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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of An Inquiry into the Principles of Political oeconomy (Vol. 1 of 2), by James Steuart
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: An Inquiry into the Principles of Political oeconomy (Vol. 1 of 2)
-Being an essay on the science of domestic policy in free nations. In which are particularly considered population, agriculture.
-
-Author: James Steuart
-
-Release Date: October 3, 2019 [eBook #60411]
-[Most recently updated: August 18, 2021]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: KD Weeks, MFR and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL OECONOMY ***
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Transcriber’s Note:
-
-This version of the text cannot represent certain typographical effects.
-Italics are delimited with the ‘_’ character as _italic_.
-
-Footnotes have been moved to follow the paragraphs in which they are
-referenced.
-
-The table of contents includes references in Book III to sections
-printed in the text as marginal notes (sidenotes). Each has been linked
-for ease of reference.
-
-[Sidenote: Marginal Notes.]
-
-All marginal notes will appear prior to the paragraph they annotated as,
-prefixed with ‘Sidenote:’
-
-There was an Errata included in the text. The corrections listed there
-were made.
-
-Minor errors, attributable to the printer, have been corrected. Please
-see the transcriber’s note at the end of this text for details regarding
-the handling of any textual issues encountered during its preparation.
-
- AN
- INQUIRY
- INTO THE
- PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL OECONOMY:
- BEING AN
- ESSAY ON THE SCIENCE
- OF
- Domestic Policy in Free Nations.
-
- IN WHICH ARE PARTICULARLY CONSIDERED
-
- POPULATION, AGRICULTURE, TRADE, INDUSTRY,
- MONEY, COIN, INTEREST, CIRCULATION, BANKS,
- EXCHANGE, PUBLIC CREDIT, AND TAXES.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- By Sir JAMES STEUART, Bart.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- _Ore trahit quodcumque potest atque addit acervo._ HOR. Lib. I. Sat. 1.
-
- IN TWO VOLUMES.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- VOL. I.
-
- LONDON:
- Printed for A. MILLAR, and T. CADELL, in the Strand.
- MDCCLXVII.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- _PREFACE._
-
-
-It is with the greatest diffidence that I present to the public this
-attempt towards reducing to principles, and forming into a regular
-science, the complicated interests of domestic policy. When I consider
-the time and labour employed in the composition, I am apt to value it
-from selfish considerations. When I compare it even with my own
-abilities, I still think favourably of it, for a better reason; because
-it contains a summary of the most valuable part of all my knowledge. But
-when I consider the greatness of my subject, how small does the result
-of my application appear!
-
-The imperfections, therefore, discovered in this work, will, I hope, be
-ascribed to the disproportion between the extent of the undertaking, and
-that of my capacity. This has been exerted to the utmost: and if I have
-failed, it may, at least, with justice, be said, that I have miscarried
-in an attempt of the greatest importance to mankind.
-
-I no where shew the least desire to make my court to any particular
-statesman whose administration might have been hinted at. I freely
-follow the thread of my reasoning without a biass, either in favour of
-popular opinions, or of any of the numberless systems which have been
-formed by those who have written upon particular parts of my subject.
-The warmth of my temper has led me often into commendations, when I was
-pleased; but when I felt the effects of ill humour on being dissatisfied
-with particular circumstances, relating to countries, to men, and to
-things, which I had in view at the time I was writing, I seldom thought
-it proper to be particular. I have, in general, considered the danger of
-error, either in blaming or commending the steps of any administration,
-without being well informed of the whole combination of circumstances
-which the statesman had before him at the time.
-
-This composition being the successive labour of many years spent in
-travelling, the reader will find some passages in which the unities of
-time and place have not been observed. These I could have corrected with
-ease, had I not been advised to leave them as characters to point out
-the circumstances under which I wrote, and thereby to confirm the
-authenticity of certain facts.
-
-The modes of thinking, also, peculiar to the several countries where I
-have lived, have, no doubt, had an influence on what I have writ
-concerning their customs: the work, therefore, will not, in general,
-correspond to the meridian of national opinions any where; and of this
-it is proper the reader should be apprised, that he may not apply to the
-domestic circumstances of his own country what was intended to refer to
-those of other nations; nor impute what was the irresistible effect of
-my experience and conviction, to wilful prejudice.
-
-I have read many authors on the subject of political oeconomy; and I
-have endeavoured to draw from them all the instruction I could. I have
-travelled, for many years, through different countries, and have
-examined them, constantly, with an eye to my own subject. I have
-attempted to draw information from every one with whom I have been
-acquainted: this, however, I found to be very difficult before I had
-attained to some previous knowledge of my subject. Such difficulties
-confirmed to me the justness of Lord Bacon’s remark, that he who knows
-how to draw information by forming proper questions, is already
-possessed of half the science[A].
-
-Footnote A:
-
- _Prudens interrogatio, dimidium scientiæ._
-
-I could form no consistent plan from the various opinions I met with:
-hence I was engaged to compile the observations I had casually made, in
-the course of my travels, reading, and experience. From these I formed
-the following work, after expunging the numberless inconsistencies and
-contradictions which I found had arisen from my separate inquiries into
-every particular branch.
-
-I had observed so many persons declining in knowledge as they advanced
-in years, that I resolved early to throw upon paper whatever I had
-learned; and to this I used to have recourse, as others have to their
-memories. The unity of the object of all my speculations, rendred this
-practice more useful to me than it would be to one whose researches are
-more extended.
-
-Whoever is much accustomed to write for his own use merely, must
-contract a more careless stile than another who has made language his
-study, and who writes in hopes of acquiring a literary reputation. I
-never, till very lately, thought of appearing as an author; and in the
-frequent perusals of what I had writ, my corrections were chiefly in
-favour of perspicuity: add to this, that the language in which I now
-write was, for many years, foreign to those with whom I lived and
-conversed. When these circumstances are combined with the intricacy of
-my subject, which constantly carried off my attention from every
-ornament of language, I flatter myself that those of my readers, at
-least, who enter as heartily as I have done into the spirit of this
-work, will candidly overlook the want of that elegance which adorns the
-stile of some celebrated authors in this Augustan age. I present this
-inquiry to the public as nothing more than an essay which may serve as a
-canvass for better hands than mine to work upon.
-
-It contains such observations only as the general view of the domestic
-policy of the countries I have seen, has suggested. It is a speculation,
-and no more. It is a rough drawing of a mighty plan, proportioned in
-correctness to my own sagacity, to my knowledge of the subject and to
-the extent of my combinations.
-
-It goes little farther than to collect and arrange some elements upon
-the most interesting branches of modern policy, such as _population,
-agriculture, trade, industry, money, coin, interest, circulation, banks,
-exchange, public credit, and taxes_. The principles deduced from all
-these topics, appear tolerably consistent; and the whole is a train of
-reasoning, through which I have adhered to the connection of subjects as
-faithfully as I could: but the nature of the work being a deduction of
-principles, not a collection of institutions, I seized the opportunities
-which my reasoning threw in my way, to connect every principle, as I
-went along, with every part of the inquiry to which it could refer; and
-when I found the connexion sufficiently shewn, I broke off such
-disquisitions as would have led me from the object then present.
-
-When principles thus casually applied in one part to matters intended to
-be afterwards treated of in another, came to be taken up a-new, they
-involved me in what may appear prolixity. This I found most unavoidable,
-when I was led to thoughts which were new to myself, and consequently
-such as must cost me the greatest labour to set in a clear and distinct
-point of view. Had I been master of my subject on setting out, the
-arrangement of the whole would have been rendered more concise: but had
-this been the case, I should never have been able to go through the
-painful deduction which forms the whole chain of my reasoning, and upon
-which, to many readers, slow in forming combinations, the conviction it
-carries along with it in a great measure depends: to the few, again, of
-a more penetrating genius, to whom the slightest hint is sufficient to
-lay open every consequence before it be drawn, in allusion to Horace, I
-offer this apology, _Clarus esse laboro, prolixus fio_.
-
-The path I have taken was new to me, after all I had read on the
-subject. I examined what I had gathered from others by my own
-principles; and according as I found it tally with collateral
-circumstances, I concluded in its favour. When, on the other hand, I
-found a disagreement, I was apprized immediately of some mistake: and
-this I found constantly owing to the narrowness of the combinations upon
-which it had been founded.
-
-The great danger of running into error upon particular points relating
-to this subject, proceeds from our viewing them in a light too confined,
-and to our not attending to the influence of concomitant circumstances,
-which render general rules of little use. Men of parts and knowledge
-seldom fail to reason consequentially on every subject; but when their
-inquiries are connected with the complicated interests of society, the
-vivacity of an author’s genius is apt to prevent him from attending to
-the variety of circumstances which render every consequence, almost,
-which he can draw, uncertain. To this I ascribe the habit of running
-into what the French call _Systemes_. These are no more than a chain of
-contingent consequences, drawn from a few fundamental maxims, adopted,
-perhaps, rashly. Such systems are mere conceits; they mislead the
-understanding, and efface the path to truth. An induction is formed,
-from whence a conclusion, called a principle, is drawn; but this is no
-sooner done, than the author extends its influence far beyond the limits
-of the ideas present to his understanding, when he made his deduction.
-
-The imperfection of language engages us frequently in disputes merely
-verbal; and instead of being on our guard against the many unavoidable
-ambiguities attending the most careful speech, we place a great part of
-our learning when at school, and of our wit when we appear on the stage
-of the world, in the prostitution of language. The learned delight in
-vague, and the witty in equivocal terms. In general, we familiarize
-ourselves so much with words, and think so little, when we speak and
-write, that the signs of our ideas take the place of the images which
-they were intended to represent.
-
-Every true proposition, when understood, must be assented to
-_universally_. This is the case always, when simple ideas are affirmed
-or denied of each other. No body ever doubted that sound is the object
-of hearing, or colour that of sight, or that black is not white. But
-whenever a dispute arises concerning a proposition, wherein complex
-ideas are compared, we may often rest assured, that the parties do not
-understand each other. Luxury, says one, is incompatible with the
-prosperity of a state. Luxury is the fountain of a nation’s welfare and
-happiness, says another. There may, in reality, be no difference in the
-sentiments of these two persons. The first may consider luxury as
-prejudicial to foreign trade, and as corrupting the morals of a people.
-The other may consider luxury as the means of providing employment for
-such as must live by their industry, and of promoting an equable
-circulation of wealth and subsistence, through all the classes of
-inhabitants. If each of them had attended to the combination of the
-other’s complex idea of luxury, with all its consequences, they would
-have rendered their propositions less general.
-
-The difference, therefore, of opinion between men is frequently more
-apparent than real. When we compare our own ideas, we constantly see
-their relations with perspicuity; but when we come to communicate those
-relations to other people, it is often impossible to put them into words
-sufficiently expressive of the precise combination we have made in our
-own minds.
-
-This being the case, I have avoided, as much as possible, condemning
-such opinions as I have taken the liberty to review; because I have
-examined such only as have been advanced by men of genius and
-reputation: and since all matters of controversy regard the comparison of
-our _ideas_, if the terms we use to express them were sufficiently
-understood by both parties, most political disputes would, I am
-persuaded, be soon at an end.
-
-Here it may be objected, that we frequently adopt an opinion, without
-being able to give a sufficient reason for it, and yet we cannot gain
-upon ourselves to give it up, though we find it combated by the
-strongest arguments.
-
-To this I answer, that in such cases we do not adhere to our own
-opinions, but to those of others, received upon trust. It is our regard
-for the authority, and not for the opinion, which makes us tenacious:
-for if the opinion were truly our own, we could not fail of seeing, or
-at least we should not long be at a loss in recollecting the ground upon
-which it is built. But when we assent implicitly to any political
-doctrine, there is no room for reason: we then satisfy ourselves with
-the persuasion that those whom we trust have sufficient reasons for what
-they advance. While our assent therefore is implicit, we are beyond
-conviction; not because we do not perceive the force of the arguments
-brought against our opinion, but because we are ignorant of the force of
-those which can be brought to support it: and as no body will sell what
-belongs to him, without being previously informed of its value, so no
-body will give up an implicit opinion, without knowing all that can be
-said for it. To this class of men I do not address myself in my
-inquiries.
-
-But I insensibly run into a metaphysical speculation, to prove, that in
-political questions it is better for people to judge from experience and
-reason, than from authority; to explain their terms, than to dispute
-about words; and to extend their combinations, than to follow conceits,
-however decorated with the name of systems. How far I have avoided such
-defects, the reader will determine.
-
-Every writer values himself upon his impartiality; because he is not
-sensible of his fetters. The wandering and independent life I have led
-may naturally have set me free, in some measure, from strong attachments
-to popular opinions. This may be called impartiality. But as no man can
-be deemed impartial, who leans to any side whatever, I have been
-particularly on my guard against the consequences of this sort of
-negative impartiality, as I have found it sometimes carrying me too far
-from that to which a national prejudice might have led me.
-
-In discussing general points, the best method I found to maintain a just
-balance in that respect, was to avert my eye from the country in which I
-lived at the time; and to judge of absent things by the absent. Objects
-which are present, are apt to produce perceptions too strong to be
-impartially compared with those recalled only by memory.
-
-When I have had occasion to dip into any question concerning the
-preference to be given to certain forms of government above others, and
-to touch upon points which have been the object of sharp disputes, I
-have given my opinion with freedom, when it seemed proper: and in
-stating the question, I have endeavoured to avoid all trite, and, as I
-may call them, technical terms of party, which are of no other use than
-to assist the disputants in their attempts to blacken each other, and to
-throw dust in the eyes of their readers.
-
-I have sometimes entred so heartily into the spirit of the statesman,
-that I have been apt to forget my situation in the society in which I
-live; and when the private man reads over the politician, his natural
-partiality in favour of individuals, leads him to condemn, as
-Machiavellian principles, every sentiment approving the sacrifice of
-private concerns, in favour of a general plan.
-
-In order, therefore, to reconcile me to myself in this particular, and
-to prevent certain expressions, here and there interspersed, from making
-the slightest impression upon a reader of delicate sentiments, I must
-observe, that nothing would have been so easy as to soften many
-passages, where the politician appears to have snatched the pen out of
-the hand of the private citizen: but as I write for such only who can
-follow a close reasoning, and attend to the general scope of the whole
-inquiry, I have, purposely, made no correction; but continued painting
-in the strongest colours, every inconvenience which must affect certain
-individuals living under our free modern governments, whenever a wise
-statesman sets about correcting old abuses, proceeding from idleness,
-sloth or fraud in the lower classes, arbitrary jurisdictions in the
-higher, and neglects in administrations, with respect to the interests
-of both. The more any cure is painful and dangerous, the more ought men
-to be careful in avoiding the disease. This leads me to say a word
-concerning the connection between the theory of morals and that of
-politics.
-
-I lay it down as a general maxim, that the characteristic of a good
-action consists in the conformity between the motive, and the duty of
-the agent. If there were but one man upon earth, his duty would contain
-no other precepts than those dictated by self-love. If he comes to be a
-father, a husband, a friend, his self-love falls immediately under
-limitations: he must withhold from himself, and give to his children; he
-must know how to sacrifice some of his fancies, in order to gratify, now
-and then, those of his wife, or of his friend. If he comes to be a
-judge, a magistrate, he must frequently forget that he is a friend, or a
-father: and if he rises to be a statesman, he must disregard many other
-attachments more comprehensive, such as family, place of birth, and
-even, in certain cases, his native country. His duty here becomes
-relative to the general good of that society of which he is the head:
-and as the death of a criminal cannot be imputed to the judge who
-condemns him, neither can a particular inconvenience resulting to an
-individual, in consequence of a step taken for a general reformation, be
-imputed to him who sits at the helm of government.
-
-If it should be asked, of what utility a speculation such as this can be
-to a statesman, to whom it is in a manner addressed from the beginning
-to the end: I answer, that although it seems addressed to a statesman,
-the real object of the inquiry is to influence the spirit of those whom
-he governs; and the variety of matter contained in it, may even suggest
-useful hints to himself. But his own genius and experience will enable
-him to carry such notions far beyond the reach of my combinations.
-
-I have already said that I considered my work as no more than a canvass
-prepared for more able hands than mine to work upon. Now although the
-sketch it contains be not sufficiently correct, I have still made some
-progress, I think, in preparing the way for others to improve upon my
-plan, by contriving proper questions to be resolved by men of experience
-in the practical part of government.
-
-I leave it therefore to masters in the science to correct and extend my
-ideas: and those who have not made the principles of policy their
-particular study, may have an opportunity of comparing the exposition I
-have given of them with the commonly received opinions concerning many
-questions of great importance to society. They will, for instance, be
-able to judge how far population can be increased usefully, by
-multiplying marriages, and by dividing lands: how far the swelling of
-capitals, cities and towns, tends to depopulate a country: how far the
-progress of luxury brings distress upon the poor industrious man: how
-far restrictions laid upon the corn trade, tend to promote an ample
-supply of subsistence in all our markets: how far the increase of public
-debts tends to involve us in a general bankruptcy: how far the abolition
-of paper currency would have the effect of reducing the price of all
-commodities: how far a tax tends to enhance their value: and how far the
-diminution of duties is an essential requisite for securing the liberty,
-and promoting the prosperity and happiness of a people.
-
-Is it not of the greatest importance to examine, with candour, the
-operations by which all Europe has been engaged in a system of policy so
-generally declaimed against, and so contrary to that which we hear daily
-recommended as the best? And to shew, from the plain principles of
-common sense, that our present situation is the unavoidable consequence
-of the spirit and manners of the present times, and that it is quite
-compatible with all the liberty, affluence, and prosperity, which any
-human society ever enjoyed in any age, or under any form of government?
-A people taught to expect from a statesman the execution of plans, big
-with impossibility and contradiction, will remain discontented under the
-government of the best of Kings.
-
-The reader is desired to correct the following errors, especially such
-as are distinguished by an asterisk *, which pervert the sense entirely.
-
-
-
-
- ERRATA.
-
- Page. Line.
- 3. 32. * advantages, r. disadvantages
- 73. 27. were, r. from
- 85. 28. * This is the, r. This is not the
- 89. 12. * supposed to come, r. subsisted
- 116. 12. productions, r. spontaneous productions
- 145. 9. * trial, r. Tirol
- 147. 30. its, r. their
- 172. 1. * earth, r. cart
- 208. 29. third, r. fourth
- 210. 6. lands, r. hands
- 214. 4. moving, r. removing.
- 217. 2. turns, r. terms
- 229. 8. * usefulness, r. uselesness
- 236. 19. * management, r. mismanagement
- 266. 21, 22. they correspond, r. it corresponds
- 290. 2. easily bred, r. bred early
- 339. 21. * preventing, r. promoting
- 382. 10. * work, r. worth
- 391. 8. * next, r. net
- 425. 27. discovering, r. discoursing
- 430. 29. _eiò_, r. _ciò_
- Ditto 30. _misuro_, r. _misura_
- 501. 3. * physical, r. political
- Ditto 27. competition, r. composition.
- 515. 17. proportions, r. propositions
- 552. 12. * bringing, r. coining
- 601. 9. * diminution, r. denomination
- 626. 31. * revolution, r. institution
- 637. ult. }
- 638. prim. } formally, r. formerly
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CONTENTS
- OF THE
- FIRST VOLUME.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- BOOK I.
-
- Of Population and Agriculture.
-
- INTRODUCTION, Page 1
-
- CHAP. I. Of the government of mankind, 6
-
- CHAP. II. Of the spirit of a people, 8
-
- CHAP. III. Upon what principles, and from what _natural 17
- causes_, do mankind multiply; and what are the effects of
- procreation in countries where numbers are not found to
- increase?
-
- CHAP. IV. Continuation of the same subject, with regard to 21
- the natural and immediate effects of agriculture, as to
- population,
-
- CHAP. V. In what manner, and according to what principles 26
- and _political causes_ does agriculture augment
- population?
-
- CHAP. VI. How the wants of mankind promote their 31
- multiplication,
-
- CHAP. VII. The effects of slavery upon the multiplication 36
- and employment of mankind,
-
- CHAP. VIII. What proportion of inhabitants is necessary for 41
- agriculture, and what proportion may be usefully employed
- in every other occupation?
-
- CHAP. IX. What are the principles which regulate the 46
- distribution of inhabitants into farms, hamlets, villages,
- towns, and cities?
-
- CHAP. X. Of the consequences which result from the 50
- reparation of the two principal classes of a people, the
- farmers and the free hands, with regard to their dwelling,
-
- CHAP. XI. Of the distribution of inhabitants into classes; 59
- of the employments, and multiplication of them,
-
- CHAP. XII. Of the great advantage of combining a well 67
- digested theory, and a perfect knowledge of facts, with
- the practical part of government, in order to make a
- people multiply,
-
- CHAP. XIII. Continuation of the same subject, with regard to 75
- the necessity of having exact lists of births, deaths, and
- marriages, for every class of inhabitants in a modern
- society,
-
- CHAP. XIV. Of the abuse of agriculture and population, 82
-
- CHAP. XV. Application of the above principles to the state 95
- of population in _Great Britain_,
-
- CHAP. XVI. Why are some countries found very populous, in 101
- respect of others, equally well calculated for
- improvement?
-
- CHAP. XVII. In what manner, and according to what 109
- proportion, do plenty and scarcity affect a people?
-
- CHAP. XVIII. Of the causes and consequences of a country 114
- being fully peopled,
-
- CHAP. XIX. Is the introduction of machines into manufactures 119
- prejudicial to the interest of a state, or hurtful to
- population?
-
- CHAP. XX. Miscellaneous observations upon agriculture and 124
- population,
-
- CHAP. XXI. Recapitulation of the first book, 149
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- BOOK II.
-
- Of Trade and Industry.
-
- INTRODUCTION, 161
-
- CHAP. I. Of the reciprocal connections between trade and 166
- industry,
-
- CHAP. II. Of Demand, 172
-
- CHAP. III. Of the first principles of bartering, and how 175
- this grows into trade,
-
- CHAP. IV. How the prices of goods come to be determined by 181
- trade,
-
- CHAP. V. How foreign trade opens to an industrious people, 184
- and the consequences of it to _the merchants_ who set it on
- foot,
-
- CHAP. VI. Consequences of the introduction of a passive 190
- foreign trade among a people who live in simplicity and
- idleness,
-
- CHAP. VII. Of double competition, 196
-
- CHAP. VIII. Of what is called expence, profit, and loss, 205
-
- CHAP. IX. The general consequences resulting to a trading 206
- nation, upon the opening of an active foreign commerce,
-
- CHAP. X. Of the balance of work and demand, 216
-
- CHAP. XI. Why in time this balance is destroyed, 225
-
- CHAP. XII. Of the competition between nations, 232
-
- CHAP. XIII. How far the form of government of a particular 237
- country may be favourable or unfavourable to a competition
- with other nations, in matters of commerce,
-
- CHAP. XIV. Security, ease, and happiness, no inseparable 250
- concomitants of trade and industry,
-
- CHAP. XV. A general view of the principles to be attended to 261
- by a statesman, who resolves to establish trade and industry
- upon a lasting footing,
-
- CHAP. XVI. Illustration of some principles laid down in the 272
- former chapter, relative to the advancement and support of
- foreign trade,
-
- CHAP. XVII. Symptoms of decay in foreign trade, 278
-
- CHAP. XVIII. Methods of lowering the price of manufactures, 283
- in order to make them vendible in foreign markets,
-
- CHAP. XIX. Of infant, foreign and domestic trade, with 301
- respect to the several principles which influence them,
-
- CHAP. XX. Of luxury, 306
-
- CHAP. XXI. Of physical and political necessaries, 311
-
- CHAP. XXII. Preliminary reflections upon inland commerce, 319
-
- CHAP. XXIII. When a nation, which has enriched herself by a 328
- reciprocal commerce in manufactures with other nations,
- finds the balance of trade turn against her, it is her
- interest to put a stop to it altogether,
-
- CHAP. XXIV. What is the proper method to put a stop to a 336
- foreign trade in manufactures, when the balance of it turns
- against a nation?
-
- CHAP. XXV. When a rich nation finds her foreign trade 343
- reduced to the articles of natural produce, what is the best
- plan to be followed? And what are the consequences of such a
- change of circumstances?
-
- CHAP. XXVI. Of the vibration of the balance of wealth 359
- between the subjects of a modern state,
-
- CHAP. XXVII. Circulation, and the balance of wealth, objects 374
- worthy of the attention of a modern statesman,
-
- CHAP. XXVIII. Circulation considered with regard to the rise 394
- and fall of the price of subsistence and manufactures,
-
- CHAP. XXIX. Circulation with foreign nations, the same thing 414
- as the balance of trade,
-
- CHAP. XXX. Miscellaneous questions and observations relative 426
- to trade and industry,
-
- CHAP. XXXI. Recapitulation of the second book, 482
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- BOOK III.
- OF MONEY AND COIN.
-
- PART I.
-
- The principles of money deduced, and applied to the coin of Great
- Britain.
-
- INTRODUCTION, 523
-
- CHAP. I. Of money of accompt, 526
- What money is ——
- Definitions ——
- Money a scale for measuring value, ——
- Principles which determine the value of things 527
- Prices not regulated by the quantity of money, ——
- But by the relative proportion between commodities and 528
- the wants of mankind,
- Necessity of distinguishing between money and price, 529
- Money of accompt what, and how contrived, ——
- Examples of it, 531
- Bank money, ——
- Angola money, ——
-
- CHAP. II. Of artificial or material money, ——
- Usefulness of the precious metals for the making money, 532
- Adjusting a standard, what? 533
- Debasing and raising a standard, what? 534
- The alteration of a standard, how to be discovered? ——
- Of alloy, ——
-
- CHAP. III. Incapacities of the metals to perform the office 535
- of an invariable measure of value,
-
- 1. They vary in their relative value to one another, ——
- All measures ought to be invariable, ——
- Consequences when they vary, 536
- Defects of a silver standard, 537
- Arguments in favour of it, ——
- Answers to these arguments, 538
- Usefulness of an universal measure, 539
- They have two values, one as coin, and one as metals, 540
- Smaller inconveniences attending material money, ——
- It wears in circulation, ——
- It is inaccurately coined, 541
- The coinage adds to its value, without adding to its ——
- weight,
- The value of it may be arbitrarily changed, ——
- Trade profits of the smallest defects in the coin, ——
-
- CHAP. IV. Methods which may be proposed for lessening the 542
- several inconveniences to which material money is liable,
- Use of theory in political matters, ——
- Five remedies against the effects of the variation ——
- between the value of the metals,
- Remedies against the other inconveniences, 544
- Against the wearing of the coin, ——
- Against inaccuracy of coinage, ——
- Against the expence of coinage, ——
- Against arbitrary changes in the value of coin, 545
-
- CHAP. V. Variations to which the value of the money-unit is ——
- exposed from every disorder in the coin,
- How the market price of the metals is made to vary, ——
- The variation ought to be referred to the _rising_ 546
- metal, and never to the _sinking_,
- How the money-unit of accompt is made to vary in its 547
- value from the variation of the metals,
- Consequences of this, ——
- The true unit is the mean proportional between the ——
- value of the metals,
- The unit to be attached to the mean proportion upon a 548
- new coinage, not after the metals have varied,
- It is better to affix the unit to one, than to both 549
- metals,
- Variation to which the money-unit is exposed from the ——
- wearing of the coin,
- Variations to which the money-unit is exposed, from the 550
- inaccuracy in the fabrication of the money,
- Variation to which the money-unit is exposed from the 551
- imposition of coinage,
- When coinage is imposed, bullion must be cheaper than ——
- coin,
- Exception from this rule, 552
- Variation to which the money-unit is exposed by the ——
- arbitrary operations of Princes in raising and
- debasing the coin,
-
- CHAP. VI. How the variations in the intrinsic value of the 553
- unit of money must affect all the domestic interests of a
- nation,
- How this variation affects the interests of debtors and ——
- creditors,
- A mistake of Mr. Locke, 555
- When the value of the unit is diminished, creditors 556
- lose; when it is augmented, debtors lose,
-
- CHAP. VII. Of the disorder in the British coin, so far as it 558
- occasions the melting down or the exporting of the specie,
- Defects in the British coin, ——
- Of the standard of the English coin and money-unit, ——
- A pound sterling by statute contains 1718.7 grains troy 559
- fine silver,
- The guinea 118.644 grains fine gold, ——
- Coinage in England free, ——
- The standard not attached to the gold coin till the 560
- year 1728,
- Consequences of this regulation to debase the standard, ——
- That debtors will not pay in silver but in gold, ——
- That some people consider coin as money of accompt, 561
- Others consider it as a metal, ——
- Operations of money-jobbers, when the coin deviates 562
- from the market proportion of the metals, or from the
- legal weight,
- They melt down when the metals in it are wrong ——
- proportioned,
- And when the coin is of unequal weight, ——
- Why silver bullion is dearer than coin, ——
- Because that species has risen in the market price as 563
- bullion, and not as coin,
- What regulates the price of bullion? 564
- 1. The intrinsic value of the currency, ——
- 2. A demand for exporting bullion, 565
- 3. Or for making of plate, ——
- Exchange _raises_, and the mint price _brings down_ ——
- bullion,
- Continuation of the operations of money-jobbers: their 566
- rule for melting the coin,
- The price in guineas equal to the price of shillings of ——
- 65 in the pound troy,
- When guineas may be melted down with profit, ——
- Silver is exported preferably to gold, 567
- This hurtful, when done by foreigners, ——
-
- CHAP. VIII. Of the disorder in the British coin, so far as it 568
- affects the value of the pound sterling currency,
- Two legal pounds sterling in England, ——
- And several others, in consequence of the wearing of 569
- the coin,
- Why any silver coin remains in England, ——
- Value of a pound sterling current determined by the ——
- operations of trade,
- To the mean value of all the currencies, 570
- Exchange a good measure for the value of a pound ——
- sterling,
- The use of paper money not hurtful in debasing the 571
- standard,
- The pound sterling not regulated by statute, but by the ——
- mean value of the current money,
- Why exchange appears so commonly against England, ——
- How the market price of bullion shews the value of the ——
- pound sterling,
- Shillings at present weigh no more than 1⁄65 of a pound 572
- troy,
- And are worn 4.29 troy grains lighter than their ——
- standard weight,
- A pound sterling worth, at present, no more than 1638 573
- grains troy fine silver, according to the price of
- bullion,
- And according to the course of exchange, ——
- Shillings coined at 65 in the pound troy, would be in 574
- proportion with the gold,
- Which shews that the standard has been debased, ——
- And that the preserving it where it is, is no new ——
- debasement,
- Proof that the standard has been debased by law, 575
- And is at present reduced to the value of the gold, ——
-
- CHAP. IX. Historical account of the variations of the British 576
- coin,
- Purport of this treatise not to dictate, but to ——
- inquire,
- How the disorder in the coin may be remedied without ——
- inconveniences,
- By making the nation itself choose the remedy, 577
- If the present standard is departed from, every other ——
- that might be pitched on is arbitrary,
- People imagine the present standard is the same with 578
- that of Queen Elizabeth,
- Debasements of the standard during the reformation, ——
- Raised by Edward VI. ——
- Debased by Elizabeth, ——
- Supported by her successors, ——
- Until it was debased by the clipping, after the 579
- revolution,
- Lowndes’s scheme refuted by Locke: the standard raised 580
- to that of Elizabeth, and the consequences of that
- measure,
- Silver has been rising from the beginning of this ——
- century,
- The English standard has been debased by law, since ——
- 1726,
- The trading interest chiefly to be blamed for this 581
- neglect,
- Debasing the standard chiefly affects permanent ——
- contracts,
- And prevents prices from rising as they should do, ——
-
- CHAP. X. Of the disorder of the British coin, so far as it 582
- affects the circulation of gold and silver coin, and of the
- consequences of reducing guineas to twenty shillings,
- Why silver coin is so scarce, 583
- Consequences of fixing the guineas at 20 shillings, ——
- with regard to circulation,
- Will make coin disappear altogether, 584
- How light shillings are bought by weight, ——
- Consequences as to the circulation with merchants and 585
- bankers,
- That guineas would still pass current for 21 shillings, ——
- That the standard would be affixed to the light silver, ——
- as it was in the year 1695,
- That merchants would gain by it, 586
- Debtors would be ruined, ——
- Consequences as to the bank, ——
- Reducing guineas to 20 shillings is the same as making 587
- them a commodity,
-
- CHAP. XI. Method of restoring the money-unit to the standard ——
- of Elizabeth, and the consequences of that revolution,
- How to fix the pound sterling at the standard of Queen ——
- Elizabeth,
- The consequences of this reformation will be to raise 588
- the standard _5 per cent._
- Every interest in a nation equally intitled to 589
- protection,
- Those who suffer by the debasement of the standard, ——
- Ought only to benefit by the restitution, 590
- And not the whole class of creditors, ——
- Whose claim ought to be liable to a conversion, 591
- According to justice and impartiality, ——
-
- CHAP. XII. _Objections_ stated against the principles laid 592
- down in this inquiry, and answers to _them_,
- That a pound will always be considered as a pound, 593
- That the standard is not debased at present, being ——
- fixed to the statute, not to the coin,
- That the pound sterling is virtually worth 1718.7 ——
- grains fine silver,
- That these principles imply a progressive debasement of 594
- the standard every new coinage,
- That the same argument holds for debasing the standard ——
- measures of weights, capacity, &c.
- That the wearing of the coin falls on them who possess ——
- it at the crying down, but does not debase the
- standard,
- That inland dealings, not the price of bullion, or ——
- course of exchange, regulate the standard,
- That public currency supports the value of the coin, ——
- That this scheme is the same with that of Lowndes, ——
- Answers to these objections, 595
- That a pound will be considered at its worth by all ——
- debtors, and by those who buy,
- If the standard was affixed to the statute, people ——
- would be obliged to pay by weight,
- No body can be obliged to pay 1718.7 grains fine silver 596
- for a pound sterling,
- That it is not the regulation of the mint, but the ——
- disorder of the coin which must debase the standard,
- That people are obliged to measure by the standard 597
- weight, but are not obliged to pay by the standard
- pound,
- That the loss upon light money when called in, does not ——
- fall upon the possessors,
- That inland dealings cannot support the standard where 599
- there are money-jobbers or foreign commerce,
- That public currency supports the authority of the 601
- coin, not the value of the pound sterling,
- That the scheme is similar, though not the same with 602
- that of Lowndes,
- Lowndes reasoned upon wrong principles, ——
- Locke attended to supporting the standard, without ——
- attending to the consequences,
- Political circumstances are greatly changed, 604
- Reconciliation of the two opinions, 606
- The question in dispute is not understood, 607
- The true characteristic of a change upon the standard ——
- is not attended to,
- Principles will not operate their effects without the 608
- assistance of the state,
- When people understand one another, they soon agree, ——
- Permanent contracts are confounded with sale in the 609
- dispute,
- The interest of creditors is always the predominant, 611
- and determines the opinion of a nation,
- Application of principles to the operation the Dutch 612
- have lately made upon their coin,
- All decisions in political questions depend upon 613
- circumstances,
-
- CHAP. XIII. In what sense the standard may be said to have 614
- been debased by law; and in what sense it may be said to
- have suffered a gradual debasement by the operation of
- political causes,
- These proportions appear contradictory, ——
- Debased by law, when affixed to the gold, 615
- Effects which the changing the proportion of the metals ——
- has upon melting the coin, and regulating payments,
- Payments made by bankers regulate all others, ——
- The standard gradually debased by the rising of the 616
- silver,
- The proportion of the metals in 1728, supposed to have ——
- been as 15.21 is to 1.,
- By what progression the silver standard has been ——
- debased,
- The standard of Elizabeth, for the pound sterling, was 617
- 1718.7 grains silver, and 157.6 ditto gold, both
- fine,
- The gold standard of her pound worth, at present, ——
- 2285.5 grains fine silver,
- The variation of the metals has produced three ——
- different standards of Elizabeth,
- One worth £ 1 0 11⅜ present currency, 618
- Another worth £ 1 7 10⅞ ditto, ——
- And a third worth £ 1 4 5⅛ ditto, ——
- The last is the true standard of Elizabeth for the ——
- pound sterling, and worth at present 2002 grains fine
- silver, and 138 ditto gold,
- But may vary at every moment, 619
- Gold rose during the whole 17th century, ——
- And silver has risen since the beginning of this ——
- century,
- Some positions recapitulated, 620
-
- CHAP. XIV. Circumstances to be attended to in a new 621
- regulation of the British coin,
- The adopting of the standard of Elizabeth, has an air ——
- of justice,
- Advantages of that of Mary I., ——
- Conversions necessary in every case, 622
- Every interest within the state to be examined, ——
- Landed interest examined, ——
- Interest of the public creditors examined, 625
- Interest of trade examined, 628
- Interest of buyers and sellers examined, ——
- Interest of the bank examined, 629
- Inconveniences attending all innovations, 632
- Argument for preserving the standard at the present ——
- value,
- That every change must either hurt the bank, or the ——
- public creditors,
- A more easy method of making a change upon the 633
- standard,
-
- CHAP. XV. Regulations which the principles of this inquiry 634
- point out as expedient to be made, by a new statute for
- regulating the British coin,
- 1. Regulation as to the standard, ——
- 2. As to the weight, ——
- 3. Mint price, ——
- 4. Denominations, 635
- 5. Marking the weight on the coins, ——
- 6. Liberty to stipulate payment in gold or silver, ——
- 7. Creditors may demand payment, half in gold, and half ——
- in silver,
- 8. Regulations as to sale, ——
- 9. Ditto as to payments to and from banks, &c., ——
- 10. All coin to be of full weight, when paid away, ——
- 11. Liberty to melt or export coin, but death to clip ——
- or wash,
- 12. Rule for changing the mint price of the metals, 636
- 13. When to change the mint price, ——
- 14. Rule for changing the denomination of the coins, ——
- 15. How contracts are to be acquitted, after a change ——
- of the denomination has taken place,
- 16. The weight of the several coins never to be 638
- changed, except upon a general recoinage of one
- denomination at least,
- How these regulations will preserve the same value to ——
- the pound sterling at all times, and how fractions in
- the denomination of coin may be avoided,
- 17. Small coins to be current only for 20 years, and 639
- large coins for 40 years, or more,
- 18. All foreign coins to pass for bullion only, ——
- Consequences of these regulations, ——
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- AN
- INQUIRY
- INTO THE
- PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL OECONOMY.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- BOOK I.
- OF POPULATION AND AGRICULTURE.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION.
-
-
-Oeconomy in general is the art of providing for all the wants of a
-family, with prudence and frugality.
-
-If any thing necessary or useful is found wanting, if any thing provided
-is lost or misapplied, if any servant, any animal, is supernumerary or
-useless, if any one sick or infirm is neglected, we immediately perceive
-a want of oeconomy. The object of it, in a private family, is therefore
-to provide for the nourishment, the other wants, and the employment of
-every individual. In the first place, for the master, who is the head,
-and who directs the whole; next for the children, who interest him above
-all other things; and last for the servants, who being useful to the
-head, and essential to the well-being of the family, have therefore a
-title to become an object of the master’s care and concern.
-
-The whole oeconomy must be directed by the head, who is both lord and
-steward of the family. It is however necessary, that these two offices
-be not confounded with one another. As lord, he establishes the laws of
-his oeconomy; as steward, he puts them in execution. As lord, he may
-restrain and give his commands to all within the house as he thinks
-proper; as steward, he must conduct with gentleness and address, and is
-bound by his own regulations. The better the oeconomist, the more
-uniformity is perceived in all his actions, and the less liberties are
-taken to depart from stated rules. He is no ways master to break through
-the laws of his oeconomy, although in every respect he may keep each
-individual within the house, in the most exact subordination to his
-commands. Oeconomy and government, even in a private family, present
-therefore two different ideas, and have also two different objects.
-
-What oeconomy is in a family, political oeconomy is in a state: with
-these essential differences however, that in a state there are no
-servants, all are children: that a family may be formed when and how a
-man pleases, and he may establish what plan of oeconomy he thinks fit;
-but states are found formed, and the oeconomy of these depends upon a
-thousand circumstances. The statesman (this is a general term to signify
-the head, according to the form of government) is neither master to
-establish what oeconomy he pleases, or in the exercise of his sublime
-authority to overturn at will the established laws of it, let him be the
-most despotic monarch upon earth.
-
-The great art therefore of political oeconomy is, first to adapt the
-different operations of it to the spirit, manners, habits, and customs
-of the people, and afterwards to model these circumstances so, as to be
-able to introduce a set of new and more useful institutions.
-
-The principal object of this science is to secure a certain fund of
-subsistence for all the inhabitants, to obviate every circumstance which
-may render it precarious; to provide every thing necessary for supplying
-the wants of the society, and to employ the inhabitants (supposing them
-to be freemen) in such a manner as naturally to create reciprocal
-relations and dependencies between them, so as to make their several
-interests lead them to supply one another with their reciprocal wants.
-
-If one considers the variety which is found in different countries, in
-the distribution of property, subordination of classes, genius of
-people, proceeding from the variety of forms of government, laws, and
-manners, one may conclude, that the political oeconomy in each must
-necessarily be different, and that principles, however universally true,
-may become quite ineffectual in practice, without a sufficient
-preparation of the spirit of a people.
-
-It is the business of a statesman to judge of the expediency of
-different schemes of oeconomy, and by degrees to model the minds of his
-subjects so as to induce them, from the allurement of private interest,
-to concur in the execution of his plan.
-
-The speculative person, who removed from the practice, extracts the
-principles of this science from _observation_ and _reflection_, should
-divest himself, as far as possible, of every prejudice, in favour of
-established opinions, however reasonable, when examined relatively to
-particular nations: he must do his utmost to become a citizen of the
-world, comparing customs, examining minutely institutions which appear
-alike, when in different countries they are found to produce different
-effects: he should examine the cause of such differences with the utmost
-diligence and attention. It is from such inquiries that the true
-principles are discovered.
-
-He who takes up the pen upon this subject, keeping in his eye the
-customs of his own or any other country, will fall more naturally into a
-description of one particular system of it, than into an examination of
-the principles of the science in general: he will applaud such
-institutions as he finds rightly administred at home; he will condemn
-those which are administred with abuse; but, without comparing different
-methods of executing the same plan in different countries, he will not
-easily distinguish the disadvantages which are essential to the
-institution, from those which proceed from the abuse. For this reason a
-land tax excites the indignation of a Frenchman, an excise that of an
-Englishman. One who looks into the execution of both, in each country,
-and in every branch of management, will discover the real effects of
-these impositions, and be able to distinguish what proceeds from abuse,
-from what is essential to the burden.
-
-Nothing is more effectual towards preparing the spirit of a people to
-receive a good plan of oeconomy, than a proper representation of it. On
-the other hand, nothing is better calculated to keep the statesman, who
-is at the head of affairs, in awe.
-
-When principles are well understood, the real consequences of burdensome
-institutions are clearly seen: when the purposes they are intended for,
-are not obtained, the abuse of the statesman’s administration appears
-palpable. People then will not so much cry out against the imposition,
-as against the misapplication. It will not be a land tax of four
-shillings in the pound, nor an excise upon wines and tobacco, which will
-excite the murmurs of a nation; it will be the prodigal dissipation and
-misapplication of the amount of these taxes after they are laid on. But
-when principles are not known, all inquiry is at an end, the moment a
-nation can be engaged to submit to the burden. It is the same with
-regard to every other part of this science.
-
-Having pointed out the object of my pursuit, I shall only add, that my
-intention is to attach myself principally to a clear deduction of
-principles, and a short application of them to familiar examples, in
-order to avoid abstraction as much as possible. I farther intend to
-confine myself to such parts of this extensive subject, as shall appear
-the most interesting in the general system of modern politics, of which
-I shall treat with that spirit of liberty, which reigns more and more
-every day, throughout all the polite and flourishing nations of Europe.
-
-When I compare the elegant performances which have appeared in Great
-Britain and in France with my dry and abstracted manner of treating the
-same subject, in a plain language void of ornament, I own I am
-discouraged on many accounts. If I am obliged to set out by laying down
-as fundamental principles the most obvious truths, I dread the
-imputation of pedantry, and of pretending to turn common sense into
-science. If I follow these principles through a minute detail, I may
-appear trifling. I therefore hope the reader will believe me, when I
-tell him, that these defects have not escaped my discernment, but that
-my genius, the nature of the work, and the connection of the subject,
-have obliged me to write in an order and in a stile where every thing
-has been sacrificed to perspicuity.
-
-My principal aim shall be to discover truth, and to enable my reader to
-touch the very link of the chain where I may at any time go astray.
-
-My business shall not be to seek for new thoughts, but to reason
-consequentially; and if any thing new be found, it will be in the
-conclusions.
-
-Long steps in political reasoning lead to error; close reasoning is
-tedious, and to many appears trivial: this however must be my plan, and
-my consolation is, that the further I advance, I shall become the more
-interesting.
-
-Every supposition must be considered as strictly relative to the
-circumstances presupposed; and though, in order to prevent
-misapplication, and to avoid abstraction as much as possible, I
-frequently make use of examples for illustrating every principle; yet
-these, which are taken from matters of fact, must be supposed divested
-of every foreign circumstance inconsistent with the supposition.
-
-I shall combat no particular opinion in such intricate matters; though
-sometimes I may pass them in review, in order to point out how I am led
-to differ from them.
-
-I pretend to form no system, but by following out a succession of
-principles, consistent with the nature of man and with one another, I
-shall endeavour to furnish some materials towards the forming of a good
-one.
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. I.
- _Of the Government of Mankind._
-
-
-Man we find acting uniformly in all ages, in all countries, and in all
-climates, from the principles of self-interest, expediency, duty, or
-passion. In this he is alike, in nothing else.
-
-These motives of human actions produce such a variety of combinations,
-that if we consider the several species of animals in the creation, we
-shall find the individuals in no class so unlike to one another, as man
-to man. No wonder then if people differ in opinion with regard to every
-thing which relates to man.
-
-As this noble animal is a sociable creature, both from necessity and
-inclination, we also find, in all ages, climates and countries, a
-certain modification of government and subordination established among
-them. Here again we are presented with as great variety as there are
-different societies; all however agreeing in this, that the end of a
-_voluntary_ subordination to authority is with a view to promote the
-general good.
-
-Constant and uninterrupted experience has proved to man, that virtue and
-justice in those who govern, are sufficient to render the society happy,
-under any form of government. Virtue and justice when applied to
-government mean no more than a tender affection for the whole society,
-and an exact and impartial regard for the interest of every class.
-
-All actions, and indeed all things, are good or bad only by relation.
-Nothing is so complex as relations when considered with regard to a
-society, and nothing is so difficult as to discover truth when involved
-and blended with these relations.
-
-We must not conclude from this, that every operation of government
-becomes problematical and uncertain as to its consequences: some are
-evidently good; others are notoriously bad: the middle terms are always
-the least essential, and the more complex they appear to a discerning
-eye, the more trivial they are found to be in their immediate
-consequences.
-
-A government must be continually in action, and one principal object of
-its attention must be, the consequences and effects of new institutions.
-
-Experience alone will shew, what human prudence could not foresee; and
-mistakes must be corrected as often as expediency requires.
-
-All governments have what they call their fundamental laws; but
-fundamental, that is, invariable laws, can never subsist among men, the
-most variable thing we know: the only fundamental law, _salus populi_,
-must ever be relative, like every other thing. But this is rather a
-maxim than a law.
-
-It is however expedient, nay absolutely necessary, that in every state,
-certain laws be supposed fundamental and invariable: both to serve as a
-curb to the ambition of individuals, and to point out to the statesman
-the out-lines, or sketch of that plan of government, which experience
-has proved to be the best adapted to the spirit of his people.
-
-Such laws may even be considered as actually invariable, while a state
-subsists without convulsions or revolutions: because then the
-alterations are so gradual, that they become imperceptible to all, but
-the most discerning, who compare the customs and manners of the same
-people in different periods of time and under different combinations of
-circumstances.
-
-As we have taken for granted the fundamental maxim, that every operation
-of government should be calculated for the good of the people, so we may
-with equal certainty decide, that in order to make a people happy, they
-must be governed according to the spirit which prevails among them.
-
-I am next to explain what I mean by the spirit of a people, and to shew
-how far this spirit must be made to influence the government of every
-society.
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAP. II.
- _Of the Spirit of a People._
-
-
-The spirit of a people is formed upon a set of received opinions
-relative to three objects; morals, government, and manners: these once
-generally adopted by any society, confirmed by long and constant habit,
-and never called in question, form the basis of all laws, regulate the
-form of every government, and determine what is commonly called the
-customs of a country.
-
-To know a people we must examine them under those general heads. We
-acquire the knowledge of their morals with ease, by consulting the
-tenets of their religion, and from what is taught among them by
-authority and under direction.
-
-The second, or government, is more disguised, as it is constantly
-changing from circumstances, partly resulting from domestic and partly
-from foreign considerations. A thorough knowledge of their history, and
-conversation with their statesmen, may give one, who has access to these
-helps, a very competent knowledge of this branch.
-
-The last, or the knowledge of the manners of a people, is by far the
-most difficult to acquire, and yet is the most open to every person’s
-observation. Certain circumstances with regard to manners are supposed
-by every one in the country to be so well known, so generally followed
-and observed, that it seldom occurs to any body to inform a stranger
-concerning them. In one country nothing is so injurious as a stroke with
-a stick, or even a gesture which implies a design or a desire to
-strike[B]: in another a stroke is nothing, but an opprobrious expression
-is not to be borne[C]. An innocent liberty with the fair sex, which in
-one country passes without censure, is looked upon in another as the
-highest indignity[D].
-
-Footnote B:
-
- France.
-
-Footnote C:
-
- Germany.
-
-Footnote D:
-
- Spain.
-
-In general, the opinion of a people with regard to injuries is
-established by custom only, and nothing is more necessary in government,
-than an exact attention to every circumstance peculiar to the people to
-be governed.
-
-The kingdom of Spain was lost for a violence committed upon chastity[E];
-the city of Genoa for a blow[F]; the kingdoms of Naples and Sicily have
-ever been ready to revolt; because having been for many ages under the
-dominion of strangers, the people have never been governed according to
-the true spirit of their manners. Let us consult the revolutions of all
-countries, and we shall find, that the most trivial circumstances have
-had a greater influence on the event, than the more weighty reasons,
-which are always set forth as the real motives. I need not enlarge upon
-this subject, my intention is only to suggest an idea which any one may
-pursue, and which will be applied upon many occasions as we go along;
-for there is no treating any point which regards the political oeconomy
-of a nation, without accompanying the example with some supposition
-relative to the spirit of the people. I return.
-
-Footnote E:
-
- By Roderigo, the last king of the Gothic line.
-
-Footnote F:
-
- Given by an Austrian officer to a Genoese, which occasioned the revolt
- in 1747, by which the Germans were expelled the city.
-
-I have said, that the most difficult thing to learn concerning a people,
-is the spirit of their manners. Consequently, the most difficult thing
-for a stranger to adopt, is their manner. Men acquire the language, nay
-even lose the foreign accent, before they lose the oddity of their
-manner. The reason is plain. The inclinations must be changed, the taste
-of amusement must be new modelled; established maxims upon government,
-manners, nay even upon some moral actions, must undergo certain new
-modifications, before the stranger’s conversation and behaviour becomes
-consistent with the spirit of the people with whom he lives.
-
-From these considerations, we may find the reason, why nothing is more
-heavy to bear than the government of conquerors, in spite of all their
-endeavours to render themselves agreeable to the conquered. Of this
-experience has ever proved the truth, and princes are so much persuaded
-of it, that when a country is subdued in our days, or when it otherwise
-changes masters, there is seldom any question of altering, but by very
-slow degrees and length of time, the established laws and customs of the
-inhabitants. I might safely say, there is no form of government upon
-earth so excellent in itself, as, necessarily, to make the people happy
-under it. Freedom itself, _imposed_ upon a people groaning under the
-greatest slavery, will not make them happy, unless it is made to undergo
-certain modifications, relative to their established habits.
-
-Having explained what I mean by the spirit of a people, I come next to
-consider, how far this spirit must influence government.
-
-If governments be taken in general, we shall find them analogous to the
-spirit of the people. But the point under consideration is, how a
-statesman is to proceed, when expediency and refinement require a change
-of administration, or when it becomes necessary from a change of
-circumstances.
-
-The great alteration in the affairs of Europe within these three
-centuries, by the discovery of America and the Indies, the springing up
-of industry and learning, the introduction of trade and the luxurious
-arts, the establishment of public credit, and a general system of
-taxation, have entirely altered the plan of government every where.
-
-From feudal and military, it is become free and commercial. I oppose
-freedom in government to the feudal system, only to mark that there is
-not found now, that chain of subordination among the subjects, which
-made the essential part of the feudal form. The head there had little
-power, and the lower classes of the people little liberty. Now every
-industrious man, who lives with oeconomy, is free and independent, under
-most forms of government. Formerly, the power of the barons swallowed up
-the independency of all inferior classes. I oppose commercial to
-military, only because the military governments now are made to subsist
-from the consequences and effects of commerce: that is, from the revenue
-of the state, proceeding from taxes. Formerly, every thing was brought
-about by numbers; now, numbers of men cannot be kept together without
-money.
-
-This is sufficient to point out the nature of the revolution in the
-political state, and of consequence in the manners of Europe.
-
-The spirit of a people changes no doubt of itself, but by slow degrees.
-The same generation commonly adheres to the same principles, and retains
-the same spirit. In every country we find two generations upon the stage
-at a time; that is to say, we may distribute into two classes the spirit
-which prevails; the one amongst men between twenty and thirty, when
-opinions are forming; the other of those who are past fifty, when
-opinions and habits are formed and confirmed. A person of judgment and
-observation may foresee many things relative to government, from an
-exact application to the rise and progress of new customs and opinions,
-provided he preserve his mind free from all attachments and prejudices,
-in favour of those which he himself has adopted, and in that delicacy of
-sensation necessary to perceive the influence of a change of
-circumstances. This is the genius proper to form a great statesman.
-
-In every new step the spirit of the people should be first examined, and
-if that be not found ripe for the execution of the plan, it ought to be
-put off, kept entirely secret, and every method used to prepare the
-people to relish the innovation.
-
-The project of introducing popery into England was blown before it was
-put in practice, and so misgave. Queen Elizabeth kept her own secret,
-and succeeded in a similar attempt. The scheme of a general excise was
-pushed with too much vivacity, was made a matter of party, ill-timed,
-and the people nowise prepared for it; hence it will be the more
-difficult to bring about at another time, without the greatest
-precautions.
-
-In turning and working upon the spirit of a people, nothing is
-impossible to an able statesman. When a people can be engaged to murder
-their wives and children, and to burn themselves, rather than submit to
-a foreign enemy, when they can be brought to give their most precious
-effects, their ornaments of gold and silver, for the support of a common
-cause; when women are brought to give their hair to make ropes, and the
-most decrepit old men to mount the walls of a town for its defence; I
-think I may say, that by properly conducting and managing the spirit of
-a people, nothing is impossible to be accomplished. But when I say,
-nothing is impossible, I must be understood to mean, that nothing
-essentially necessary for the good of the people is impossible; and this
-is all that is required in government.
-
-That it requires a particular talent in a statesman to dispose the minds
-of a people to approve even of the scheme which is the most conducive to
-their interest and prosperity, appears from this; that we see examples
-of wise, rich and powerful nations languishing in inactivity, at a time
-when every individual is animated with a quite contrary spirit; becoming
-a prey to their enemies, like the city of Jerusalem, while they are
-taken up with their domestic animosities, only because the remedies
-proposed against these evils contradict the spirit of the times[G].
-
-Footnote G:
-
- This was writ in the year 1756, about the time the island of Minorca
- was taken by the French.
-
-The great art of governing is to divest one’s self of prejudices and
-attachments to particular opinions, particular classes, and above all to
-particular persons; to consult the spirit of the people, to give way to
-it in appearance, and in so doing to give it a turn capable of inspiring
-those sentiments which may induce them to relish the change, which an
-alteration of circumstances has rendered necessary.
-
-Can any change be greater among free men, than from a state of absolute
-liberty and independency to become subject to constraint in the most
-trivial actions? This change has however taken place over all Europe
-within these three hundred years, and yet we think ourselves more free
-than ever our fathers were. Formerly a gentleman who enjoyed a bit of
-land knew not what it was to have any demand made upon him, but in
-virtue of obligations by himself contracted. He disposed of the fruits
-of the earth, and of the labour of his servants or vassals, as he
-thought fit. Every thing was bought, sold, transferred, transported,
-modified, and composed, for private consumption, or for public use,
-without ever the state’s being once found interested in what was doing.
-This, I say, was formerly the general situation of Europe, among free
-nations under a regular administration; and the only impositions
-commonly known to affect landed men were made in consequence of a
-contract of subordination, feudal or other, which had certain
-limitations; and the impositions were appropriated for certain purposes.
-
-Daily experience shews, that nothing is more against the inclinations of
-a people, than the imposition of taxes; and the less they are accustomed
-to them, the more difficult it is to get them established.
-
-The great abuse of governors in the application of taxes contributes not
-a little to augment and entertain this repugnancy in the governed: but
-besides abuse, there is often too little management used to prepare the
-spirits of the people for such innovations: for we see them upon many
-occasions submitting with chearfulness to very heavy impositions,
-provided they be well-timed, and consistent with their manners and
-disposition. A French gentleman, who cannot bear the thought of being
-put upon a level with a peasant in paying a land tax, pays contentedly,
-in time of war, a general tax upon all his effects, under a different
-name. To pay for your head is terrible in one country; to pay for light
-appears as terrible in another.
-
-It often happens, that statesmen take the hint of new impositions from
-the example of other nations, and not from a nice examination of their
-own domestic circumstances. But when these are rightly attended to, it
-becomes easy to discover the means of executing the same plan, in a way
-quite adapted to the spirit, temper, and circumstances of the people.
-When strangers are employed as statesmen, the disorder is still greater,
-unless in cases of most extraordinary penetration, temper, and above all
-flexibility and discretion.
-
-Statesmen have sometimes recourse to artifice instead of reason, because
-their intentions often are not upright. This destroys all confidence
-between them and the people; and confidence is necessary when you are in
-a manner obliged to ask a favor, or when at least what you demand is not
-indisputably your right. A people thus tricked into an imposition,
-though expedient for their prosperity, will oppose violently, at another
-time, a like measure, even when essential to their preservation.
-
-At other times, we see statesmen presenting the allurement of present
-ease, precisely at the time when people’s minds are best disposed to
-receive a burden. I mean when war threatens, and when the mind is heated
-with a resentment of injuries. Is it not wonderful, at such a time as
-this, to increase taxes only in proportion to the interest of money
-wanted; does not this imply a shortsightedness, or at least an
-indifference as to what is to come? Is it not more natural, that a
-people should consent to come under burdens to gratify revenge, than
-submit to repay a large debt when their minds are in a state of
-tranquillity.
-
-From the examples I have given, I hope what I mean by the spirit of a
-people is sufficiently understood, and I think I have abundantly shewn
-the necessity of its being properly disposed, in order to establish a
-right plan of oeconomy. This is so true, that many examples may be
-found, of a people’s rejecting the most beneficial institutions, and
-even the greatest favors, only because some circumstance had shocked
-their established customs. No wonder then, if we see them refuse to come
-under limitations, restraints and burdens, when the utmost they can be
-flattered with from them, is a distant prospect of national good.
-
-I have found it necessary to premise these general reflections, in order
-to obviate many objections which might naturally enough occur in the
-perusal of this inquiry. I shall have occasion to make a number of
-suppositions, and to draw consequences from them, which are abundantly
-natural, if a proper spirit in the people be presupposed, but which
-would be far from being natural without this supposition. I suppose, for
-example, that a poor man, loaded with many children, would be glad to
-have the state maintain them; that another, who has wasted lands, would
-be obliged to one who would gratuitously build him a farm-house upon it.
-Yet in both suppositions I may prove mistaken; for fathers there are,
-who would rather see their children dead than out of their hands; and
-proprietors are to be found, who, for the sake of hunting, would lay the
-finest country in Europe into a waste.
-
-In order to communicate an adequate idea of what I understand by
-political oeconomy, I have explained the term, by pointing out the
-object of the art; which is, to provide food, other necessaries, and
-employment to every one of the society.
-
-This is a very simple and a very general method of defining a most
-complicated operation.
-
-To provide a proper employment for all the members of a society, is the
-same as to model and conduct every branch of their concerns.
-
-Upon this idea, I think, may be formed the most extensive basis for an
-inquiry into the principles of political oeconomy.
-
-The next thing to be done, is to fall upon a distinct method of
-analysing so extensive a subject, by contriving a train of ideas, which
-may be directed towards every part of the plan, and which, at the same
-time, may be made to arise methodically from one another.
-
-For this purpose I have taken a hint from what the late revolutions in
-the politics of Europe have pointed out to be the regular progress of
-mankind, from great simplicity to complicated refinement.
-
-This first book shall then set out by taking up society in the cradle,
-as I may say. I shall then examine the principles which influence their
-multiplication, the method of providing for their subsistence, the
-origin of their labour, the effects of their liberty and slavery, the
-distribution of them into classes, with some other topics which relate
-to mankind in general.
-
-Here we shall find the principles of industry influencing the
-multiplication of mankind, and the cultivation of the soil. This I have
-thrown in on purpose to prepare my reader for the subject of the second
-book; where he will find the same principle (under the wings of liberty)
-providing an easy subsistence for a numerous populace, by the means of
-trade, which sends the labour of an industrious people over the whole
-world.
-
-From the experience of what has happened these last two hundred years,
-we find to what a pitch the trade and industry of Europe has increased
-alienations, and the circulation of money. I shall, therefore, closely
-adhere to these, as the most immediate consequences of the preceding
-improvement; and, by analysing them, I shall form my third book, in
-which I intend to treat of credit.
-
-We see also how credit has engaged nations to avail themselves of it in
-their wars, and how, by the use of it, they have been led to contract
-debts; which they never can satisfy and pay, without imposing taxes. The
-doctrine then of debts and taxes will very naturally follow that of
-credit in this great chain of political consequences.
-
-By this kind of historical clue, I shall conduct myself through the
-great avenues of this extensive labyrinth; and in my review of every
-particular district, I shall step from consequence to consequence, until
-I have penetrated into the utmost recesses of my own understanding.
-
-When a subject is broken off, I shall render my transitions as gradual
-as I can, by still preserving some chain of connexion; and although I
-cannot flatter myself (in such infinite variety of choice, as to order
-and distribution) to hit off, at all times, that method, which may
-appear to every reader the most natural and the most correct, yet I
-shall spare no pains in casting the materials into different forms, so
-as to make the best distribution of them in my power.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. III.
- _Upon what Principles, and from what_ natural Causes _do Mankind
- multiply? And what are the effects of Procreation in Countries where
- Numbers are not found to increase?_
-
-
-The multiplication of mankind has been treated of in different ways;
-some have made out tables to shew the progression of multiplications,
-others have treated the question historically. The state of numbers in
-different ages of the world, or in different countries at different
-times, has been made the object of inquiry; and the most exact scrutiny
-into antient authors, the means of investigating the truth of this
-matter. All passages relative to the subject have been laid together,
-and accompanied with glosses and interpretations the most plausible, in
-order to determine the main question. The elaborate performances of Mr.
-Hume, and Mr. Wallace, who have adopted opposite opinions in regard to
-the populousness of the antient world, have left nothing new to be said
-upon this subject; at least the application they appear to have given in
-examining the antients, is a great discouragement to any one who might
-otherwise still flatter himself, there, to find out circumstances proper
-to cast a new light upon the question.
-
-My intention in this chapter is not to decide, nor even to give my
-opinion upon that matter, far less to combat the arguments advanced on
-either side. I am to consider the question under a different point of
-view; not to enquire what numbers of people were found upon the earth at
-a certain time, but to examine the natural and rational causes of
-multiplication. If we can discover these, we may perhaps be led to judge
-how far they might have operated in different ages and in different
-countries.
-
-The fundamental principle of the multiplication of all animals, and
-consequently of man, is generation; the next is food: generation gives
-existence, food preserves it. Did the earth produce of itself the proper
-nourishment for man, with unlimited abundance, we should find no
-occasion to labour in order to procure it. Now in all countries found
-inhabited, as in those which have been found desolate, if the state of
-animals be inquired into, the number of them will be found in proportion
-to the quantity of food produced by the earth, _regularly throughout the
-year_, for their subsistence. I say, regularly throughout the year,
-because we perceive in those animals which produce in great abundance,
-such as all the feathered genus, that vast multitudes are destroyed in
-winter; they are brought forth with the fruits of the earth, and fall in
-proportion. This principle is so natural, that I think it can hardly be
-controverted.
-
-As to man, the earth does not spontaneously produce nourishment for him
-in any considerable degree. I allow that as some species of animals
-support life by devouring others, so may man; but it must be observed,
-that the species feeding must always be much inferior in number to the
-species fed upon. This is evident in reason and in fact.
-
-Were the earth therefore uncultivated, the numbers of mankind would not
-exceed the proportion of the spontaneous fruits which she offers for
-their immediate use, or for that of the animals which might be the
-proper nourishment of man.
-
-There is therefore a certain number of mankind which the earth would be
-able to maintain without any labour: allow me to call this quantity (A).
-Does it not, from this exposition of the matter, appear plain, that
-without labour (A) never can increase any more than animals, which do
-not work for themselves, can increase beyond the proportion of food
-provided for them by nature? Let it be however observed, that I do not
-pretend to limit (A) to a determined number. The seasons will no doubt
-influence the numbers of mankind, as we see they influence the plenty of
-other animals; but I say (A) will never increase beyond the fixed
-proportion above-mentioned.
-
-Having resolved one question with regard to multiplication, and shewn
-that numbers must become greater or smaller according to the productions
-of nature, I come to the second thing proposed to be treated of in the
-chapter: to wit, what will become of the generative faculty after it has
-produced the full proportion of (A), and what effects will afterwards
-follow.
-
-We see how beneficent, I might have said prodigal, nature is, in
-bestowing life by generation. Several kinds of animals, especially
-insects, multiply by thousands, and yet the species does not appear
-annually to increase. No body can pretend that particular individuals of
-any species have a privilege to live, and that others die from a
-difference in their nature. It is therefore reasonable to conclude, that
-what destroys such vast quantities of those produced, must be, among
-other causes, the want of food. Let us apply this to man.
-
-Those who are supposed to be fed with the spontaneous fruits of the
-earth, cannot, from what has been said, multiply beyond that proportion;
-at the same time the generative faculty will work its natural effects in
-augmenting numbers. The consequence will be, that certain individuals
-must become worse fed, consequently weaker; consequently, if in that
-weakly state, nature should withold a part of her usual plenty, the
-whole multitude will be affected by it; a disease may take place, and
-sweep off a far greater number than that proportioned to the deficiency
-of the season. What results from this? That those who have escaped,
-finding food more plentiful, become vigorous and strong; generation
-gives life to additional numbers, food preserves it, until they rise up
-to the former standard.
