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Title: A New Banking System
Author: Lysander Spooner
Date: 1873
Language: en
Topics: mutual banking, mutualism
Source: Retrieved on 2020-06-10 from https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/34187

Lysander Spooner

A New Banking System

The reader will understand that the ideas presented in the following

pages admit of a much more thorough demonstration than can be given in

so small a space. Such demonstration, if it should be necessary, the

author hopes to give at a future time.

CHAPTER I. A NEW BANKING SYSTEM.

Under the banking system—an outline of which is hereafter given—the real

estate of Boston alone—taken at only three-fourths its value, as

estimated by the State valuation[1]—is capable of furnishing three

hundred millions of dollars of loanable capital.

Under the same system, the real estate of Massachusetts—taken at only

three-fourths its estimated value[2]—is capable of furnishing seven

hundred and fifty millions of loanable capital.

The real estate of the Commonwealth, therefore, is capable of furnishing

an amount of loanable capital more than twelve times as great as that of

all the “National” Banks in the State[3]; more than twice as great as

that of all the “National” banks of the whole United States

($353,917,470); and equal to the entire amount ($750,000,000, or

thereabouts) both of greenback and “National” bank currency of the

United States.

It is capable of furnishing loanable capital equal to one thousand

dollars for every male and female person, of sixteen years of age and

upwards, within the Commonwealth; or two thousand five hundred dollars

for every male adult.

It would scarcely be extravagant to say that it is capable of furnishing

ample capital for every deserving enterprise, and every deserving man

and woman, within the State; and also for all such other enterprises in

other parts of the United States, and in foreign commerce, as

Massachusetts men might desire to engage in.

Unless the same system, or some equivalent one, should be adopted in

other States, the capital thus furnished in this State, could be loaned

at high interest at the West and the South.

If adopted here earlier than in other States, it would enable the

citizens of this State to act as pioneers in the most lucrative

enterprises that are to be found in other parts of the country.

All this capital is now lying dead, so far as being loaned is concerned.

All this capital can be loaned in the form of currency, if so much can

be used.

All the profits of banking, under this system, would be clear profits,

inasmuch as the use of the real estate as banking capital, would not

interfere at all with its use for other purposes.

The use of this real estate as banking capital would break up all

monopolies in banking, and in all other business depending upon bank

loans. It would diffuse credit much more widely than it has ever been

diffused. It would reduce interest to the lowest rates to which free

competition could reduce it. It would give immense activity and power to

industrial and commercial enterprise. It would multiply machinery, and

do far more to increase production than any other system of credit and

currency that has ever been invented. And being furnished at low rates

of interest, would secure to producers a much larger share of the

proceeds of their labor, than they now receive.

All this capital can be brought into use as fast as the titles to real

estate can be ascertained, and the necessary papers be printed.

Legally, the system (as the author claims, and is prepared to establish)

stands upon the same principle as a patented machine; and is, therefore,

already legalized by Congress; and cannot, unless by a breach of the

public faith, any more be prohibited, or taxed, either by Congress or

this State, than can the use of a patented machine.

Every dollar of the currency furnished by this system would have the

same value in the market as a dollar of gold; or so nearly the same

value that the difference would be a matter of no appreciable

importance.

The system would, therefore, restore specie payments at once, by

furnishing a great amount of currency, that would be equal in value to

specie.

The system would not inflate prices above their true and natural value,

relatively to specie; for no possible amount of paper currency, every

dollar of which is equal in value to specie, can inflate prices above

their true and natural value, relatively to specie. Whenever, if ever,

the paper should not buy as much in the market as specie, it would be

returned to the banks for redemption, and thus taken out of circulation.

So that no more could be kept in circulation than should be necessary

for the purchase and sale of property at specie prices.

The system would not tend to drive specie out of the country; although

very little of it would be needed by the banks. It would rather tend to

bring specie into the country, because it would immensely increase our

production. We should, therefore, have much more to sell, and much less

to buy. This would always give a balance in our favor, which would have

to be paid in specie.

It is, however, a matter of no practical importance whether the system

would bring specie into the country, or drive it out; for the volume and

value of the currency would be substantially unaffected either by the

influx or efflux of specie. Consequently industry, trade, and prices

would be undisturbed either by the presence or absence of specie. The

currency would represent property that could not be exported; that would

always be here; that would always have a value as fixed and well known

as that of specie; that would always be many times more abundant than

specie can ever be; and that could always be delivered (in the absence

of specie) in redemption of the currency. These attributes of the

currency would render all financial contractions, revulsions, and

disorders forever impossible.

The following is An Outline of the System.

The principle of the system is that the currency shall represent an

invested dollar, instead of a specie dollar.

The currency will, therefore, be redeemable by an invested dollar,

except when redeemed by specie, or by being received in payment of debts

due the banks.

The best capital will probably be mortgages and railroads; and these

will very likely be the only capital which it will ever be expedient to

use.

Inasmuch as railroads could not be used as capital, without a

modification of their present charters, mortgages are probably the best

capital that is immediately available.

Supposing mortgages to be the capital, they will be put into joint

stock, held by trustees, and divided into shares of one hundred dollars

each.

This stock may be called the Productive Stock, and will be entitled to

the dividends.

The dividends will consist of the interest on the mortgages, and the

profits of banking.

The interest on the mortgages should be so high—say six or seven per

cent—as to make the Productive Stock worth ordinarily par of specie in

the market, independently of the profits of banking.

Another kind of stock, which may be called Circulating Stock, will be

created, precisely equal in amount to the Productive Stock, and divided

into shares of one dollar each.

This Circulating Stock will be represented by certificates, scrip, or

bills, of various denominations, like our present bank bills—that is,

representing one, two, three, five, ten, or more shares, of one dollar

each.

These certificates, scrip, or bills of the Circulating Stock, will be

issued for circulation as currency, as our bank bills are now.

In law, this Circulating Stock will be in the nature of a lien on the

Productive Stock. It will be entitled to no dividends. Its value will

consist, first, in its title to be received in payment of all dues to

the bank; second, in its title to be redeemed, either in specie on

demand, or in specie, with interest from the time of demand, before any

dividends can be made to the bankers; and, third, in its title, when not

redeemed with specie, to be redeemed (in sums of one hundred dollars

each) by a transfer of a corresponding amount of the capital itself;

that is, of the Productive Stock.

The holders of the Circulating Stock are, therefore, sure, first, to be

able to use it (if they have occasion to do so) in payment of their dues

to the bank; second, to get, in exchange for it, either specie on

demand, or specie, with interest from the time of demand; or, third, a

share of the capital itself, the Productive Stock; a stock worth par of

specie in the market, and as merchantable as a share of railroad stock,

or government stock, or any other stock whatever is now.

Whenever Productive Stock shall have been transferred in redemption of

Circulating Stock, it (the Productive Stock) may be itself redeemed, or

bought back, at pleasure, by the bankers, on their paying its face in

specie, with interest (or dividends) from the time of the transfer; and

must be so bought back, before any dividends can be paid to the original

bankers. The fulfilment of all these obligations, on the part of the

bank, is secured by the fact that the capital and all the resources of

the bank are in the hands of trustees, who are legally bound—before

making any dividends to the bankers—to redeem all paper in the manner

mentioned; and also to buy back all Productive Stock that shall have

been transferred in redemption of the circulation.

Such are the general principles of the system. The details are too

numerous to be given here. They will be found in the “Articles of

Association of a Mortgage Stock Banking Company,” which the author has

drawn up and copyrighted.

CHAPTER II. SPECIE PAYMENTS.

Although the banks, under this system, make no absolute promise to pay

specie on demand, the system nevertheless affords a much better

practical guaranty for specie payments, than the old specie paying

system (so called); and for these reasons, viz:

be solvent, that no runs would ever be made upon them for specie,

through fear of their insolvency. They could, therefore, maintain specie

payments with much less amounts of specie, than the old specie paying

banks (so called) could do.

paper would be more convenient than specie for purposes of trade, bills

would rarely be presented for redemption—otherwise than in payment of

debts due the banks—except in those cases where the holders desired to

invest their money; and would therefore prefer a transfer of Productive

Stock, to a payment in specie. If they wanted specie for exportation,

they would buy it in the market (with the bills), as they would any

other commodities for export.[4] It would, therefore, usually be only

when they wanted an investment, and could find none so good as the

Productive Stock, that they would return their bills for redemption. And

then they would return them, not really for the purpose of having them

redeemed with specie, but in the hope of getting a transfer of

Productive Stock, and holding it awhile, and drawing interest on it.

circulation of their bills, to pay, at all times, such small amounts of

specie, as the public convenience might require.

only temporary ones, by here and there a bank separately, and not by all

the banks simultaneously, as under the so called specie paying system.

No general public inconvenience would therefore ever be felt from that

cause.

would bring no discredit upon their bills, and be no obstacle to their

circulation at par with specie. It would be known that—unless bad notes

had been discounted—all the bills issued by the banks, would be wanted

to pay the debts due the banks. This would ordinarily be sufficient, of

itself, to keep the bills at par with specie. It would also be known

that, if specie were not paid on demand, it would either be paid

afterwards, with interest from the time of demand; or Productive Stock,

equal in value to specie in the market, would be transferred in

redemption of the bills. The bills, therefore, would never depreciate in

consequence of specie not being paid on demand; nor would any

contraction of the currency ever be occasioned on that account.

For the reasons now given, the system is practically the best specie

paying system that was ever invented. That is to say, it would require

less specie to work it; and also less to keep its bills always at par

with specie. In proportion to the amount of currency it would furnish,

it would not require so much as one dollar in specie, where the so

called specie paying system would require a hundred. It would also, by

immensely increasing our production and exports, do far more than any

other system, towards bringing specie into the country, and preventing

its exportation.

