Considerations on the Importation of Foreign Corn; Arising Out of the Proceedings, at a Meeting of the Heritors of Fife-shire, Proposing to Petition the Legislature for Further Restriction, as Published in the Courier Newspaper of the 10th Dec. 1813: Comprising a Review of the Usual Arguments Adopted by Agriculturists, in Support of this Measure; Shewing, that the Present High Price of Every Thing Has Been Caused by the Excessive Increase of the Rent of Land, and a Circulating Taxation. That the Proposed Encouragement to Agriculture, in the Legislative Support of Yet Higher Prices, is Delusive; and Will be Wrested to the Further Increase of Rent, in the Same Manner as Have Been the High Prices, to which the Country Has Already Submitted; that the High Prices of Things, in No Way Result from Paper Currency: Also Exhibiting the True Cause of the Rise in the Price of Gold and Silver in Britain; and Thereby Shewing, that it is Independent of the Circulation of Bank-notes


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The Grounds of an Opinion on the Policy of Restricting the Importation of Foreign Corn; Intended As an Appendix to Observations on the Corn Law


Book Description

Grounds, &c. The professed object of the Observations on the Corn Laws, which I published in the spring of 1814, was to state with the strictest impartiality the advantages and disadvantages which, in the actual circumstances of our present situation, were likely to attend the measures under consideration, respecting the trade in corn. A fair review of both sides of the question, without any attempt to conceal the peculiar evils, whether temporary or permanent, which might belong to each, appeared to me of use, not only to assist in forming an enlightened decision on the subject, but particularly to prepare the public for the specific consequences which were to be expected from that decision, on whatever side it might be made. Such a preparation, from some quarter or other, seemed to be necessary, to prevent those just discontents which would naturally have arisen, if the measure adopted had been attended with results very different from those which had been promised by its advocates, or contemplated by the legislature...