-
-Thus the generative faculty resembles a spring loaded with a weight,
-which always exerts itself in proportion to the diminution of
-resistance: when food has remained some time without augmentation or
-diminution, generation will carry numbers as high as possible; if then
-food come to be diminished, the spring is overpowered; the force of it
-becomes less than nothing. Inhabitants will diminish, at least, in
-proportion to the overcharge. If upon the other hand, food be increased,
-the spring which stood at 0, will begin to exert itself in proportion as
-the resistance diminishes; people will begin to be better fed; they will
-multiply, and in proportion as they increase in numbers, the food will
-become scarce again.
-
-I must here subjoin a remark very analogous to this subject. That the
-generative faculty in man (which we have compared to a spring) and the
-care and love we have for our children, first prompt us to multiply, and
-then engage us to divide what we have with our little ones. Thus from
-dividing and subdividing it happens, that in every country where food is
-limited to a certain quantity, the inhabitants must be subsisted in a
-regular progression, descending down from plenty and ample subsistence,
-to the last periods of want, and even sometimes starving for hunger.
-
-Although the examples of this last extremity are not common in some
-countries, yet I believe they are more so than is generally imagined;
-and the other stages of want are productive of many diseases, and of a
-decay which extinguishes the faculty of generation, or which weakens it,
-so as to produce children less vigorous and less healthy. I appeal to
-experience, if this reasoning be not just.
-
-Put two or three pairs of rabbits into a field proper for them, the
-multiplication will be rapid; and in a few years the warren will be
-stocked: you may take yearly from it a hundred pairs, I shall suppose,
-and keep your warren in good order: give over taking any for some years,
-you will perhaps find your original stock rather diminished than
-increased, for the reasons above mentioned. Africa yearly furnishes many
-thousands for the cultivation of America; in this she resembles the
-warren. I have little doubt but that if all her sons were returned to
-her, by far the greater part would die of hunger.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. IV.
- _Continuation of the same Subject, with regard to the natural and
- immediate effects of Agriculture, as to Population._
-
-
-I proceed in my examination. I now suppose man to add his labour and
-industry to the natural activity of the soil: in so far, as by this he
-produces an additional quantity of food, in so far he lays a foundation
-for the maintenance of an additional number. This number I shall call
-(B). From this I conclude, that as (A) is in a constant proportion to
-the spontaneous fruits, so (B) must be in proportion to agriculture (by
-this term I understand at present every method of augmenting food by
-labour) consequently the number maintained by the labour of mankind must
-be to the whole number of mankind as (B) is to (A + B), or as (B) is to
-(A) and (B) jointly.
-
-By this operation we find mankind immediately divided into two classes;
-those who, without working, live upon the spontaneous fruits of the
-earth; that is, upon milk, cattle, hunting, &c. The other part, those
-who are obliged to labour the soil. It is proper next to inquire what
-should naturally oblige a man to labour; and what are the natural
-consequences of it as to multiplication.
-
-We have already said, that the principle of generation is inherent in
-man, and prompts him to multiply. Another principle, as naturally
-inherent in the mind, as the first is in the body, is self-love, or a
-desire of ease and happiness, which prompts those who find in themselves
-any superiority; whether personal, or political, to make use of every
-natural advantage. Consequently, such will multiply proportionably:
-because by appropriating to themselves the fruits of the earth, they
-have the means of subsisting their offspring. The others, I think, will
-very naturally become their servants; as this method is of all others
-the most easy to procure subsistence. This is so analogous to the nature
-of man, that we see every where, even among children, that the smallest
-superiority in any one over the rest, constantly draws along with it a
-tribute of service in one way or other. Those who become servants for
-the sake of food, will soon become slaves: for slavery is but the abuse
-of service, established by a civil institution; and men who find no
-possibility of subsisting otherwise, will be obliged to serve upon the
-conditions prescribed to them.
-
-This seems a consequence not unnatural in the infancy of the world: yet
-I do not pretend to affirm that this was the origin of slavery.
-Servants, however, there have always been; and the abuse of service is
-what we understand by slavery. The subordination of children to their
-parents, and of servants to their masters, seems to be the most rational
-origin of society and government. The first of these is natural, and
-follows as the unavoidable consequence of an entire dependence: the
-second is political, and may very naturally take place as to those who
-cannot otherwise procure subsistence. This last species of subordination
-may, I think, have taken place, the moment man became obliged to labour
-for subsistence, but no sooner.
-
-The wants of man are not confined to food, merely. When food is to be
-produced from the rude surface of the earth, a great part of his time
-must be taken up with this object, even supposing him to be provided
-with every utensil proper for the exercise of his industry: he must
-therefore be in a worse condition to provide for his other wants:
-consequently, he may be willing to serve any one who will do it for him.
-Whereas on the other hand, if we suppose all mankind idle and fed,
-living upon the spontaneous fruits of the earth, the plan of universal
-liberty becomes quite natural: because under such circumstances they
-find no inducement to come under a voluntary subordination.
-
-Let us now borrow the idea of a primitive society, of a government, of a
-king, from the most antient history we have, the better to point out the
-effects of agriculture and multiplication. The society is the whole
-taken together; it is Jacob, his sons, their wives, their children, and
-all the servants. The government regards the institutions prescribed by
-Jacob, to every one of the family, concerning their respective
-subordination and duty. Multiplication will here go forward, not in
-proportion to the generative faculty, but according to the employment of
-the persons already generated. If Jacob continue pasturing his herds, he
-must extend the limits of his right of pasture; he must multiply his
-stock of cattle, in proportion as the mouths of his family augment. He
-is charged with all this detail: for he is master, and director, and
-statesman, and general provider. His servants will work as they are
-ordered; but if he has not had the proper foresight, to break up lands
-so soon as his family comes nearly up to that proportion which his
-flocks can easily feed; if in this case, a dry season should burn up the
-grass in Palestine, he will be obliged to send some of his stock of
-cattle, with some of his family, to market, there to be sold; and with
-the price he must buy corn. For in this early age, there was money,
-there were manufacturers of sackcloth, of common rayment, and of
-party-coloured garments; there was a trade in corn, in spicery, balm,
-and myrrh. Jacob and his family were shepherds, but they lived not
-entirely on flesh; they eat bread: consequently there was tillage in
-those days, though they exercised none. The famine however was ready to
-destroy them, and probably would have done it, but for the providential
-circumstance of Joseph’s being governor of Egypt. He relieved their
-distress, he gave to his family the best country in the whole kingdom
-for pasture; and they had a gratuitous supply of bread.
-
-No doubt, so long as these favourable circumstances subsisted,
-multiplication would go on apace. What supernatural assistance God was
-pleased to grant for the increase of his chosen people, does not concern
-my inquiry.
-
-I have mentioned transiently this example of the patriarch, only to
-point out how antient the use of money, the invention of trade and
-manufactures appear to have been. Without such previous establishments,
-I consider mankind as savages, living on the spontaneous fruits of the
-earth, as in the first supposition; and confined, as to numbers, to the
-actual extent of these productions.
-
-From what has been said, we may conclude, that the numbers of mankind
-must depend upon the quantity of food produced by the earth for their
-nourishment; from which, as a corollary, may be drawn,
-
-That mankind have been, as to numbers, and must ever be, in proportion
-to the food produced; and that the food produced will be in the compound
-proportion of the fertility of the climate, and the industry of the
-inhabitants.
-
-From this last proposition it appears plain, that there can be no
-general rule for determining the number of inhabitants necessary for
-agriculture, not even in the same country. The fertility of the soil
-when laboured; the ease of labouring it; the quantity of good
-spontaneous fruits; the plenty of fish in the rivers and sea; the
-abundance of wild birds and beasts; have in all ages, and ever must
-influence greatly the nourishment, and, consequently, regulate the
-multiplication of man, and determine his employment.
-
-To make an establishment in a country not before inhabited, to root out
-woods, destroy wild and venomous animals, drain marshy grounds, give a
-free course to water, and to lay down the surface into corn fields, must
-surely require more hands than to cultivate the same after it is
-improved. For the truth of this, I appeal to our American brethren.
-
-We may therefore conclude, that the most essential requisite for
-population, is that of agriculture, or the providing of subsistence.
-Upon this all the rest depends: while subsistence is upon a precarious
-footing, no statesman can turn his attention to any thing else.
-
-The great importance of this object has engaged some to imagine, that
-the luxurious arts, in our days, are prejudicial both to agriculture and
-multiplication. It is sometimes a loss to fix one’s attention too much
-upon any one object, however important. No body can dispute that
-agriculture is the foundation of multiplication, and the most essential
-requisite for the prosperity of a state. But it does not follow from
-this, that almost every body in the state should be employed in it; that
-would be inverting the order of things, and turning the servant into the
-master. The duty and business of man is not to feed; he is fed, in order
-to do his duty, and to become useful.
-
-It is not sufficient for my purpose to know, that the introduction of
-agriculture, by multiplying the quantity of the earth’s productions,
-does evidently tend to increase the numbers of mankind. I must examine
-the _political causes_ which must concur, in order to operate this
-effect.
-
-For this purpose, my next inquiry shall be directed towards discovering
-the true principles which influence the employment of man, with respect
-to agriculture. I shall spare no pains in examining this point to the
-bottom, even though it should lead me to anticipate some branches of my
-subject.
-
-I shall endeavour to lay down principles consistent with the nature of
-man, with agriculture, and with multiplication, in order, by their
-means, to discover both the use and abuse of the two last. When these
-parts are well understood, the rest will go on more smoothly, and I
-shall find the less occasion to interrupt my subject, in order to
-explain the topics upon which the whole depends.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. V.
- _In what Manner, and according to what Principles, and_ political
- Causes, _does Agriculture augment Population_?
-
-
-I have already shewn, how the spontaneous fruits of the earth provide a
-fund of nourishment for a determined number of men, and I have slightly
-touched upon the consequences of adding labour to the natural activity
-of the soil.
-
-Let me now carry this inquiry a little farther. Let me suppose a country
-fertile in spontaneous productions, capable of improvements of every
-kind, inhabited by a people living under a free government, and in the
-most refined simplicity, without trade, without the luxurious arts, and
-without ambition. Let me here suppose a statesman, who shall inspire a
-taste for agriculture and for labour into those who formerly consumed
-the spontaneous fruits of the earth in ease and idleness. What will
-become of this augmentation of food produced by this additional labour?
-
-The sudden increase of food, such as that here supposed, will
-immediately diffuse vigour into all; and if the additional quantity be
-not very great, no superfluity will be found. No sooner will the
-inhabitants be fully nourished, but they will begin to multiply a-new;
-then they will come to divide with their children, and food will become
-scarce again.
-
-Thus much is necessary for the illustration of one principle; but the
-effects, which we have been pointing out, will not be produced barely by
-engaging those who lived by hunting (I suppose) to quit that trade, and
-turn farmers. The statesman must also find out a method to make the
-produce of this new branch of industry circulate downwards, so as to
-relieve the wants of the most necessitous. Otherwise, the plenty
-produced, remaining in the hands of those who produced it, will become
-to them an absolute superfluity; which, had they any trade with a
-neighbouring state, they would sell, or exchange, and leave their fellow
-citizens to starve. And as we suppose no trade at all, this superfluity
-will perish like their cherries, in a year of plenty; and consequently
-the farmers will immediately give over working.
-
-If, to prevent this inconveniency, the statesman forces certain classes
-to labour the soil, and, with discretion, distributes the produce of it
-to all that have occasion for subsistence, taking in return their
-services for the public benefit; this will prove an infallible way of
-multiplying inhabitants, of making them laborious, and of preserving a
-simplicity of manners; but it is also the picture of antient slavery,
-and is therefore excluded from the supposition.
-
-If he acts consistently with that spirit of liberty, which we have
-supposed to animate his subjects, he has no method left, but to contrive
-different employments for the hands of the necessitous, that, by their
-labour, they may produce an equivalent which may be acceptable to the
-farmers, in lieu of this superfluity; for these last will certainly not
-raise it, if they cannot dispose of it; nor will they dispose of it, but
-for a proper equivalent. This is the only method (in a free state) of
-procuring additional food, and of distributing it through the society,
-as the price of those hours which before were spent in idleness: and, as
-this will prove a more certain and more extensive fund of subsistence,
-than the precarious productions of spontaneous fruits, which cannot be
-increased at discretion, and in proportion to demand, it will greatly
-increase numbers; but, on the other hand, it must evidently destroy that
-simplicity of manners which naturally reigns among nations who do not
-labour.
-
-A people, therefore, who have an industrious turn, will multiply in
-proportion to the superfluity of their farmers; because the labour of
-the necessitous will prove an equivalent for it.
-
-Now this additional number of inhabitants being raised and fed with the
-superfluity _actually_ produced by the farmers, can never be supposed
-necessary for providing that quantity, which (though relatively to the
-farmers it be called a superfluity) is only a sufficiency relatively to
-the whole society; and, therefore, if it be found necessary to employ
-the new inhabitants also in farming, it must only be with a view to a
-still greater multiplication.
-
-Farther, we may lay it down as a principle, that a farmer will not
-labour to produce a superfluity of grain relatively to his own
-consumption, unless he finds some want which may be supplied by means of
-that superfluity; neither will other industrious persons work to supply
-the wants of the farmer for any other reason than to procure
-subsistence, which they cannot otherwise so easily obtain. These are the
-reciprocal wants which the statesman must create, in order to bind the
-society together. Here then is one principle: _Agriculture among a free
-people will augment population, only in proportion as the necessitous
-are put in a situation to purchase subsistence with their labour_. I
-proceed.
-
-If in any country which actually produces nourishment for its
-inhabitants, according to the progression above-mentioned, (p. 27.) a
-plan is set on foot for the extension of agriculture; the augmentation
-must be made to bear a due proportion to the progress of industry and
-wants of the people, or else an outlet must be provided for disposing of
-the superfluity. And if, at setting out, a foreign consumption cannot be
-procured for the produce of husbandry, the greatest caution must be had
-to keep the improvement of the soil within proper bounds: for, without
-this, the plan intended for an improvement will, by over-doing, turn out
-to the detriment of agriculture. This will be the case, if the fruits of
-the earth be made to increase faster than the numbers and the industry
-of those who are to consume them. For if the whole be not consumed, the
-regorging plenty will discourage the industry of the farmer.
-
-But if, together with an encouragement to agriculture, a proper outlet
-be found for the superfluity, until the numbers and industry of the
-people, by increasing, shall augment the home-consumption, which again
-by degrees will diminish the quantity of exportation, then the spring
-will easily overcome the resistance; it will dilate; that is, numbers
-will continue to increase.
-
-From this may be derived another principle: _That agriculture, when
-encouraged for the sake of multiplying inhabitants, must keep pace with
-the progress of industry; or an out-let must be provided for all
-superfluity_.
-
-In the foregoing example, I have supposed no exportation, the more to
-simplify the supposition: I was, therefore, obliged to throw in a
-circumstance, in order to supply the want of it; to wit, an augmentation
-of inland demand from the suspension of hunting; and I have supposed
-those who formerly supported themselves by this, to consume the
-superfluous food of the farmers for the price of their labour. This may
-do well enough as a supposition, and has been made use of only to
-explain principles; but the manners of a people are not so easily
-changed; and therefore I have anticipated a little the supposition of
-trade, only to shew how it must concur with industry, in the advancement
-of agriculture and multiplication.
-
-Let me next consider the consequences of an augmentation of agriculture
-in a country where the inhabitants are lazy; or where they live in such
-simplicity of manners, as to have few wants which labour and industry
-can supply. In this case, I say, the scheme of agriculture will not
-succeed; and, if set on foot, part of the grounds will soon become
-uncultivated again.
-
-The laziest part of the farmers, disgusted with a labour which produces
-a plenty superfluous to themselves, which they cannot dispose of for any
-equivalent, will give over working, and return to their antient
-simplicity. The more laborious will not furnish food to the necessitous
-for nothing: such therefore who cannot otherwise subsist, will naturally
-serve the industrious, and thereby sell their service for food. Thus by
-the diminution of labour, a part of the country, proportional to the
-quantity of food which the farmers formerly found superfluous, will
-again become uncultivated.
-
-Here then will be found a country, the population of which must stop for
-want of food; and which, by the supposition, is abundantly able to
-produce more. Experience every where shews the possible existence of
-such a case, since no country in Europe is cultivated to the utmost; and
-that there are many still, where cultivation, and consequently
-multiplication, is at a stop. These nations I consider as in a _moral
-incapacity_ of multiplying: the incapacity would be _physical_, if there
-was an actual impossibility of their procuring an augmentation of food
-by any means whatsoever.
-
-These principles seem to be confirmed by experience, whether we compare
-them with the manner of living among the free American savages, or among
-the free, industrious, and laborious Europeans. We find the productions
-of all countries, generally speaking, in proportion to the number of
-their inhabitants; and, on the other hand, the inhabitants are most
-commonly in proportion to the food.
-
-I beg that this may not be looked upon as a quibble, or what is called a
-vicious circle. I have qualified the general proposition by subjoining
-that it is found true most commonly; and from what is to follow, we
-shall better discover both the truth and meaning of what is here
-advanced. While certain causes operate, food will augment, and mankind
-will increase in proportion; when these causes cease, _procreation_ will
-not augment numbers; then the general proposition will take place;
-numbers and food will remain the same, and balance one another. This I
-imagine to be so in fact; and I hope to shew that it is rational also.
-Let me now put an end to this chapter, by drawing some conclusions from
-what has been laid down, in order to enlarge our ideas, and to enable us
-to extend our plan.
-
-I. One consequence of a fruitful soil, possessed by a free people, given
-to agriculture, and inclined to industry, will be the production of a
-superfluous quantity of food, over and above what is necessary to feed
-the farmers. Inhabitants will multiply; and according to their increase,
-a certain number of the whole, proportional to such superfluity of
-nourishment produced, will apply themselves to industry and to the
-supplying of other wants.
-
-II. From this operation produced by industry, we find the people
-distributed into two classes. The first is that of the farmers who
-produce the subsistence, and who are necessarily employed in this branch
-of business; the other I shall call _free hands_; because their
-occupation being to procure themselves subsistence out of the
-superfluity of the farmers, and by a labour adapted to the wants of the
-society, may vary according to these wants, and these again according to
-the spirit of the times.
-
-III. If in the country we are treating of, both money and the luxurious
-arts are supposed unknown, then the superfluity of the farmers will be
-in proportion to the number of those whose labour will be found
-sufficient to provide for all the other necessities of the inhabitants;
-and so soon as this is accomplished, the consumption and produce
-becoming equally balanced, the inhabitants will increase no more, or at
-least very precariously, unless their wants be multiplied.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. VI.
- _How the Wants of Mankind promote their Multiplication._
-
-
-If the country we were treating of in the former chapter be supposed of
-a considerable extent and fruitfulness, and if the inhabitants have a
-turn for industry; in a short time, _luxury_ and the use of _money_ (or
-of something participating of the nature of money) will infallibly be
-introduced.
-
-By LUXURY, I understand _the consumption of any thing produced by the
-labour or ingenuity of man, which flatters our senses or taste of
-living, and which is neither necessary for our being well fed, well
-clothed, well defended against the injuries of the weather, nor for
-securing us against every thing which can hurt us_[H].
-
-Footnote H:
-
- As my subject is different from that of morals, I have no occasion to
- consider the term luxury in any other than a political sense, to wit,
- as a principle which produces employment, and gives bread to those who
- supply the demands of the rich. For this reason I have chosen the
- above definition of it, which conveys no idea, either of abuse,
- sensuality, or excess; nor do I, at present, even consider the hurtful
- consequences of it as to foreign trade. Principles here are treated of
- with regard to mankind in general, and the effects of luxury are only
- considered relatively to multiplication and agriculture. Our reasoning
- will take a different turn, when we come to examine the separate
- interest of nations, and the principles of trade.
-
- I beg therefore, that at present my reasoning be carried no further
- (from inductions and suppositions) than my intention is that it should
- be. I am no patron, either of vice, profusion, or the dissipation of
- private fortunes; although _I may now and then reason very cooly upon
- the political consequences of such diseases in a state, when I only
- consider the influence they have as to feeding and multiplying a
- people_. My subject is too extensive of itself to admit of being
- confounded with the doctrine either of morals, or of government,
- however closely these may appear connected with it; and did I not
- begin by simplifying ideas as much as possible, and by banishing
- combinations, I should quickly lose my way, and involve myself in
- perplexities inextricable.
-
-By MONEY, I understand _any commodity, which purely in itself is of no
-material use to man for the purposes above-mentioned, but which acquires
-such an estimation from his opinion of it, as to become the universal
-measure of what is called value, and an adequate equivalent for any
-thing alienable_.
-
-Here a new scene opens. This money must be found in the hands of some of
-the inhabitants; naturally, of such as have had the wit to invent it,
-and the address to make their countrymen fond of it, by representing it
-as an equivalent value for food and necessaries; that is to say, the
-means of procuring, without work or toil, not only the labour of others,
-but food itself.
-
-Here then is produced a new object of want. Every person becomes fond of
-having money; but how to get it is the question. The proprietors will
-not give it for nothing, and by our former supposition every one within
-the society was understood to be abundantly supplied with food and
-necessaries; the farmers, from their labouring the ground; the free
-hands, by the return of their own ingenuity, in furnishing necessaries.
-The proprietors therefore of this money have all their wants supplied,
-and still are possessors of this new kind of riches, which we now
-suppose to be coveted by all.
-
-The natural consequence here will be, that those who have the money will
-cease to labour, and yet will consume; and they will not consume for
-nothing, for they will pay with money.
-
-Here then is a number of inhabitants, who live and consume the produce
-of the earth without labouring: food will soon become scarce; demand for
-it will rise, and that will be paid with money; this is the best
-equivalent of all; many will run to the plough; the superfluity of the
-farmers will augment; the rich will call for superfluities; the free
-hands will supply them, and demand food in their turn. These will not be
-found a burden on the husbandmen, as formerly; the rich, who hired of
-them their labour or service, must pay them with money, and this money
-in their hands will serve as an equivalent for the superfluity of
-nourishment produced by additional agriculture.
-
-When once this imaginary wealth, money, becomes well introduced into a
-country, luxury will very naturally follow; and when money becomes the
-object of our wants, mankind become industrious, in turning their labour
-towards every object which may engage the rich to part with it; and thus
-the inhabitants of any country may increase in numbers, until the ground
-refuses farther nourishment. The consequences of this will make the
-subject of another chapter.
-
-Before we proceed, something must be said, in order to restrain these
-general assertions a little.
-
-We have supposed a very rapid progress of industry, and a very sudden
-augmentation of inhabitants, from the introduction of money. But it must
-be observed, that many circumstances have concurred with the money, to
-produce this effect.
-
-We have supposed a country capable of improvement, a laborious people, a
-taste of refinement and luxury in the rich, an ambition to become so,
-and an application to labour and ingenuity in the lower classes of men.
-According to the greater or less degree of force, or concurrence of
-these and like circumstances, will the country in question become more
-or less cultivated, and consequently peopled.
-
-If the soil be vastly rich, situated in a warm climate, and naturally
-watered, the productions of the earth will be almost spontaneous: this
-will make the inhabitants lazy. Laziness is the greatest of all
-obstacles to labour and industry. Manufactures will never flourish here.
-The rich, with all their money, will not become luxurious with delicacy
-and refinement; for I do not mean by luxury the gratification of the
-animal appetites, nor the abuse of riches, but _an elegance of taste and
-in living, which has for its object the labour and ingenuity of man_;
-and as the ingenuity of workmen begets a taste in the rich, so the
-allurement of riches kindles an ambition, and encourages an application
-to works of ingenuity in the poor.
-
-Riches therefore will here be adored as a god, but not made subservient
-to the uses of man; and it is only by the means of swift circulation
-from hand to hand, (as shall be observed in its proper place) that they
-become productive of the effects mentioned above[I].
-
-Footnote I:
-
- Every transition of money from hand to hand, for a valuable
- consideration, implies some service done, something wrought by man, or
- performed by his ingenuity, or some consumption of something produced
- by his labour. The quicker therefore the circulation of money is in
- any country, the more strongly it may be inferred, that the
- inhabitants are laborious; and _vice versa_: but of this more
- hereafter.
-
-When money does not circulate, it is the same thing as if it did not
-exist; and as the treasures found in countries where the inhabitants are
-lazy do not circulate, they are rather ornamental than useful.
-
-It is not therefore in the most fruitful countries of the world, nor in
-those which are the best calculated for nourishing great multitudes,
-that we find the most inhabitants. It is in climates less favoured by
-nature, and where the soil only produces to those who labour, and in
-proportion to the industry of every one, where we may expect to find
-great multitudes; and even these will be found greater or less, in
-proportion as the turn of the inhabitants is directed to ingenuity and
-industry.
-
-In such countries where these are made to flourish, the free hands (of
-whom we have spoken above) will be employed in useful manufactures,
-which, being refined upon by the ingenious, will determine what is
-called the standard of taste; this taste will increase consumption,
-which again will multiply workmen, and these will encourage the
-production of food for their nourishment.
-
-Let it therefore never be said, that there are too many manufacturers
-employed in a country; it is the same as if it were said, there are too
-few idle persons, too few beggars, and too many husbandmen.
-
-We have more than once endeavoured to shew, that these manufacturers
-never can be fed but out of the superfluity of nourishment produced by
-the farmers. It is a contradiction, I think, to say, that those who are
-fed upon the surplus of those who cultivate the soil are necessary for
-producing a sufficiency to themselves. For if even this surplus were to
-diminish, the manufactures, not the labourers, would be the first to be
-extinguished for want of nourishment.
-
-The importance of the distributive proportion of mankind into labourers
-and free hands appears so great, and has so intimate a connection with
-this subject, that it engages me to seek for an illustration of the
-principles I have been laying down, in an example drawn from facts, as
-it is found to stand in one of the greatest and most flourishing nations
-in Europe. But before I proceed farther in this part of my subject, I
-must examine the consequences of slavery with regard to the subject we
-are now upon. Relations here are so many and so various, that it is
-necessary to have sometimes recourse to transitions, of which I give
-notice to my reader, that he may not lose the connection.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. VII.
- _The Effects of Slavery upon the Multiplication and Employment of
- Mankind._
-
-
-Before I go on to follow the consequences of the above reasoning, I must
-stop, to consider a difference, of no small importance, between antient
-and modern times, which will serve to illustrate the nature of slavery,
-with regard to population and the employment of mankind.
-
-We have endeavoured to lay down the principles which seem to influence
-these two objects, supposing all to be free. In that case I imagine the
-human species will multiply pretty much in proportion to their industry;
-their industry will increase according to their wants, and these again
-will be diversified according to the spirit of the times.
-
-From this I conclude, that the more free and simple the manners of a
-country are, _cæteris paribus_, the fewer inhabitants will be found in
-it. This is proved by experience every where. The Tartars, who freely
-wander up and down a country of vast extent, multiply but little; the
-savages in America, who live upon hunting, in a state of great
-independence; the inhabitants of several mountainous countries in
-Europe, where there are few manufactures, and where the inhabitants do
-not leave the country; in all such places mankind do not multiply. What
-is the reason of this? One would imagine, where there is a great extent
-of ground capable of producing food, that mankind should multiply until
-the soil refused to give more. I imagine the answer may be easily
-discovered from the principles above laid down.
-
-Where mankind have few wants, the number of free hands necessary to
-supply them is very small, consequently very little surplus from the
-farmers is sufficient to maintain them. When therefore it happens, that
-any poor family in the class of free hands is very numerous, division
-there comes to be carried to its utmost extent, and the greatest part
-become quite idle, because there is no demand for their work. As long as
-they can be fed by the division of the emoluments arising from the
-labour of their parents, or by the charity of others, they live; when
-these resources fail, they become miserable. In so wretched a situation
-it is not easy to find bread. The farmers will not double their
-diligence from a charitable disposition. Those who have land will not
-allow those indigent people a liberty to raise grain in it for nothing;
-and although they should, the poor are not in a capacity to provide what
-is necessary for doing it. All other work is fully stocked, the wretched
-die, or extinguish without multiplying.
-
-To make this more evident, let us suppose the wants of mankind, in any
-polite nation of Europe, which lives and flourishes in our days upon the
-produce of its own soil, reduced all at once to the simplicity of the
-antient patriarchs, or even to that of the old Romans. Suppose all the
-hands now employed in the luxurious arts, and in every branch of modern
-manufactures, to become quite idle, how could they be subsisted? What
-oeconomy could be set on foot able to preserve so many lives useful to
-the state? Yet it is plain by the supposition, that the farmers of the
-country are capable of maintaining them, since they do so actually. It
-would be absurd to propose to employ them in agriculture, seeing there
-are enough employed in this, to provide food for the whole.
-
-If it be certain, that such people would die for want without any
-resource, must it not follow, that unless their parents had found the
-means of maintaining them when children, and they themselves the means
-of subsisting by their industry in supplying wants, they could not have
-existed beyond their first infancy.
-
-This seems to strike deep against the populousness of the old world,
-where we know that the wants of mankind, with regard to trades and
-manufactures, were so few.
-
-But in those days the wants of mankind were of a different nature. At
-present there is a demand for the ingenuity of man; then there was a
-demand for his person and service. Now provided there be a demand for
-man, whatever use he be put to, the species will multiply; for those who
-stand in need of them will always feed them, and as long as food is to
-be found, numbers will increase.
-
-In the present times food cannot, in general, be found, but by labour,
-and that cannot be found but to supply wants. Nobody will feed a free
-man, more than he will feed the wild birds or beasts of the field,
-unless he has occasion for the labour of the one or the flesh of the
-other.
-
-In the old world the principles were the same, but the spirit of nations
-was different. Princes wanted to have numerous armies. Free states
-sought for power in the number of their citizens. The wants of mankind
-being few, and a simplicity of manners established, to have encouraged
-industry, excepting in agriculture, which in all ages has been the
-foundation of population, would have been an inconsistency. To make
-mankind labour beyond their wants, to make one part of a state work to
-maintain the other gratuitously, could only be brought about by slavery,
-and slavery was therefore introduced universally. Slavery was then as
-necessary towards multiplication, as it would now be destructive of it.
-The reason is plain. If mankind be not forced to labour, they will only
-labour for themselves; and if they have few wants, there will be little
-labour. But when states come to be formed, and have occasion for idle
-hands to defend them against the violence of their enemies, food at any
-rate must be procured for those who do not labour; and as, by the
-supposition, the wants of the labourers are small, a method must be
-found to increase their labour above the proportion of their wants.
-
-For this purpose slavery was calculated: it had two excellent effects
-with respect to population. The first, that, in unpolished nations,
-living upon the spontaneous fruits of the earth, and almost continually
-in war, lives were preserved for the sake of making slaves of the
-captives. These sold to private people, or different states, were sure
-of being fed; whereas remaining in their own country, they only occupied
-a place, which, by the force of the generative faculty, as has been
-observed, was soon to be filled up by propagation: for it must not be
-forgot, that when numbers are swept off, by any sudden calamity, which
-does not proportionally diminish subsistence, a new multiplication
-immediately takes place. Thus we perceive the hurt done by plagues, by
-war, and by other devastations, either among men, or cattle, repaired in
-a few years, even in those countries where the standard number of both
-is seldom found to increase. What immense quantities of cattle are
-yearly slaughtered! Does any body imagine that if all were allowed to
-live, numbers would increase in proportion? The same is true of men.
-
-The second advantage of slavery was, that in countries where a good
-police prevailed, and where the people had fewer wants by far than are
-felt in modern times, the slaves were forced to labour the soil which
-fed both them and the idle freemen, as was the case in Sparta; or they
-filled all the servile places which freemen fill now, and they were
-likewise employed, as in Greece and in Rome, in supplying with
-manufactures those whose service was necessary for the state.
-
-Here then was a violent method of making mankind laborious in raising
-food; and providing this be accomplished, (by any means whatever)
-numbers will increase.
-
-Trade, industry, and manufactures, only tend to multiply the numbers of
-men, by encouraging agriculture. If it be therefore supposed, that two
-states are equally extended, equally fruitful, and equally cultivated,
-and the produce consumed at home, I believe they will be found equally
-peopled. But suppose the one laboured by free men, the other by slaves,
-what difference will be found in making war? In the first, the free
-hands must, by their industry and labour, purchase their food, and a day
-lost in labour is in a manner a day of fasting: in the last, the slaves
-produce the food, they are first fed, and the rest costs nothing to the
-body of free men, who may be all employed in war, without the smallest
-prejudice to industry.
-
-From these principles it appears, that slavery in former times had the
-same effect in peopling the world that trade and industry have now. Men
-were then forced to labour because they were slaves to others; men are
-now forced to labour because they are slaves to their own wants.
-
-I only add, that I do not pretend that in fact slavery in antient times
-did every where contribute to population, any more than I can affirm
-that the spirit of industry in the Dutch is common to all free nations
-in our days. All that is necessary for my purpose is, to set forth the
-two principles, and to shew the natural effects of the one and the
-other, with respect to the multiplication of mankind and advancement of
-agriculture, the principal objects of our attention throughout this
-book.
-
-I shall at present enlarge no farther upon this matter, but return to
-where I left off in the preceeding chapter, and take up the farther
-examination of the fundamental distribution of inhabitants into
-labourers and free hands.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. VIII.
- _What Proportion of Inhabitants is necessary for Agriculture, and what
- Proportion may be usefully employed in every other Occupation?_
-
-
-I have proposed this question, not with an intention to answer it fully,
-but to point out how, with the proper lights given, it may be answered.
-
-As I write under circumstances not the most favourable for having
-recourse to books, I must employ those I have. The article _Political
-Arithmetic_, of Mr. Chambers’s Cyclopedia, furnishes me with some
-extracts from Sir William Petty, and Dr. Davenant, which I here intend
-to employ, towards pointing out a solution of the question proposed.
-These authors consider the state of England as it appeared to them, and
-what they say is conclusive only with respect to that state.
-
-Sir William Petty supposes the inhabitants of England to be six
-millions, the value of grain yearly consumed by them ten millions
-sterling, the bushel of wheat reckoned at 5_s._ and that of barley at
-2_s._ 6_d._ If we cast the two together, and reckon upon an average,
-this will make the quarter, or eight bushels of grain, worth 1_l._
-10_s._ but in regard, the barley cannot amount to one half of all the
-grain consumed, especially as there is a good quantity of rye made use
-of, which is worth more than the barley, though less than the wheat; let
-us suppose the grain worth 32_s._ _per_ quarter, at a medium; then ten
-millions sterling will purchase six millions of quarters of grain, or
-thereabouts: which used for nourishment, in bread and beer, gives the
-mean quantity of one quarter, or 512 pounds of grain for every
-inhabitant, including the nourishment of his proportional part of
-animals; supposing that Sir William attended to this circumstance, for
-it is not mentioned by Chambers. And I must observe, by the by, that
-this computation may hold good as to England, where people eat so little
-bread; but would not answer in France, nor in almost any other country I
-have seen.
-
-Dr. Davenant, correcting Sir William’s calculation, makes the
-inhabitants 5,545,000. These, according to Sir William’s prices and
-proportions, would consume to the amount of 8,872,000_l._ sterling; but
-the Dr. carries it, with reason, a little higher, and states it at
-9,075,000_l._ sterling; the difference, however, is inconsiderable. From
-this he concludes, the gross produce of the corn fields to be about
-9,075,000_l._ sterling. I make no criticism upon this computation.
-
-Next, as to the value of other lands; I find Sir William reckons the
-gross produce of them in butter, cheese, milk, wool, horses yearly bred,
-flesh for food, tallow, hides, hay, and timber, to amount to
-12,000,000_l._ sterling: The amount therefore of the gross produce of
-all the lands in England must be equal to these two sums added together,
-that is to 21,075,000_l._ sterling.
-
-From these data, the Dr. values the yearly rent of corn lands at two
-millions sterling, and those of pasture, &c. at seven millions, in all
-nine millions.
-
-From this it appears, that the land rents of England are to the gross
-produce, as nine is to twenty one, or thereabouts.
-
-Let me now examine some other proportions.
-
-The rents of the corn lands are to the gross produce of them, as two is
-to nine; those of pasture, as seven to twelve.
-
-Now it is very certain, that all rents are in a pretty just proportion
-to the gross produce, after deducting three principal articles.
-
-1. The nourishment of the farmer, his family and servants.
-
-2. The necessary expences of his family, for manufactures, and
-instruments for cultivating the ground.
-
-3. His reasonable profits, according to the custom of every country.
-
-Of these three articles, let us distinguish what part implies the direct
-consumption of the pure produce, from what does not.
-
-Of the first sort are the nourishment of men and cattle, wool and flax
-for cloathing, firing, and other smaller articles.
-
-Of the second are all manufactures bought, servants wages, the hire of
-labourers occasionally, and profits, either spent in luxury, (that is
-superfluity) lent, or laid up.
-
-The three articles above mentioned (which we have distributed under two
-heads) being deduced from the gross produce, the remaining value shews
-the land rent.
-
-This being the case, I am next to examine the cause of the great
-disproportion between the rents of corn lands, and those of pasture,
-when compared with the gross produce, in order to draw some conclusion,
-which may lead to the solution of the question here proposed.
-
-This difference must proceed from the greater proportion of labouring
-and other inhabitants employed in consequence of tillage; which makes
-the expence of it far greater than that of pasture. And since, in the
-one and the other, every article of necessary expence or consumption,
-appears to be proportionally equal among those concerned in both, that
-is, proportional to the number of labouring inhabitants; it follows,
-that the proportion of people employed in agriculture, and upon the
-account of it, in different countries, is nearly in the ratio of the
-gross produce to the land-rent; or in other words, in the proportion of
-the consumption made by the farmers, and by those employed necessarily
-by them, to the net produce; which is the same thing.
-
-Now as the consumption upon corn farms is 7⁄9, and that upon pasture
-5⁄12, the proportion of these two fractions must mark the ratio between
-the populousness of pasture lands, and those in tillage; that is to say,
-tillage lands in England were, at that time, peopled in proportion to
-pasture lands, as 84 is to 45, or as 28 to 15.
-
-This point being settled, I proceed to another; to wit, the application
-of this net produce or surplus of the quantity of food and necessaries
-remaining over and above the nourishment, consumption and expence, of
-the inhabitants employed in agriculture; and which we have observed
-above, to be equal to the land-rents of England, that is to say, to nine
-millions yearly.
-
-Must not this of necessity be employed in the nourishment, and for the
-use of those whom we have called the _free hands_; who may be employed
-in manufactures, trades, or in any way the state pleases.
-
-Now the number of people, I take to be very nearly in the proportion of
-the quantity of food they consume; especially when a society is taken
-thus, in such accumulative proportion, and when all are found under the
-same circumstances as to the plenty of the year.
-
-The whole gross produce of England we have said to be 21,000,000_l._
-sterling, of which 9 millions have remained for those not employed in
-agriculture; the farmers, therefore, and their attendants, must annually
-consume 12 millions; consequently the last class is to the first as 12
-is to 9. If therefore, according to Dr. Davenant, there be 5,545,000
-people in that kingdom, there must be about 3,168,571 employed or
-dependent upon agriculture, and 2,376,429 free hands for every other
-occupation. But this proportion of farmers will be found far less, if we
-reflect, that we have reckoned for them the total amount of the three
-articles above mentioned, that is to say, the total consumption they
-make, as well in manufactures, profits upon their labour, &c. as for
-food and necessaries; whereas there has been nothing reckoned for the
-free hands, but the land-rent: consequently there should be added to the
-number of the latter as many as are employed in supplying with all sorts
-of manufactures the whole of the farmers of England, and all those who
-depend upon them; and this number must be taken from one and added to
-the other class.
-
-If this number be supposed to amount to four hundred thousand, it will
-do more than cast the balance upon the opposite side.
-
-From these matters of fact (in so far as they are so) we may conclude:
-
-I. That the raising of the rents of lands shews the increase of
-industry, as it swells the fund of subsistence consumed by the
-industrious; that is, by those who buy it.
-
-II. That it may denote either an increase of inhabitants, or the
-depopulation of the land, in order to assemble the superfluous mouths in
-villages, towns, &c. where they may exercise their industry with greater
-conveniency.
-
-While the land-rents of Europe were very low, numbers of the inhabitants
-appeared to be employed in agriculture; but were really no more than
-idle consumers of the produce of it. This shall be farther illustrated
-in the subsequent chapters.
-
-III. The more a country is in tillage, the _more_ it is inhabited, and
-the smaller is the proportion of _free hands_ for all the services of
-the state. The more a country is in pasture, the _less_ it is inhabited,
-but the greater is the proportion of _free hands_.
-
-I do not pretend, as I have said above, that there is any calculation to
-be depended on in this chapter; I have only endeavoured to point out how
-a calculation might be made, when the true state of England comes to be
-known.
-
-This question not being of a nature to enter into the chain of our
-reasoning, may be considered rather as incidental than essential; I have
-therefore treated it superficially, and chiefly for the sake of the
-conclusions.
-
-Our next inquiry will naturally be into the principles which determine
-the residence of inhabitants, in order to discover why, in all
-flourishing states, cities are now found to be every where increasing.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. IX.
-_What are the Principles which regulate the Distribution of Inhabitants
- into Farms, Villages, Hamlets, Towns, and Cities?_
-
-
-Having pointed out the natural distribution of inhabitants into the two
-capital classes of which we have been treating, I am now going to
-examine how far their employment must decide as to their place of
-residence.
-
-I. When mankind is fed upon the spontaneous fruits of the earth, the
-distribution of their residence depends upon the division of the lands.
-If these are in common to all, then the inhabitants will be scattered
-abroad, or gathered together, according as the productions of the earth
-are equally distributed over the face of the country, or confined to
-some fruitful spots.
-
-Hence the Tartars wander with their flocks and feed upon them: hence the
-hunting Indians are scattered in small societies, through the woods, and
-live upon game: hence others, who feed upon the fruits of the earth, are
-collected in greater numbers upon the sides of rivers, and in watered
-vallies.
-
-Where therefore the surface of the earth is not appropriated, _there_
-the place producing food determines the place of residence of every one
-of the society, and _there_ mankind may live in idleness, and remain
-free from every constraint.
-
-II. When the earth is not in common to those who live upon her
-spontaneous fruits, but appropriated by a few, _there_ either slavery or
-industry must be introduced among those who consume the surplus of the
-proprietors; because they will expect either service or work in return
-for their superfluity. In that case, the residence of the inhabitants
-will depend upon the circumstances we are going to consider; and the
-object of agriculture (in countries where the surface of the earth is
-not broken up, being solely directed towards the gathering in of fruits)
-will only determine the residence of these who are necessary for that
-purpose: consequently it will follow, that in climates where the earth
-produces spontaneously, and in vast abundance, there _may_ be found
-large cities; because the number of those who are necessary for
-gathering in the fruits, is small in proportion to their quantity;
-whereas in other countries, where the earth’s productions are scanty,
-and where the climate refuses those of the copious and luxuriant kind,
-there will hardly be found any considerable town, as the number of those
-who are necessary for collecting the subsistence, bear a great
-proportion to the fruits themselves. I do not say, that in the first
-case there _must_ be large towns, or that in the other there _can_ be
-none; but I say, that in the first case, those who _may_ be gathered
-into towns, bear a great proportion to the whole society; and that in
-the second, they bear a small one.
-
-I think I have found this principle confirmed by experience. When I
-compare the bulk and populousness of the cities of Lombardy, and still
-more, those of the watered provinces of Spain, with the inhabitants of
-the territory which maintains them, I find the proportion of the first
-vastly greater than in those of France and England; and still more again
-in these two last mentioned kingdoms, than in the more northern
-countries and provinces, where the earth’s productions bear a less
-proportion to the labour bestowed in producing them. Now, although I
-allow that neither the one or the other to be fed by spontaneous
-productions, yet still it may be inferred, that the more the climate
-contributes to favour the labour of man, the more the productions
-participate of the spontaneous nature[J].
-
-Footnote J:
-
- Hence we may conclude, that in those countries where the people live
- upon the spontaneous fruits, the whole society (considered in a
- political light) is found composed of free hands. Nature there
- supplies the place of the whole class of farmers.
-
- We have said that industry and manufactures are the occupation of the
- free hands of a state; consequently, where the proportion of them is
- the largest, industry should flourish to the greatest advantage; that
- is to say, in countries where the inhabitants live upon the
- spontaneous fruits: but that is not the case. Why? Because there is
- another circumstance of equal weight which prevents it. These people
- are unacquainted with want, and want is the spur to industry. Let this
- suffice, in general, as to the distribution of inhabitants in
- countries unacquainted with labour.
-
-Again, in countries where labour is required for feeding a society, the
-smaller the proportion of labourers, the greater will be that of the
-free hands. Fruits which are produced by annual labour, and still more,
-such as are the consequence of a thorough cultivation, (such as
-luxuriant pasture) give returns far superior to the nourishment of those
-employed in the cultivation; consequently, all the surplus is consumed
-by people not employed in agriculture; consequently, by those who are
-not bound to reside upon the spot which feeds them, and who may choose
-the habitation best adapted for the exercise of that industry which is
-most proper to produce an equivalent to the farmers for their
-superfluities.
-
-From this it is plain that the residence of the farmers only, is
-essentially attached to the place of cultivation. Hence, farms in some
-provinces, villages in others.
-
-I now proceed to the other class of inhabitants; the free hands who live
-upon the surplus of the farmers.
-
-These I must subdivide into two conditions. The first, those to whom
-this surplus directly belongs, or who, with a revenue in money already
-acquired, can purchase it. The second, those who purchase it with their
-daily labour or personal service.
-
-Those of the first condition may live where they please; those of the
-second, must live where they can. The residence of the consumers, in
-many cases, determines that of the suppliers. In proportion, therefore,
-as those who live where they please choose to live together, in that
-proportion the others must follow them. And in proportion as the state
-thinks fit to place the administration of government in one place, in
-that proportion must the administrators, and every one depending upon
-them, be gathered together. These I take to be principles which
-influence the swelling of the bulk of capitals, and smaller cities.
-
-When the residence of the consumer does not determine that of him who
-supplies it, other considerations are allowed to operate. This is the
-case in what may properly be called manufactures, distinguished from
-trades, whether they be for home consumption, or foreign exportation.
-These considerations are,
-
-I. Relative to the place and situation of the establishment, which gives
-a preference to the sides of rivers and rivulets, when machines wrought
-by water are necessary; to the proximity of forests when fire is
-employed; to the place which produces the substance of the manufacture;
-as in mines, collieries, brick-works, &c.
-
-II. Relative to the conveniency of transportation, as upon navigable
-rivers, or by great roads.
-
-III. Relative to the cheapness of living, consequently not (frequently)
-in great cities, except for their own consumption. But it must be
-observed, that this last consideration can hardly ever be permanent: for
-the very establishment being the means of raising prices, the advantage
-must diminish in proportion as the undertaking comes to succeed. The
-best rule therefore is, to set down such manufactures upon the banks of
-navigable rivers, where all necessary provisions may be brought from a
-distance at a small cost. This advantage is permanent, the others are
-not; and may prove in time hurtful, by a change in these very
-circumstances which decided as to the choice of the situation. From the
-establishment of manufactures we see hamlets swell into villages, and
-villages into towns.
-
-Sea-ports owe their establishment to foreign trade. From one or other of
-these and similar principles, are mankind gathered into hamlets,
-villages, towns, and cities.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. X.
- _Of the Consequences which result from the Separation of the two
- principal Classes of a People, the Farmers and the Free Hands, with
- regard to their Dwelling._
-
-
-I am next going to examine the consequences resulting to the state, to
-the citizens, and to the landed interest, from this kind of separation,
-as I may call it, between the parent earth and her laborious children,
-which I suppose to take place every where in proportion to the progress
-of industry, luxury, and the swift circulation of money.
-
-As to the state, it is, I think, very plain, that, without such a
-distribution of inhabitants, it would be impossible to levy taxes. For
-as long as the earth nourishes directly those who are upon her surface,
-as long as she delivers her fruits into the very hand of him who
-consumes them, there is no alienation, no occasion for money,
-consequently no possibility of establishing an extensive taxation, as
-shall in its place be fully explained, and from this principle is, I
-imagine, to be deduced the reason, why we find taxation so little known
-under the feudal form of government.
-
-The personal service of the vassals, with their cattle and servants,
-upon all occasions made the power and wealth of the lords, and their
-rents were mostly paid in kind. They lived upon their lands, were
-commonly jealous of one another, and had constant disputes. This was a
-very good reason to keep them from coming together. Towns were situated
-round their habitations. These were mostly composed of the few tradesmen
-and manufacturers that were in the country. The lord’s judge, his
-fiscal, and his court of record, added to these numbers; law-suits, and
-the lord’s attendance, brought the vassals frequently together; this
-gave encouragement to houses of entertainment; and this I take to be the
-picture of the greatest part of small towns, if we ascend three or four
-hundred years from the present time.
-
-Cities were the residence of bishops. These lords were very independent
-of the civil government, and had at the same time the principal
-direction in it. They procured privileges to their cities, and these
-communities formed themselves by degrees into small republics: taxes
-here have ever been familiar. The feudal lords seldom appeared there,
-and the inferior classes of the people enjoyed liberty and ease in these
-cities only.
-
-In some countries of Europe, as in Germany, the principal citizens, in
-time, became patricians. In France certain offices of public trust
-sometimes procured nobility to those who bore them, and always
-consideration. The representatives of the citizens were even admitted
-into the states, and formed the _tiers êtat_. Elsewhere they received
-casual marks of distinction from the sovereign, as the Lord Mayor of
-London does to this day usually receive knighthood. In short, the only
-dawning of public liberty to be met with during the feudal government,
-was in the cities; no wonder then if they increased.
-
-Upon the discovery of America and the East-Indies, industry, trade, and
-luxury, were soon introduced in the kingdoms of Spain, France, and
-England: the grandeur and power of the Hans towns had already pointed
-out to sovereigns the importance of those objects.
-
-The courts of princes then became magnificent; the feudal lords
-insensibly began to frequent them with more assiduity than formerly. The
-splendor of the prince soon eclipsed those rays which shone around them
-upon their own lands. They now no more appeared to one another as
-objects of jealousy, but of emulation. They became acquainted, began to
-relish a court life, and every one proposed to have a house in the
-capital. A change of habitation made a change of circumstances, both as
-to city and country. As to the city; in so far as inhabitants were
-increased, by the addition of the great lords, and of those who followed
-their example, demand increased for every sort of provision and labour;
-and this quickly drew more inhabitants together. Every one vied with
-another in magnificence of palaces, clothes, equipages. Modes changed,
-and by turns enlivened the different branches of ingenuity. Whence came
-so great a number of inhabitants all of a sudden? He who would have cast
-his eyes on the deserted residences of the nobility, would have seen the
-old people weeping and wailing, and nothing heard among them but
-complaints of desolation: the youth were retired to the city; there was
-no change as to them.
-
-This is no doubt a plain consequence of a sudden revolution, which never
-can happen without being attended with great inconveniencies. Many of
-the numerous attendants of the nobility who uselesly filled every house
-and habitation belonging to the great man, were starving for want. He
-was at court, and calling aloud for money, a thing he was seldom
-accustomed to have occasion for, except to lock up in his chest. In
-order to procure this money, he found it expedient to convert a portion
-of the personal services of his vassals into cash: by this he lost his
-authority. He then looked out for a farmer (not a husbandman) for an
-estate which he formerly consumed in its fruits. This undertaker, as I
-may call him, began by dismissing idle mouths. Still greater complaints
-ensued. At last, the money spent in the city began to flow into the
-hands of the industrious: this raised an emulation, and the children of
-the miserable, who had felt the sad effects of the revolution, but who
-could not foresee the consequences, began to profit by it. They became
-easy and independent in the great city, by furnishing to the
-extravagance of those under whose dominion they were born.
-
-This progression is perhaps too minutely traced to be exact; I therefore
-stop, to consider the situation of affairs at that period, when all the
-inconveniences of the sudden revolution had ceased, and when things were
-come to the state in which we now find them. Capitals swelled to a great
-extent. Paris and London appear monstrous to some, and are said to be a
-load upon the rest of the country. This must be examined.
-
-We agree, I suppose, that the inhabitants of cities are not employed in
-agriculture, and we may agree that they are fed by it: we have examined
-into the causes of the increase of cities, and we have seen the fund
-provided for their subsistence, to wit, the surplus of fruits produced
-by husbandmen.
-
-What are then the advantages resulting to the citizens from this great
-increase of their city? I cannot find any great benefit resulting to
-individuals from that circumstance; but I conclude, that the same
-advantages which many find in particular, must be common to great
-numbers, consequently great numbers are gathered together.
-
-The principal objections against great cities are, that health there is
-not so good, that marriages are not so frequent as in the country, that
-debauchery prevails, and that abuses are multiplied.
-
-To this I answer, that these objections lie equally against all cities,
-and are not peculiar to those complained of for their bulk; and that the
-evils proceed more from the spirit of the inhabitants, than from the
-size of the capital. As for the prolongation of life, it is more a
-private than a public concern.
-
-It is farther urged, that the number of deaths exceeds the number of
-births in great cities; consequently smaller towns, and even the
-country, is stripped of its inhabitants, in order to recruit these
-capitals.
-
-Here I deny, first, that in all capitals the number of deaths exceeds
-the number of births; for in Paris it is otherwise. But supposing the
-assertion to be true, what conclusion can be drawn from it, except that
-many people who are born in the country die in town. That the country
-should furnish cities with inhabitants is no evil. What occasion has the
-country for supernumerary hands? If it has enough for the supply of its
-own wants, and of the demands of cities, has it not enough? Had it more,
-the supernumeraries would either consume without working, or, if added
-to the class of labourers, instead of being added to the number of free
-hands, would overturn the balance between the two classes; grain would
-become too plentiful, and that would cast a general discouragement upon
-agriculture: whereas, by going to cities, they acquire money, and
-therewith purchase the grain they would have consumed, had they remained
-in the country; and this money, which their additional labour in cities
-will force into circulation, would otherwise have remained locked up, or
-at least would never have gone into the country, but in consequence of
-the desertion of the supernumeraries. The proper and only right
-encouragement for agriculture, is a moderate and gradual increase of
-demand for the productions of the earth: this works a natural and
-beneficial increase of inhabitants; and this demand must come from
-cities, for the husbandmen never have occasion to demand; it is they who
-offer to sale.
-
-The high prices of most things in large cities is surely a benefit, not
-a loss to the country. But I must observe, that the great expence of
-living in capitals does not affect the lower classes, nor the moderate
-and frugal, in any proportion to what it does the rich. If you live on
-beef, mutton, bread, and beer, you may live as cheap in London and in
-Paris as in most cities I know. These articles abound, and though the
-demand be great, the provision made for supplying it is in proportion.
-But when you come to fish, fowl, and game; delicacies of every kind
-brought from far, by the post, by ships, and messengers; when you have
-fine equipages, large houses, expensive servants, and abundance of waste
-in every article, without one grain of oeconomy in any, it is no wonder
-that money should run away so fast.
-
-I do not, from what has been said, conclude, that there is any evident
-advantage in having so overgrown a capital as London in such a kingdom
-as England; but only that I do not find great force in the objections I
-have met with against it. That there may be others which I do not know,
-I will not deny, because I am not sufficiently acquainted with that
-kingdom to be a competent judge of the matter.
-
-Let me now conclude this chapter, by mentioning in what respects I think
-cities an advantage, in general, to a country; and, as I go along, I
-shall point out wherein they prove a disadvantage, in particular, to
-some parts of it.
-
-The general advantages of them are;
-
-I. To remove the unnecessary load upon the land; those idle people, who
-eat up a part of the produce of labour without contributing to it.
-
-II. The opportunity of levying taxes, and of making these affect the
-rich, in proportion to the consumption they make, without hurting
-industry or exportation.
-
-III. The advantages resulting to the landed interest are no less
-considerable. This is proved by universal experience: for we see every
-where, that the moment any city, town, or village, begins to increase,
-by the establishment of trade or manufactures, the lands round about
-immediately rise in their value. The reason of this seems easily deduced
-from the above principles.
-
-When a farmer has got his oeconomy under right regulations, not one
-supernumerary, nor useless mouth, but abundance of hands for every kind
-of labour, which is generally the case near towns and cities, the
-proximity of them discharges him of every superfluity. His cattle
-consume the exact quantity of grain and of forage necessary; what
-remains is money; a superfluous egg is money; a superfluous day of a
-cart, of a horse, a superfluous hour of a servant, is all money to the
-farmer. There is a constant demand for every thing he can do or furnish.
-To make this the more sensibly perceived, remove into a province, far
-from a town, and compare situations. There you find abundance of things
-superfluous, which cannot be turned into money, which therefore are
-consumed without much necessity, and with no profit. It is good to have
-an estate there, when you want to live upon it; it is better to have one
-near the great town, when you do not.
-
-It may be alledged, that the disadvantages felt by the distant farmer
-and proprietor, when they compare situations with those situated near
-the town, proceed from the town: this must be examined.
-
-If the town consume the produce of this distant farm, it must consume it
-in competition with every place at a smaller distance; consequently this
-competition must do more good than harm to the distant farm. If the city
-consumes none of the produce, wherein does it affect it? It may be
-answered, that, by entering into competition with the distant farmer for
-the labouring inhabitants, these desert agriculture, in favour of a more
-lucrative occupation, to be found in the city. Scarcity of hands in the
-country raises the price of labour on one hand, while it diminishes the
-demand on the other; consequently the farmer suffers a double
-disadvantage. Of this there can be no doubt; but as these revolutions
-cannot by their nature be sudden, it becomes the duty of the statesman,
-whom I suppose constantly awake, to set on foot directly some branch of
-industry in every such distant part of the country; and as prices will
-diminish for a while, for the reasons above-mentioned, this will prove
-an encouragement to the establishment; this again will accelerate
-propagation, as it will prove an outlet for children, and, in a short
-time, the farmer will find himself in a better situation than ever. But
-even without this assistance from the state, a few years will set all to
-rights, providing the spirit of industry is kept up: for cities, by
-swelling, extend their demand to the most distant corners of a country;
-the inhabitants who desert do not cease to consume, and thereby they
-repair the hurt they did by their desertion. I appeal to experience for
-the truth of this. Do we not perceive demand extending every year
-farther and farther from great capitals? I know places in France which,
-twenty years ago, never knew what it was to send even a delicacy to
-Paris, but by the post, and which now send thither every week loaded
-waggons, with many thousand weight of provisions; in so much that I may
-almost say, that a fatted chicken in the most distant province of that
-country can be sold with great profit in the Paris market during all the
-winter season; and cattle carry thither their own flesh cheaper than any
-waggon can. What distant farm then can complain of the greatness of that
-noble city? There is however a case, where a distant part of a country
-may suffer in every respect, to wit, when the revolution is sudden; as
-when a rich man, used to spend his income in his province, for the
-encouragement of industry, goes to Paris or London, and stays away for a
-year or two, without minding the interest of the estate he abandons. No
-doubt that must affect his province in proportion; but in every
-revolution which comes on gradually by the desertion of such as only
-lived by their industry, new mouths are born and supply the old. The
-only question is about employing them well: while you have superfluous
-food and good oeconomy, a country will always reap the same benefit from
-her natural advantages.
-
-IV. Another advantage of cities is, the necessity arising from thence of
-having great roads, and these again prove a considerable encouragement
-to agriculture.
-
-The miserable condition of roads over all Europe almost, till within
-these hundred years, is a plain proof of the scanty condition of the
-cities, and of the small encouragement formerly given towards extending
-the improvement of the soil.
-
-Let any one examine the situation of the landed interest before the
-making of great roads in several provinces in France, and compare it
-with what it is at present. If this be found a difficult inquiry, let
-him compare the appearance of young gentlemen of middling fortune, as he
-finds them at Paris, or in their regiment, with that of their fathers,
-who live in their province in the old way, and he will have a very good
-opportunity of perceiving the progress of ease and refinement in that
-class, which has proceeded from no other cause than the improvement of
-the soil. People complain that prices are risen; of this there is no
-doubt with regard to many articles. Is it not quite consistent with our
-principles? It is not because there is now a larger mass of money in the
-kingdom, though I allow this to be true, and also that this circumstance
-may have contributed to raise prices; but the direct principle which has
-influenced them, and which will always regulate their rise and fall, is
-the increase of demand. Now the great roads in a manner carry the goods
-to market; they seem to shorten distances, they augment the number of
-carriages of all sorts, they remove the inconveniencies above-mentioned
-resulting from the distance of the city. The more distant parts of the
-country come to market, in competition with the farmers in the
-neighbourhood of the cities. This competition might make the rents of
-lands lying round such as were the first to encourage industry, sink in
-their value. But the hurt in this respect done to the proprietors of
-these lands would soon be repaired. The cities would increase in bulk,
-demand would increase also, and prices would rise a-new. Every thing
-which employs inhabitants usefully promotes consumption; and this again
-is an advantage to the state, as it draws money from the treasures of
-the rich into the hands of the industrious. The easy transportation of
-fruits produces this effect: the distant farmer can employ his idle
-hours in providing, and the idle days of his servants and cattle in
-sending things to market, from farms which formerly never knew what it
-was to sell such productions.
-
-I shall carry these speculations no farther, but conclude by observing,
-that the making of roads must advance population, as they contribute to
-the advancement of agriculture.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XI.
-_Of the Distribution of Inhabitants into Classes; of the Employment and
- Multiplication of them._
-
-
-Having deduced the effects of modern policy, in assembling so large a
-proportion of inhabitants into cities, it is proper to point out the
-principles which should direct the statesman to the proper means of
-providing, supporting, and employing them. Without this they neither can
-live nor multiply. Their parent, Earth, has in a manner banished them
-from her bosom; they have her no more to suckle them in idleness;
-industry has gathered them together, labour must support them, and that
-must produce a surplus for bringing up children. If this resource should
-fail, misery will ensue: the depopulation of the cities will be followed
-by the ruin of the lands, and all will go to wreck together.
-
-We have already laid down the principles which appear the most natural
-to engage mankind to labour, supposing all to be free; and we have
-observed how slavery, in former times, might work the same effect, as to
-peopling the world, that trade and industry do now; men were then forced
-to labour because they were slaves to others, men are forced to labour
-now because they are slaves to their own wants: provided man be made to
-labour, and make the earth produce abundantly, and providing that either
-authority, industry or charity, can make the produce circulate for the
-nourishment of the free hands, the principle of a great population is
-brought to a full activity.
-
-I shall now suppose these principles to be well understood. Wants
-promote industry, industry gives food, food increases numbers: the next
-question is, how numbers are to be well employed?
-
-It is a general maxim in the mouth of every body; increase the
-inhabitants of the state: the strength and power of a state is in
-proportion to the number of its inhabitants.
-
-I am not fond of condemning opinions; but I am very much for limiting
-general propositions. I have hardly ever escaped being led into error by
-every one I have laid down. Nothing is so systematical, nothing so
-pretty in a treatise as general maxims; they facilitate the distribution
-of our ideas, and I have never been able to dash them out but with a
-certain regret.
-
-As I often recur to private oeconomics for clearing up my ideas
-concerning the political, I have asked myself, if it be a general rule,
-that the master of a family should increase the mouths of it, to the
-full proportion of all he can feed? Now it is my opinion, that in a
-small family well composed, and where every one is properly employed,
-both master and servants are much happier than in others vastly more
-numerous, where the same order and regularity is not kept up; and that a
-small number of well disciplined soldiers is more formidable, and really
-stronger, than the numerous populace of a large city.
-
-The use of inhabitants is to be mutually serviceable one to another in
-particular, and to the society in general. Consequently, every state
-should, in good policy, first apply itself to make the inhabitants they
-have answer that purpose, before they carry their views towards
-augmenting their numbers. I think it is absurd to wish for new
-inhabitants, without first knowing how to employ the old; and it is
-ignorance of the real effects of population, to imagine that an increase
-of numbers will infallibly remove inconveniencies which proceed from the
-abuses of those already existing.
-
-I shall then begin by supposing that inhabitants require rather to be
-well employed than increased in numbers.
-
-If I know the number of inhabitants, I may know the proportion which die
-every year: consequently, I know how many pairs of breeders are
-necessary to keep up the stock. If I want to raise twenty bushels of
-grain only, I do not sow my lands with twenty bushels. If I have as many
-children born as there are people who die, I have enough by the
-supposition. But these children must be raised proportionally, from the
-different classes of inhabitants, which I here consider as distributed
-into two conditions; those who do not labour, and those who do. May I
-not venture to say, that there is no absolute necessity that those of
-the first class should multiply in order to recruit the second. If then
-the second class is kept up to its proper standard by its own
-multiplication, and if their work be all consumed, will it not be found
-that the diminution of those mouths who do not work, and which appear
-only useful in consideration of the consumption they make, is no real
-loss to the nation? But to this it is objected, that if the number of
-the first class be diminished, the work of the second will lie upon
-hand.
-
-Here I look for my answer from what daily experience points out. Two
-persons (A) and (B) have each 1000_l._ a year; (A) has many children,
-(B) has none: they both spend their income; (A) upon the necessaries of
-life for his family, and for the education of his children; for the
-supplying of which, those of the working class are only employed, for
-who ever does or gives any thing for money, I consider as a worker: (B)
-spends his income as a fashionable young gentleman; he has a fine
-chariot, abundance of footmen in laced liveries; in short, without
-examining into the particulars of his expence, I find the whole 1000_l._
-spent at the end of the year. Neither (A) nor (B) do any work; nor are
-any of (A’s) children necessary as a supply to the working hands, by the
-supposition. Is it not true then, that (B) has consumed as much work or
-service, for these I consider as the same thing, as (A) with his family?
-Nay, I may still go farther, and affirm, that (B) has contributed as
-much, if not more, to population than (A). For if it be true, that he
-who gives food gives numbers, I say, that the expence of (B) has given
-food to the children of the industrious employed by him: consequently,
-in place of having directly contributed to the increase of the idle of
-the state, which is the case with (A), he has indirectly contributed to
-the multiplication of the industrious. What good then does the state
-reap from (A’s) children, from his marriage, from his multiplication?
-Indeed, I see no harm although he had remained a batchelor: for those
-who produce only idle consumers, certainly add neither riches, strength,
-or ease to a state. And it is of such people alone that there is any
-question here.
-
-From this I conclude, that there can be no determined number of rich
-idle consumers necessary to employ a determined number of industrious
-people, no more than of masters to employ a fixt number of menial
-servants. Do we not see a single man frequently attended by more
-servants than are necessary when he gets a wife and family: nay, it many
-times happens, that a young man, upon his marriage, diminishes the
-number of his domestics, in order to give bread to his children.
-
-If riches are calculated, as I hope to be able to shew, for the
-encouragement of industry; if circulation is to be accelerated by every
-method, in order to give bread to those who are disposed to work, or, in
-other words, who are disposed to become vigorous members of the
-commonwealth, by contributing with their strength, their ingenuity, or
-their talents, to supply her wants, to augment their riches, to promote
-and administer a good government at home, or to serve it abroad: then, I
-say, the too great multiplication of those, who come under none of these
-classes, the idle consumers as I have called them, contribute directly
-to make the other part languish.