If it should be charged that the system supplies no specie for

exportation; the answer is, that it is really no part of the legitimate

business of a bank to furnish specie for exportation. Its legitimate

business is simply to furnish credit and currency for home industry and

trade. And it can never furnish these constantly, and in adequate

amounts, unless it can be freed from the obligation to supply specie on

demand for exportation. Specie should, therefore, always be merely an

article of merchandise in the market, like any other; and should have no

special—or, at least, no important—connection with the business of

banking, except as furnishing the measure of value. If a paper currency

is made payable in specie, on demand, very little of it can ever be

issued, or kept in circulation; and that little will be so irregular and

inconstant in amount as to cause continual and irremediable

derangements. But if a paper currency, instead of promising to pay

specie on demand, promises only an alternative redemption, viz: specie

on demand, or specie with interest from the time of demand, or other

merchantable property of equal market value with specie—it can then be

issued to an amount equal to such property; and yet keep its promises to

the letter. It can, therefore, furnish all the credit and currency that

can be needed; or at least many times more than the so called specie

paying system ever did, or ever can, furnish. And then the interest,

industry and trade of a nation will never be disturbed by the

exportation of specie. And yet the standard of value will always be

maintained.

The difference between the system here proposed, and the so called

specie paying system—in respect to their respective capacities for

furnishing credit and currency, and at the same time fulfilling their

contracts to the letter—is as fifty to one, at the least, in favor of

the former; probably much more than that.

Thus under the system now proposed, the real estate and railroads of the

United States, at their present values, are capable of furnishing twenty

thousand millions ($20,000,000,000) of paper currency; and furnishing it

constantly, and without fluctuation, and every dollar of it will have an

equal market value with gold. The contracts or certificates comprising

it, can always be fulfilled to the letter; that is, the capital itself,

(the Productive Stock,) represented by these certificates, can always be

delivered, on demand, in redemption of the certificates, if the banks

should be unable to redeem in specie. On the other hand, it would be

impossible to have so much as four hundred millions, ($400,000,000)—one

fiftieth of the amount before mentioned—of so called specie paying paper

currency; that is, a paper promising to pay specie on demand; and

constantly able to fulfil its obligations.

It is of no appreciable importance that a paper currency should be

payable on demand with specie. It is sufficient, if it be payable

according to its terms, if only those terms are convenient and

acceptable. For then the value of the currency will be known, and its

contracts will be fulfilled to the letter. And when these contracts are

fulfilled to the letter, then, to all practical purposes, specie

payments are maintained. When, for example, a man promises to pay wheat,

either on demand, or at a time specified, and he fulfils that contract

to the letter, that, to all practical purposes, is specie payments; as

much so as if the promise and payment had been made in coin. It is,

therefore, the specific and literal fulfilment of contracts, that

constitutes specie payments; and not the particular kind of property

that is promised and paid.

The great secret, then, of having an abundant paper currency, and yet

maintaining all the while specie payments, consists in having the paper

represent property—like real estate, for example—that exists in large

amounts, and can always be delivered, on demand, in redemption of the

paper; and also in having this paper issued by the persons who actually

own the property represented by it, and who can be compelled by law to

deliver it in redemption of the paper. And the great secret—if it be a

secret—of having only a scanty currency, and of not having specie

payments, consists in having the paper issued by a government that

cannot fulfil its contracts, and has no intention of fulfilling them;

and by banks that are not even required to fulfil them.

It is somewhat remarkable that after ten years experiment, we have not

yet learned these apparently self-evident truths.

The palpable fact is that the advocates of the present “National”

currency system,—that is, the stockholders in the present “National”

banks,—do not wish for specie payments. They wish only to maintain, in

their own hands, a monopoly of banking, and, as far as possible also, a

monopoly of all business depending upon bank loans. They wish,

therefore, to keep the volume of the currency down to its present

amount. As an excuse for this, they profess a great desire for specie

payments; and at the same time practice the imposture of declaring that

specie payments will be impossible, if the amount of the currency be

increased.

But all this is sheer falsehood and fraud. It is, of course, impossible

to have specie payments, so long as the only currency issued is issued

by a government that has nothing to redeem with, and has no intention of

redeeming; and by banks that are not even required to redeem. But there

is no obstacle to our having twenty times as much currency as we now

have, and yet having specie payments—or the literal fulfilment of

contracts—if we will but suffer the business of banking to go into the

hands of those who have property with which to redeem, and can be

compelled by law to redeem.

It is with government paper, and bank paper, as it is with the paper of

private persons; that is, it is worth just what can be delivered in

redemption of it, and no more. We all understand that the notes of the

Astors, and Stewarts, and Vanderbilts, though issued by millions, and

tens of millions, are really worth their nominal values. And why? Solely

because the makers of them have the property with which to redeem them

in full, and can be made to redeem them in full. We also all understand

that the notes of Sam Jones, and Jim Smith, and Bill Nokes, though

issued for only five dollars, are not worth two cents on the dollar. And

why? Solely because they have nothing to pay with; and cannot be made to

pay.

Suppose, now, that these notes of Sam Jones, and Jim Smith, and Bill

Nokes, for five dollars, were the only currency allowed by law; and that

they were worth in the market but two cents on the dollar. And suppose

that the few holders of these notes, wishing to make the most of them,

at the expense of the rights of everybody else, should keep up a

constant howl for specie payments; and should protest against any issue

of the notes of the Astors, the Stewarts, and the Vanderbilts, upon the

ground that such issue would inflate the currency, and postpone specie

payments! What would we think of men capable of uttering such

absurdities? Would we in charity to their weakness, call them idiots? or

would we in justice to their villainy, denounce them as impostors and

cheats of the most transcendent and amazing impudence? And what would we

think of the wits of forty millions of people, who could be duped by

such preposterous falsehoods?

And yet this is scarcely an exaggerated picture of the fraud that has

been practiced upon the people for the last ten years. A few men have

secured to themselves the monopoly of a few irredeemable notes; and not

wishing to have any competition, either in the business of banking, or

in any business depending upon bank loans, they cry out for specie

payments; and declare that no solvent or redeemable notes must be put

into circulation, in competition with their insolvent and irredeemable

ones, lest the currency be inflated, and specie payments be postponed!

And this imposture is likely to be palmed off upon the people in the

future, as it has been in the past, if they are such dunces as to permit

it to be done.

It is perfectly evident, then, that specie payments—or the literal

fulfilment of contracts—does not depend at all upon the amount of paper

in circulation as currency; but solely upon the fact whether, on the one

hand, it be issued by those who have property with which to redeem it,

and can be made to redeem it; or whether, on the other hand, it be

issued by those who cannot redeem it, and cannot be made to redeem it.

When the people shall understand these simple, manifest truths, they

will soon put an end to the monopoly, extortion, fraud, and tyranny of

the existing “National” system.

The “National” system, so called, is, in reality, no national system at

all; except in the mere facts that it is called the national system, and

was established by the national government. It is, in truth, only a

private system; a mere privilege conferred upon a few, to enable them to

control prices, property, and labor; and thus to swindle, plunder, and

oppress all the rest of the people.

CHAPTER III. NO INFLATION OF PRICES.

Section 1.

In reality there is no such thing as an inflation of prices, relatively

to gold. There is such a thing as a depreciated paper currency. That is

to say, there is such a thing as a paper currency, that is called by the

same names as gold—to wit, money, dollars, &c.—but that cannot be

redeemed in full; and therefore has not the same value as gold. Such a

currency does not circulate at its nominal, but only at its real, value.

And when such a currency is in circulation, and prices are measured by

it, instead of gold, they are said to be inflated, relatively to gold.

But, in reality, the prices of property are not thereby inflated at all

relatively to gold. It is only the measuring of prices by a currency,

that is called by the same names as gold, but that is really inferior in

value to gold, that causes the apparent, not real, inflation of prices,

relatively to gold.

To measure prices by a currency that is called by the same names as

gold, but that is really inferior in value to gold, and then—because

those prices are nominally higher than gold prices—to say that they are

inflated, relatively to gold, is a perfect absurdity. If we were to call

a foot measure a yard, and were then to say that all cloth measured by

it became thereby stretched to three times its length, relatively to a

true yard-stick, we should simply make ourselves ridiculous. We should

not thereby prove that the foot measure had really stretched the cloth,

but only that it had taxed our brains beyond their capacity.

It is only irredeemable paper—irredeemable in whole or in part,—that

ever appears to inflate prices, relatively to gold. But that it really

causes no inflation of prices, relatively to gold, is proved by the fact

that it no more inflates the prices of other property, than it does the

price of gold itself. Thus we say that irredeemable paper, that is worth

but fifty cents on the dollar, inflates the prices of commodities in

general to twice their real value. By this we mean, that they are

inflated to twice their value relatively to gold. And why do we say

this? Solely because it takes twice as many of these irredeemable paper

dollars to buy any commodity,—a barrel of flour for example,—as it would

if the paper were equal in value to gold. But it also takes twice as

many of these irredeemable paper dollars to buy gold itself, as it would

if the paper were equal in value to gold. There is, therefore, just as

much reason for saying that the paper inflates the price of gold, as

there is for saying that it inflates the price of flour. It inflates

neither. It is, itself, worth but fifty cents on the dollar; and it,

therefore, takes twice as much of it to buy either flour or gold, as it

would if the paper were of equal value with gold. The value of the

coins—in any nation that is open to free commerce with the rest of the

world—is fixed by their value in the markets of the world; and can

neither be reduced below that value, in that nation, by any possible

amount of paper currency, nor raised above that value, by the entire

disuse of a paper currency. Any increase of the currency, therefore, by

means of paper representing other property than the coins—but having an

equal value with the coins—is an absolute bona fide increase of the

currency to that extent; and not a mere depreciation of it, as so many

are in the habit of asserting.

