by 541] - The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, Vol. 9 Letters 1821-1823

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538.: ricardo to mcculloch1[Answered by 541] - David Ricardo, The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, Vol. 9 Letters 1821-1823 [1821]

Edition used:

The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, ed. Piero Sraffa with the Collaboration of M.H. Dobb (Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2005). Vol. 9 Letters 1821-1823.

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.


538.

ricardo to mcculloch1
[Answered by 541]

My Dear Sir

Mr. Wigram, the chairman of the East India company, has at length sent me the paper respecting the sales of tea, which I enclose. I hope it will answer the purpose for which you required it.2

The difficult subject of value has engaged my thoughts but without my being able satisfactorily to find my way out of the labyrinth. I have received 2 long letters from Malthus on the subject, and as it may assist you to know the pours and contres of Malthus’s doctrine I enclose his last letter and my answer.3 Return them by the post, but take care your parcel is not over weight when you have read them. I am in no hurry for the answer as it is a copy.4 I wish also you would send me your own views on this subject in writing. In your article on Polit. Econ. in the Encyclopedia, you do not, I think, do quite justice to the argument of our opponents. I cannot get over the difficulty of the wine which is kept in a cellar for 3 or 4 years, or that of the oak tree, which perhaps originally had not 2/expended on it in the way of labour, and yet comes to be worth £100. There is no difficulty in estimating all these in a measure of value such as ours, but the difficulty is in shewing why we fix on that measure, and in proving it to be, what a measure of value must be, itself invariable.

I have written a short essay on the Plan of a National Bank,1 in which I have endeavored to shew that no one would be injured by such an establishment, but the Bank of England and the other issuers of paper money in the country who have no claim whatever to a profit which may be compared to that which is derived from the seignorage of money.

I have been expecting a letter from you every day. I hope I shall soon hear from you. The ladies of my family desire to be kindly remembered to you,—my daughter Mary in particular who is obliged to you for your efforts to make her understand Political Economy—she is grateful for your able article on that subject which is safely arrived.2

Ever Yrs.

D Ricardo

[1 ]Addressed: ‘J. R. MCulloch Esqr. / Buccleugh Place / Edinburgh’.

MS in British Museum.—Letters to McCulloch, XXXIX.

[2 ]Enclosure wanting. McCulloch was preparing an article on ‘East India Company’s Monopoly—Price of Tea’, for the Edinburgh Review, Jan. 1824 (Art. VIII). It is no doubt Wigram’s paper that he describes on p. 459: ‘We have now in our possession an official account commencing with the first sale in 1820, and ending with the second sale in 1823, containing a statement of the various descriptions of tea sold by the East India Company at their quarterly sales, the prices at which the teas were put up, the prices at which they were actually sold, the total quantities sold, and the quantities refused by the dealers, at the Company’s upset prices.’

[3 ]Letters 532 and 536.

[4 ]See above, p. 320, n. 1.

[1 ]Published posthumously in 1824.

[2 ]Perhaps the Encyclopaedia Britannica article, see above, p. 275.