Das Kapital (Gesamtausgabe)
noodzakelijkheid der verwisseling van geldspeciën te danken gehad. Van deze allen is de Hamburgsche de eenige die nog heden bestaat, om dat de behoefte aan zulk eene inrigting zich in deze koopstad, die geen eigen muntstelsel heeft, nog altijd doet gevoelen etc." (S. Viesering, "Handboek van Praktische Staathuishoudkunde". Amsterdam 1860. I. p. 247, 248.)
S. 351, Note 54
"You" (the Bank of England) "are very large dealers in the commodity of capital ?" ("Report on Bank Acts", R. of C. 1857, [p. 104].)
1300
DAS KAPITAL
S. 364, Note 57
"The equitableness of taking interest depends not upon a man's making or not making profit, but upon its"
(...) "being capable of producing profit, if rightly employed." ("An Essay on the Governing Causes of the Natural Rate of Interest, wherein the sentiments of Sir W. Petty and Mr. Locke, on that head, are considered", London 1750, p.49. Verfasser der anonymen Schrift: J. Massie.)
S. 365, Note 58
"Rich people, instead of employing their money themselves ... let it out to other people for them to make profit of, reserving for the owners a proportion of the profits so made." (l.c.p. 23, 24.) S. 367, Note 60
"The ambiguity of the term value of money or of the currency, when employed indiscriminately as it is, to signify both value in exchange for commodities and value in use of capital, is a constant source of confusion."
Tooke, "Inquiry into the Currency Principle", p. 77.)
S. 371, Note 61
"The natural rate of interest is governed by the profits of trade to particulars." (Massie, l.c.p. 51.) S. 373, Note 64
... "by the accumulation of surplus capital necessarily accompanying the scarcity of profitable employment for it in previous years, by the release of hoards, and by the revival of confidence in commercial prospects." ("History of Prices from 1839 to 1847". London 1848, p. 54.)
S. 373, Note 65
"An old customer of a banker was refused a loan upon a 200,000 £ bond; when about to leave to make known his suspension of payment, he was told there was no necessity for the step, under the circumstances the banker would buy the bond at 150,000£." ([R. Roy,] "The Theory of the Exchanges. The Bank Charter Act of 1844 etc." London 1864, p. 80.)
S. 376, Note 68
"By which, gambling in discounts, by anticipation of the alterations in the bank rate, has now become half the trade of thc great heads of the money centre." ([H. Roy.] "The Theory of the Exchanges etc.", p. 113.) S. 377f., Note 70
"This rule of dividing profits is not, however, to be applied particularly to every lender and borrower, but to lenders and borrowers in general ... remarkably great and small gains are the reward of skill and the want of understanding, which lenders have nothing at all to do with; for as they will not suffer by the one, they ought not to benefit by the other. What has been said of particular men in the same business is applicable to particular sorts of business; if the merchants and tradesmen employed in any one branch of trade get more by what they borrow than the common profits made by other merchants and tradesmen of the same country, the extraordinary gain is theirs, though it required only common skill and understanding to get it; and not the lenders', who supplied them with money ... for the lenders would not have lent their money to carry on any business or trade upon lower terms than would admit of paying so much as the common rate of interest; and, therefore, they ought not to receive more than that, whatever advantage may be made by their money." (Massie, l.c.p. 50, 51.)
S. 378, Note 71
Bank rate
5
p.c.
1301
DAS KAPITAL
Market rate of dist., 60 day's draft
35/8
p.c.
Market rate of dist., 3 months
31/2
p.c.
Market rate of dist., 6 months
35/16
p.c.
Loans to bill-broker, day to day
1 to 2
p.c.
Loans to bill-broker, for one week
3
p.c.
Last rate for fortnight, loans to stockbrokers
43/4 to p.c.
5
Deposit allowance (banks)
31/2
p.c.
Deposit allowance (discount houses)
3 to p.c.
31/4
("Daily News", vom 10. Dez. 1889.)
S. 393, Note 72
"The profits of enterprise depend upon the net profits of capital, not the latter upon the former." (Ramsay, l.c.p. 214. Net profits bei Ramsey immer = Zins.)
S.397, Note 73
"Superintendence is here" (...) "completely dispensed with." (J. E. Cairnes, "The Slave Power". London 1862.
p. 48, 49.)
S. 397, Note 74 "If the nature of the work requires that the workmen" (...)"should be dispersed over an ex-tended area, the
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