Practically and commercially speaking, a dollar is not necessarily a

specific thing, made of silver, or gold, or any other single metal, or

substance. It is only such a quantum of market value as exists in a

given piece of silver or gold. And it is the same quantum of value,

whether it exist in gold, silver, houses, lands, cattle, horses, wool,

cotton, wheat, iron, coal, or any other commodity that men desire for

use, and buy and sell in the market.

Every dollar’s worth of vendible property in the world is equal in value

to a dollar in gold. And if it were possible that every dollar’s worth

of such property, in the world, could be represented, in the market, by

a contract on paper, promising to deliver it on demand; and if every

dollar’s worth could be delivered on demand, in redemption of the paper

that represented it, the world could then have an amount of currency

equal to the entire property of the world. And yet clearly every dollar

of paper would be equal in value to a dollar of gold; specie payments—or

the literal fulfilment of contracts—could forever be maintained; and yet

there could be no inflation of prices, relatively to gold. Such a

currency would no more inflate the price of one thing, than of another.

It would as much inflate the price of gold, as of any thing else. Gold

would stand at its true and natural value as a metal; and all other

things would also stand at their true and natural values, for their

respective uses.

On this principle, if every dollar’s worth of vendible property in the

United States could be represented by a paper currency; and if the

property could all be delivered on demand, in redemption of the paper,

such a currency would not inflate the prices of property at all,

relatively to gold. Gold would still stand at its true and natural value

as a metal, or at its value in the markets of the world. And all the

property represented by the paper, would simply be measured by the gold,

and would stand at its true and natural value, relatively to the gold.

We could then have some thirty thousand millions ($30,000,000,) of paper

currency,—taking our property at its present valuation. And yet every

dollar of it would be equal to a dollar of gold; and there could

evidently be no inflation of prices, relatively to gold. No more of the

currency could be kept in circulation, than should be necessary or

convenient for the purchase and sale of property at specie prices.

It is probably not practicable to represent the entire property of the

country by such contracts on paper as would be convenient and acceptable

as a currency. This is especially true of the personal property;

although large portions even of this are being constantly represented by

such contracts as bank notes, private promissory notes, checks, drafts,

and bills of exchange; all of which are in the nature of currency; that

is, they serve for the time as a substitute for specie; although some of

them do not acquire any extensive, or even general, circulation.

But that it is perfectly practicable to represent nearly all the real

estate of the country—including the railroads—by such contracts on paper

as will be perfectly convenient and acceptable as a currency; and that

every dollar of it can be kept always at par with specie throughout the

entire country—that all this is perfectly practicable, the author offers

the system already presented in proof.

Section 2.

To sustain their theory, that an abundant paper currency—though equal in

value to gold—inflates prices, relatively to gold, its advocates assert

that, for the time being, the paper depreciates the gold itself below

its true value; or at least below that value which it had before the

paper was introduced. But this is an impossibility; for in a country

open to free commerce with the rest of the world, gold must always have

the same value that it has in the markets of the world; neither more,

nor less. No possible amount of paper can reduce it below that value; as

has been abundantly demonstrated in this country for the last ten years.

Neither can any possible amount of paper currency reduce gold below its

only true and natural value, viz.: its value as a metal, for uses in the

arts. The paper cannot reduce the gold below this value, because the

paper does not come at all in competition with it for those uses. We

cannot make a watch, a spoon, or a necklace, out of the paper; and

therefore the paper cannot compete with the gold for these uses.

That gold and silver now have, and can be made to have, no higher value,

as a currency, than they have as metals for uses in the arts, is proved

by the fact that doubtless not more than one tenth, and very likely not

more than a twentieth, of all the gold and silver in the world (out of

the mines), is in circulation as currency. In Asia, where these metals

have been accumulating from time immemorial, and whither all the gold

and silver of Europe and America—except what is caught up, and converted

into plate, jewelry, &c.—is now going, and has been going for the last

two thousand years, very little is in circulation as money. For the

common traffic of the people, coins made of coarser metals, shells, and

other things of little value, are the only currency. It is only for the

larger commercial transactions, that gold and silver are used at all as

a currency. The great bulk of these metals are used for plate, jewelry,

for embellishing temples and palaces. Large amounts are also hoarded.

But that gold and silver coins now stand, and that they can be made to

stand, as currency, only at their true and natural values as metals, for

uses in the arts; and that neither the use, nor disuse, of any possible

amount of paper currency, in any one country—the United States, for

example—can sensibly affect their values in that country, or raise them

above, or reduce them below, their values in the markets of the world,

the author hopes to demonstrate more fully at a future time, if it

should be necessary to do so.

Section 3.

Another argument—or rather assertion—of those who say that any increase

of the currency, by means of paper—though the paper be equal in value to

gold—depreciates the value of the gold, or inflates prices relatively to

gold, is this: They assert that, where no other circumstances intervene

to affect the prices of particular commodities, such increase of the

currency raises the prices of all kinds of property—relatively to

gold—in a degree precisely corresponding with the increase of the

currency.

This is the universal assertion of those who oppose a solvent paper

currency; or a paper currency that is equal in value to gold.

But the assertion itself is wholly untrue. It is wholly untrue that an

abundant paper currency—that is equal in value to gold—raises the prices

of all commodities—relatively to gold—in a proportion corresponding to

the increase of the currency. Instead of doing so, it causes a rise only

in agricultural commodities, and real estate; while it causes a great

fall in the prices of manufactures generally. Thus the increased

currency produces a directly opposite effect upon the prices of

agricultural commodities and real estate, on the one hand, and upon

manufactures, on the other.

The reasons are these:

Agriculture requires but very few exchanges, and can, therefore, be

carried on with very little money. Manufactures, on the other hand,

require a great many exchanges, and can, therefore, be carried on

(except in a very feeble way), only by the aid of a great deal of money.

The consequence is, that the people of all those nations, that have but

little money, are engaged mostly in agriculture. Very few of them are

manufacturers. Being mostly engaged in agriculture, each one producing

the same commodities with nearly all the others; and each one producing

all he wants for his own consumption, there is no market, or very little

market, for agricultural commodities; and such commodities,

consequently, bear only a very small price.

Manufactured commodities, on the other hand, are very scarce and dear,

for the sole reason that so few persons are engaged in producing them.

But let there be an increase of currency, and laborers at once leave

agriculture, and become manufacturers.

As manufactured commodities usually bring much higher prices than

agricultural, in proportion to the labor it costs to produce them, men

usually leave agriculture, and go into manufacturing, to the full extent

the increased currency will allow. The consequence is that, under an

abundant currency, manufactures become various, abundant, and cheap;

where before they were scarce and dear.

But while, on the one hand, manufactures are thus becoming various,

abundant, and cheap, agricultural commodities, on the other hand, are

rising: and why? Not because the currency is depreciated, but simply

because so many persons, who before—under a scanty currency—were engaged

in agriculture, and produced all the agricultural commodities they

needed, and perhaps more than they needed, for their own consumption,

having now left agriculture, and become manufacturers, have become

purchasers and consumers, instead of producers, of agricultural

commodities.

Here the same cause—abundant currency—that has occasioned a rise in the

prices of agricultural commodities, has produced a directly opposite

effect upon manufactures. It has made the latter various, abundant, and

cheap; where before they were scarce and dear.

On the other hand, when the currency contracts, manufacturing industry

is in a great degree stopped; and the persons engaged in it are driven

to agriculture as their only means of sustaining life. The consequence

is, that manufactured commodities become scarce and dear, from

non-production. At the same time, agricultural commodities become

superabundant and cheap, from over-production and want of a market.

Thus an abundant currency, and a scanty currency, produce directly

opposite effects upon the prices of agricultural commodities, on the one

hand, and manufactures, on the other.

The abundant currency makes manufactures various, abundant, and cheap,

from increased production; while it raises the prices of agricultural

commodities, by withdrawing laborers from the production of them, and

also by creating a body of purchasers and consumers, to wit, the

manufacturers.

On the other hand, a scanty currency drives men from manufactures into

agriculture, and thus causes manufactures to become scarce and dear,

from non-production; and, at the same time, causes agricultural

commodities to fall in price, from over-production, and want of a

market.

But whether, on the one hand, agricultural commodities are rising, and

manufactured commodities are falling, under an abundant currency; or

whether, on the other hand, manufactured commodities are rising, and

agricultural commodities are falling, under a scanty currency, the value

of the currency itself, dollar for dollar, remains the same in both

cases.

The value of the currency, in either of these cases; is fixed, not at

all by the amount in circulation, but by its value relatively to gold.

And the value of gold, in any particular country, is fixed by its value

as a metal, and its value in the markets of the world; and not at all by

any greater or less quantity of paper that may be in circulation in that

country.

Section 4.

But it is not alone agricultural products that rise in price under an

abundant currency. Real estate also, of all kinds—agricultural,

manufacturing, and commercial—rises under an abundant currency, and

falls under a scanty currency. The reasons are these:

Agricultural real estate rises under an abundant currency, because

agricultural products rise under such a currency, as already explained.

Manufacturing real estate rises under an abundant currency, simply

because—money being the great instrumentality of manufacturing

industry—that industry is active and profitable under an abundant

currency. Commercial real estate rises under an abundant currency,

because, under such a currency, commerce, the exchange and distribution

of agricultural and manufactured commodities, is active and profitable.

Railroads, also, rise under an abundant currency, because, under such a

currency, the transportation of freight and passengers is increased.

