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Appendix to Addresses of the Philadelphia Society

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2014

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Summary

This material appears as a postscript to the Second Address.

Postscript, October 23, 1821.

The grand point, on which the political economists of the new and old school are at issue, is the unlimited freedom, or the qualified restriction of Commerce: the disciples of the new school contending for the former, as the best means of promoting national prosperity and happiness, and the adverse party contending for such restrictions as raised England to that height of power which she now possesses, and to that prosperity which she enjoyed till her wild and wasteful wars crippled her resources, impaired her prosperity, and entailed on her an enormous debt, with a most burdensome and oppressive taxation—such restrictions, in fine, as retrieved the desperate circumstances in which France was sunk, when subjugated by the Holy Alliance. In corroboration of the doctrines advanced on this vital topic in the preceding pages [written in March, 1819] I am happy to be able to adduce the powerful testimony and unanswerable arguments, of the Quarterly Review for January 1821; which are respectfully submitted to the consideration of the statesmen of the United States.

“Questions of commercial policy have been lately treated in so abstract a manner that their connection with common life and practice seems to be entirely forgotten. Speculative writers send forth from their closets general propositions and paradoxical dogmas upon matters relative to the common intercourse of the world, with the most confident affirmation of their universal applicability.

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Publisher: Anthem Press
Print publication year: 2014

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