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== Other works == === 1800: ''The present high price of provisions'' === In this work, his first published pamphlet, Malthus argues against the notion prevailing in his locale that the greed of intermediaries caused the high price of provisions. Instead, Malthus says that the high price stems from the [[Poor Laws]], which "increase the parish allowances in proportion to the price of corn." Thus, given a limited supply, the Poor Laws force up the price of daily necessities. However, he concludes by saying that in time of scarcity such Poor Laws, by raising the price of corn more evenly, actually produce a ''beneficial'' effect.<ref>1800: ''The present high price of provisions'', paragraph 26</ref> === 1814: ''Observations on the effects of the Corn Laws'' === Although government in Britain had regulated the prices of grain, the [[Corn Laws]] originated in 1815. At the end of the Napoleonic Wars that year, [[Parliament of the United Kingdom|Parliament]] passed legislation banning the importation of foreign corn into Britain until domestic corn cost 80 shillings per [[hundredweight|quarter]].{{clarify|date=April 2018}} The high price caused the cost of food to increase and caused distress among the working classes in the towns. It led to serious rioting in London and to the [[Peterloo Massacre]] in [[Manchester]] in 1819.<ref>{{cite book|first=Francis Wrigley|last=Hirst|title=From Adam Smith to Philip Snowden: a History of Free Trade in Great Britain|publisher=[[T. Fisher Unwin]]|location=London, England|date=1925|asin=B007T0ONNO|page=88}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|first=Eric|last=Hobsbawm|title=Industry and Empire: The Birth of the Industrial Revolution|publisher=[[The New Press]]|location=New York City|date=1999|isbn=978-1565845619|page=175|quote=The Corn Laws... safeguarded farmers from the consequences of their wartime euphoria, when farms had changed hands at the fanciest prices, loans and mortgages had been accepted on impossible terms}}</ref> In this pamphlet, printed during the parliamentary discussion, Malthus tentatively supported the free-traders. He argued that given the increasing cost of growing British corn, advantages accrued from supplementing it from cheaper foreign sources. === 1820: ''Principles of political economy'' === In 1820 Malthus published ''[[Principles of Political Economy (Malthus)|Principles of Political Economy]]''. (A second edition was posthumously published in 1836.) Malthus intended this work to rival Ricardo's ''Principles'' (1817).<ref>See {{cite book|last=Malthus|first=Thomas Robert|year=1820|title=Principles of Political Economy Considered with a View of their Practical Application|edition=1|publisher=John Murray|publication-date=1820|location=London|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=b_dBAAAAcAAJ&pg=PR1}}</ref> It, and his 1827 ''Definitions in political economy'', defended [[Jean Charles LΓ©onard de Sismondi|Sismondi]]'s views on "general glut" rather than Say's law, which in effect states "there can be no general glut".<ref>{{cite book|title=Jean-Baptiste Say: Critical Assessments of Leading Economists|volume=5|chapter=Say's Law and Keynesian Economics|first=Tyler|last=Cowen|date=2000|page=319}}</ref> === Other publications === * 1807. ''A letter to Samuel Whitbread, Esq. M.P. on his proposed Bill for the Amendment of the Poor Laws''. Johnson and Hatchard, London. * 1808. Spence on Commerce. ''Edinburgh Review'' '''11''', January, 429β448. * 1808. Newneham and others on the state of Ireland. ''Edinburgh Review'' '''12''', July, 336β355. * 1809. Newneham on the state of Ireland, ''Edinburgh Review'' '''14''' April, 151β170. * 1811. Depreciation of paper currency. ''Edinburgh Review'' '''17''', February, 340β372. * 1812. Pamphlets on the bullion question. '' Edinburgh Review'' '''18''', August, 448β470. * 1813. ''A letter to the Rt. Hon. Lord Grenville''. Johnson, London. * 1817. ''Statement respecting the East-India College''. Murray, London. * 1821. Godwin on Malthus. ''Edinburgh Review'' '''35''', July, 362β377. * 1823. ''The Measure of Value, stated and illustrated'' * 1823. Tooke β On high and low prices. ''[[Quarterly Review]]'', '''29''' (57), April, 214β239. * 1824. Political economy. ''Quarterly Review'' '''30''' (60), January, 297β334. * 1829. On the measure of the conditions necessary to the supply of commodities. ''Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature of the United Kingdom''. '''1''', 171β180. John Murray, London. * 1829. On the meaning which is most usually and most correctly attached to the term ''Value of a Commodity''. ''Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature of the United Kingdom''. '''2''', 74β81. John Murray.
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