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Oeuvres complètes

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Bibliographic data

fullscreen: Oeuvres complètes

Monograph

Identifikator:
836084659
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-28892
Document type:
Monograph
Author:
Ricardo, David
Title:
Oeuvres complètes
Place of publication:
Paris
Publisher:
Guillaumin
Year of publication:
1847
Scope:
1 Online-Ressource (XLVIII, 752 S)
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
Get license information via the feedback formular.

Contents

Table of contents

  • Statistical manual
  • Title page
  • Squibb Building (New York City)
  • Allerton New York Corporation
  • Broadway Motors Building (General Motors) / (New York City)
  • 42nd and Lexington Avenue (Chanin) Office Building (New York City)
  • Broadway and 41st Street Building (New York City)
  • United Post Office (several large cities)
  • The Drake
  • Hotel Pierre (New York City)
  • Fox Office Building (New York City)
  • The Roosevelt (New York City)
  • Russek's Fifth Avenue Building (New York City)
  • Varick Street Station (New York City Postoffice)
  • Textile Building (New York City)
  • Station "F" (New York City Postoffice)
  • Barc-Ray Holding Corporation (New York City)
  • 55 Fifth Avenue Building (New York City)
  • Woodbridge Building (100 William Street, New York City)
  • Fuller Building (New York City)
  • Chrysler Building (New York City)
  • Central Zone Building (New York City)
  • Lincoln Building (New York City)
  • Postum Building (New York City)
  • Wadsworth Building (44-48 Cedar Street, New York City)
  • Fuller Building (New York City)
  • Graybar Building (New York City)
  • J.C. Penney Building (New York City)
  • Chesebrough Buildings (New York City)
  • Professional Center Building (New York City)
  • New York Athletic Club (New York City)
  • Roxy Theatre (New York City)
  • Broadway Barclay Office (Transportation) Building (Southwest Corner Broadway and Barclay New York City)
  • Belmont Building (Southeast Corner Madison Ave. and 34th St., New York City)
  • Ludwig Bauman Brooklyn Building (Brooklyn, New York)
  • Savoy-Plaza Corporation (New York City)
  • Saks Realty Corporation (New York City)
  • Prudence-Bonds Corporation
  • Hotel Lexington (New York City)
  • Loew's Theatre and Realty Corp.
  • Standard Building Corp. (Albany, N.Y.)
  • The Barbizon (New York City)
  • The Barclay (New York City)
  • American Woman's Realty Corporation (American Women's Association Clubhouse, New York City)
  • One Park Avenue Building (New York City)
  • One West 57th Street Properties (New Yor City)
  • Fift Avenue and 28th Street Building (New York City)
  • Two Park Avenue Building (New York City)
  • Fifth Avenue and 29th Street Building (New York City)
  • 42 Broadway Building (New York City)
  • 43 Exchange Place Building (New York City)
  • 48 West 48th Street (Cellini) Building (New York City)
  • 51 Fifth Avenue Building (New York City)
  • 60 Broad Street Building (New York City)
  • 60 Broadway Building (New York City)
  • 61 Broadway Building (New York City
  • 111 John Street Building (New York City)
  • 301 East 38th Street Building (New York City)
  • 522 West End Avenue Apartment Bldg. (New York City)
  • Millinery Center Building (Northeast Corner Seventh Avenue and 38th Street, New York City)
  • Harriman Building (39 Broadway, New York City)
  • Trinity Building (New York City)
  • 100 West 55th Street Building (New York City)
  • 50 Broadway Building (New York City)
  • 165 Broadway Building (New York City)
  • Munson Building (New York City)
  • Equitable Office Building (New York City)
  • The Alden (New York City)
  • The Dorset (New York City)
  • Hotel St. George (Brooklyn, N.Y.)
  • Larrabee Building (Chicago)
  • Chicago Evening Post Building (Chicago)
  • Mercantile American Realty Company (San Francisco Area)
  • 11 West 42nd Street Building (New York City)
  • Dallas Post Office (Dallas, Texas)
  • Boston Postal Service Station (Boston)
  • Boston Parcel Post Station (Boston)
  • The Oliver Cromwell (New York City)
  • Court and Remsen Streets Office Building (Brooklyn, N.Y.)
  • New York Title and Mortgage Company
  • 18-20 East 41st Street Building (New York City)
  • Lefcourt-State Building (New York City)
  • Lefcourt-Manhattan Building (New York City)
  • Montague-Court Office Building (Brooklyn, N.Y.)
  • Vanderbilt Avenue Building (New York City)
  • Hotel Victoria (New York City)
  • Bryant Park Building (New York City)
  • Lord's Court Building (New York City)
  • Tyler Building (17-23 John Street, New York City)
  • 10 East 40th Street Building (New York City)
  • 610 Park Avenue Building (New York City)
  • New Weston Hotel Annex (New York City)
  • 65 East 96th Street Apartment Building (New York City)
  • Insurance Center Building (New York City)
  • 134 Waverly Place Apartments (New York City)
  • Liggett Building (Northeast Corner 42nd St. and Madison Ave., New York City)
  • Broadway and 38th Street Building (New York City)
  • Park-Murray Office Building (New York City)
  • 170 Broadway Building (New York City)
  • 200 Madison Avenue Building (New York City)
  • The Stratford (New York City)
  • The Pennsylvania Building (New York City)
  • Kenmore Hall (New York City)
  • 30 East 40th Street Building (New York City)
  • 51 West 86th St. Apts. (New York City)
  • Bar Building and Annex (White Plains, N.Y.)
  • George Washington Hotel (New York City)
  • Film Center Building (New York City)
  • National Tower Building (New York City)
  • Allerton Fifty-fifth Street Corportation (Northeast Corner Madison Ave. and 55th St., New York City)
  • Trinity Court Building (New York City)
  • Park Chambers (New York City)
  • 79 Madison Avenue Building (New York City)
  • Fox New Academy of Music (New York City)
  • Wellston Apartments (New York City)
  • 18 Gramercy Park South (New York City)
  • Herald Sqare Building (New York City)
  • Times Square - 46th Street Building (New York City)
  • Butler Hall (New York City)
  • 52nd and Madison Avenue Office Building (New York City)
  • 320 East 57th Street Apartment Building (New York City)
  • Sutton Place Apartments (New York City)
  • The Lombardy (New York City)
  • 103 East 57th Street Building (Ritz Tower)
  • Hearst-Brisbane Properties (New York City)
  • International Commerce Building (New York City)
  • 315 West 86th Street Apartments (New York City)
  • Lincoln Hotel Properties (New York City)
  • 57th Street and Madison Avenue Office Building (New York City)
  • Westinghouse Building (New York City)
  • 7 East 44th Street Building (Hale Bldg.)
  • 514 West End Avenue (New York City)
  • Carnegie Plaza Apartment Building (New York City)
  • Sherry Netherland Hotel (New York City)
  • 2-8 West 46th Street Building (New York City)
  • 616 Madison Avenue Apartment Hotel (New York City)
  • The Berkshire (New York City)
  • 277 Park Avenue Apartment Building (New York City)
  • 65 West 39th Street Building (New York City)
  • Real Estate Board Building (New York City)
  • Kent Garage Investing Company (Common Stock)
  • Index