-
-There is no governing a state in perfection, and consequently no
-executing the plan of a right distribution of the inhabitants, without
-exactly knowing their situation as to numbers, their employment, the
-gains upon every species of industry, the numbers produced from each
-class. These are the means of judging how far those of a particular
-trade or occupation are in a situation to bring up a family. To examine,
-on the other hand, the state of the higher classes who do not labour,
-the ease of their circumstances, and the use the state has for their
-service, may appear superfluous. Since those who do not work, must be
-supposed to have wherewithal to live; and consequently, not to stand in
-need of assistance. But this is not every where, nor always the case:
-many excellent subjects are lost to a state, for want of a proper
-attention in the statesman to this object.
-
-I have observed how necessary a thing it was to govern a people
-according to their spirit: now by governing I understand, protecting,
-cherishing, and supporting, as well as punishing, restraining, and
-exacting. If, therefore, there be found in any country, a very numerous
-nobility, who look upon trade and the inferior arts, as unbecoming their
-birth; a good statesman must reflect upon the spirit of former times,
-and compare it with that of the present. He will then perceive, that
-these sentiments have been transmitted from father to son, and that six
-generations are not elapsed since, over all Europe, they were
-universally adopted: that although the revolution we talked of in the
-10th chap. has in effect rendered them less adapted to the spirit of the
-present times, they are however productive of excellent consequences;
-they serve as a bulwark to virtue, against the allurements of riches;
-and it is dangerous to force a set of men who form a considerable body
-in a state, from necessity, to trample under foot, what they have been
-persuaded from their infancy to be the test of a noble and generous
-mind.
-
-About 200 years ago, the nobility of several nations, I mean, by this
-term, all people well born, whether adorned with particular marks of
-royal favour or not, used to live upon the produce of their lands. In
-those days there was little luxury, little circulation; the lands fed
-numbers of useless mouths, in the modern acceptation of useless,
-consequently produced a very moderate income in money to the
-proprietors, who were, notwithstanding, the most considerable persons in
-the state. This class of inhabitants remaining inactive in the country,
-during the revolution above mentioned, have, in consequence of the
-introduction of industry, trade and luxury, insensibly had the balance
-of wealth, and consequently of consideration turned against them. Of
-this there is no doubt. This class however has retained the military
-spirit, the lofty sentiments; and notwithstanding of their depression in
-point of fortune, are found calculated to shine the brightest, when set
-in a proper elevation. In times of peace, when trade flourishes, the
-lustre of those who wallow in public money, the weight and consideration
-of the wealthy merchant, and even the ease and affluence of the
-industrious tradesman, eclipse the poor nobility: they become an object
-of contempt to bad citizens, an object of compassion to the good; and
-political writers imagine they render them an important service, when
-they propose to receive them into the lower classes of the people. But
-when danger threatens from abroad, and when armies are brought into the
-field, compare the behaviour of those conducted by a warlike nobility,
-with those conducted by the sons of labour and industry; those who have
-glory, with those who have gain for their point of view. Let the state
-only suffer this nobility to languish without a proper encouragement,
-there is no fear but they will soon disappear; their lands will become
-possessed by people of a way of thinking more a la mode, and the army
-will quickly adopt new sentiments, more analogous to the spirit of a
-moneyed interest.
-
-I find nothing more affecting to a good mind, than to see the distress
-of a poor nobility in both sexes. Some have proposed trade for this
-class. Why do you not trade? I answer, for the nobility; Because, in
-order to trade, I must have money. This objection is unanswerable. Why
-then do you not apply to other branches of industry? If it is the state
-who is supposed to ask the question, I ask, in my turn, What advantage
-she can reap from their industry? What profit from their becoming
-shop-keepers, weavers, or taylors? Are not, or ought not all these
-classes to be provided with hands from their own multiplication? What
-advantage can she reap by the children of one class taking the bread out
-of the mouths of another?
-
-If the sentiments in which the nobility have been educated, prove
-detrimental to the state, throw a discouragement upon them. If birth is
-to be no mark of distinction, let it not be distinguished by any
-particular privilege, which in appearance sets that class above the
-level of those with whom the state intends they should be incorporated.
-You do not make your valet de chambre get behind your coach, though upon
-an occasion it might be convenient, and though perhaps he had been your
-footman the day before; you would even turn him out of doors, did he not
-change his company with his rank.
-
-If you cannot afford to have a nobility, let it die away: grant, as in
-England, the title of noble to one of a family, and let all the rest be
-commoners; that is to say, distinguished by no personal privilege
-whatsoever from the lowest classes of the people. But if you want them
-to serve you as soldiers, and that they should preserve those sentiments
-you approve of in a soldier, take care at least of their children. If
-these appear to you poor and ragged, while they are wandering up and
-down their fathers lands, chasing a wretched hare or a partridge,
-compare them, when in the troops, with those of your wealthy neighbours,
-if any such you have.
-
-The establishment of an _hôtel militaire_ shews at least that there are
-people who lend an ear to such representations. I do not propose that a
-prince should divert into that channel those streams of wealth which
-flow from every part of the state, though nothing is more reasonable
-than for men to pay in order to protect their gains, but let a tax be
-imposed upon noble property, and let that be applied for the education
-of the generous youth from their earliest years. There the state will
-have all under her eye, they are her children, her subjects, and they
-ask no more than to be taken from the obscurity of their habitations,
-and rendered capable of being employed while young and vigorous. When
-they have done their task, the country which produced them will receive
-them back into her warm bosom; there they will produce others like
-themselves, and support the spirit and propagation of their own class,
-without becoming any charge upon others.
-
-A statesman should make it his endeavour to employ as many of every
-class as possible, and when employment fails in the common run of
-affairs, to contrive new outlets for young people of every denomination.
-The old and idle are lost beyond recovery in many particulars.
-
-The mutual relations likewise, through industry, between class and class
-should be multiplied and encouraged to the utmost. Relations by
-marriage, I am apt to believe, prove here more hurtful than beneficial.
-That is to say, I would rather discourage the intermarriage of the
-persons of different classes; but I would encourage, as much as
-possible, all sorts of mutual dependencies between them, in the way of
-their trades. The last tends to keep every one employed, according to
-the wants and spirit of his class; the first is productive in general of
-no good effect that I can perceive; which is reason sufficient for a
-state to give at least no encouragement to such marriages, and this is
-all the restraint proper to be imposed.
-
-Such members of the society as remain unemployed, either from natural
-infirmities or misfortunes, and who thereby become a load upon others,
-are really a load upon the state. This is a disease which must be
-endured. There is no body, no thing, without diseases. A state should
-provide retreats of all sorts, for the different conditions of her
-decayed inhabitants: humanity, good policy, and christianity, require
-it. Thus much may be said in general upon the principles which direct
-the employment and distribution of inhabitants, which in every state
-must be different, according to circumstances relating to the extension,
-situation and soil of the country, and above all, to the spirit of the
-people. I am next to offer some considerations with regard to the proper
-methods of augmenting numbers.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XII.
- _Of the great Advantage of combining a well digested Theory and a
- perfect Knowledge of Facts with the practical Part of Government, in
- order to make a People multiply._
-
-
-We have the happiness to live in an age where daily opportunities offer,
-of perceiving the difference between exercising an art according to the
-mechanical received practice, and according to the principles which
-study and refinement have introduced for bringing it to perfection. This
-will appear in the strongest light to one who compares the operation of
-building an ordinary house, with that of executing a great public work,
-where the most able architects are employed; the making a common parish
-road, with that of a military way, through mountains, forests, and
-marshes. In the first, every difficulty appears unsurmountable: in the
-second, the greatest obstacles are made to vanish. By comparing these
-things, we distinguish between the artist, who proceeds by the rules of
-the science, and the ordinary tradesman, who has no other resource than
-common practice, aided by his own ingenuity.
-
-Every branch of science must be carried to perfection by a master in it,
-formed by the hand of nature, and improved by application and
-experience. The great genius of Mr. de Colbert saw through the confusion
-and perplexity of the administration of the French finances; he invented
-resources for swelling the public treasure, which never would have been
-liable to so many inconveniencies as are complained of, had the
-administration been conducted with as much disinterestedness, as it was
-set on foot with ability. The genius of Mr. Law was original as to
-figures and paper credit. Sir Robert Walpole discovered new principles
-of taxation, he extended the plan of public credit, and reduced the
-application of it to a science. These were born statesmen, they were
-creators of new ideas, they found out new principles for the government
-of men, and led them by their interest to concur in the execution of
-their plans. Men of a speculative disposition may broach hints, although
-the force of theory, destitute of practice, and unassisted by
-experiment, be not sufficient to carry them the length of forming a
-plan. A great genius, with power and authority, has occasion for no more
-than a hint to strike out the system, and to carry it, with success,
-into execution.
-
-No problems of political oeconomy seem more obscure than those which
-influence the multiplication of the human species, and which determine
-the distribution and employment of them, so as best to advance the
-prosperity of each particular society.
-
-I have no where found these matters treated to my wish, nor have I ever
-been able to satisfy myself concerning them. There are many clouds which
-still cover the fruitful fields of this science; and until these be
-dissipated, the political eye cannot take in the whole landscape, nor
-judge of the deformities which appear in the many representations which
-our modern painters are daily giving of it.
-
-I may here, without an imputation of vanity, put myself so far upon a
-level with the great Montesquieu, as to adopt the saying of Correggio,
-_Io anche son pittore_; I am also a dawber; for I frankly acknowledge my
-own insufficiency to treat this subject with perspicuity: my frequent
-repetitions, and my often returning to it at different times, in order
-to clear up my ideas and those of my readers, shews plainly, that I am
-sensible of my own insufficiency. By setting it in different lights, and
-viewing it as it were from different stations, perhaps both my reader
-and I may come at last to see a little clearer.
-
-In a former chapter, I have endeavoured to lay down the principles which
-influence multiplication; but alas! they are all so general, that they
-can be considered only as the most remote. They may satisfy a slight
-speculation, but can be of little use in practice. I have principally
-insisted upon those which are found to operate at all times among
-societies where primitive simplicity prevails. Now this matter comes to
-be examined in a more complex light, as relative to the modern manners
-of mankind, which no statesman, however able, can change, where trade,
-industry, luxury, credit, taxes, and debts, are introduced. In these the
-most polite nations of Europe are involved. This is a chain of adamant,
-it hangs together by a cohesion, which the successive revolutions of
-three centuries have so cemented with the spirit of nations, that it
-appears to be indissoluble. It is not my business to examine how far the
-modern system is to be preferred to the antient; my point of view is, to
-investigate how a statesman may turn the circumstances which have
-produced this new plan of oeconomy to the best advantage for mankind,
-leaving the reformation of such plan to time and events, of which I am
-not the master. Schemes of recalling antient simplicity, and of making
-mankind honest and virtuous, are beautiful speculations: I admire them
-as much as any body, but not enough to believe them practicable in our
-degenerate age.
-
-If therefore the principles I here lay down appear contradictory to so
-amiable a system of policy, let no man thence conclude any thing to my
-disadvantage upon the account of my particular opinion of it, which is a
-matter of no importance whatsoever. My object is to examine the
-consequences of what we feel and see daily passing, and to point out how
-far the bad may be avoided, and the good turned to the best advantage.
-
-The loss of antient simplicity, and the introduction of this complicated
-scheme of living, has rendered the mechanism of government infinitely
-more difficult, and almost every disorder in the political body affects
-multiplication. Depopulation is as certain a mark of political diseases,
-as wasting is of those in the human body. The increase of numbers in a
-state shews youth and vigour; when numbers do not diminish, we have an
-idea of manhood, and of age when they decline.
-
-The importance of the subject therefore requires me to bring it once
-more upon the carpet, in order to inquire into the proper methods of
-restoring and preferring youth, and of diffusing vigour into every
-articulation, into every vein, into every nerve, as I may say, of a
-modern society.
-
-In the republic of Lycurgus an unmarried man met with no respect;
-because no reason but debauchery could prevent his marrying. Marriage
-was no load in a state where all were fed and taken care of at the
-public charge. A Spartan who did not marry, was considered as one who
-refused to contribute towards recruiting of the army, only to gratify a
-vicious habit.
-
-The _jus trium liberorum_, and the other encouragements given by
-Augustus Cæsar to engage the Romans to marry, were calculated chiefly
-for the nobility, and only for the citizens, but not at all for the
-inferior class (the slaves) bound to labour. The vice to be corrected,
-and that which the emperor had in his eye in those institutions, was the
-prodigal and dissolute life of rich men who lived in celibacy. This
-affected the Roman state, and deprived it of its principal force, the
-military power, the equites. Judge of the force of this class by the
-numbers of them destroyed at Cannæ. In those days, the chief
-encouragement to multiplication was to be directed towards the higher
-classes; the lower classes of the people (by far the most numerous in
-all countries and in all ages) were easily recruited, by the importation
-of slaves, as they are now in the West-Indies, where, consequently, the
-same principle must naturally operate, which fixed the attention of the
-wise emperor. The state of affairs in Europe, and in England
-particularly, is changed entirely, by the establishment of universal
-liberty. Our lowest classes are absolutely free; they belong to
-themselves, and must bring up their own children, else the state becomes
-depopulated. There is no resource to us from importation, whether by
-ships, or acts of parliament for naturalization. We shall always have a
-numerous and free common people, and shall constantly have the same
-inconveniencies to struggle with, as long as the lowest classes remain
-in such depression as not to be able to support their own numbers. Here
-then lies the difficulty. In order to have a flourishing state, which
-Sir William Temple beautifully compared to a pyramid, we must form a
-large and solid basis of the lowest classes of mankind. As the classes
-mount in wealth, the pyramid draws narrower until it terminate in a
-point, (as in monarchy) or in a small square, as in the aristocratical
-and mixed governments. This lowest class therefore must be kept up, and,
-as we have said, by its own multiplication. But where every one lives by
-his own industry, a competition comes in, and he who works cheapest
-gains the preference. How can a married man, who has children to
-maintain, dispute this preference with one that is single? The unmarried
-therefore force the others to starve; and the basis of the pyramid is
-contracted. Let this short sketch of a most important part of our
-subject suffice at present; it shall be taken up and examined at more
-length, in the chapter of physical necessaries, or natural wants.
-
-From this results the principal cause of decay in modern states: it
-results from liberty, and is inseparably connected with it.
-
-Several modern writers upon this subject, recommend marriage, in the
-strongest manner, to all classes of inhabitants; yet a parish priest
-might, properly enough, not be warranted to join a couple unless they
-could make it appear that their children were not likely to become a
-burden to the parish. Could any fault be found, reasonably, with such a
-regulation? Those who are gratuitously fed by others are a load upon the
-state, and no acquisition, certainly, so long as they continue so.
-Nothing is so easy as to marry; nothing so natural, especially among the
-lower sort. But as in order to reap, it is not sufficient to plow and to
-sow, so in order to bring up children, it is not sufficient to marry. A
-nest is necessary for every animal which produces a helpless brood: a
-house is the nest for children; but every man who can beget a child
-cannot build or rent a house.
-
-These reflections lead me to make a distinction which I apprehend may be
-of use in clearing up our ideas concerning population. Let me therefore
-consider the generation of man in a political light, and it will present
-itself under two forms. The one as a real multiplication; the other only
-as procreation.
-
-Children produced from parents who are able to maintain them, and bring
-them up to a way of getting bread for themselves, do really multiply and
-serve the state. Those born of parents whose subsistence is precarious,
-or which is proportioned only to their own physical necessary, have a
-precarious existence, and will undoubtedly begin their life by being
-beggars. Many such will perish for want of food, but many more for want
-of ease; their mendicity will be accompanied with that of their parents,
-and the whole will go to ruin; according to the admirable expression of
-the Marechal de Vauban, in his Dixme Royale. _La mendicité_, says he,
-_est un mal qui tue bientot son homme_. He had many examples of the
-truth of it before his eyes; whoever has not, must have seen little of
-the world.
-
-When marriage is contracted without the requisites for multiplication,
-it produces a procreation, attended with the above mentioned
-inconveniencies; and as by far the greater part of inhabitants are in
-the lower classes, it becomes the duty of a statesman to provide against
-such evils, if he intends, usefully, to increase the number of his
-people.
-
-Every plan proposed for this purpose, which does not proceed upon an
-exact recapitulation of the inhabitants of a country, parish by parish,
-will prove nothing more than an expedient for walking in the dark. Among
-such recapitulations or lists I would recommend, as an improvement upon
-those I have seen in the Marechal de Vauban’s excellent performance
-above cited, and in the states of his Prussian Majesty, or elsewhere, to
-have one made out, classing all the inhabitants, not only by the trades
-they exercise, but by those of their fathers, with a view to distinguish
-those classes which multiply, from those which only procreate. I should
-be glad also to see bills of mortality made out for every class,
-principally to compare the births and deaths of the children in them.
-
-Let me take an example. Suppose then, that I have before me a general
-recapitulation of all the inhabitants of a country, parish by parish,
-where they may appear distributed under the respective denominations of
-their fathers’ employment. I shall immediately find a considerable
-number produced from the higher classes, from those who live upon an
-income already provided, and upon branches of industry which produce an
-easy and ample subsistence. These have no occasion for the assistance of
-the state in bringing up their children, and you may encourage marriage,
-or permit celibacy in such classes, in proportion to the use you find
-for their offspring when they are brought up. When I come to the lower
-classes, I examine, for example, that of shoemakers, where I find a
-certain number produced. This number I first compare with the number of
-shoemakers actually existing, and then with the number of marriages
-subsisting among them, (for I suppose recapitulations of every kind)
-from which I discover the fertility of marriage, and the success of
-multiplication in that part. When the state of the question is examined,
-class by class, I can decide where marriage succeeds, and where it does
-not. I have said, that I imagine it an advantage that every class should
-support at least its own numbers; and when it does more, I should wish
-(were it possible) that the higher classes might be recruited from the
-lower, rather than the lower from the higher; the one seems a mark of
-prosperity, the other of decay: but I must confess that the first is by
-far the most difficult to be obtained.
-
-According therefore to circumstances, and in consistence with these
-principles, I would encourage marriage by taking the children off the
-hands of their parents. Where marriage succeeds the worst, if it happens
-to be in a very low class, great encouragement should be given to it:
-perhaps the whole should be taken care of. Certain trades may be loaded
-with one child, others with two, and so progressively. But of this, more
-in another place. I beg it may not here be imagined that I propose, that
-the whole of the lower classes of people are to marry and propagate, and
-that the state is to feed all their offspring. My view extends no
-farther, than to be assured of having such a number of children yearly
-taken care of as shall answer the multiplication proposed, and that
-these be proportionally raised from each class, and from each part of
-the country, and produced from marriages protected by the state,
-distinguished from the others, which under a free government must always
-be found exposed to the inconveniencies of want and misery. To guard
-against such evils ought to be another object of public care. Hospitals
-for foundlings are an admirable institution; and colonies are an outlet
-for superfluous inhabitants. But I insensibly enter into a detail which
-exceeds my plan. To lay down a scheme, you must suppose a particular
-state perfectly known. This lies beyond my reach, and therefore I shall
-go no farther, but illustrate what I have said, by some observations and
-reflections which seem analogous to the subject.
-
-I have not here proposed plans of multiplication inconsistent with the
-spirit of the nations with which I am a little acquainted; nor with the
-religion professed in Europe, for many reasons, obvious to any rational
-man. But principally, because, I believe, it will be found, that a
-sufficient abundance of children are born already; and that we have
-neither occasion for concubinage, nor polygamy, to increase their
-numbers. But we want a right method of taking care of those we have, in
-order to produce a multiplication proportioned to the possibility of our
-providing nourishment and employment. I have therefore proposed, that a
-statesman, well informed of the situation of his people, the state of
-every class, the number of marriages found in each, should say, let
-there be so many marriages authorised in every class, distributed in a
-certain proportion for every parish, city, burrow, &c. in the country;
-let rules be laid down to direct a preference, in case of a competition,
-between different couples; and let the consequence of this approbation
-be, to relieve the parents of all children above a certain number, as
-has been said. I propose no new limitations upon marriage, because I am
-a friend to liberty, and because such limitations would shock the spirit
-of the times. I therefore would strongly recommend hospitals for
-foundlings over all the country; and still more strongly the frugal
-maintenance of children in such hospitals, and their being bred up early
-to fill and recruit the lowest classes of the people.
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XIII.
- _Continuation of the same Subject, with regard to the Necessity of
-having exact Lists of Births, Deaths, and Marriages, for every Class of
- Inhabitants in a modern Society._
-
-
-Mr. Derham has furnished some tables which shew the proportion between
-marriages and births in England, to be as 1 to 4; that of births to
-burials as 1 12⁄100to 1: from which it appears that multiplication there
-goes on, though slowly: a mark of youth and vigour. Dr. Davenant values
-the augmentation at 9000 a year. Could matters be kept at that standard,
-I should prefer it by far to a more rapid multiplication: it amounts to
-about a million in a century (without entering into accumulations or
-exact calculations) and the longer youth is preserved so much the
-better. A rapid multiplication will stop at some period, and that stop,
-which marks distress, must produce great inconveniencies.
-
-These calculations extracted from very lame vouchers, shew how necessary
-it is to have authentic recapitulations: since, lame as they are, it is
-from these and the like, that Dr. Halley, and others, have calculated
-the value of annuities, which (at a time when all the states of Europe
-are borrowing money at the expence of every man’s private industry or
-property) ought to be valued at their real worth. Now, in all these
-calculations of mortality, it appears that what we have called the abuse
-of marriage or procreation is included.
-
-If it be true, as I think it is, from what I have seen and observed,
-that numbers, especially of children, among the lower classes, perish
-from the effects of indigence; either directly by want of food, or by
-diseases contracted gradually from the want of convenient ease; and that
-others perish for want of care, when the slightest assistance of a
-surgeon to let them blood, would be sufficient to preserve them against
-the inflammatory distempers to which they are chiefly exposed.
-
-If these things are so, must we not infer, that calculations formed upon
-a conclusion drawn from the births and deaths of mankind in general,
-cannot possibly be so exact as if the like were drawn from those of
-every class of inhabitants taken separately.
-
-It may here be answered, that among the rich and easy, there are found
-diseases which sweep off numbers, in as great a proportion as other
-distempers do of the poor: that we see very large families brought up
-among the lowest classes, while a great man has all the pains in the
-world to preserve a young boy from the wreck of a number of children.
-
-All this I agree may be true; but I should be glad to see in what
-proportion it _is_ so, and to be certain of the fact. I want to know the
-diseases of the rich and of the poor; I want to have as particular
-details of the births and deaths of every class, as I can have of those
-of the cities of Paris, London, or Breslaw. I want to know from what
-parents those multitudes of poor which I find every where are sprung;
-and most of all to have such accounts from different countries, where
-different manners prevail. For no just conclusion can be drawn from the
-comparison of facts, without examining circumstances. The most barren
-class in one country, may be the most fruitful in another. As an example
-of this, let any one compare the state of marriage among the footmen of
-London and of Paris.
-
-I find error concealed every where under general propositions. The
-children of the poor, says one, thrive better than those of the rich. If
-it be so, it ought not to be so in common reason. But the same person
-will tell you, I have made my son a merchant; he will be a rich man.
-Why? Because (A B) was a merchant, who, from nothing, died worth a
-hundred thousand pounds. But if you go through all the letters of the
-alphabet following (A B), among those who set out as he did, you will
-find, that perhaps every one of them died a bankrupt. Those who prove
-successful are remarkable: those who miscarry are never heard of. It is
-just so with respect to the question before us. But to return to our
-tables, and what are called calculations.
-
-One marriage produces four children at a medium in England. If you
-reckon 6,000,000 of people in that country, and that 1⁄30 part dies
-annually, then to keep up the stock it is sufficient that 200,000 be
-annually born; add to this the yearly increase of 9000, the total of
-births will then be 209,000: for if 200,000 die this year, and if
-209,000 be born, this must certainly imply an increase of 9000,
-providing we suppose the acquisition of foreigners to be equal to the
-exportation of the natives. As this is only meant as an illustration, I
-need not examine the matter of fact. The next question is, how many
-marriages, properly contracted or encouraged as above, will give this
-increase? For we may know that these subsisting in that kingdom, joined
-with the effects of extramatrimonial conjunctions, is just sufficient to
-produce it. I imagine that nothing but experiment can give the solution
-of this question. Mr. King supposes every 104th person in England to
-marry yearly, that is 57,682 persons, or 28,841 couples. If this number
-of marriages be supposed to subsist with fertility for seven years,
-producing a child every year, the number of 200,000 births would be
-procured; but I apprehend that marriages, rightly contracted, subsist
-much longer in general than seven years, even with fertility, though not
-in proportion to a child every year: consequently, the number of
-marriages constantly subsisting with fertility in England, where it is
-supposed that 28,841 are yearly contracted, must be much greater than
-seven times that number, or than 201,887. If we suppose the whole of the
-209,000 births to be produced by marriages, at three marriages to every
-child annually produced, then the number of marriages subsisting will be
-627,000. From these speculations (for I do not pretend to call them
-calculations) I conclude, that the more fruitful marriages are rendered
-(not with regard to procreation, merely, but multiplication, which I
-have above distinguished) the fewer become necessary; and the fewer
-unnecessary marriages are contracted, the better for the state, and the
-less misery for those who contract them. I shall here stop, and leave to
-the reader to draw his conclusions, putting him in mind of the wide
-difference that is always found between theory and practice.
-
-From this reasoning I infer, that no exact judgment can be formed, as to
-the numbers in any society, from the single datum of the annual number
-of deaths among them; and although the just proportion between numbers
-and deaths may exactly be determined in one particular place, yet that
-proportion will not serve as a general standard, and being taken for
-granted may lead to error.
-
-Here are the reasons for my opinion.
-
-Were no body to marry but such as could maintain their children, the
-bills of births and burials would, I apprehend, diminish, and yet
-numbers might remain as before; and were every body to marry who could
-procreate, they certainly would increase, but still numbers would never
-exceed the proportion of subsistence. Could we but see bills of births
-and deaths for the city of Rome, while in all its glory; or indeed for
-the sugar colonies in America, where slaves are imported, adding the
-number of those imported to that of births, and supposing the colony
-neither upon the growing nor the declining hand, then the deaths and
-births would be equal; but the proportion of them to all in the colony,
-I apprehend, would be far less than in any state in Europe, where
-slavery does not prevail.
-
-It may be alledged, that were all to marry, the consequence would be a
-great multiplication. I say not; or if it were, what sort of
-multiplication would it be? A multitude of children who never could come
-to manhood; or who would starve their parents, and increase misery
-beyond expression. All therefore that can be learned from bills of
-mortality, &c. is, that if the births exceed the deaths, and that all
-remain in the country, numbers will increase; that if the deaths exceed
-the births, numbers will diminish; but while they stand at par, no
-conclusion can be drawn as to numbers in general: these will be in a
-less proportion as abusive procreation goes forward; and, _vice versa_,
-they will be in a greater. There still hangs a cloud upon this subject:
-let me therefore reason upon an example. Suppose the inhabitants of a
-country to stand at 6,000,000, one thirtieth to die every year, and as
-many to be born, that is, the births and burials to stand at 200,000;
-that every three marriages subsisting produce a child every year, that
-is 600,000 marriages; let the quantity of food be supposed the same,
-without a possibility of being augmented. Would not the consequence be,
-that numbers could not increase? Now let me suppose marriages carried to
-1,000,000, I say the effect would be, either that they would become in
-general less fruitful, or if they suffered no diminution in this
-particular, that the bills of births and deaths would rise to 333,333;
-that is to say, they would be to the number of inhabitants as 1 to 18,
-instead of being as 1 to 30. Now this increase of mortality proceeding
-from want of food, either the old would starve the young, or the young
-would starve the old; or a third case, more probable than either, would
-happen, the rich would starve the poor. What would be the consequences
-in all these three suppositions? In the first, the number of 6,000,000
-would be found to diminish; because the proportion of large consumers
-would rise, and mortality would increase among the children. In the
-second, the standard number would augment, because the proportion of
-small consumers would rise, and mortality would increase among the
-parents. In the third, numbers would remain pretty much the same, but
-misery and distress would lay all the lower classes waste. It is
-computed that one half of mankind die before the age of puberty in
-countries where numbers do not augment; from this I conclude, that too
-many are born. If methods therefore are fallen upon to render certain
-diseases less mortal to children, all the good that will be got by it,
-in general, will be to render old people of the lower classes more
-wretched; for if the first are brought to live, the last must die.
-
-From these speculations I cannot help wishing to see bills of mortality
-made out for different classes, as well as for different ages. Were this
-executed it would be an easy matter to perceive, whether the mortality
-among children proceeds from diseases to which infancy is necessarily
-exposed, or from abusive procreation. I am pretty much convinced before
-I see the experiment, that it proceeds from the latter; but should
-experience prove it, the principles I have laid down would acquire an
-additional force. In the mean time, I must conclude, that it is not for
-want of marrying that a people does not increase, but from the want of
-subsistence; and it is miserable and abusive procreation which starves
-one half of the whole, and is the fountain of so much wretchedness.
-
-Upon the whole, I may say, that were it possible to get a view of the
-general state of births and burials in every class of the inhabitants of
-a country, marriage might surely be put upon a better footing than ever
-it has been, for providing a determined number of good and wholesome
-recruits every year towards national multiplication. This is walking in
-the light, and is a means of procuring whatever augmentation of hands
-you wish for. What difficulties may be found in the execution, nothing
-but experience can shew; and this, to a judicious eye, will point out
-the remedy. In my opinion, this will be far better than a general
-naturalization, which I take to be a leap in the dark. For however easy
-it may be to naturalize men, I believe nothing is so difficult as to
-naturalize customs and foreign habits; and the greatest blessing any
-nation can enjoy, is an uniformity of opinion upon every point which
-concerns public affairs and the administration of them. When God blesses
-a people, he makes them unanimous, and bestows upon them a governor who
-loves them, and who is beloved, honoured and respected by them; this,
-and this only, can create unanimity.
-
-Let this suffice at present, as to the distribution, employment, and
-increase of a people. Upon the proper employment of the free hands, the
-prosperity of every state must depend: consequently the principal care
-of a statesman should be, to keep all employed, and for this purpose he
-must acquire an exact knowledge of the state of every denomination, in
-order to prevent any one from rising above, or sinking below that
-standard which is best proportioned to the demand made for their
-particular industry. As the bad consequences resulting from the loss of
-this exact balance are not immediate, a moderate attention, with the
-help of the proper recapitulations, will be sufficient to direct him.
-
-This and the two preceding chapters have in a manner wholly treated of
-the employment of the free hands: I must now consider the effects of an
-overcharge of those employed in agriculture. Here we shall still
-discover inconveniencies, resulting from the want of that just
-proportion in the distribution of classes, which gives health and vigour
-to a state; and we shall see how it may happen, that even an overcharge
-of inhabitants in general may become a political disease; as an
-abundance of blood, however rich and good, may affect the health of the
-human body.
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XIV.
- _Of the Abuse of Agriculture and Population._
-
-
-I have taken notice above of two performances, wherein the authors, with
-equal ability, have treated of the numbers of mankind; a subject which
-has a very close connection with political oeconomy.
-
-Although (as I have said) I do not pretend to decide between them as to
-the point in dispute, I find that in this chapter I shall be naturally
-led into a chain of reasoning very contrary to that of Mr. Wallace,
-which is a thing I should have dispensed with, did not the merit of his
-performance in the eyes of the learned world appear sufficient to draw
-my attention.
-
-Agriculture is without all doubt the foundation of multiplication, which
-must ever be in proportion to it; that is, to the earth’s productions,
-as has been said. But it does not follow, that in proportion to
-multiplication those produced must of course become useful to one
-another, and useful to the society in general. Now I consider
-multiplication as no otherwise useful to a state, than in so far as the
-additional number becomes so, to those who are already existing, whom I
-consider as the body-politic of the society. If it therefore happens,
-that an additional number produced do no more than feed themselves, then
-I perceive no advantage gained to the society by their production. If,
-without rendering any equivalent service, they are fed by others, there
-is a loss.
-
-Agriculture may be said to be carried to its utmost extent, when the
-earth is so laboured as to produce the greatest quantity of fruits
-possible for the use of man; and in judging of the improvement of two
-spots of ground of the same extent, that may be said to be most improved
-which produces the greatest quantity of food: but as to population, the
-question does not stop there; for let the quantity be equal on both, yet
-if the inhabitants of the one be more frugal livers than those of the
-other, this circumstance alone will make an inequality. If agriculture
-therefore be considered only with respect to population, we must
-consider that country as the best peopled, where productions are the
-most abundant, and where the inhabitants are the most sober. Thus much
-with regard to the extent of agriculture and population: we come now to
-consider the inconveniencies which may result to a society from an
-over-stretch, or from what I call an abuse of either the one or the
-other.
-
-I call every thing an abuse in society which implies a contradiction to
-the spirit of it, or which draws along with it an inconveniency to
-certain classes, which is not compensated by the general welfare.
-
-The political oeconomy of government is brought to perfection, when
-every class in general, and every individual in particular, is made to
-be aiding and assisting to the community, in proportion to the
-assistance he receives from it. This conveys my idea of a free and
-perfect society, which is, _a general tacit contract, from which
-reciprocal and proportional services result universally between all
-those who compose it_.
-
-Whenever therefore any one is found, upon whom nobody depends, and who
-depends upon every one, as is the case with him who is willing to work
-for his bread, but who can find no employment, there is a breach of the
-contract, and an abuse. For the same reason, if we can suppose any
-person entirely taken up in feeding himself, depending upon no one, and
-having nobody depending on him, we lose the idea of society, because
-there are no reciprocal obligations between such a person and the other
-members of the society.
-
-Those who are for employing the whole of a people in agriculture may
-answer, that all their time cannot be employed in this occupation, and
-that in the intervals they may apply themselves to supply reciprocal
-wants.
-
-I very readily agree, that any person, who would calculate his labour in
-agriculture, purely for his own subsistence, would find abundance of
-idle hours. But the question is, whether in good oeconomy such a person
-would not be better employed in providing _nourishment_ for others, than
-in providing for any other want. When he provides food, he surely
-provides for a want; and experience shews, that it is better for a man
-to apply close to one trade, than to turn himself to several.
-
-Hence I conclude, that the best way of binding a free society together,
-is by multiplying reciprocal obligations, and creating a general
-dependence between all its members. This cannot be better effected, than
-by appropriating a certain number of inhabitants, for the production of
-the quantity of food required for all, and by distributing the remainder
-into proper classes for supplying every other want. I say farther, that
-this distribution is not only the most rational, but that mankind fall
-naturally into it; and misery attends and has ever attended those who
-have been found without a particular employment.
-
-It must not be concluded from this reasoning, that abuse is always
-implied when we find any of the classes of the free hands of a state
-casually employed in agriculture.
-
-There is such a variety of circumstances in every country, that without
-a peculiar talent of laying principles together, so as to answer every
-combination, the most perfect theory which can be proposed must appear
-defective.
-
-In countries ill-improved, where industry begins to take root, we are
-not to conclude, that good policy requires a sudden and immediate
-separation between the dwellings of the husbandmen and free hands.
-Sudden revolutions are constantly hurtful, and a good statesman ought to
-lay down his plan of arriving at perfection by gradual steps.
-
-If he finds, as is the case of rude and uncivilized societies, that many
-are occupied, partly, in providing subsistence for their own family,
-partly, in other useful pursuits, he may by degrees detach as many as he
-can from every other branch of industry, except that of agriculture. The
-most wealthy are the most proper to carry this branch to any degree of
-perfection. The landed men ought to be encouraged by every means to
-apply to the study of farming. This employment has been considered as
-honourable in all ages of the world, and very well suits the rank, the
-interest, and the amusement of gentlemen.
-
-The next step is to introduce manufactures into the country, and to
-provide a ready market abroad for every superfluous part of them. The
-allurement of gain will soon engage every one to pursue that branch of
-industry which succeeds best in his hands. By these means many will
-follow manufactures and abandon agriculture; others will prosecute their
-manufactures in the country, and avail themselves at the same time, of
-small portions of land, proper for gardens, grass for cows, and even for
-producing certain kinds of fruit necessary for their own maintenance.
-
-This I do not consider as a species of farming. It is more properly, in
-a political light, a sort of village life, only the village here appears
-dispersed over a large extent; and I call it a village life, because
-here the occupation of the inhabitants is principally directed towards
-the prosecution of their trades: agriculture is but a subaltern
-consideration, and will be carried on so far only, as it occasions no
-great avocation from the main object. It will however have the effect to
-parcel out the lands into small possessions: a system admirably
-calculated for the improvement of the soil, and advantageous to
-population, when the spirit of industry is not thereby checked. This is
-not the case when such possessors apply totally to agriculture, and
-content themselves with a bare subsistence from it, without prosecuting
-any other branch of industry, or forming any plan of ambition for
-themselves, or for their children’s emerging from so circumscribed a
-sphere of life: from this alone proceeds, in most countries, the
-inconveniency of a minute subdivision of land property.
-
-We shall presently see, by various examples, the truth of this
-proposition; and from what observations I have been able to make, it
-appears, that a great inconvenience flows from it; the _property_ of the
-lands, and not the _bare possession_ of them, is vested in the lower
-classes. While they only remain as tenants, the interest of the
-proprietor, on one hand, will lead him to incorporate these small
-possessions into larger farms, the moment the possessors, by relaxing
-from their principal occupation, (industry) are no longer able to pay a
-rent above the value of the grounds when let in farms; and the interest
-of these tenants, on the other hand, will frequently lead them to
-abandon such small possessions, when the prosecution of their industry
-demands a change of habitation. Thus the interest of agriculture will go
-hand in hand with that of industry, and classes will separate their
-habitations, according as their respective interests require.
-
-It is certainly the interest of every landlord, whose land is ill
-improved, to multiply habitations upon it, providing he makes choice of
-such people as can live by some other branch of industry than bare
-agriculture: and, in many cases, it may be his advantage to incorporate
-his lands into farms as soon as they are fully cultivated. By this plan
-he will advance the improvement of his land; he will multiply the useful
-inhabitants; and he will at the same time share the profits of their
-industry beyond the value of the land rent.
-
-By these means has the woollen manufacture in England, and the linen in
-Ireland and Scotland been greatly augmented. But as the improvement of
-land goes on, this oeconomy will decline: towns will swell in
-consequence of the principles we are now going to deduce; the lands will
-become more thinly inhabited; and farms will by degrees grow more
-extensive. I appeal to experience for the justness of this opinion.
-
-Hence it plainly appears, that, in every light this matter can be
-represented, we still find it impossible to employ usefully above a
-certain part of a people in agriculture. The next question is, how to
-determine the just proportion. For this purpose we must have recourse to
-facts, not to theory. We have, in a former chapter, examined the state
-of this question with regard to one country. I shall here only add,
-that, in proportion to the culture of the soil, and to the number of
-crops it is made to produce, a greater or less number will be required;
-and in proportion to the surplus of food above what is necessary to
-maintain the labourers, will a number of free hands be provided for. If
-therefore a species of agriculture can be found established, which
-produces little or no surplus, _there_ little or no industry can be
-exercised; few wants can be supplied: this will produce a wonderful
-simplicity of manners, will ruin the system of modern policy, and
-produce what I must call an abuse. Let me look for some examples, in
-order to set this question in a clearer light.
-
-In the wine-provinces of France, we find the lands which lie round the
-villages divided into very small lots, and there cultivation is carried
-to a very extraordinary height. These belong _in property_ to the
-peasants, who cultivate the vines. No frugality can be greater than in
-the consumption of this produce, and the smallest weed which comes up
-among the grain, is turned to account, for the food of animals. The
-produce of such lands, I may say, is intirely consumed by the proprietor
-and his family, who are all employed in the cultivation, and there is no
-superfluous quantity here produced for the maintenance of others. Does
-not this resemble the distribution of lands made by the Romans in favour
-of 5000 Sabine families, where each received two _plethra_ of ground.
-[See Numbers of Mankind, p. 117.] Now let me examine the political state
-of agriculture, and of other labour performed by my French vine-dresser.
-
-By the supposition we imply, that the bit of land is sufficient for
-maintaining the man and his family, and nothing more; he has no grain to
-sell, no food can by him be supplied to any other person whatever; but
-the state of other lands capable of yielding a surplus, such as the
-vineyard, produces a demand for his labour. This labour, considered with
-respect to the vine-dresser, is a fund for providing all his wants in
-manufactures, salt, &c. and what is over must be considered as his
-profits, out of which he pays the royal impositions. The same labour,
-considered with regard to the proprietor of the vineyard, enters into
-that necessary deduction out of the fruits, which, when deducted, leaves
-the remainder, which we call surplus, or what answers to the land rent.
-This belongs to the proprietor, and becomes a fund for supplying all his
-wants.
-
-Here we have an idea of society. The vine-dresser depends upon the
-proprietor for the price of his labour; the proprietor upon the
-vine-dresser for his surplus. But did we suppose all the kingdom
-parcelled out, and laboured, as the spot which lies round the village,
-what would become of the vine-dresser with regard to all his other
-wants; there would be no vines to dress, no surplus nourishment any
-where found, consequently no employment, not even life, for those who
-had no land. From this example we discover the difference between
-agriculture exercised _as a trade_ and _as a direct means of
-subsisting_, a distinction to be attended to, as it will very frequently
-occur in the prosecution of our subject. We have the two species in the
-vine-dresser: he labours the vineyard as a trade, and his spot of ground
-for subsistence. We may farther conclude, that, as to the last part, he
-is only useful to himself; but, as to the first, he is useful to the
-society, and becomes a member of it; consequently, were it not for his
-trade, the state would lose nothing, though the vine-dresser and his
-land were both swallowed up by an earthquake. The food and the consumers
-would both disappear together, without the least political harm to any
-body: consequently, such a species of agriculture is no benefit to a
-state; and consequently, neither is that species of multiplication,
-implied by such a distribution of property, any benefit. Thus an
-over-extension of agriculture and division of lands becomes an abuse,
-and so, consequently, does an over-multiplication.
-
-Here I am obliged to conclude, that those passages of Roman authors
-which mention the frugality of that people, and the small extent of
-their possessions cannot be rightly understood, without the knowledge of
-many circumstances relative to the manners of those times. For if you
-understand such a distribution of lands to have extended over all the
-Roman territory, the number of the citizens would have far exceeded what
-they appear to have been by the Census, and even surpass all belief. But
-farther, I may be allowed to ask, whether or no it be supposed that
-these frugal Romans laboured this small portion of lands with their own
-hands and consumed the produce of it? If I am answered in the
-affirmative, (which is necessary to prove the advantages of
-agriculture’s being exercised by all the classes of a people) then I
-ask, from whence were the inhabitants of Rome, and other cities,
-subsisted; who fed the armies when in the field? If these were fed by
-foreign grain imported, or plundered from their neighbours, where was
-the advantage of this subdivision of lands, and of this extensive
-agriculture, which could not feed the inhabitants of the state? If it be
-said, that notwithstanding this frugal distribution of property among
-the citizens, there was still found surplus enough to supply both Rome
-and the armies, will it not then follow, that there was no necessity for
-employing all the people in agriculture, since the labour of a part
-might have sufficed.
-
-_That number of husbandmen_, therefore, _is the best, which can provide
-food for all the state; and that number of inhabitants is the best,
-which is compatible with the full employment of every one of them_.
-
-Idle mouths are only useful to themselves, not to the state;
-consequently, are not an object of the care of the state, any farther
-than to provide employment for them; and their welfare (while they
-remain useless to others) is, in a free country, purely a matter of
-private concern. Let me take another example for the farther
-illustration of this matter.
-
-Those who travel into the southern provinces of Spain, find large tracts
-of land quite uncultivated, producing only a scanty pasture for herds of
-the lesser cattle. Here and there are found interspersed some spots of
-watered lands, which, from the profusion of every gift which nature can
-bestow, strike a northern traveller with an idea of paradise. In such
-places villages are found, and numbers of inhabitants. It must be
-allowed that industry and labour do not here go forward as in other
-countries; but to supply this want charity steps in. Charity in Spain
-(in proportion to its extent) is as powerful a principle towards
-multiplication as industry and labour. _Whatever gives food gives
-numbers_: but charity cannot extend beyond superfluity, and this must
-ever be in proportion to industry. These watered lands are well laboured
-and improved. The value of them in one sense, is in proportion to their
-fertility, and the surplus of the labourers should naturally be given
-for an equivalent in money or work: but this equivalent cannot be found,
-because the consumers have neither the one nor the other. If the
-Spaniards, therefore, were not the most charitable people upon earth, it
-is very plain that the labouring of these watered lands would diminish,
-until it came upon a level with the wealth and industry of the
-consumers. But here it is otherwise: labour goes on mechanically, and
-without combination of circumstances, and the poor live in ease, in
-proportion to the plenty of the year.
-
-Here then is a third principle of multiplication. The first is slavery,
-or a violent method of making mankind labour; the second is industry,
-which is a rational excitement to it; the third is charity, which
-resembles the manna in the desert, the gift of God upon a very
-extraordinary occasion, and when nothing else could have preserved the
-lives of his people. Whether, in all cases, this principle of
-christianity advances the prosperity of a modern society (when complied
-with from obedience to precept, without consulting reason as to the
-circumstances of times and situations) is a question which lies out of
-my road to examine. The action, considered in the intention of the
-agent, must in every case appear highly beautiful, and we plainly see
-how far it contributes to multiplication, though we do not so plainly
-perceive how this again is advantageous to society.
-
-Now if we examine the state of agriculture in the territory of this
-Spanish village, we find, upon the whole, no more surplus of fruits than
-upon the French vine dresser’s portion of land; consequently, if all
-Spain was laboured and inhabited like this village and its small garden,
-as it is called, it would be the most populous country in the world, the
-most simple in the manner of living; but it never could communicate the
-idea of a vigorous or a flourishing state. It is the employment alone of
-the inhabitants which can impress that character.
-
-Now in this last example, what a number of free hands do we find! are
-not all the poor of this class? Would it not be better if all these by
-their labour could purchase their subsistence, than be obliged to
-receive it in the precarious manner they do? Can one suppose all these
-people industrious, without implying what I call superfluity of labour?
-Is not this luxury, according to my definition of it? Where would be the
-harm if the Spanish farmer, who gives a third of his crop in charity,
-should in return receive some changes of raiment, some convenient
-furniture for his house, some embellishment to his habitation; these
-things would cost him nothing; he would receive them in exchange for
-what he now gives from a principle of charity, and those who have a
-precarious, would have a certain livelihood. Let us travel a little
-farther in search of the abuse of population.
-
-In Germany, we find many small towns, formed into corporations, which
-enjoy certain privileges. The freedom of such towns is not easily
-purchased; and one, upon considering outward circumstances, must be not
-a little surprized to hear of the sums refused, when offered, to obtain
-it. Round these towns there is a small territory divided into very small
-portions, and not able to maintain the inhabitants: these lands
-therefore are infinitely overstocked with husbandmen; for every
-proprietor, less or more, concerns himself with the cultivation. Here,
-one who would aspire to extend his possession would, according to the
-sentiment of Manius Curius Dentatus, certainly be considered as a
-dangerous citizen, and a hurtful member of the society. Those lots are
-divided among the children of the proprietors, who are free of the town,
-by which means they are constantly splitting by multiplication, and
-consolidating by death, and by marriage: these nearly balance one
-another, and property remains divided as before. A stranger is at a loss
-to find out the reason why the liberty of so poor a little town should
-be so valuable. Here it is; first there are certain advantages enjoyed
-in common, such as the privilege of pasture on the town lands, and
-others of a like nature; but I find the charges which the burgesses are
-obliged to pay, may more than compensate them. The principal reason
-appears to be, that no one who has not the liberty of the town, can
-settle in a way of industry so as to marry and have a family: because
-without this his labour can only be directed towards furnishing the
-wants of peasants who live in villages; these are few, and little
-ingenuity is required for it. In towns there is found a greater
-diversity of wants, and the people there have found out mechanically,
-that if strangers were allowed to step in and supply them, their own
-children would starve; therefore the heads of the corporation, who have
-an interest to keep up the price of work, have also an interest to hold
-the liberty of their town at a high value. This appears to me a pretty
-just representation of the present state of some towns I have seen,
-relative to the present object of inquiry.
-
-But as industry becomes extended, and trade and manufactures are
-established, this political oeconomy must disappear.
-
-Such a change, however, will not probably happen without the
-interposition of the sovereign, and a new plan of administration; what
-else can give a turn to this spirit of idleness, or rather, as I may
-call it, of this trifling industry? Agriculture can never be a proper
-occupation for those who live in towns: this therefore is an abuse of
-it, or rather indeed an abuse of employment.
-
-Ease and plenty can never enter a little town, but by the means of
-wealth; wealth can never come in but by the produce of labour going out;
-and when people labour purely for their own subsistence, they only make
-the little money they have circulate, but can acquire nothing new; and
-those who with difficulty can maintain themselves, can never hope to
-increase their numbers.
-
-If in spite of the little industry set on foot in such towns, the
-generative faculty shall work its effect and increase numbers, this will
-make the poor parents still divide, and misery will ensue; this again
-may excite compassion, and that will open the chests of those who have a
-charitable disposition: hospitals are founded for the relief of the
-poor, they are quickly filled, and as many necessitous remain as ever.
-The reason is plain; the hospital applies a palliative for the abuse,
-but offers no cure. A tree is no sooner discharged of its branches than
-it pushes new ones. It has been said, that numbers are in proportion to
-food; consequently, poor are in proportion to charity. Let the King give
-his revenue in charity, he will soon find poor enough to consume it. Let
-a rich man spend 100,000_l._ a year upon a table, he will find guests
-(the best in the kingdom) for every cover. These things, in my way of
-considering them, are all analogous, and flow from the same principle.
-And the misery found in these little German towns, is another
-modification of the abuse of population. These examples shew the
-inconveniencies and abuses which result from a misapplication of
-inhabitants to agriculture, which produces a population more burthensome
-than beneficial to a modern state.
-
-If the simplicity of the antients is worthy of imitation, or if it
-appears preferable to the present system, which it is not my business to
-decide, then either slavery must be introduced to make those subsist who
-do not labour, or they must be fed upon charity. Labour and industry can
-never, I think, be recommended on one hand, and the effects of them
-proscribed on the other. If a great body of warlike men (as was the case
-in Sparta) be considered as essential to the well being of the state; if
-all trade and all superfluity be forbid amongst them, and no employment
-but military exercises allowed; if all these warriors be fed at public
-tables, must you not either have a set of helotes to plow the ground for
-them, or a parcel of charitable Spanish farmers to feed them gratis.
-
-Thus much I have thought might be of use to say to illustrate the
-principles I have laid down. I find these very contrary to the reasoning
-which runs through the whole of the performance which I mentioned above,
-and which I have had in my eye. A more particular examination of it
-might be useful, and even amusing; but it would engage me in too long a
-disquisition for the nature of this work. I cannot however help, in this
-place, adding one observation more, in consequence of our principles,
-which _seems_ contrary to the strain of our ingenious author’s
-reasoning. I say _seems_, because almost all difference of opinion upon
-such subjects proceeds from the defect of language in transmitting our
-ideas when complex or abstract.
-
-The effect of diseases which sweep off numbers of people does not
-essentially diminish population, except when they come suddenly or
-irregularly, any more than it would necessarily dispeople the world if
-all mankind were to be swept off the stage at the age of forty six
-years. I apprehend that in man, as in every other animal, the generative
-faculty is more than able to repair all losses occasioned by regular
-diseases; and I have shewn, I think, more than once, that multiplication
-never can stop but for want of food. As long then as the labour of man
-can continue annually to produce the same quantity of food as at
-present, and that motives are found to make him labour, the same numbers
-may be fed, and the generative faculty, which from one pair has produced
-so many millions, would certainly do more than keep up the stock,
-although no person were to pass the age above mentioned. Here is the
-proof: was the life of man confined to forty six years, the state of
-mortality would be increased in the proportion which those who die above
-forty six bear to those who die under this age. This proportion is, I
-believe, as 1 to 10, consequently, mortality would increase 1⁄10,
-consequently, numbers would be kept up by 1⁄10 increase upon births; and
-surely the generative faculty of man far exceeds this proportion, when
-the other requisites for propagation, to wit, food, &c. are to be found,
-as by the supposition.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XV.
- _Application of the above Principles to the State of Population in_
- Great-Britain.
-
-
-A letter from Dr. Brakenridge, F. R. S. addressed to George Lewis Scott,
-Esq; which I found in the Danish Mercury for March 1758, furnishes me
-with a very good opportunity of applying the principles we have been
-laying down to the state of population in Great-Britain. I shall
-therefore, according to my plan, pass in review that gentleman’s
-opinion, without entring upon any refutation of it. I shall extract the
-propositions he lays down, examine the conclusions he draws from them,
-and then shew wherein they differ from those which result from the
-theory established in this inquiry.
-
-The author’s calculations and suppositions as to matters of fact shall
-be taken for granted, as I believe the first are as good as any that can
-be made, upon a subject where all the data required for solving the
-problem are quite a piece of guess-work.
-
-I must follow the Mercury, not having the original.
-
-PROP. I. After a very close examination, says our author, I find, that
-our islands gain, as to population, absolutely no more than what is
-requisite for repairing their losses, and that, in England itself,
-numbers would diminish, were they not recruited from Ireland and
-Scotland.
-
-PROP. II. Men, able to carry arms, that is from 18 to 56 years, make,
-according to Dr. Halley, the fourth part of a people; and when a people
-increase in numbers, every denomination, as to age, increases in that
-proportion: consequently in England, where the number of inhabitants
-does not exceed six millions, if the annual augmentation upon the whole
-do not exceed 18,000, as I am pretty sure it does not, the yearly
-augmentation of those fit to carry arms will be only 4,500.
-
-PROP. III. In England, burials are to births, as 100 is to 113. I
-suppose that, in Scotland and Ireland, they may be as 100 is to 124. And
-as there may be, in these two last kingdoms, about two millions and a
-half of inhabitants, the whole augmentation may be stated at 15,000; and
-consequently that, of such as are fit to carry arms, at 3,750. Add this
-number to those annually produced in England, and the sum total of the
-whole augmentation in the British isles will be about 8,250.
-
-PROP. IV. The strangers, who arrive in England, in order to settle, are
-supposed to compensate those who leave the country with the same intent.
-
-PROP. V. It is out of this number of 8,250, that all our losses are to
-be deduced. If the colonies, wars, and navigation, carry off from us
-annually 8,000 men, the British isles cannot augment in people: if we
-lose more, numbers must diminish.
-
-PROP. VI. By calculations, such as they are, our author finds, that,
-upon an average of 66 years, from 1690 to 1756, this number of 8000 have
-been annually lost, that is, have died abroad in the colonies, in war,
-or on the account of navigation.
-
-PROP. VII. That, since the inhabitants of Britain and Ireland are about
-8,000,000, and that the augmentation is annually about 8000, we may
-conclude in general for all Europe, that, for every million of
-inhabitants, there is an annual augmentation of 1000; consequently,
-every thousand men slain in war must destroy all the augmentation of a
-million of inhabitants during a year. Consequently France, which
-contains 14 millions, according to Sir William Petty, having lost above
-14,000 men a-year, during the same 66 years, cannot have augmented in
-population.
-
-PROP. VIII. That the progress of trade and navigation augmenting the
-loss of people by sea, must consequently have diminished population over
-all Europe.
-
-PROP. IX. The exportation of our corn proves what the above propositions
-have demonstrated. For supposing the progress of agriculture to
-compensate the additional quantity distilled of late years, there is
-still 1⁄6 of the crop exported, which proves that our numbers are small,
-and that they do not augment.
-
-From these propositions our author concludes, that what stops
-multiplication in the British isles is, 1st, That living in celibacy is
-become a-la-mode: 2dly, That wars have been carried on beyond the
-nation’s force: 3dly, That the use of spirituous liquors destroys great
-numbers of inhabitants.
-
-I shall now shortly apply the principles I have been laying down, in
-order to resolve every phenomenon here described, as to the population
-of Great Britain. These I shall willingly take for granted, as it is of
-no consequence to my reasoning, whether they be exact or not: it is
-enough that they may be so; and the question here is only to account for
-them.
-
-England, says he, would diminish in numbers, were it not recruited from
-Scotland and Ireland. This, I say, is a contingent, not a certain
-consequence: for did those grown-up adventurers cease to come in, the
-inhabitants of England themselves would undoubtedly multiply, provided
-an additional number of breeders could be found, able to bring up their
-children. Now the importation of grown men into a country in so far
-resembles the importation of slaves into our colonies, that the one and
-the other diminishes the price of labour, and thereby prevents marriage
-among certain classes of the natives, whose profits are not sufficient
-for bringing up a family: and when any such do marry notwithstanding,
-they do not multiply, as has been said. Now were the Scots and Irish to
-come no more into England, the price of labour would rise; those who now
-cannot bring up children, might then be enabled to do it, and this would
-make the English multiply themselves; that is, it would augment the
-number of their own breeders. On the other hand, did the price of labour
-continue too low to prove a sufficient encouragement for an additional
-number of English breeders, the contingent consequence would take place;
-that is, numbers would diminish, according to our author’s supposition,
-and the exportation of grain would increase, in proportion to that
-diminution; and did foreign demand for grain also diminish, then
-agriculture would suffer, and every thing would decline: but of this
-more as we go along.
-
-The representation he gives of the state of population in these
-countries, is one modification of what I have called a moral incapacity
-of a people’s increasing in numbers. It is just so in Africa, where the
-inhabitants are sold; just so in Switzerland, and in many mountainous
-countries, where inhabitants desert, in order to seek their fortunes
-elsewhere. The national stock remains at an equal standard, and the
-augmentation upon births above burials is constantly in proportion to
-the exportation of inhabitants. Let this proportion rise ever so high,
-an increase of national population is noways essentially to be implied
-from this phenomenon alone, but must proceed from other causes.
-
-I can find nothing advanced by our author to prove, or even to induce
-one to believe, that had the lives of those eight thousands been yearly
-preserved from extraordinary dangers, numbers would have augmented.
-England enjoyed in a manner 26 years peace after the treaty of Utrecht.
-For many years before, a very destructive war had been carried on. Had
-the bills of births been produced from 1701 to 1713, had they been
-compared with those from this last period to 1739, when the Spanish war
-began, had we seen a gradual augmentation from year to year during those
-last 26 years, such as might be expected from the preservation of a
-considerable number at least of the 8,250 able healthy men, just in the
-period of life fit for propagation, one might be tempted to conclude,
-that the preceding war had done hurt to population, by interrupting the
-propagation of the species. But if, by comparing the bills of births for
-a considerable number of years, in war and in peace, one can discover no
-sensible difference, it is very natural to conclude, either that those
-wars did not destroy many breeders, or that others must have slipt in
-directly, and bred in the place of those who had been killed. What
-otherwise can be the reason why the number which our author supposes to
-have been destroyed abroad, should so exactly compensate the annual
-augmentation, but only that those nations are stocked to the full
-proportion of their subsistence: and what is the reason why, after a
-destructive war, which, by the suddenness of the revolution, sweeps off
-numbers of the grown men, and diminishes the original stock, numbers
-should in a few years get up to the former standard, and then stop
-a-new.
-
-From our author’s representation of the bills of births and deaths, I
-should be apt to suspect, in consequence of my principles, that upon a
-proper examination it would be found, that, in those years of war, the
-proportion of births to deaths had been higher than in years of peace,
-because more had died abroad. And, had the slaughter of the inhabitants
-gone gradually on, increasing every year beyond the 8,250, I am of
-opinion, that the proportion of births might very possibly have kept
-pace with it. On the contrary, during the years of peace, the proportion
-should have diminished, and had nobody died out of the country at all,
-the births and deaths would have become exactly equal.
-
-From what I have here said, the reader may perceive, that it is not
-without reason that I have treated the principles relating to my subject
-in general, and that I avoid as much as possible to reason from facts
-alledged as to the state of particular countries. Those our author
-builds upon may be true, and may be false: the proportion of births and
-deaths in one place is no rule for another; we know nothing exactly
-about the state of this question in the British isles; and it may even
-daily vary, from a thousand circumstances. War _may_ destroy population
-as well as agriculture, and it _may not_, according to circumstances.
-When the calamity falls upon the breeders, and when these are supposed
-the only people in the country in a capacity of bringing up their
-children, births will soon diminish. When it destroys the indigent, who
-cannot bring up their children, or who do not marry, births will remain
-the same. The killing the wethers of a flock of sheep does not diminish
-the brood of lambs next year; the killing of old pigeons makes a
-pigeon-house thrive. When the calamity falls upon the farmers, who make
-our lands produce, agriculture is hurt, no doubt: does it fall upon the
-superfluities of cities, and other classes of the free hands, it may
-diminish manufacturers, but agriculture will go on, while there is a
-demand for its produce; and if a diminution of consumption at home be a
-consequence of the war, the augmentation upon exportation will more than
-compensate it. I do not find that war _diminishes_ the demand for
-subsistence.
-
-The long wars in Flanders in the beginning of this century interrupted
-agriculture now and then, but did not destroy it. That in the Palatinate
-in the end of the last ruined the country so, that it has hardly as yet
-recovered it. War has different effects, according to circumstances.
-
-OBJ. The population of the British isles is not stopt for want of food,
-because one-sixth part of the crop is annually exported. I answer, That
-it is still stopt for want of food, for the exportation only marks that
-the home demand is satisfied; but this does not prove that the
-inhabitants are full fed, although they can buy no more at the
-exportation-price. Those who cannot buy, are exactly those who I say die
-for want of subsistence: could they buy, they would live and multiply,
-and no grain perhaps would be exported. This is a plain consequence of
-my reasoning; and my principal point in view throughout this whole book,
-is to find out a method for enabling those to buy who at present cannot,
-and who therefore do not multiply; because they can give no equivalent
-to the farmers for their superfluity, which consequently they export. By
-this application of our principles, I have no occasion to call in
-question our author’s facts. It is no matter what be the state of the
-case: if the principles I lay down be just, they must resolve every
-phenomenon.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XVI.
- _Why are some Countries found very populous in respect of others,
- equally well calculated for Improvement?_
-
-
-This question comes immediately under the influence of the principles
-already laid down, and must be resolved in consequence of them. It is
-with a view to make the application of these, that I have proposed it;
-and, in the examination, we shall prove their justness, or discover
-their defects.
-
-It may be answered in general, that every such difference must proceed
-from what I call the spirit of the government and of the people, which
-will not only decide as to numbers, but as to many other things. I must
-however observe, that the question in itself is of little importance, if
-nothing but numbers be considered; for of what consequence is it to know
-how many people are in a country, when the employment of them does not
-enter into the inquiry? Besides, it is only by examining the employment
-of a people, that I can form any judgment as to this particular. But as
-the numbers of mankind have been thought a point worthy of examination,
-I have chosen this title for a chapter, which might perhaps have more
-properly stood under another.
-
-While slavery prevailed, I see no reason to conclude against the numbers
-of mankind, as I have said already: when slavery was abolished, and
-before industry took place, if my principles be true that period I think
-should mark the time of the thinnest population in Europe; for I believe
-it will be found, that there never was an example of a country, however
-fertile by nature, where every one was absolutely free; where there was
-little or no industry, nor labour, but in agriculture; and where, at the
-same time, there were many inhabitants, not beggars, nor living upon
-charity. I have mentioned this so often, that I am afraid of tiring my
-reader with useless repetitions. I have brought it in here, only to give
-him an opportunity of applying this principle to the solution of the
-question before us.
-
-I shall begin my inquiry by asking what is understood by a country’s
-being populous; for that term presents different ideas, if circumstances
-are not attended to. I have heard it said, that France was a desert, and
-that there was nobody found in it but in towns; while in England one
-cannot travel half a mile without finding a farm, perhaps two together;
-and in looking round, one sees the whole country divided into small
-possessions. The difference here found, I apprehend, decides nothing in
-favour of, or against the real populousness of the one or the other, but
-proceeds entirely from circumstances relative to agriculture, and to the
-distribution of free hands. These circumstances will be better
-understood from the examination of facts, than from the best theory in
-the world. Let one consider the state of agriculture in Picardy and in
-Beauce, and then compare it with the practice in many provinces in
-England, and the contrast will appear striking. Were there more forest
-in England, to supply the inhabitants with fuel, I imagine many
-inclosures, useful at first for improving the grounds, would be taken
-away, and the country laid more open; were wolves less common in France,
-there would be found more scattered farms. Cattle there must be shut up
-in the night, and cannot be left in the fields; this is a great
-discouragement to inclosing. Where there are no inclosures, there are
-few advantages to be found from establishing the farm-house exactly upon
-the spot of ground to be laboured; and then the advantages which result
-to certain classes of inhabitants, from being gathered together, the
-farmers with the tradesmen, are found to preponderate. Thus the French
-farmers are gathered into villages, and the English remain upon their
-fields. But farther, in Picardy and Beauce agriculture has been long
-established, and, I imagine, that, at the time when lands were first
-broken up, or rather improved, their habitations must have been closer
-together.
-
-This drawing together of inhabitants must leave many ruinous
-possessions, and this, by the by, is one reason why people cry out upon
-the desolation of France, because ruinous houses (which may often times
-be a mark of improvement, not of desertion) are found in different
-places in the country. Paris has grown considerably in bulk, and from
-this it naturally happens, that the country round is purged of idle
-mouths. If this makes labour dear in the country, it is the city alone
-which suffers by it, the country must certainly be the gainers. So much
-for two species of population in two of the best inhabited countries of
-Europe. I now come to another in one of the worst.
-
-In some countries you find every farm-house surrounded with small huts,
-possessed by numbers of people, supposed to be useful to the farmer.
-These in Scotland are called cottars, (cottagers) because they live in
-cottages. If you consider them in a political light, they will appear to
-be inhabitants appropriated for agriculture. In one sense they are so,
-if by that you understand the gathering in of the fruits; in another
-they are not, if by agriculture you understand the turning up the
-surface. I bring in this example, and shall enlarge a little upon it,
-because I imagine it to be, less or more, the picture of Europe 400
-years ago.
-
-The Scotch farmer must have hands to gather in a scanty produce, spread
-over a large extent of ground. He has six cottars, I shall suppose; but
-these cottars must have wives, and these wives will have children, and
-all must be fed before the master’s rent can be paid. It never comes
-into the cottar’s head to suppose that his children can gain money by
-their labour; the farmer never supposes that it is possible for him to
-pay his rent without the assistance of his cottars to tend his cattle,
-and gather in his crop; and the master cannot go against the custom of
-the country, without laying his land waste. All these children are ready
-at the farmer’s disposal; he can, without any expence, send what parcels
-of sheep he pleases, to different distances of half a mile or more, to
-feed upon spots of ground which, without the conveniency of these
-children, would be entirely lost. By this plan of farming, landlords who
-have a great extent of country which they are not able to improve, can
-let the whole in a very few farms, and at the same time all the
-spontaneous produce of the earth is gathered in and consumed. If you
-compare the rent of these lands with the extent, it appears very small;
-if you compare it with the numbers fed upon the farm, you will find that
-an estate in the highlands maintains, perhaps, ten times as many people
-as another of the same value in a good and fertile province. Thus it is
-in some estates as in some convents of the begging order, the more
-mouths the better cheer.
