[Lombard Street: A Description of the Money Market by Walter Bagehot]@TWC D-Link book
Lombard Street: A Description of the Money Market

CHAPTER VI
44/48

The figures of trade are reckoned by hundreds of millions, where those of loanable capital count only by millions.

A great increase in the borrowing demands of English commerce almost always changes an excess of loanable capital above the demand to a greater deficiency below the demand.

That deficiency causes adversity, or apparent adversity, in trade, just as, and in the same manner, that the previous excess caused prosperity, or apparent prosperity.

It causes a fall of price that runs through society; that fall causes a decline of activity and a diminution of profits--a painful contraction instead of the previous pleasant expansion.
The change is generally quicker because some check to credit happens at an early stage of it.

The mercantile community will have been unusually fortunate if during the period of rising prices it has not made great mistakes.


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