| United States. Congress. Senate - 1877 - 556 páginas
...eqnal in value to, bullion; and one of our latest anthorities (Jevous on Money) distinctly asserts that "there is plenty of evidence to prove that an inconvertible paper money, carefully limited in qnantity, can retain its full value. Onch was the case with the Bank of England... | |
| Freeman Otis Willey - 1882 - 564 páginas
...of Political Economy, in the Owens University, England: " There is plenty of evidence to prove that inconvertible paper money, if carefully limited in quantity can retain its full value. . . . But there is abundance of evidence to prove that the value of gold has undergone extensive changes.... | |
| Catherine Nugent - 1896 - 456 páginas
...doctrine is taught by John Stuart Mill, Locke, Hume, Prof. Jevons and others. Prof. Jevons says: " There is plenty of evidence to prove that an inconvertible...carefully limited in quantity, can retain its full value;" and Ricardo himself says: "A well regulated paper currency is so great an improvement in commerce that... | |
| Lyman E. Stowe - 1896 - 414 páginas
...political economy in the Owens University, England, says: ''There is plenty of evidence to prove that inconvertible paper money, if carefully limited in quantity, can retain its full value. * * But there is abundance of evidence to prove that the value of gold has undergone extensive changes.... | |
| John Raymond Cummings - 1912 - 230 páginas
...also says ("Money and the Mechanism of Exchange," p. 234): "There is plenty of evidence to prove that inconvertible paper money, if carefully limited in...Bank of England notes for several years after the supension of specie payments in 1797, and such is the case with the present notes of the Bank of France."... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Banking and Currency - 1913 - 1142 páginas
...currency the immediate agency in determining its value is its quantity, Prof. Stanley Jevons declares: There is plenty of evidence to prove that an inconvertible...in quantity, can retain its full value. * * * Such is the case with the present notes of the bank of France. Prof. Fawcett says: By limiting its quantity... | |
| Thomas L. Brunk - 1928 - 280 páginas
...he obtains the consent of another, to that extent that other controls his property." Jevons says.t "There is plenty of evidence to prove that an inconvertible...notes for several years after the suspension of specie payment in 1797; and such is the case with the present notes of the Bank of France." (P. 235). The... | |
| 1913 - 996 páginas
...currency the immediate agency in determining its value is its quantity, Prof. Stanley Jevons declares: There is plenty of evidence to prove that an inconvertible...in quantity, can retain its full value. * * * Such is the case with the present notes of the Bank of France. Prof. Fawcett says: By limiting its quantity... | |
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