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To this the answer is that the comparative derivation
of the maturationvalue of Exchequer Bills is plainly referable
to the conjoint operation of a variety of causes
not one of which is applicable to the proposed paper
These are -
1. What the The Annuity to which the Exchequer Bill undulations conveys
no right to is not a perpetual Annuity, but
and Annuity if such it may be bound lasting at
for a term: subject to frequent uncertainties sometimes for less than one year, however
for more than two years : whereas the annuity
conveyed by a proposed Annuity is an
annuity perpetual in the first instance
only to redemption on repayment of the principal
and that annuity at the same time if the family
of circulationpassing in be admitted, convertible by that means
into an Annuity for any shorter period at pleasure.
The Stock Annuities which yield rates
of interest above 3 per Cent, were to and 8 per
Cent - Stock Annuities of these classes though perpetual unless
redeemed yet by the bare circumstances of being
subject to redemption coupled with the probability
of redemption grounded in the extra rate
of interest more subject to a in the interest degree of depreciation
in the which any body may an in looking at
the prices of Stock as published in the daily papers
the Annuity deemed by an Exchequer Bill is
not an Annuity which instead of being expand
to be paid off at the end of an uncertain number
of years is incapable of lasting for a minute
as two years.
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Identifier: | JB/002/533/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 2. |
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002 |
annuity notes |
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533 |
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001 |
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text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
e6 |
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jeremy bentham |
1798 a<…> |
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frances wright |
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1798 |
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1272 |
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