CONTENTS
xxi
SECTION
PAGE
LXXXIV. | The influence on one another of the different employments of money |
81 |
LXXXV. | Money invested in land is bound to bring the least |
82 |
LXXXVI. | Money placed on loan is bound to bring rather more than the revenue of landed estates acquired with an equal capital |
82 |
LXXXVII. | Money invested in agricultural manufacturings or commercial undertakings is bound to bring more than the interest of money on loan |
83 |
LXXXVIII. | Nevertheless the products of these different employments are limited by one another, &, notwithstanding their inequality, preserve a kind of equilibrium |
83 |
LXXXIX. | The current interest of money is the thermometer by which one may judge of the abundance or scarcity of capitals; it is the measure of the extent a Nation can give to its enterprises in agriculture, manufacture & commerce |
85 |
XC. | Influence of the rate of interest of money on aU gainful undertakings |
86 |
XCI. | The total wealth of a nation is composed: 1st, of the net revenue of all the estates in land multiplied by the rate at which land is sold; 2d of the sum of all the moveable riches existing in the nation |
86 |
XCII. | The amount of capitals on loan cannot be included in this total without being reckoned twice over |
88 |
XCIII. | In which of the three classes of the Society the capitalist lenders of money are to be placed |
90 |
XCIV. | The capitalist lender of money belongs to the disposable class, so far as his person is concerned |
90 |
XCV. | The interest drawn by the lender of money is disposable, so far as concerns the use he can make of it |
92 |
XCVI. | The interest of money is not disposable in this sense,—that the State can without harm appropriate part of it for its wants |
92 |
XCVII. | Objection |
94 |
XCVIII. | Answer to the objection |
94 |