On the other hand, all kinds of real estate fall in price under a scanty

currency, for these reasons, to wit: Agricultural real estate falls,

because, manufactures having been in a great measure stopped, and the

manufacturers driven into agriculture, there is little market for

agricultural products, and those products bring only a small price.

Manufacturing real estate falls, because, manufacturing industry having

become impossible for lack of money, manufacturing real estate is lying

dead, or unproductive. Commercial real estate falls, because commerce,

the exchange and distribution of agricultural and manufactured

commodities, has ceased. Railroads fall in price, because, owing to the

suspension of manufactures and commerce, there is little transportation

of either freight or passengers.

Thus it will be seen that an abundant currency creates a great rise in

agricultural products, and in all kinds of real estate—agricultural,

manufacturing, and commercial, (including railroads); and, at the same

time, causes manufactured commodities to become various, abundant, and

cheap. While, on the other hand, a scanty currency causes agricultural

commodities, and all kinds of real estate, to fall in price; and, at the

same time, makes manufactured commodities scarce and dear.

It is a particularly noticeable fact, that those who claim that an

abundant paper currency inflates the prices of all commodities,

relatively to gold, never find it convenient to speak of the variety,

abundance, and cheapness of manufactures, that exist under an abundant

currency; but only of the high prices of agricultural commodities, and

real estate.

The whole subject of prices—a subject that is very little understood,

and that has been forever misrepresented, in order to justify restraints

upon the currency, and keep it in a few hands—deserves a more extensive

discussion; but the special purposes of this pamphlet do not admit of it

here. But enough has probably now been said, to show that the great

changes that take place in prices, under an abundant currency, on the

one hand, and a scanty currency, on the other, are not occasioned at all

by any change in the value of the currency itself—dollar for

dollar—provided the currency be equal in value to coin.

Enough, also, it is hoped, has been said, to show to all holders of

either agricultural, manufacturing, or commercial real estate (including

railroads), that the greater or less value of their property depends

almost wholly upon the abundance or scarcity of currency; and that,

inasmuch as, under the system proposed, they have the power, in their

own hands, of creating probably all the currency that can possibly be

used in manufactures and commerce, they have no one but themselves to

blame, if they suffer the value of their property to be destroyed by any

such narrow and tyrannical systems of currency and credit as those that

now prevail, or those that have always heretofore prevailed.

By using their real estate as banking capital, they can not only get an

income from it, in the shape of interest on money, but by supplying

capital to mechanics and merchants, they create a large class who will

pay high prices for agricultural products, and high prices and rents for

manufacturing and commercial real estate; and who will also supply them,

in return, with manufactured commodities of the greatest variety,

abundance, and cheapness.

It is, therefore, mere suicide for the holders of real estate, who have

the power of supplying an indefinite amount of capital for mechanics and

merchants—and who can make themselves and everybody else rich by

supplying it—to suffer that power to be usurped by any such small body

of men as those who now monopolize it, through mere favoritism,

corruption, and tyranny, on the part of the government, and not because

they have any claim to it.

CHAPTER IV. SECURITY OF THE SYSTEM.

Supposing the property mortgaged to be ample, the system, as a system,

is absolutely secure. The currency would be absolutely incapable of

insolvency; for there could never be a dollar of the currency in

circulation, without a dollar of capital (Productive Stock) in bank,

which must be transferred in redemption of it, unless redemption be made

in specie.

The capital alone, be it observed—independently of the notes

discounted—must always be sufficient to redeem the entire circulation;

for the circulation can never exceed the capital (Productive Stock). But

the notes discounted are also holden by the trustees, and the proceeds

of them must be applied to the redemption of the circulation. Supposing,

therefore, the capital to be sufficient, and the notes discounted to be

solvent, the redemption of the circulation is doubly secured.

What guarantee, then, have the public, for the sufficiency of the

mortgages? They have these, viz.:

1. The mortgages, composing the capital of a bank, will be matters of

public record, and everybody, in the neighborhood, will have the means

of judging for himself of the sufficiency of the property holden. If the

property should be insufficient, the bank would be discredited at once;

for the abundance of solvent currency would be so great, that no one

would have any inducement to take that which was insolvent or doubtful.

2. By the Articles of Association, all the mortgages that make up the

capital of a bank, are made mutually responsible for each other;

because, if any one mortgage proves insufficient, no dividend can

afterwards be paid to any of the bankers (mortgagors), until that

deficiency shall have been made good by the company. The effect of this

provision will be, to make all the founders of a bank look carefully to

the sufficiency of each other’s mortgages; because no man will be

willing to put in a good mortgage of his own, on equal terms with a bad

mortgage of another man’s, when he knows that his own mortgage will have

to contribute to making good any deficiency of the other. The result

will be, that the mortgages, that go to make up the capital of any one

bank, will be either all good, or all bad. If they are all good, the

solvency of the bank will be apparent to all in the vicinity; and the

credit of the bank will at once be established at home. If the mortgages

are all bad, that fact, also, will be apparent to everybody in the

vicinity, and the bank is at once discredited at home.

From the foregoing considerations, it is evident that nothing is easier

than for a good bank to establish its credit, at home; and that nothing

is more certain than that a bad bank would be discredited, at home, from

the outset, and could get no circulation at all. It is also evident that

a bank, that has no credit at home, could get none abroad. There is,

therefore, no danger of the public being swindled by bad banks.

A bank that is well founded, and that has established its credit at

home, has so many ways of establishing its credit abroad, that there is

no need that they be all specified here. The mode that seems most likely

to be adopted, is the following, viz.:

When the capital shall consist of mortgages, it will be very easy for

all the banks, in any one State, to make their solvency known to each

other. There would be so many banks, that some system would naturally be

adopted for this purpose.

Perhaps this system would be, that a standing committee, appointed by

the banks, would be established in each State, to whom each bank in the

State would be required to produce satisfactory evidence of its

solvency, before its bills should be received by the other banks of the

State.

When the banks, or any considerable number of the banks, of any

particular State—Massachusetts, for instance,—shall have made themselves

so far acquainted with each other’s solvency, as to be ready to receive

each other’s bills, they will be ready to make a still further

arrangement for their mutual benefit, viz: To unite in establishing one

general agency in Boston, another in New York, and others in

Philadelphia, Baltimore, Cincinnati, Chicago, St. Louis, New Orleans,

San Francisco, &c., &c., where the bills of all these Massachusetts

banks would be redeemed, either from a common fund contributed for the

purpose, or in such other way as might be found best. And thus the bills

of all the Massachusetts banks would be placed at par at all the great

commercial points.

Each bank, belonging to the association, might print on the back of its

bills, “Redeemable at the Massachusetts Agencies in Boston, New York,

Philadelphia, &c.”

In this way, all the banks of each State might unite to establish a

joint agency in every large city, throughout the country, for the

redemption of all their bills. In doing so, they would not only certify,

but make themselves responsible for, the solvency of each other’s bills.

The banks might safely make permanent arrangements of this kind with

each other; because the permanent solvency of all the banks might be

relied on.

The permanent solvency of all the banks might be relied on, because,

under this system, a bank (whose capital consists of mortgages), once

solvent, is necessarily forever solvent, unless in contingencies so

utterly improbable as not to need to be taken into account. In fact, in

the ordinary course of things, every bank would be growing more and more

solvent; because, in the ordinary course of things, the mortgaged

property would be constantly rising in value, as the wealth and

population of the country should increase. The exceptions to this rule

would be so rare as to be unworthy of notice.

There is, therefore, no difficulty in putting the currency, furnished by

each State, at par throughout the United States. At the general

agencies, in the great cities, the redemption would, doubtless, so far

as necessary, be made in specie, on demand; because, at such points,

especially in cities on the sea-board, there would always be an

abundance of specie in the market as merchandise; and it would,

therefore, be both for the convenience and interest of the banks to

redeem in specie, on demand, rather than transfer a portion of their

capital, and then pay interest on that capital until it should be

redeemed, or bought back, with specie.

Often, however, and very likely even in the great majority of cases, a

man from one State—as California, for example,—presenting Massachusetts

bills for redemption at a Massachusetts agency—either in Boston, New

York, or elsewhere—would prefer to have them redeemed with bills from

his own State, California, rather than with specie.

If the system were adopted throughout the United States, the banks of

each State would be likely to have agencies of this kind in all the

great cities. Each of these agencies would exchange the bills of every

other State for the bills of its own State; and thus the bills of each

State would find their way home, without any demand for their redemption

in specie having ever been made.

Where railroads were used as capital, all the banks in the United States

could form one association, of the kind just mentioned, to establish

agencies at all the great commercial points, for the redemption of their

bills. Of course each railroad would receive the bills of all other

roads, for fare and freight.

Thus all railroad currency, under this system, would be put at par

throughout the United States.

CHAPTER V. THE SYSTEM AS A CREDIT SYSTEM.

Section 1.

Perhaps the merits of the system, as a credit system, cannot be better

illustrated than by comparing the amount of loanable capital it is

capable of supplying, with the amount which the present “National” banks

(so called) are capable of supplying.

If we thus compare the two systems, we shall find that the former is

capable of supplying more than fifty times as much credit as the latter.

Thus the entire circulation authorized by all the “National” banks,[5]

is but three hundred and fifty-four millions of dollars ($354,000,000).

But the real estate and railroads of the country are probably worth

twenty thousand millions of dollars ($20,000,000,000). This latter sum

is fifty-six times greater than the former; and is all capable of being

loaned in the form of currency.

Calling the population of the country forty millions (40,000,000), the

“National” system is capable of supplying not quite nine dollars ($9) of

loanable capital to each individual of the whole population. The system

proposed is capable of supplying five hundred dollars ($500) of loanable

capital to each individual of the whole population.

