[Lombard Street: A Description of the Money Market by Walter Bagehot]@TWC D-Link bookLombard Street: A Description of the Money Market CHAPTER IV 1/15
CHAPTER IV. The Position of the Chancellor of the Exchequer in the Money Market. Nothing can be truer in theory than the economical principle that banking is a trade and only a trade, and nothing can be more surely established by a larger experience than that a Government which interferes with any trade injuries that trade.
The best thing undeniably that a Government can do with the Money Market is to let it take care of itself. But a Government can only carry out this principle universally if it observe one condition: it must keep its own money.
The Government is necessarily at times possessed of large sums in cash.
It is by far the richest corporation in the country; its annual revenue payable in money far surpasses that of any other body or person.
And if it begins to deposit this immense income as it accrues at any bank, at once it becomes interested in the welfare of that bank.
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