-
-I shall now suppose our modern policy to inspire an ingenious or public
-spirited lady to set up a weaver or two at a farm-house. The cottars
-begin to spin; they will be a long time in attaining to a dexterity
-sufficient to appear at the weaver’s house, in competition with others
-who are accustomed to the trade; consequently this manufacture will be
-long in a languishing condition; but if the undertaking is supported
-with patience, these obstacles will be got the better of. Those who
-tended herds of cattle for a poor maintenance, will turn themselves to a
-more profitable occupation; the farmer will find more difficulty in
-getting hands, he will complain, perhaps give way; the master will lose
-a year’s rent, and no body will take so extensive a farm; it must be
-divided, then it must be improved, and then it produces more grain upon
-one tenth, than perhaps formerly was produced upon the whole. This grain
-is bought with the price of spinning; the parents divide with the
-children, who are fed, and spin in their turn. When this is
-accomplished, what is the revolution? Why, formerly the earth fed all
-the inhabitants with her spontaneous productions, as I may call them;
-now more labour is exercised upon turning up her surface, this she pays
-in grain, which belongs to the strong man for his labour and toil; women
-and children have no direct share, because they have not contributed
-thereto, as they did in feeding cattle. But they spin, and have money to
-buy what they have not force to produce; consequently they live; but as
-they become useless as cottars, they remove from their mother earth, and
-gather into villages. When this change is effected the lands appear less
-inhabited; ruinous huts (nay, villages I may call them) are found
-frequently, and many would be apt to conclude, that the country is
-depopulated; but this is by no means found to be the case, when the
-whole is taken together.
-
-The spirit therefore of the principal people of a country determines the
-employment of the lower classes; the employment of these determines
-their usefulness to the state, and their usefulness, their
-multiplication. The more they are useful, the more they gain, according
-to the definition of the contract of society; the more they gain, the
-more they can feed; and consequently the more they will marry and divide
-with their children. This increases useful population, and encourages
-agriculture. Compare the former with the present situation, as to
-numbers, as to ease, as to happiness!
-
-Is it not plain, that when the earth is not improved it cannot produce
-so much nourishment for man as when it is? On the other hand, if
-industry does not draw into the hands of the indigent, wherewith to
-purchase this additional nourishment, no body will be at a considerable
-first expence to break up grounds in order to produce it. The
-withdrawing therefore a number of hands from a trifling agriculture
-forces, in a manner, the husbandman to work the harder; and by hard
-labour upon a small spot, the same effect is produced as with slight
-labour upon a great extent.
-
-I have said, that I imagined the state of agriculture in the Scotch
-farm, was a pretty just representation of the general state of Europe
-about 400 years ago: if not in every province of every country, at least
-in every country for the most part. Several reasons induce me to think
-so: first, where there is no industry, nothing but the earth directly
-can feed her children, little alienation of her fruits can take place.
-Next, because I find a wonderful analogy between the way of living in
-some provinces of different countries with what I have been describing.
-Pipers, blue bonnets, and oat meal, are known in Swabia, Auvergne,
-Limousin, and Catalonia, as well as in Lochaber: numbers of idle, poor,
-useless hands, multitudes of children, whom I have found to be fed, no
-body knows how, doing nothing at the age of fourteen, keeping of cattle
-and going to school, the only occupations supposed possible for them. If
-you ask why they are not employed, they tell you because commerce is not
-in the country: they talk of commerce as if it was a man, who comes to
-reside in some countries in order to feed the inhabitants. The truth is,
-it is not the fault of these poor people, but of those whose business it
-is to find out employment for them.
-
-Another reason I derive from the nature of the old tenures, where we
-find lands which now produce large quantities of grain, granted for a
-mere trifle, when at the same time others in the neighbourhood of cities
-and abbies are found charged with considerable prestations. This I
-attribute to the bad cultivation of lands at that time, From which I
-infer, a small population. In those days of trouble and confusion,
-confiscations were very frequent, large tracts of lands were granted to
-the great lords upon different revolutions, and these finding them often
-deserted, as is mentioned in history, (the vassals of the former, being
-either destroyed or driven out to make place for the new comers) used to
-parcel them out for small returns in every thing but personal service.
-Such sudden and violent revolutions must dispeople a country; and
-nothing but tranquillity, security, order and industry, for ages
-together, can render it populous.
-
-Besides these natural causes of population and depopulation (which
-proceed, as we have observed, from a certain turn given to the spirit of
-a people) there are others which operate with irresistible force, by
-sudden and violent revolutions. The King of Prussia, for example,
-attempted to people a country all at once, by profiting of the desertion
-of the Saltzburgers. America is become very poorly peopled in some spots
-upon the coast, and in some islands, at the expence of the exportation
-of millions from Europe and from Africa; such methods never can succeed
-in proportion to the attempt. Spain, on the other hand, was depopulated
-by the expulsion of its anti-christian inhabitants. These causes work
-evident effects, which there is little occasion to explain, although the
-more remote consequences of them may deserve observation. I shall, in
-another place, have occasion to examine the manner of our peopling
-America. In this place, I shall make a few observations upon the
-depopulation of Spain, and finish my chapter.
-
-That country is said to have been antiently very populous under the
-government of the Moors. I am not sufficiently versed in the politics,
-oeconomy and manners of that people, to judge how far these might be
-favourable to population: what seems, however, to confirm what we are
-told, is, the large repositories they used for preserving grain, which
-still remain entire, though never once made use of. They watered the
-kingdoms of Valencia, Murcia and Granada. They gathered themselves into
-cities of which we still can discover the extent. The country which they
-now possess (though drier than Spain) furnishes Europe with considerable
-quantities of grain. The palace of the Moorish King at Granada, shews a
-taste for luxury. The mosque of Cordoua speaks a larger capital. All
-these are symptoms of population, but they only help one to guess. The
-numbers which history mentions to have been driven out, is a better way
-still of judging, if the fidelity of historians could be depended upon,
-when there is any question about numbers.
-
-Here was an example of a country depopulated in a very extraordinary
-manner: yet I am of opinion, that the scarcity of inhabitants complained
-of in that country, for a long time after the expulsion, did not so much
-proceed from the effects of the loss sustained, as from the contract
-between the spirit of those christians who remained after the expulsion,
-and their catholic deliverers. The christians who lived among the Moors,
-were really Moors as to manners, though not as to religion. Had they
-adopted the spirit of the subjects of Castile, or had they been governed
-according to their own, numbers would soon have risen to the former
-standard. But as the christian lord governed his Murcian, Andalousian,
-and Granada subjects, according to the principles of christian policy,
-was it any wonder that in such an age of ignorance, prejudice, and
-superstition, the country (one of the finest in the world) should be
-long in recovering? Recover, however, it did; and sooner perhaps than is
-commonly believed: for I say it was recovered so soon as all the flat
-and watered lands were brought into cultivation; because I have reason
-to believe that the Moors never carried their agriculture farther in
-these southern provinces.
-
-From this I still conclude, that no destruction of inhabitants by
-expulsion, captivity, war, pestilence or famine, is so permanently
-hurtful to population, as a revolution in that spirit which is necessary
-for the increase and support of numbers. Let that spirit be kept up, and
-let mankind be well governed, numbers will quickly increase to their
-former standard, after the greatest reduction possible: and while they
-are upon the augmenting hand, the state will be found in more heart and
-more vigour, than when arrived even at the former height; for so soon as
-a state ceases to grow in prosperity, I apprehend it begins to decay
-both in health and vigour.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XVII.
-_In what Manner and according to what Proportion do Plenty and Scarcity
- affect a People?_
-
-
-In a former chapter I have examined this question, relatively to mankind
-fed by the hand of nature: I now come nearer home, and shall keep close
-to modern times, considering circumstances and effects which by daily
-experience we see and feel.
-
-I have often said, that numbers are in proportion to the produce of the
-earth. I now say, that in most countries of Europe, the food produced in
-the country is _nearly_ consumed by the inhabitants: and by _nearly_ I
-understand, that the part exported bears a small proportion to the
-home-consumption. I do by no means establish this as an universal
-proposition; but I say it is true _for the most part_: and the intention
-of this chapter is to enable us to judge how far these limitations
-should extend. I allow, for example, that Holland, not producing food
-for its inhabitants, must draw it from some country which produces a
-superfluity, regularly: but let it be observed that Poland, Germany,
-Flanders, and England, with many other countries, contribute their
-contingents to supply the demand of the Dutch; and of several large
-trading towns which have small territories. This being the case, the
-quota furnished by each country, must be in a small proportion to the
-respective quantity growing in it. But these are general conclusions
-upon vague suppositions, which throw no light on the question. I shall
-therefore endeavour to apply our reasoning to facts, and then examine
-consequences.
-
-There are few countries, I believe, in Europe more abounding in grain
-than England: I shall therefore keep that kingdom in my eye while I
-examine this matter. Nothing is more common than to hear that an
-abundant crop furnishes more than three years subsistence: nay, I have
-found it advanced by an author of consideration, (Advantages and
-disadvantages of France and Great Britain, &c. article Grain) that a
-plentiful year produces five years nourishment for the inhabitants. If
-this be a mistake, it may prove a very hurtful one in many respects. I
-am, on the contrary, apt to believe, that no annual produce of grain
-ever was so great in England as to supply its inhabitants fifteen
-months, _in that abundance with which they feed themselves in a year of
-plenty_. If this be the case, at what may we compute the surplus in
-ordinary good years? I believe it will be thought a very good year which
-produces _full_ subsistence for fifteen months; and crops which much
-exceed this are, I believe, very rare. Here follow my reasons for
-differing so widely from the gentleman whom I have cited. If I am in the
-wrong, I shall have the most sensible pleasure in being set right; and
-nothing will be so easy to any one who has access to be better informed
-as to facts than I can pretend to be.
-
-I consider all the yearly crop of grain in England as consumed at home,
-except what is exported; for I cannot admit that any considerable
-quantity is lost: that it may be abused, misapplied, drank when it
-should be eat, I do not deny. These are questions which do not regard
-the present inquiry. Whether therefore it be consumed in bread, beer,
-spirits, or by animals, I reckon it consumed; and in a year when the
-greatest consumption is made at home, this I call _the abundance with
-which the inhabitants feed themselves in years of plenty_. Now I find in
-the performance above cited, a state of exportations for five years,
-from 1746 to 1750 inclusive, where the quantity exported amounts in all
-to 5,289,847 quarters of all sorts of grain. This is not one year’s
-provision, according to Sir William Petty’s calculation, of which we
-have made mention above. The bounties upon corn (continues the author
-abovementioned) have amounted in one year to 500,000_l._ sterling. He
-does not mention the year, and I am little able to dispute that matter
-with him. I suppose it to be true; and still farther, let it be
-understood that the whole exportation was made out of the produce of one
-crop. I do not find that this sum answers to the bounty upon 3,000,000
-of quarters, which, according to Sir William Petty, make six months
-provision. I calculate thus. The bounty upon wheat is 5_s._ a quarter,
-that upon rye 3_s._ 6_d._ that upon barley 2_s._ 6_d._ these are the
-species of grain commonly exported: cast the three premiums together,
-and divide by three, the bounty will come to 3_s._ 8_d._ at a medium; at
-which rate 500,000_l._ sterling will pay the bounty of 2,727,272
-quarters of grain. An immense quantity to be exported! but a very
-inconsiderable part of a crop supposed capable to maintain England for
-five years. It may be answered, that the great abundance of a plentiful
-year is considerably diminished when a scanty crop happens to preceed
-it, or to follow upon it. In the first case, it is sooner begun upon; in
-the last, it supplies the consumption in the year of scarcity,
-considerably. This I allow to be just; but as it is not uncommon to see
-a course of good years follow one another, the state of exportation at
-such times must certainly be the best, nay, the only method of judging
-of the real extent of superfluity.
-
-On the other hand, I am apt to believe, that there never was a year of
-such scarcity as that the lands of England did not produce greatly above
-six months subsistence, _such as the people are used to take in years of
-scarcity_. Were six months of the most slender subsistence to fail, I
-imagine all Europe together might perhaps be at a loss to supply a
-quantity sufficient to prevent the greatest desolation by famine.
-
-As I have no access to look into records, I content myself with less
-authentic documents. I find then by the London news-papers, that, from
-the 9th of April to the 13th of August 1757, while great scarcity was
-felt in England, there were declared in the port of London no more than
-71,728 quarters of wheat, of which 15,529 were not then arrived. So that
-the whole quantity there imported to relieve the scarcity, was 56,199
-quarters. Not one month’s provision for the inhabitants of that city,
-reckoning them at 800,000 souls! One who has access to look into the
-registers of the trade in grain, might in a moment determine this
-question.
-
-Another reason which induces me to believe what the above arguments seem
-to prove, I draw from what I see at present passing in Germany; I mean
-the universal complaints of scarcity in those armies which are now
-assembled, [1757] When we compare the numbers of an army, let it be of a
-hundred thousand men, suppose the suite of it to be as many more, and
-forty thousand horses, all strangers, (for the others I reckon nothing
-extraordinary) what an inconsiderable number does this appear, in
-proportion to the inhabitants of this vast country of Germany! Yet let
-us observe the quantity of provisions of all sorts constantly coming
-down the Rhine, the Moselle, and many other rivers, collected from
-foreign provinces on all hands; the numbers of cattle coming from
-Hungary; the loads of corn from Poland; and all this in a year which has
-produced what at any other time would have been called an excellent
-crop. After these foreign supplies, must not one be astonished to find
-scarcity complained of in the provinces where the war is carried on, and
-high prices every where else. From such circumstances I must conclude,
-that people are generally very much deceived in their estimation of
-plenty and scarcity, when they talk of two or three years subsistence
-for a country being found upon their lands at once. I may indeed be
-mistaken in my conclusions; but the more I have reflected upon this
-subject, the more I find myself confirmed in them, even from the
-familiar examples of the sudden rise of markets from very inconsiderable
-monopolies, and of their sudden fall by inconsiderable quantities
-imported. I could cite many examples of these vicissitudes, were it
-necessary, to prove what every one must observe.
-
-I come now to resolve a difficulty which naturally results from this
-doctrine, and with which I shall close the chapter.
-
-If it be true, that a crop in the most plentiful year is nearly consumed
-by the inhabitants, what becomes of them in years of scarcity; for
-nobody can deny, that there is a great difference between one crop and
-another. To this I answer, first, That I believe there is also a very
-great deceit, or common mistake, as to the difference between crops: a
-good year for one soil, is a bad one for another. But I shall not
-enlarge on this; because I have no sufficient proof of my opinion. The
-principal reason upon which I found it, is, that it is far from being
-true, that the same number of people consume always the same quantity of
-food. In years of plenty every one is well fed; the price of the lowest
-industry can procure subsistence sufficient to bear a division; food is
-not so frugally managed; a quantity of animals are fatted for use; all
-sorts of cattle are kept in good heart; and people drink more largely,
-because all is cheap. A year of scarcity comes, the people are ill fed,
-and when the lower classes come to divide with their children, the
-portions are brought to be very small; there is great oeconomy upon
-consumption, few animals are fatted for use, cattle look miserably, and
-a poor man cannot indulge himself with a cup of generous ale. Add to all
-these circumstances, that in England the produce of pasture is very
-considerable, and it commonly happens, that a bad year for grain, which
-proceeds from rains, is for the same reason a good year for pasture; and
-in the estimation of a crop, every circumstance must be allowed to
-enter.
-
-From what has been said I must conclude in general, that the best corn
-country in the world, provided slavery be not established, does not
-produce wherewithal fully to maintain, as in years of plenty, one third
-more than its own inhabitants; for if this should be the case, all the
-policy of man would not be able to prevent the multiplication of them,
-until they arose nearly up to the mean proportion of the produce in
-ordinary years, and it is only what exceeds this standard, and proceeds
-from unusual plenty, which can be exported. Were plentiful years more
-common, mankind would be more numerous; were scarcity more frequent,
-numbers would be less. Numbers therefore must ever be, in my humble
-opinion, in the ratio of food, and multiplication will never stop until
-the balance comes to be nearly even.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XVIII.
- _Of the Causes and Consequences of a Country’s being fully peopled._
-
-
-In the titles of my chapters, I rather seek to communicate a rough idea
-of the subject than a correct one. In truth and in reason, there is no
-such thing as a country actually peopled to the full, if by this term
-numbers only are meant, without considering the proportion they bear to
-the consumption they make of the productions of their country. I have in
-a former chapter established a distinction between the physical and
-moral impossibility of increasing numbers. As to the physical
-impossibility, the case can hardly exist, because means of procuring
-subsistence from other countries, when the soil refuses to give more,
-seem, if not inexhaustible, at least very extensive. A country therefore
-fully peopled, that is, in a physical impossibility of increasing their
-numbers, is a chimerical and useless supposition. The subject here under
-consideration is, the situation of a people, who find it their interest
-to seek for subsistence from abroad. This may happen, and commonly does,
-long before the country itself is fully improved: it decides nothing as
-to the intrinsic fertility of the soil, and proves no more, than that
-the industry of the free hands has made a quicker progress in
-multiplying mouths, than that of the farmers in providing subsistence.
-To illustrate this idea, let me propose the following question.
-
-Is multiplication the efficient cause of agriculture, or is agriculture
-that of multiplication?
-
-I answer, that multiplication is the efficient cause of agriculture,
-though I allow, that, in the infancy of society, the spontaneous fruits
-of the earth, which are free to all, are the efficient cause of a
-multiplication, which may rise to the exact proportion of them; as has
-been said above. This must be explained.
-
-I have already distinguished the fruits of agriculture from the earth’s
-spontaneous production: I must farther take notice, that when I employ
-the term agriculture in treating of modern policy, I always consider it
-to be exercised as a trade, and producing a surplus, and not as the
-direct means of subsisting, where all is consumed by the husbandman, as
-has been fully explained above. We have said, that it is the surplus
-produced from it, which proves a fund for multiplying inhabitants. Now
-there must be a demand for this surplus. Every person who is hungry will
-make a demand, but every such demand will not be answered, and will
-consequently have no effect. The demander must have an equivalent to
-give: it is this equivalent which is the spring of the whole machine;
-for without _that_ the farmer will not produce any surplus, and
-consequently he will dwindle down to the class of those who labour for
-actual subsistence. The poor, who produce children, make an ineffectual
-demand, and when they cannot increase the equivalent, they divide the
-food they have with the new comers, and prove no encouragement to
-agriculture. By dividing, the whole become ill fed, miserable, and thus
-extinguish. Now because it is the _effectual_ demand, as I may call it,
-which makes the husbandman labour for the sake of the equivalent, and
-because this demand increases, by the multiplication of those who have
-an equivalent to give, therefore I say that multiplication is the cause,
-and agriculture the effect. On the other hand, I think the spontaneous
-fruits of the earth, as in the supposition, may be considered as the
-cause of a certain limited multiplication; because in that case there is
-no equivalent demanded. The earth produces, whether her fruits be
-consumed or not: mankind are fed upon these gratuitously, and without
-labour, and the existence of the fruits is anterior to the production of
-those who are to consume them. Those who are first fed, draw their
-vigour from their food, and their multiplication from their vigour.
-Those who are produced, live freely upon their parent earth, and
-multiply until all the produce be consumed: then multiplication stops,
-as we have said; _but establish agriculture_, and multiplication will go
-on a-new. Consequently, my reader will say, agriculture is as much the
-cause of this new multiplication, as the spontaneous fruits were of the
-first. Here is a very natural conclusion, which seems directly to
-contradict what we have been endeavouring to prove; but the knot is
-easily untied. We have seen how the existence of agriculture must depend
-upon the industry of man; that is, on the only means _of establishing
-agriculture_: now, as this industry is chiefly promoted by the motive of
-providing for our children, the procreation of them must be considered
-as the first, or at least the most palpable political cause of setting
-mankind to work, and therefore may be considered as anterior to
-agriculture; whereas, on the other hand, the earth’s spontaneous
-productions being in small quantity, and quite independent of man,
-appear, as it were, to be furnished by nature, in the same way as a
-small sum is given to a young man, in order to put him in a way of
-industry, and of making his fortune. The small sum sets him a-going, but
-it is his industry which makes the fortune. From this illustration it
-appears, that if the demand for food can be more readily supplied from
-abroad than from home, it will be the foreign subsistence, which will
-preserve numbers, produced from _industry_, not from _domestic
-agriculture_; and these numbers will, in their turn, produce an
-advancement of it at home, by inspiring a desire in the husbandman to
-acquire the equivalent which their countrymen give to strangers.
-
-Such nations, whose statesmen have not the talent to engage the
-husbandmen to wish for the equivalent, which the labour of their
-fellow-citizens can produce; or, in other words, who cannot create
-reciprocal wants and dependencies among their subjects, must stand in a
-moral incapacity of augmenting in numbers. Of such states we have no
-occasion to treat in this chapter, any more than of those who are
-supposed to be in the physical incapacity of multiplying: our point of
-view is, to examine the natural consequences resulting from a demand for
-subsistence extending itself to foreign countries. This I take to be the
-mother of industry at home, as well as of trade abroad; two objects
-which come to be treated of in the second book.
-
-A country may be fully peopled (in the sense we understand this term) in
-several different ways. It may be fully stocked at one time with six
-millions, and at another may maintain perhaps eight or even nine
-millions with ease, without the soil’s being better cultivated or
-improved. On the other hand, a country may maintain twenty millions with
-ease, and by being improved as to the soil, become overstocked with
-fifteen millions. These two assertions must be explained.
-
-The more frugal a people are, and the more they feed upon the plentiful
-productions of the earth, the more they may increase in numbers.
-
-Were the people of England to come more into the use of living upon
-bread, and give over consuming so much animal food, inhabitants would
-certainly increase, and many rich grass fields would be thrown into
-tillage. Were the French to give over eating so much bread, the Dutch so
-much fish, the Flemish so much garden stuff, and the Germans so much
-sourkraut, and all take to the English diet of pork, beef, and mutton,
-their respective numbers would soon decay, let them improve their
-grounds to the utmost. These are but reflections, by the by, which the
-reader may enlarge upon at pleasure. The point in hand is, to know what
-are the consequences of a country’s being so peopled, no matter from
-what cause, that the soil, in its actual state of fertility, refuses to
-supply a sufficient quantity of such food as the inhabitants incline to
-live upon. These are different according to the diversity of spirit in
-the people.
-
-If they be of an indolent disposition, directed in their political
-oeconomy by established habits and old prejudices, which prevent
-innovations, although a change of circumstances may demand them, the
-effect will be to put a stop to population; which cannot augment without
-an increase of food on one hand, and of industry on the other, to make
-the first circulate. These must go hand in hand: the precedence between
-them is a matter of mere curiosity and speculation.
-
-If, on the contrary, a spirit of industry has brought the country to a
-certain degree of population, this spirit will not be stopt by the want
-of food; it will be brought from foreign countries, and this new demand,
-by diminishing among them the quantity usually produced for their own
-subsistence, will prompt the industrious to improve their lands, in
-order to supply the new demand without any hurt to themselves. Thus
-trade has an evident tendency towards the improvement of the world in
-general, by rendering the inhabitants of one country industrious, in
-order to supply the wants of another, without any prejudice to
-themselves. Let us make a step further.
-
-The country fully stocked can offer in exchange for this food, nothing
-but the superfluity of the industry of the free hands, for that of the
-farmers is supposed to be consumed by the society; except indeed some
-species of nourishment or productions, which, being esteemed at a higher
-value in other countries than in those which produce them, bring a more
-considerable return than the value of what is exported, as when raw silk
-and delicate wines, &c. are given in exchange for grain and other
-provisions.
-
-The superfluity of industry must, therefore, form the principal part of
-exportation, and if the nation fully stocked be surrounded by others
-which abound in grain and articles of subsistence, where the inhabitants
-have a taste for elegance, and are eager of acquiring the manufactures
-and improvements of their industrious neighbours; it is certain, that a
-trade with such nations will very considerably increase the inhabitants
-of the other, though fully stocked, relatively to the production of
-their own soil; and the additional numbers will only increase that of
-manufacturers, not of husbandmen. This is the case with Holland, and
-with many large trading cities which are free and have but a small
-territory.
-
-If, on the contrary, the nation fully stocked be in the neighbourhood of
-others who take the same spirit as itself, this supply of food will
-become in time more difficult to be had, in proportion as their
-neighbours come to supply their own wants. They must therefore seek for
-it at a greater distance, and as soon as the expence of procuring it
-comes to exceed the value of the labour of the free hands employed in
-producing the equivalent, their work will cease to be exported, and the
-number of inhabitants will be diminished to the proportion of the
-remaining food.
-
-I do not say that trade will cease on this account; by no means. Trade
-may still go on, and even be more considerable than before; but it will
-be a trade which never can increase inhabitants, because for this
-purpose there must be subsistence. It may have however numberless and
-great advantages: it may greatly advance the wealth of the state, and
-this will purchase even power and strength. A trading nation may live in
-profound peace at home, and send war and confusion among her enemies,
-without even employing her own subjects. Thus trade without increasing
-the inhabitants of a country can greatly add to its force, by arming
-those hands which she has not fed, and employing them for her service.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XIX.
- _Is the Introduction of Machines into Manufactures prejudicial to the
- Interest of a State, or hurtful to Population?_
-
-
-This I find has been made a question in modern times. The antients held
-in great veneration the inventors of the saw, of the lathe, of the
-wimble, of the potters wheel; but some moderns find an abuse in bringing
-mechanism to perfection: (see _Les Interets de la France mal entendus_,
-p. 272. 313.) the great Montesquieu finds fault with water mills, though
-I do not find that he has made any objection against the use of the
-plow.
-
-Did people understand one another, it would be impossible that such
-points could suffer a dispute among men of sense; but the circumstances
-referred to, or presupposed, which authors almost always keep in their
-eye, though they seldom express them, render the most evident truths
-susceptible of opposition.
-
-It is hardly possible suddenly to introduce the smallest innovation into
-the political oeconomy of a state, let it be ever so reasonable, nay
-ever so profitable, without incurring some inconveniencies. A room
-cannot be swept without raising dust, one cannot walk abroad without
-dirtying one’s shoes; neither can a machine, which abridges the labour
-of men, be introduced _all at once_ into an extensive manufacture,
-without throwing many people into idleness.
-
-In treating every question of political oeconomy, I constantly suppose a
-statesman at the head of government, systematically conducting every
-part of it, so as to prevent the vicissitudes of manners, and
-innovations, from hurting any interest within the commonwealth, by their
-natural and immediate effects or consequences. When a house within a
-city becomes crazy, it is taken down; this I call systematical ruin:
-were it allowed to fall, the consequences might be fatal in many
-respects. In like manner, if a number of machines are all at once
-introduced into the manufactures of an industrious nation, (in
-consequence of that freedom which must necessarily be indulged to all
-sorts of improvement, and without which a state cannot thrive) it
-becomes the business of the statesman to interest himself so far in the
-consequences, as to provide a remedy for the inconveniencies resulting
-from the sudden alteration. It is farther his duty to make every
-exercise even of liberty and refinement an object of government and
-administration; not so as to discourage or to check them, but to prevent
-the revolution from affecting the interests of the different classes of
-the people, whose welfare he is particularly bound to take care of.
-
-The introduction of machines can, I think, in no other way prove hurtful
-by making people idle, than by the suddenness of it: and I have
-frequently observed, that all sudden revolutions, let them be ever so
-advantageous, must be accompanied with inconveniencies. A safe,
-honourable, and lasting peace, after a long, dangerous, and expensive
-war, forces a number of hands to be idle, and deprives them of bread.
-Peace then may be considered as a machine for defending a nation, at the
-political loss of making an army idle; yet no body, I believe, will
-alledge that in order to give bread to soldiers, sutlers, and
-undertakers, the war should be continued. But here I must observe, that
-it seems to be a palpable defect in policy, if a statesman shall neglect
-to find out a proper expedient (at whatever first expence it may be
-procured) for giving bread to those who, at the risk of their lives,
-have gone through so many fatigues for the service of their country.
-This expence should be charged to the account of the war, and a state
-ought to consider, that as their safety required that numbers should be
-taken out of the way of securing to themselves a lasting fund of
-subsistence, which would have rendered them independent of every body,
-(supposing that to have been the case) she becomes bound by the contract
-of society, which ties all together, to find them employment. Let me
-seek for another illustration concerning this matter.
-
-I want to make a rampart cross a river, in order to establish a bridge,
-a mill, a sluice, &c. For this purpose, I must turn off the water, that
-is, stop the river; would it be a good objection against my improvement
-to say, that the water would overflow the neighbouring lands, as if I
-could be supposed so improvident as not to have prepared a new channel
-for it? Machines stop the river; it is the business of the state to make
-the new channel, as it is the public which is to reap the benefit of the
-sluice: I imagine what I have said will naturally suggest an answer to
-all possible objections against the introduction of machines; as for the
-advantages of them, they are so palpable that I need not insist upon
-them. There is however one case in which I think they may be disapproved
-of; but it seems a chimerical supposition, and is brought in here for no
-other purpose than to point out and illustrate the principle which,
-influences this branch of our subject.
-
-If you can imagine a country peopled to the utmost extent of the
-fertility of the soil, and absolutely cut off from any communication
-with other nations; all the inhabitants fully employed in supplying the
-wants of one another, the circulation of money going forward regularly,
-proportionally, and uniformly through every vein, as I may call it, of
-the political body; no hidden or extraordinary demand at any time for
-any branch of industry; no redundancy of any employment; no possibility
-of increasing either circulation, industry, or consumption. In such a
-situation as that I should disapprove of the introduction of machines,
-as I disapprove of taking physic in an established state of perfect
-health. I disapprove of a machine only because it is an innovation in a
-state absolutely perfect in these branches of its political oeconomy;
-and where there is perfection there can be no improvement. I farther
-disapprove of it because it might force a man to be idle, who would be
-found thereby in a physical impossibility of getting his bread, in any
-other way than that in which he is supposed to be actually employed.
-
-The present situation of every country in Europe, is so infinitely
-distant from this degree of perfection, that I must consider the
-introduction of machines, and of every method of augmenting the produce
-or facilitating the labour and ingenuity of man, as of the greatest
-utility. Why do people wish to augment population, but in order to
-compass these ends? Wherein does the effect of a machine differ from
-that of new inhabitants?
-
-As agriculture, exercised as a trade, purges the land of idle mouths,
-and pushes them to a new industry which the state may turn to her own
-advantage; so does a machine introduced into a manufacture, purge off
-hands which then become superfluous _in that branch_, and which may
-quickly be employed in another.
-
-If therefore the machine proves hurtful, it can only be because it
-presents the state with an additional number of hands bred to labour;
-consequently, if these are afterwards found without bread, it must
-proceed from a want of attention in the statesman: for an industrious
-man made idle, may constantly be employed to advantage, and with profit
-to him who employs him. What could an act of naturalization do more,
-than furnish industrious hands forced to be idle, and demanding
-employment? Machines therefore I consider as a method of augmenting
-(virtually) the number of the industrious, without the expence of
-feeding an additional number: this by no means obstructs natural and
-useful population, for the most obvious reasons.
-
-We have shewn how population must go on, in proportion to subsistence,
-and in proportion to industry: now the machine eats nothing, so does not
-diminish subsistence, and industry (in our age at least) is in no danger
-of being overstocked in any well governed state; for let all the world
-copy your improvements, they still will be the scholars. And if, on the
-contrary, in the introduction of machines you are found to be the
-scholars of other nations, in that case you are brought to the dilemma
-of accepting the invention with all its inconveniencies, or of
-renouncing every foreign communication.
-
-In speculations of this kind, one ought not, I think, to conclude, that
-experience _must_ of necessity prove what we imagine our reasoning has
-pointed out.
-
-The consequences of innovations in political oeconomy, admit of an
-infinite variety, because of the infinite variety of circumstances which
-attend them: no reasoning, therefore, however refined, can point out a
-priori, what upon such occasions must indispensably follow. The
-experiment must be made, circumstances must be allowed to operate;
-inconveniencies must be prevented or rectified as far as possible; and
-when these prove too many, or too great to be removed, the most
-rational, the best concerted scheme in theory must be laid aside, until
-preparatory steps be taken for rendring it practicable.
-
-Upon the whole, daily experience shews the advantage and improvement
-acquired by the introduction of machines. Let the inconveniencies
-complained of be ever so sensibly felt, let a statesman be ever so
-careless in relieving those who are forced to be idle, all these
-inconveniencies are only temporary; the advantage is permanent, and the
-necessity of introducing every method of abridging labour and expence,
-in order to supply the wants of luxurious mankind, is absolutely
-indispensable, according to modern policy, according to experience, and
-according to reason.
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XX.
- _Miscellaneous Observations upon Agriculture and Population._
-
-
-I have hitherto considered the object of agriculture, as no more than
-the raising of grain; the food of mankind has been estimated by the
-quantity they consume of that production; and husbandmen have been
-supposed to have their residence in the country. As my subject has but
-an indirect connection with the science of agriculture, I have
-simplified many things complex in themselves, the better to adapt them
-to the principal object of my inquiry, and the better to keep my
-attention fixed upon one idea at a time. I am now going to return to
-some parts of my subject, which I think I have treated too
-superficially; and to examine, as I go along, some miscellaneous
-questions which will naturally arise from what is to be said.
-
-[Sidenote: QUEST. I.]
-
-Almost every one who has writ upon population, and upon agriculture,
-considered as an essential concomitant of it, has recommended the equal
-distribution of the property of lands as useful to both: a few
-reflections upon this question, after what has been thrown out in the
-course of the foregoing chapters, may not be improper; more in order to
-examine and apply the principles laid down, than with a view to combat
-the opinion of others.
-
-I have already, upon several occasions, taken notice of the great
-difference between the political oeconomy of the antients, and that of
-modern times; for this reason, among others, that I perceive the
-sentiments of the antients, which were founded upon reason and common
-sense, relative to their situation, have been adopted by some moderns,
-who have not perhaps sufficiently attended to the change of our manners,
-and to the effects which this change must operate upon every thing
-relative to our oeconomy. The antients recommended strongly an equal
-distribution of lands as the best security for liberty, and the best
-method, not only to preserve an equality among the citizens, but also to
-increase their number.
-
-In those days, the citizens did not compose one half of the state
-relatively to numbers; and there was almost no such thing as an
-established monied interest, which can no where be founded but upon
-trade, and an extensive industry. In those days there was no solid
-income but in land: and that being equally divided among the citizens,
-was favourable to their multiplication and produced equality. But in our
-days, riches do not consist in lands only; nay we sometimes find the
-most considerable proprietor of these in very indifferent circumstances;
-loaded with debts, and depending upon the indulgence of men who have not
-an acre, and who are their creditors. Let us therefore divide our lands
-as we please, we shall never produce equality by it. This is an
-essential difference between us and the antients, with respect to one
-point. Now as to the other, population.
-
-The equal division of lands, no doubt, greatly tends to increase the
-numbers of one class of inhabitants, to wit, the landlords. In antient
-times, as has been observed, the chief attention was to increase the
-citizens, that is the higher classes of the state; and the equal
-division of property so effectually produced this effect, that the Greek
-states were obliged to allow the exposition of children; and Aristotle
-looked upon it as a thing indispensably necessary, as M. de Montesquieu
-has very judiciously observed. The multiplication of the lowest classes,
-that is of the slaves, never entered into the consideration of the
-public, but remained purely a matter of private concern; and we find it
-was a question with some, whether or not it was worth while to breed
-from them at all. But in our days the principal object is to support the
-lower classes from their own multiplication, and for this purpose, an
-unequal division of property seems to me the more favourable scheme;
-because the wealth of the rich falls naturally into the pockets of the
-industrious poor; whereas the produce of a very middling fortune, does
-no more than feed the children of the proprietor, who in course become
-very commonly and very naturally an useless burthen upon the land. Let
-me apply this to an example. Do we not familiarly observe, that the
-consolidation of small estates, and the diminution of gentlemens
-families of middling fortunes, do little harm to a modern state. There
-are always abundance of this class of inhabitants to be found whenever
-there is occasion for them. When a great man buys up the lands of the
-neighbouring gentry, or small proprietors, all the complaints which are
-heard, turn upon the distress which thence result to the lower classes,
-from the loss of their masters and protectors; but never one word is
-heard of that made by the state, from the extinction of the former
-proprietor’s family. This abundantly shews that the object of modern
-attention is the multiplication of the lower classes, consequently it
-must be an inconsistency to adopt the practice of the antients, when our
-oeconomy is entirely opposite to theirs.
-
-[Sidenote: QUEST. II.]
-
-Let this suffice to point out how far the difference of our manners
-should influence the division of our lands. I shall now examine a
-question relative to the science of agriculture, not considered as a
-method of improving the soil, (this will come in more naturally
-afterwards) but of making it produce to the best advantage, supposing it
-to be already improved.
-
-In treating of the productions of the earth, in consequence of
-agriculture, I have all along distinguished them from those which
-spontaneously proceed from the force of nature: these are the immediate
-gift of God, those are the return of the labour of his creatures. Every
-one knows that the labour of mankind is not in proportion to their
-numbers, but to their industry. The produce therefore of agriculture
-must be estimated, not according to the quantity of fruits only, but
-also according to the labour employed to produce them. These things
-premised, the question here proposed to be examined arises, viz. Which
-species of agriculture is the most advantageous to a modern society,
-that which produces the greatest quantity of fruits _absolutely_ taken,
-or that which produces the greatest quantity _relatively_ taken, I mean
-to the labour employed?
-
-This question might easily be resolved, in general, by the application
-of principles already deduced; although it cannot admit of a direct
-answer, in the manner I have put it. One, therefore, may say
-indeterminately, that species is the best which produces a surplus the
-best proportioned to the industry, and to the demands of all the free
-hands of the state. But as this solution would not lead me to the object
-I have in view, I have thrown in an alternative in order to gain
-attention to the principles which I am going to examine, and which
-influence and determine the establishment of the one or the other
-species of agriculture.
-
-The principal difficulty I find in the examination of this question, is
-to distinguish the effects of agriculture from those of the spontaneous
-production of the earth. The returns from pasture, for example,
-relatively taken, are, as we have observed, both from reason and from
-experience, far greater than those of corn fields, (vid. supra, chap.
-8.) though I little doubt but that, absolutely taken, the case is quite
-otherwise; that is to say, that an acre of the finest corn land will
-produce more nourishment for man, than an equal portion of the finest
-pasture: but here we are following the proportion of space and produce,
-not of labour; for if the produce of both acres be considered relatively
-to the _labour_ necessary for the cultivation, as well as to the extent;
-the produce of pasture will be found far greater: this however I ascribe
-to the spontaneous operation of nature, and not to the superior utility
-of this kind of agriculture.
-
-Since therefore it is impossible, rightly to separate the effects of
-nature from those of art and industry, in this species of improvement,
-let us confine our speculations to those only which have for their
-object the turning up the surface, and the sowing or cultivating annual
-vegetables. For the better conveying our ideas, let us take an example,
-and reason from a supposition.
-
-Let me suppose an island of a small extent and fruitful soil,
-sufficiently improved, and cultivated after the manner of the best lands
-of England, in the ordinary method of farming.
-
-In that case we may infer, from what was laid down in the 8th chapter,
-that the number of people employed about farming may be nearly about one
-half of the whole society. Let the whole inhabitants of the island be
-called 1000, that is 500 farmers, and as many free hands. The 500
-farmers must then feed 1000; the 500 free hands must provide for all the
-other wants of 1000. By this supposition, and allowing that there is an
-equal degree of industry in these two classes, the providing of food
-will appear to be an occupation just equal to that of providing for all
-other wants. From this let me draw a few consequences, by the by, before
-I proceed.
-
-Experience shews that in all countries there are found many who are here
-understood to be included in the class of free hands, who consumed
-infinitely more of other things than of food; consequently we must
-conclude, that as the wants of some do far exceed the proportion of
-their food, so in order to bring the balance even, the wants of others
-must fall far below it. That this is the case, I believe, will be found
-by experience. Let me follow this thought a little farther.
-
-In proportion as a greater number than one half of the people becomes
-employed in agriculture, must it not follow, that all other work must
-come to bear a smaller proportion than formerly to the food consumed;
-consequently the manner of living must become more simple. Now we have
-shewn that what we call wants, in contradistinction to food, can only be
-supplied by the free hands, and that these again can only be fed from
-the surplus of the farmers; consequently the fewer wants, and the fewer
-free hands, the less surplus, which of course infers an agriculture less
-productive, relatively to the number of farmers. Were, therefore, a
-whole society employed in agriculture, carried on as a direct method of
-subsisting, there would be no surplus, consequently no free hands;
-consequently no work for supplying any want but food. This may be
-thought an impossible supposition. If you suppose agriculture exercised
-as a trade, I allow it to be so, but not if it be carried on as a method
-of subsisting only; and if you throw away the idea of labour altogether,
-and suppose mankind in its infancy, that is in paradise, living upon the
-spontaneous fruits of the earth, and quite naked, you will find the case
-not only supposable, but exactly so. It is exactly so among the cattle:
-every one of them may be considered in a parallel situation with a
-husbandman who works for his own nourishment. They feed upon the
-spontaneous fruits of the earth, and have no surplus; and having no
-other want, they are freed from every other care. Let me return now to
-the island.
-
-The 500 farmers feed 1000; and we suppose the lands laboured as in a
-good English farm. One of the society proposes to augment the number of
-inhabitants by introducing a more operose species of agriculture, the
-produce of which may be _absolutely_ greater, though relatively less.
-
-The first question the statesman would naturally put to this reformer
-would be, What is your view in increasing the number of our inhabitants,
-is it to defend us against our enemies, is it to supply the wants of
-strangers, and thereby to enrich ourselves, is it to supply our own
-_wants_ with more abundance, or is it to provide us more abundantly with
-_food_? I can hardly find out any other rational view in wishing for an
-additional number of people in any country whatsoever. Let it be
-answered, that all these ends may be thereby obtained: and now let us
-examine how far this reformation upon agriculture will have the effect
-of increasing inhabitants, how far such increase will procure the ends
-proposed, and how far the execution of such a plan is a practicable
-scheme to an industrious people.
-
-If the inhabitants be not sufficiently fed, which is the only thing that
-can prevent their multiplication, it must proceed from one of two
-causes. Either _first_, that those do procreate who cannot produce an
-equivalent for the food of their children; or _secondly_, that industry
-making a quicker progress than agriculture, the industrious come too
-strongly in competition with one another, for the surplus of food to be
-found; which has the effect of raising the prices of it, and reducing
-the portions too low to suffer a division; and thereby of preventing
-marriage and multiplication in the lower classes of the free hands.
-
-In the first case, it is to no purpose to increase the produce of
-agriculture, by rendering it more expensive; for those who have no
-equivalent to give when food is cheap, will still be in greater
-necessity when it rises in the price. In the second case, it is to no
-purpose to diminish the surplus of the farmers, because the supposition
-proves that the balance is already too heavy upon the side of the free
-hands, that is, that the surplus of the farmers is already become
-insufficient fully to feed them.
-
-Two remedies may be proposed for this inconveniency, the one tending to
-population, the other to depopulation; and as the end to be compassed is
-to set the balance even between husbandmen and free hands, I shall
-explain both, and point out _how far_ from principles it appears, that
-in either way the end may be attained.
-
-That tending to increase population is the remedy proposed, and, no
-doubt, was it possible to introduce a new system of agriculture of a
-larger absolute production, although the relative production should be
-less, the inhabitants of the state becoming thereby better fed, though
-at a greater cost, would infallibly multiply. Let me therefore examine
-this first part before I say any thing of the other; and for the greater
-distinctness I shall return to my example, and examine both the
-consequences and the possibility of putting such a plan in execution.
-
-Let me suppose, that by using the spade and rake, instead of the plow
-and harrow, the lands of our island might be brought to produce with
-more abundance; this is a method of increasing the expence of
-agriculture, which would require an additional number of husbandmen.
-
-Now, by the supposition, 500 farmers fed, though scantily, the whole of
-the inhabitants, that is 1000 persons. If therefore 100 of the free
-hands can be engaged to become farmers, the end may be attained: more
-nourishment will be produced; the people will be better fed; they will
-multiply; that is, their number will rise above 1000. Let us next
-endeavour to form a judgment of this increase, and of the consequence of
-the revolution.
-
-The society will now be composed of 600 farmers and 400 free hands. The
-600 will certainly produce more fruits than formerly; but as their
-labour is relatively less productive by the supposition, it will be
-impossible for them to furnish surplus equal to their own consumption;
-consequently, the free hands never will be able to rise to a number
-equal to theirs; that is, the society will never get up to 1200. But we
-supposed, that the other wants of the society required the industry of
-one half of the inhabitants to supply them; that is, of all the 500 free
-hands; and, as the number of these has been already reduced, and can
-never more rise to that proportion, as has been said, must not either
-the people voluntarily adopt a more simple way of living; or must not
-the demand for work rise very considerably? Let me consider the
-consequences in both cases. In the first, you perceive, that if the
-inhabitants themselves are obliged to simplify their way of living, for
-want of hands to supply what they formerly consumed, three of the four
-objects proposed by the reformation become impossible to be attained; to
-wit, the defending themselves against their enemies, the supplying the
-wants of strangers, and the supplying their own with more abundance. And
-with regard to the fourth, the being better fed, that must cease to be
-the case, the moment the end is obtained; that is, the moment the
-inhabitants are multiplied up to the proportion of additional food.
-Consequently, by simplifying their way of life, and allowing farming to
-stand upon the new footing, they compass not any one of the ends they
-proposed.
-
-Next, if we suppose, that the inhabitants do not incline to simplify
-their way of life, but that the wealthy among them insist upon
-purchasing all the instruments of luxury which they formerly were used
-to enjoy, must not demand for work greatly rise, and must not, of
-consequence, an additional encouragement be given to that species of
-labour which had been diminished, in taking 100 persons from industry,
-to throw them into the class of farmers? Will not this make them quickly
-desert their spade, and the rather, as they have taken to an employment
-less lucrative than that of farming, according to the former systems?
-
-So much for the consequences which would follow, in case the plan
-proposed was found practicable; that is, supposing it to be a thing
-possible to transport into agriculture a part of an industrious society,
-already otherwise employed, and to change _all at once_ the relative
-proportion between those who supply food, and those who purchase it with
-their industry. We have begun, by taking that first step for granted;
-and now I am to shew what obstacles will be found in the execution.
-
-We have said, that it is the multiplicity and complexity of wants which
-give an encouragement to agriculture, and not agriculture, or an
-abundance of food, which inspires mankind with a disposition to labour.
-Now, if this principle be true, the supposition we have proceeded upon
-is absurd. I am afraid, both reason and experience will abundantly prove
-that it is so.
-
-The natural and necessary effect of industry, in trades and
-manufactures, is to promote the increase of relative husbandry; which,
-by augmenting the surplus, tends of course to increase the proportion of
-the free hands relatively to the farmers. A river may as easily ascend
-to its source, as a people voluntarily adopt a more operose agriculture
-than that already established, supposing the lands to be fully improved,
-the spirit of industry to prevail on one hand, and the farmers to have
-profit only in view on the other.
-
-What farmer could sell the surplus of an expensive agriculture in
-competition with another who exercised a species relatively more
-productive?
-
-When lands are improved, the simplification of agriculture is a
-necessary concomitant of industry, because diminishing expence is the
-only method of gaining a preference at market.
-
-[Sidenote: QUEST. III.]
-
-Whether industry has done hurt to population, by augmenting the
-relative, and diminishing the absolute produce of agriculture; or
-whether it has done good to it, by encouraging the science in general,
-and extending the exercise of it over the face of the earth, is a matter
-of fact which I shall leave to others, better informed than I am, to
-determine. For my own part, I believe that thousands of examples may be
-found of the one and the other. I know corn fields, where villages
-formerly stood, the inhabitants of which fed themselves with the pure
-produce of absolute agriculture; that is, with a bit of garden ground,
-and the milk of a cow: there surely is depopulation: but, at a small
-distance from the place where those villages stood, I see corn fields,
-where nothing but heath was to be met with; this marks population. I
-seek no more than to explain from facts the principles I am endeavouring
-to discover, and shall leave general conclusions to others, as I have
-already said.
-
-There is a maxim in law, which may be extended almost to every thing in
-this world, _unum quodque eodem modo solvitur quo colligatum est_.
-Industry forms this species of absolute agriculture; industry destroys
-it. A military force raised the Roman greatness; a military force
-destroyed it. A spirit of liberty may form a noble constitution, and a
-spirit of liberty may break the same to pieces. The States of Denmark
-restrained the royal power and established a free government; the same
-States rendered that very power unlimited, and established there the
-purest monarchy in Christendom. But these reflections are foreign to our
-subject: _Ne sutor ultra crepidam_. I return.
-
-When industry is set on foot, it gives encouragement to agriculture
-exercised as a trade: and by the allurements of ease, which a large
-surplus procures to the farmers, it does hurt to that species which is
-exercised as a method of subsistence. Lands become more generally and
-less thoroughly laboured. In some countries tillage is set on foot and
-encouraged; this is an operose agriculture. While industry goes forward,
-and while a people can remain satisfied with a nourishment consisting
-chiefly of bread, this system of agriculture will subsist, and will
-carry numbers very high. If wealth increases, and if those who have it
-begin to demand a much greater proportion of work than formerly, while
-they consume no more food, then I believe numbers may diminish from the
-principles I am now going in quest of.
-
-I return to the council of the island where the proposition laid down
-upon the carpet is, _The scanty subsistence of the inhabitants requires
-redress_.
-
-A Machiavelian stands up (of such there are some in every country) and
-proposes, in place of multiplying the inhabitants, by rendering
-agriculture more operose, to diminish their number, by throwing a
-quantity of corn fields into grass. What is the intention of
-agriculture, says he, but to nourish a state? By our operose method of
-plowing and sowing, one half of the whole produce is consumed by those
-who raise it; whereas by having a great part of our island in pasture,
-one half of the husbandmen may be saved. Pray what do you propose to do
-with those whom you intend to make idle? replies a citizen. Let them
-betake themselves to industry. But industry is sufficiently, nay more
-than sufficiently stocked already. If, says Machiavel, the supernumerary
-husbandmen be thrown out of a way of living, they may go where they
-please; we have no occasion for them, nor for any one who lives only to
-feed himself. But you diminish the number of your people, replies the
-citizen, and consequently your strength; and if afterwards you come to
-be attacked by your enemies, you will wish to have those back again for
-your defence, whom in your security you despised. To this the other
-makes answer: there you trust to the Egyptian reed. If they be necessary
-for feeding us at present, how shall we be able to live while we employ
-them as soldiers? We may live without many things, but not without the
-labour of our husbandmen. Whether we have our grounds in tillage or in
-pasture, if that class be rightly proportioned to the labour required,
-we never can take any from it. In those countries where we see princes
-have recourse to the land to recruit their armies, we may safely
-conclude, that there the land is overstocked; and that industry has not
-as yet been able to purge off all the superfluous mouths: but with us
-the case is different, where agriculture is justly proportioned to the
-number of husbandmen. If I propose a reform, it is only to augment the
-surplus, upon which all the state, except the husbandmen, are fed; if
-the surplus after the reform is greater than at present, the plan is
-good, although 250 of our farmers should thereby be forced to starve for
-hunger.
-
-Though no man is, I believe, capable to reason in so inhuman a style,
-and though the revolution here proposed be an impossible supposition, if
-meant to be executed all at once, the same effects however must be
-produced, in every country where we see corn fields by degrees turned
-into pasture; only the change is gradual, industry is not overstocked
-any where, and subsistence may be drawn from other countries, where the
-operose species of agriculture can be carried on with profit.
-
-Familiar experience proves the truth of this. I have a corn farm, where
-I maintain ten horses and four servants for the cultivation alone: at
-the end of the year I find my surplus equal to 40_l._ sterling. If, by
-throwing my grounds into grass, I can dismiss three servants and eight
-horses, and at the end of the year raise my surplus to 50_l._ sterling,
-who doubts of my doing it? Is not this following the doctrine above laid
-down? But there is nothing odious in this; because I do not see these
-three servants die for hunger, nor is it a consequence they should, as
-states are formed. They turn themselves to industry, and food comes from
-abroad, in proportion as the country itself produces a less quantity.
-Fact and experience prove this assertion, and I cite Holland as an
-example, where every branch of operose agriculture is exploded, except
-for such productions as cannot be brought from other countries. I
-introduced the rough Machiavelian only to set principles in a strong
-light, and particularly that concerning the recruiting of armies from
-the land, which I take to be both a true one, and one necessary to be
-attended to, to wit, that those who must labour for the subsistence of
-the society, can be of little use for the defence of a state, in case of
-any emergency. Princes have found out the truth of this, and in
-proportion as industry has extended itself, regular armies have been
-found necessary to be kept up in times of peace, in order to be had in
-times of war. A militia composed of people truly industrious, I take to
-be far better in speculation than in practice. How would a militia do in
-Holland? how admirable was it not formerly in Scotland, Poland, and
-Catalonia? And how admirably does it still succeed in the armies of the
-house of Austria? I may however be mistaken; for a military and an
-industrious spirit may be found compatible with one another in some
-particular nations: time perhaps will clear up this matter. Thus much
-with regard to a militia. Now as to recruiting a regular army.
-
-The more they are recruited from the land, the less they desert. The
-army of the Russians, for example, now assembled (1758) hardly knows
-desertion, those of the house of Austria, taken from certain provinces
-where there is almost no industry, are in the same case, also the
-militia of France which I consider as regular troops. On the other hand,
-those armies which are raised in the countries where industry has taken
-root are chiefly composed of loose fellows, the excrements of populous
-cities, the sons of vice and idleness, who have neither domicil nor
-attachment. These are soldiers truly by trade, and make a trade of it;
-how many thousands of such are now to be found? they come to market
-every season, and the best bidder has them while he can hold them. Some
-princes make a point not to receive their own deserters back, but accept
-of those who have committed the same infidelity to others; while others
-content themselves with punishing those who fail in their attempt to
-desert, but receive them back when they return of their own accord,
-after having accomplished their desertion. All is now become commerce,
-and seems to be regulated by the principles of it. I return to our
-agriculture.
-
-Does not the exposition we have now given of these principles tend to
-cast a light upon the first question dismissed in this chapter, to wit,
-the effects of an equal and an unequal distribution of the property of
-lands?
-
-When these are once well cultivated and improved, it is of no
-consequence to whom the property belongs; for by the property of such
-lands I only can mean the surplus, as we have abundantly explained
-elsewhere. Let therefore the property of all the lands of a kingdom,
-fully improved, belong to the state, or to any number of individuals,
-however few, there is no question of improvement; no difference as to
-agriculture, no difference as to population, according to modern policy.
-So long as the whole is well cultivated and made to produce, by a set of
-men I call farmers, the end is fully obtained; and according to the
-nature of the agriculture, which many different circumstances of taste
-and manner of living has introduced, larger or smaller portions of land
-must be allotted to each of them.
-
-If you suppose a country not as yet improved, as many are, then, the
-case becomes quite different, and small possessions are necessary, both
-for multiplying the inhabitants and for improving the soil. In this
-supposition the most operose agriculture may be carried on in
-competition with the most lucrative; because when there is a question of
-improvement, there is frequently a considerable outgoing instead of any
-surplus after paying the labour.
-
-Agriculture for improvement can be carried on by none but those who have
-wealth and superfluity, and is prosecuted with a view to future, not to
-present advantage: of this we shall treat in another place. For I
-consider it as a quite different operation, influenced by different
-principles, and no ways to be confounded with the present subject of
-inquiry. But I have insensibly been wandering through an extensive
-subject, and it is now time to return.
-
-I have said above that a river might as easily ascend to its source, as
-an industrious people voluntarily adopt a more operose system of
-agriculture than that already established, while the spirit of industry
-prevails on one hand, and while farmers have profit only in view on the
-other. In consequence of this position, I have treated the plan proposed
-for augmenting the inhabitants of the island, by the introduction of a
-more operose agriculture as absurd, and so it certainly is: but let me
-throw in a circumstance which affects the spirit of that people, and the
-plan becomes plausible and easy.
-
-Let a part of the wealthy proprietors of the lands take a taste for
-agriculture. Let a Tull, a Du Hamel turn agriculture into an object of
-luxury, of amusement. Let this science be turned into a Missisippi, or
-South Sea scheme. Let the rich be made to believe that treasures are to
-be found at a small expence, laid at first out upon farming, and you
-will soon see the most operose species of the science go forward, and
-the produce of it come to market and be sold, in spite of all
-competition. My Lady Duchess’s knotting may be sold at so much a pound,
-as well as that performed by a girl who does not spend six pence a day;
-but if the one and the other be considered relatively to the expence of
-the manufacturer, every knot of my Lady’s will be found to have cost as
-much as a pound of the other. The Duchess’s pound, however, increases
-the quantity of knots; and so does my Lord’s farm the mass of
-subsistence for the whole society. The nation also gains by his
-extravagance having taken a turn, which may produce the permanent good
-effect of improving a part of the country, though at an expence
-infinitely beyond the value of it. I must now again touch upon another
-part of my subject, which I think has been treated too superficially.
-
-In a former chapter I have shewn how industry has the natural effect of
-collecting into towns and cities the free hands of a state, leaving the
-farmers in their farms and villages. This distribution served the
-purpose of explaining certain principles; but when examined relatively
-to other circumstances which at that time I had not in my eye, it will
-be found by far too general. Let me therefore add some farther
-observations upon that matter.
-
-The extensive agriculture of plowing and sowing, is the proper
-employment of the country, and is the foundation of population in every
-nation fed upon its own produce. Cities are commonly surrounded by
-kitchen gardens, and rich grass fields; these are the proper objects of
-agriculture for those who live in suburbs, or who are shut up within the
-walls of small towns. The gardens produce various kinds of nourishment,
-which cannot easily be brought from a distance, in that fresh and
-luxuriant state which pleases the eye, and conduces to health. They
-offer a continual occupation to man, and very little for cattle,
-therefore are properly situated in the proximity of towns and cities.
-The grass fields again are commonly either grazed by cows, for the
-production of milk, butter, cream, &c. which suffer by long carriage; or
-kept in pasture for preserving fatted animals in good order until the
-markets demand them; or they are cut in grass for the cattle of the
-city. They may also be turned into hay with profit; because the carriage
-of a bulky commodity from a great distance is sometimes too expensive.
-Thus we commonly find agriculture disposed in the following manner. In
-the center stands the city surrounded by kitchen gardens; beyond these
-lies a belt of fine luxuriant pasture or hay fields; stretch beyond this
-and you find the beginning of what I call operose farming, plowing and
-sowing; beyond this lie grazing farms for the fattening of cattle; and
-last of all come the mountainous and large extents of unimproved or ill
-improved grounds, where animals are bred. This seems the natural
-distribution, and such I have found it almost every where established,
-when particular circumstances do not invert the order.
-
-The poorness of the soil near Paris, for example, presents you with
-fields of rye corn at the very gates, and with the most extensive
-kitchen gardens and orchards, even for cherries and peaches, at a
-considerable distance from town. Other cities I have found, and I can
-cite the example of that which I at present inhabit, Padoua, where no
-kitchen garden is to be found near it, but every spot is covered with
-the richest grain; two thirds with wheat, and the remaining third with
-Indian corn. The reason of this is palpable. The town is of a vast
-extent, in proportion to the inhabitants; the gardens are all within the
-walls, and the dung of the city enables the soil to produce constantly.
-Hay is brought from a greater distance, because the expence of
-distributing the dung over a distant field, would be greater than that
-of transporting the hay by water-carriage. The farm houses here appear
-no larger than huts, as they really are, built by the farmers, because
-the space to be laboured is very small, in proportion to the produce;
-hence it is, that a farmer here pays the value of the full half of the
-crop to the landlord, and out of the remaining half, not only sows the
-ground and buys the dung, but furnishes the cattle and labouring
-instruments, nay even rebuilds his house, when occasion requires.
-
-When first I examined these fertile plains, I began to lament the
-prodigal consumption of such valuable lands, in a multitude of very
-broad high-ways, issuing to all quarters; many of which I thought might
-be saved, in consideration of the vast advantage accruing upon such
-oeconomy: but upon farther reflection I perceived, that the loss was
-inconsiderable; for the fertility of the soil proceeding chiefly from
-the manure laid upon it, the loss sustained from the roads ought to be
-computed at no more than the value of the land when uncultivated. The
-case would be very different, were roads now to be changed, or new ones
-carried through the corn fields; the loss then would be considerable,
-though even that would be temporary, and only affect particular persons:
-for the same dung, which now supports these lands in their fertility,
-would quickly fertilize others in their places and in a few years
-matters would stand as at present.
-
-These last reflections lead me naturally to examine a question which has
-been treated by a very polite French writer, the author of _l’Ami de
-l’homme_, and which comes in here naturally enough, before I put an end
-to this first book. Here it is.
-
-[Sidenote: QUEST. IV.]
-
-Does an unnecessary consumption of the earth’s productions, either in
-food, cloathing, or other wants; and a prodigal employment of fine rich
-fields, in gardens, avenues, great roads, and other uses which give
-small returns, _hurt population_, by rendering food and necessaries less
-abundant, in a kingdom such as France, in its present situation?
-
-My answer is, That if France were fully cultivated and peopled, the
-introduction of superfluous consumption would be an abuse, and would
-diminish the number of inhabitants; as the contrary is the case, it
-proves an advantage. I shall now give my reasons for differing in
-opinion from the gentleman whose performance I have cited.
-
-As the question is put, you perceive the end to be compassed is, to
-render food and necessaries abundant; because the abuse is considered in
-no other light, than relatively to the particular effect of diminishing
-the proper quantity of subsistence, which the king would incline to
-preserve, for the nourishment and uses of his people. I shall therefore
-confine myself chiefly to this object, and if I shew, that these
-superfluous employments of the surface of the earth, and prodigal
-consumptions of her fruits, are really no harm, but an encouragement to
-the improvement of the lands of France _in her present state_, I shall
-consider the question as sufficiently resolved: because if the abuse, as
-it is called, proves favourable to agriculture, it can never prove
-hurtful to population. However, from the inattention of the government,
-it may affect foreign trade, but this is an object entirely foreign to
-the question. But before I enter upon the subject, it is proper to
-observe, that I am of opinion, that any system of oeconomy which
-necessarily tends to corrupt the manners of a people, ought by every
-possible means to be discouraged, although no particular prejudice
-should result from it, either to population, or to plentiful
-subsistence.
-
-Now, in the question before us, the only abuse I can find in these
-habits of extraordinary consumption, appears relative to the character
-of the consumers, and seems in no way to proceed from the effects of the
-consumption. The vices of men may no doubt prove the cause of their
-making a superfluous consumption, but the consumption they make can
-hardly ever be the cause of this vice. The most virtuous man in France
-may have the most splendid table, the richest clothes, the most
-magnificent equipages, the greatest number of useless horses, the most
-pompous palace, and most extensive gardens. The most enormous luxury to
-be conceived, in our acceptation of the term, so long as it is directed
-to no other object than the consumption of the labour and ingenuity of
-man, is compatible with virtue as well as with vice. This being
-premised, I come to the point in hand.
-
-France, at present, is in her infancy as to improvement, although the
-advances she has made within a century excite the admiration of the
-world. I shall not go far in search of the proof of this assertion.
-Great tracts of her lands are still uncultivated, millions of her
-inhabitants are idle. When all comes to be cultivated, and all are
-employed, then she will be in a state of perfection, relatively to the
-moral possibility of being improved. The people are free, slavery is
-unknown, and every man is charged with feeding himself, and bringing up
-his children. The ports of the country are open to receive subsistence,
-and that nation, as much as any other, may be considered as an
-individual in the great society of the world; that is, may increase in
-power, wealth, and ease, relatively to others, in proportion to the
-industry of her inhabitants. This being the case, all the principles of
-political oeconomy, which we have been inquiring after, may freely
-operate in this kingdom.
-
-France has arrived at her present pitch of luxury, relatively to
-consumption, by slow degrees. As she has grown in wealth, her desire of
-employing it has grown also. In proportion as her demands have
-increased, more hands have been employed to supply them; for no article
-of expence can be increased, without increasing the work of those who
-supply it. If the same number of inhabitants in the city of Paris
-consume four times as much of any necessary article as formerly, I hope
-it will be allowed, that the production of such necessaries must be four
-times as abundant, and consequently, that many more people must be
-employed in providing them.
-
-What is it that encourages agriculture, but a great demand for its
-productions? What encourages multiplication, but a great demand for
-people; that is, for their work? Would any one complain of the
-extravagant people in Paris, if, instead of consuming those vast
-superfluities, they were to send them over to Dover, for a return in
-English gold? What is the difference between the prodigal consumption,
-and the sale? The one brings in money, the other brings in none: but as
-to food and necessaries, for providing the poor and frugal, their
-contingent, in either case, stands exactly the same.
-
-But, says one, were it not for this extraordinary consumption, every
-thing would be cheaper. This I readily allow; but will any body say,
-that reducing the price of the earth’s productions is a method to
-encourage agriculture, especially in a country where grounds are not
-improved, and where they cannot be improved; chiefly, because the
-expence surpasses all the profits which possibly can be drawn from the
-returns? High prices therefore, the effect of great consumption, are
-certainly advantageous to the extension of agriculture. If I throw my
-rich corn fields into gravel-walks and gardens, I suppose they will no
-more come into competition with those of my neighbour, the laborious
-husbandman. Who will then lose by my extravagance? Not the husbandman.
-It will perhaps be said, the nation in general will lose; because you
-deprive them of their food. This might be true, were the laying waste
-the corn fields a sudden revolution, and extensive enough to affect the
-whole society; and were the sea-ports and barriers of the kingdom shut:
-but that not being the case, the nation, upon the smallest deficiency,
-goes to market with her money, and loses none of her inhabitants.
-
-OBJ. But if living is made dear, manufacturers must starve, for want of
-employment.
-
-ANSW. Not those who supply home consumption, but only those who supply
-foreigners living more cheaply; and of such I know but few. The interest
-of this class shall be fully examined in another place. At present I
-shall only observe, that the laying waste corn fields in an industrious
-country, where refinement has set on foot a plan of useful husbandry,
-will have no other effect, than that of rendring grain for a while
-proportionally dearer: consequently, agriculture will be thereby
-encouraged; and in a few years the loss will be repaired, by a farther
-extension of improvement. This will make food plentiful and cheap: then
-numbers will increase, until it become scarce again. It is by such
-alternate vicissitudes, that improvement and population are carried to
-their height. While the improvement of lands goes forward, I must
-conclude, that demand for subsistence is increasing; and if this be not
-a proof of population, I am much mistaken.