Supposing one half the population (male and female) to be sixteen years

of age and upwards, and to be capable of producing wealth, and to need

capital for their industry, the “National” system would furnish not

quite eighteen dollars ($18) for each one of them, on an average. The

other system is capable of furnishing one thousand dollars ($1,000) for

each one of them, on an average.

Supposing the adults (both male and female) of the country to be sixteen

millions (16,000,000), the “National” system is capable of furnishing

only twenty-two dollars and twelve and a half cents ($22.12½) to each

one of these persons, on an average. The system proposed is capable of

furnishing twelve hundred and fifty dollars ($1,250) to each one, on an

average.

Supposing the number of male adults in the whole country to be eight

millions (8,000,000), the “National” system is capable of furnishing

only forty-four dollars and twenty-five cents ($44.25) to each one. The

other system is capable of furnishing twenty-five hundred dollars

($2,500) to each one.

The present number of “National” banks is little less than two thousand

(2,000). Calling the number two thousand (2,000), and supposing the

$354,000,000 of circulation to be equally divided between them, each

bank would be authorized to issue $177,000. Under the proposed system,

the real estate and railroads of the country are capable of furnishing

one hundred thousand (100,000) banks, having each a capital of two

hundred thousand dollars ($200,000); or it is capable of furnishing one

hundred and twelve thousand nine hundred and ninety-four (112,994)

banks, having each a capital ($177,000), equal, on an average, to the

capital of the present “National” banks. That is, this system is capable

of furnishing fifty-six times as many banks as the “National” system,

having each the same capital, on an average, as the “National” banks.

Calling the number of the present “National” banks two thousand (2,000),

and the population of the country forty millions (40,000,000), there is

only one bank to 20,000 people, on an average; each bank being

authorized to issue, on an average, a circulation of $177,000.

Under the proposed system, we could have one bank for every five hundred

(500) persons; each bank being authorized to issue $200,000; or $23,000

each more than the “National” banks.

These figures give some idea of the comparative capacity of the two

systems to furnish credit.

Under which of these two systems, now, would everybody, who needs

credit, and deserves it, be most likely to get it? And to get all he

needs to make his industry most productive? And to get it at the lowest

rates of interest?

The proposed system is as much superior to the old specie paying system

(so called)—in respect to the amount of loanable capital it is capable

of supplying—as it is to the present “National” system.

Section 2.

But the proposed system has one other feature, which is likely to be of

great practical importance, and which gives it a still further

superiority—as a credit system—over the so-called specie paying system.

It is this:

The old specie paying system (so called) could add to the loanable

capital of the country, only by so much currency as it could keep in

circulation, over and above the amount of specie that it was necessary

to keep on hand for its redemption. But the amount of loanable capital

which the proposed system can supply, hardly depends at all upon the

amount of its currency that can be kept in circulation. It can supply

about the same amount of loanable capital, even though its currency

should be returned for redemption immediately after it is issued. It can

do this, because the banks, by paying interest on the currency returned

for redemption—or, what is the same thing, by paying dividends on the

Productive Stock transferred in redemption of the currency—can postpone

the payment of specie to such time as it shall be convenient for them to

pay it.

All that would be necessary to make loans practicable on this basis,

would be, that the banks should receive a higher rate of interest on

their loans than they would have to pay on the currency returned for

redemption; that is, on the Productive Stock transferred in redemption

of the currency.

The rate of interest received by the banks, on the loans made by them,

would need to be so much higher than that paid by them, on currency

returned for redemption, as to make it an object for them to loan more

of their currency than could be kept in circulation. Subject to this

condition, the banks could loan their entire capitals, whether much or

little of it could be kept in circulation.

For example, suppose the banks should pay six per cent. interest on

currency returned for redemption—(or as dividends on the Productive

Stock transferred in redemption of such currency)—they could then loan

their currency at nine per cent. and still make three per cent. profits,

even though the currency loaned should come back for redemption

immediately after it was issued.

But this is not all. Even though the banks should pay, on currency

returned for redemption, precisely the same rate of interest they

received on loans—say six per cent.—they could still do business, if

their currency should, on an average, continue in circulation one half

the time for which it was loaned; for then the banks would get three per

cent. net on their loans, and this would make their business a paying

one.

But the banks would probably do much better than this; for bank credits

would supersede all private credits; and the diversity and amount of

production would be so great that an immense amount of currency would be

constantly required to make the necessary exchanges. And whatever amount

should be necessary for making these exchanges, would, of course, remain

in circulation. However much currency, therefore, should be issued, it

is probable that, on an average, it would remain in circulation more

than half the time for which it was loaned.

Or if the banks should pay six per cent. interest on currency returned

for redemption; and should then loan money, for six months, at eight per

cent. interest; and this currency should remain in circulation but one

month; the banks would then get eight per cent. for the one month, and

two per cent. net for the other five months; which would be equal to

three per cent. for the whole six months. Or if the currency should

remain in circulation two months, the banks would then get eight per

cent. for the two months, and two per cent. net for the other four

months; which would be equal to four per cent. for the whole six months.

Or if the currency should remain in circulation three months, the banks

would then get eight per cent. for three months, and two per cent. net

for the other three months; which would be equal to five per cent. for

the whole six months. Or if the currency should remain in circulation

four months, the banks would then get eight per cent. for the four

months, and two per cent. net for the other two months; which would be

equal to six per cent. for the whole six months. Or if the currency

should remain in circulation five months, the banks would then get eight

per cent. for the five months, and two per cent. net for the other

month; which would be equal to seven per cent. for the whole six months.

The banks would soon ascertain, by experiment, how long their currency

was likely to remain in circulation; and what rate of interest it was

therefore necessary for them to charge to make their business a paying

one. And that rate, whatever it might be, the borrowers would have to

pay. Subject to this condition, the banks could always loan their entire

capitals.

CHAPTER VI. AMOUNT OF CURRENCY NEEDED.

It is of no use to say that we do not need so much currency as the

proposed system would supply; because, first, if we should not need it,

we shall not use it. Every dollar of paper will represent specific

property that can be delivered on demand in redemption of it, and that

will have the same market value as gold. The paper dollar, therefore,

will have the same market value as the gold dollar, or as a dollar’s

worth of any other property; and no one will part with it, unless he

gets in exchange for it something that will serve his particular wants

better; and no one will accept it, unless it will serve his particular

wants better than the thing he parts with. No more paper, therefore, can

circulate, than is wanted for the purchase and sale of commodities at

their true and natural values, as measured by gold.

Secondly, we do not know at all how much currency we do need. That is

something that can be determined only by experiment. We know that,

heretofore, whenever currency has been increased, industry and traffic

have increased to a corresponding extent. And they would unquestionably

increase to an extent far beyond any thing the world has ever seen, if

only they were aided and permitted by an adequate currency.

We, as yet, know very little what wealth mankind are capable of

creating. It is only within a hundred years, or a little more, that any

considerable portion of them have really begun to invent machinery, and

learned that it is only by machinery that they can create any

considerable wealth. But they have not yet learned—at least, they

profess not to have learned—that money is indispensable to the practical

employment of machinery; that it is as impossible to operate machinery

without money, as it is to operate it without wind, water, or steam.

When they shall have learned, and practically accepted, this great fact,

and shall have provided themselves with money, wealth will speedily

become universal. And it is only those who would deplore such a result,

or those who are too stupid to see the palpable and necessary connection

between money and manufacturing industry, who resist the indefinite

increase of money.

It is scarcely a more patent fact that land is the indispensable capital

for agricultural industry, than it is that money is the indispensable

capital for manufacturing industry. Practically, everybody recognizes

this fact, and virtually acknowledges it; although, in words, so many

deny it. Men as deliberately and accurately calculate the amount of

machinery that a hundred dollars in money will operate, as they do the

amount of machinery that a ton of coal, or a given amount of water, will

operate. They calculate much more accurately the amount of manufactured

goods a hundred dollars will produce, than they do the amount of grain,

grass, or vegetables an acre of land will produce. They no more expect

to see mechanics carrying on business for themselves without money, than

they do to see agricultural laborers carrying on farming without land,

or than they do to see sailors going to sea without ships. They know

that all mechanical, as well as agricultural, laborers, who have not the

appropriate capital for their special business, must necessarily stand

idle, or become mere wage-laborers for others, at such particular

employments as the latter may dictate, and at such prices as the latter

may see fit to pay.

All these things attest the perfect knowledge that men have, that a

money capital is indispensable to manufacturing industry; whatever

assertions they may make to the contrary.

They know, therefore, that prohibitions upon money are prohibitions upon

industry itself; that there can be no such thing as freedom of industry,

where there is not freedom to lend and hire capital for such industry.

Every one knows, too—who knows any thing at all on such a subject—that

it is, intrinsically, as flagrant a tyranny, as flagrant a violation of

men’s natural rights, for a government to forbid the lending and hiring

of money for manufacturing industry, as it is to forbid the lending and

hiring of land, or agricultural implements, for agricultural industry,

or the lending and hiring of ships for maritime industry. They know that

it is as flagrant a tyranny, as flagrant a violation of men’s natural

rights, to forbid one man to lend another money for mechanical industry,

as it would be to forbid the former to lend the latter a house to live

in, a shop to work in, or tools to work with.

It is, therefore, a flagrant, manifest tyranny, a flagrant, manifest

violation of men’s natural rights, to lay any conditions or restrictions

whatever upon the business of banking—that is, upon the lending and

hiring of money—except such as are laid upon all other transactions

between man and man, viz.: the fulfilment of contracts, and restraints

upon force and fraud.

