Dan Seitz

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For all the various examples of hiccups in interest payments on the new national debt, this wasn’t the idle boast of a pamphleteer in the ministry’s pocket. The first phase of the financial revolution in the 1690s had demonstrated that Parliament could indeed raise loans at almost any moment and use its powers to persuade investors that such debt would in fact be covered by one new stream of income—a fee on malt!—or another.
Money for Nothing: The Scientists, Fraudsters, and Corrupt Politicians Who Reinvented Money, Panicked a Nation, and Made the World Rich
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