アメリカにおける投機・賭博差異論の検討 : 1886-1922年
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概要
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This paper is intended to investigate the speculation theories discussed from the end of nineteenth century to the early years of the twentieth century in the United States. During that period, business transactions such as futures trading, short selling, and settlements without any delivery of properties were regarded as gambling or wagers, and therefore these transactions were prohibited by statutes in many states. However, some economists and finance professionals tried to justify these speculative transactions by arguing that there was a difference between speculation and gambling. In this paper, I investigate the arguments by H. C. Emery, A. T. Hadley, T. F. Woodlock, S. S. Pratt, H. Dewey, and J. E. Meeker, through which they all tried to distinguish speculation from gambling and supported speculative transactions. This research is significant because of two points. First, the discussion about the difference between speculation and gambling in the United States at that time can be adapted to the present evaluation of speculation. Second, it is clear that speculation theories at that time had an important role in the birth of risk theory and insurance theory in the United States.
- 2012-01-25