Companies in joynt-stock unnecessary and inconvenient. Free trade to India in a regulated company, the interest of England. / Discours'd in a letter to a friend.
- Title
- Companies in joynt-stock unnecessary and inconvenient. Free trade to India in a regulated company, the interest of England. / Discours'd in a letter to a friend.
- Publication
- [London :: s.n.,]
- 1691
- Rights/Permissions
-
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- Subject terms
- East India Company -- Early works to 1800.
- Free trade -- England -- Early works to 1800.
- Stock companies -- England -- Early works to 1800.
- Great Britain -- Commerce -- India -- Early works to 1800.
- India -- Commerce -- Great Britain -- Early works to 1800.
- Link to this Item
-
https://name.umdl.umich.edu/B02301.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"Companies in joynt-stock unnecessary and inconvenient. Free trade to India in a regulated company, the interest of England. / Discours'd in a letter to a friend." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/B02301.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 5, 2024.
Contents
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COMPANIES IN JOYNT-STOCK Unnecessary and Inconvenient: Free Trade to INDIA IN
A Regulated Company, The INTEREST ofENGLAND. -
Question I.
Under a Regulation how can the Forts and Islands of St. Helenaand Bom∣bay,Fort St. Georgeand Bencoelennow in the Companies Possession be paid for and after∣terwards maintained? -
Quest. II.
What Security can be had of those People in India when you trust them with your Money for making Investments. -
Quest. III.
Will it not be a means to ruine the Trade and lessen the Exportation of our Ma∣nufactures and Growths? -
Quest. IV.
Will not the Natives raise the Price of their Goods, and lower the Price of ours? -
Quest. V.
How will you maintain the Pepper Trade on Sumatraand North Coast of Indiaand Malabar. -
Quest. VI.
How will you support the Trade to India,if the Dutchor any others should at∣tempt by force or fraud to out you of it, or defend it in Case of a War with them, or any other European? -
Quest. VII.
Will it not be very difficult to keep in good order, and govern the several Facto∣ries, and Merchants that shall reside in India? -
Quest. VIII.
Will not Interlopers go out from, and return to other Countries in Europe,and so avoid those Impositions that a Regulated Company must necessarily lay on all Ships and Goods for their support? -
Quest. IX.
The Dutchare esteemed the best Judges of Trade, and its Advantages, of any other People, and do not they carry on their Trade to Indiaand Guineain Joynt-Stocks.
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Question I.