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PRINCIPLES
OF
POLITICAL ECONOMY
WITHI
SOME OF THEIR APPLICATIONS TO SOCIAL PHILOSOPHY.
BY
JOHN STUART MILL.
IN TWO VOLUMES.
VOL. II.
FROM THE FIFTH LONDON EDITION.
NEW YORK:
D. APPLETON AND COMPANY,
1893.
HARVARD UNIVERSITY LIBRARY NUV 6 1953
2. Gold and Silver, why fitted for those purposes,
3. Money a mere contrivance for facilitating exchanges, which
does not affect the laws of Value,
PAGE
17
19
22
CHAPTER VIII. Of the Value of Money, as dependent on
Demand and Supply.
§ 1. Value of Money, an ambiguous expression, .
25
2. The Value of Money depends, cæteris paribus, on its quantity,
26
3. - together with the rapidity of circulation,
31
4. Explanations and limitations of this principle,
33
CHAPTER IX. Of the Value of Money, as dependent on
Cost of Production.
1. The Value of money, in a state of freedom, conforms to the
value of the bullion contained in it, .
37
2.
-
which is determined by the cost of production,
40
3. This law, how related to the principle laid down in the pre-
ceding chapter,
42
CHAPTER X. Of a Double Standard, and Subsidiary Coins.
2. The use of the two metals as money, how obtained without
making both of them legal tender,
46
48
CHAPTER XI. Of Credit, as a Substitute for Money.
§ 1. Credit not a creation but a transfer of the means of produc-
tion, .
2. In what manner it assists production,
3. Function of credit in economizing the use of money,
4. Bills of exchange,.
5. Promissory notes,.
6. Deposits and cheques,
50
51
53
55
60
61
CHAPTER XII. Influence of Credit on Prices.
§ 1. The influence of bank notes, bills, and cheques, on price, a part of the influence of Credit,.
2. Credit a purchasing power similar to money,
3. Effects of great extensions and contractions of credit. Phe-
nomena of a coinmercial crisis analyzed, .
67
---
7. Are bank notes money?
4. Bills a more powerful instrument for acting on prices than
book credits, and bank notes than bills,
5. the distinction of little practical importance,
6. Cheques an instrument for acting on prices, equally power-
ful with bank notes,.
8. No generic distinction between bank notes and other forms
of credit,
8888
85
CHAPTER XIII. Of an Inconvertible Paper Currency.
§ 1. The value of an inconvertible paper, depending on its quan- tity, is a matter of arbitrary regulation,
88
3. Examination of the doctrine that an inconvertible currency is safe if representing actual property,
2. If regulated by the price of bullion, an inconvertible cur-
rency might be safe, but not expedient,
91
93
4. of the doctrine that an increase of the currency promotes
industry, .
5. Depreciation of currency a tax on the community, and a
6. Examination of some pleas for committing this fraud,
CHAPTER XIV. Of Excess of Supply.
99
100
§ 1. Can there be an oversupply of commodities generally? . 105
2. The supply of commodities in general, cannot exceed the
4. Origin and explanation of the notion of general oversupply,. 110
CHAPTER XV. Of a Measure of Value.
§ 1. A Measure of Exchange Value, in what sense possible,
2. A Measure of Cost of Production,
CHAPTER XVI. Of some Peculiar Cases of Value.
1. Values of commodities which have a joint cost of production, 120
2. Values of the different kinds of agricultural produce,
CHAPTER XVII. Of International Trade.
123
§ 1. Cost of production not the regulator of international values, 126
2. Interchange of commodities between distant places, deter-
mined by differences not in their absolute, but in their
comparative, cost of production,
3. The direct benefits of commerce consist in increased effi-
ciency of the productive powers of the world, .
128
131
4.
--
not in a vent for exports, nor in the gains of merchants, .
5. Indirect benefits of commerce, economical and moral; still
greater than the direct,
132
134
CHAPTER XVIII. Of International Values.
§ 1. The values of imported commodities depend on the terms of international interchange,
137