1,721,018 research outputs found

    Grenville on War Finance and the Sinking Fund

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    One of the prominent supporters of the Pitt’s sinking fund, as well as promoter and architect of the fund implemented by the shortlived Ministry of All the Talents, Grenville, in 1828, in his essay on the supposed advantages of a sinking fund, gave the final blow to a system which had played a vital role in the handling of British public finance since 1716. This paper discusses the reasons that led Grenville to change his opinion. The functions performed by the sinking fund, over a century in which extensive military commitments went hand in hand with the development of public credit, were manifold. Among these, during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars, two emerged as prominent: the first concerned the attempt to make indiscriminate use of the public debt to finance the war; the second instead touched on the relationship between government and Parliament, and on how the former could emancipate himself from the latter over how and how much to spend. After focusing on these functions of the sinking fund and their fading away with the end of hostilities wartime, the paper highlights some differences between Grenville and Ricardo on war finance and the sinking fund

    Rethinking Expansionary Fiscal Retrenchments

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    During the last quarter of the 20th Century, the conventional wisdom prevailing in academic, political and financial circles was definitely against government deficits. At the turn of the century, however, a substantial recourse to deficit spending practices in the United States reopened the debate on the usefulness of countercyclical fiscal policies. This essay discusses the main contents of this debate, reviewing the contributions to various symposiums held at a number of U.S. Federal Reserve Banks. A comparison with the views on this issue prevailing in Europe is also provided

    The rate of interest independent of the rate of profit: a review of Matthew Smith's Tooke (2011)

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    It is particularly fortunate that the publication of a book on the work of Thomas Tooke should have occurred during one of the biggest financial crises in the history of the capitalist system. Matthew Smith’s account of Tooke’s contributions is wide-ranging. Among the many topics analysed in his book, this review aims to discuss in particular Tooke’s view of the connection between the interest rate and the incentive to invest, his notion of the interest rate as a cost of production, and the relationship of this notion with the classical theory of distributio
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