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Front Page Titles (by Subject) APPENDIX A: A Table, Showing the Result of Value Lent to the State. - A Treatise on Political Economy
APPENDIX A: A Table, Showing the Result of Value Lent to the State. - Jean Baptiste Say, A Treatise on Political Economy [1803]Edition used:A Treatise on Political Economy; or the Production, Distribution, and Consumption of Wealth, ed. Clement C. Biddle, trans. C. R. Prinsep from the 4th ed. of the French, (Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo & Co., 1855. 4th-5th ed. ).
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- Advertisement By the American Editor, to the Sixth Edition.
- Advertisement By the American Editor, to the Fifth Edition.
- Introduction
- Book I: Of the Production of Wealth.
- Book I, Chapter I.: Of What Is to Be Understood By the Term, Production.
- Book I, Chapter II.: Of the Different Kinds of Industry, and the Mode In Which They Concur In Production.
- Book I, Chapter III: Of the Nature of Capital, and the Mode In Which It Concurs In the Business of Production.
- Book I, Chapter IV: On Natural Agents That Assist In the Production of Wealth, and Specially of Land.
- Book I, Chapter V: On the Mode In Which Industry, Capital, and Natural Agents Unite In Production.
- Book I, Chapter VI: Of Operations Alike Common to All Branches of Industry.
- Book I, Chapter VII: Of the Labour of Mankind, of Nature, and of Machinery Respectively.
- Book I, Chapter VIII: Of the Advantages and Disadvantages Resulting From Division of Labour, and of the Extent to Which It May Be Carried.
- Book I, Chapter IX: Of the Different Methods of Employing Commercial Industry, and the Mode In Which They Concur In Production.
- Book I, Chapter X: Of the Transformations Undergone By Capital In the Progress of Production
- Book I, Chapter XI: Of the Formation and Multiplication of Capital.
- Book I, Chapter XII: Of Unproductive Capital
- Book I, Chapter XIII: Of Immaterial Products, Or Values Consumed At the Moment of Production.
- Book I, Chapter XIV: Of the Right of Property.
- Book I, Chapter XV: Of the Demand Or Market For Products.
- Book I, Chapter XVI: Of the Benefits Resulting From the Quick Circulation of Money and Commodities.
- Book I, Chapter XVII: Of the Effect of Government Regulations Intended to Influence Production.
- Book I, Chapter XVIII: Of the Effect Upon National Wealth, Resulting From the Productive Efforts of Public Authority.
- Book I, Chapter XIX: Of Colonies and Their Products.
- Book I, Chapter XX: Of Temporary and Permanent Emigration, Considered In Reference to National Wealth.
- Book I, Chapter XXI: Of the Nature and Uses of Money.
- Book I, Chapter XXII: Of Signs Or Representatives of Money.
- Book II: Of the Distribution of Wealth
- Book Ii, Chapter I: Of the Basis of Value; and of Supply and Demand.
- Book Ii, Chapter II: The Sources of Revenue.
- Book Ii, Chapter III: Of Real and Relative Variation of Price.
- Book Ii, Chapter IV: Of Nominal Variation of Price, and of the Peculiar Value of Bullion and of Coin.
- Book Ii, Chapter V: Of the Manner In Which Revenue Is Distributed Amongst Society.
- Book Ii, Chapter VI: Of What Branches of Production Yield the Most Liberal Recompense to Productive Agency.
- Book Ii, Chapter VII: Of the Revenue of Industry
- Book Ii, Chapter VIII: Of the Revenue of Capital.
- Book Ii, Chapter IX: Of the Revenue of Land.
- Book Ii, Chapter X: Of the Effect of Revenue Derived By One Nation From Another.
- Book Ii, Chapter XI: Of the Mode In Which the Quantity of the Product Affects Population.
- Book III: Of the Consumption of Wealth
- Book Iii, Chapter I: Of the Different Kinds of Consumption.
- Book Iii, Chapter II: Of the Effect of Consumption In General.
- Book Iii, Chapter III: Of the Effect of Productive Consumption.
- Book Iii, Chapter IV: Of the Effect of Unproductive Consumption In General.
- Book Iii, Chapter V: Of Individual Consumption—its Motives and Its Effects.
- Book Iii, Chapter VI: On Public Consumption
- Book Iii, Chapter VII: Of the Actual Contributors to Public Consumption.
- Book Iii, Chapter VIII: Of Taxation.
- Book Iii, Chapter IX: Of National Debt.
- Appendix A: a Table, Showing the Result of Value Lent to the State.
APPENDIX A
A Table, Showing the Result of Value Lent to the State.
General Fund, whence all Revenue is derivable; consisting of the Total Natural Agency, Capital and Industry, at the command of the Nation, divided into four equal portions, whereof respectively each Individual is supposed to possess a share, proportionate to his Wealth. Of this stock, the only part applicable to the purpose of a National Loan, is the transferable or floating value, capable of acting as capital.
| I. yielding | revenue | consumable by the proprietor himself. | These three portions yield but two of revenue; portion II. being absolutely extinct. | | II. yielding | nothing; being lent to, and consumed by the state | revenue. | | III. yielding | revenue | transferred to, and consumable by, the lenders of Portion II. | | IV. yielding | revenue | applicable to any purpose. |
APPENDIX BA table, showing the comparative condition of France, Great Britain and Ireland, and the United States of America, in respect to Population, Debt, and Taxation, at the close of the year 1831. | | Population. | Debt. | Revenue. | | France | 32,560,000 | $1,036,800,000 | $187,200,000 | | Britain and Ireland | 24,304,000 | 3,756,802,723 | 247,075,200 | | United States | 13,200,000 | 24,322,235* | 28,526,820* | | * These two sums only include the public debt and revenue of the Federal Government, at the period referred to, and not the debts and revenue of the different States of the Union. To show the comparative condition of the people of the United States, with those of France and Britain, in respect to debt and taxation, at the time mentioned, it would be necessary to add the debts and revenue of the respective States, which, however, at this time, we have no means of doing. American Editor. |
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