| Richard Webster - 1874 - 256 Seiten
...whilst a large amount of bullion was held in the coffers of the Bank, and during a time of favourable exchanges; and it may be traced to the same cause...previously advanced at an unusually low rate of interest. If the Committee considered the Act of 1844, which they desire to be amended, as far as its restrictive... | |
| Archibald Alison - 1876 - 446 Seiten
...while a large amount of bullion was held in the coffers of the Bank, and during a time of favourable exchanges ; and it may be traced to the same cause...hardly have felt itself justified in taking, had not the impression existed, that by the separation of the issue and the banking departments, one inflexible... | |
| Benjamin Bannister Turner - 1897 - 330 Seiten
...whilst a large amount of bullion was held in the coffers of the Bank, and during a time of favourable exchanges ; and it may be traced to the same cause,...one inflexible rule for regulating the Bank issues had been substituted by law in place of the discretion formerly vested in the Bank." - The Committee... | |
| James William Gilbart - 1922 - 468 Seiten
...whilst a large amount of bullion was held in the coffers of the bank, and during a time of favourable exchanges ; and it may be traced to the same cause,...in taking, had not an impression existed that, by tho separation of the issue and the banking departments, one inflexible rule for regulating the bank... | |
| Michael D. Bordo, Anna J. Schwartz - 2009 - 694 Seiten
...whilst a large amount of bullion was held in the coffers of the Bank, and during a time of favourable exchanges; and it may be traced to the same cause,...one inflexible rule for regulating the Bank issues had been substituted by law in place of the discretion formerly vested in the Bank. (Turner 1897, pp.... | |
| James William Gilbart - 1999 - 674 Seiten
...bullion was held in the coffers of the bank, and-during a time of favourable exchanges; and it maybe traced to the same cause, indirectly, as a consequence...one inflexible rule for regulating the bank issues had been substituted by law in place of the discretion formerly vested in the bank." The nature and... | |
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