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This Chapter introduces the Railroad Era and the financial and regulatory changes spawned by Richard Trevithick’s steam-powered locomotive. In particular, railroads illustrate how technological innovations, like the steam engine and rail car, often require financial innovations to bring the new technology to market because not only is production of the product itself expensive, but it also requires enormous investments in infrastructure like the Transcontinental Railroad. For example, preferred stock was invented to make railroad financing more appealing to governmental investors, but it was quickly adopted for many different purposes. Although the idea of using public funds to purchase railroad stock was unpopular with legislatures in the beginning, constituents soon began to demand access to this preference and additional rights. Additionally, as the acrimony between Federalists and anti-federalists persisted throughout the era, another financial evolution was primed to take place–the abandonment of the gold standard. Federalization of the money system continued as the United States attempted to better control its economy by adopting the gold standard.
This chapter offers an exposition of Suárez's theory of distributive justice, which, until very recently, has not been the subject of scholarly attention. Suárez's immediate preoccupations were theological, there is a clear political dimension to his treatment. For Suárez politics provides the perfect platform for testing our intuitions about distributive justice. Suárez's discussion illuminates aspects of distributive justice too often overlooked by contemporary theorists. Suárez maintains that distributive justice is the sovereign's virtue, consisting in meeting and protecting the subjects' rights to acquire and remain in possession of portions of the common stock. These rights are created by a pact or conditional promise that specifies the personal qualities that ground the subject's rights to shares of the common stock. Distributive justice governs not only the fresh allocation of shares of the common stock, but also the conditions under which subjects can continue to own them.
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