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wanted for eleven or twelve years, would cost two millions of dollars at the expiration of that term, because money at compound interest of six per cent. per annum, doubles in about eleven years and eight months, and that sum would have been the amount in the hands of the capitalists had they employed it in any branch of productive industry. If repairs should also be required, the amount would make a further addition to the cost of the road, unless they were met by the receipt of a corresponding amount of tolls; and hence it is evident, that those who leave out of view in their estimates of the judiciousness of investments, the accumulating power of capital at compound interest, are very unsafe counsellors. It is true, that nobody would be so unwise as purposely to construct a road or canal, a long time before it was wanted at all, and hence so strong a case as the one above supposed, has probably never occurred. Still, the principle here laid down is true as regards every investment made in advance, to the extent of that portion of the capital that does not yield the ordinary income. A regular interest account current would show the true amount of the cost of the improvement, and if reference were had to this test of productiveness more frequently than it is, it would be found that many investments which have been usually considered productive, have been upon the whole losing transactions.

* The present value of a million of dollars payable eleven years and eight months hence, is five hundred thousand dollars, which of course would be the present loss, or sinking of capital in the case supposed. If ten per cent. were taken as the annual profit that could have been made on the employment of the capital, (a profit which capital will earn in some parts of the Western country,) the result would of course be much more unfavorable to the community.

BOOK THE SECOND.

OF THE LAWS WHICH REGULATE A MIXED CURRENCY COMPOSED OF THE PRECIOUS METALS, AND OF PA. PER CONVERTIBLE INTO COIN ON DEMAND.

In the former part of this work I pointed out the principles by which a currency composed entirely of the precious metals is regulated. I come now to speak of the laws which regulate a currency composed of coin and convertible paper, and here I wish it to be distinctly understood, that by convertible paper, I mean notes issued by banks, payable to bearer in coin on demand. Paper money issued by governments, like the paper of the North American colonies before the revolution, or like the continental money of a subsequent period, or like the assignats of France, or the actual paper money of some of the nations of Europe, not being payable in coin by the issuers at the pleasure of the holder, belongs to another category, and is governed by laws peculiar to itself.

CHAPTER I.

OF BANKS OF DEPOSITE, OF BANKS OF DISCOUNT AND OF BANKS OF CIRCULATION.

Or banks there are three distinct kinds, wholly different from each other, in their constitution, their uses, their operations, and their influence upon the

public prosperity, viz. banks of deposite, banks of discount, and banks of circulation, or, as some express it, banks of issue, of each of which I will speak in its turn.

A bank of deposite is an institution established solely for the safe keeping of the coin and bullion of individuals, which would otherwise have to be kept in iron chests or less secure receptacles, and for facilitating mercantile payments by the transfer upon its books by checks or drafts of the various amounts standing to the credit of the depositors, thus saving the labor of repeated countings, and the expense of repeated transportations of the precious metals from house to house, accompanied at the same time by a diminished risk from fire or pillage, and a diminished wear and tear of the coins by friction. Such a bank, it is manifest, is more appropriate for a community using a currency of coin alone, than for one employing a mixed currency; and accordingly, we find such a bank as having formerly existed at Amsterdam, and at the present day at Hamburgh, in which latter city, a deposite of standard silver of the weight of a marc, entitles the depositor to the credit of an amount denominated a marc banco, which is the unit of the currency of Hamburgh, in which all bills of exchange and mercantile debts are payable, and which the party who holds the credit may draw out at his pleasure in marcs weight, or transfer to others. As regards the operations of this particular species of banks, the reader will perceive that they add nothing to the existing amount of the currency, and that they take nothing from it. The credits on their books represent certain quantities of bullion ascertained by weight, placed there for safe keeping, without any authority on the part of the administrators of the bank to lend it, or to apply it to any purpose whatever, until called for by its owners, or transferred by them to other persons; and hence it is clear, that such

banks exercise no influence whatever over the currency, by contracting or expanding its amount.

A bank of discount is an institution possessing a capital in money, which the proprietors, for there are usually several, associated in part for the sake of maintaining a survivorship, lend to merchants and others by discounting acceptances and promissory notes, originating in the sale of merchandise and other property, having short periods to run. It also receives on deposite, either by allowing interest or not, as the agreement may be, the money of other people, repayable at fixed periods or on demand, which it also lends with its own capital in discounting commercial securities. Of this description of banks, are all the establishments in London, (except the Bank of England,) and many of those of the principal cities on the continent of Europe known as private bankers. Several bankers of the same description, but better known as extensive brokers, have also at different periods in New York and Philadelphia, carried on the business of lending their own capitals and the capitals of others deposited with them, and it is probable that in every commercial community there are establishments of the kind upon a larger or a smaller scale. As such banks do nothing more than lend the money which actually exists in the community, it is evident, that they, like banks of deposite, exert no influence whatever over the currency, in expanding or contracting its amount, and that consequently they produce no effects different from those which would result if the same money had been loaned out by its individual proprietors, through the agency of brokers.

Some persons indeed suppose that where the money of depositors is repayable on demand, an expansion of the currency takes place to the whole extent of such deposited sums, in case they have been loaned to others, inasmuch as the depositor as well as the person to whom his money has been loaned, has each

the power to make purchases in the market for the same amount, the right possessed by the former to draw money out of the bank, giving him the same command of funds as the actual possession of money by the latter confers upon him. But this is an error, for, if the depositor's money has been loaned out, it can in no possible way be paid back to him, but by the bank's requiring the borrower or some other of its debtors to refund an equal amount, by which process the aggregate mass of the currency is preserved the same as before. Banks well administered, do not, however, place themselves in the condition of being obliged in order to meet the sudden demands of depositors, to call unexpectedly on their debtors. They keep on hand an amount of money unemployed, sufficient to meet any probable calls that may be made upon them, before the bills receivable held by them fall due, and like the mill pond which is supplied with water from the stream above, just as fast as it is discharged through the mill race below, they preserve a uniform level in the currency. Nor is the matter at all changed by the fact that bank credits or deposites are transferable by means of checks, from the account of one person to that of another, for it is clear, that if by such transfers, one person becomes possessed of the command of funds, another parts with it to the same amount, and consequently, there is but one power of purchase in the market at any one time, with the same money.

A bank of circulation is an institution established solely for the purpose of lending credit, which is performed by exchanging its promissory notes payable to bearer on demand in coin, or giving transferable credits on its books, also payable on demand in coin, for the promissory notes of individuals, payable at a future fixed day, the latter paying a per centage per annum equal to the interest on a loan of capital, for the advantages they consider themselves as enjoying by dealing in the market with the credit of the bank

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