Full text

214 MODERN MONETARY SYSTEMS 
exchange standard, stable in relation to the French franc 
and, later, to the United States dollar down to the middle 
of 1919 and only fell after a fourth campaign which was 
also unsuccessful. 
It is, however, even more important to remember that 
the objection which is made to the system of the gold reserve that 
it did not everywhere withstand the crisis of the world war is 
equally true of countries with the traditional system of the gold 
standard. For from the opening of hostilities even neutral 
countries were obliged to suspend the convertibility of notes and 
the free export of gold, and even now their exchanges almost all 
fluctuate in relation to the dollar far outside the gold points. 
This fact is in itself sufficient to dissipate the legend 
that only countries with the gold reserve system have to 
face the problem of stabilising their currency when the 
balance of payments is in deficit and when international 
disturbances arise. Apart therefore from periods which 
are really catastrophic, when 4// monetary systems go to 
pieces, it is entirely permissible to contemplate that a 
system of this kind should be generalised and should 
work regularly with the help of some central institution of 
international credit. 
But in the first place we must set aside the doubt which 
really lies behind the objection described above. If some 
people still hesitate in considering the gold reserve system 
as a normal one, the reason is that it does not seem to them 
to bring into play those forces tending to bring about an 
equilibrium which they believe to have been present in the 
former system of the gold standard with an internal gold 
circulation. They are obsessed by the old doctrine of 
Ricardo, either in its original form or in some new form; 
they believe that foreign exchanges naturally tend to 
balance and that this tendency reduces to a minimum the 
media of payments which will be required to wipe out any 
deficit and which will avoid any prolonged disequilibrium 
in the balance of payments. 
Ricardo’s arguments are well known. Under his anti- 
quated theory any temporary excess of imports provokes 
the export of metal currency, and reduces the volume of
	        

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Modern Monetary Systems. King, 1927.
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