A man who is without capital, and who, by prohibitions upon banking, is

practically forbidden to hire any, is in a condition elevated but one

degree above that of a chattel slave. He may live; but he can live only

as the servant of others; compelled to perform such labor, and to

perform it at such prices, as they may see fit to dictate. And a

government, which, at this day, subjects the great body of the people—or

even any portion of them—to this condition, is as fit an object of

popular retribution as any tyranny that ever existed.

To deprive mankind of their natural right and power of creating wealth

for themselves, is as great a tyranny as it is to rob them of it after

they have created it. And this is done by all laws against honest

banking.

All these things are so self-evident, so universally known, that no man,

of ordinary mental capacity, can claim to be ignorant of them. And any

legislator, who disregards them, should be taught, by a discipline

short, sharp, and decisive, that his power is wholly subordinate to the

natural rights of mankind.

It is, then, one of man’s indisputable, natural rights to lend and hire

capital in any and every form and manner that is intrinsically honest.

And as money, or currency, is the great, the indispensable

instrumentality in the production and distribution of wealth; as it is

the capital, the motive power, that sets all other instrumentalities in

motion; as it is the one thing, without which all the other great

agencies of production—such as science, skill, and machinery—are

practically paralyzed; to say that we need no more of it, and shall have

no more of it, than we now have, is to say that we need no more wealth,

and shall have no more wealth, and no more equal or equitable

distribution of wealth, than we now have. It is to say that the mass of

mankind—the laborers, the producers of wealth—need not to produce, and

shall not be permitted to produce, wealth for themselves, but only for

others.

For a government to limit the currency of a people, and to designate the

individuals (or corporations) who shall have the control of that

currency, is, manifestly, equivalent to saying there shall be but so

much industry and wealth in the nation, and that these shall be under

the special control, and for the special enjoyment, of the individuals

designated; and, of course, that all other persons shall be simply their

dependants and servants; receiving only such prices for their property,

and such compensation for their labor, as these few holders of the

currency shall see fit to give for them.

The effect of these prohibitions upon money, and consequently upon

industry, are everywhere apparent in the poverty of the great body of

the people.

At the present time, the people of this country certainly do not produce

one third, very likely not one fifth, of the wealth they might produce.

And the little they do produce is all in the hands of a few. All this is

attributable to the want of currency and credit, and to the consequent

want of science, skill, machinery, and working capital.

Of the twenty million persons, male and female, of sixteen years of age

and upwards—capable of producing wealth—certainly not one in five has

the science, skill, implements, machinery, and capital necessary to make

his or her industry most effective; or to secure to himself or herself

the greatest share in the products of his or her own industry. A very

large proportion of these persons—nearly all the females, and a great

majority of the males—persons capable of running machinery, and of

producing each three, five, or ten dollars of wealth per day, are now

without science, skill, machinery, or capital, and are either producing

nothing, or working only with such inferior means, and at such inferior

employments, as to make their industry of scarcely any value at all,

either to themselves or others, beyond the provision of the coarsest

necessaries of a hard and coarse existence. And this is all owing to the

lack of money; or rather to the lack of money and credit.

There are, doubtless, in the country, ten million (10,000,000) persons,

male and female—sixteen years of age and upwards—who are naturally

capable of creating from three to five dollars of wealth per day, if

they had the science, skill, machinery, and capital which they ought to

have, and might have; but who, from the want of these, are now creating

not more than one dollar each per day, on an average; thus occasioning a

loss, to themselves and the country of from twenty to forty millions of

dollars per day, for three hundred days in a year; a sum equal to from

six to twelve thousand millions per annum; or three to six times the

amount of our entire national debt.

And there are another ten million of persons—better supplied, indeed,

with capital, machinery, &c., than the ten million before mentioned—but

who, nevertheless, from the same causes, are producing far less than

they might.

The aggregate loss to the country, from these causes, is, doubtless,

equal to from ten to fifteen thousand millions per year; or five, six,

or seven times the amount of the entire national debt.

In this estimate no account is taken of the loss suffered from our

inability—owing simply to a want of money—to bring to this country, and

give employment to, the millions of laborers, in Europe and Asia, who

desire to come here, and add the products of their labor to our national

wealth. It is, probably, no more than a reasonable estimate to suppose

that the nation, as a nation, is losing twenty thousand millions of

dollars ($20,000,000,000) per annum—about ten times the amount of our

national debt—solely for the want of money to give such employment as

they need, to the population we now have, and to those who desire to

come here from other countries.

Among the losses we suffer, from the causes mentioned, the

non-production of new inventions is by no means the least. As a general

rule, new inventions are made only where money and machinery prevail.

And they are generally produced in a ratio corresponding with the amount

of money and machinery. In no part of the country are the new inventions

equal in number to what they ought to be, and might be. In three fourths

of the country very few are produced. In some, almost none at all. The

losses from this cause cannot be estimated in money.

The government, in its ignorance, arrogance, and tyranny, either does

not see all this, or, seeing it, does not regard it. While these

thousands of millions are being lost annually, from the suppression of

money, and consequently of industry, and while three fourths of the

laborers of the country are either standing idle, or, for the want of

capital, are producing only a mere fraction of what they might produce,

a two-pence-ha’-penny Secretary of the Treasury can find no better

employment for his faculties, than in trying, first, to reduce the rate

of interest on the public debt one per cent.—thereby saving twenty

millions a year, or fifty cents for each person, on an average! And,

secondly, in paying one hundred millions per annum of the principal;

that is, two and a half dollars for each person, on an average! And he

insists that the only way to achieve these astounding results, is to

deprive the people at large of money! To destroy, as far as possible,

their industry! To deprive them, as far as possible, of all power to

manufacture for themselves! And to compel them to pay, to the few

manufacturers it has under its protection, fifty or one hundred per

cent. more for their manufactures than they are worth!

He has been tugging at this tremendous task four years, or thereabouts.

And he confidently believes that if he can be permitted to enforce this

plan for a sufficient period of years, in the future, he will ultimately

be able to save the people, annually, fifty cents each, on an average,

in interest! and also continue to pay, annually, two dollars and a half

for each person, on an average, of the principal, of the national debt!

He apparently does not know, or, if he knows, it is, in his eyes, a

matter of comparatively small moment, that this saving of $20,000,000

per annum in interest, and this payment of $100,000,000 per annum of

principal, which he proposes to make on behalf of the people, are not

equal to what two days—or perhaps even one day—of their industry would

amount to, if they were permitted to enjoy their natural rights of

lending and hiring capital, and producing such wealth as they please for

themselves. He apparently does not know, or, if he knows, it is with him

a small matter, that if the people were permitted to enjoy their natural

freedom in currency and credit, and consequently their natural freedom

in industry, they could pay the entire national debt three, four, or a

half dozen times over every year, more easily than they can save the

$20,000,000, and pay the $100,000,000, annually, by the process that he

adopts for saving and paying them.

And yet this man, and his policy, represent the government and its

policy. The president keeps him in office, and Congress sustain him in

his measures.

In short, the government not only does not offer, but is apparently

determined not to suffer, any such thing as freedom in currency and

credit, or, consequently, in industry. It is, apparently, so bent upon

compelling the people to give more for its few irredeemable notes than

they are worth; and so bent upon keeping all wealth, and all means of

wealth, in the hands of the few—upon whose money and frauds it relies

for support—that it is determined, if possible, to perpetuate this state

of things indefinitely. And it will probably succeed in perpetuating it

indefinitely—under cover of such false pretences as those of specie

payments, inflation of prices, reducing the interest, and paying the

principal, of the national debt, &c.—unless the people at large shall

open their eyes to the deceit and robbery that are practised upon them;

and, by establishing freedom in currency and credit—and thereby freedom

in industry and commerce—end at once and forever the tyranny that

impoverishes and enslaves them.

CHAPTER VII. IMPORTANCE OF THE SYSTEM TO MASSACHUSETTS.

Section 1.

The tariffs, by means of which a few monied men of Massachusetts have so

long plundered the rest of the country, and on which they have so

largely relied for their prosperity, will not much longer be endured.

The nation at large has no need of tariffs. Money is the great

instrumentality for manufacturing. And the nation needs nothing but an

ample supply of money—in addition to its natural advantages—to enable

our people to manufacture for themselves much more cheaply than any

other people can manufacture for us.

To say nothing of the many millions who, if we had the money necessary

to give them employment, might be brought here from Europe and Asia, and

employed in manufactures, more than half the productive power of our

present population—in the South and West much more than half—is utterly

lost for the want of money, and the consequent want of science, skill,

and machinery. And yet those few, who monopolize the present stock of

money, insist that they must have tariffs to enable them to manufacture

at all. And the nation is duped by these false pretences. To give

bounties to encourage manufactures, and at the same time forbid all but

a favored few to have money to manufacture with, is just as absurd as it

would be to give bounties to encourage manufactures, and at the same

time forbid all but a favored few to have machinery of any kind to

manufacture with. It is just as absurd as it would be to give bounties

to encourage agriculture, and at the same time forbid all but a favored

few to own land, or have cattle, horses, seed corn, seed wheat, or

agricultural implements. It is just as absurd as it would be to give

bounties to encourage navigation, and at the same time forbid all but a

favored few to have ships.

The whole object of such absurdities and tyrannies is to commit the

double wrong of depriving the mass of the people of all power to

manufacture for themselves, and at the same time compel them to pay

extortionate prices to the favored few who are permitted to manufacture.

When tariffs shall be abolished, Massachusetts will have no means of

increasing her prosperity, nor even of perpetuating such poor prosperity

as she now has,[6] except by a great increase of money; such an increase

of money as will enable her skilled laborers and enterprising young men

to get capital for such industries and enterprises as they may prefer to

engage in here, rather than go elsewhere.