-
-I can very easily suppose, that a demand for _work_ may increase
-considerably, in consequence of an augmentation of riches only; because
-there is no bounds to the consumption of _work_; but as for articles of
-nourishment the case is quite different. The most delicate liver in
-Paris will not put more of the earth’s productions into his belly, than
-another: he may pick and choose, but he will always find, that what he
-leaves will go to feed another: victuals are not thrown away in any
-country I have ever been in. It is not in the most expensive kitchens
-where there is found the most prodigal dissipation of the abundant
-fruits of the earth; and it is with such that a people is fed, not with
-ortolans, truffles, and oysters, sent from Marenne.
-
-OBJ. Roads of a superfluous breadth are carried many times through the
-finest fields, belonging to the poor and industrious, without a proper
-indemnity being given.
-
-ANSW. The with-holding the indemnity is an abuse; the loss of the fields
-is none _to the state_, except in such countries where the quantity of
-arable lands is small, as in mountainous provinces; there a proper
-consideration should be had to the breadth, because the loss cannot be
-made up. In such countries as I here describe, and I cite the Tirol for
-an example, I have found all the inhabitants in a manner employed in
-that species of agriculture, which is exercised as a method of
-subsisting. The little ground that is arable, is divided into very small
-lots; the people multiply very much, and leave the country. Those who
-remain are usually employed in cutting wood, for building and burning,
-which they send down the rivers, and in return buy corn, which comes
-from the south and from the north. This is the best plan of industry
-they can follow, without the assistance of their sovereign. Roads here
-are executed to great perfection, with abundance of solidity, and with a
-tender regard for the little ground there is. I return to France.
-
-OBJ. A multitude of superfluous horses are kept in Paris, which consume
-what would feed many more inhabitants.
-
-ANSW. True: but he who feeds the horses, because _he thinks_ he has use
-for them, would not feed those inhabitants, because _he is sure_ he has
-no use for them: and did he, in complaisance for the public, dismiss his
-cattle, the farmer, who furnishes the hay and oats, would lose a
-customer, and nobody would gain. These articles are produced, because
-they are demanded: when additional inhabitants are produced, who will
-demand and can pay, their demand will be answered also, as long as there
-is an unemployed acre in France.
-
-OBJ. The increase of the consumption of wood for firing is hurtful to
-population, because it marks the extension of forests.
-
-ANSW. This consequence I deny; both from fact and reason. From fact,
-because forests are not extended, and that nothing but the hand of
-nature, in an ill-inhabited country, seems capable of forming them. In
-France, forests are diminishing daily; and were it not for the
-jurisdiction of the _Table de marbre_, they would have been more
-diminished than they are. I agree, that the consumption of wood is at
-present infinitely greater than formerly, and likewise, that the price
-of it is greatly risen every where. These two circumstances rather seem
-to mark the contraction, than the extension of forests. But the increase
-of consumption and price proceed from other causes, as I shall shew, in
-order to point out some new principles relative to this extensive
-subject. 1. The increase of consumption proceeds from the increase of
-wealth. 2. The increase of price proceeds from the increase upon the
-value of labour, and not from the scarcity of forest, nor the height of
-the demand for firing. As to the first, I believe the fact will not be
-called in question, as it is one of the superfluities of consumption
-complained of, and put down to the account of luxury and extravagance.
-As to the second, the true cause of the rise of the price of that
-commodity demands a little more attention, and in order to point it out
-with some distinctness, I must first shew the political impossibility of
-forests becoming extended over the _arable_ lands of France in her
-present situation.
-
-The best proof I can offer to support my opinion is, to compare the
-inconsiderable value of an acre of standing forest in the king’s
-adjudications, where thousands are sold at a time, with the value of an
-acre of tolerable corn lands, and then ask, if the present value of
-forests is so considerable, as to engage any proprietor to sow such a
-field for raising wood, when he must wait, perhaps 40 years, before it
-be fit for cutting? Add to this, that whoever plants a tree in France,
-comes under the jurisdiction above-mentioned, and is not at liberty to
-cut it down, and dispose of it, without their permission. It is in a
-great measure for this reason, that so few trees are seen about French
-villages; and I never heard of one example, of corn lands being sown
-with the seeds of forest-trees, with a view to improvement. That
-forests, which are well kept, may extend themselves over grounds not
-worth the cultivation, I do not deny; but this surely can do no harm to
-agriculture; and it is only in that respect, I pretend that forests in
-France are not at present in a way of gaining ground.
-
-Now as to the rise in the price of wood for burning, I say, it proceeds
-not from the rise of the price of timber growing in forests, so much as
-from the increase of the price of labour, and principally of the price
-of transportation. This is not peculiar to France alone, but is common
-to all Europe almost, for the reasons I shall presently give. But in the
-first place, as to the matter of fact, that the rise in the price
-proceeds from the cause assigned, may be seen, by comparing the low
-price of an acre of standing forest, with the great value of the timber
-when brought to market: the first is the neat value of the wood; the
-last includes that of the labour.
-
-Next as to the price of labour; the rise here is universal in all
-industrious nations, from a very plain reason, easily deducible from the
-principles above laid down.
-
-While the land remained loaded with a number of superfluous mouths,
-while numbers were found in every province employed in agriculture, for
-the sake of subsistence, merely, such people were always ready to employ
-their idle hours and days, for a very small consideration from those who
-employed them. They did not then depend upon this employment for their
-subsistence; and a penny in their pocket purchased some superfluity for
-them. But when modern policy has by degrees drawn numbers from the
-country, the few that remain for the service of the public must now
-labour for their subsistence; and he who employs them, must feed them,
-clothe them, and provide for all their other wants. No wonder then, if
-labour be dearer: there is a palpable reason for the augmentation.
-
-The price of all necessaries has risen, no doubt, partly for the same
-reason, and this circumstance certainly enters into the combination: but
-work, in the country especially, has risen far beyond the proportion of
-the price of necessaries, and will rise still more as the lands become
-better purged of superfluous mouths.
-
-Notwithstanding what I have said, I readily allow, that the great
-consumption of wood for burning, but more particularly for forges, has
-considerably raised the intrinsic value of forest lands; but the
-consequence has not been, to extend the forests, as we have shewn, but
-to produce a general revenue from them all over the kingdom; whereas
-formerly, in many provinces, they produced almost nothing. When they
-were cut, cattle were turned in, and by eating up the tender shoots from
-year to year, the forest ran into a wild, neither producing timber, nor
-pasture. This practice was established upon the ruling principle of
-private interest. The land was not worth the expence of grubbing up the
-timber; the timber when grown, did not compensate the loss of a few
-years pasture. No jurisdiction, however well administred, can check the
-operation of that principle; and a statesman who would attempt it, would
-be called a tyrant: he would distress the husbandman, and do no service
-to the state.
-
-From what has been said, I must conclude, that while the consumption of
-the earth’s produce, and of the work of man tend to excite industry, in
-providing for extraordinary demands; when the interest of foreign trade
-does not enter into the question; and while there are lands enough
-remaining unimproved, to furnish _the first matter_; there can be no
-political abuse from the misapplication or unnecessary destruction of
-either fruits or labour. The misapplier, or dissipator, is punished by
-the loss of his money; the industrious man is rewarded by the
-acquisition of it. We have said, that vice is not more essentially
-connected with superfluity, than virtue with industry and frugality. But
-such questions are foreign to my subject. I would however recommend it
-to moralists, to study circumstances well, before they carry reformation
-so far, as to interrupt an established system in the political oeconomy
-of their country.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXI.
- _Recapitulation of the First Book._
-
-
-[Sidenote: INTROD.]
-
-I set out by distinguishing government from political oeconomy; calling,
-the first the power to command, the second the talent to execute. Thus
-the governor may restrain, but the steward must lead, and, by direct
-motives of self-interest, gently conduct free and independent men to
-concur in certain schemes ultimately calculated for their own proper
-benefit.
-
-The object is, to provide food, other necessaries and employment, not
-only for those who actually exist, but also for those who are to be
-brought into existence. This is accomplished, by engaging every one of
-the society to contribute to the service of others, in proportion only
-as he is to reap a benefit from reciprocal services. To render this
-practicable, the spirit of the people must be studied, the different
-occupations prescribed to each must first be adapted to their
-inclinations, and when once they have taken a taste for labour, these
-inclinations must be worked upon by degrees, so as to be bent towards
-such pursuits as are most proper for attaining the end desired.
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. I.]
-
-He who sits at the head of this operation, is called the statesman. I
-suppose him to be constantly awake, attentive to his employment, able
-and uncorrupted, tender in his love for the society he governs,
-impartially just in his indulgence for every class of inhabitants, and
-disregardful of the interest of individuals, when that regard is
-inconsistent with the general welfare.
-
-Did I propose a plan of execution, I confess this supposition would be
-absurd; but as I mean nothing farther than the investigation of
-principles, it is no more so, than to suppose a point, a straight line,
-a circle, or an infinite, in treating of geometry.
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. II.]
-
-To prepare the way for treating this subject, in that order which the
-revolutions of the last centuries have pointed out as the most natural,
-I have made the distribution of my plan in the following order.
-Population and agriculture are the foundations of the whole. Civil and
-domestic liberty, introduced into Europe by the dissolution of the
-feudal form of government, set trade and industry on foot; these
-produced wealth and credit; these again debts and taxes; and all
-together established a perfectly new system of political oeconomy, the
-principles of which it is my intention to deduce and examine.
-
-Population and agriculture, as I have said, must be the basis of the
-whole, in all ages of the world; and as they are so blended together in
-their connections and relations, as to make the separation of them quite
-incompatible with perspicuity and order, they have naturally been made
-the subject of the first book.
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. III.]
-
-I have shewn, that the first principle of multiplication is generation;
-the second is food: the one gives existence and life; the other
-preserves them.
-
-The earth’s spontaneous fruits being of a determined quantity, never can
-feed above a determined number. Labour is a method of augmenting the
-productions of nature, and in proportion to the augmentation, numbers
-may increase. From these positions, I conclude,
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. IV.]
-
-That the numbers of mankind must ever have been in proportion to the
-produce of the earth; and this produce must constantly be in the
-compound ratio of the fertility of the soil, and labour of the
-inhabitants. Consequently, there can be no determined universal
-proportion over the world, between the number of those necessary for
-labouring the soil, and of those who may be maintained by its produce.
-Here I am led to examine the motives which may induce one part of a free
-people to labour, in order to feed the other.
-
-This I shew to proceed from the different wants to which mankind are
-liable.
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. V.]
-
-Here I introduce a statesman, as being necessary to model the spirit of
-a society. He contrives and encourages reciprocal objects of want, which
-have each their allurement. This engages every one in a different
-occupation, and must hurt the former simplicity of manners. I shew how
-essential it is, to keep a just balance throughout every part of
-industry, that no discouragement may be cast upon any branch of it,
-either from superfluity, or want; and I have pointed out, how the
-dividing of food between parents and children, is the means of bringing
-on scarcity, which inconveniency can only be removed by an augmentation
-of labour.
-
-If a society does not concur in this plan of reciprocal industry, their
-numbers will cease to increase; because the industrious will not feed
-the idle. This I call a state of a moral impossibility of increase in
-numbers, and I distinguish it from the physical impossibility, which can
-take place only when nature itself, not man, refuses to produce
-subsistence. From this I apply to each particular society what I had
-before found applicable to mankind in general; to wit,
-
-That the inhabitants of every country must be in the compound proportion
-of the quantity of food produced in it, and of the industry of the lower
-classes. If the food produced surpass the proportion of industry, the
-balance of food will be exported; if the industry surpasses the
-proportion of food, its deficiency must be supplied by imports.
-
-Reciprocal wants excite to labour; consequently, those whose labour is
-not directed towards the cultivation of the soil, must live upon a
-surplus produced by those who do. This divides the society into two
-classes. The one I call farmers, the other free hands.
-
-As the creating these reciprocal wants was what set the society to work,
-and distributed them naturally into the two classes we have mentioned;
-so the augmentation of wants will require an augmentation of free hands,
-and their demand for food will increase agriculture.
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. VI.]
-
-Here I define luxury to mean no more than the consumption of
-superfluity, or the supplying of wants not essentially necessary to
-life; and, I say, that a taste for superfluity will introduce the use of
-money, which I represent as the general object of want, that is of
-desire, among mankind; and I shew how an eagerness to acquire it becomes
-an universal passion, a means of increasing industry among the free
-hands; consequently, of augmenting their numbers; consequently, of
-promoting agriculture for their subsistence.
-
-The whole operation I have been describing proceeds upon one
-supposition, to wit, that the people have a taste for labour, and the
-rich for superfluity. If these be covetous and admirers of simplicity;
-or those be lazy and void of ambition, the principles laid down will
-have no effect: and so in fact we find, that it is not in the finest
-countries in the world where most inhabitants are found, but in the most
-industrious.
-
-Let it therefore never be said, there are too many manufacturers in a
-free country. It is the same thing as if it was said, there are too few
-idle persons, too few beggars, and too many husbandmen.
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. VII.]
-
-Here I break off my subject, to answer an objection arising from these
-principles.
-
-OBJ. How could the simplicity of the antients be compatible with a great
-multiplication?
-
-ANSW. In antient times men were forced to labour the ground because they
-were slaves to others. In modern times the operation is more complex,
-and as a statesman cannot make slaves of his subjects, he must engage
-them to become slaves to their own passions and desires; this is the
-only method to make them labour the ground, and provided this be
-accomplished, by whatever means it is brought about, mankind will
-increase.
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. VIII.]
-
-This question being dismissed, I point out a method of estimating the
-proportion of numbers between the farmers and free hands of a country,
-only as an illustration of the principle already laid down, to wit, that
-it is the surplus of the farmers which goes for the subsistence of the
-others.
-
-This surplus I shew to be the same thing as the value of the land rents;
-and hence I conclude,
-
-1st, That the rising of the rents of lands proves the augmentation of
-industry, and the multiplication of free hands; but as rents may rise,
-and yet the number of inhabitants continue the same as before, I infer,
-
-2dly, That the revolution must then mark the purging of the lands of
-superfluous mouths, and forcing these to quit their mother earth, in
-order to retire to towns and villages, where they may usefully swell the
-number of the free hands and apply to industry.
-
-3dly, That the more a country is in tillage, the more it is inhabited,
-and the fewer free hands are to be found: that the more it is laid into
-pasture, the less it is inhabited, and the greater is the proportion of
-free hands.
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. IX.]
-
-Next I consider the principles which determine the place of residence.
-
-The farmers must live upon, or near the spot they labour; that is,
-either upon their farms or in their villages.
-
-The free hands I divide into two conditions. The first composed of the
-proprietors of the surplus of food, that is the landlords; together with
-those who can purchase it with a revenue already acquired, that is, the
-monied interest. The second condition is composed of those who must
-purchase some of this surplus with their daily labour.
-
-Those of the first condition may live where they please; those of the
-second must live where they can.
-
-When those of the first choose to live together, a considerable number
-of those of the second must follow them, in order to supply their
-consumption. This forms towns and cities.
-
-When a statesman places the whole administration of public affairs in
-the same city, this swells a capital.
-
-When manufacturers get together in bodies, they depend not directly upon
-consumers, but upon merchants. The situation of their residence depends
-upon circumstances relative to their occupation, provision and
-transportation of their work. From this hamlets swell into villages, and
-villages into towns. Sea ports owe their establishment to the increase
-of foreign trade.
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. X.]
-
-As the collecting such numbers of inhabitants together is a late
-revolution in the political oeconomy of Europe, I endeavour to give a
-short historical representation of it, and examine the consequences
-which result from it, both to the state from the growth of cities, and
-to the land proprietors from the desertion, as I may call it, of so many
-vassals and dependents. One principal effect I observe to be, the
-additional occupation it has given to statesmen; that is to say,
-political oeconomy is thereby become more complex.
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. XI.]
-
-Formerly the inhabitants were dispersed, and by sucking, as it were,
-their mother earth, were more easily subsisted: now industry has
-gathered them together, and industry must support them. The failing of
-industry, is like the cutting off the subsistence of an army. This is
-the care of a general to prevent, that the care of a statesman.
-
-The supporting industry means no more than employing those who must live
-by it; and keeping their numbers in proportion to their work. The first
-point, therefore, is to find work for the present inhabitants; the
-second is, to make them multiply, if the demand for their labour
-increases.
-
-Increasing numbers will never remove, but rather augment such
-inconveniencies, as proceed from the abuses of those already existing.
-
-In order to employ a people rightly, it is proper to know the exact
-state of numbers necessary for supplying the demand for every
-occupation; to distribute those who must live by their industry into
-proper classes; and to make every class (as far as possible) at least,
-support their own numbers by propagation.
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. XII.]
-
-Where the value of any species of industry is not sufficient for that
-purpose, a proper remedy must be applied. When any are found incapable,
-from age or infirmities, to gain their livelihood, they must be
-maintained. Infants exposed by their parents must be taken care of, and
-thrown back into the lowest classes of the people; the most numerous
-always, and the most difficult to be supported by their own propagation.
-Marriage, without assistance, will not succeed in a class who gain no
-more by their industry than a personal physical necessary. Here our
-oeconomy differs widely from that of the antients. Among them marriage
-was encouraged in many ways; but it was only for the free. These did not
-amount to one half of the people. The slaves who represented our lower
-classes were recruited from other countries, as they are at present in
-America.
-
-If, therefore, according to modern oeconomy, the lowest species of
-labour must be kept cheap, in order to make manufactures flourish, the
-state must be at the expence of the children; for as matters stand,
-either the unmarried gain as much as the married should do, and become
-extravagant; or the married gain no more than the unmarried can do, and
-become miserable. An unequal competition between people of the same
-class, always implies one of these inconveniencies; and from these
-principally proceeds the decay and misery of such numbers in all modern
-states, as well as the constant complaints of the augmentation of the
-price of labour.
-
-Every individual is equally inspired with a desire to propagate. A
-people can no more remain without propagating, than a tree without
-growing: but no more can live than can be fed; and as all augmentations
-of food must come at last to a stop, so soon as this happens, a people
-increase no more; that is to say, the proportion of those who die
-annually increases. This insensibly deters from propagation, because we
-are rational creatures. But still there are some who, though rational,
-are not provident; these marry and produce. This I call vicious
-propagation. Hence I distinguish propagation into two branches, to wit,
-multiplication, which goes on among these who can feed what they breed,
-and mere procreation, which takes place among those who cannot maintain
-their offspring.
-
-This last produces a political disease, which mortality cures at the
-expence of much misery; as forest trees which are not pruned, dress
-themselves and become vigorous at the expence of numbers which die all
-around. How to propose a remedy for this inconveniency, without laying
-some restraint upon marriage; how to lay a restraint upon marriage
-without shocking the spirit of the times, I own I cannot find out; so I
-leave every one to conjecture.
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. XIII.]
-
-Although a complete remedy cannot be obtained against the effects of
-abusive procreation; yet with the help of accurate lists of births and
-deaths for every class of people, many expedients may be fallen upon to
-preserve the few who escape the dangers of their infancy, from falling
-back into the unhappy class which produced them. From these lists the
-degree of mortality and nature of diseases, as well as the difference
-between the propagation of the easy and of the miserable, will plainly
-appear; and if it be the duty of a statesman to keep all his people
-busy, he certainly should acquire the most exact knowledge possible of
-the numbers and propagation of those of every denomination, that he may
-prevent any class from rising above or sinking below the standard, which
-is best proportioned to the demand for their respective industry.
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. XIV.]
-
-Population and agriculture have so close a connexion with one another,
-that I find even the abuses to which they are severally liable,
-perfectly similar. I have observed how naturally it must happen, that
-when too many of a society propagate, a part must starve; when too many
-cultivate, a part must starve also. Here is the reason:
-
-The more of a people cultivate a country, the smaller portion of it must
-fall to every man’s share; and when these portions are reduced so low as
-to produce no more than what is necessary to feed the labourers, then
-agriculture is stocked to the utmost.
-
-From this I divide agriculture into two branches; the one useful, the
-other abusive. The first is a trade, that is, a method of producing not
-only subsistence for the labourers, but also a surplus to be provided
-for the free hands of the state, for their subsistence, and for an
-equivalent either in work itself, or for the produce of it. The second
-is no trade, because it implies no alienation, but is purely a method of
-subsisting. If, therefore, in any country where agriculture is exercised
-as a trade, and where there are many free hands, the farmers should be
-allowed to multiply up to the proportion of the whole produce; would not
-all the free hands be forced to starve? What would be the advantage of
-having so many farmers; for there is one evident loss? Every one would
-be entirely taken up in feeding himself, wants would disappear; life
-indeed would be simplified to the last degree, but the bond of society,
-mutual dependence, would be dissolved: therefore I call this species
-abusive, in proportion as these effects are produced. I cite several
-examples of this abusive agriculture in different countries, where I
-take occasion to observe, that the christian virtue, charity, in
-proportion to its extent, is as conducive to multiplication as either
-slavery, or industry: whatever gives food must give numbers. I do not
-say that charity is conducive to industry.
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. XV.]
-
-I next apply these general principles to a particular representation
-given of the state of population in the British isles; from which I
-conclude, that population there is not obstructed, either by losses
-sustained from war and commerce, or from the exportation of their
-subsistence, but from the political situation of that country, which
-throws it at present into a moral incapacity of augmenting in numbers.
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. XVI.]
-
-The establishment of trade and industry naturally rectifies this
-misapplication of agriculture, by purging the land of superfluous
-mouths, and thereby reduces it, as it ought to be, to a trade calculated
-to furnish a surplus, which comes to be sold for the labour of all the
-industrious. It is this alone which can rivet the bond of general
-dependence among free men who must live by their industry; by making one
-part laborious farmers, and the other ingenious tradesmen and
-manufacturers. It is by the vibration of the balance between these two
-classes, that multiplication and agriculture are carried to their
-height. When industry goes on too fast, free hands multiply above the
-standard, that is, their scale sinks; this raises the price of food, and
-gives an additional encouragement to agriculture: when this again
-becomes the more weighty, food becomes plentiful and cheap, then numbers
-augment a-new. These reflections lead me to consider the effects of
-plentiful and scarce years in modern times, when famines are almost
-things unknown; and I conclude,
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. XVII.]
-
-That were plentiful years more common, mankind would be more numerous;
-that were scarce years more frequent, numbers would diminish. Then
-applying this observation to the state of exportations of grain from
-England, I am tempted to infer, that this kingdom, the most fertile
-perhaps in Europe, has never been found to produce, in one year,
-eighteen months full subsistence for all its inhabitants; nor ever less
-than ten months scanty provision in the years of the greatest sterility.
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. XVIII.]
-
-When a country is fully peopled and continues to be industrious, food
-will come from abroad. When a loaf is to be had, the rich will eat it,
-though at the distance of a mile; and the poor may starve, though at the
-next door. It is the demand of the rich, who multiply as much as they
-incline, which encourages agriculture even in foreign nations; therefore
-I conclude, that this multiplication is the cause, and that the progress
-of agriculture is but the effect of it.
-
-A country once fully stocked may diminish in numbers, and still remain
-stocked. This must proceed from a change in the manner of living; as
-when an indolent people quit the consumption of the more abundant
-productions of the earth, to seek after delicacies. On the other hand,
-the industrious bring an additional supply from abroad, and by
-furnishing strangers with the produce of their labour, they still go on
-and increase in numbers. This is the case of Holland: and this scheme
-will go on, until abuses at home raise the price of labour; and
-experience abroad, that universal school mistress, teaches foreigners to
-profit of their own advantages.
-
-When food ceases to be augmented, numbers come to a stand; but trade may
-still go on and increase wealth: this will hire armies of foreigners; so
-the traders may read of their own battles, victories, and trophies, and
-by spending their money, never smell gunpowder.
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. XIX.]
-
-When they cannot augment their numbers, they will introduce machines
-into many manufactures; and these will supply the want, without adding
-to the consumption of their food. Foreigners, astonished at a novelty
-which lowers prices, and checks their growing industry, will copy the
-inventions; but being no more than scholars, who go aukwardly to work,
-this improvement will throw many of their hands into idleness: the
-machines will be cried down, and the traders will laugh in their
-sleeves, well knowing that nothing is more easy than to put work into
-the hands of an industrious man made idle. Wit and genius, in short,
-will always set him who possesses them above the level of his fellows,
-and when one resource fails him, he will contrive another.
-
-[Sidenote: CHAP. XX.]
-
-The wit I here mention is not that acquired in the closet; for there one
-may learn, that an equal distribution of lands was so favourable to
-multiplication in antient times, that it must be owing to a contrary
-practice, that our numbers now are so much smaller. But he who walks
-abroad, and sees millions who have not one moment’s time to put a spade
-in the ground, so busily are they employed in that branch of industry
-which is put into their hands, must readily conclude, that circumstances
-are changed, and that the fewer people are necessary for feeding the
-whole society, the more must remain free to be employed in providing
-every other thing that can make life agreeable, both to themselves and
-to strangers; who in return deliver into the hands of their industrious
-servants, the ensigns of superiority and dominion, money. Who is best
-employed, he who works to feed himself, or he who works to be fed,
-cloathed, and supplied, disposing only of his superfluities to those
-whom, consequently, he shortly must command. This is obtained by the
-introduction of the useful species of agriculture, and by the explosion
-of the abusive. And when strangers are so kind as to allow their
-neighbours the privilege of clothing and adorning them, good nature, not
-to say self-interest, demands, in return, that the first be indulged in
-a permission to exercise those branches of toil and labour which are the
-least profitable, though the most necessary for the subsistence of the
-latter.
-
-When the eye of humanity considers the toil of the farmer, and the
-indifference of his rich countryman in squandering, the abuse appears
-offensive. The rich man is advised to consider of the pain incurred by
-the poor husbandman, in consequence of his dissipation. Upon this the
-rich, touched with compassion, simplifies his way of life. The
-husbandman in a fury falls upon the reformer, and, in his rough way,
-gives him to understand, that he by no means looks upon him as his
-friend: for, says he, do you take me for the rich man’s slave; or do you
-imagine that I toil as I do, either by his command, or for any
-consideration for him? Not in the least, it is purely for his money; and
-from the time you persuaded him to become an oeconomist, here am I, and
-my poor family, starving. We are not the only people in this situation;
-there is my neighbour who has all his hay and oats upon hand, since, by
-your instigation, likewise, he dismissed his useless horses. Do you
-think he will give his oats in charity to feed the poor? He is poor
-enough himself, and all those who have been working to get this
-provision together are in no better humour than I am. Hold your tongue,
-says the reformer, you are a parcel of extravagant fellows, you
-labourers. A hundred years ago, one could have got as many of you as one
-pleased, for the half of what you cost us at present. Give us back our
-lands, says the other, at the rate we had them; and let us all be well
-fed before we give you a farthing, and you shall have us as cheap as
-ever. But do you think that after you have chased one half of us into
-towns, and raised your rents with the price of their food, that we can
-work twice as hard, and serve you as formerly? No, Sir! you ought to
-have more sense than to expect it.
-
-This is a sketch of the first book; I thought a short abridgment of it
-might be of service for recollecting ideas, and ranging them in order
-before I proceed.
-
- END OF THE FIRST BOOK.
-
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- AN
- INQUIRY
- INTO THE
- PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL OECONOMY.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- BOOK II.
- OF TRADE AND INDUSTRY.
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION.
-
-
-Before I enter upon this second book, I must premise a word of
-connexion, in order to conduct the ideas of my reader by the same way
-through which the chain of my own thoughts, and the distribution of my
-plan have naturally led me.
-
-My principal view hitherto has been to prepare the way for an
-examination of the principles of modern politics, by inquiring into
-those which have, less or more, operated regular effects in all the ages
-of the world.
-
-In doing this, I confess, it has been impossible for me not to
-anticipate many things which, according to the plan I have laid down,
-will in some measure involve me in repetitions.
-
-I propose to investigate principles which are all relative and depending
-upon one another. It is impossible to treat of these with distinctness,
-without applying them to the objects on which they have an influence;
-and as the same principles extend their influence to several branches of
-my subject, those of my readers who keep them chiefly in their eye, will
-not find great variety in the different applications of them.
-
-In all compositions of this kind, two things are principally requisite.
-The first is, to represent such ideas as are abstract, clearly, simply,
-and uncompounded. This part resembles the forging out the links of a
-chain. The second is, to dispose those ideas in a proper order; that is,
-according to their most immediate relations. When such a composition is
-laid before a good understanding, memory finishes the work, by cementing
-the links together; and providing any one of them can be retained, the
-whole will follow of course.
-
-Now the relations between the different principles of which I treat, are
-indeed striking to such as are accustomed to abstract reasoning, but not
-near so much so, as when the application of them is made to different
-examples.
-
-The principle of self-interest will serve as a general key to this
-inquiry; and it may, in one sense, be considered as the ruling principle
-of my subject, and may therefore be traced throughout the whole. This is
-the main spring, and only motive which a statesman should make use of,
-to engage a free people to concur in the plans which he lays down for
-their government.
-
-I beg I may not here be understood to mean, that self-interest should
-conduct the statesman: by no means. Self-interest, when considered with
-regard to him, is public spirit; and it can only be called
-self-interest, when it is applied to those who are to be governed by it.
-
-From this principle men are engaged to act in a thousand different ways,
-and every action draws after it certain necessary consequences. The
-question therefore constantly under consideration comes to be, what will
-mankind find it their interest to do, under such and such circumstances?
-
-In order to exhaust the subject of political oeconomy, I have proposed
-to treat the principles of it in relation to circumstances; and as these
-are infinite, I have taken them by categories; that is, by the more
-general combinations, which modern policy has formed. These, for the
-sake of order, I have represented as all hanging in a chain of
-consequences, and depending on one another. See Book I. Chap. ii.
-
-I found this the best method for extending my plan, from which it is
-natural to infer, that it will also prove the best for enabling my
-readers to retain it.
-
-I shall do what I can to diversify, by various circumstances, the
-repetitions which this disposition must lead me into. There is no seeing
-a whole kingdom, without passing now and then through a town which one
-has seen before. I shall therefore imitate the traveller, who, upon such
-occasions, makes his stay very short, unless some new curiosity should
-happen to engage his attention.
-
-I have said, that self-interest is the ruling principle of my subject,
-and I have so explained myself, as to prevent any one from supposing,
-that I consider it as the universal spring of human actions. Here is the
-light in which I want to represent this matter.
-
-The best way to govern a society, and to engage every one to conduct
-himself according to a plan, is for the statesman to form a system of
-administration, the most consistent possible with the interest of every
-individual, and never to flatter himself that his people will be brought
-to act in general, and in matters which purely regard the public, from
-any other principle than private interest. This is the utmost length to
-which I pretend to carry my position. As to what regards the merit and
-demerit of actions in general, I think it fully as absurd to say, that
-no action is truly virtuous, as to affirm, that none is really vitious.
-
-It might perhaps be expected, that, in treating of politics, I should
-have brought in public spirit also, as a principle of action; whereas
-all I require with respect to this principle is, only a restraint from
-it; and even this is, perhaps, too much to be taken for granted. Were
-public spirit, instead of private utility, to become the spring of
-action in the individuals of a well-governed state, I apprehend, it
-would spoil all. I explain myself.
-
-Public spirit, in my way of treating this subject, is as superfluous in
-the governed, as it ought to be all-powerful in the statesman; at least,
-if it is not altogether superfluous, it is fully as much so, as miracles
-are in a religion once fully established. Both are admirable at setting
-out, but would shake every thing loose were they to continue to be
-common and familiar. Were miracles wrought every day, the laws of nature
-would no longer be laws: and were every one to act for the public, and
-neglect himself, the statesman would be bewildered, and the supposition
-is ridiculous.
-
-I expect, therefore, that every man is to act for his own interest in
-what regards the public; and, politically speaking, every one ought to
-do so. It is the combination of every private interest which forms the
-public good, and of this the public, that is, the statesman, only can
-judge. You must love your country. Why? Because it is yours. But you
-must not prefer your own interest to that of your country. This, I
-agree, is perfectly just and right: but this means no more, than that
-you are to abstain from acting to its prejudice, even though your own
-private interest should demand it; that is, you should abstain from
-unlawful gain. Count Julian, for example, who, from private resentment,
-it is said, brought the Moors into Spain, and ruined his country,
-transgressed this maxim. A spy in an army, or in a cabinet, who betrays
-the secrets of his country, and he who sells his trust, are in the same
-case: defrauding the state is, among many others, a notorious example of
-this. To suppose men, in general, honest in such matters, would be
-absurd. The legislature therefore ought to make good laws, and those who
-transgress them ought to be speedily, severely, and most certainly
-punished. This belongs to the coercive part of government, and falling
-beyond the limits of my subject, is ever taken for granted.
-
-Were the principle of public spirit carried farther; were a people to
-become quite disinterested, there would be no possibility of governing
-them. Every one might consider the interest of his country in a
-different light, and many might join in the ruin of it, by endeavouring
-to promote its advantages. Were a rich merchant to begin and sell his
-goods without profit, what would become of trade? Were another to defray
-the extraordinary expence of some workmen in a hard year, in order to
-enable them to carry on their industry, without raising their price,
-what would become of others, who had not the like advantages? Were a man
-of a large landed estate to distribute his corn rents at a low price in
-a year of scarcity, what would become of the poor farmers? Were people
-to feed all who would ask charity, what would become of industry? These
-operations of public spirit ought to be left to the public, and all that
-is required of individuals is, not to endeavour to defeat them.
-
-This is the regular distribution of things, and it is only this which
-comes under my consideration.
-
-In ill-administred governments I admire as much as any one every act of
-public spirit, every sentiment of disinterestedness, and nobody can have
-a higher esteem for every person remarkable for them.
-
-The less attentive any government is to do their duty, the more
-essential it is that every individual be animated by _that_ spirit,
-which then languishes in the very part where it ought to flourish with
-the greatest strength and vigour; and on the other hand, the more public
-spirit is shewn in the administration of public affairs, the less
-occasion has the state for assistance from individuals.
-
-Now as I suppose my statesman to do his duty in the most minute
-particulars, so I allow every one of his subjects to follow the dictates
-of his private interest. All I require is an exact obedience to the
-laws. This also is the interest of every one; for he who transgresses
-ought most undoubtedly to be punished: and this is all the public spirit
-which any perfect government has occasion for.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. I.
- _Of the reciprocal Connections between Trade and Industry._
-
-
-I am now going to treat of trade and industry, two different subjects,
-but which are as thoroughly blended together, as those we have discussed
-in the first book. Similar to these in their mutual operations, they are
-reciprocally aiding and assisting to each other, and it is by the
-constant vibration of the balance between them, that both are carried to
-their height of perfection and refinement.
-
-_TRADE_ _is an operation, by which the wealth, or work, either of
-individuals, or of societies, may be exchanged, by a set of men called
-merchants, for an equivalent, proper for supplying every want, without
-any interruption to industry, or any check upon consumption_.
-
-_INDUSTRY_ _is the application to ingenious labour in a free man, in
-order to procure, by the means of trade, an equivalent, fit for the
-supplying every want_.
-
-I must observe, that these definitions are only just, relatively to my
-subject, and to one another: for _trade_ may exist without _industry_,
-because things produced partly by nature may be exchanged between men;
-_industry_ may be exercised without _trade_, because a man may be very
-ingenious in working to supply his own consumption, and where there is
-no exchange, there can be no _trade_. _Industry_ likewise is different
-from _labour_. _Industry_, as I understand the term, must be voluntary;
-_labour_ may be forced: the one and the other may produce the same
-effect, but the political consequences are vastly different.
-
-_Industry_, therefore, is only applicable to free men; _labour_ may be
-performed by slaves.
-
-Let me examine this last distinction a little more closely, the better
-to try whether it be just, and to point out the consequences which
-result from it.
-
-I have said, that without the assistance of one of the three principles
-of multiplication, to wit, slavery, industry, or charity, there was no
-possibility of making mankind subsist, so as to be serviceable to one
-another, in greater numbers than those proportioned to the spontaneous
-fruits of the earth. Slavery and industry are quite compatible with the
-selfish nature of man, and may therefore be generally established in any
-society: charity again is a refinement upon humanity, and therefore, I
-apprehend, it must ever be precarious.
-
-Now I take slavery and industry to be equally compatible with great
-multiplication, but incompatible with one another, without great
-restrictions laid upon the first. It is a very hard matter to introduce
-industry into a country where slavery is established; because of the
-unequal competition between the work of slaves and that of free men,
-supposing both equally admitted to market. Here is the reason:
-
-The slaves have all their particular masters, who can take better care
-of _them_, than any statesman can take of the industrious freemen;
-because their liberty is an obstacle to his care. The slaves have all
-their wants supplied by the master, who may keep them within the limits
-of sobriety. He may either recruit their numbers from abroad, or take
-care of the children, just as he finds it his advantage. If the latter
-should prove unprofitable, either the children die for want of care, or
-by promiscuous living few are born, or by keeping the sexes asunder,
-they are prevented from breeding at all. A troop of manufacturing
-slaves, considered in a political light, will be found all employed, all
-provided for, and their work, when brought to market by the master, may
-be afforded much cheaper, than the like performed by freemen, who must
-every one provide for himself, and who may perhaps have a separate
-house, a wife, and children, to maintain, and all this from an industry,
-which produces no more, nay not so much, as that of a single slave, who
-has no avocation from labour. Why do large undertakings in the
-manufacturing way ruin private industry, but by coming nearer to the
-simplicity of slaves. Could the sugar islands be cultivated to any
-advantage by hired labour? Were not the expences of rearing children
-supposed to be great, would slaves ever be imported? Certainly not: and
-yet it is still a doubt with me, whether or not a proper regulation for
-bringing up the children of slaves might not turn this expedient to a
-better account, than the constant importation of them. But this is
-foreign to the present purpose. All I intend here to observe is, the
-consequences of a _competition_ between the work of slaves and of free
-men; from which competition I infer, that, without judicious
-regulations, it must be impossible for industry ever to get the better
-of the disadvantages to which it will necessarily be exposed at first,
-in a state where slavery is already introduced.
-
-These regulations ought to prevent the competition between the
-industrious freemen and the masters of slaves, by appropriating the
-occupation of each to different objects: to confine slavery, for
-example, to the country; that is, to set the slaves apart for
-agriculture, and to exclude them from every other service of work. With
-such a regulation _perhaps_ industry might succeed. This was not the
-case of old; industry did not succeed as at present: and to this I
-attribute the simplicity of those times.
-
-It is not so difficult to introduce slavery into a state where liberty
-is established; because such a revolution might be brought about by
-force and violence, which make every thing give way; and, for the
-reasons above-mentioned, I must conclude, that the consequences of such
-a revolution would tend to extinguish, or at least, without the greatest
-precaution, greatly check the progress of industry: but were such
-precautions properly taken; were slavery reduced to a temporary and
-conditional service, and put under proper regulations; it might prove,
-of all others, the most excellent expedient for rendering the lower
-classes of a people happy and flourishing; and for preventing that
-vitious procreation, from which the great misery to which they are
-exposed at present chiefly proceeds. But as every modification of
-slavery is quite contrary to the spirit of modern times, I shall carry
-such speculations no farther. Thus much I have thought it necessary to
-observe, only by the way, for the sake of some principles which I shall
-have occasion afterwards to apply to our own oeconomy; for wherever any
-notable advantage is found accompanying slavery, it is the duty of a
-modern statesman to fall upon a method of profiting by it, without
-wounding the spirit of European liberty. And this he may accomplish in a
-thousand ways, by the aid of good laws, calculated to cut off from the
-lower classes of a people any interest they can have in involving
-themselves in want and misery, opening to them at the same time an easy
-progress towards prosperity and ease.
-
-Here follows an exposition of the principles, from which I was led to
-say, in a former chapter, that the failure of the slavish form of feudal
-government, and the extension thereby given to civil and domestic
-liberty, were the source from which the whole system of modern polity
-has sprung.
-
-Under the feudal form, the higher classes were perhaps more free than at
-present, but the lower classes were either slaves, or under a most
-servile dependence, which is entirely the same thing as to the
-consequence of interrupting the progress of private industry.
-
-I cannot pretend to advance, as a confirmation of this doctrine, that
-the establishment of slavery in our colonies in America was made with a
-view to promote agriculture, and to curb manufactures in the new world,
-because I do not know much of the sentiments of politicians at that
-time: but if it be true, that slavery has the effect of advancing
-agriculture, and other laborious operations which are of a simple
-nature, and at the same time of discouraging invention and ingenuity;
-and if the mother-country has occasion for the produce of the first, in
-order to provide or to employ those who are taken up at home in the
-prosecution of the latter; then I must conclude, that slavery _has been_
-very _luckily_, if not _politically_, established to compass such an
-end: and therefore, if any colony, where slavery is not common, shall
-ever begin to rival the industry of the mother-country, a very good way
-of frustrating the attempt will be, to encourage the introduction of
-slaves into such colonies without any restrictions, and allow it to work
-its natural effect.
-
-Having given the definition of trade and industry, as relative to my
-inquiry, I come now to examine their immediate connections, the better
-to cement the subject of this book, with the principles deduced in the
-former.
-
-In treating of the reciprocal wants of a society, and in shewing how
-their being supplied by labour and ingenuity naturally tends to increase
-population on one hand, and agriculture on the other, the better to
-simplify our ideas, we supposed the transition to be direct from the
-manufacturer to the consumer, and both to be members of the same
-society. Matters now become more complex, by the introduction of trade
-among different nations, which is a method of collecting and
-distributing the produce of industry, by the interposition of a third
-principle. Trade receives from a thousand hands, and distributes to as
-many.
-
-To ask, whether trade owes its beginning to industry, or industry to
-trade, is like asking, whether the motion of the heart is owing to the
-blood, or the motion of the blood to the heart. Both the one and the
-other, I suppose, are formed by such insensible degrees, that it is
-impossible to determine where the motion begins. But so soon as the body
-comes to be perfectly formed, I have little doubt of the heart’s being
-the principle of circulation. Let me apply this to the present question.
-
-A man must first exist, before he can feel want; he must want, that is,
-desire, before he will demand; and he must demand, before he can
-receive. This is a natural chain, and from it we have concluded in Book
-I. that population is the cause, and agriculture the effect.
-
-By a parallel reason it may be alledged, that as wants excite to
-industry, and are considered as the cause of it; and as the produce of
-industry cannot be exchanged without trade; so trade must be an effect
-of industry. To this I agree: but I must observe, that this exchange
-does not convey my idea of trade, although I admit, that it is the root
-from which the other springs; it is the seed, but not the plant; and
-trade, as we have defined it, conveys another idea. The workman must not
-be interrupted, in order to seek for an exchange, nor the consumer put
-to the trouble of finding out the manufacturer. The object of trade
-therefore is no more than a new want, which calls for a set of men to
-supply it; and trade has a powerful effect in promoting industry, by
-facilitating the consumption of its produce.
-
-While wants continue simple and few, a workman finds time enough to
-distribute all his work: when wants become more multiplied, men must
-work harder; time becomes precious; hence trade is introduced. They who
-want to consume, send the merchant, in a manner, to the workman, for his
-labour, and do not go themselves; the workman sells to this interposed
-person, and does not look out for a consumer. Let me now take a familiar
-instance of infant trade, in order to shew how it grows and refines:
-this will illustrate what I have been saying.
-
-I walk out of the gates of a city in a morning, and meet with five
-hundred persons, men and women, every one bringing to market a small
-parcel of herbs, chickens, eggs, fruit, &c. It occurs to me immediately,
-that these people must have little to do at home, since they come to
-market for so small a value. Some years afterwards, I find nothing but
-horses, carts, and waggons, carrying the same provisions. I must then
-conclude, that either those I met before are no more in the country, but
-purged off, as being found useless, after a method has been found of
-collecting all their burdens into a few carts; or that they have found
-out a more profitable employment than carrying eggs and greens to
-market. Which ever happens to be the case, there will be the
-introduction of what I call trade; to wit, this collecting of eggs,
-fruit, fowl, &c. from twenty hands, in order to distribute it to as many
-more within the walls. The consequence is, that a great deal of labour
-is saved; that is to say, the cart gives time to twenty people to
-labour, if they incline; and when wants increase, they will be ready to
-supply them.
-
-We cannot therefore say, that trade will force industry, or that
-industry will force trade; but we may say, that trade will facilitate
-industry, and that industry will support trade. Both the one and the
-other however depend upon a third principle; to wit, a taste for
-superfluity, in those who have an equivalent to give for it. This taste
-will produce demand, and this again will become the main spring of the
-whole operation.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. II.
- _Of Demand._
-
-
-This is no new subject; it is only going over what has been treated of
-very extensively in the first book under another name, and relatively to
-other circumstances. _These_ ideas were there kept as simple as
-possible; _here_ they take on a more complex form, and appear in a new
-dress.
-
-The wants of mankind were said to promote their multiplication, by
-augmenting the demand for the food of the free hands, who, by supplying
-those wants, are enabled to offer an equivalent for their food, to the
-farmers who produced it; and as this way of bartering is a
-representation of trade in its infancy, it is no wonder that trade, when
-grown up, should still preserve a resemblance to it.
-
-_Demand_, considered as a term appropriated to trade, will now be used
-in place of _wants_, the term used in the first book relatively to
-bartering; we must therefore expect, that the operations of the same
-principle, under different appellations, will constantly appear similar,
-in every application we can make of it, to different circumstances and
-combinations.
-
-Whether this term be applied to bartering or to trade, it must
-constantly appear reciprocal. If I demand a pair of shoes, the shoemaker
-either demands money, or something else for his own use. To prevent
-therefore the ambiguity of a term, which, from the sterility of
-language, is taken in different acceptations, according to the
-circumstances which are supposed to accompany it, I shall endeavour
-shortly to analyze it.
-
-_1mo._ Demand is ever understood to be relative to merchandize. A demand
-for money, except in bills of exchange, is never called demand. When
-those who have merchandize upon hand, are desirous of converting them
-into money, they are said to offer to sale; and if, in order to find a
-buyer, they lower their price, then, in place of saying the demand for
-money is high, we say the demand for goods is low.
-
-_2do._ Suppose a ship to arrive at a port loaded with goods, with an
-intention to purchase others in return, the operation only becomes
-double. The ship offers to sale, and the demand of the port is said to
-be high or low, according to the height of the price offered, not
-according to the quantity demanded, or number of demanders. When all is
-sold, then the ship becomes demander; and if his demand be
-proportionally higher than the former, we say upon the whole, that the
-demand is for the commodities of the port; that is, the port offers, and
-the ship demands. This I call reciprocal demand.
-
-_3tio._ Demand is either simple or compound. Simple, when the demander
-is but _one_, compound, when _they are more_. But this is not so much
-relative to persons as to interests. Twenty people demanding from the
-same determined interest form but a simple demand; it becomes compound
-or high, when different interests produce a competition. It may
-therefore be said, that when there is no competition among buyers,
-demand is simple, let the quantity demanded be great or small, let the
-buyers be few or many. When therefore in the contract of barter the
-demand upon one side is simple, upon the other compound, that which is
-compound is constantly called the demand, the other not.
-
-_4to._ Demand is either great or small: great, when the _quantity_
-demanded is great; small, when the _quantity_ demanded is small.
-
-_5to._ Demand is either high or low: high, when the competition among
-the _buyers_ is great; low, when the competition among the _sellers_ is
-great. From these definitions it follows, that the consequence of a
-great demand, is a great sale; the consequence of a high demand, is a
-great price. The consequence of a small demand, is a small sale; the
-consequence of a low demand, is a small price.
-
-_6to._ The nature of demand is to encourage industry; and when it is
-regularly made, the effect of it is, that the supply for the most part
-is found to be in proportion to it, and then the demand is commonly
-simple. It becomes compound from other circumstances. As when it is
-irregular, that is, unexpected, or when the usual supply fails; the
-consequence of which is, that the provision made for the demand, falling
-short of the just proportion, occasions a competition among the buyers,
-and raises the current, that is, the ordinary prices. From this it is,
-that we commonly say, demand raises prices. Prices are high or low
-according to demand. These expressions are just; because the sterility
-of language obliges us there to attend to circumstances which are only
-implied.
-
-Demand is understood to be _high_ or _low_, relatively to the common
-rate of it, or to the competition of buyers, to obtain the provision
-made for it. When demand is relative to the quantity demanded, it must
-be called great or small, as has been said.
-
-_7mo._ Demand has not always the same effect in raising prices: we must
-therefore carefully attend to the difference between a demand for things
-of the first necessity for life, and for things indifferent; also
-between a demand made by the immediate consumers, and one made by
-merchants, who buy in order to sell again. In both cases the competition
-will have different effects. Things of absolute necessity must be
-procured, let the price be ever so great: consumers who have no view to
-profit, but to satisfy their desires, will enter into a stronger
-competition than merchants, who are animated by no passion, and who are
-regulated in what they offer by their prospect of gain. Hence the great
-difference in the price of grain in different years; hence the uniform
-standard of the price of merchandize, in fairs of distribution, such as
-Frankfort, Beaucaire, &c. hence, also, the advantage which consumers
-find in making their provision at the same time that merchants make
-theirs; hence the sudden rise and fall in the price of labouring cattle
-in country markets, where every one provides for himself.
-
-Let what has been said suffice at setting out: this principle will be
-much better explained by its application as we advance, than by all the
-abstract distinctions I am capable to give of it.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. III.
- _Of the first Principles of bartering, and how this grows into Trade._
-
-
-I must now begin by tracing trade to its source, in order to reduce it
-to its first principles.
-
-The most simple of all trade, is that which is carried on by bartering
-the necessary articles of subsistence. If we suppose the earth free to
-the first possessor, this person who cultivates it will first draw from
-it his food, and the surplus will be the object of barter: he will give
-this in exchange to any one who will supply his other wants. This (as
-has been said) naturally supposes both a surplus quantity of food
-produced by labour, and also free hands; for he who makes a trade of
-agriculture cannot supply himself with all other necessaries, as well as
-food; and he who makes a trade of supplying the farmers with such
-necessaries, in exchange for his surplus of food, cannot be employed in
-producing that food. The more the necessities of man increase, _cæteris
-paribus_, the more free hands are required to supply them; and the more
-free hands are required, the more surplus food must be produced by
-additional labour, to supply their demand.
-
-This is the least complex kind of trade, and may be carried on to a
-greater or less extent, in different countries, according to the
-different degrees of the wants to be supplied. In a country where there
-is no money, nor any thing equivalent to it, I imagine the wants of
-mankind will be confined to few objects; to wit, the removing the
-inconveniencies of hunger, thirst, cold, heat, danger, and the like. A
-free man who by his industry can procure all the comforts of a simple
-life, will enjoy his rest, and work no more: And, in general, all
-increase of work will cease, so soon as the demand for the purposes
-mentioned comes to be satisfied. There is a plain reason for this. When
-the free hands have procured, by their labour, wherewithal to supply
-their wants, their ambition is satisfied: so soon as the husbandmen have
-produced the necessary surplus for relieving theirs, they work no more.
-Here then is a natural stop put to industry, consequently to bartering.
-This, in the first book, we have called _the moral impossibility of
-augmenting numbers._
-
-The next thing to be examined, is, how bartering grows into trade,
-properly so called and understood, according to the definition given of
-it above; how trade comes to be extended among men; how manufactures,
-more ornamental than useful, come to be established; and how men come to
-submit to labour, in order to acquire what is not absolutely necessary
-for them.
-
-This, in a free society, I take to be chiefly owing to the introduction
-of money, and a taste for superfluities in those who possess it.
-
-In antient times, money was not wanting; but the taste for superfluities
-not being in proportion to it, the specie was locked up. This was the
-case in Europe four hundred years ago. A new taste for superfluity has
-drawn, perhaps, more money into circulation, from our own treasures,
-than from the mines of the new world. The poor opinion we entertain of
-the riches of our forefathers, is founded upon the modern way of
-estimating wealth, by the quantity of coin in circulation, from which we
-conclude, that the greatest part of the specie now in our hands must
-have come from America.
-
-It is more, therefore, through the taste of superfluity, than in
-consequence of the quantity of coin, that trade comes to be established;
-and it is only in consequence of trade that we see industry carry things
-in our days to so high a pitch of refinement and delicacy. Let me
-illustrate this by comparing together the different operations of
-barter, sale, and commerce.
-
-When reciprocal wants are supplied by barter, there is not the smallest
-occasion for money: this is the most simple of all combinations.
-
-When wants are multiplied, bartering becomes (for obvious reasons) more
-difficult; upon this money is introduced. This is the common price of
-all things: it is a proper equivalent in the hands of those who want,
-perfectly calculated to supply the occasions of those who, by industry,
-can relieve them. This operation of buying and selling is a little more
-complex than the former; but still we have here no idea of trade,
-because we have not introduced the merchant, by whose industry it is
-carried on.
-
-Let this third person be brought into play, and the whole operation
-becomes clear. What before we called wants, is here represented by the
-consumer; what we called industry, by the manufacturer; what we called
-money, by the merchant. The merchant here represents the money, by
-substituting credit in its place; and as the money was invented to
-facilitate barter, so the merchant, with his credit, is a new refinement
-upon the use of money. This renders it still more effectual in
-performing the operations of buying and selling. This operation is
-trade: it relieves both parties of the whole trouble of transportation,
-and adjusting wants to wants, or wants to money; the merchant represents
-by turns both the consumer, the manufacturer, and the money. To the
-consumer he appears as the whole body of manufacturers; to the
-manufacturers as the whole body of consumers; and to the one and the
-other class his credit supplies the use of money. This is sufficient at
-present for an illustration. I must now return to the simple operations
-of money in the hands of the two contracting parties, the buyer and the
-seller, in order to show how men come to submit to labour in order to
-acquire superfluities.
-
-So soon as money is introduced into a country it becomes, as we have
-said above, an universal object of want to all the inhabitants. The
-consequence is, that the free hands of the state, who before stopt
-working, because all their wants were provided for, having this new
-object of ambition before their eyes, endeavour, by refinements upon
-their labour, to remove the smaller inconveniencies which result from a
-simplicity of manners. People, I shall suppose, who formerly knew but
-one sort of cloathing for all seasons, willingly part with a little
-money to procure for themselves different sorts of apparel properly
-adapted to summer and winter, which the ingenuity of manufacturers, and
-their desire of getting money, may have suggested to their invention.
-
-I shall not here pursue the gradual progress of industry, in bringing
-manufactures to perfection; nor interrupt my subject with any further
-observations upon the advantages resulting to industry, from the
-establishment of civil and domestic liberty, but shall only suggest,
-that these refinements seem more generally owing to the industry and
-invention of the manufacturers (who by their ingenuity daily contrive
-means of softening or relieving inconveniencies, which mankind seldom
-perceive to be such, till the way of removing them is contrived) than to
-the taste for luxury in the rich, who, to indulge their ease, engage the
-poor to become industrious.
-
-Let any man make an experiment of this nature upon himself, by entring
-into the first shop. He will no where so quickly discover his wants as
-there. Every thing he sees appears either necessary, or at least highly
-convenient; and he begins to wonder (especially if he be rich) how he
-could have been so long without that which the ingenuity of the workman
-alone had invented, in order that from the novelty it might excite his
-desire; for perhaps when it is bought, he will never once think of it
-more, nor ever apply it to the use for which it at first appeared so
-necessary.
-
-Here then is a reason why mankind labour though not in want. They become
-desirous of possessing the very instruments of luxury, which their
-avarice or ambition prompted them to invent for the use of others.
-
-What has been said represents trade in its infancy, or rather the
-materials with which that great fabric is built.
-
-We have formed an idea of the wants of mankind multiplied even to
-luxury, and abundantly supplied by the employment of all the free hands
-set apart for that purpose. But if we suppose the workman himself
-disposing of his work, and purchasing, with it, food from the farmer,
-cloaths from the clothier, and in general seeking for the supply of
-every want from the hands of the person directly employed for the
-purpose of relieving it; this will not convey an idea of trade,
-according to our definition.
-
-Trade and commerce are an abbreviation of this long process; a scheme
-invented and set on foot by merchants, from a principle of gain,
-supported and extended among men, from a principle of general utility to
-every individual, rich or poor, to every society, great or small.
-
-Instead of a pin-maker exchanging his pins with fifty different persons,
-for whose labour he has occasion, he sells all to the merchant for money
-or for credit; and, as occasion offers, he purchases all his wants,
-either directly from those who supply them, or from other merchants who
-deal with manufacturers in the same way his merchant dealt with him.
-
-Another advantage of trade is, that industrious people in one part of
-the country, may supply customers in another, though distant. They may
-establish themselves in the most commodious places for their respective
-business, and help one another reciprocally, without making the distant
-parts of the country suffer for want of their labour. They are likewise
-exposed to no avocation from their work, by seeking for customers.
-
-Trade produces many excellent advantages; it marks out to the
-manufacturers when their branch is under or overstocked with hands. If
-it is understocked, they will find more demand than they can answer: if
-it is overstocked, the sale will be slow.
-
-Intelligent men, in every profession, will easily discover when these
-appearances are accidental, and when they proceed from the real
-principles of trade; which are here the object of our inquiry.
-
-Posts, and correspondence by letters, are a consequence of trade, by the
-means of which merchants are regularly informed of every augmentation or
-diminution of industry in every branch, in every part of the country.
-From this knowledge they regulate the prices they offer; and as they are
-many, they serve as a check upon one another, from the principles of
-competition which we shall hereafter examine.
-
-From the current prices the manufacturers are as well informed as if
-they kept the correspondence themselves: the statesman feels perfectly
-where hands are wanting, and young people destined to industry, obey, in
-a manner, the call of the public, and fall naturally in to supply the
-demand.
-
-Two great assistances to merchants, especially in the infancy of trade,
-are public markets for collecting the work of small dealers, and large
-undertakings in the manufacturing way by private hands. By these means
-the merchants come at the knowledge of the quantity of work in the
-market, as on the other hand the manufacturers learn, by the sale of the
-goods, the extent of the demand for them. These two things being justly
-known, the price of goods is easily fixt, as we shall presently see.
-
-Public sales serve to correct the small inconveniencies which proceed
-from the operations of trade. A set of manufacturers got all together
-into one town, and entirely taken up with their industry, are thereby as
-well informed of the rate of the market as if every one of them carried
-thither his work, and upon the arrival of the merchant, who readily
-takes it off their hands, he has not the least advantage over them from
-his knowledge of the state of demand. This man both buys and sells in
-what is called wholesale (that is by large parcels) and from him
-retailers purchase, who distribute the goods to every consumer
-throughout the country. These last buy from wholesale merchants in every
-branch, that proportion of every kind of merchandize which is suitable
-to the demand of their borough, city, or province.
-
-Thus all inconveniencies are prevented, at some additional cost to the
-consumer, who, for reasons we shall afterwards point out, must naturally
-reimburse the whole expence. The distance of the manufacturer, the
-obscurity of his dwelling, the caprice in selling his work, are quite
-removed; the retailer has all in his shop, and the public buys at a
-current price.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. IV.
- _How the Prices of Goods are determined by Trade._
-
-
-In the price of goods, I consider two things as really existing, and
-quite different from one another; to wit, the real value of the
-commodity, and the profit upon alienation. The intention of this chapter
-is to establish this distinction, and to shew how the operation of trade
-severally influences the standard of the one and the other; that is to
-say, how trade has the effect of rendering fixt and determined, two
-things which would otherwise be quite vague and uncertain.
-
-I. The first thing to be known of any manufacture when it comes to be
-sold, is, how much of it a person can perform in a day, a week, a month,
-according to the nature of the work, which may require more or less time
-to bring it to perfection. In making such estimates, regard is to be had
-only to what, upon an average, a workman of the country in general may
-perform, without supposing him the best or the worst in his profession;
-or having any peculiar advantage or disadvantage as to the place where
-he works.
-
-Hence the reason why some people thrive by their industry, and others
-not; why some manufactures flourish in one place and not in another.
-
-II. The second thing to be known, is the value of the workman’s
-subsistence and necessary expence, both for supplying his personal
-wants, and providing the instruments belonging to his profession, which
-must be taken upon an average as above; except when the nature of the
-work requires the presence of the workman in the place of consumption:
-for although some trades, and almost every manufacture, may be carried
-on in places at a distance, and therefore may fall under one general
-regulation as to prices, yet others there are which, by their nature,
-require the presence of the workman in the place of consumption; and in
-that case the prices must be regulated by circumstances relative to
-every particular place.
-
-III. The third and last thing to be known, is the value of the
-materials, that is the first matter employed by the workman; and if the
-object of his industry be the manufacture of another, the same process
-of inquiry must be gone through with regard to the first, as with regard
-to the second: and thus the most complex manufactures may be at last
-reduced to the greatest simplicity. I have been more particular in this
-analysis of manufactures than was absolutely necessary in this place,
-that I might afterwards with the greater ease point out the methods of
-diminishing the prices of them.
-
-These three articles being known, the price of manufacture is
-determined. It cannot be lower than the amount of all the three, that
-is, than the real value; whatever it is higher, is the manufacturer’s
-profit. This will ever be in proportion to demand, and therefore will
-fluctuate according to circumstances.
-
-Hence appears the necessity of a great demand, in order to promote
-flourishing manufactures.
-
-By the extensive dealings of merchants, and their constant application
-to the study of the balance of work and demand, all the above
-circumstances are known to them, and are made known to the industrious,
-who regulate their living and expence according to their certain profit.
-I call it certain, because under these circumstances they seldom
-overvalue their work, and by not overvaluing it, they are sure of a
-sale: a proof of this may be had from daily experience.
-
-Employ a workman in a country where there is little trade or industry,
-he proportions his price always to the urgency of your want, or your
-capacity to pay; but seldom to his own labour. Employ another in a
-country of trade, he will not impose upon you, unless perhaps you be a
-stranger, which supposes your being ignorant of the value; but employ
-the same workman in a work not usual in the country, consequently not
-demanded, consequently not regulated as to the value, he will proportion
-his price as in the first supposition.
-
-We may therefore conclude from what has been said, that in a country
-where trade is established, manufactures must flourish, from the ready
-sale, the regulated price of work, and certain profit resulting from
-industry. Let us next inquire into the consequences of such a situation.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. V.
-_How foreign Trade opens to an industrious People, and the consequences
- of it to_ the Merchants _who set it on foot_.
-
-
-The first consequence of the situation described in the preceding
-chapter, is, that wants are easily supplied, for the adequate value of
-the thing wanted.
-
-The next consequence is, the opening of foreign trade under its two
-denominations of passive and active. Strangers and people of distant
-countries finding the difficulty of having their wants supplied at home,
-and the ease of having them supplied from this country, immediately have
-recourse to it. This is passive trade. The active is when merchants, who
-have executed this plan at home with success, begin to transport the
-labour of their countrymen into other regions, which either produce, or
-are capable of producing such articles of consumption, proper to be
-manufactured, as are most demanded at home; and consequently will meet
-with the readiest sale, and fetch the largest profits.
-
-Here then is the opening of foreign trade, under its two denominations
-of active and passive: but as our present point of view is the
-consequences of this revolution to the merchants, we shall take no
-farther notice, in this place, of that division: it will naturally come
-in afterwards.
-
-What then are the consequences of this new commerce to our merchants,
-who have left their homes in quest of gain abroad?
-
-The first is, that arriving in any new country, they find themselves in
-the same situation, with regard to the inhabitants, as the workman in
-the country of no trade, with regard to those who employed him; that is,
-they proportion the price of their goods to the eagerness of acquiring,
-or the capacity of paying, in the inhabitants, but never to their real
-value.
-
-The first profits then, upon this trade, must be very considerable; and
-the demand from such a country will be _high_ or _low_, _great_ or
-_small_, according to the spirit, not the real wants of the people: for
-these in all countries, as has been said, must first be supplied by the
-inhabitants themselves, before they cease to labour.
-
-If the people of this not-trading country (as we shall now call it) be
-abundantly furnished with commodities useful to the traders, they will
-easily part with them, at first, for the instruments of luxury and ease;
-but the great profit of the traders will insensibly increase the demand
-for the productions of their new correspondents; this will have the
-effect of producing a competition between themselves, and thereby of
-throwing the demand on their side, from the principles I shall
-afterwards explain. This is perpetually a disadvantage in traffic: the
-most unpolished nations in the world quickly perceive the effects of it;
-and are taught to profit of the discovery, in spite of the address of
-those who are the most expert in commerce.
-
-The traders will, therefore, be very fond of falling upon every method
-and contrivance to inspire this people with a taste of refinement and
-delicacy. Abundance of fine presents, consisting of every instrument of
-luxury and superfluity, the best adapted to the genius of the people,
-will be given to the prince and leading men among them. Workmen will
-even be employed at home to study the taste of the strangers, and to
-captivate their desires by every possible means. The more eager they are
-of presents, the more lavish the traders will be in bestowing and
-diversifying them. It is an animal put up to fatten, the more he eats
-the sooner he is fit for slaughter. When their taste for superfluity is
-fully formed, when the relish for their former simplicity is
-sophisticated, poisoned, and obliterated, then they are surely in the
-fetters of the traders, and the deeper they go, the less possibility
-there is of their getting out. The presents then will die away, having
-served their purpose; and if afterwards they are found to be continued,
-it will probably be to support the competition against other nations,
-who will incline to share of the profits.
-
-If, on the contrary, this not-trading nation does not abound with
-commodities useful to the traders, these will make little account of
-trading with them, whatever their turn may be; but if we suppose this
-country inhabited by a laborious people, who, having taken a taste for
-refinement from the traders, apply themselves to agriculture, in order
-to produce articles of subsistence, they will sollicit the merchants to
-give them part of their manufactures in exchange for those; and this
-trade will undoubtedly have the effect of multiplying numbers in the
-trading nation. But if food cannot be furnished, nor any other branch of
-production found out to support the correspondence, the taste for
-refinement will soon die away, and trade will stop in this quarter.
-
-Had it not been for the furs in those countries adjacent to Hudson’s
-Bay, and in Canada, the Europeans never would have thought of supplying
-instruments of luxury to those nations; and if the inhabitants of those
-regions had not taken a taste for the instruments of luxury furnished to
-them by the Europeans, they never would have become so indefatigable nor
-so dexterous hunters. At the same time we are not to suppose, that ever
-these Americans would have come to Europe in quest of our manufactures.
-It is therefore owing to our merchants, that these nations are become in
-any degree fond of refinement; and this taste, in all probability, will
-not soon exceed the proportion of the productions of their country. From
-these beginnings of foreign trade it is easy to trace its increase.
-
-One step towards this, is the establishing correspondences in foreign
-countries; and these are more or less necessary in proportion as the
-country where they are established is more or less polished or
-acquainted with trade. They supply the want of posts, and point out to
-the merchants what proportion the productions of the country bear to the
-demand of the inhabitants for manufactures. This communicates an idea of
-commerce to the not-trading nation, and they insensibly begin to fix a
-determined value upon their own productions, which perhaps bore no
-determined value at all before.
-
-Let me trace a little the progress of this refinement in the savages, in
-order to shew how it has the effect of throwing the demand upon the
-traders, and of creating a competition among them, for the productions
-of the new country.
