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Mallock, William Hurrell, 1849-1923

"A Critical Examination of Socialism"



CHAPTER XIV
THE SOCIALISTIC ATTACK ON INTEREST AND THE NATURE OF ITS SEVERAL
ERRORS
The practical outcome of the moral attack on interest is
logically an attack on bequest.
Modern socialism would logically allow a man to inherit
accumulations, and to spend the principal, but not to receive
interest on his money as an investment.
What would be the result if all who inherited capital spent it
as income, instead of living on the interest of it?
Two typical illustrations of these ways of treating capital.
The ultimate difference between the two results.
What the treatment of capital as income would mean, if the
practice were made universal. It would mean the gradual loss of
all the added productive forces with which individual genius has
enriched the world.
Practical condemnation of proposed attack on interest.
Another aspect of the matter.
Those who attack interest, as distinct from other kinds of
money-reward, admit that the possession of wealth is necessary
as a stimulus to production.


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