Thank you, Nicholas and Mason, for pursuing this and providing the
quoted material.
Apart from the time discounting, I was struck by the risk
discounting. In Chapter IV around par 22, Petty notes that the years
purchase reflecting value in England would be lessened in Ireland on
account of frequent rebellions and thieves and robbers reacting to
landlords' presence. One must wonder whether England's later 20th
century departures from Ireland (rather dragged out afther the rising
of 1916) and the Indian sub-continent (rather more hurried after
WWII), A) were predictable under Petty's calculus that the cost of
"ownership" outweighed the revenues, and B) were more motivated by
economics than by post-imperial enlightenment.
Scott Cullen