-
-Experience shews, that in a new discovered country, merchants constantly
-find some article or other of its productions, which turns out to a
-great account in commerce; and we see that the longer such a trade
-subsists, and the more the inhabitants take a taste for European
-manufactures, the more their own productions rise in their value, and
-the less profit is made by trading with them, even in cases where the
-trade is carried on by companies; which is a very wise institution for
-one reason, that it cuts off a competition between our merchants.
-
-This we shall shew, in its proper place, to be the best means of keeping
-prices low in favour of the nation; however it may work a contrary
-effect with respect to individuals who must buy from these monopolies.
-
-When companies are not established, and when trade is open, our
-merchants, by their eagerness to profit of the new trade, betray the
-secrets of it, they enter into competition for the purchase of the
-foreign produce, and this raises prices and favours the commerce of the
-most ignorant savages.
-
-Some account for this in a different manner. They alledge that it is not
-this competition which raises prices; because there is also a
-competition among the savages as to which of them shall get the
-merchandize; and this may be sufficient to counterbalance the other, and
-in proportion as the quantity of goods demanded by the savages, as an
-exchange for the produce of their country, becomes greater, a less
-quantity of this produce must be given for every parcel of the goods.
-
-To this I answer, That I cannot admit this apparent reason to be
-consistent with the principles of trade, however ingenious the conceit
-may be.
-
-The merchant constantly considers his own profit in parting with his
-goods, and is not influenced by the reasons of expediency which the
-savages may find, to offer him less than formerly; for were this
-principle of proportion admitted generally, the price of merchandize
-would always be at the discretion of the buyers.
-
-The objection here stated is abundantly plain; but it must be resolved
-in a very different manner. Here are two solutions:
-
-1. Prices, I have said, are made to rise, according as demand is _high_,
-not according as it is _great_. Now, in the objection, it is said, that,
-in proportion as the demand is _great_, a less proportion of the
-equivalent must go to every parcel of the merchandize; which I apprehend
-to be false: and this shews the necessity of making a distinction
-between the _high_ and the _great_ demand, which things are different in
-trade, and communicate quite different ideas.
-
-2. In all trade there is an exchange, and in all exchange, we have said,
-there is a reciprocal demand implied: it must therefore be exactly
-inquired into, on which hand the competition between the demanders is
-found; that is to say, on which hand it is _strongest_; according to the
-distinction in the second chapter.
-
-If the inhabitants of the country be in competition for the
-manufactures, goods will rise in their price most undoubtedly, let the
-quantity of the produce they have to offer be large or small; but so
-soon as these prices rise above the faculties, or desire of buying, in
-certain individuals, their demand will stop, and their equivalent will
-be prevented from coming into commerce. This will disappoint the
-traders; and therefore, as their gains are supposed to be great, either
-a competition will take place among themselves, who shall carry off the
-quantity remaining, supposing them to have separate interests; or, if
-they are united, they may, from a view of expediency, voluntarily sink
-their price, in order to bring it within the compass of the faculties,
-or intention, to buy in those who are still possessed of a portion of
-what they want.
-
-It is from the effects of competition among sellers that I apprehend
-prices are brought down, not from any imaginary proportion of quantity
-to quantity in the market. But of this more afterwards, in its proper
-place.
-
-So soon as the price of manufactures is brought as low as possible, in
-the new nation; if the surplus of their commodities does not suffice to
-purchase a quantity of manufactures proportioned to their wants, this
-people must begin to labour: for labour is the necessary consequence of
-want, real or imaginary; and by labour it will be supplied.
-
-When this comes to be the case, we immediately find two trading nations
-in place of one; the balance of which trade will always be in favour of
-the most industrious and frugal; as shall be fully explained in another
-place.
-
-Let me now direct my inquiry more particularly towards the consequences
-of this new revolution produced by commerce, relative to the not-trading
-nation, in order to shew the effect of a passive foreign trade. I shall
-spare no pains in illustrating, upon every occasion, as I go along, the
-fundamental principles of commerce, demand, and competition, even
-perhaps at the expence of appearing tiresome to some of my readers.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. VI.
- _Consequences of the introduction of a passive foreign Trade among a
- People who live in Simplicity and Idleness._
-
-
-We now suppose the arrival of traders, all in one interest, with
-instruments of luxury and refinement, at a port in a country of great
-simplicity of manners, abundantly provided by nature with great
-advantages for commerce, and peopled by a nation capable of adopting a
-taste for superfluities.
-
-The first thing the merchants do, is to expose their goods, and point
-out the advantages of many things, either agreeable or useful to mankind
-in general, such as wines, spirits, instruments of agriculture, arms,
-and ammunition for hunting, nets for fishing, manufactures for clothing,
-and the like. The advantages of these are presently perceived, and such
-commodities are eagerly sought after.
-
-The natives on their side produce what they most esteem, generally
-something superfluous or ornamental. The traders, after examining all
-circumstances, determine the object of their demand, giving the least
-quantity possible in return for this superfluity, in order to impress
-the inhabitants with a high notion of the value of their own
-commodities; but as this parsimony may do more hurt than good to their
-interest, they are very generous in making presents, from the principles
-mentioned above.
-
-When the exchange is completed, and the traders depart, regret is
-commonly mutual; the one and the other are sorry that the superfluities
-of the country fall short. A return is promised by the traders, and
-assurances are given by the natives, of a better provision another time.
-
-What are the first consequences of this revolution?
-
-It is not evident, that, in order to supply an equivalent for this new
-want, more hands must be set to work than formerly. And it is evident
-also, that this augmentation of industry will not essentially increase
-numbers, as was supposed to be the effect of it through the whole train
-of our reasoning in the first book. Why? Because _there_ the produce of
-the industry was supposed to be consumed at home; and _here_ it is
-intended to be exported. But if we can find out any additional
-consumption at home even implied by this new trade, I think it will have
-the effect of augmenting numbers. An example will make this plain.
-
-Let me suppose the superfluity of this country to be the skins of wild
-beasts, not proper for food; the manufacture sought for, brandy. The
-brandy is sold for furs. He who has furs, or he who can spare time to
-hunt for them, will drink brandy in proportion: but I cannot find out
-any reason to conclude from this simple operation, that one man more in
-the country must necessarily be fed, (for I have taken care to suppose,
-that the flesh of the animals is not proper for food) or that any
-augmentation of agriculture must of consequence ensue from this new
-traffic.
-
-But let me throw in a circumstance which may imply an additional
-consumption at home, and then examine the consequences.
-
-A poor creature, who has no equivalent to offer for food, who is
-miserable, and ready to perish for want of subsistence, goes a-hunting,
-and kills a wolf; he comes to a farmer with the skin, and says; You are
-well fed, but you have no brandy; if you will give me a loaf, I will
-give you this skin, which the strangers are so fond of, and they will
-give you brandy. But, says the farmer, I have no more bread than what is
-sufficient for my own family. As for that, replies the other, I will
-come and dig in your ground, and you and I will settle our account as to
-the small quantity I desire of you. The bargain is made; the poor fellow
-gets his loaf, and lives at least; perhaps he marries, and the farmer
-gets a dram. But had it not been for this dram, (that is, this new want)
-which was purchased by the industry of this poor fellow, by what
-argument could he have induced the farmer, to part with a loaf.
-
-I here exclude the sentiment of charity. This alone, as I have often
-observed, is a principle of multiplication, and if it was admitted here,
-it would ruin all my supposition; but as true it is, on the other hand,
-that could the poor fellow have got bread by begging, he would not
-probably have gone a-hunting.
-
-Here then it appears, that the very dawning of trade, in the most
-unpolished countries, implies a multiplication. This is enough to point
-out the first step, and to connect the subject of our present inquiries
-with what has been already discussed in relation to other circumstances.
-I proceed.
-
-So soon as all the furs are disposed of, and a taste for superfluity
-introduced, both the traders and the natives will be equally interested
-in the advancement of industry in this country. Many new objects of
-profit for the first will be discovered, which the proper employment of
-the inhabitants, in reaping the natural advantages of their soil and
-climate, will make effectual. The traders will therefore endeavour to
-set on foot many branches of industry among the savages, and the
-allurements of brandy, arms, and clothing, will animate these in the
-pursuit of them. Let me here digress for a few lines.
-
-If we suppose slavery to be established in this country, then all the
-slaves will be set to work, in order to provide furs and other things
-demanded by the traders, that the masters may thereby be enabled to
-indulge themselves in the superfluities brought to them by the
-merchants. When liberty is the system, every one, according to his
-disposition, becomes industrious, in order to procure such enjoyments
-for himself.
-
-In the first supposition, it is the head of the master which conducts
-the labour of the slave, and turns it towards ingenuity: in the second,
-every head is at work, and every hand is improving in dexterity. Where
-hands therefore are principally necessary, the slaves have the
-advantage; where heads are principally necessary, the advantage lies in
-favour of the free. Set a man to labour at so much a day, he will go on
-at a regular rate, and never seek to improve his method: let him be
-hired by the piece, he will find a thousand expedients to extend his
-industry. This is exactly the difference between the slave and the free
-man. From this I account for the difference between the progress of
-industry in antient and modern times. Why was a _peculium_ given to
-slaves, but to engage them to become dextrous? Had there been no
-_peculium_ and no _libertini_, or free men, who had been trained to
-labour, there would have been little more industry any where, than there
-was in the republic of Lycurgus, where, I apprehend, neither the one or
-the other was to be found. I return.
-
-When once this revolution is brought about; when those who formerly
-lived in simplicity become industrious; matters put on a new face. Is
-not this operation quite similar to that represented in the fifth
-chapter of the first book? There I found the greatest difficulty, in
-shewing how the mutual operations of supplying food and other wants
-could have the effect of promoting population and agriculture, among a
-people who were supposed to have no idea of the system proposed to be
-put in execution. Here the plan appears familiar and easy. The
-difference between them seems to resemble that of a child’s learning a
-language by grammar, or learning it by the ear in the country where it
-is spoken. In the first case, many throw the book aside, but in the
-other none ever fail of success.
-
-I have said, that matters put on a new face; that is to say, we now find
-two trading nations instead of one, with this difference, however, that
-as hitherto we have supposed the merchants all in one interest, the
-compound demand, that is, the competition of the buyers, has been, and
-must still continue on the side of the natives. This is a great
-prejudice to their interest, but as it is not supposed sufficient to
-check their industry, nor to restrain their consumption of the
-manufactures, let me here examine a little more particularly the
-consequences of the principle of demand in such a situation; for
-although I allow, that it can never change sides, yet it may admit of
-different modifications, and produce different effects, as we shall
-presently perceive.
-
-The merchants we suppose all in one interest, consequently there can be
-no competition among them; consequently no check can be put upon their
-raising their prices, as long as the prices they demand are complied
-with. So soon as they are raised to the full extent of the abilities of
-the natives, or of their inclination to buy, the merchants have the
-choice of three things, which are all perfectly in their option, and the
-preference to be given to the one or the other depends intirely upon
-themselves, and upon the circumstances I am going to point out.
-
-First, they may support the _high_ demand; that is, not lower their
-price; which will preserve a high estimation of the manufactures in the
-opinion of the inhabitants, and render the profits upon their trade the
-greatest possible. This part they may possibly take, if they perceive
-the natives doubling their diligence, in order to become able, in time,
-to purchase considerable cargoes at a high value; from which supposition
-is implied a strong disposition in the people to become luxurious, since
-nothing but want of ability prevents them from complying with the
-highest demand: but still another circumstance must concur, to engage
-the merchants not to lower their price. The great proportion of the
-goods they seek for, in return, must be found in the hands of a few.
-This will be the case if slavery be established; for then there must be
-many poor, and few rich: and they are commonly the rich consumers who
-proportion the price they offer, rather to their desires, than to the
-value of the thing.
-
-The second thing which may be done is, to open the door to a _great_
-demand; that is, to lower their prices. This will sink the value of the
-manufactures in the opinion of the inhabitants, and render profits less
-in proportion, although indeed, upon the voyage, the profits may be
-greater.
-
-This part they will take, if they perceive the inhabitants do not
-incline to consume great quantities of the merchandize at a high value,
-either from want of abilities or inclination; and also, if the profits
-upon the trade depend upon a large consumption, as is the case in
-merchandize of a low value, and suited chiefly to the occasions of the
-lower sort. Such motives of expediency will be sufficient to make them
-neglect a _high_ demand, and prefer a _great_ one; and the more, when
-there is a likelihood that the consumption of low-priced goods in the
-beginning may beget a taste for others of a higher value, and thus
-extend in general the taste of superfluity.
-
-A third part to be taken, is the least politic, and perhaps the most
-familiar. It is to profit by the competition between the buyers, and
-encourage the rising of demand as long as possible; when this comes to a
-stop, to make a kind of auction, by first bringing down the prices to
-the level of the highest bidders, and so to descend by degrees, in
-proportion as demand sinks. Thus we may say with propriety, according to
-our definitions of demand, that it commonly becomes _great_, in
-proportion as prices sink. By this operation, the traders will profit as
-much as possible, and sell off as much of their goods as the profits
-will permit.
-
-I say, this plan, in a new discovered country, is not politic, as it
-both discovers a covetousness and a want of faith in the merchants, and
-also throws open the secrets of their trade to those who ought to be
-kept ignorant of them.
-
-Let me next suppose, that the large profits of our merchants shall be
-discovered by others, who arrive at the same ports in a separate
-interest, and who enter into no combination which might prevent the
-natural effects of competition.
-
-Let the state of demand among the natives be supposed the same as
-formerly, both as to _height_ and _greatness_, in consequence of the
-operation of the different principles, which might have induced our
-merchants to follow one or other of the plans we have been describing;
-we must however still suppose, that they have been careful to preserve
-considerable profits upon every branch.
-
-If we suppose the inhabitants to have increased in numbers, wealth, and
-taste for superfluity, since the last voyage, demand will be found
-rather on the rising hand. Upon the arrival of the merchants in
-competition with the former, both will offer to sale; but if both stand
-to the same prices, it is very natural to suppose, that the former
-dealers will obtain a preference; as _cæteris paribus_, it is always an
-advantage to know and to be known. The last comers, therefore, have no
-other way left to counterbalance this advantage, but to lower their
-prices.
-
-This is a new phoenomenon: here the fall of prices is not voluntary as
-formerly; not consented to from expediency; not owing to a failure of
-demand, but to the influence of a new principle of commerce, to wit, a
-double competition. This I shall now examine with all the care I am
-capable of.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. VII.
- _Of double Competition._
-
-
-When _competition_ is much stronger on one side of the contract than on
-the other, I call it _simple_, and then it is a term synonimous with
-what I have called _compound demand_. This is the species of competition
-which is implied in the term _high demand_, or when it is said, that
-_demand raises prices_.
-
-_Double competition_ is, when, in a certain degree, it takes place on
-both sides of the contract at once, or vibrates alternately from one to
-the other. This is what restrains prices to the adequate value of the
-merchandize.
-
-I frankly confess I feel a great want of language to express my ideas,
-and it is for this reason I employ so many examples, the better to
-communicate certain combinations of them, which otherwise would be
-inextricable.
-
-The great difficulty is to distinguish clearly between the principles of
-_demand_, and those of _competition_: here then follows the principal
-differences between the two, relatively to the effects they produce
-severally in the mercantile contract of buying and selling, which I here
-express shortly by the word _contract_.
-
-_Simple demand_ is what brings the quantity of a commodity to market.
-Many demand, who do not buy; many offer, who do not sell. This demand is
-called _great_ or _small_; it is said to _increase_, to _augment_, to
-_swell_; and is expressed by these and other synonimous terms, which
-mark an augmentation or diminution of quantity. In this species, two
-people never demand the same thing, but a part of the same thing, or
-things quite alike.
-
-_Compound demand_ is the principle which raises prices, and never can
-make them sink; because in this case more than one demands the very same
-thing. It is solely applicable to the buyers, in relation to the price
-they offer. This demand is called _high_ or _low_, and is said to
-_rise_, to _fall_, to _mount_, to _sink_, and is expressed by these and
-other synonimous terms.
-
-_Simple competition_, when between buyers, is the same as _compound_ or
-_high demand_, but differs from it in so far, as this may equally take
-place among sellers, which _compound demand_ cannot, and then it works a
-contrary effect: it makes prices _sink_, and is synonimous with _low
-demand_: it is this competition which overturns the balance of work and
-demand; of which afterwards.
-
-_Double competition_ is what is understood to take place in almost every
-operation of trade; it is this which prevents the excessive rise of
-prices; it is this which prevents their excessive fall. While _double
-competition_ prevails, the balance is perfect, trade and industry
-flourish.
-
-The capital distinction, therefore, between the terms _demand_ and
-_competition_ is, that _demand_ is constantly relative to the buyers,
-and when money is not the price, as in barter, then it is relative to
-that side upon which the greatest _competition_ is found.
-
-We therefore say, with regard to _prices_, demand is _high_ or _low_.
-With regard _to the quantity of merchandize_, demand is _great_ or
-_small_. With regard _to competition_, it is always called _great_ or
-_small_, _strong_ or _weak_.
-
-_Competition_, I have said, is, with equal propriety, applicable to both
-parties in the contract. A _competition_ among buyers is a proper
-expression; a _competition_ among sellers, who have the merchandize, is
-fully as easily understood, though it be not quite so striking, for
-reasons which an example will make plain.
-
-You come to a fair, where you find a great variety of every kind of
-merchandize, in the possession of different merchants. These, by
-offering their goods to sale, constitute a tacit competition; every one
-of them wishes to sell in preference to another, and at the same time
-with the best advantage to himself.
-
-The buyers begin, by cheapning at every shop. The first price asked
-marks the covetousness of the seller; the first price offered, the
-avarice of the buyer. From this operation, I say, competition begins to
-work its effects on both sides, and so becomes double. The principles
-which influence this operation are now to be deduced.
-
-It is impossible to suppose the same degree of eagerness, either to buy
-or to sell, among several merchants; because the degree of eagerness I
-take to be exactly in proportion to their view of profit; and as these
-must necessarily be influenced and regulated by different circumstances,
-that buyer, who has the best prospect of selling again with profit,
-obliges him, whose prospect is not so good, to content himself with
-less; and that seller, who has bought to the best advantage, obliges
-him, who has paid dearer for the merchandize, to moderate his desire of
-gain.
-
-It is from these principles, that competition among buyers and sellers
-must take place. This is what confines the fluctuation of prices within
-limits which are compatible with the reasonable profits of both buyers
-and sellers; for, as has been said, in treating of trade, we must
-constantly suppose the whole operation of buying and selling to be
-performed by merchants; the buyer cannot be supposed to give so high a
-price as that which he expects to receive, when he distributes to the
-consumers, nor can the seller be supposed to accept of a lower than that
-which he paid to the manufacturer. This competition is properly called
-double, because of the difficulty to determine upon which side it
-stands; the same merchant may have it in his favour upon certain
-articles, and against him upon others; it is continually in vibration,
-and the arrival of every post may less or more pull down the heavy
-scale.
-
-In every transaction between merchants, the profit resulting from the
-sale must be exactly distinguished from the value of the merchandize.
-The first _may_ vary, the last never _can_. It is this profit alone
-which can be influenced by competition; and it is for that reason we
-find such uniformity every where in the prices of goods of the same
-quality.
-
-The competition between sellers does not appear so striking, as that
-between buyers; because he who offers to sale, appears only passive in
-the first operation; whereas the buyers present themselves one after
-another; they make a demand, and when the merchandize is refused to one
-at a certain price, a second either offers more, or does not offer at
-all: but so soon as another seller finds his account in accepting the
-price the first had refused, then the first enters into competition,
-providing his profits will admit his lowering the first price, and thus
-competition takes place among the sellers, until the profits upon their
-trade prevent prices from falling lower.
-
-In all markets, I have said, this competition is varying, though
-insensibly, on many occasions; but in others, the vibrations are very
-perceptible. Sometimes it is found strongest on the side of the buyers,
-and in proportion as this grows, the competition between the sellers
-diminishes. When the competition between the former has raised prices to
-a certain standard, it comes to a stop; then the competition changes
-sides, and takes place among the sellers, eager to profit of the highest
-price. This makes prices fall, and according as they fall, the
-competition among the buyers diminishes. They still wait for the lowest
-period. At last it comes; and then perhaps some new circumstance, by
-giving the balance a kick, disappoints their hopes. If therefore it ever
-happens, that there is but one interest upon one side of the contract,
-as in the example in the former chapter, where we supposed the sellers
-united, you perceive, that the rise of the price, occasioned by the
-competition of the buyers, and even its coming to a stop, could not
-possibly have the effect of producing any competition on the other side;
-and therefore, if prices come afterwards to sink, the fall must have
-proceeded from the prudential considerations of adapting the price to
-the faculties of those, who, from the height of it, had withdrawn their
-demand.
-
-From these principles of competition, the forestalling of markets is
-made a crime, because it diminishes the competition which ought to take
-place between different people, who have the same merchandize to offer
-to sale. The forestaller buys all up, with an intention to sell with
-more profit, as he has by that means taken other competitors out of the
-way, and appears with a single interest on one side of the contract, in
-the face of many competitors on the other. This person is punished by
-the state, because he has prevented the price of the merchandize from
-becoming justly proportioned to the real value; he has robbed the
-public, and enriched himself; and in the punishment, he makes
-restitution. Here occur two questions to be resolved, for the sake of
-illustration.
-
-Can competition among buyers possibly take place, when the provision
-made is more than sufficient to supply the quantity demanded? On the
-other hand, can competition take place among the sellers, when the
-quantity demanded exceeds the total provision made for it?
-
-I think it may in both cases; because in the one and the other, there is
-a competition implied on one side of the contract, and the very nature
-of this competition implies a possibility of its coming on the other,
-provided separate interests be found upon both sides. But to be more
-particular.
-
-1. Experience shews, that however justly the proportion between the
-demand and the supply may be determined in fact, it is still next to
-impossible to discover it exactly, and therefore buyers can only
-regulate the prices they offer, by what they may reasonably expect to
-sell for again. The sellers, on the other hand, can only regulate the
-prices they expect, by what the merchandize has cost them when brought
-to market. We have already shewn, how, under such circumstances, the
-several interests of individuals affect each other, and make the balance
-vibrate.
-
-2. The proportion between the supply and the demand is seldom other than
-_relative_ among merchants, who are supposed to buy and sell, not from
-necessity, but from a view to profit. What I mean by _relative_ is, that
-their demand is _great_ or _small_, according to prices: there may be a
-great demand for grain at 35 shillings _per_ quarter, and no demand at
-all for it at 40 shillings; I say, among merchants.
-
-Here I must observe, how essential it is, to attend to the smallest
-circumstance in matters of this kind. The circumstance I here have in my
-eye, is the difference I find in the effect of competition, when it
-takes place purely among merchants on both sides of the contract, and
-when it happens, that either the consumers mingle themselves with the
-merchant-buyers, or the manufacturers, that is, the furnishers, mingle
-themselves with the merchant-sellers. This combination I shall
-illustrate, by the solution of another question, and then conclude my
-chapter with a few reflections upon the whole.
-
-Can there be no case formed, where the competition upon one side may
-subsist, without a possibility of its taking place on the other,
-although there should be separate interests upon both?
-
-I answer. The case is hardly supposable among merchants, who buy and
-sell with a view to profit; but it is absolutely supposable, and that is
-all, when the direct consumers are the buyers; when the circumstances of
-one of the parties is perfectly known; and when the competition is so
-strong upon one side, as to prevent a possibility of its becoming
-double, before the whole provision is sold off, or the demand satisfied.
-Let me have recourse to examples.
-
-Grain arriving in a small quantity, at a port where the inhabitants are
-starving, produces so great a competition among the consumers, who are
-the buyers, that their necessity becomes evident; all the grain is
-generally bought up before prices can rise so high as to come to a stop;
-because nothing but want of money, that is, an impossibility of
-complying with the prices demanded by the merchants, can restrain them:
-but if you suppose, even here, that prices come naturally to a stop; or
-that, after some time, they fall lower, from prudential considerations,
-then there is a possibility of a competition taking place among the
-sellers, from the principles above deduced. If, on the contrary, the
-stop is not natural, but occasioned by the interposition of the
-magistrate, from humanity, or the like, there will be no competition,
-because then the principles of commerce are suspended; the sellers are
-restrained on one side, and they restrain the buyers on the other. Or
-rather, indeed, it is the magistrate, or compassion, who in a manner
-fixes the price, and performs the office of both buyer and seller.
-
-A better example still may be found, in a competition among sellers;
-where it may be so strong, as to render a commodity in a manner of no
-value at all, as in the case of an uncommon and unexpected draught of
-fish, in a place of small consumption, when no preparations have been
-made for salting them. There can be then no competition among the
-buyers; because the market cannot last, and they find themselves
-entirely masters, to give what price they please, being sure the sellers
-must accept of it, or lose their merchandize. In the first example,
-humanity commonly stops the activity of the principle of competition; in
-the other it is stopt by a certain degree of fair-dealing, which forbids
-the accepting of a merchandize for nothing.
-
-In proportion therefore as the rising of prices can stop demand, or the
-sinking of prices can increase it, in the same proportion will
-competition prevent either the rise or the fall from being carried
-beyond a certain length: and if such a case can be put, where the rising
-of prices cannot stop demand, nor the lowering of prices augment it, in
-such cases double competition has no effect; because these circumstances
-unite the most separate interests of buyers and sellers in the
-mercantile contract, and when upon one side there is no separate
-interest, there can then be no competition.
-
-From what has been said, we may form a judgment of the various degrees
-of competition. A book not worth a shilling, a fish of a few pounds
-weight, are often sold for considerable sums. The buyers here are not
-merchants. When an ambassador leaves a court in a hurry, things are sold
-for less than the half of their value: he is no merchant, and his
-situation is known. When, at a public market, there are found consumers,
-who make their provision; or manufacturers, who dispose of their goods
-for present subsistence; the merchants, who are respectively upon the
-opposite side of the contract to these, profit of their competition; and
-those who are respectively upon the same side with them, stand by with
-patience, until they have finished their business. Then matters come to
-be carried on between merchant and merchant, and then, I allow, that
-profits may rise and fall, in the proportion of quantity to demand; that
-is to say, if the provision is less than the demand, the competition
-among the demanders, or the rise of the price, will be in the compound
-proportion of the falling short of the commodity, and of the prospect of
-selling again with profit. It is this combination which regulates the
-competition, and keeps it within bounds. It can affect but the profits
-upon the transaction; the intrinsic value of the commodity stands
-immoveable: nothing is ever sold below the real value; nothing is ever
-bought for more than it may probably bring. I mean in general. Whereas
-so soon as consumers and needy manufacturers mingle in the operation,
-all proportion is lost. The competition between them is too strong for
-the merchants; the balance vibrates by jerks. In such markets merchants
-seldom appear: the principal objects there, are the fruits and
-productions of the earth, and articles of the first necessity for life,
-not manufactures strictly so called. A poor fellow often sells, to
-purchase bread to eat; not to pay what he did eat, while he was employed
-in the work he disposes of. The consumer often measures the value of
-what he is about to purchase, by the weight of his purse, and his desire
-to consume.
-
-As these distinctions cannot be conveyed in the terms by which we are
-obliged to express them, and as they must frequently be implied, in
-treating of matters relating to trade and industry, I thought the best
-way was, to clear up my own ideas concerning them, and to lay them in
-order before my reader, before I entred farther into my subject.
-
-All difference of opinion upon matters of this nature proceeds, as I
-believe, from our language being inadequate to express our ideas, from
-our inattention, in using terms which appear synonimous, and from our
-natural propensity to include, under general rules, things which, upon
-some occasions, common reason requires to be set asunder.
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAP. VIII.
- _Of what is called Expence, Profit, and Loss._
-
-
-As we have been employed in explaining of terms, it will not be amiss to
-say a word concerning those which stand in the title of this chapter.
-
-The term _expence_, when simply expressed, without any particular
-relation, is always understood to be relative to money. This kind I
-distinguish under the three heads, of _private_, _public_, and
-_national_.
-
-1. _Private_ expence is, what a private person, or private society, lays
-out, either to provide articles of consumption, or something more
-permanent, which may be conducive to their ease, convenience, or
-advantage. Thus we say, _a large domestic expence_, relative to one who
-spends a great income. We say, a merchant has been at _great expence_
-for magazines, for living, for clerks, &c. but never that he has been at
-any in buying goods. In the same way a manufacturer may expend for
-building, machines, horses, and carriages, but never for the matter he
-manufactures. When a thing is bought, in order to be sold again, the sum
-employed is called money _advanced_; when it is bought not to be sold,
-it may be said to be _expended_.
-
-2. _Public expence_ is, the employment of that money, which has been
-contributed by individuals, for the current service of the state. The
-contribution, or gathering it together, represents the effects of many
-articles of _private expence_; the laying it out when collected, is
-_public expence_.
-
-3. _National expence_, is what is expended out of the country: this is
-what diminishes national wealth. The principal distinction to be here
-attended to, is between _public expence_, or the laying out of public
-money, and _national expence_, which is the alienating the nation’s
-wealth in favour of strangers. Thus the greatest _public expence_
-imaginable, may be no national expence; because the money may remain at
-home. On the other hand, the smallest _public_, or even _private
-expence_, may be a national expence; because the money may go abroad.
-
-_Profit_, and _loss_, I divide into _positive_, _relative_, and
-_compound_. _Positive profit_, implies no loss to any body; it results
-from an augmentation of labour, industry, or ingenuity, and has the
-effect of swelling or augmenting the public good.
-
-_Positive loss_, implies no profit to any body; it is what results from
-the cessation of the former, or of the effects resulting from it, and
-may be said to diminish the public good.
-
-_Relative profit_, is what implies a loss to some body; it marks a
-vibration of the balance of wealth between parties, but implies no
-addition to the general stock.
-
-_Relative loss_, is what, on the contrary, implies a profit to some
-body; it also marks a vibration of the balance, but takes nothing from
-the general stock.
-
-The _compound_ is easily understood; it is that species of profit and
-loss which is partly _relative_, and partly _positive_. I call it
-compound, because both kinds may subsist inseparably in the same
-transaction.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. IX.
- _The general consequences resulting to a trading Nation, upon the
- opening of an active foreign Commerce._
-
-
-Did I not intend to confine myself to very general topics in this
-chapter, I might in a manner exhaust the whole subject of modern
-oeconomy under this title; for I apprehend that the whole system of
-modern politics is founded upon the basis of an active foreign trade.
-
-A nation which remains passive in her commerce, is at the mercy of those
-who are active, and must be greatly favoured, indeed, by natural
-advantages, or by a constant flux of gold and silver from her mines, to
-be able to support a correspondence, not entirely hurtful to the
-augmentation of her wealth.
-
-These things shall be more enlarged upon as we go along: the point in
-hand, is, to consider the consequences of this trade, relatively to
-those who are the actors in the operation.
-
-When I look upon the wide field which here opens to my view, I am
-perplexed with too great a variety of objects. In one part, I see a
-decent and comely beginning of industry; wealth flowing gently in, to
-recompence ingenuity; numbers both augmenting, and every one becoming
-daily more useful to another; agriculture proportionally extending
-itself; no violent revolutions; no exorbitant profits; no insolence
-among the rich; no excessive misery among the poor; multitudes employed
-in producing; great oeconomy upon consumption; and all the instruments
-of luxury, daily produced by the hands of the diligent, going out of the
-country for the service of strangers; not remaining at home for the
-gratification of sensuality. At last the augmentations come insensibly
-to a stop. Then these rivers of wealth, which were in brisk circulation
-through the whole world, and which returned to this trading nation as
-blood returns to the heart, only to be thrown out again by new
-pulsations, begin to be obstructed in their course; and flowing abroad
-more slowly than before, come to form stagnations at home. These,
-impatient of restraint, soon burst out into domestic circulation. Upon
-this cities swell in magnificence of buildings; the face of the country
-is adorned with palaces, and becomes covered with groves; luxury shines
-triumphant in every part; inequality becomes more striking to the eye;
-and want and misery appear more deformed, from the contrast: even
-fortune grows more whimsical in her inconstancy; the beggar of the other
-day, now rides in his coach; and he who was born in a bed of state, is
-seen to die in a gaol, or in an alms-house. Such are the effects of
-great domestic circulation.
-
-The statesman looks about with amazement; he, who was wont to consider
-himself as the first man in the society in every respect, perceives
-himself, perhaps, eclipsed by the lustre of private wealth, which avoids
-his grasp when he attempts to seize it. This makes his government more
-complex and more difficult to be carried on; he must now avail himself
-of art and address as well as of power and force. By the help of
-cajoling and intrigues, he gets a little into debt; this lays a
-foundation for public credit, which, growing by degrees, and in its
-progress assuming many new forms, becomes, from the most tender
-beginnings, a most formidable monster, striking terror into those who
-cherished it in its infancy. Upon this, as upon a triumphant war-horse,
-the statesman gets a-stride, he then appears formidable a-new; his head
-turns giddy; he is choaked with the dust he has raised; and at the
-moment he is ready to fall, to his utter astonishment and surprize, he
-finds a strong monied interest, of his own creating, which, instead of
-swallowing him up as he apprehended, flies to his support. Through this
-he gets the better of all opposition, he establishes taxes, multiplies
-them, mortgages his fund of subsistence, either becomes a bankrupt, and
-rises again from his ashes; or if he be less audacious, he stands
-trembling and tottering for a while on the brink of the political
-precipice. From one or the other of these perilous situations, he begins
-to discover an endless path which, after a multitude of windings, still
-returns into its self, and continues an equal course through this vast
-labyrinth: but of this last part, more in the fourth book.
-
-It is now full time to leave off rhapsody, and return to reasoning and
-cool inquiry, concerning the more immediate and more general effects and
-revolutions produced by the opening of a foreign trade in a nation of
-industry.
-
-The first and most sensible alteration will be an increase of demand for
-manufacturers, because by supplying the wants of strangers, the number
-of consumers will now be considerably augmented. What again will follow
-upon this, must depend upon circumstances.
-
-If this revolution in the state of demand should prove too violent, the
-consequence of it will be to _raise_ demand; if it should prove gradual,
-it will _increase_ it. I hope this distinction is well understood, and
-that the consequence appears just: for, if the supply do not increase in
-proportion to the demand, a competition will ensue among the demanders;
-which is the common effect of such sudden revolutions. If, on the other
-hand, a gentle increase of demand should be accompanied with a
-proportional supply, the whole industrious society will grow in vigour,
-and in wholsome stature, without being sensible of any great advantage
-or inconveniency; the change of their circumstances will even be
-imperceptible.
-
-The immediate effects of the violent revolution will, in this example,
-be flattering to some, and disagreeable to others. Wealth will be found
-daily to augment, from the rising of prices, in many branches of
-industry. This will encourage the industrious classes, and the idle
-consumers at home will complain. I have already dwelt abundantly long
-upon the effects resulting from this to the lower classes of the people,
-in providing them with a certain means of subsistence. Let me now
-examine in what respect even the higher classes will be made likewise to
-feel the good effects of this general change, although at first they may
-suffer a temporary inconveniency from it.
-
-Farmers, as has been observed, will have a greater difficulty in finding
-servants, who, instead of labouring the ground, will choose to turn
-themselves to manufactures. This we have considered in the light of
-purging the lands of superfluous mouths; but every consequence in this
-great chain of politics draws other consequences after it, and as they
-follow one another, things put on different faces, which affect classes
-differently. The purging of the land is but one of the first; here
-follows another.
-
-The desertion of the hands employed in a trifling agriculture will at
-first, no doubt, embarrass the farmers; but in a little time every thing
-becomes balanced in a trading nation, because _here_ every _industrious_
-man must advance in prosperity, in spite of all general combinations of
-circumstances.
-
-In the case before us, the relative profits upon farming must soon
-become greater than formerly, because of this additional expence which
-must affect the whole class of farmers; consequently, this additional
-expence, instead of turning out to be a loss to either landlord or
-farmer, will, after some little time, turn out to the advantage of both:
-because the produce of the ground, being indispensably necessary to
-every body, must in every article increase in its value. Thus in a short
-time accounts will be nearly balanced on all hands; that is to say, the
-same proportion of wealth will, _cæteris paribus_, continue the same
-among the industrious. I say among the industrious; for those who are
-either idle, or even negligent, will be great losers.
-
-A proprietor of land, inattentive to the causes of his farmer’s
-additional expence, may very imprudently suffer his rents to fall,
-instead of assisting him on a proper occasion, in order to make them
-afterwards rise the higher.
-
-Those who live upon a determined income in money, and who are nowise
-employed in traffic, nor in any scheme of industry, will, by the
-augmentation of prices, be found in worse circumstances than before.
-
-In a trading nation every man must turn his talents to account, or he
-will undoubtedly be left behind in this universal emulation, in which
-the most industrious, the most ingenious, and the most frugal will
-constantly carry off the prize.
-
-This consideration ought to be a spur to every body. The richest men in
-a trading nation have no security against poverty, I mean proportional
-poverty; for though they diminish nothing of their income, yet by not
-increasing it in proportion to others, they lose their rank in wealth,
-and from the first class in which they stood, they will slide insensibly
-down to a lower.
-
-There is one consequence of an additional beneficial trade, which raises
-demand and increases wealth; but if we suppose no proportional
-augmentation of supply, it will prove at best but an airy dream which
-lasts for a moment, and when the gilded scene is passed away, numberless
-are the inconveniencies which are seen to follow.
-
-I shall now point out the natural consequences of this augmentation of
-wealth drawn from foreign nations, when the statesman remains
-inattentive to increase the supply both of food and manufactures, in
-proportion to the augmentation of mouths, and of the demand for the
-produce of industry.
-
-In such a situation profits will daily swell, and every scheme for
-reducing them within the bounds of moderation, will be looked upon as a
-hurtful and unpopular measure: be it so; but let us examine the
-consequences.
-
-We have said, that the rise of demand for manufactures naturally
-increases the value of work: now I must add, that under such
-circumstances, the augmentation of riches, _in a country, either not
-capable of improvement as to the soil, or where precautions have not
-been taken for facilitating a multiplication of inhabitants, by the
-importation of subsistence_, will be productive of the most calamitous
-consequences.
-
-On one side, this wealth will effectually diminish the mass of the food
-before produced; and on the other, will increase the number of useless
-consumers. The first of these circumstances will raise the demand for
-food; and the second will diminish the number of useful free hands, and
-consequently raise the price of manufactures: here are shortly the
-outlines of this progress.
-
-The more rich and luxurious a people are, the more delicate they become
-in their manner of living; if they fed on bread formerly, they will now
-feed on meat; if they fed on meat, they will now feed on fowl. The same
-ground which feeds a hundred with bread, and a proportional quantity of
-animal food, will not maintain an equal number of delicate livers. Food
-must then become more scarce; demand for it rises; the rich are always
-the strongest in the market; they consume the food, and the poor are
-forced to starve. Here the wide door to modern distress opens; to wit, a
-hurtful competition for subsistence. Farther, when a people become rich,
-they think less of oeconomy; a number of useless servants are hired, to
-become an additional dead weight on consumption; and when their starving
-countrymen cannot supply the extravagance of the rich so cheaply as
-other nations, they either import instruments of foreign luxury, or seek
-to enjoy them out of their own country, and thereby make restitution of
-their gains.
-
-Is it not therefore evident, that if, before things come to this pass,
-additional subsistence be not provided by one method or other, the
-number of inhabitants must diminish; although riches may daily increase
-by a balance of additional matter, supposed to be brought into the
-country in consequence of the hitherto beneficial foreign trade. This is
-not all. I say farther, that the beneficial trade will last for a time
-only. For the infallible consequence of the rise of prices at home will
-be, that those nations which at first consumed your manufactures,
-perceiving the gradual increase of their price, will begin to work for
-themselves; or finding out your rivals who can supply them cheaper, will
-open their doors to them. These again, perceiving the great advantages
-gained by your traders, will begin to supply the market; and since every
-thing must be cheaper in countries where we do not suppose the
-concurrence of all the circumstances mentioned above, these nations will
-supplant you, and be enriched in their turn.
-
-Here comes a new revolution. Trade is come to a stop: what then becomes
-of all the hands which were formerly employed in supplying the foreign
-demands?
-
-Were revolutions so sudden as we are obliged to represent them, all
-would go to wreck; in proportion as they happen by quicker or slower
-degrees, the inconveniencies are greater or smaller.
-
-Prices, we have said, are made to rise by competition. If the
-competition of the strangers was what raised them, the distress upon the
-manufacturers will be in proportion to the suddenness of their deserting
-the market. If the competition was divided between the strangers and the
-home consumers, the inconveniencies which ensue will be less; because
-the desertion of the strangers will be in some measure made up by an
-increase of home consumption which will follow upon the fall of prices.
-And if, in the third case, the natives have been so imprudent as not
-only to support a competition with the strangers, and thereby disgust
-them from coming any more to market, but even to continue the
-competition between themselves, the whole _loss_ sustained by the
-revolution will be national. Wealth will cease to augment, but the
-inconveniencies, in place of being felt by the manufacturers, will only
-affect the state; those will continue in affluence, extolling the
-generosity of their countrymen, and despising the poverty of the
-strangers who had enriched them.
-
-Domestic luxury will here prove an expedient for preserving from ruin
-the industrious part of a people, who, in subsisting themselves, had
-enriched their country. No change will follow in their condition; they
-will go on with a painful assiduity to labour, and if the consequences
-of it become now hurtful to one part of the state, they must, at least,
-be allowed to be essentially necessary for the support of the other.
-
-But that luxury is no necessary concomitant of foreign trade, in a
-nation where the true principles of it are understood, will appear very
-plain, from a contrast I am now going to point out, in the example of a
-modern state, renowned for its commerce and frugality. The country I
-mean, is Holland.
-
-A set of industrious and frugal people were assembled in a country, by
-nature subject to many inconveniencies, the removing of which
-necessarily employed abundance of hands. Their situation upon the
-continent, the power of their former masters, and the ambition of their
-neighbours, obliged them to keep great bodies of troops. These two
-articles added to the numbers of the community, without either enriching
-the state by their labour exported, or producing food for themselves or
-countrymen.
-
-The scheme of a commonwealth was calculated to draw together the
-industrious; but it has been still more useful in subsisting them: the
-republican form of government, being there greatly subdivided, vests
-authority sufficient in every part of it, to make suitable provision for
-their own subsistence; and the tye which unites them, regards only
-matters of public concern. Had the whole been governed by one sovereign,
-or by one council, this important matter never could have been
-effectuated.
-
-I imagine it would be impossible for the most able minister that ever
-lived, to provide nourishment for a country so extended as France, or
-even as England, supposing these as fully peopled as Holland is: even
-although it should be admitted that a sufficient quantity of food might
-be found in other countries for their subsistence. The enterprise would
-be too great, abuses would multiply; the consequence would be, that the
-inhabitants would die for want. But in Holland the case is different,
-every little town takes care of its own inhabitants; and this care,
-being the object of application and profit to so many persons, is
-accomplished with success.
-
-When once it is laid down as a maxim in a country, that food must of
-necessity be got from abroad, in order to feed the inhabitants at home,
-the corn trade becomes considerable, and at the same time certain,
-regular, and permanent. This was the case in Holland: as the inhabitants
-were industrious, the necessary consequence has been, a very
-extraordinary multiplication; and at the same time such an abundance of
-grain, that instead of being in want themselves, they often supply their
-neighbours. There are many examples of England’s being supplied with
-grain from thence, and, which is still more extraordinary, from the
-re-exportation of the very produce of its own fruitful soil.
-
-It is therefore evident, that the only way to support industry, is to
-provide a supply of subsistence, constantly proportional to the demand
-that may be made for it. This is a precaution indispensably necessary
-for preventing hurtful competition. This is the particular care of the
-Dutch: so long as it can be effectual, their state can fear no decline;
-but whenever they come to be distressed in the markets, upon which they
-depend for subsistence, they will sink into ruin. It is by mere dint of
-frugality, cheap and parsimonious living, that the navigation of this
-industrious people is supported. Constant employment, and an
-accumulation of almost imperceptible gains, fills their coffers with
-wealth, in spight of the large outgoings to which their own proper
-nourishment yearly forces them. The large profits upon industry in other
-countries, which are no proof of generosity, but a fatal effect of a
-scanty subsistence, is far from dazzling their eyes. They seldom are
-found in the list of competitors at any foreign port; if they have their
-cargo to dispose of, they wait with pleasure in their own vessels,
-consuming their own provisions, and at last accept of what others have
-left. It may be said, that many other circumstances concur in favour of
-the Dutch, besides the article of subsistence. I shall not dispute this
-matter; but only remind my reader of what was said in the first book; to
-wit, that if a computation be made of the hands employed in providing
-subsistence, and of those who are severally taken up in supplying every
-other want, their numbers will be found nearly to balance one another in
-the most luxurious countries. From this I conclude, that the article of
-food, among the lower classes, must bear a very high proportion to all
-the other articles of their consumption; and therefore a diminution upon
-the price of subsistence, must be of infinite consequence to
-manufacturers, who are obliged to buy it. From this consideration, let
-us judge of the consequence of such augmentations upon the price of
-grain, as are familiar to us; 30 or 40 _per cent._ seems nothing. Now
-this augmentation operates upon two thirds, at least, of the whole
-expence of a labouring man: let any one who lives in tolerable affluence
-make the application of this to himself, and examine how he would manage
-his affairs if, by accidents of rains or winds, his expences were to
-rise 30 _per cent._ without a possibility of restraining them; for this
-is unfortunately the case with all the lower classes. From whence I
-conclude, that the keeping food cheap, and still more the preserving it
-at all times at an equal standard, is the fountain of the wealth of
-Holland; and that any hurtful competition in this article must beget a
-disorder which will affect the whole of the manufacturers of a state.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. X.
- _Of the Balance of Work and Demand._
-
-
-It is quite impossible to go methodically through the subject of
-political oeconomy, without being led into anticipations. We have
-frequently mentioned this balance of work and demand, and shewed how
-important a matter it is for a statesman to attend to it. The thing,
-therefore, in general is well understood; and all that remains to be
-done, is to render our ideas more determined concerning it, and more
-adequate, if possible, to the principles we have been laying down.
-
-We have treated fully of demand, and likewise of competition. We have
-observed how different circumstances influence these terms, so as to
-make them represent ideas entirely different; and we have said that
-double competition supports the balance we are now to speak of, and that
-single competition overturns it.
-
-The word demand in this chapter is taken in the most simple acceptation;
-and when we say that the balance between work and demand is to be
-sustained in equilibrio, as far as possible, we mean that the quantity
-supplied should be in proportion to the quantity _demanded_, that is,
-_wanted_. While the balance stands justly poised, prices are found in
-the adequate proportion of the real expence of making the goods, with a
-small addition for profit to the manufacturer and merchant.
-
-I have, in the fourth chapter, observed how necessary a thing it is to
-distinguish the two constituent parts of every price; the value, and the
-profit. Let the number of persons be ever so great, who, upon the sale
-of a piece of goods, share in the profits; it is still essential, in
-such enquiries as these, to suppose them distinctly separate from the
-real value of the commodity; and the best way possible to discover
-exactly the proportion between the one and the other, is by a scrupulous
-watchfulness over the balance we are now treating of, as we shall
-presently see.
-
-The value and profits, combined in the price of a manufacture produced
-by one man, are easily distinguished, by means of the analysis we have
-laid down in the fourth chapter. As long as any market is _fully_
-supplied with this sort of work, and _no more_; those who are employed
-in it live by their trade, and gain no unreasonable profit: because
-there is then no violent competition upon one side only, neither between
-the workmen, nor between those who buy from them, and the balance gently
-vibrates under the influence of a double competition. This is the
-representation of a perfect balance.
-
-This balance is overturned in four different ways.
-
-Either the demand diminishes, and the work remains the same:
-
-Or the work diminishes, and the demand remains:
-
-Or the demand increases, and the work remains:
-
-Or the work increases, and the demand remains.
-
-Now each of these four combinations may, or may not, produce a
-competition upon one side of the contract only. This must be explained.
-
-If demand diminishes, and work remains the same, which is the first
-case, either those who furnish the work will enter into competition, in
-which case they will hurt each other, and prices will fall below the
-reasonable standard of the even balance; or they will not enter into
-competition, and then prices continuing as formerly, the whole demand
-will be supplied, and the remainder of the work will lie upon hand.
-
-This is a symptom of decaying trade.
-
-Let us now, on the other hand, suppose demand to increase, and work to
-remain as before.
-
-This example points out no diminution on either side, as was the case
-before, but an augmentation upon one; and is either a symptom of growing
-luxury at home, or of an increase in foreign trade.
-
-Here the same alternation of circumstances occurs. The demanders will
-either enter into competition and raise the price of work, or they will
-enter into no competition; but being determined not to exceed the
-ordinary standard of the perfect balance, will defer making their
-provision till another time, or supply themselves in another market;
-that is to say, the new demand will cease as soon as it is made, for
-want of a supply.
-
-Whenever, therefore, this perfect balance of work and demand is
-overturned by the force of a simple competition, or by one of the scales
-preponderating, one of two things must happen; either a part of the
-demand is not answered, or a part of the goods is not sold.
-
-These are the immediate effects of the overturning of the balance.
-
-Let me next point out the object of the statesman’s care, relatively to
-such effects, and shew the consequences of their being neglected.
-
-We may now simplify our ideas, and instead of the former combinations,
-make use of other expressions which may convey them.
-
-Let us therefore say, that the _fall_ or _rise_ upon either side of the
-balance, is _positive_, or _relative_. _Positive_, when the side we talk
-of really augments beyond, or diminishes below the usual standard.
-_Relative_, when there is no alteration upon the side we speak of, and
-that the subversion of the balance is owing to an alteration on the
-other side. As for example:
-
-Instead of saying demand diminishes, and work remains the same, let us
-say, demand diminishes _positively_, or work increases _relatively_;
-according as the subject may lead us to speak either of the one or of
-the other. This being premised,
-
-If the scale of work shall preponderate _positively_, it should be
-inquired, whether the quantity furnished has really swelled, in all
-respects, beyond the proportion of the consumption, (in which case the
-statesman should diminish the number of hands, by throwing a part of
-them into a new channel) or whether the imprudence of the workmen has
-only made them produce their work unseasonably; in which case, proper
-information, and even assistance should be given them, to prevent
-merchants from taking the advantage of their want of experience: but
-these last precautions are necessary only in the infancy of industry.
-
-If a statesman should be negligent on this occasion; if he should allow
-natural consequences to follow upon one another; just as circumstances
-shall determine; then it may happen, that workmen will keep upon hand
-that part of their goods which exceeds the demand, until necessity
-forces them to enter into competition with one another, and sell for
-what they can get. Now this competition is hurtful, because it is all on
-one side, and because we have supposed the preponderating of the scale
-of work to be an overturning of a perfect balance, which can by no means
-be set right, consistently with a scheme of thriving, but by the scale
-of demand becoming heavier, and re-establishing a double competition.
-Were this to happen before the workmen come to sell in competition, then
-the balance would again be even, after what I call _a short vibration_,
-which is no _subversion_; but when the scale of work remains too long in
-the same position, and occasions a strong, hurtful, and lasting
-competition, upon one side only, then, I say, the balance is
-_overturned_; because this diminishes the reasonable profits, or
-perhaps, indeed, obliges the workmen to sell below prime cost. The
-effect of this is, that the workmen fall into distress, and that
-industry suffers a discouragement; and this effect is certain.
-
-But it may be asked, Whether, by this fall of prices, demand will not be
-increased? That is to say, will not the whole of the goods be sold off?
-
-I answer, That this may, or may not, be the effect of the fall,
-according to circumstances: it is a contingent consequence of the
-simple, but not the effect of the double competition: the distress of
-the workmen is a certain and unavoidable consequence of the first.
-
-But supposing this contingent consequence to happen, will it not set the
-balance even, by increasing the demand? I answer, the balance is then
-made even by a violent shock given to industry, but it is not set even
-from any principle which can support it, or make it flourish. Here is
-the criterion of a perfect balance: _A positive moderate profit must
-balance a positive moderate profit; the balance must vibrate, and no
-loss must be found on either side_. In the example before us, the
-balance stands even, it is true; the work and the demand are equally
-poised as to quantity; but it is a _relative profit_, which hangs in the
-scale, opposite to a _relative loss_. I wish this may be well
-understood; farther illustrations will make it clear.
-
-Next, let me suppose the scale of _demand_ to preponderate positively.
-In this case, the statesman should be still more upon his guard, to
-provide a proportional supply; because the danger here may at first put
-on a shew of profit, and deceive him.
-
-The consequences of this subversion of the balance are either,
-
-1st, That a competition will take place among the demanders only, which
-will raise profits. Now if, after a short vibration, the supply comes to
-be increased by the statesman’s care, no harm will ensue; competition
-will change sides, and profits will come down again to the perfect
-standard. But if the scale of demand remains preponderating, and so
-keeps profits high, the consequence will be, that, in a little time, not
-only the immediate seller of the goods, but also every one who has
-contributed to the manufacture, will insist upon sharing these new
-profits. Now the evil is not, that every one should share, or that the
-profits should swell, as long as they are supported by demand, and as
-long as they can truly be considered as precarious; but the mischief is,
-that, in consequence of this wide repartition, and by such profits
-subsisting for a long time, they insensibly become _consolidated_, or,
-as it were, transformed into the intrinsic value of the goods. This, I
-say, is brought about by time; because the habitual extraordinary gains
-of every one employed induce the more luxurious among them to change
-their way of life insensibly, and fall into the habit of making greater
-consumptions, and engage the more slothful to remain idle, till they are
-exhausted. When therefore it happens, that large profits have been made
-for a considerable time, and that they have had the effect of forming a
-taste for a more expensive way of living among the industrious, it will
-not be the cessation of the demand, nor the swelling of the supply,
-which will engage them to part with their gains. Nothing will operate
-this effect but sharp necessity; and the bringing down of their profits,
-and the throwing the workmen into distress, are then simultaneous; which
-proves the truth of what I have said, that these profits become, by long
-habit, virtually _consolidated_ with the real value of the merchandize.
-These are the consequences of a neglected simple competition, which
-raises the profits upon industry, and keeps the balance overturned for a
-considerable time.
-
-2dly, Let me examine the consequences of this overturn in the actual
-preponderancy of demand, when it does not occasion a competition among
-the demanders, and consequently, when it does not increase the profits
-upon industry.
-
-This case can only happen, when the commodity is not a matter of great
-necessity, or even of great use; since the desire of procuring it is not
-sufficient to engage the buyers to raise their price; unless, indeed,
-this difference should proceed from the ease of providing the same, in
-other markets, as cheap as formerly. This last is a dangerous
-circumstance, and loudly calls for the attention of the statesman. He
-must prevent, by all possible means, the desertion of the market, by a
-speedy supply for all the demand, and must even perhaps give
-encouragements to manufacturers, to enable them to diminish the prices
-fixed by the regular standard. This is the situation of a nation which
-is in the way of losing branches of her foreign trade; of which
-afterwards.
-
-Whatever therefore be the consequence of the actual preponderancy of the
-scale of demand; that is, whether it tend to raise profits, or to
-discredit the market; the statesman’s care should be directed
-immediately towards making the balance come even of itself, without any
-shock, and that as soon as possible, by increasing the supply. For if it
-be allowed to stand long in this overturned state, natural consequences
-will operate a forced restitution; that is, the rise in the price, or
-the call of a foreign market, will effectually cut off a proportional
-part of the demand, and leave the balance in an equilibrium,
-disadvantageous to trade and industry.
-
-In the former case, the manufacturers were forced to starve, by an
-unnatural restitution, when the relative profit and loss of individuals
-balanced one another. Here the manufacturers are inriched for a little
-time, by a rise of profits, relative to the loss the nation sustains, by
-not supplying the whole demand. This results from the competition of
-their customers; but so soon as these profits become _consolidated_ with
-the intrinsic value, they will cease to have the advantage of profits,
-and, becoming in a manner necessary to the existence of the goods, will
-cease to be considered as advantageous. These forced restitutions then,
-brought about, as we have said, by selling goods below their value, by
-cutting off a part of the demand, or by sending it to another market,
-resembles the operation of a carrier, who sets his ass’s burden even, by
-laying a stone upon the lightest end of it. He however loses none of his
-merchandize; but the absurdity of the statesman is still greater, for he
-appears willingly to open the heavy end of the load, and to throw part
-of his merchandize into the high-way.
-
-I hope, by this time, I have sufficiently shewn the difference in effect
-between the _simple_ and the _double_ competition; between the
-_vibrations_ of this balance of work and demand, and the _overturning_
-of it. When it vibrates in moderation, and by short alternate risings
-and sinkings, then industry and trade go on prosperously, and are in
-harmony with each other; because both parties gain. The industrious man
-is recompenced in proportion to his ingenuity; the intrinsic value of
-goods does not vary, nor deceive the merchant; profits on both sides
-fluctuate according to demand, but never get time to consolidate with,
-and swell the real value, and never altogether disappear, and starve the
-workman.
-
-This happy state cannot be supported but by the care of the statesman;
-and when he is found negligent in the discharge of this part of his
-duty, the consequence is, that either the spirit of industry, which, it
-is supposed, has cost him much pains to cultivate, is extinguished, or
-the produce of it rises to so high a value, as to be out of the reach of
-a multitude of purchasers.
-
-The progress towards the one or the other of these extremes is easily
-perceived, by attending to the successive overturnings of the balance.
-When these are often repeated on the same side, and the balance set
-right, by a succession of forced restitutions only, the same scale
-preponderating a-new, then is the last period soon accomplished. When,
-on the contrary, the overturnings are alternate, sometimes the scale of
-demand overturning the balance, sometimes the scale of work, the last
-period is more distant. Trade and industry subsist longer, but they
-remain in a state of perpetual convulsion. On the other hand, when the
-balance gently vibrates, then work and demand, that is, trade and
-industry, like agriculture and population, prove mutually assisting to
-each other, in promoting their reciprocal augmentation.
-
-In order therefore to preserve a trading state from decline, the
-greatest care must be taken, to support a perfect balance between the
-hands employed in work and the demand for their labour. That is to say,
-according to former definitions, to prevent demand from ever standing
-long at an immoderate height, by providing at all times a supply,
-sufficient to answer the greatest that ever can be made: or, in other
-words, still, in order to accustom my readers to certain expressions, to
-encourage the _great_, and to discourage the _high_ demand. In this
-case, competition will never be found too strong on either side of the
-contract, and profits will be moderate, but sure, on both.
-
-If, on the contrary, there be found too many hands for the demand, work
-will fall too low for workmen to be able to live; or, if there be too
-few, work will rise, and manufactures will not be exported.
-
-For want of this just balance, no trading state has ever been of long
-duration, after arriving at a certain height of prosperity. We perceive
-in history the rise, progress, grandeur, and decline of Sydon, Tyre,
-Carthage, Alexandria, and Venice, not to come nearer home. While these
-states were on the growing hand, they were powerful; when once they came
-to their height, they immediately found themselves labouring under their
-own greatness. The reason of this appears from what has been said.
-
-While there is a demand for the trade of any country, inhabitants are
-always on the increasing hand. This is evident from what has been so
-often repeated in the first book, and confirmed by thousands of
-examples. There never was any branch of trade established in any
-kingdom, province, city, or even village; but such kingdom, province,
-&c. increased in inhabitants. While this gradual increase of people is
-in proportion to the growing demand for hands, the balance between work
-and demand is exactly kept up: but as all augmentations must at last
-come to a stop, when this happens, inconveniencies must ensue, greater
-or less, according to the negligence of the statesman, and the violence
-or suddenness of the revolution.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XI.
- _Why in Time this Balance is destroyed._
-
-
-Now let us examine what may be the reason why, in a trading and
-industrious nation, time necessarily destroys the perfect balance
-between work and demand.
-
-We have already pointed out one general cause, to wit, the natural stop
-which must at last be put to augmentations of every kind.
-
-Let us now apply this to circumstances, in order to discover in what
-manner natural causes operate this stop, either by preventing the
-increase of work, on one side of the balance, or the increase of demand,
-on the other. When once we discover how the stop is put to
-augmentations, we may safely conclude, that the continuation of the
-same, or similar causes, will soon produce a diminution, and operate a
-decline.
-
-We have traced the progress of industry, and shewn how it goes hand in
-hand with the augmentation of subsistence, which is the principal
-allurement to labour. Now the augmentation of food is relative to the
-soil, and as long as this can be brought to produce, at an expence
-proportioned to the value of the returns, agriculture, without any
-doubt, will go forward in every country of industry. But so soon as the
-progress of agriculture demands an additional expence, which the natural
-return, at the stated prices of subsistence, will not defray,
-agriculture comes to a stop, and so would numbers, did not the
-consequences of industry push them forward, in spite of small
-difficulties. The industrious then, I say, continue to multiply, and the
-consequence is, that food becomes scarce, and that the inhabitants enter
-into competition for it.
-
-This is no contingent consequence, it is an infallible one; because food
-is an article of the first necessity, and here the provision is supposed
-to fall short of the demand. This raises the profits of those who have
-food ready to sell; and as the balance upon this article must remain
-overturned for some time, without the interposition of the statesman,
-these profits will be consolidated with the price, and give
-encouragement to a more expensive improvement of the soil. I shall here
-interrupt the examination of the consequences of this revolution as to
-agriculture, until I have examined the effects which the rise of the
-price of food produces on industry, and on the demand for it.
-
-This augmentation on the value of subsistence must necessarily raise the
-price of all work, because we are here speaking of an industrious people
-fully employed, and because subsistence is one of the three articles
-which compose the intrinsic value of their work, as has been said.
-
-The rise therefore, upon the price of work, not being any augmentation
-of that part of the price which we call profits, as happens to be the
-case when a rise in demand has produced a competition among the buyers,
-cannot be brought down but by increasing the supply of subsistence; and
-were a statesman to mistake the real cause of the rise, and apply the
-remedy of increasing the quantity of work, in order to bring down the
-market, instead of augmenting the subsistence, he would occasion a great
-disorder; he would introduce the hurtful simple competition between
-people who labour for moderate profits, mentioned in the last chapter,
-and would throw such a discouragement upon their industry, as would
-quickly extinguish it altogether.
-
-On the other hand, did he imprudently augment the subsistence, by large
-importations, he would put an end to the expensive improvements of the
-soil, and this whole enterprize would fall to nothing. Here then is a
-dilemma, out of which he can extricate himself by a right application of
-public money, only.
-
-Such a necessary rise in the price of labour may either affect foreign
-exportation, or it may not, according to circumstances. If it does, the
-price of subsistence, at any rate, must be brought down at least to
-those who supply the foreign demand; if it does not affect foreign
-exportation, matters may be allowed to go on; but still the remedy must
-be ready at hand, to be applied the moment it becomes expedient.
-
-There is one necessary augmentation upon the prices of industry, brought
-about by a very natural cause, viz. the increase of population, which
-may imply a more expensive improvement of the soil; that is, an
-extension of agriculture. This augmentation may very probably put a stop
-to the augmentation of demand for many branches of manufactures,
-consequently may stop the progress of industry; and if the same causes
-continue to operate in a greater degree, it may also cut off a part of
-the former demand, may discredit the market, open a door to foreign
-consumption, and produce the inconveniencies of poverty and distress, in
-proportion to the degree of negligence in the statesman.
-
-I shall now give another example, of a very natural augmentation upon
-the intrinsic value of work, which does not proceed from the increase of
-population, but from the progress of industry itself; which implies no
-internal vice in a state, but which is the necessary consequence of the
-reformation of a very great one. This augmentation must be felt less or
-more in every country, in proportion as industry becomes extended.
-
-We have said, that the introduction of manufactures naturally tends to
-purge the lands of superfluous mouths: now this is a very slow and
-gradual operation. A consequence of it was said to be (Book I. Chap.
-xx.) an augmentation of the price of labour, because those who have been
-purged off, must begin to gain their whole subsistence at the expence of
-those who employ them.
-
-If therefore, in the infancy of industry, any branch of it shall find
-itself assisted in a particular province, by the cheap labour of those
-mouths superfluously fed by the land, examples of which are very
-frequent, this advantage must diminish, in proportion as the cause of it
-ceases; that is, in proportion as industry is extended, and as the
-superfluous mouths are of consequence purged off.
-
-This circumstance is of the last importance to be attended to by a
-statesman. Perhaps it was entirely owing to it, that industry was
-enabled to set up its head in this corner. How many examples could I
-give, of this assistance given to manufactures in different provinces,
-where I have found the value of a day’s work, of spinning, for example,
-not equal to half the nourishment of the person. This is a great
-encouragement to the making of cloths; and accordingly we see some
-infant manufactures dispute the market with the produce of the greatest
-dexterity; the distaff dispute prices with the wheel. But when these
-provinces come to be purged of their superfluous mouths, spinning
-becomes a trade, and the spinners must live by it. Must not then prices
-naturally rise? And if these are not supported by the statesman, or if
-assistance is not given to these poor manufacturers, to enable them to
-increase their dexterity, in order to compensate what they are losing in
-cheapness, will not their industry fail? Will not the poor spinners be
-extinguished? For it is not to be expected, that the landlord will
-receive them back again from a principle of charity, after he has
-discovered their former uselesness.
-
-A third cause of a necessary augmentation upon the intrinsic value of
-goods proceeds from taxes. A statesman must be very negligent indeed, if
-he does not attend to the immediate consequences of his own proper
-operations. I shall not enlarge on this at present, as it would be an
-unnecessary anticipation; but I shall return, to resume the part of my
-reasoning which I broke off abruptly.
-
-I have observed, how the same cause which stops the progress of
-industry, gives an encouragement to agriculture: how the rise in the
-price of subsistence necessarily increases the price of work to an
-industrious and well-employed people: how this cuts off a part of the
-demand for work, or sends it to a foreign market.
-
-Now all these consequences are entirely just, and yet they seem
-contradictory to another part of my reasoning, (Book I. Chap. xvi.)
-where I set forth the advantages of a prodigal consumption of the
-earth’s produce as advantageous to agriculture, by increasing the price
-of subsistence, without taking notice, on the other hand, of the hurt
-thereby done to industry, which supports the consumption of that
-produce.
-
-The one and the other chain of consequences is equally just, and they
-appear contradictory only upon the supposition, that there is no
-statesman at the helm. These contradictions represent the alternate
-overturn of the balance. The duty of the statesman is, to support the
-double competition every where, and to permit only the gentle alternate
-vibrations of the two scales.
-
-When the progress of industry has augmented numbers, and made
-subsistence scarce, he must estimate to what height it is expedient that
-the price of subsistence should rise. If he finds, that, in order to
-encourage the breaking up of new lands, the price of it must rise too
-high, and stand high too long, to preserve the intrinsic value of goods
-at the same standard as formerly; then he must assist agriculture with
-his purse, in order that exportation may not be discouraged. This will
-have the effect of increasing subsistence, according to the true
-proportion of the augmentation required, without raising the price of it
-too high. And if that operation be the work of time, and the demand for
-the augmentation be pressing, he must have subsistence imported, or
-brought from abroad, during that interval. This supply he may cut off
-whenever he pleases, that is, whenever it ceases to be necessary.