Even if Massachusetts were willing to manufacture for the South and

West, without a tariff, she could hope to do so only until the South and

West should supply themselves with money. So soon as they shall supply

themselves with money, they will be able to manufacture for themselves

more cheaply than Massachusetts can manufacture for them. Their natural

advantages for manufacturing are greatly superior to those of

Massachusetts. They have the cheap food, coal, iron, lead, copper, wool,

cotton, hides, &c., &c. They lack only money to avail themselves of

these advantages. And, under the system proposed, their lands and

railroads are capable of supplying all the money they need. And they

will soon adopt that, or some other system. And they will then not only

be independent of Massachusetts, but will be able to draw away from her

her skilled laborers, and enterprising young men, unless she shall first

supply them with the money capital necessary for such industries and

enterprises as may induce them to remain. They will, of course, go where

they can get capital, instead of staying where they can get none.

So great are the natural advantages of the South and West over those of

Massachusetts, that it is doubtful how many of these men can be

persuaded to remain, by all the inducements that capital can offer. But

without such inducements it is certain they will all go.

And Massachusetts has no means of supplying this needed money, except by

using her real estate as banking capital.

It is, therefore, plainly a matter of life or death to the holders of

real estate in Massachusetts to use it for that purpose; for their real

estate will be worth nothing when the skilled labor and the enterprising

young men of Massachusetts shall have deserted her.

All this is so manifest as to need no further demonstration. And

Massachusetts will do well to look the facts in the face before it is

too late.

Section 2.

What prospect has Massachusetts under the present “National” system?

The Comptroller of the Currency, in his last annual report, says, that

of the $354,000,000 of circulation authorized by law, Massachusetts has

now $58,506,686. He says, further, that this is more than four times as

much as she would be entitled to, if the currency were apportioned

equally among the States, according to population; more than twice as

much as she would be entitled to, if the circulation were apportioned

among the States, according to their wealth; and three times as much as

she is entitled to upon an apportionment made—as apportionments are now

professedly made—half upon population, and half upon wealth.

The Comptroller further says, that a law of Congress, passed July 12,

1870, requiring him to withdraw circulation from those States having

more than their just proportion, and to distribute it among those now

having less than their just proportion, will require him to withdraw

“from thirty-six banks in the City of Boston, $11,403,000; [and] from

fifty-three country banks of Massachusetts, $2,997,000.”

Thus the law requires $14,400,000 to be withdrawn from the present banks

of Massachusetts.

When this shall have been done, she will have but $44,106,686 left. And

as this will be more than three times her just proportion on a basis of

population, and nearly twice her just share on a basis of wealth, there

is no knowing how soon the remaining excess over her just share may be

withdrawn.[7]

By the census of 1870, Massachusetts had a population of 1,457,351. She

has now, doubtless, a population of 1,500,000. Calling her population

1,500,000, the $58,506,686 of circulation which she now has, is equal to

$39 for each person, on an average. When $14,400,000 of this amount

shall have been withdrawn, as the law now requires it to be, the

circulation will be reduced to less than $30 for each person, on an

average. If the circulation should be reduced to the proportion to which

Massachusetts is entitled, on the basis of wealth—that is, to

$25,098,600—she will then have less than $17 for each person, on an

average. If the circulation should be reduced to the proportion to which

Massachusetts is entitled on a basis of population—that is to

$13,879,778—she will then have a trifle less than $9 for each person, on

an average. For years the industry of Massachusetts has been greatly

crippled for the want of bank credits, although her banks have been

authorized to issue their notes to the amount of $58,506,686; or $39 to

each person, on an average. What will her industry be when her banks

shall be authorized to issue only $44,106,686, or $30 for each person,

on an average? What will it be, if her bank issues shall be reduced to

her proportion on a basis of wealth, to wit, $25,098,600; or less than

$17 for each person, on an average? Or what will it be, if her bank

circulation shall be reduced to her proportion on a basis of population,

to wit, to $13,379,778; or less than $9 for each person, on an average?

In contrast with such contemptible sums as these, Massachusetts, under

the system proposed, could have nine hundred millions ($900,000,000) of

bank loans;[8] that is, $600 for every man, woman, and child, on an

average; or $1,500 to each adult, male and female, on an average; or

$3,000 to each male adult, on an average.

Which, now, of these two systems is most likely to secure and increase

the prosperity of Massachusetts? Which is most likely to give to every

deserving man and woman in the State, the capital necessary to make

their industry most productive to themselves individually, and to the

State? Which system is most likely to induce the skilled laborers and

enterprising young men of Massachusetts to remain here? And which is

most likely to drive them away?

Section 3.

But the whole is not yet told. The present “National” system is so

burdened with taxes and other onerous conditions, that no banking at all

can be done under it, except at rates of interest that are two or three

times as high as they ought to be; or as they would be under the system

proposed.

The burdens imposed on the present banks are probably equal to from six

to eight per cent. upon the amount of their own notes that they are

permitted to issue.

In the first place, they are required, for every $90 of circulation, to

invest $100 in five or six per cent. government bonds.[9] This alone is

a great burden to all that class of persons who want their capital for

active business. It amounts to actual prohibition upon all whose

property is in real estate, and therefore not convertible into bonds.

And this is a purely tyrannical provision, inasmuch as real estate is a

much safer and better capital than the bonds. Let us call this a burden

of two per cent. on their circulation.

Next, is the risk as to the permanent value of the bonds. Any war, civil

or foreign, would cause them to drop in value, as the frost causes the

mercury to drop in the thermometer. Even any danger of war would at once

reduce them in value. Let us call this risk another burden of one per

cent. on the circulation.

Next, every bank in seventeen or eighteen of the largest cities—Boston

among the number—are required to keep on hand, at all times, a

reserve—in dead capital (legal tenders)—“equal to at least twenty-five

per centum,” and all other banks a similar reserve “equal to at least

fifteen per centum,” “of the aggregate amount of their notes in

circulation, and of their deposits.”

Doubtless, two thirds—very likely three fourths—of all the bank

circulation and deposits are in the seventeen cities named. And as these

city banks are required to keep a reserve of dead capital equal to

twenty-five per cent., and all others a similar reserve equal to fifteen

per cent., both on their circulation and deposits, this average burden

on all the banks is, doubtless, equal to two per cent. on their

circulation.

Next, the banks are required to pay to the United States an annual tax

of one per cent. on their average circulation, and half of one per cent.

on the amount of their deposits.

Here is another burden equal to at least one and a half per cent. on

their circulation.

Then the capitals of the banks—the United States bonds—are made liable

to State taxes to any extent, “not at a greater rate than is assessed

upon the monied capital in the hands of individual citizens of such

State.” This tax is probably equal to one per cent. on their

circulation.

Here, then, are taxes and burdens equal to seven and a half per cent. on

their circulation.

Next, the banks are required to make at least five reports annually, to

the Comptroller of the Currency, of their “resources and liabilities.”

Also reports of “the amount of each dividend declared by the

association.”

Then, too, the banks are restricted as to the rates of interest they are

permitted to take.

Then “Congress may at any time alter, amend, or repeal this act;” and

thus impose upon the banks still further taxes, conditions,

restrictions, returns, and reports. Or it may at pleasure abolish the

banks altogether.

All these taxes, burdens, and liabilities, cannot be reckoned at less

than eight or nine per cent. on the circulation of the banks; a sum two

or three times as great as the rate of interest ought to be; and two or

three times as great as it would be under the system proposed.

And yet the banks must submit to all these burdens as a condition of

being permitted to loan money at all. And they must make up—in their

rates of interest—for all these burdens. Under this system, therefore,

the rate of interest must always be two or three times as high as it

ought to be.

The objections to the system, then, are, first, that it furnishes very

little loanable capital; and, second, that it necessarily raises the

interest on that little to two or three times what it ought to be.

Such a system, obviously, could not be endured at all, but for these

reasons, viz.: first, that, being a monopoly, those holding it are

enabled to make enormous extortions upon borrowers; and, secondly, that

these borrowers—most of whom are the bankers themselves—employ the money

in the manufacture and sale of goods that are protected, by tariffs,

from foreign competition, and for which they are thus enabled to get,

say, fifty per cent. more than they are worth.

In this way, these bank extortions and tariff extortions are thrown

ultimately upon the people who consume the goods which the bank capital

is employed in producing and selling.

Thus the joint effect of the bank system and the tariff is, first, to

deprive the mass of the people of the money capital that would enable

them to manufacture for themselves; and, secondly, to compel them to pay

extortionate prices for the few manufactures that are produced.

Under the system proposed, all these things would be done away. The West

and the South, that are now relied on to pay all these extortions, would

manufacture for themselves. Their lands and railroads would enable them

to supply all the manufacturing capital that could be used. And they

could supply it at one half, or one third, the rates now required by the

“National” banks. Of course, Massachusetts could not—under the

“National” system—manufacture a dollar’s worth for the South and West.

She could not keep her manufacturing laborers. They would all go where

they could get cheap capital, cheap supplies, and good markets. And then

the manufacturing industry of Massachusetts, and with it the value of

her real estate, will have perished from the natural and legitimate

effect of her meanness, extortion, and tyranny.

Looking to the future, then, there is no State in the Union—certainly

none outside of New England—that has a greater interest in supplying her

mechanics with the greatest possible amount of capital; or in supplying

it at the lowest possible rates of interest. And this can be done only

by using her real estate as banking capital.

CHAPTER VIII. THE TRUE CHARACTER OF THE “NATIONAL” SYSTEM.

Section 1.

Under the “National” system there are less than 2,000 banks. But let us

call them 2,000.

Calling the population of the country forty millions, there is but one

bank to 20,000 people.

