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Malthus on the High Price of Provisions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 November 2014

Harry G. Johnson*
Affiliation:
Jesus College, Cambridge, England
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Extract

Malthus's Investigation of the High Price of Provisions, hitherto available in Canada only on microfilm, is a pamphlet well worth republication here both for its topicality and its economic content. Many of Malthus's views on inflation, particularly his discussion of opposing theories, have direct application to current economic controversy. And while the late Lord Keynes, with that excess of generosity which he reserved for the underdog in academic debates, seems to have exaggerated the extent to which Malthus here expounds the principle of effective demand, the pamphlet does anticipate several important elements of the modern theory of income determination.

The Investigation was written in a hurry—in much the same way as a modern British economist takes time from his academic pursuits to dash off a quick pamphlet setting the public straight on some problem of grave national importance. It records, Malthus says elsewhere, “an idea which struck him so strongly as he rode on horseback from Hastings to Town” that he stopped two days in his “garret in town,” “sitting up till two o'clock to finish it that it might come out before the meeting of Parliament.” As a result of this rapid writing, it is clear, incisive, and delightfully personal, in the manner of the first Essay; by the second Essay, for reasons of his own, he had reduced his style to a pedantic verbosity almost worthy of Adam Smith himself.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Political Science Association 1949

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References

1 Thanks are due to the Kress Library of Harvard University for permitting access to the original manuscript. The second edition differs from the first in the paging of the type, apparently owing to the insertion of the first footnote. Beyond the addition of the footnote, three words were altered in the second edition, which slightly change the emphasis of the argument; the original words are here reproduced in square brackets, immediately following those which were substituted. An advertisement for George Edwards' Dearness, Nor Scarcity, Its Cause And Remedy was also appended.

page 194 note * It will be observed that I am not now speaking of the causes that may have contributed to the actual scarcity; but of the cause of the very high price of provisions in proportion to the actual degree of that scarcity. [This footnote did not appear in the first edition.]

page 196 note * I am describing what took place in the neighbourhood where I then lived; and I have reason to believe that something nearly similar took place in most counties of the kingdom.

page 201 note * In a scarcity the quantity of commodities in circulation is probably not so great as in years of plenty.