-
-If the supply comes from a sister country, it must be so taken, as to
-occasion no violent revolution when it comes to be interrupted a-new. As
-for example: One province demands a supply of grain from another, only
-for a few years, until their own soil can be improved, so as to provide
-them sufficiently. The statesman should encourage agriculture, no doubt,
-in the province furnishing, and let the farmers know the extent of the
-demand, and the time it may probably last, as near as possible; but he
-must discourage the plucking up of vineyards, and even perhaps the
-breaking up of great quantities of old pasture; because, upon the
-ceasing of the demand, such changes upon the agriculture of the province
-furnishing, may occasion a hurtful revolution.
-
-While this foreign supply is allowed to come in, the statesman should be
-closely employed in giving such encouragement to agriculture at home,
-according to the principles hereafter to be deduced, as may nearly
-balance the discouragement given to it by this newly permitted
-importation. If this step be neglected, the consequence may be, that the
-foreign supply will go on increasing every year, and will extinguish the
-agriculture already established in the country, in place of supplying a
-temporary exigency, which is within the power of the country itself to
-furnish. These, I suppose, were the principles attended to by the
-government of England, upon opening their ports for the importation of
-provisions from Ireland.
-
-The principle, therefore, being to support a gentle increase of food,
-inhabitants, work, and demand, the statesman must suffer small
-vibrations in the balance, which, by alternate competition, may favour
-both sides of the contract; but whenever the competition stands too long
-upon either side, and threatens a subversion of the balance, then, with
-an artful hand, he must endeavour to load the lighter scale, and never,
-but in cases of the greatest necessity, have recourse to the expedient
-of taking any thing from the heaviest.
-
-In treating of the present state of France, we observed, in the chapter
-above-cited, how the vibration of the balance of agriculture and
-population may carry food and numbers to their height; but as foreign
-trade was not there the direct object of inquiry, I did not care to
-introduce this second balance of work and demand, for fear of perplexing
-my subject. I hope I have now abundantly shewn the force of the
-different principles, and it must depend upon the judgment of the
-statesman to combine them together, and adapt them to his plan: a thing
-impossible to be even chalked out by any person who is not immediately
-at the head of the affairs of a nation. My work resembles the formation
-of the pure colours for painting, it is the artist’s business to mix
-them: all I can pretend to, is to reason consequentially from
-suppositions. If I go at any time farther, I exceed my plan, and I
-confess the fault.
-
-I shall now conclude my chapter by introducing a new subject. I have
-been at pains to shew how the continued neglect of a statesman, in
-watching over the vibrations of the balance of work and demand,
-naturally produces a total subversion of it; but this is not, of itself,
-sufficient to undo an industrious people. Other nations must be taught
-to profit of the disorder; and this is what I call the competition
-between nations.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XII.
- _Of the Competition between Nations._
-
-
-Mankind daily profit by experience, and acquire knowledge at their own
-cost.
-
-We have said that what lays the foundation of foreign trade, is the ease
-and conveniency which strangers find in having their wants supplied by
-those who have set industry on foot. The natural consequence of this
-foreign demand is to bring in wealth, and to promote augmentations of
-every kind. As long as these go on, it will be impossible for other
-nations to rival the traders, because their situation is every day
-growing better: dexterity increasing, diminishes the price of work;
-every circumstance, in short, becomes more favourable; the balance never
-vibrates, but by one of the scales growing positively heavier, and it is
-constantly coming even by an increase of weight on the other side. We
-have seen how these revolutions never can raise the intrinsic value of
-goods, and have observed that this is the road to greatness.
-
-The slower any man travels, the longer he is in coming to his journey’s
-end; and when his health requires travelling, and that he cannot go far
-from home, he rides out in a morning and comes home to dinner.
-
-This represents another kind of vibration of the balance, and when
-things are come to such a height as to render a train of augmentations
-impossible, the next best expedient is, to permit alternate vibrations
-of diminution and augmentation.
-
-Work augments, I shall suppose, and no more demand can be procured; it
-may then be a good expedient to diminish hands, by making soldiers of
-them; by employing them in public works; or by sending them out of the
-country to become useful in its colonies. These operations give a
-relative weight to the scale of demand, and revive a competition on that
-side. Then the industrious hands must be gently increased a-new, and the
-balance kept in vibration as long as possible. By these alternate
-augmentations and diminutions, hurtful revolutions, and the subversion
-of the balance, may be prevented. This is an expedient for standing
-still without harm, when one cannot go forward to advantage.
-
-If such a plan be followed, an industrious nation will continue in a
-situation to profit of the smallest advantage from revolutions in other
-countries, occasioned by the subversion of _their_ balance; which may
-present an opportunity of new vibrations by alternate augmentations.
-
-On such occasions, the abilities of a statesman are discovered, in
-directing and conducting what I call the delicacy of national
-competition. We shall then observe him imitating the mariners, who do
-not take in their sails when the wind falls calm, but keep them trimmed
-and ready to profit of the least breath of a favourable gale. Let me
-follow my comparison. The trading nations of Europe represent a fleet of
-ships, every one striving who shall get first to a certain port. The
-statesman of each is the master. The same wind blows upon all; and this
-wind is the principle of self-interest, which engages every consumer to
-seek the cheapest and the best market. No trade wind can be more
-general, or more constant than this; the natural advantages of each
-country represent the degree of goodness of each vessel; but the master
-who sails his ship with the greatest dexterity, and he who can lay his
-rivals under the lee of his sails, will, _cæteris paribus_, undoubtedly
-get before them, and maintain his advantage.
-
-While a trading nation, which has got an established advantage over her
-rivals, can be kept from declining, it will be very difficult, if not
-impossible, for any other to enter into competition with her: but when
-the balance begins to vibrate by alternate diminutions; when a decrease
-of demand operates a failure of supply; when this again is kept low, in
-order to raise the competition of consumers; and when, instead of
-restoring the balance by a gentle augmentation, a people are engaged,
-from the allurements of high profits, to discourage every attempt to
-bring down the market; then the cissars of foreign rivalship will fairly
-trim off the superfluity of demand; the simple competition will cease;
-prices will fall, and a return of the same circumstances will prepare
-the way for another vibration downwards.
-
-Such operations as these, are just what is requisite for facilitating
-the competition of rival nations; and the only means possible to engage
-those who did not formerly work, to begin and supply themselves.
-
-Did matters stand so, the evil would be supportable; strangers would
-only supply the superfluities of demand, and the balance would still be
-found in a kind of equilibrium at home. But, alas! even this happy state
-can only be of short duration. The beginnings of trade with the
-strangers will prove just as favourable to the vibration of their
-balance, by augmentations, as it was formerly to the home-traders; and
-now every augmentation to those, must imply a diminution to the others.
-What will then become of those hands, in the trading nation, who subsist
-only by supplying the foreign market? Will not this revolution work the
-same effect, as to them, as if an additional number of hands had been
-employed to supply the same consumption? And will not this utterly
-destroy the balance among the traders, by throwing an unsurmountable
-competition on the side of the supply? It will however have a different
-effect from what might have happened, if the same number of hands had
-been thrown into the trading nation; for, in this case, they might only
-destroy the consolidated profits upon labour, and perhaps restore the
-balance: the inconveniency would be equally felt by every workman, but
-profit would result to the public. But in the other case, the old
-traders will find no foreign sale for their work; these branches of
-industry will fall below the price of subsistence, and the new beginners
-will have _reasonable_ profits in supplying their own wants. I say
-_reasonable_, because this transition of trade from one nation to
-another, never can be sudden or easy; and can only take place in
-proportion to the rise in the intrinsic value of goods in that which is
-upon the decline, not in proportion to the rise in their profits upon
-the sale of them: for as long as the most extravagant profits do not
-become consolidated, as we have said, with the value of the work, a
-diminution of competition among the consumers, which may be occasioned
-by a beginning of foreign industry, will quickly make them disappear;
-and this will prove a fatal blow to the first undertakings of the rival
-nations. But when once they are fairly so consolidated, that prices can
-no more come down of themselves, and that the statesman will not lend
-his helping hand, then the new beginners pluck up courage, and set out
-by making small profits: because in all new undertakings there is
-mismanagement and considerable loss; and nothing discourages mankind
-from new undertakings more than difficult beginnings.
-
-As long, therefore, as a trading state is upon the rising hand, or even
-not upon the decline, and while the balance is kept right without the
-expedient of alternate diminutions, work will always be supplied from
-that quarter, cheaper than it possibly can be furnished from any other,
-where the same dexterity does not prevail. But when a nation begins to
-lose ground, then the very columns which supported her grandeur, begin,
-by their weight, to precipitate her decline. The wealth of her citizens
-will support and augment home demand, and encourage that blind fondness
-for high profits, which it is impossible to preserve. The moment these
-consolidate to a certain degree, they have the effect of banishing from
-the market the demand of strangers, who only can enrich her. It is in
-vain to look for their return after the nation has discovered her
-mistake, although she should be able to correct it; because, before this
-can happen, her rivals will have profited of the golden opportunity, and
-during the infatuation of the traders, will, even by their assistance,
-have got fairly over the painful struggle against their superior
-dexterity.
-
-Thus it happens, that so soon as matters begin to go backward in a
-trading nation, and that by the increase of their riches, luxury and
-extravagance take place of oeconomy and frugality among the industrious;
-when the inhabitants themselves foolishly enter into competition with
-strangers for their own commodities; and when a statesman looks cooly
-on, with his arms across, or takes it into his head, that it is not his
-business to interpose, the prices of the dextrous workman will rise
-above the amount of the mismanagement, loss, and reasonable profits, of
-the new beginners; and when this comes to be the case, trade will decay
-where it flourished most, and take root in a new soil. This I call a
-competition between nations.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XIII.
- _How far the Form of Government of a particular Country may be
- favourable or unfavourable to a Competition with other Nations, in
- matters of Commerce._
-
-
-The question before us, though relative to another science, is not
-altogether foreign to this. I introduce it in this place, not so much
-for the sake of connexion, as by way of digression, which at the same
-time that it has a relation to general principles, may also prove a
-relaxation to the mind, after so long a chain of close reasoning.
-
-In setting out, I informed my readers that I intended to treat of the
-political oeconomy of free nations only; and upon every occasion where I
-have mentioned slavery, I have pointed out how far the nature of it is
-contrary to the advancement of private industry, the inseparable
-concomitant of foreign and domestic trade.
-
-No term is less understood than that of _liberty_, and it is not my
-intention, at present, to enter into a particular inquiry into all the
-different acceptations of it.
-
-By a people’s being free, I understand no more than their being governed
-by general laws, well known, not depending upon the ambulatory will of
-any man, or any set of men, and established so as not to be changed, but
-in a regular and uniform way; for reasons which regard the body of the
-society, and not through favour or prejudice to particular persons, or
-particular classes. In so far as a power of dispensing with, restraining
-or extending general laws, is left in the hands of any governor, in so
-far, I consider public liberty as precarious. I do not say it is hereby
-hurt; this will depend upon the use made of such prerogatives. According
-to this definition of liberty, a people may be found to enjoy freedom
-under the most despotic forms of government; and perpetual service
-itself, where the master’s power is limited according to natural equity,
-is not altogether incompatible with liberty in the servant.
-
-Here new ideas present themselves concerning the general principles of
-_subordination_ and _dependence_ among mankind; which I shall lay before
-my reader before I proceed, submitting the justness of them to his
-decision.
-
-As these terms are both relative, it is proper to observe, that by
-_subordination_ is implied an authority which superiors have over
-inferiors; and by _dependence_, is implied certain advantages which the
-inferiors draw from their subordination: a servant is under
-_subordination_ to his master, and _depends_ upon him for his
-subsistence.
-
-Dependence is the only bond of society; and I have observed, in the
-fourth chapter of the first book, that the dependence of one man upon
-another for food, is a very natural introduction to slavery. This was
-the first contrivance mankind fell upon, in order to become useful to
-one another.
-
-Upon the abolishing of slavery, from a principle of christianity, the
-next step taken, was the establishment of an extraordinary subordination
-between the different classes of the people; this was the principle of
-the feudal government.
-
-The last refinement, and that which has brought liberty to be generally
-extended to the lowest denominations of a people, without destroying
-that dependence necessary to serve as a band of society, was the
-introduction of industry: by this is implied, the circulation of an
-adequate equivalent for every service, which procures to the rich, every
-advantage they could expect to reap, either from the servitude or
-dependence of the poor; and to these again, every comfort they could
-wish to enjoy under the mildest slavery, or most gentle subordination.
-
-From this exposition, I divide dependence into three kinds. The first
-natural, between parents and children; the second political, between
-masters and servants, lords and vassals, Princes and subjects; the third
-commercial, between the rich and the industrious.
-
-May I be allowed to transgress the limits of my subject for a few lines,
-and to dip so far into the principles of the law of nature, as to
-enquire, how far subordination among men is thereby authorized? I think
-I may decide, _that in so far as the subordination is in proportion to
-the dependence, in so far it is reasonable and just_. This represents an
-even balance. If the scale of subordination is found too weighty,
-tyranny ensues, and licentiousness is implied, in proportion as it rises
-above the level. From this let me draw some conclusions.
-
-_1mo._ He who depended upon another, for the preservation of a life
-justly forfeited, and at all times in the power of him who spared it,
-was, by the civil law, called a slave. This surely is the highest degree
-of dependence.
-
-_2do._ He who depends upon another for every thing necessary for his
-subsistence, seems to be in the second degree; this is the dependence of
-children upon their parents.
-
-_3tio._ He who depends upon another for the means of procuring
-subsistence to himself by his own labour, stands in the third degree:
-this I take to have been the case between the feudal lords, and the
-lowest classes of their vassals, the labourers of the ground.
-
-_4to._ He who depends totally upon the sale of his own industry, stands
-in the fourth degree: this is the case of tradesmen and manufacturers,
-with respect to those who employ them.
-
-These I take to be the different degrees of subordination between man
-and man, considered as members of the same society.
-
-In proportion, therefore, as certain classes, or certain individuals
-become more dependent than formerly, in the same proportion ought their
-just subordination to increase: and in proportion as they become less
-dependent than formerly, in the same proportion ought this just
-subordination to diminish. This seems to be a rational principle: next
-for the application.
-
-I deduce the origin of the great subordination under the feudal
-government, from the necessary dependence of the lower classes for their
-subsistence. They consumed the produce of the land, as the price of
-their subordination, not as the reward of their industry in making it
-produce.
-
-I deduce modern liberty from the independence of the same classes, by
-the introduction of industry, and circulation of an adequate equivalent
-for every service.
-
-If this doctrine be applied in order to resolve the famous question so
-much debated, concerning the origin of supreme authority, in so far as
-it is a question of the law of nature, I do not find the decision so
-very difficult: _All authority is in proportion to dependence, and must
-vary according to circumstances_.
-
-I think it is as rational to say, that the fatherly power proceeded
-originally from the act of the children, as to say, that the great body
-of the people who were fed, and protected by a few great lords, was the
-fountain of power, and creator of subordination. Those who have no other
-equivalent to give for their food and protection, must pay in personal
-service, respect, and submission; and so soon as they come to be in a
-situation to pay a proper equivalent for these dependencies, in so far
-they acquire a title to liberty and independence. The feudal lords,
-therefore, who, with reason, had an entire authority over many of their
-vassals, being subdued by their King; the usurpation was upon _their_
-rights, not upon the rights of the lower classes: but when a King came
-to extend the power he had over the vassals of the lords, to the
-inhabitants of cities, who had been independent of that subordination,
-his usurpation became evident.
-
-The rights of Kings, therefore, are to be sought for in history; and not
-founded upon the supposition of tacit contracts between them and their
-people, inferred from the principles of an imaginary law of nature,
-_which makes all mankind equal_: nature can never be in opposition to
-common reason.
-
-The general principle I have laid down, appears, in my humble opinion,
-more rational than that imaginary contract; and as consonant to the full
-with the spirit of free government. If the original tacit contract of
-government between Prince and people is admitted universally, then all
-governments ought to be similar; and every subordination, which appears
-contrary to the entire liberty and independence of the lowest classes,
-ought to be construed as tyrannical: whereas, according to my principle,
-the subordination of classes may, in different countries, be vastly
-different; the prerogative of one sovereign may, from different
-circumstances, be far more extended than that of another.
-
-May not one have attained the sovereignty (by the free election of the
-people, I suppose) because of the great extent of his possessions,
-number of his vassals and dependents, quantity of wealth, alliances and
-connexions with neighbouring sovereigns? Had not, for example, such a
-person as Hugh Capet, the greatest feudal Lord of his time, a right to a
-much more extensive jurisdiction over his subjects, than could
-reasonably be aspired to by a King of Poland, sent from France, or from
-Germany, and set at the head of a republic, where he has not one person
-depending upon him for any thing?
-
-The power of Princes, as _Princes_, must then be distinguished from the
-power they derive from other circumstances, which do not necessarily
-follow in consequence of their elevation to the throne. It would, I
-think, be the greatest absurdity to advance, that the title of King
-abolishes, of itself, the subordination due to the person who exercises
-the office of that high magistracy.
-
-Matter of fact, which is stronger than all reasoning, demonstrates the
-force of the principle here laid down. Do we not see how subordination
-rises and falls under different reigns, under a rich Elizabeth, and a
-necessitous Charles, under a powerful Austrian, and a distressed
-Bavarian Emperor? I proceed no farther in the examination of this
-matter: perhaps my reader has decided that I have gone too far already.
-
-From these principles may be deduced the boundaries of subordination. A
-people who depend upon nothing but their own industry for their
-subsistence, ought to be under no farther subordination than what is
-necessary for their protection. And as the protection of the whole body
-of such a people implies the protection of every individual, so every
-political subordination should there be general and equal: no person, no
-class should be under a greater subordination than another. This is the
-subordination of the laws; and whenever laws establish a subordination
-more than what is proportionate to the dependence of those who are
-subordinate, in so far such laws may be considered as contrary to
-natural equity, and arbitrary.
-
-These things premised, I come to the question proposed, namely, How far
-particular forms of government are favourable or unfavourable to a
-competition with other nations, in point of commerce?
-
-If we reason from facts, and from experience, we shall find, that trade
-and industry have been found mostly to flourish under the republican
-form, and under those which have come the nearest to it. May I be
-allowed to say, that, perhaps, one principal reason for this has been,
-that under these forms the administration of the laws has been the most
-uniform, and consequently, that most liberty has _actually_ been there
-enjoyed: I say actually, because I have said above, that in my
-acceptation of the term, liberty is equally compatible with monarchy as
-with democracy; I do not say the enjoyment of it is equally secure under
-both; because under the first it is much more liable to be destroyed.
-
-The life of the democratical system is equality. Monarchy conveys the
-idea of the greatest inequality possible. Now if, on one side, the
-equality of the democracy secures liberty; on the other, the moderation
-in expence discourages industry; and if, on one side, the inequality of
-the monarchy endangers liberty, the progress of luxury encourages
-industry on the other. From whence we may conclude, that the
-democratical system is naturally the best for giving birth to foreign
-trade; the monarchical, for the refinement of the luxurious arts, and
-for promoting a rapid circulation of inland commerce.
-
-The danger which liberty is exposed to under monarchy, and the
-discouragement to industry, from the frugality of the democracy, are
-only the natural and immediate effects of the two forms of government;
-and these inconveniencies will only take place while statesmen neglect
-the interest of commerce, so far as not to make it an object of
-administration.
-
-The disadvantage, therefore, of the monarchical form, in point of trade
-and industry, does not proceed from the inequality it establishes among
-the citizens, but from the consequence of this inequality, which is very
-often accompanied with an arbitrary and undetermined subordination
-between the individuals of the higher classes, and those of the lower;
-or between those vested with the execution of the laws, and the body of
-the people. The moment it is found that any subordination within the
-monarchy, between subject and subject, is left without proper bounds
-prescribed, liberty is so far at an end. Nay monarchy itself is thereby
-hurt, as this undetermined subordination implies an arbitrary power in
-the state, not vested in the monarch. _Arbitrary_ power never can be
-delegated; for if it be _arbitrary_, it may be turned against the
-monarch, as well as against the subject.
-
-I might therefore say, that when such a power in individuals is
-constitutional in the monarchy, such monarchy is not a government, but a
-tyranny, and therefore falls without the limits of our subject; and when
-such a power is anti-constitutional, and yet is exercised, that it is an
-abuse, and should be overlooked. But as the plan of this inquiry engages
-me to investigate the operations of general principles, and the
-consequences they produce, I cannot omit, in this place, to point out
-those which flow from an undetermined subordination, from whatever cause
-it may proceed.
-
-Whether this undetermined subordination between individuals, be a _vice_
-in the constitution of the government, or an _abuse_, it is the same
-thing as to the consequences which result from it. It is this which
-checks and destroys industry, and which in a great measure prevents its
-progress from being equal in all countries. This difference in the form
-or administration of governments, is the only one which it is
-essentially necessary to examine in this inquiry; and so essential it
-is, in my opinion, that I imagine it would be less hurtful, in a plan
-for the establishment of commerce, fairly, and at once, to enslave the
-lower classes of the inhabitants, and to make them vendible like other
-commodities, than to leave them nominally free, burthened with their own
-maintenance, charged with the education of their children, and at the
-same time under an irregular subordination; that is, liable at every
-moment to be loaded with new prestations or impositions, either in work
-or otherwise, and to be fined or imprisoned at will by their superiors.
-
-It produces no difference, whether these irregularities be exercised by
-those of the superior classes, or by the statesman and his substitutes.
-It is the irregularity of the exactions more than the extent of them
-which ruins industry. It renders living precarious, and the very idea of
-industry should carry along with it, not only an assured livelihood, but
-a certain profit over and above.
-
-Let impositions be ever so high, provided they be proportional, general,
-gradually augmented, and permanent, they may have indeed the effect of
-stopping foreign trade, and of starving the idle, but they never will
-ruin the industrious, as we shall have occasion to shew in treating of
-taxation. Whereas, when they are arbitrary, falling unequally upon
-individuals of the same condition, sudden, and frequently changing their
-object, it is impossible for industry to stand its ground. Such a system
-of oeconomy introduces an unequal competition among those of the same
-class, it stops industrious people in the middle of their career,
-discourages others from exposing to the eyes of the public _the ease of
-their circumstances_, consequently encourages hoarding; this again
-excites rapaciousness upon the side of the statesman, who sees himself
-frustrated in his schemes of laying hold of private wealth.
-
-From this a new set of inconveniencies follow. He turns his views upon
-solid property. This inspires the landlords with _indignation_ against
-_him_ who can load _them_ at will; and with _envy_ against the _monied
-interest_, who can baffle his attempts. This class again is constantly
-upon the catch to profit of the public distress for want of money. What
-is the consequence of all this? It is, that the lowest classes of the
-people, who ought by industry to enrich the state, find on one hand the
-monied interest constantly amassing, in order to lend to the state,
-instead of distributing among _them_, by seasonable loans, their
-superfluous income, with a view to share the reasonable profits of their
-ingenuity; and on the other hand, they find the emissaries of taxation
-robbing them of the seed before it is sown, instead of waiting for a
-share in the harvest.
-
-Under the feudal form of government, liberty and independence were
-confined to the nobility. Birth opened the door of preferment to some,
-and birth as effectually shut it against others. I have often observed
-how, by reason and from experience, such a form of government must be
-unfavourable both to trade and industry.
-
-From reason it is plain, that industry must give wealth, and wealth
-_will_ give power, if he who possesses it be left the master to employ
-it as he pleases. A government could not therefore encourage a system
-which tended to throw power into the hands of those who were only made
-to obey. It was consequently very natural for the nobility to be jealous
-of wealthy merchants, and of every one who became easy and independent
-by means of their own industry; experience proved how exactly this
-principle regulated their administration.
-
-A statesman ought, therefore, to consider attentively every circumstance
-of the constitution of his country, before he sets on foot the modern
-system of trade and industry. I am far from being of opinion that this
-is the only road to happiness, security, and ease; though, from the
-general taste of the times I live in, it be the system I am principally
-employed to examine. A country may be abundantly happy, and sufficiently
-formidable to those who come to attack it, without being extremely rich.
-Riches indeed are forbid to all who have not mines, or foreign trade.
-
-If a country be found labouring under many natural disadvantages from
-inland situation, barren soil, distant carriage, it would be in vain to
-attempt a competition with other nations in foreign markets. All that
-can be then undertaken is a passive trade, and that only in so far as it
-can bring in additional wealth. When little money can be acquired, the
-statesman’s application must be, to make that already acquired to
-circulate as much as possible, in order to give bread to every one in
-the society.
-
-In countries where the government is vested in the hands of the great
-lords, as is the case in all aristocracies, as was the case under the
-feudal government, and as it still is the case in many countries in
-Europe, where trade, however, and industry are daily gaining ground; the
-statesman who sets the new system of political oeconomy on foot, may
-depend upon it, that either his attempt will fail, or the constitution
-of the government will change. If he destroys all arbitrary dependence
-between individuals, the wealth of the industrious will share, if not
-totally root out the power of the grandees. If he allows such a
-dependence to subsist, his project will fail.
-
-While Venice and Genoa flourished, they were obliged to open the doors
-of their senate to the wealthy citizens, in order to prevent their being
-broken down. What is venal nobility? The child of commerce, the
-indispensible consequence of industry, and a middle term, which our
-Gothic ancestors found themselves obliged to adopt, in order not
-entirely to lose their own rank in the state. Money, they found, must
-carry off the fasces, so they chose rather to adopt the wealthy
-plebeians, and to clothe ignoble shoulders with their purple mantle,
-than to allow these to wrest all authority out of the hands of the
-higher class. By this expedient, a sudden revolution has often been
-prevented. Some kingdoms have been quit for a bloody rebellion, or a
-long civil war. Other countries have likewise demonstrated the force of
-the principles here laid down: a wealthy populace has broken their
-chains to pieces, and overturned the very foundations of the feudal
-system.
-
-All these violent convulsions have been owing to the short-sightedness
-of statesmen; who, inattentive to the consequences of growing wealth and
-industry, foolishly imagined that hereditary subordination was to
-subsist among classes, whose situation, with respect to each other, was
-entirely changed.
-
-The pretorian cohorts were at first subordinate to the orders of the
-Emperors, and were the guards of the city of Rome. The Janissaries are
-understood to be under the command of the principal officers of the
-Port. So soon as the leading men of Rome and Constantinople, who
-naturally were entitled to govern the state, applied to these tumultuous
-bodies for their protection and assistance, they in their turn, made
-sensible of their own importance, changed the constitution, and shared
-in the government.
-
-A milder revolution, entirely similar, is taking place in modern times;
-and an attentive spectator may find amusement in viewing the progress of
-it in many states of Europe. _Trade_ and _industry_ are in vogue; and
-their establishment is occasioning a wonderful fermentation with the
-remaining fierceness of the feudal constitution.
-
-Trade and industry owed their establishment to _war_ and to _ambition_;
-and perhaps mankind may hope to see the day when they will put an end to
-the first, by exposing the expensive folly of the latter.
-
-Trade and industry, I say, owed their establishment to the ambition of
-princes, who supported and favoured the plan in the beginning,
-principally with a view to enrich themselves, and thereby to become
-formidable to their neighbours. But they did not discover, until
-experience taught them, that the wealth they drew from such fountains
-was but the overflowing of the spring; and that an opulent, bold, and
-spirited people, having the fund of the prince’s wealth in their own
-hands, have it also in their own power, when it becomes strongly their
-inclination, to shake off his authority. The consequence of this change
-has been the introduction of a more mild, and a more regular plan of
-administration. The money gatherers are become more useful to princes,
-than the great lords; and those who are fertile in expedients for
-establishing public credit, and for drawing money from the coffers of
-the rich, by the imposition of taxes, have been preferred to the most
-wise and most learned counsellors.
-
-As this system is new, no wonder if it has produced phenomena both new
-and surprizing. Formerly, the power of Princes was employed to destroy
-liberty, and to establish arbitrary subordination; but in our days, we
-have seen those who have best comprehended the true principles of the
-new plan of politics, arbitrarily limiting the power of the higher
-classes, and thereby applying their authority towards the extension of
-public liberty, by extinguishing every subordination, other than that
-due to the established laws.
-
-The fundamental maxim of some of the greatest ministers, has been to
-restrain the power of the great lords. The natural inference that people
-drew from such a step, was, that the minister thereby intended to make
-every thing depend on the prince’s will only. This I do not deny. But
-what use have we seen made of this new acquisition of power? Those who
-look into events with a political eye, may perceive several acts of the
-most arbitrary authority exercised by some late European sovereigns,
-with no other view than to establish public liberty upon a more
-extensive bottom. And although the prerogative of some princes be
-increased considerably beyond the bounds of the antient constitution,
-even to such a degree as perhaps justly to deserve the name of
-usurpation; yet the consequences resulting from the revolution, cannot
-every where be said, upon the whole, to have impaired what I call
-_public liberty_. I should be at no loss to prove this assertion from
-matters of fact, and by examples, did I think it proper: it seems better
-to prove it from reason.
-
-When once a state begins to subsist by the consequences of industry,
-there is less danger to be apprehended from the power of the sovereign.
-The mechanism of his administration becomes more complex, and, as was
-observed in the introduction to the first book, he finds himself so
-bound up by the laws of his political oeconomy, that every transgression
-of them runs him into new difficulties.
-
-I only speak of governments which are conducted systematically,
-constitutionally, and by general laws; and when I mention princes, I
-mean their councils. The principles I am enquiring into, regard the cool
-administration of their government; it belongs to another branch of
-politics, to contrive bulwarks against their passions, vices and
-weaknesses, as men.
-
-I say, therefore, that from the time states have begun to be supported
-by the consequences of industry, the plan of administration has become
-more moderate; has been changing and refining by degrees; and every
-change, as has been often observed, must be accompanied with
-inconveniencies.
-
-It is of governments as of machines, the more they are simple, the more
-they are solid and lasting; the more they are artfully composed, the
-more they become useful; but the more apt they are to be out of order.
-
-The Lacedemonian form may be compared to the wedge, the most solid and
-compact of all the mechanical powers. Those of modern states to watches,
-which are continually going wrong; sometimes the spring is found too
-weak, at other times too strong for the machine: and when the wheels are
-not made according to a determined proportion, by the able hands of a
-Graham, or a Julien le Roy, they do not tally well with one another;
-then the machine stops, and if it be forced, some part gives way; and
-the workman’s hand becomes necessary to set it right.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XIV.
-_Security, Ease and Happiness, no inseparable Concomitants of Trade and
- Industry._
-
-
-The republic of Lycurgus represents the most perfect plan of political
-oeconomy, in my humble opinion, anywhere to be met with, either in
-antient or modern times. That it existed cannot be called in question,
-any more than that it proved the most durable of all those established
-among the Greeks; and if at last it came to fail, it was more from the
-abuses which gradually were introduced into it, than from any vice in
-the form.
-
-The simplicity of the institution made the solidity of it; and had the
-Lacedemonians at all times adhered to the principles of their
-government, and spirit of their constitution, they might have perhaps
-subsisted to this very day.
-
-My intention, in this chapter, is not to enter into a critical
-disquisition concerning the mechanism of every part of the Spartan
-republic; but to compare the general plan of Lycurgus’s political
-oeconomy with the principles we have been laying down.
-
-Of this plan we have a description in the life of that legislator
-written by Plutarch, one of the most judicious authors to be met with in
-any age.
-
-This historian flourished at least 800 years after the institution of
-the plan he describes. A plan never reduced into a system of written
-laws, but stamped at first upon the minds of the Spartans by the
-immediate authority of the gods, which made them submit to the most
-violent revolution that perhaps ever took place in any nation, and which
-they supported for so many ages by the force of education alone.
-
-As the whole of Lycurgus’s laws was transmitted by tradition only, it is
-not to be supposed, that the description Plutarch, or indeed any of the
-antients, have given us of this republic, can be depended on with
-certainty as a just representation of every part of the system laid down
-by that great statesman. But on the other hand, we may be very sure,
-that as to the outlines of the institution, we have them transmitted to
-us in all their purity; and, in what relates to my subject, I have no
-occasion to launch out into any particulars which may imply the smallest
-controversy, as to the matter of fact.
-
-Property among the Lacedemonians, at the time when Lycurgus planned his
-institution, was very unequally divided: the consequence of which, says
-our historian, was to draw many poor people into the city, where the
-wealth was gathered into few hands; that is, according to our language,
-_the luxury of the rich, who lived in the city, had purged the lands of
-useless mouths, and the instability of the government had rendered
-industry precarious, which must have opened the door to general distress
-among all the lower classes_.
-
-The first step our legislator took, was to prepare the spirit of the
-people, so as to engage them to submit to a total reform, which could
-not fail of being attended with innumerable inconveniencies.
-
-For this purpose he went to Delphi, without having communicated his
-design to any body. The Pythia declared him to be the darling of the
-gods, and rather a god than a man; and publicly gave out, that Apollo
-had delivered to him alone the plan of a republic which far exceeded
-every other in perfection.
-
-What a powerful engine was this in the hands of a profound politician,
-who had travelled over the world with a previous intention to explore
-the mysteries of the science of government! and what advantages did such
-an authentic recommendation, coming directly (as was believed) from the
-voice of the Divinity, give him over a superstitious people, in
-establishing whatever form of government he thought most proper!
-
-The sagacious Lacedemonian did not, however, entirely depend upon the
-blind submission of his countrymen to the dictates of the oracle; but
-wisely judged that some preparatory steps might still be necessary. He
-communicated, therefore, his plan, first to his friends, and then by
-degrees to the principal people of the state, who certainly never could
-have been brought to relish an innovation so prejudicial to their
-interest, had it not been from the deepest reverence and submission to
-the will of the gods. Assured of their assistance, he appeared in the
-market place, accompanied by his party, all in arms; and having imposed
-respect, he laid the foundation of his government by the nomination of a
-senate.
-
-Whatever regards any other object than his plan of political oeconomy,
-shall be here passed over in silence. It is of no consequence to my
-inquiry, where the supreme power was vested: it is sufficient to know
-that there was an authority in the state sufficient to support the
-execution of his plan.
-
-He destroyed all inequality at one stroke. The property of all the lands
-of the state was thrown together, and became at the disposal of the
-legislator. Every branch of industry was proscribed to the citizens. And
-a monied interest was made to disappear, by the introduction of iron
-coin. The lands he divided into equal lots, according to the number of
-citizens.
-
-Thus all were rendred entirely equal in point of fortune, as neither
-wealth, industry, or lands, could give a superiority to any body. From
-this part of the plan I conclude, that Lycurgus discovered the utter
-insufficiency of an agrarian law for establishing equality among the
-individuals of a state, without proscribing, at the same time, both
-wealth and industry. A circumstance which seems to have escaped every
-other statesman in antient times, as well as the modern patrons of
-equality and simplicity of manners. The lands were cultivated by the
-Helotes, who were nourished from them, and who were obliged to deliver
-the surplus, that is, a determined quantity of fruits, to the proprietor
-of the lot. Every necessary mechanic art was likewise exercised by this
-body of slaves.
-
-By this distribution, the produce of the earth (that is every article of
-nourishment) came free and without cost to every individual of the
-state. The Spartan landlords were rather overseers of the slaves, and
-collectors of the public subsistence, than direct proprietors of the
-soil which produced it. For although every man was fed from his own
-lands, and provided his own portion, yet this portion was regulated, and
-was to be consumed in public; and any one who pretended to eat alone, or
-before he came to the public hall, was held in the utmost contempt.
-
-Their cloathing was the most simple possible, perfectly alike, and could
-be purchased for a small value. This frugality produced no bad effect;
-because no man lived by his industry. Arts, as has been said, were
-exercised by the Helotes, the property of private citizens; and if such
-masters as entertained manufacturing slaves gained by that traffic (as
-some must do) every method of profiting of their superior riches was cut
-off.
-
-The Spartans were continually together, they had nothing to do but to
-divert themselves; and their amusements were mostly martial exercises.
-The regulations of these numerous assemblies (which were compared, with
-great elegance and justness, to swarms of bees) cut off all outward
-marks of distinction. There was not a possibility for luxury to
-introduce itself, either in eating, drinking, cloathing, furniture, or
-any other expence.
-
-Here then was a whole nation fed and provided for gratuitously; there
-was not the least occasion for industry; the usefulness of which we have
-shewn principally to consist in its proving an expedient for procuring
-for the necessitous, what the Spartans found provided for them without
-labour.
-
-Under such circumstances we may conclude, from the principles we have
-laid down, that a people thus abundantly nourished, must have multiplied
-exceedingly. And so no doubt they did. But the regulation of the lots
-permitted no more than a fixt number of citizens. Whenever, therefore,
-numbers were found to exceed this standard, the supernumeraries were
-dismissed, and sent to form colonies. And when the Helotes increased too
-much, and thereby began to rise above the proportion of the labour
-required of them, in order to prevent the consuming the food of their
-masters, which they had among their hands, and thereby becoming idle,
-licentious, and consequently dangerous to the state, it was permitted to
-destroy them by way of a military exercise, conducted by stratagem and
-address; arts which this people constantly preferred in war, to labour,
-strength, and intrepidity.
-
-This appears a very barbarous custom, and I shall not offer any thing as
-an apology for it, but the ferocity of the manners of those times.
-Abstracting from the cruelty, the restraining the numbers of that class
-within certain limits, was absolutely necessary. The Lacedemonian slaves
-were in many respects far happier than those of other nations. They were
-in reality a body of farmers, which paid a certain quantity of fruits
-out of every lot; to wit, 70 medimni of barley: their numbers were not
-recruited from abroad, as elsewhere, but supported by their own
-propagation; consequently there was an absolute necessity either to
-prevent the over multiplication of them, or to diminish an income
-proportioned exactly to the necessities of the state: and what expedient
-could be fallen upon? They were slaves, and therefore could not be
-inrolled in the number of citizens; they could not be sold to strangers,
-for money which was forbid; and they were of no use to industry. No
-wonder then if the fierceness of the manners of those days permitted the
-inhuman treatment they received; which, however, Plutarch is far from
-attributing to the primitive institution of Lycurgus. Besides, when we
-see that the freemen themselves were obliged to quit the country the
-moment their numbers exceeded a certain standard, it was not to be
-expected, that useless slaves should be permitted to multiply at
-discretion.
-
-From this sketch of Lycurgus’s political oeconomy, we find the state
-abundantly provided with every necessary article; an effectual stop put
-to vicious procreation among the citizens; and a corrective for the over
-multiplication of the slaves. The next care of a statesman is to
-regulate the employment of a people.
-
-Every freeman in the state was bred up from his infancy to arms. No
-family care could prevent him from serving the state as a soldier; his
-children were no load upon him; it was the business of the Helotes to
-supply them with provisions; of the servants in town to prepare these,
-and the public tables were always ready furnished. The whole youth of
-Sparta was educated not as the children of their parents, but of the
-state. They imbibed the same sentiments of frugality, temperance, and
-love of simplicity. They exercised the same employment, and were
-occupied in the same way in every respect. The simplicity of Lycurgus’s
-plan, rendered this a practicable scheme. The multiplicity and variety
-of employments among us, makes it absolutely necessary to trust the
-parents with the education of their children; whereas in Sparta, there
-were not two employments for a free man; there was neither orator,
-lawyer, physician, or politician, by profession to be found. The
-institutions of their lawgiver were constantly inculcated by the old
-upon the minds of the young; every thing they heard or saw, was relative
-to war. The very gods were represented in armour, and every precept they
-were taught, tended to banish superfluity, and to establish moderation
-and hard living.
-
-The youth were continually striving together in all military exercises;
-such as boxing and wrestling. To keep up, therefore, a spirit of
-emulation, and to banish animosity at the same time, sharp, satirical
-expressions were much encouraged; but these were always to be seasoned
-with something gracious or polite. The grave demeanour likewise, and
-down-cast look which they were ordered to observe in the streets, and
-the injunction of keeping their hands within their robes, might very
-naturally be calculated to prevent quarrels, and especially blows, at
-times when the authority of a public assembly could not moderate the
-vivacity of their passions. By these arts, the Spartans lived in great
-harmony in the midst of a continual war.
-
-Under such regulations a people must enjoy security from foreign
-attacks; and certainly the intention of the legislator never was to
-extend the limits of Laconia by conquest. What people could ever think
-of attacking the Lacedemonians, where nothing but blows could be
-expected?
-
-They enjoyed ease in the most supreme degree; they were abundantly
-provided with every necessary of life; although, I confess, the
-enjoyment of them in so austere a manner, would not be relished by any
-modern society. But habit is all in things of this kind. A course meal
-to a good stomach, has more relish than all the delicacies of the most
-exquisite preparation to a depraved appetite; and if sensuality be
-reckoned among the pleasures of life, enough of it might have been met
-with in the manners of that people. It does not belong to my subject to
-enter into particular details on this head. But the most rational
-pleasure among men, the delightful communication of society, was here
-enjoyed to the utmost extent. The whole republic was continually
-gathered together in bodies, and their studies, their occupations, and
-their amusements, were the same. One taste was universal; and the young
-and the old being constantly together, the first under the immediate
-inspection and authority of the latter, the same sentiments were
-transmitted from generation to generation. The Spartans were so pleased,
-and so satisfied with their situation, that they despised the manners of
-every other nation. If this does not transmit an idea of happiness, I am
-at a loss to form one. Security, ease, and happiness, therefore, are not
-inseparable concomitants of trade and industry.
-
-Lycurgus had penetration enough to perceive the weak side of his
-institution. He was no stranger to the seducing influence of luxury; and
-plainly foresaw, that the consequences of industry, which procures to
-mankind a great variety of new objects of desire, and a wonderful
-facility in satisfying them, would easily root out the principles he had
-endeavoured to instil into his countrymen, if the state of simplicity
-should ever come to be sophisticated by foreign communications. He
-affected, therefore, to introduce several customs which could not fail
-of disgusting and shocking the delicacy of neighbouring states. He
-permitted the dead to be buried within the walls; the handling of dead
-bodies was not reckoned pollution among the Lacedemonians. He forbade
-bathing, so necessary for cleanliness in a hot country: and the
-coarseness and dirtiness of their cloaths, and sweat from their hard
-exercises, could not fail to disgust strangers from coming among them.
-On the other hand, nothing was found at Sparta which could engage a
-stranger to wish to become one of their number. And to prevent the
-contagion of foreign customs from getting in, by means of the citizens
-themselves, he forbade the Spartans to travel; and excluded from any
-employment in the state, those who had got a foreign education. Nothing
-but a Spartan breeding could have fitted a person to live among them.
-
-The theft encouraged among the Lacedemonians was calculated to make them
-artful and dextrous; and contained not the smallest tincture of vice. It
-was generally of something eatable, and the frugality of their table,
-prompted them to it; while on the other hand, their being exposed to the
-like reprisals, made them watchful and careful of what belonged to
-themselves; and the pleasure of punishing an unsuccessful attempt, in
-part indemnified them for the trouble of being constantly upon their
-guard. A Lacedemonian had nothing of any value that could be stolen; and
-it is the desire and intention of making unlawful gain, which renders
-theft either criminal or scandalous.
-
-The hidden intercourse between the Spartans and their young wives was,
-no doubt, calculated to impress upon the minds of the fair sex, the wide
-difference there is between an act of immodesty, and that of simply
-appearing naked in the public exercises; two things which we are apt to
-confound, only from the impression of our own customs. I am persuaded
-that many a young person has felt her modesty as much hurt by taking off
-her handkerchief, the first time she appeared at court, as any
-Lacedemonian girl could have done by stripping before a thousand people;
-yet both her reason and common sense, must make her sensible of the
-difference between a compliance with a custom in a matter of dress, and
-a palpable transgression against the laws of her honour, and the modesty
-of her sex.
-
-I have called this Lacedemonian republic a perfect plan of political
-oeconomy; because it was a system, uniform and consistent in all its
-parts. _There_, no superfluity was necessary, because there was no
-occasion for industry, to give bread to any body. _There_, no
-superfluity was permitted, because the moment the limits of the
-absolutely necessary are transgressed, the degrees of excess are quite
-indeterminate, and become purely relative. The same thing which appears
-superfluity to a peasant, appears necessary to a citizen; and the utmost
-luxury of this class, frequently does not come up to what is thought the
-mere necessary for one in a higher rank. Lycurgus stopt at the only
-determined frontier, the pure physical necessary. All beyond this was
-considered as abusive.
-
-The only things in commerce among the Spartans were,
-
-_1mo._ What might remain to them of the fruits of their lot, over their
-own consumption; and _2do._ The work of the slaves employed in trades.
-The numbers of these could not be many, as the timber of their houses
-was worked only with the saw and ax; and every utensil was made with the
-greatest simplicity. A small quantity, therefore, of iron coin, as I
-imagine, must have been sufficient for carrying on the circulation at
-Sparta. The very nature of their wants must, as I have said, terminate
-all their commerce, in the exchange of their surplus-food of their
-portions of land, with the work of the manufacturing slaves, who must
-have been fed from it.
-
-As the Lacedemonians had no mercantile communication with other nations,
-the iron coin was no more than a bank note of no intrinsic value, as I
-suppose, but a middle term introduced for keeping accounts, and for
-facilitating barter. An additional argument for this opinion of the coin
-being of no intrinsic value, is, that it is said to have been rendred
-unserviceable for other uses, by being slaked in vinegar. In order
-consequently to destroy, as they imagined, any intrinsic value which
-might therein otherwise remain. If this coin, therefore, was made of an
-extraordinary weight, it must have been entirely with a political view
-of discouraging commerce and circulation, an institution quite
-consistent with the general plan, and nowise a consequence of the
-baseness of the metal of which it was made: a small quantity of this,
-with the stamp of public authority for its currency and value, would
-have answered every purpose equally well.
-
-Let me now conclude this chapter by an illustration of the subject,
-which will still more clearly point out the force of the principles upon
-which this Lacedemonian republic was established.
-
-Were any Prince in Europe, whose subjects, I shall suppose, may amount
-to six millions of inhabitants, one half employed in agriculture, the
-other half employed in trade and industry, or living upon a revenue
-already acquired; were such a Prince, I say, supposed to have authority
-sufficient to engage his people to adopt a new plan of oeconomy,
-calculated to secure them against the designs of a powerful neighbour,
-who, I shall suppose, has formed schemes of invading and subduing them.
-
-Let him engage the whole proprietors of land to renounce their several
-possessions: or if that supposition should appear too absurd, let him
-contract debts to the value of the whole property of the nation; let the
-land-tax be imposed at twenty shillings in the pound, and then let him
-become bankrupt to the creditors. Let the income of all the lands be
-collected throughout the country for the use of the state; let all the
-luxurious arts be proscribed; and let those employed in them be formed,
-under the command of the former land proprietors, into a body of regular
-troops, officers and soldiers, provided with every thing necessary for
-their maintenance, and that of their wives and families at the public
-expence. Let me carry the supposition farther. Let every superfluity be
-cut off; let the peasants be enslaved, and obliged to labour the ground
-with no view of profit to themselves, but for simple subsistence; let
-the use of gold and silver be proscribed; and let all these metals be
-shut up in a public treasure. Let no foreign trade, and very little
-domestic be encouraged, but let every man, willing to serve as a
-soldier, be received and taken care of; and those who either incline to
-be idle, or who are found superfluous, be sent out of the country. I
-ask, what combination, among the modern European Princes, would carry on
-a successful war against such a people? What article would be wanting to
-their ease, that is, to their ample subsistence? Their happiness would
-depend upon the temper of their mind. And what country could defend
-themselves against the attack of such an enemy? Such a system of
-political oeconomy, I readily grant, is not likely to take place: but if
-ever it did, would it not effectually dash to pieces the whole fabric of
-trade and industry, which has been forming for so many years? And would
-it not quickly oblige every other nation to adopt, as far as possible, a
-similar conduct, from a principle of self-preservation.
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XV.
-_A general View of the Principles to be attended to by a Statesman, who
- resolves to establish Trade and Industry upon a lasting footing._
-
-
-The two preceding chapters I have introduced purposely to serve as a
-relaxation to the mind, like a farce between the acts of a serious
-opera. I now return to the place where I broke off my subject, at the
-end of the twelfth chapter.
-
-It is a great assistance to memory, now and then to assemble our ideas,
-after certain intervals, in going through an extensive subject. No part
-of it can be treated of with distinctness, without banishing
-combinations; and no part of it can be applied to practice, or adapted
-to any plan, without attending to combinations almost infinite.
-
-For this reason nothing can appear more inconsistent than the spirit
-which runs through some parts of this book, if compared with that which
-prevailed in the first. _There_ luxury was looked on with a favourable
-eye, and every augmentation of superfluity was considered as a method of
-advancing population. We were then employed in drawing mankind, as it
-were, out of a state of idleness, in order to increase their numbers,
-and engage them to cultivate the earth. We had no occasion to divide
-them into societies having separate interests, because the principles we
-treated of were common to all. We therefore considered the industrious,
-who are the providers, and the luxurious, who are the consumers, as
-children of the same family, and as being under the care of the same
-father.
-
-We are now engaged in a more complex operation; we represent different
-societies animated with a different spirit; some given to industry and
-frugality, others to dissipation and luxury. This creates separate
-interests among nations, and every one must be supposed under the
-government of a statesman, who is wholly taken up in advancing the good
-of those he governs, though at the expence of other societies which lie
-round him.
-
-This presents a new idea, and gives birth to new principles. The general
-society of mankind treated of in the first book, is here in a manner
-divided into two. The industrious providers are supposed to live in one
-country, the luxurious consumers in another. The principles of the first
-book remain here in full vigour. Luxury still tends as much as ever to
-the advancement of industry; the statesman’s business is only to remove
-the seat of it from his own country. When that can be accomplished
-without detriment to industry at home, he has an opportunity of joining
-all the advantages of antient simplicity, to the wealth and power which
-attend upon the luxury of modern states. He may preserve his people in
-sobriety, and moderation as to every expence, as to every consumption,
-and make them enjoy, at the same time, riches and superiority over all
-their neighbours.
-
-Such would be the state of trading nations, were they only employed in
-supplying the wants or extravagant consumption of strangers; and did
-they not insensibly adopt the very manners with which they strive to
-inspire others.
-
-As often, therefore, as we suppose a people applying themselves to the
-advancement of foreign trade, we must simplify our ideas, by dismissing
-all political combinations of other circumstances; that is to say, we
-must suppose the spirit universal, and then point out the principles
-which influence the success of it.
-
-We must encourage oeconomy, frugality, and a simplicity of manners,
-discourage the consumption of every thing that can be sold out of the
-country, and excite a taste for superfluity in neighbouring nations.
-When such a system can no more be supported to its full extent, by the
-scale of foreign demand becoming positively lighter; then in order to
-set the balance even again, without taking any thing out of the heavy
-scale, and to preserve and give bread to those who have enriched the
-state, an additional home consumption, proportioned to the deficiency of
-foreign demand, must be encouraged. For were the same simplicity of
-manners still kept up, the infallible consequence would be a forced
-restitution of the balance, by the distress, misery, and at last
-extinction of the supernumerary workmen.
-
-I must therefore, upon such occasions, consider the introduction of
-luxury, or superfluous consumption, as a rational and moral consequence
-of the deficiency of foreign trade.
-
-I am, however, far from thinking that the luxury of every modern state,
-is only in proportion to such failure; and I readily admit, that many
-examples may be produced where the progress of luxury, and the domestic
-competitions with strangers who come to market, have been the cause both
-of the decline and extinction of their foreign trade; but as my business
-is chiefly to point out principles, and to shew their effects, it is
-sufficient to observe, that in proportion as foreign trade declines,
-either a proportional augmentation upon home consumption must take
-place, or a number of the industrious, proportioned to the diminution of
-former consumption, must decrease. By the first, what I call a natural
-restitution of the balance is brought about, from the principles above
-deduced; by the second, what I call a forced one.
-
-Here then is an example, where the introduction of luxury may be a
-rational and prudent step of administration; and as long as the progress
-of it is not accelerated from any other principle, but that of
-preserving the industrious, by giving them employment, the same spirit,
-under the direction of an able statesman, will soon throw industry into
-a new channel, better calculated for reviving foreign trade, and for
-promoting the public good, by substituting the call of foreigners in
-place of that of domestic luxury.
-
-I hope, from what I have said, the political effects of luxury, or the
-consumption of superfluity, are sufficiently understood. These I have
-hitherto considered as advantageous only to those classes who are made
-to subsist by them; I reserve for another occasion the pointing out how
-they influence the imposition of taxes, and how the abuse of consumption
-in the rich may affect the prosperity of a state.
-
-So soon as all foreign trade comes to a stop, without a scheme for
-recalling it, and that domestic consumption has filled up its place in
-consuming the work, and giving bread to the industrious, we find
-ourselves obliged to reason again upon the principles of the first book.
-The statesman has once more both the producers and the consumers under
-his care. The consumers can live without employment, the producers
-cannot. The first seldom have occasion for the statesman’s protection;
-the last constantly stand in need of it. There is a perpetual
-fluctuation in the balance between these two classes, from which a
-multitude of new principles arise; and these render the administration
-of government infinitely more difficult, and require superior talents in
-the person who is at the helm. I shall here only point out the most
-striking effects of the fluctuation and overturn of this new balance,
-which in the subsequent chapters shall be more fully illustrated.
-
-_1mo._ In proportion as the consumers become extravagant, the producers
-become wealthy; and when the former become bankrupts, the latter fill
-their place.
-
-_2do._ As the former become frugal and oeconomical, the latter languish;
-when those begin to hoard, and to adopt a simple life, these are
-extinguished: all extremes are vicious.
-
-_3tio._ If the produce of industry consumed in a country, surpass the
-income of those who do not work, the balance due by the consumers must
-be paid to the suppliers by a proportional alienation of their funds.
-This vibration of the balance, gives a very correct idea of what is
-meant by _relative profit and loss_. The nation here loses nothing by
-the change produced.
-
-_4to._ When, on the other hand, the annual produce of industry consumed
-in a country, does not amount to the value of the income of those who do
-not work, the balance of income saved, must either be locked up in
-chests, made into plate, lent to foreigners, or fairly exported as the
-price of foreign consumption.
-
-_5to._ The scales stand even when there is no balance on either side;
-that is, when the domestic consumption is just equivalent to the annual
-income of the funds. I do not pretend to decide at present whether this
-exact equilibrium marks the state of perfection in a country where there
-is no foreign trade, (of which we are now treating) or whether it be
-better to have small vibrations between the two scales; but I think I
-may say, that all subversions of the balance on either side cannot fail
-to be hurtful, and therefore should be prevented.
-
-Let this suffice at present, upon a subject which shall be more fully
-treated of afterwards. Let us now fix our attention upon the interests
-of a people entirely taken up in the prosecution of foreign trade. So
-long as this spirit prevails, I say, it is the duty of a statesman to
-encourage frugality, sobriety, and an application to labour in his own
-people, and to excite in foreign nations a taste for superfluities as
-much as possible.
-
-While a people are occupied in the prosecution of foreign trade, the
-mutual relations between the individuals of the state, will not be so
-intimate as when the producers and consumers live in the same society;
-such trade implies, and even necessarily creates a chain of foreign
-dependencies; which work the same effect, as when the mutual dependence
-subsisted among the citizens. Now the use of dependencies, I have said,
-is to form a band of society, capable of making the necessitous subsist
-out of the superfluities of the rich, and to keep mankind in peace and
-harmony with one another.
-
-Trade, therefore, and foreign communications, form a new kind of society
-among nations; and consequently render the occupation of a statesman
-more complex. He must, as before, be attentive to provide food, other
-necessaries and employment for all his people; but as the foreign
-connections make these very circumstances depend upon the entertaining a
-good correspondence with neighbouring nations, he must acquire a proper
-knowledge of their domestic situation, so as to reconcile, as much as
-may be, the interests of both parties, by engaging the strangers to
-furnish articles of the first necessity, when the precious metals cannot
-be procured; and to accept, in return, the most consumable superfluities
-which industry can invent. And, last of all, he must inspire his own
-people with a spirit of emulation in the exercise of frugality,
-temperance, oeconomy, and an application to labour and ingenuity. If
-this spirit of emulation is not kept up, another will take place; for
-emulation is inseparable from the nature of man; and if the citizens are
-not made to vie with one another, in the practice of moderation, the
-wealth they must acquire, will soon make them vie with strangers, in
-luxury and dissipation.
-
-While a spirit of moderation prevails in a trading nation, it may rest
-assured, that in as far as it excels the nations with whom it
-corresponds in this particular, so far will it increase the proportion
-of its wealth, power, and superiority, over them. These are lawful
-pursuits among men, when purchased by success in so laudable an
-emulation.
-
-If it be said, that superfluity, intemperance, prodigality, and
-idleness, qualities diametrically opposite to the former, corrupt the
-human mind, and lead to violence and injustice; is it not very wisely
-calculated by the Author of all things, that a sober people, living
-under a good government, should by industry and moderation, necessarily
-acquire wealth, which is the best means of warding off the violence of
-those with whom they are bound in the great society of mankind? And is
-it not also most wisely ordained, that in proportion as a people
-contract vicious habits, which may lead to excess and injustice, the
-very consequence of their dissipation (poverty) should deprive them of
-the power of doing harm? But such reflections seem rather to be too
-great a refinement on my subject, and exceed the bounds of political
-oeconomy.
-
-When we treat of a virtuous people applying to trade and industry, let
-us consider their _interest_ only, in preserving those sentiments; and
-examine the political evil of their falling off from them. When we treat
-of a luxurious nation, where the not-working part is given to excesses
-in all kinds of consumption, and the working part to labour and
-ingenuity, in order to supply them, let us examine the consequences of
-such a spirit, with respect to foreign trade: and if we find, that a
-luxurious turn in the rich is prejudicial thereto, let us try to
-discover the methods of engaging the inhabitants to correct their
-manners from a motive of self-interest. These things premised,
-
-I shall now give a short sketch of the general principles upon which a
-system of foreign trade may be established and preserved as long as
-possible, and of the methods by which it may be again recovered, when,
-from the natural advantages and superior ability of administration in
-rival nations, (not from vices at home) a people have lost for a time
-every advantage they used to draw from their foreign commerce.
-
-The first general principle is to employ, as usefully as possible, a
-certain number of the society, in producing objects of the first
-necessity, always more than sufficient to supply the inhabitants; and to
-contrive means of enabling every one of the free hands to procure
-subsistence for himself, by the exercise of some species of industry.
-
-These first objects compassed, I consider the people as abundantly
-provided with what is purely necessary; and also with a surplus prepared
-for an additional number of free hands, so soon as a demand can be
-procured for their labour. In the mean time, the surplus will be an
-article of exportation; but no sooner will demand come from abroad, for
-a greater quantity of manufactures than formerly, than such demand will
-have the effect of gradually multiplying the inhabitants up to the
-proportion of the surplus above mentioned, provided the statesman be all
-along careful to employ these additional numbers, which an useful
-multiplication must produce, in supplying the additional demand: then
-with the equivalent they receive from strangers, they will at the same
-time enrich the country, and purchase for themselves that part of the
-national productions which had been permitted to be exported, only for
-want of a demand for it at home.
-
-He must, at the same time, continue to give proper encouragement to the
-advancement of agriculture, that there may be constantly found a surplus
-of subsistence (for without a surplus there can never be enough) this
-must be allowed to go abroad, and ought to be considered as the
-provision of those industrious hands which are yet unborn.
-
-He must cut off all foreign competition, beyond a certain standard, for
-that quantity of subsistence which is necessary for home consumption;
-and, by premiums upon exportation, he must discharge the farmers of any
-superfluous load, which may remain upon their hands when prices fall too
-low. This important matter shall be explained at large in another place,
-when we come to treat of the policy of grain.
-
-If natural causes should produce a rise in the price of subsistence,
-which cannot be brought down by extending agriculture, he must then lay
-the whole community under contribution, in order to indemnify those who
-work for strangers, for the advance upon the price of their food; or he
-must indemnify the strangers in another way, for the advance in the
-price of manufactures.
-
-He must consider the manufactures of superfluity, as worked up for the
-use of strangers, and discourage all domestic competition for them, by
-every possible means.
-
-He must do what he can, constantly to proportion the supply to the
-demand made for them; and when the first necessarily comes to exceed the
-latter, in spight of all his care, he must then consider what remains
-over the demand, as a superfluity of the strangers; and for the support
-of the equal balance between work and demand, he must promote the sale
-of them even within the country, under certain restrictions, until the
-hands employed in such branches where a redundancy is found, can be more
-usefully set to work in another way.
-
-He must consider the advancement of the common good as a direct object
-of private interest to every individual, and by a disinterested
-administration of the public money, he must plainly make it appear that
-it is so.
-
-From this principle flows the authority, vested in all governments, to
-load the community with taxes, in order to advance the prosperity of the
-state. And this object can be nowise better obtained than by applying
-the amount of them to the keeping an even balance between work and
-demand. Upon this the health of a trading state principally depends.
-
-If the failure of foreign demand be found to proceed from the superior
-natural advantages of other countries, he must double his diligence to
-promote luxury among his neighbours; he must support simplicity at home;
-he must increase his bounties upon exportation; and his expence in
-relieving manufactures, when the price of their industry falls below the
-expence of their subsistence.
-
-While these operations are conducted with coolness and perseverance,
-while the allurements of the wealth acquired do not frustrate the
-execution, the statesman may depend upon seeing foreigners return to his
-ports, so soon as their own dissipation, and want of frugality, come to
-compensate the advantages which nature had given them over their frugal
-and industrious neighbours.
-
-If this plan be pursued, foreign trade will increase in proportion to
-the number of inhabitants; and domestic luxury will serve only as an
-instrument in the hands of the statesman to increase demand when the
-home supply becomes too great for foreign consumption. In other words,
-the rich citizens will be engaged to consume what is superfluous, in
-order to keep the balance even in favour of the industrious, and in
-favour of the nation.
-
-The whole purport of this plan is to point out the operation of three
-very easy principles.
-
-The first, That in a country entirely taken up with the object of
-promoting foreign trade, no competition should be allowed to come from
-abroad for articles of the first necessity, and principally for food, so
-as to raise prices beyond a certain standard.
-
-The second, That no domestic competition should be allowed upon articles
-of superfluity, so as to raise prices beyond a certain standard.
-
-The third, That when these standards cannot be preserved, and that from
-natural causes, prices get above them, public money must be thrown into
-the scale to bring prices to the level of those of exportation.
-
-The greater the extent of foreign trade in any nation, the lower these
-standards _must_ be kept; the less the extent of it, the higher they
-_may_ be allowed to rise. Consequently,
-
-Were no man in a nation employed in producing the necessaries of life,
-but every man in supplying articles of foreign consumption, the prices
-of necessaries might be allowed to fall as low as possible. There would
-be no occasion for a standard in favour of those who live by producing
-them.
-
-Were no man in the state employed in supplying strangers, the prices of
-superfluities might be allowed to rise as high as possible, and a
-standard would also become useless, as the sole design of it is to
-favour exportation.
-
-But as neither of these suppositions can ever take place, and as in
-every nation there is a part employed in producing, and a part in
-consuming, and that it is only the surplus of industry which can be
-exported; a standard is necessary for the support of the reciprocal
-interests of both parties at home; and the public money must be made to
-operate only upon the price of _the surplus_ of industry so as to make
-it exportable, even in cases where the national prices upon home
-consumption have got up beyond the standard. Let me set this matter in
-another light, the better to communicate an idea which I think a little
-obscure.
-
-Were food and other necessaries the pure gift of nature in any country,
-I should have laid it down as a principle to discourage all foreign
-competition for them, either below or above any certain standard;
-because in this case the lower the price the better, since no
-inconveniency could result from thence to any industrious person. But
-when the production of these is in itself a manufacture, or an object of
-industry, a certain standard must be kept up in favour of those who live
-by producing them.
-
-On the other hand, as to the manufactures of superfluity, domestic
-competition should be discouraged, beyond a certain standard, in order
-that prices may not rise above those offered by foreigners; but it might
-be encouraged below the standard, in order to promote consumption and
-give bread to manufacturers. But were there no foreign demand at all,
-there would be no occasion for any standard, and the nation’s wealth
-would thereby only circulate in greater or less rapidity in proportion
-as prices would rise or fall. The study of the balance between work and
-demand, would then become a principal object of attention in the
-statesman, not with a view to enrich the state, but in order to preserve
-every member of it in health and vigour. On the other hand, the object
-of a standard regards foreign trade, and the acquisition of new wealth,
-at the expence of other nations. The rich, therefore, at home must not
-be allowed to increase their consumption of superfluities beyond the
-proportion of the constant supply; because these being intended for
-strangers, the only way of preventing them from supplying themselves, is
-to prevent prices from getting up beyond the standard, at which
-strangers can produce them.
-
-Farther, were every one of the society in the same pursuit of industry,
-there would be no occasion for the public to be laid under contribution
-for advancing the general welfare; but as there is a part employed in
-enriching the state, by the sale of their work to strangers, and a part
-employed in making these riches circulate at home, by the consumption of
-superfluities, I think it is a good expedient to throw a part of
-domestic circulation into the public coffers; that when the consequences
-of private wealth come necessarily to raise prices, a statesman may be
-enabled to defray the expence of bounties upon that part which can be
-exported, and thereby enable the nation to continue to supply foreigners
-at the same price as formerly.
-
-The farther these principles can be carried into execution, the longer a
-state will flourish; and the longer she will support her superiority.
-When foreign demand begins to fail, so as not to be recalled, either
-industry must decline, or domestic luxury must begin. The consequences
-of both may be easily guessed at, and the principles which influence
-them shall be particularly examined in the following chapter.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XVI.
- _Illustration of some Principles laid down in the former Chapter,
- relative to the advancement and support of foreign Trade._
-
-
-I am now to give an illustration of some things laid down, I think, in
-too general terms in the former chapter, relating to that species of
-trade which is carried on with other nations.
-
-I have constantly in view to separate and distinguish the principles of
-foreign trade, from those which only influence the advancement of an
-inland commerce, and a brisk circulation: operations which produce very
-different effects, equally meriting the attention of a statesman.
-
-The very existence of foreign trade, implies a separate interest between
-those nations who are found on the opposite side of the mercantile
-contract, as both endeavour to make the best bargain possible for
-themselves. These transactions imply a mutual dependence upon one
-another, which may either be necessary or contingent. It is necessary,
-when one of the nations cannot subsist without the assistance of the
-other, as is the case between the province of Holland, and those
-countries which supply it with grain; or contingent, when the wants of a
-particular nation cannot be supplied by their own inhabitants, from a
-want of skill and dexterity, only.
-
-Wherever, therefore, one nation finds another necessarily depending upon
-her for particular branches of traffic, there is a certain foundation
-for foreign trade; where the dependence is contingent, there is occasion
-for management, and for the hand of an able statesman.
-
-The best way to preserve every advantage, is, to examine in how far they
-are necessary, and in how far they are only contingent, to consider in
-what respect the nation may be most easily rivalled by her neighbours,
-and in what respect she has natural advantages which cannot be taken
-from her.
