Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General Introduction
- Editorial Foreword
- Preface
- Introduction to New Edition
- Notes on Further Reading
- Corrections to this Edition
- I THE TREATY OF PEACE
- II INFLATION AND DEFLATION
- III THE RETURN TO THE GOLD STANDARD
- 1 AURI SACRA FAMES (1930)
- 2 ALTERNATIVE AIMS IN MONETARY POLICY (1923)
- 3 POSITIVE SUGGESTIONS FOR THE FUTURE REGULATION OF MONEY (1923)
- 4 THE SPEECHES OF THE BANK CHAIRMEN (1924,1925, 1927)
- 5 THE ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF MR CHURCHILL (1925)
- 6 MITIGATION BY TARIFF (1931)
- 7 THE END OF THE GOLD STANDARD (27 SEPTEMBER 1931)
- IV POLITICS
- V THE FUTURE
- VI LATER ESSAYS
- Index
6 - MITIGATION BY TARIFF (1931)
from III - THE RETURN TO THE GOLD STANDARD
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General Introduction
- Editorial Foreword
- Preface
- Introduction to New Edition
- Notes on Further Reading
- Corrections to this Edition
- I THE TREATY OF PEACE
- II INFLATION AND DEFLATION
- III THE RETURN TO THE GOLD STANDARD
- 1 AURI SACRA FAMES (1930)
- 2 ALTERNATIVE AIMS IN MONETARY POLICY (1923)
- 3 POSITIVE SUGGESTIONS FOR THE FUTURE REGULATION OF MONEY (1923)
- 4 THE SPEECHES OF THE BANK CHAIRMEN (1924,1925, 1927)
- 5 THE ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF MR CHURCHILL (1925)
- 6 MITIGATION BY TARIFF (1931)
- 7 THE END OF THE GOLD STANDARD (27 SEPTEMBER 1931)
- IV POLITICS
- V THE FUTURE
- VI LATER ESSAYS
- Index
Summary
PROPOSALS FOR A REVENUE TARIFF (7 MARCH 1931)
‘Proposals for a Revenue Tariff’ was first published as an article in the New Statesman and Nation, 7 March 1931. As the recantation of an avowed free trader, it caused a sensation.
Do you think it a paradox that we can continue to increase our capital wealth by adding both to our foreign investments and to our equipment at home, that we can continue to live (most of us) much as usual or better, and support at the same time a vast body of persons in idleness with a dole greater than the income of a man in full employment in most parts of the world—and yet do all this with one-quarter of our industrial plant closed down and one-quarter of our industrial workers unemployed? It would be not merely a paradox, but an impossibility, if our potential capacity for the creation of wealth were not much greater than it used to be. But this greater capacity does exist. It is to be attributed mainly to three factors—the ever-increasing technical efficiency of our industry (I believe that output per head is 10 per cent greater than it was even so recently as 1924), the greater economic output of women, and the larger proportion of the population which is at the working period of life. The fall in the price of our imports compared with that of our exports also helps.
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- The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes , pp. 231 - 244Publisher: Royal Economic SocietyPrint publication year: 1978