In Obedience to the Order of the House,
your Committee have enquired into the State and Circumstances of
the Trade of this Province with regard to the Quantity of our Paper
Currency from its first Emission in 1723, to the present Time; and
do find, by authentic Accounts, that before that Period our Trade
was in a declining State; and that since the same, our Importations
from Great-Britain have increased as follows, viz.
We do also find, that in the Years 1729, 1730,
and 1731, we had near the same Quantity of Paper Money that we now
have, and ever since have had; and that our Exportations of Wheat,
Flour, Bread, and Flaxseed, amounted then, one Year with another,
to little more than £60000 per Annum; whereas in the Year
1749
which last is more than treble the Value of those Articles
exported twenty Years before. For a more particular Account of
those Exportations, your Committee beg Leave to refer to a
Valuation of the several Articles hereunto annexed.
By the Report of a Former Committee of
Assembly, made in August, 1752, it appears that our Numbers of
People, and Domestic Trade, have increased in like Proportion.
Your Committee beg Leave to observe, that they
apprehend the Occasions for a Medium of Trade; must have increased
equally with the Trade; and that our Foreign and Domestic Commerce
could not have been carried on as it has been for some Years past,
had not the accidental Introduction of great Quantities of Silver
and Gold, by the War, Supplied the Deficiency of our Paper Currency
for that Purpose. And since Complaints of the Want of a Sufficient
Medium (occasioned by the Diminution of our Quantity of Gold and
Silver which is continually sent Home in Return for British and
India Manufactures) are daily growing louder; and our Paper
Currency must, by the present Acts, begin shortly to diminish one
sixth Part annually, your Committee humbly submit it to the
Consideration of the House, whether it is not now become necessary,
not only to prolong the Re-emissions, but to strike and emit an
additional Sum.