And this one bank is, in law, a person; and only a single person. In

lending money, it acts, and can act, only as a unit. Its several

stockholders cannot act separately, as so many individuals, in lending

money.

So far, therefore, as this system is concerned, there is but one money

lender for twenty thousand people!

Of these 20,000 people, ten thousand (male and female) are sixteen years

of age and upwards, capable of creating wealth, and requiring capital to

make their labor most productive.

Yet, so far as this system is concerned, there is but one person

authorized to lend money to, or for, these ten thousand, who wish to

borrow.

And this one money lender is one who, proverbially “has no soul.” It is

not a natural human being. It is a legal, an artificial, and not a

natural, person. It is neither masculine nor feminine. It has not the

ordinary human sympathies, and is not influenced by the ordinary human

motives of action. It is no father, who might wish to lend money to his

children, to start them in life. It is no neighbor, who might wish to

assist his neighbor. It is no citizen, who might wish to promote the

public welfare. It is simply a nondescript, created by law, that wants

money, and nothing else.

Moreover, it has only $177,000 to lend to these 10,000 borrowers; that

is, a fraction less than $18, on an average, for each one!

What chance of borrowing capital have these ten thousand persons, who

are forbidden to borrow, except from this one soulless person, who has

so little to lend?

If money lenders must be soulless—as, perhaps, to some extent, they must

be—it is certainly of the utmost importance that there be so many of

them, and that they may have so much money to lend, as that they may be

necessitated, by their own selfishness, to compete with each other, and

thus save the borrowers from their extortions.

But the “National” system says, not only that the money lender shall be

a soulless person, and one having only a little money to lend, but that

he shall also have the whole field—a field of 10,000 borrowers—entirely

to himself!

It says that this soulless person shall have this whole field to

himself, notwithstanding he has so little money to lend, and

notwithstanding there are many other persons standing by, having, in the

aggregate, fifty times as much money to lend as he; and desiring to lend

it at one half, or one third, the rates he is demanding, and extorting!

It says, too, that he shall have this whole field to himself,

notwithstanding that ninety-nine one-hundredths of those who desire to

borrow, are sent away empty! and are thereby condemned—so far as such a

system can condemn them—to inevitable poverty!

Section 2.

But further. Each one of these 2,000 legal, or artificial, persons, who

alone are permitted to lend money, is made up of, say, fifty actual, or

natural, persons, to whom alone, it is well known, that this legal

person will lend it!

These 2,000 legal persons, then, who alone are permitted to lend money,

are made up of 100,000 actual persons, who alone are to borrow it.

These 100,000 actual persons, who compose the legal persons, do not,

then, become bankers because they have money to lend to others, but only

because they themselves want to borrow!

Thus when the system says that they alone shall lend, it virtually says

that they alone shall borrow; because it is well known that, in

practice, they will lend only to themselves.

In short, it says that only these 100,000 men—or one in four hundred of

the population—shall have liberty either to lend, or borrow, capital!

Such capital as is indispensable to every producer of wealth, if he

would control his own industry, or make his labor most productive.

Consequently, it says, practically—so far as it is in its power to

say—that only one person in four hundred of the population shall be

permitted to have capital; or, consequently, to labor directly for

himself; and that all the rest of the four hundred shall be compelled to

labor for this one, at such occupations, and for such wages, as he shall

see fit to dictate.

In short, the system says—as far as it can say—that only 100,000

persons—only one person in four hundred of the population—shall be

suffered to have any money! And, consequently, that all the property and

labor of the thirty-nine million nine hundred thousand (39,900,000)

persons shall be under the practical, and nearly absolute, control of

these 100,000 persons! It says that thirty-nine million nine hundred

thousand (39,900,000) persons shall be in a state of industrial and

commercial servitude (to the 100,000), elevated but one degree above

that of chattel slavery.

And this scheme is substantially carried out in practice. These 100,000

men call themselves “the business men” of the country. By this it is

meant, not that they are the producers of wealth, but only that they

alone handle the money! Other persons are permitted to sell only to

them! to buy only of them! to labor only for them! and to sell to, buy

of, and labor for, them, only at such prices as these 100,000 shall

dictate. These 100,000 so called “business men,” not only own the

government, but they are the government. Congress is made up of them,

and their tools. And they hold all the other departments of the

government in their hands. Their sole purpose is power and plunder; and

they suffer no constitutional or natural law to stand in the way of

their rapacity.

How many times, during the last presidential canvass, were we told that

“the business men” of the country wished things to remain as they were?

Having gathered all power into their own hands, having subjected all the

property and all the labor of the country to their service and control,

who can wonder that they were content with things as they were? That

they did not desire any change? And their money and their frauds being

omnipotent in carrying elections, there was no change.

These 100,000 “business men,” having secured to themselves the control

of all bank credits, and thereby the control of all business depending

on bank loans; having also obtained control of the government, enact

that foreigners shall not be permitted to compete with them, by selling

goods in our markets, except under a disadvantage of fifty to one

hundred per cent.

And this is the industrial and financial system which the “National”

bank system establishes—so far as it can establish it. And this is the

scheme by means of which these 100,000 men cripple, and more than half

paralyze, the industry of forty millions of people, and secure to

themselves so large a portion of the proceeds of such industry as they

see fit to permit.

CHAPTER IX. AMASA WALKER’S OPINION OF THE AUTHOR’S SYSTEM.

As Mr. Amasa Walker is considered the highest authority in the country,

in opposition to all paper currency that does not represent gold or

silver actually on hand, it will not be impertinent to give his opinion

of the system now proposed.

He reviewed it in a somewhat elaborate article, entitled “Modern

Alchemy,” published in the Bankers Magazine (N. Y.) for December, 1861.

That he had no disposition to do any thing but condemn the system to the

best of his ability, may be inferred from the following facts.

After describing the efforts of the old alchemists to transmute the

baser metals into gold, he represents all attempts to make a useful

paper currency as attempts “to transmute paper into gold.” He says that

the idea that paper can be made to serve the purposes of money is “a

perfectly cognate idea” with that of the old alchemists, that the baser

metals can be transmuted into gold. (p. 407.)

He also informs us that—

“It is perfectly impracticable to transmute paper into gold to any

extent or degree whatever, and that all attempts to do so (beneficially

to the trade and commerce of the world) are as absurd and futile as the

efforts of the old alchemists to change the baser metals into the most

precious.” (p. 415).

These extracts are given to show the spirit and principle of his

article, and the kind of arguments he employs against all paper that

represents other property than coin; even though that property have

equal value with coin in the market.

Yet he says:—

“One thing we cheerfully accord to Mr. Spooner’s system—it is an honest

one. Here is no fraud, no deception. It makes no promise that it cannot

fulfil. It does not profess to be convertible into specie [on demand].

It is the best transmutation project we have seen.” (p. 413).

When he says that “it is the best transmutation project he has seen,”

the context shows that he means to say that it comes nearer to

transmuting paper into gold, than any other system he has seen.

This admission, coming from so violent an opponent of paper currency,

may reasonably be set down as the highest commendation that he could be

expected to pay to any paper system.

He also says:—

“Many schemes of the same kind have, at different times, been presented

to the world; but none of them have been more complete in detail, or

more systematically arranged, than that of Mr. Spooner. (p. 414).

But by way of condemning the system as far as possible, he says:—

“Mr. Spooner, however, can, we think, make no claim to originality, so

far as the general principle is concerned. The famous bank of John Law,

in France, was essentially of the same character.” (p. 413.)

No, it was not essentially of the same character. One difference—to say

nothing of twenty others—between the two systems was this: that Law’s

bank issued notes that it had no means to redeem; whereas Mr. Walker

himself admits that “Mr. Spooner’s system makes no promises that it

cannot fulfil.” That is to say, it purports to represent nothing except

what it actually represents, viz.: property that is actually on hand,

and can always be delivered, on demand, in redemption of the paper. Is

not this difference an “essential” one? If Mr. Walker thinks it is not,

he differs “essentially” from the rest of mankind. What fault was ever

found with John Law’s bank, except that it could not redeem its paper?

Will Mr. Walker inform us?

[1] By the State valuation of May, 1871, the real estate of Boston is

estimated at $395,214,950.

[2] By the State valuation of May, 1871, the real estate of the

Commonwealth is estimated at $991,196,803.

[3] The amount of circulation now authorized by the present “National”

banks of Massachusetts, is $58,506,686, as appears by the recent report

of the Comptroller of the Currency.

[4] There would always be a plenty of specie for sale, in the seaports,

as merchandise.

[5] Exclusive of the so-called “gold” banks, which are too few to be

worthy of notice.

[6] I say “poor prosperity,” because the present prosperity of

Massachusetts is not only a dishonest prosperity, but is also only the

prosperity of the few, and not of the many.

[7] If the excess mentioned in the text should not be withdrawn, it will

be only because the system is so villainous in itself, that other parts

of the country will not accept the shares to which they are entitled.

[8] Since the notes on page fifth were printed, the Boston Journal, of

Jan. 11, 1873, says that, by the valuation of 1872, the real estate of

Massachusetts is $1,131,306,347.

[9] At first they were required to invest only in six per cent. bonds.

But more recently they have been coerced or “persuaded” to invest

sixty-five millions ($65,000,000) in five per cent. bonds. And very

lately it has been announced that “The Comptroller of the Currency will

not hereafter change United States bonds, deposited as security for

circulating notes of national banks, except upon condition of

substituting the new five per cents. of the loan of July 14, 1870, and

January 20, 1872.”—Boston Daily Advertiser of February 5, 1873.

From this it is evident that all the banks are to be “persuaded” into

investing their capitals in five per cent. bonds.