-
-The natural advantages are chiefly to be depended on: France, for
-example, can never be rivalled in her wines. Other countries may enjoy
-great advantages from their situation, mines, rivers, sea ports,
-fishing, timber, and certain productions proper to the soil. If you
-abstract from these natural advantages, all nations are upon an equal
-footing as to trade. Industry and labour are no properties attached to
-place, any more than oeconomy and sobriety.
-
-This proposition may be called in question, upon the principles of M. de
-Montesquieu, who deduces the origin of many laws, customs, and even
-religions, from the influence of the climate. That great man reasoned
-from fact and from experience, and from the power and tendency of
-natural causes, to produce certain effects when not checked by other
-circumstances; but in my method of treating this subject, I suppose
-these causes never to be allowed to produce their natural and immediate
-effects, when such effects would be followed by a political
-inconvenience: because I constantly suppose a statesman at the head of
-government, who makes every circumstance concur in promoting the
-execution of the plan he has laid down.
-
-_1mo._ If a nation then has formed a scheme of being long great and
-powerful by trade, she must first apply closely to the manufacturing
-every natural produce of the country. For this purpose a sufficient
-number of hands must be employed: for if hands be found wanting, the
-natural produce will be exported without receiving any additional value
-from labour; and so the consequences of this natural advantage will be
-lost.
-
-The price of food, and all necessaries for manufacturers, must be found
-at an easy rate.
-
-And, in the last place, if oeconomy and sobriety in the workmen, and
-good regulations on the part of the statesman, are not kept up, the end
-will not be obtained: for if the manufacture, when brought to its
-perfection, does not retain the advantages which the manufacturer had in
-the beginning, by employing the natural produce of the country; it is
-the same thing as if the advantage had not existed. I shall illustrate
-this by an example.
-
-I shall suppose wool to be better, more plentiful, and cheaper, in one
-country than in another, and two nations rivals in that trade. It is
-natural that the last should desire to buy wool of the first, and that
-the other should desire to keep it at home, in order to manufacture it.
-Here then is a natural advantage which the first country has over the
-latter, and which cannot be taken from her. I shall suppose that
-subsistence is as cheap in one country as in the other; that is to say,
-that bread and every other necessary of life is at the same price. If
-the workmen of the first country (by having been the founders of the
-cloth manufacture, and by having had, for a long tract of years, so
-great a superiority over other nations, as to make them, in a manner,
-absolutely dependent upon them for cloths) shall have raised their
-prices from time to time; and if, in consequence of large profits, long
-enjoyed without rivalship, these have been so consolidated with the real
-value, by an habitual greater expence in living, which implies an
-augmentation of wages; that country may thereby lose all the advantages
-it had from the low price and superior quality of its wool. But if, on
-the other hand, the workmen in the last country work less, be less
-dextrous, pay extravagant prices for wool at prime cost, and be at great
-expence in carriage; if manufactures cannot be carried on successfully,
-but by public authority, and if private workmen be crushed with
-excessive taxes upon their industry; all the accidental advantages which
-the last country had over the first, may come to be more than balanced,
-and the first may regain those which nature first had given her. But
-this should by no means make the first country rest secure. These
-accidental inconveniencies found in the last may come to cease; and
-therefore the only real security of the first for that branch, is the
-cheapness of the workmanship.
-
-_2do._ In speaking of a standard, in the last chapter, I established a
-distinction between one regulated by the height of foreign demand, and
-another kept as low as the possibility of supplying the manufacture can
-admit. This requires a little explanation.
-
-It must not here be supposed that a people will ever be brought from a
-principle of public spirit, not to profit of a rise in foreign demand;
-and as this may proceed from circumstances and events which are entirely
-hid from the manufacturers, such revolutions are unavoidable. We must
-therefore restrain the generality of our proposition, and observe, that
-the indispensible _vibrations_ of this foreign demand do no harm; but
-that the statesman should be constantly on his guard to prevent the
-_subversion of the balance, or the smallest consolidation of
-extraordinary profits with the real value_. This he will accomplish, as
-has been observed, by multiplying hands in those branches of
-exportation, upon which profits have risen. This will increase the
-supply, and even frustrate his own people of extraordinary gains, which
-would otherwise terminate in a prejudice to foreign trade.
-
-A statesman may sometimes, out of a principle of benevolence, perhaps of
-natural equity towards the classes of the industrious, as well as from
-sound policy, permit larger profits, as an encouragement to some of the
-more elegant arts, which serve as an ornament to a country, establish a
-reputation for taste and refinement in favour of a people, and thereby
-make strangers prefer articles of their production, which have no other
-superior merit than the name of the country they come from: but even as
-to these, he ought to be upon his guard, never to allow them to rise so
-high, as to prove an encouragement to other nations, to establish a
-successful rivalship.
-
-_3tio._ The encouragement recommended to be given to the domestic
-consumption of superfluities, when foreign demand for them happens to
-fall so low as to be followed with distress in the workmen, requires a
-little farther explanation.
-
-If what I laid down in the last chapter be taken literally, I own it
-appears an absurd supposition, because it implies a degree of public
-spirit in those who are in a capacity to purchase the superfluities, no
-where to be met with, and at the same time a self-denial, in
-discontinuing the demand, so soon as another branch of foreign trade is
-opened for the employment of the industrious, which contradicts the
-principles upon which we have founded the whole scheme of our political
-oeconomy.
-
-I have elsewhere observed, that were revolutions to happen as suddenly
-as I am obliged to represent them, all would go into confusion.
-
-What, therefore, is meant in this operation comes to this, that when a
-statesman finds, that the natural taste of his people does not lead them
-to profit of the surplus of commodities which lie upon hand, and which
-were usually exported, he should interpose his authority and management
-in such a way as to prevent the distress of the workmen, and when, by a
-sudden fall in a foreign demand, this distress becomes unavoidable,
-without a more powerful interposition, he should then himself become the
-purchaser, if others will not; or, by premiums or bounties on the
-surplus which lies upon hand, promote the sale of it at any rate, until
-the supernumerary hands can be otherwise provided for. And although I
-allow that the rich people of a state are not naturally led, from a
-principle either of public spirit or self-denial, to render such
-political operations effectual to promote the end proposed, yet we
-cannot deny, that it is in the power of a good governor, by exposing the
-political state of certain classes of the people, to gain upon men of
-substance to concur in schemes for their relief; and this is all I
-intend to recommend in practice. My point of view is to lay down the
-principles, and I never recommend them farther than they are rendered
-possible in execution, by preparatory steps, and by properly working on
-the spirit of the people.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XVII.
- _Symptoms of Decay in foreign Trade._
-
-
-If manufacturers are found to be without employment, we are not
-immediately to accuse the statesman, or conclude this to proceed from a
-decay of trade, until the cause of it be inquired into. If upon
-examination it be found, that for some years past food has been at a
-higher rate than in neighbouring countries, the statesman may be to
-blame: for it is certain, that a trading nation, by turning part of her
-commerce into a proper channel, may always be able to establish a just
-balance in this particular. And though it be not expedient in years of
-scarcity to bring the price of grain very low, yet it is generally
-possible to raise the price of it in all rival nations, which, with
-regard to the present point, is the same thing.
-
-If this want of employment for manufacturers do not proceed from the
-high prices of living, but for want of commissions from the merchants,
-the causes of this diminution of demand must be examined into. It may be
-accidental, and happen from causes which may cease in a little time, and
-trade return to flourish as before. It may also happen upon the
-establishment of new undertakings in different places of the country,
-from which, by reason of some natural advantage, or a more frugal
-disposition in the workmen, or from the proximity of place, markets may
-be supplied, which formerly were furnished by those industrious people
-who are found without employment. In these last suppositions, the
-distress of the manufacturers does not prove any decay of trade in
-general, but, on the contrary, may contribute to destroy the bad effects
-of consolidated profits, by obliging those who formerly shared them, to
-abandon the ease of their circumstances, and submit a-new to a painful
-industry, in order to procure subsistence. When such revolutions are
-sudden, they prove hard to bear, and throw people into great distress.
-It is partly to prevent such inconveniencies, that we have recommended
-the lowest standard possible, upon articles of exportation.
-
-Two causes there are, which very commonly mark a decline of trade, to
-wit; 1. When foreign markets, usually supplied by a trading nation,
-begin to be furnished, let it be in the most trifling article, by
-others, not in use to supply them. Or, 2. When the country itself is
-furnished from abroad with such manufactures as were formerly made at
-home.
-
-These circumstances prove one of two things, either that there are
-workmen in other countries, who, from advantages which they have
-acquired by nature, or by industry and frugality, finding a demand for
-their work, take the bread out of the mouths of those formerly employed,
-and deprive them of certain branches of their foreign trade: or, that
-these foreign workmen, having profited of the increased luxury and
-dissipation of the former traders, have begun to supply the markets with
-certain articles of consumption, the profits upon which being small,
-are, without much rivalship, insensibly yielded up to them by the
-workmen of the other trading nation, who find better bread in serving
-their own wealthy countrymen.
-
-Against the first cause of decline, I see no better remedy than
-patience, as I have said already, and a perseverance in frugality and
-oeconomy, until the unwary beginners shall fall into the inconveniencies
-generally attending upon wealth and ease.
-
-The second cause of decline is far more difficult to be removed. The
-root of it lies deep, and is ingrafted with the spirit and manners of
-the whole people, high and low. The lower classes have contracted a
-taste for superfluity and expence, which they are enabled to gratify, by
-working for their countrymen; while they despise the branches of foreign
-trade as low and unprofitable. The higher classes again depend upon the
-lower classes, for the gratification of a thousand little trifling
-desires, formed by the taste of dissipation, and supported by habit,
-fashion, and a love of expence.
-
-Here then is a system set on foot, whereby the poor are made rich, and
-the rich are made happy, in the enjoyment of a perpetual variety of
-every thing which can remove the inconveniencies to which human nature
-is exposed. Thus both parties become interested to support it, and vie
-with one another in the ingenuity of contriving new wants; the one from
-the immediate satisfaction of removing them; the other from the profit
-of furnishing the means, and the hopes of one day sharing in them.
-
-But even for this great evil, the very nature of man points out a
-remedy. It is the business of a statesman to lay hold of it. The remedy
-flows from the instability of every taste not founded upon rational
-desires.
-
-In every country of luxury, we constantly find certain classes of
-workmen in distress, from the change of modes. Were a statesman upon his
-guard to employ such as are forced to be idle, before they betake
-themselves to new inventions, for the support of the old plan, or before
-they contract an abandoned and vitious life, he would get them cheap,
-and might turn their labour both to the advantage of the state and to
-the discouragement of luxury.
-
-I confess, however, that while a luxurious taste in the rich subsists,
-industrious people will always be found to supply the instruments of it
-to the utmost extent; and I also allow, that such a taste has infinite
-allurements, especially while youth and health enable a rich man to
-indulge in it. Those, however, who are systematically luxurious, that
-is, from a formed taste and confirmed habit, are but few, in comparison
-of those who become so from levity, vanity, and the imitation of others.
-The last are those who principally support and extend the system; but
-they are not the most incorrigible. Were it not for imitation, every age
-would seek after, and be satisfied with the gratification of natural
-desires. Twenty-five might think of dress, horses, hunting, dogs, and
-generous wines: forty, of a plentiful table, and the pleasures of
-society: sixty, of coaches, elbow-chairs, soft carpets, and instruments
-of ease. But the taste for imitation blends all ages together. The old
-fellow delights in horses and fine clothes; the youth rides in his
-chariot on springs, and lolls in an easy chair, large enough to serve
-him for a bed. All this proceeds from the superfluity of riches and
-taste of imitation, not from the real allurements of ease and taste of
-luxury, as every one must feel, who has conversed at all with the great
-and rich. Fashion, which I understand here to be a synonimous term for
-imitation, leads most people into superfluous expence, which is so far
-from being an article of luxury, that it is frequently a load upon the
-person who incurs it. All such branches of expence, it is in the power
-of a statesman to cut off, by setting his own example, and that of his
-favourites and servants, above the caprice of fashion.
-
-The levity and changeableness of mankind, as I have said, will even
-assist him. A generation of oeconomists is sometimes found to succeed a
-generation of spendthrifts; and we now see, almost over all Europe, a
-system of sobriety succeeding an habitual system of drunkenness.
-Drunkenness, and a multitude of useless servants, were the luxury of
-former times.
-
-Every such revolution may be profited of by an able statesman, who must
-set a good example on one hand, while, on the other, he must profit of
-every change of taste, in order to re-establish the foreign trade of his
-subjects. An example of frugality, in the head of a luxurious people,
-would do infinite harm, were it only intended to reform the morals of
-the rich, without indemnifying the poor for the diminution upon their
-consumption.
-
-At the same time, therefore, that luxury comes to lose ground at home, a
-door must be opened, to serve as an out-let for the work of those hands
-which must be thereby made idle; and which, consequently, must fall into
-distress.
-
-This is no more than the principle before laid down, in the fifteenth
-chapter, reversed: there we said, that when foreign demand begins to
-decline, domestic luxury must be made to increase, in order to soften
-the shock of the sudden revolution in favour of the industrious. For the
-same reason here we say, that foreign trade must be opened upon every
-diminution of domestic luxury.
-
-How few Princes do we find either frugal or magnificent from political
-considerations! And, this being the case, is it not necessary to lay
-before them the natural consequences of the one and the other? And it is
-still more necessary to point out the methods to be taken in order to
-avoid the inconveniencies which may proceed from either.
-
-Under a prodigal administration, the number of people will increase. The
-statesman therefore should keep a watchful eye upon the supplying of
-subsistence. Under a frugal reign, numbers will diminish, if the
-statesman does not open every channel which may carry off the
-superfluous productions of industry. Here is the reason: a diminution of
-expence at home, is a diminution of employment; and this again implies a
-diminution of people; because it interrupts the circulation of the
-subsistence which made them live; but if employment is sent far from
-abroad, the nation will preserve its people, and the savings of the
-Prince may be compensated by the balance coming in from strangers.
-
-These topics are delivered only as hints; and the amplification of them
-might not improperly have a place here; but I expect to bring them in
-elsewhere to greater advantage, after examining the principles of
-taxation, and pointing out those which direct the application of public
-money.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XVIII.
- _Methods of lowering the Price of Manufactures, in order to make them
- vendible in foreign Markets._
-
-
-The multiplicity of relations between the several parts of political
-oeconomy, forces me to a frequent repetition of principles. I have no
-other rule to judge whether such relations be superfluous, or necessary,
-but by the tendency they have to give me a more distinct view of my
-subject. This is the case when the same principles are applied to
-different combinations of circumstances.
-
-Almost every thing to be said on the head mentioned in the title of this
-chapter, has been taken notice of elsewhere; and my present intention is
-only to lay together ideas which appear scattered, because they have
-been occasionally brought in by their relations to other matters.
-
-The methods of lowering the price of manufactures, so as to render them
-exportable, are of two kinds.
-
-The first, such as proceed from a good administration, and which bring
-down prices within the country, in consequence of natural causes.
-
-The second, such as operate only upon that part which comes to be
-exported, in consequence of a proper application of public money.
-
-As I have not yet inquired into the methods of providing a public fund,
-it would, I think, be contrary to order to enter on the disposal of it,
-for bringing down the price of manufactures. This operation will come in
-more naturally afterwards, and the general distinction here mentioned,
-is only introduced by the by, that my readers may retain it and apply it
-as we go along.
-
-The end proposed is to lower the price of manufactures, so that they may
-be exported. The first thing therefore to be known, is the cause from
-whence it happens, that certain manufactures cannot be furnished at home
-so cheap as in other countries; the second, how to apply the proper
-remedy for lowering the price of them.
-
-The causes of high prices, that is, of prices relatively high to what
-they are found to be in other nations, are reducible to four heads;
-which I shall lay down in their order, and then point out the methods of
-removing them likewise, in their order.
-
-_1mo._ The consolidation of high profits with the real value of the
-manufacture. This cause operates in countries where luxury has gained
-ground, and when domestic competition has called off too many of the
-hands, which were formerly content to serve at a low price, and for
-small gains.
-
-_2do._ The rise in the price of articles of the first necessity. This
-cause operates when the progress of industry has been more rapid than
-that of agriculture. The progress of industry we have shewn necessarily
-implies an augmentation of _useful inhabitants_; and as these have
-commonly wherewithal to purchase subsistence, the moment their numbers
-swell above the proportion of the quantity of it produced by
-agriculture, or above what is found in the markets of the country, or
-brought from abroad, they enter into competition and raise the price of
-it. Here then let it be observed, by the by, that what raises the price
-of subsistence is the augmentation of the numbers of useful inhabitants,
-that is, of such as are easy in their circumstances. Let the wretched be
-ever so many, let the vicious procreation go on ever so far, such
-inhabitants will have little effect in raising price, but a very great
-one in increasing misery. A proof of this is to be met with in many
-provinces where the number of poor is very great, and where at the same
-time the price of necessaries is very low; whereas no instance can be
-found where a number of the industrious being got together, do not
-occasion an immediate rise on most of the articles of subsistence.
-
-_3tio._ The natural advantages of other countries. This operates in
-spight of all the precautions of the most frugal and laborious people.
-Let them deprive themselves of every superfluity; let them be ever so
-diligent and ingenious; let every circumstance be improved by the
-statesman to the utmost for the establishment of foreign trade; the
-advantage of climate and situation may give such a superiority to the
-people of another country, as to render a direct competition with them
-impossible.
-
-_4to._ The superior dexterity of other nations in working up their
-manufactures, their knowledge in the science of trade, the advantage
-they have in turning their money to account in the intervals of their
-own direct circulation, the superior abilities of their statesman, the
-application of their public money, in one word, the perfection of their
-political oeconomy.
-
-Before I enter upon the method of removing these several
-inconveniencies, I must observe, that as we are at present treating of
-the _relative_ height of the price of manufactures, a competition
-between nations is constantly implied. It is this which obliges a
-statesman to be principally attentive to the rise of prices. The term
-_competition_ is relative to, and conveys the idea of emulation between
-two parties striving to compass the same end. I must therefore
-distinguish between the endeavours which a nation makes to _retain_ a
-superiority already got, and those of another which strives to get the
-better of it. The first I shall call a competition to _retain_; the
-second, a competition to _acquire_.
-
-The first three heads represent the inconveniencies to which the
-competitors to _retain_ are liable; and the fourth comprehends those to
-which the competitors to _acquire_ are most commonly exposed.
-
-Having digested our subject into order, I shall run through the
-principles which severally influence the removing of every
-inconvenience, whether incident to a nation whose foreign trade is
-already well established, or to another naturally calculated for entring
-into a competition for the acquisition of it.
-
-In proposing a remedy for the particular causes of augmentation here set
-down, we must suppose every one entirely simple, and uncompounded with
-the others; a thing which in fact seldom happens. This I do for the sake
-of distinctness; and the principal difficulty in practice is to combine
-the remedies in proportion to the complication of the disease. I now
-come to the first of the four causes of high prices, to wit,
-consolidated profits.
-
-The whole doctrine of these has been abundantly set forth in the 10th
-chapter. We there explained the nature of them, shewed how the
-subversion of the balance, by a long preponderancy of the scale of
-demand, had the effect of consolidating profits in a country of luxury;
-and observed, that the reducing them to the proper standard could never
-fail of bringing those who had long enjoyed them, into distress.
-
-The question here is to reduce them, when foreign trade cannot otherwise
-be retained, let the consequences be ever so hurtful to certain
-individuals. When the well being of a nation comes in competition with a
-temporary inconvenience to some of the inhabitants, the general good
-must be preferred to particular considerations.
-
-I have observed above, that domestic luxury, by offering high prices
-upon certain species of industry, calls off many hands employed to
-supply the articles of exportation, upon which profits are generally
-very moderate. The first natural and immediate effect of this, is, to
-diminish the hands employed in furnishing the foreign demand;
-consequently, to diminish the supply; consequently, to occasion a
-_simple competition_ on the side of the strangers, who are the
-purchasers; consequently, to augment profits, until by their rise and
-consolidation the market is deserted.
-
-The very progress here laid down, points out the remedy. The number of
-hands employed in these particular branches must be multiplied; and if
-the luxurious taste and wealth of the country prevent any one who can do
-better, from betaking himself to a species of industry lucrative to the
-nation, but ungrateful to those who exercise it, the statesman must
-collect the children of the wretched into workhouses, and breed them to
-this employment, under the best regulations possible for saving every
-article of unnecessary expence; here likewise may be employed
-occasionally those above mentioned, whom the change of modes may have
-cast out of employment, until they can be better provided for. This is
-also an outlet for foundlings, since many of those who work for foreign
-exportation, are justly to be ranked in the lowest classes of the
-people; and in the first book we proposed, that every one brought up at
-the expence of public charity, should be thrown in for recruiting these
-classes, which can with greatest difficulty support their own
-propagation.
-
-Here let me observe, that although it be true in general, that the
-greatest part of exportable manufactures do yield but very middling
-profits, from the extension of industry in different countries, yet
-sundry exceptions may be found; especially in nations renowned for their
-elegance of taste. But how quickly do we see these lucrative branches of
-foreign trade cut off, from the very inconvenience we here seek a remedy
-for. The reason is plain. When strangers demand such manufactures, they
-only share in the instruments of foreign luxury, which bring every where
-considerable profits to the manufacturer. These high profits easily
-establish a rivalship in favour of the nation to whom they are supplied;
-because a hint is sufficient to enable such as exercise a similar
-profession in that country, to supply their own inhabitants. This being
-the case, an able statesman should be constantly attentive to every
-growing taste in foreign nations for the inventions of his people; and
-so soon as his luxurious workmen have set any one on foot, he may throw
-that branch into the hands of the most frugal, in order to support it,
-and give them such encouragement as to prevent, at least, the rivalship
-of those strangers who are accustomed to work for large profits. This is
-one method of turning a branch of luxury into an article of foreign
-trade. Let me illustrate this by an example.
-
-What great advantages do not the French reap from the exportation of
-their modes? But we quickly find their varnishes, gauzes, ribbands, and
-colifichets, imitated by other nations, for no other reason but because
-of the large, or at least consolidated profits enjoyed by the French
-workmen themselves, who, fertile in new inventions, and supported by
-their reputation for elegance of dress, have got into possession of the
-right of prescribing to all Europe the standard of taste in articles of
-mere superfluity. This however is no permanent prerogative; and that
-elegant people, by long setting the example, and determining the
-standard of refinement in some luxurious arts, will at last inspire a
-similar taste into their scholars, who will thereby be enabled to
-supplant them. Whereas were they careful to supply all their inventions
-at the lowest prices possible, they would ever continue to be the only
-furnishers.
-
-The method therefore of reducing consolidated profits, whether upon
-articles of exportation, or home consumption, is to increase the number
-of hands employed in supplying them; and the more gradually this
-revolution is made to take place, the fewer inconveniencies will result
-to those who will thereby be forced to renounce them.
-
-A country which has an extensive territory, and great opportunities of
-extending her agriculture (such as I supposed the present situation of
-France to be) may, under a good administration, find the progress of
-luxury very compatible with the prosperity of her foreign trade; because
-inhabitants may be multiplied at discretion. But so soon as subsistence
-becomes hard to be obtained, this expedient is cut off. A statesman must
-then make the best of the inhabitants he has, luxury must suffer a
-check; and those who are employed in supplying home consumption at high
-prices, must be made to reduce their consolidated profits, in order to
-bring the total amount of their manufactures within such bounds as to
-make them vendible in foreign markets.
-
-If manufacturers become luxurious in their way of living, it must
-proceed from their extraordinary profits. These they may still continue
-to have, as long as the produce of their work is consumed at home. But
-no merchant will pretend to sell it out of the country; because, in this
-case, he will find the labour of other people who are less luxurious,
-and consequently work cheaper, in competition with him.
-
-To re-establish then the foreign trade, these consolidated profits must
-be put an end to, by attacking luxury when circumstances render an
-augmentation of people inconvenient, and prices will fall of course.
-
-This will occasion great complaints among all sorts of tradesmen. The
-cry will be, that trade is ruined, manufacturers are starving, and the
-state is undone: but the truth will be, that manufacturers will, by
-their labour, begin to enrich their own nation, at the expence of all
-those who trade with her, instead of being enriched at the expence of
-their own countrymen; and only by a revolution in the balance of wealth
-at home.
-
-It will prove very discouraging to any statesman to attempt a sudden
-reform of this abuse of consolidated profits, when he is obliged to
-attack the luxury of his own people. The best way therefore is to
-prevent matters from coming to such a pass, as to demand so dangerous
-and difficult a remedy.
-
-There is hardly a possibility of changing the manners of a people, but
-by a proper attention to the education of the youth. All methods,
-therefore, should be fallen upon to supply manufactures with new hands;
-and lest the corruption of example should get the better of all
-precautions, the seat of manufactures might be changed; especially when
-they are found in great and populous cities, where living is dear: in
-this case, others should be erected in the provinces where living is
-cheap. The state must encourage these new undertakings, numbers of
-children must be taken in, in order to be bred early to industry and
-frugality; this again will encourage people to marry and propagate, as
-it will contribute towards discharging them of the load of a numerous
-family. If such a plan as this be followed, how inconsiderable will the
-number of poor people become in a little time; and as it will insensibly
-multiply the useful inhabitants, out of that youth which recruited and
-supported the numbers of the poor, so the taxes appropriated for the
-relief of poverty may be wholly applied, in order to prevent it.
-
-Laws of naturalization have been often proposed in a nation where
-consolidated profits have occasioned the inconveniencies for which we
-have here been proposing a remedy. By this expedient many flatter
-themselves to draw industrious strangers into the country, who being
-accustomed to live more frugally, and upon less profits, may, by their
-example and competition, beat down the price of work among the
-inhabitants.
-
-Several circumstances concur to defeat the success of this scheme. The
-first is, that consolidated profits are not the only inconvenience to be
-removed: there is also a complication of high prices upon many
-necessaries. The second, as no real change is supposed to be made within
-the country, either as to the increase of subsistence, or the regulation
-of its price, or manner of living, these strangers, who, as such, must
-be exposed to extraordinary expence, are not able to subsist, nor
-consequently to work so cheap as they did at home. Besides, what can be
-supposed to be their motive of coming, if it be not to have higher
-wages, and to live better?
-
-Here then is a nation sending for strangers, in order that they may work
-cheaper; and strangers flocking into the country in hopes of selling
-their work dearer. This is just the case with two friends who are about
-making a bargain; the seller imagines that _his friend_ will not grudge
-a good price. The buyer, on the other hand, flatters himself that _his
-friend_ will sell to him cheaper than to another. This seldom fails to
-produce discontent on both sides.
-
-Besides, unless the quantity of food be increased, if strangers are
-imported to eat part of it, natives must in some degree starve; and if
-you augment the quantity of food, and keep it at a little lower price
-than in neighbouring nations, your own inhabitants will multiply; the
-state may take great numbers of them into their service when young; they
-soon come to be able to do something in the manufacturing way; they may
-be bound for a number of years, sufficient to indemnify the public for
-the first expence; and the encouragement alone of having bread cheaper
-than elsewhere, will bring you as many strangers as you incline to
-receive, provided a continual supply of food can be procured in
-proportion to the increase of the people.
-
-But I imagine that it is always better for a state to multiply by means
-of its own inhabitants, than by that of strangers; for many reasons
-which to me appear obvious.
-
-We come now to the second cause of high prices, to wit, a rise in the
-value of the articles of the first necessity, which we have said
-proceeds from the progress of industry having outstripped the progress
-of agriculture. Let me set this idea in a clearer light; for here it is
-shut up in too general terms to be rightly viewed on all sides.
-
-The idea of inhabitants being multiplied beyond the proportion of
-subsistence, seems to imply that there are too many already; and the
-demand for their industry having been the cause of their multiplication,
-proves that formerly there were too few. Add to this, that if,
-notwithstanding the rise upon the price of work proceeding from the
-scarcity of subsistence, the scale of home demand is found to
-preponderate, at the expence of foreign trade, this circumstance proves
-farther, that however the inhabitants may be already multiplied above
-the proportion of subsistence, their numbers are still too few for what
-is demanded of them at home; and for what is required of them towards
-promoting the prosperity of their country, in supporting their trade
-abroad.
-
-From this exposition of the matter, the remedy appears evident: both
-inhabitants and subsistence must be augmented. The question comes to be,
-in what manner, and with what precautions, must these operations be
-performed?
-
-Inhabitants are multiplied by reducing the price of subsistence, to the
-value which demand has fixed upon the work of those who are to consume
-it. This is only to be accomplished by augmenting the quantity, by
-importation from foreign parts, when the country cannot be made to
-produce more of itself.
-
-Here the interposition of a statesman is absolutely necessary; since
-great loss may often be incurred by bringing down the price of grain in
-a year of scarcity. Premiums, therefore, must be given upon importation,
-until a plan can be executed for the extending of agriculture; of which
-in another place. This must be gone about with the greatest
-circumspection; for if grain be thereby made to fall too low, you ruin
-the landed interest, and although (as we have said above) all things
-soon become balanced in a trading nation, yet sudden and violent
-revolutions, such as this must be, are always to be apprehended. They
-are ever dangerous; and the spirit of every class of inhabitants must be
-kept up.
-
-By a discredit call upon any branch of industry, the hands employed in
-it may be made to abandon it, to the great detriment of the whole. This
-will infallibly happen, when violent transitions do not proceed from
-natural causes, as in the example here before us, when the price of
-grain is supposed to be brought down, from the increase of its quantity
-by importation, and not by plenty. Because, upon the falling of the
-market by importation, the poor farmer has nothing to make up for the
-low price he gets for his grain; whereas, when it proceeds from plenty,
-he has an additional quantity.
-
-In years, therefore, of general scarcity, a statesman should not, by
-premiums given, reduce the price of grain, but in a reciprocal
-proportion to the quantity wanted: that is to say, the more grain is
-wanted, the less the price should be diminished.
-
-It may appear a very extensive project for any government to undertake
-to keep down the prices of grain, in years of general scarcity. I allow
-it to be politically impossible to keep prices low; because if all
-Europe be taken together, the produce of the whole is consumed one year
-with another, by the inhabitants; and in a year when there is a general
-scarcity, it would be very hard, if not impossible, (without having
-previously established a plan for this purpose) to make any nation live
-in plenty while others are starving. All therefore that is proposed, is
-to keep the prices of grain in as just a proportion as possible to the
-plenty of the year.
-
-Now if a government does not interpose, this never is the case. I shall
-suppose the inhabitants of a country to consume, in a year of moderate
-plenty, six millions of quarters of grain; if in a year of scarcity it
-shall be found, that one million of quarters, or indeed a far less
-quantity, be wanting, the five millions of quarters produced, will rise
-in their price to perhaps double the ordinary value, instead of being
-increased only by one fifth. But if you examine the case in countries
-where trade is not well established, as in some inland provinces on the
-continent, it is no extraordinary thing to see grain bearing three times
-the price it is worth in ordinary years of plenty, and yet if in such a
-year there were wanting six months provisions for the inhabitants of a
-great kingdom, all the rest of Europe would perhaps hardly be able to
-keep them from starving.
-
-It is the fear of want, and not real want, which makes grain rise to
-immoderate prices. Now as this extraordinary revolution in the rise of
-it, does not proceed from a natural cause, to wit, the degree of
-scarcity, but to the avarice and evil designs of men who hoard it up, it
-produces as bad consequences to that part of the inhabitants of a
-country employed in manufactures, as the fall of grain would produce to
-the farmers, in case the prices should be, by importation, brought below
-the just proportion of the quantity produced in the nation.
-
-Besides the importation of grain, there is another way of increasing the
-quantity of it very considerably, in some countries of Europe. In a year
-of scarcity, could not the quantity of food be considerably augmented by
-a prohibition to make malt liquors, allowing the importation of wines
-and brandies; or indeed without laying any restraint upon the liberty of
-the inhabitants as to malt liquors, I am persuaded that the liberty of
-importing wines duty free, would, in years of scarcity, considerably
-augment the quantity of subsistence.
-
-This is not a proper place to examine the inconvenience which might
-result to the revenue by such a scheme; because we are here only talking
-of those expedients which might be fallen upon to preserve a balance on
-foreign trade. An exchequer which is filled at the expence of this, will
-not continue long in a flourishing condition.
-
-These appear to be the most rational temporary expedients to diminish
-the price of grain in years of scarcity; we shall afterwards examine the
-principles upon which a plan may be laid down to destroy all
-precariousness in the price of subsistence.
-
-Precautions of another kind must be taken in years of plenty; for high
-prices occasioned by exportation are as hurtful to the poor tradesman as
-if they were occasioned by scarcity. And low prices occasioned by
-superfluity are as hurtful to the poor husbandman as if his crop had
-failed him.
-
-A statesman therefore, should be very attentive to put the inland trade
-in grain upon the best footing possible, to prevent the frauds of
-merchants, and to promote an equal distribution of food in all corners
-of the country: and by the means of importation and exportation,
-according to plenty and scarcity, to regulate a just proportion between
-the general plenty of the year in Europe, and the price of subsistence;
-always observing to keep it somewhat lower at home, than it can be found
-in any rival nation in trade. If this method be well observed,
-inhabitants will multiply; and this is a principal step towards reducing
-the expence of manufactures; because you increase the number of hands,
-and consequently diminish the price of labour.
-
-Another expedient found to operate most admirable effects in reducing
-the price of manufactures (in those countries where living is rendred
-dear, by a hurtful competition among the inhabitants for the subsistence
-produced) is the invention and introduction of machines. We have, in a
-former chapter, answered the principal objections which have been made
-against them, in countries where the numbers of the idle, or trifling
-industrious, are so great, that every expedient which can abridge
-labour, is looked upon as a scheme for starving the poor. There is no
-solidity in this objection; and if there were, we are not at present in
-quest of plans for feeding the poor; but for accumulating the wealth of
-a trading nation, by enabling the industrious to feed themselves at the
-expence of foreigners. The introduction of machines is found to reduce
-prices in a surprizing manner. And if they have the effect of taking
-bread from hundreds, formerly employed in performing their simple
-operations, they have that also of giving bread to thousands, by
-extending numberless branches of ingenuity, which, without the machines,
-would have remained circumscribed within very narrow limits. What
-progress has not building made within these hundred years? Who doubts
-that the conveniency of great iron works, and saw mills, prompts many to
-build? And this taste has greatly contributed to increase, not diminish,
-the number both of smiths and carpenters, as well as to extend
-navigation. I shall only add in favour of such expedients, that
-experience shews the advantage gained by certain machines, is more than
-enough to compensate every inconvenience arising from consolidated
-profits, and expensive living; and that the first inventors gain thereby
-a superiority which nothing but adopting the same invention can
-counterbalance.
-
-The third cause of high prices we have said to be owing to the natural
-advantages which neighbouring nations reap from their climate, soil, or
-situation.
-
-Here no rise of prices is implied in the country in question, they are
-only supposed to have become relatively high by the opportunity other
-nations have had to furnish the same articles at a lower rate, in
-consequence of their natural advantages.
-
-There are two expedients to be used, in order to defeat the bad effects
-of a competition which cannot be got the better of in the ordinary way.
-The first to be made use of, is, to assist the branches in distress with
-the public money. The other is patience, and perseverance in frugality,
-as has been already observed. A short example of the first will be
-sufficient in this place to make the thing fully understood. I have
-already said, that I purposely postpone an ample dissertation upon the
-principles which influence such operations.
-
-Let me suppose a nation accustomed to export to the value of a million
-sterling of fish every year, undersold in this article by another which
-has found a fishery on its own coasts, so abundant as to enable it to
-undersell the first by 20 _per cent._ This being the case, the statesman
-may buy up all the fish of his subjects, and undersell his competitors
-at every foreign market, at the loss of perhaps 250,000_l._ What is the
-consequence? That the million he paid for the fish remains at home, and
-that 750,000_l._ comes in from abroad for the price of them. How is the
-250,000_l._ to be made up? By a general imposition upon all the
-inhabitants. This returns into the public coffers, and all stands as it
-was. If this expedient be not followed, what are the consequences? That
-those employed in the fishery are forced to starve; that the fish taken
-either remain upon hand, or if sold by the proprietors, at a great loss;
-these are undone, and the nation for the future loses the acquisition of
-750,000_l._ a year.
-
-To abridge this operation, premiums are given upon exportation, which
-comes to the same thing, and is a refinement on the application of this
-very principle: but premiums are often abused. It belongs to the
-department of the coercive power of government to put a stop to such
-abuse. All I shall say upon the matter is, that if there be crimes
-called high treason, which are punished with greater severity than
-highway robbery, and assassination, I should be apt (were I a statesman)
-to put at the head of that bloody list, every attempt to defeat the
-application of public money, for the purposes here mentioned. The
-multiplicity of frauds alone, discourages a wise government from
-proceeding upon this principle, and disappoints the scheme. If severe
-punishment can in its turn put a stop to frauds, I believe it will be
-thought very well applied.
-
-While a statesman is thus defending the foreign trade of his country, by
-an extraordinary operation performed upon the circulation of its wealth,
-he must at the same time employ the second expedient with equal address.
-He must be attentive to support sobriety at home, and wait patiently
-until abuses among his neighbours shall produce some of the
-inconveniencies we have already mentioned. So soon as this comes to be
-the case, he has gained his point; the premiums then may cease; the
-public money may be turned into another channel; or the tax may be
-suppressed altogether, according as circumstances may require.
-
-I need not add, that the more management and discretion is used in such
-operations, the less jealousy will be conceived by other rival nations.
-And as we are proposing this plan for a state already in possession of a
-branch of foreign trade, ready to be disputed by others, having superior
-natural advantages, it is to be supposed that the weight of money, at
-least, is on her side. This, if rightly employed, will prove an
-advantage, more than equal to any thing which can be brought against it;
-and if such an operation comes to raise the indignation of her rival, it
-will, on the other hand, reconcile the favour of every neutral state,
-who will find a palpable benefit from the competition, and will never
-fail giving their money to those who sell the cheapest. In a word, no
-private trader can stand in competition with a nation’s wealth. Premiums
-are an engine in commerce, which nothing can resist but a similar
-operation.
-
-Hitherto we have been proposing methods for removing the inconveniencies
-which accompany wealth and superiority, and for preserving the
-advantages which result from foreign trade already established: we must
-now change sides, and adopt the interest of those nations who labour
-under the weight of a heavy competition with their rich neighbours,
-versed in commerce, dextrous in every art and manufacture, and conducted
-by a statesman of superior abilities, who sets all engines to work, in
-order to make the most of every favourable circumstance.
-
-It is no easy matter for a state unacquainted with trade and industry,
-even to form a distant prospect of rivalship with such a nation, while
-the abuses attending upon their wealth are not supposed to have crept in
-among them. Consequently, it would be the highest imprudence to attempt
-(at first setting out) any thing that could excite their jealousy.
-
-The first thing to be inquired into, is the state of natural advantages.
-If any branch of natural produce, such as grain, cattle, wines, fruits,
-timber, or the like, are here found of so great importance to the rival
-nation, that they will purchase them with money, not with an exchange of
-their manufactures, such branches of trade may be kept open with them.
-If none such can be found, the first step is to cut off all
-communication of trade by exchange with such a people; and to apply
-closely to the supply of every want at home, without having recourse to
-foreigners.
-
-So soon as these wants begin to be supplied, and that a surplus is
-found, other nations must be fought for, who enjoy less advantages; and
-trade may be carried on with them in a subaltern way. People here must
-glean before they can expect to reap. But by gleaning every year they
-will add to their stock of wealth, and the more it is made subservient
-to public uses, the faster it will increase.
-
-The beginners will have certain advantages inseparable from their infant
-state; to wit, a series of augmentations of all kinds, of which we have
-so frequently made mention. If these can be preserved in an equable
-progression; if the balance of work and demand, and that of population
-and agriculture, can be kept in a gentle vibration, by alternate
-augmentations; and if a plan of oeconomy, equally good with that of the
-rivals, be set on foot and pursued; time will bring every natural
-advantage of climate, soil, situation, and extent, to work their full
-effects; and in the end they will decide the superiority.
-
-I shall now conclude my chapter, with some observations on the
-difference between theory and practice, so far as regards the present
-subject.
-
-In theory, we have considered every one of the causes which produce high
-prices, and prevent exportation, as simple and uncompounded: in practice
-they are seldom ever so. This circumstance makes the remedies difficult,
-and sometimes dangerous. Difficult, from the complication of the
-disease; dangerous, because the remedy against consolidated profits will
-do infinite harm, if applied to remove that which proceeds from dear
-subsistence, as has been said.
-
-Another great difference between theory and practice occurs in the
-fourth case; where we suppose a nation unacquainted with trade, to set
-out upon a competition with those who are in possession of it. When I
-examine the situation of some countries of Europe (Spain perhaps) to
-which the application of these principles may be made, I find that it is
-precisely in such nations, where the other disadvantages of consolidated
-profits, and even the high prices of living, are carried to the greatest
-height; and that the only thing which keeps one shilling of specie among
-them, is the infinite advantage they draw from the mines, and from the
-sale of their pure and unmanufactured natural productions, added to
-their simplicity of life, occasioned by the wretchedness of the lower
-classes, which alone prevents these also from consuming foreign
-commodities. Were money in these countries as equally distributed as in
-those of trade and industry, it would quickly be exported. Every one
-would extend his consumption of foreign commodities, and the wealth
-would disappear. But this is not the case; the rich keep their money in
-their coffers; because lending at interest, there, is very wisely laid
-under numberless obstructions. The vice, therefore, is not that the
-lending of money at interest is forbid, but that the people are not put
-in a situation to have any pressing occasion for it, as a means of
-advancing their industry. Were they taught to supply their own wants,
-the state might encourage circulation by loan; but as they run to
-strangers for that supply, money is better locked up.
-
-Upon a right use and application of these general principles, according
-to the different combinations of circumstances, in a nation whose
-principal object is an extensive and profitable foreign trade, I imagine
-a statesman may both establish and preserve, for a very long time, a
-great superiority in point of commerce; provided peace can be preserved:
-for in time of war, every populous nation, if great and extended, will
-find such difficulties in procuring food, and such numbers of hands to
-maintain, that what formerly made its greatness, will hasten its ruin.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XIX.
- _Of infant, foreign, and inland Trade, with respect to the several
- Principles which influence them._
-
-
-I have always found the geography of a country easier to retain, from
-the inspection of maps, after travelling over the regions there
-represented, than before; as most prefaces are best understood, after
-reading the book, which they are calculated to introduce. I intend this
-as an apology for presenting my readers with a chapter of distribution
-in the middle of my subject.
-
-My intention, at present, is to take a view of the whole region of
-trade, divided into its different districts, in order to point out a
-ruling principle in each, from which every other must naturally flow, or
-may be deduced by an easy reasoning. These I shall lay before my reader,
-that from them he may distribute his ideas in the same order I have
-done. Hence the terms I shall be obliged to use will be rendred more
-adequate, in expressing the combinations I may have occasion to convey
-by them.
-
-I divide trade into infant, foreign, and inland.
-
-_1mo._ Infant trade, taken in a general acceptation, may be understood
-to be that species, which has for its object the supplying the
-necessities of the inhabitants of a country; because it is commonly
-antecedent to the supplying the wants of strangers. This species has
-been known in all ages, and in all countries, in a less, or greater
-degree, in proportion to the multiplication of the wants of mankind, and
-in proportion to the numbers of those who depend on their ingenuity for
-procuring subsistence.
-
-The general principles which direct a statesman in the proper
-encouragement of this commerce, relate to two objects.
-
-1. To promote the ease and happiness of the higher classes in making
-their wealth subservient to their wants and inclinations.
-
-2. To promote the ease and happiness of the lower classes, by turning
-their natural faculties to an infallible means of relieving their
-necessities.
-
-This communicates the idea of a free society; because it implies the
-circulation of a real equivalent for every service; to acquire which,
-mankind submit with pleasure to the hardest labour.
-
-In the first book, I had little occasion to consider trade under
-different denominations; or as influenced by any other principle than
-that of promoting the multiplication of mankind, and the extension of
-agriculture, _by drawing the wealth of the rich into the hands of the_
-industrious. This operation, when carried no farther, is a true
-representation of infant trade.
-
-But now I must set the matter in a new light: and consider this infant
-trade as a basis for establishing a foreign commerce. In itself it is
-only a means of gratifying the desires of those who have the equivalent;
-and of providing it for those who have it not. We are next to examine
-how, by the care of a statesman, it may prove a method whereby one
-society may be put in a situation to acquire a superiority over others;
-by diminishing, on one hand, the quantity they have of that general
-equivalent, and by increasing, on the other, the absolute quantity of it
-at home; in such a manner as not only to promote the circulation of that
-part of it which is necessary to supply the wants of all the citizens;
-but by a surplus of it, to render other nations dependent upon them, in
-most operations of their political oeconomy.
-
-The statesman who resolves to improve this infant trade into foreign
-commerce, must examine the wants of other nations, and consider the
-productions of his own country. He must then determine, what kinds of
-manufactures are best adapted for supplying the first, and for consuming
-the latter. He must introduce the use of such manufactures among his
-subjects; and endeavour to extend his population, and his agriculture,
-by encouragements given to these new branches of consumption. He must
-provide his people with the best masters; he must supply them with every
-useful machine; and above all, he must relieve them of their work, when
-home demand is not sufficient for the consumption of it.
-
-A considerable time must of necessity be required to bring a people to a
-dexterity in manufactures. The branches of these are many; and every one
-requires a particular slight of hand, and a particular master, to point
-out the rudiments of the art. People do not perceive this inconveniency,
-in countries where they are already introduced; and many a projector has
-been ruined for want of attention to it.
-
-In the more simple operations of manufacturing, where apprenticeships
-are not in use, every one teaches another. The new beginners are put
-among a number who are already perfect: all the instructions they get,
-is, _do as you see others do before you_. This is an advantage which an
-established industry has over another newly set on foot; and this I
-apprehend to be the reason why we see certain manufactures, after
-remaining long in a state of infancy, make in a few years a most
-astonishing progress. What loss must be at first incurred! what numbers
-of aspiring geniuses overpowered by unsuccessful beginnings, when a
-statesman does not concern himself in the operation! If he assists his
-subjects, by a prohibition upon foreign work, how often do we see this
-expedient become a means of extending the most extravagant profits?
-Because he neglects, at the same time, to extend the manufacture by
-multiplying the hands employed in it. I allow, that as long as the gates
-of a kingdom are kept shut, and that no foreign communication is
-permitted, large profits do little harm; and tend to promote dexterity
-and refinement. This is a very good method for laying a foundation for
-manufactures: but so soon as the dexterity has been sufficiently
-encouraged, and that abundance of excellent masters are provided, then
-the statesman ought to multiply the number of scholars; and a new
-generation must be brought up in frugality, and in the enjoyment of the
-most moderate profits, in order to carry the plan into execution.
-
-The ruling principle, therefore, which ought to direct a statesman in
-this first species of trade, is to encourage the manufacturing of every
-branch of natural productions, by extending the home-consumption of
-them; by excluding all competition with strangers; by permitting the
-rise of profits, so far as to promote dexterity and emulation in
-invention and improvement; by relieving the industrious of their work,
-as often as demand for it falls short. And until it can be exported to
-advantage, it may be exported with loss, at the expence of the public.
-To spare no expence in procuring the ablest masters in every branch of
-industry, nor any cost in making the first establishments; providing
-machines, and every other thing necessary or useful to make the
-undertaking succeed. To keep constantly an eye upon the profits made in
-every branch of industry; and so soon as he finds, that the real value
-of the manufacture comes so low as to render it exportable, to employ
-the hands, as above, and to put an end to these profits he had permitted
-only as a means of bringing the manufacture to its perfection. In
-proportion as the prices of every species of industry are brought down
-to the standard of exportation, in such proportion does this species of
-trade lose its original character, and adopt the second.
-
-_2do._ _Foreign trade_ has been explained sufficiently: the ruling
-principles of which are to banish luxury; to encourage frugality; to fix
-the lowest standard of prices possible; and to watch, with the greatest
-attention, over the vibrations of the balance between work and demand.
-While this is preserved, no internal vice can affect the prosperity of
-it. And when the natural advantages of other nations constitute a
-rivalship, not otherwise to be overcome, the statesman must
-counterbalance these advantages, by the weight and influence of public
-money; and when this expedient also becomes ineffectual, foreign trade
-is at an end; and out of its ashes arises the third species, which I
-call inland commerce.
-
-_3tio._ The more general principles of _inland trade_ have been
-occasionally considered in the first book, and more particularly hinted
-at in the 15th chapter of this; but there are still many new relations
-to be examined, which will produce new principles, to be illustrated in
-the subsequent chapters of this book. I shall, here only point out the
-general heads, which will serve to particularize and distinguish this
-third species of trade, from the two preceding.
-
-Inland commerce, as here pointed out, is supposed to take place upon the
-total extinction of foreign trade. The statesman must in such a case, as
-in the other two species, attend to supplying the wants of the rich, in
-relieving the necessities of the poor, by the circulation of the
-equivalent as above; but as formerly he had it in his eye to watch over
-the balance of work and demand, so now he must principally attend to the
-balance of wealth, as it vibrates between consumers and manufacturers;
-that is, between the rich and the industrious. The effects of this
-vibration have been shortly pointed out, Chap. xv.
-
-In conducting a foreign trade, his business was to establish the lowest
-standard possible as to prices; and to confine profits within the
-narrowest bounds: but as now there is no question of exportation, this
-object of his care in a great measure disappears; and high profits made
-by the industrious will have then no other effect than to draw the
-balance of wealth more speedily to their side. The higher the profits,
-the more quickly will the industrious be enriched, the more quickly will
-the consumers become poor, and the more necessary will it become to cut
-off the nation from every foreign communication in the way of trade.
-
-From this political situation of a state arises the fundamental
-principle of taxation; which is, _that, at the time of the vibration of
-the balance between the consumer and the manufacturer, the state should
-advance the dissipation of the first, and share in the profits of the
-latter_. This branch of our subject I shall not here anticipate; but I
-shall, in the remaining chapters of this book, make it sufficiently
-evident, that so soon as the wealth of a state becomes considerable
-enough to introduce luxury, to put an end to foreign trade, and from the
-excessive rise of prices to extinguish all hopes of restoring it, then
-taxes become necessary, both for preserving the government on the one
-hand, and on the other, to serve as an expedient for recalling foreign
-trade in spite of all the pernicious effects of luxury to extinguish it.
-
-I hope from this short recapitulation and exposition of principles, I
-have sufficiently communicated to my reader the distinctions I wanted to
-establish, between what I have called infant, foreign, and inland trade.
-Such distinctions are very necessary to be retained; and it is proper
-they should be applied in many places of this treatise, in order to
-qualify general propositions: these cannot be avoided, and might lead
-into error, without a perpetual repetition of such restrictions, which
-would tire the reader, appear frivolous to him, perhaps, and divert his
-attention.
-
-I only add, that we are not to suppose the commerce of any nation
-restricted to any one of the three species. I have considered them
-separately, according to custom, in order to point out their different
-principles. It is the business of statesmen to compound them according
-to circumstances.
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XX.
- _Of Luxury._
-
-
-My reader may perhaps be surprized to find this subject formally
-introduced, after all I have said of it in the first book, under a
-definition which renders the term sufficiently clear, by distinguishing
-it from sensuality and excess; and by confining it to _the providing of
-superfluities, in favour of a consumption_, which necessarily must
-produce the good effects of giving employment and bread to the
-industrious.
-
-The simple acceptation of the term, was the most proper for explaining
-the political effects of extraordinary consumption. I cannot however
-deny, that the word _luxury_ commonly conveys a more complex idea; and
-did I take no notice of this circumstance, it might be thought that I
-had purposely restrained a general term to a particular acceptation, in
-order to lead to error, and to suppress the vicious influence of modern
-oeconomy over the minds of mankind; which influence, if vicious, cannot
-fail to affect even their political happiness.
-
-My intention therefore, in this chapter, is to amuse, and to set my
-ideas concerning luxury (in the most extensive acceptation of the word)
-in such an order, as first to vindicate the definition I have given of
-it, by shewing that it is a proper one; and secondly, to reconcile the
-sentiments of those who appear to combat one another, on a subject
-wherein all must agree, when terms are fully understood.
-
-For this purpose I must distinguish _luxury_ as it affects our different
-interests, by producing hurtful consequences; from _luxury_, as it
-regards the moderate gratification of our natural or rational desires. I
-must separate objects which are but too frequently confounded, and
-analyze this complicated term, by specifying the ideas it contains,
-under partial definitions.
-
-The interests affected by luxury, I take to be four; _1mo._ _the moral_,
-in so far as it does hurt to the mind; _2do._ _the physical_, as it
-hurts the body; the _domestic_, as it hurts the fortune; and the
-_political_, as it hurts the state.
-
-The natural desires which proceed from our animal oeconomy, and which
-are gratified by _luxury_, may be also reduced to four; viz. _hunger_,
-_thirst_, _love_, and _ease_ or indolence. The moderate gratification of
-these desires, and physical happiness, is the same thing. The immoderate
-gratification of them is _excess_; and if this also be implied by
-_luxury_, no man, I believe, ever seriously became its apologist.
-
-The first point to be explained, is what is to be understood by
-_excess_. What appears an excess to one man, may appear moderation to
-another. I therefore measure the _excess_ by the bad effects it produces
-on the _mind_, the _body_, the _fortune_, and the _state_: and when we
-speak of _luxury_ as a vice, it is requisite to point out the particular
-bad effects it produces, to one, more, or all the interests which may be
-affected by it: when this is neglected, ambiguities ensue, which involve
-people in inextricable disputes.
-
-In order to communicate my thoughts upon this subject with the more
-precision, I shall give an example of the harm resulting to the _mind_,
-the _body_, the _fortune_, and the _state_, from the excessive
-gratification of the several natural desires above-mentioned.
-
-_1mo._ As to the mind, _eating to excess_ produces the inconvenience of
-rendring the perceptions dull, and of making a person unfit for study or
-application.
-
-_Drinking_ confounds the understanding, and often prevents our
-discovering the most palpable relations of things.
-
-_Love_ fixes our ideas too much upon the same object, makes all our
-pursuits and pleasures analogous to it, and consequently renders them
-trifling and superficial.
-
-_Ease_, that is, too great a fondness for it, destroys activity, damps
-our resolutions, and misleads the decisions of our judgment on every
-occasion, where one side of the question implies an obstacle to the
-enjoyment of a favourite indolence.
-
-These are examples of the evils proceeding from _luxury_ in the most
-general acceptation of the term. While the gratification of those
-desires is accompanied by no such inconveniencies, I think it is a
-proof, that there has been no _moral excess_, or that no moral evil has
-been directly implied in the gratification. But I cannot equally
-determine, that there has been no luxury in the enjoyment of
-superfluity.
-
-_2do._ _The physical_ inconveniencies which follow from all the four,
-terminate in the hurt they do the body, health or constitution. If no
-such harm follows upon the gratification of our desires, I find no
-_physical_ evil: but still _luxury_, I think, may be applied in every
-acceptation in which the term can be taken.
-
-_3tio._ If the _domestic_ inconveniences of the four species be
-examined, they all center in one, viz. the dissipation of fortune, upon
-which depends the future ease of the proprietor, and the well-being of
-his posterity. When _luxury_ is examined with respect to this object,
-the idea we conceive of it admits of a new modification. An _excess_
-here, is compatible with a very moderate gratification of our most
-natural desires. It is not _eating_, nor _drinking_, _love_, nor
-_indolence_ which are hurtful to the fortune, but the expence attending
-such gratifications. All these are frequently indulged even to _excess_,
-in a _moral_ and _physical_ sense, by people who are daily becoming more
-wealthy by these very means.
-
-_4to._ Some _political_ inconveniencies of _luxury_ have been already
-pointed out. The extinction of foreign trade is the most striking. But
-the loss of trade, conveys no ideas of any _moral_, _physical_, or
-_domestic excess_; and still it is vicious in so far as it affects the
-well-being of a state. Besides this particular evil, I very willingly
-agree, that in as far as the good government of a state depends upon the
-application and capacity, as well as the integrity of those who sit at
-the helm, or who are employed in the administration, or direction of
-public affairs, in so far may the moral inconveniencies of _luxury_
-mentioned above, affect the prosperity of a state. The consequences of
-_excessive luxury_, _moral_ and _physical_, as well as the dissipation
-of private fortunes, may render both the statesman, and those whom he
-employs, negligent in their duty, unfit to discharge it, rapacious and
-corrupt. These may, indirectly, be reckoned among the _political_ evils
-attending _luxury_, in so far as they take place. But on the other hand,
-as they cannot be called the _necessary effects_ of the _cause_ to which
-they are here ascribed, that is, to _moral_, _physical_, and _domestic
-luxury_, I do not think they can with propriety be implied in the
-definition of the term. They are rather to be attributed to the
-imperfection of the human mind, than to any other second cause, which
-might occasionally contribute to their production. They may proceed from
-_avarice_, as well as from _prodigality_.
-
-I hope this short exposition of a matter, not absolutely falling within
-the limits of my subject, will suffice to prove that my definition of
-_luxury_, describes at least the most essential requisite towards
-determining it: _the providing of superfluity with a view to
-consumption_. This is inseparable from our ideas of _luxury_; but
-vicious _excess_ certainly is not. A sober man may have a most delicate
-table, as well as a glutton; and a virtuous man may enjoy the pleasures
-of love and ease with as much sensuality as Heliogabalus. But no man can
-become luxurious, in our acceptation of the word, without giving bread
-to the industrious, without encouraging emulation, industry, and
-agriculture; and without producing the circulation of an adequate
-equivalent for every service. This last is the palladium of liberty, the
-fountain of gentle dependence, and the agreeable band of union among
-free societies.
-
-Let me therefore conclude my chapter, with a metaphysical observation.
-The use of words, is to express ideas; the more simple any idea is, the
-more easy it is to convey it by a word. Whenever, therefore, language
-furnishes several words, which are called _synonimous_, we may conclude,
-that the idea conveyed by them is not simple. On every such occasion, it
-is doing a service to learning, to render them as little synonimous as
-possible, and to point out the particular differences between the ideas
-they convey.
-
-Now as to the point under consideration. I find the three terms,
-_luxury_, _sensuality_, and _excess_, generally considered in a
-synonimous light, notwithstanding the characteristic differences which
-distinguish them. _Luxury consists in providing the objects of
-sensuality, in so far_ _as they are superfluous._ _Sensuality_ consists
-_in the actual enjoyment of them_; and _excess_ implies _an abuse of
-enjoyment_. A person, therefore, according to these definitions, may be
-very _luxurious_ from vanity, pride, ostentation, or with a political
-view of encouraging consumption, without having a turn for sensuality,
-or a tendency to fall into excess. _Sensuality_, on the other hand,
-might have been indulged in a Lacedemonian republic, as well as at the
-court of Artaxerxes. _Excess_, indeed, seems more closely connected with
-_sensuality_, than with _luxury_; but the difference is so great, that I
-apprehend _sensuality_ must in a great measure be extinguished, before
-_excess_ can begin.
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXI.
- _Of Physical and Political Necessaries._
-
-
-After having cleared up our ideas concerning _luxury_, it comes very
-naturally in, to examine what is meant by _physical necessary_.
-
-I have observed in the third chapter of the first book, that in most
-countries where food is limited to a determined quantity, inhabitants
-are fed in a regular progression down from plenty and ample subsistence,
-to the last period of want, and dying from hunger. _It is ample
-subsistence where no degree of superfluity is implied_, which
-communicates an idea of the _physical-necessary_. It is the top of this
-ladder; it is the first rank among men who enjoy no superfluity
-whatsoever. A man enjoys the physical-necessary as to food, when he is
-fully fed; if he is likewise sufficiently clothed, and well defended
-against every thing which may hurt him, he enjoys his full
-physical-necessary. The moment he begins to add to this, he may be
-considered as moving upwards into another category, to wit, the class of
-the _luxurious_, or consumers of superfluity; of which there are to be
-found, in most countries, as many stages upward, as there are stages
-downwards, from where he stood before. This is one general idea of the
-question. Let me now look for another.
-
-If we examine the state of many animals which have no appetites leading
-them to excess, we may form a very just idea of a _physical-necessary_
-for man. When they are free from labour, and have food at will, they
-enjoy their full physical-necessary. They are then in the height of
-beauty, and enjoy the greatest degree of happiness they are capable of.
-Animals which are forced to labour, prove to us very plainly, that this
-_physical-necessary_ is not fixed to a point, but that it may vary like
-most other things: every one perceives the difference between labouring
-cattle which are well fed, and those which are middling, or ill fed; all
-however, I suppose to live in health, and to work according to their
-strength. This represents the nature of a _physical-necessary_ for man.
-
-In many of the inferior classes in every nation, we find various degrees
-of ease among the individuals; and yet upon the whole, it would be hard
-to determine, which are those who enjoy superfluity; which are those who
-possess the pure physical-necessary; and which are those who fall below
-it. The cause of this ambiguity must here be explained.
-
-The nature of man furnishes him with some desires relative to his wants,
-which do not proceed from his animal oeconomy, but which are entirely
-similar to them in their effects. These proceed from the affections of
-his mind, are formed by habit and education, and when once _regularly
-established_, create another kind of necessary, which, for the sake of
-distinction, I shall call _political_. The similitude between these two
-species of _necessary_, is therefore the cause of ambiguity.
-
-This _political-necessary_ has for its object, certain articles of
-_physical superfluity_, which distinguishes what we call _rank_ in
-society.
-
-_Rank_ is determined by birth, education, or habit. A man with
-difficulty submits to descend from a higher way of living to a lower;
-and when an accidental circumstance has raised him for a while, above
-the level of that _rank_ where his _birth_ or _education_ had placed
-him, his ambition prompts him to support himself in his elevation. If
-his attempt be a rational scheme, he is generally approved of; the
-common consent of his fellow-citizens prescribes a certain
-_political-necessary_ for him, proportioned to his ambition; and when at
-any time _this_ comes to fail, he is considered to be in want.
-
-If on the other hand, a person either from vanity, or from no rational
-prospect of success, forms a scheme of rising above the _rank_ where
-_birth_ or _education_ had placed him, his fellow-citizens do not
-consent to prescribe for him a political-necessary suitable to his
-ambition; and when this fails him, he is only considered to fall back
-into the class he properly belonged to. But if the political-necessary
-suitable to this rank should come to fail, then he is supposed to be
-deprived of his _political-necessary_.
-
-The measure of this last species of _necessary_, is determined only by
-general opinion, and therefore can never be ascertained justly; and as
-this opinion may have for its object even those who are below the level
-of the _physical-necessary_; it often happens, that we find great
-difficulties in determining its exact limits.
-
-It may appear absurd, to suppose that any one can enjoy _superfluity_
-(which we have called the characteristic of _political-necessary_) to
-whom any part of the _physical-necessary_ is found wanting. However
-absurd this may appear, nothing, however, is more common among men, and
-the reason arises from what has been observed above. The desires which
-proceed from the affections of his mind, are often so strong, as to make
-him comply with them at the expence of becoming incapable of satisfying
-that which his animal oeconomy necessarily demands.
-
-From this it happens, that however easy it may be to conceive an
-accurate idea of a physical-necessary for _animals_, nothing is more
-difficult, than to prescribe the proper limits for it with regard to
-_man_.
-
-This being the case, let us suppose the condition of those who enjoy but
-little superfluity, and who fill the lower classes of the people, to be
-distinguished into three denominations; to wit, the highest, middle, and
-lowest degree of physical-necessary; and then let us ask, how we may
-come to form an estimation as to the respective value of the consumption
-implied in each, in order to determine the minimum as to the profits
-upon industry. This question is of great importance; because we have
-shewn that the prosperity of foreign trade depends on the cheapness of
-manufacturing; and this again depends on the price _of living_, that is
-of the physical-necessary for manufacturers.
-
-One very good method of estimating the value of the total consumption
-implied by this necessary quantity, is to compute the expence of those
-who live in communities, such as in hospitals, workhouses, armies,
-convents, according to the different degrees of ease, severally enjoyed
-by those who compose them. In running over the few articles of expence
-in such establishments, it will be easy to discern between those, which
-relate to the supply of the physical, and those which relate to the
-supply of the political-necessary: ammunition bread is an example of the
-first; a Monk’s hood and long sleeves, are a species of the latter.
-
-When once the real value of a man’s subsistence is found, the statesman
-may the better judge of the degree of ease, necessary or expedient for
-him to allow to the several classes of the laborious and ingenious
-inhabitants.
-
-As we have divided this physical-necessary into three degrees; the
-_highest_, _middle_, and _lowest_; the next question is, which of the
-three degrees is the most expedient to be established, as the standard
-value of the industry of the very lowest class of a people.
-
-I answer, that in a society, it is requisite that the individual of the
-most puny constitution for labour and industry, and of the most slender
-genius for works of ingenuity, having no natural defect, and enjoying
-health, should be able by a labour proportioned to his force, to gain
-the _lowest_ degree of the physical-necessary; for in this case, by far
-the greatest part of the industrious will be found in the second class,
-and the strong and healthy all in the first.
-
-The difference between the highest class and the lowest, I do not
-apprehend to be very great. A small quantity added to what is barely
-sufficient, makes enough: but this _small quantity_ is the most
-difficult to acquire, and this is the most powerful spur to industry.
-The moment a person begins to live by his industry, let his livelihood
-be ever so poor, he immediately forms little objects of ambition;
-compares his situation with that of his fellows who are a degree above
-him, and considers a shade more of ease, as I may call it, as an
-advancement, not only of his happiness, but of his rank.
-
-There are still more varieties to be met with among those who are
-confined to the sphere of the physical-necessary. The labour of a strong
-man ought to be otherwise recompensed than that of a puny creature. But
-in every state there is found labour of different kinds, some require
-more, and some less strength, and all must be paid for; but as a weakly
-person does not commonly require so much nourishment as the strong and
-robust, the difference of his gains may be compensated by the smalness
-of his consumption.
-
-What we mean by the _first class_ of the physical-necessary, is when a
-person gains wherewithal to be well fed, well clothed, and well defended
-against the injuries of heat and cold, without any superfluity. This I
-say, a strong healthy person should be able to gain by the exercise of
-the lowest denominations of industrious labour, and that without a
-possibility of being deprived of it, by the competition of others of the
-same profession.
-
-Could a method be fallen upon to prevent competition among industrious
-people of the same profession, the moment they come to be reduced within
-the limits of the _physical-necessary_, it would prove the best security
-against decline, and the most solid basis of a lasting prosperity.
-
-But as we have observed in the first book, the thing is impossible,
-while marriage subsists on the present footing. From this one
-circumstance, the condition of the industrious of the same profession,
-is rendred totally different. Some are loaded with a family, others are
-not. The only expedient, therefore, for a statesman, is to keep the
-general principles constantly in his eye, to destroy this competition as
-much as he can, at least in branches of exportation; to avoid, in his
-administration, every measure which may tend to promote it, by
-constituting a particular advantage in favour of some individuals of the
-same class; and if the management of public affairs, necessarily implies
-such inconveniencies, he must find out a way of indemnifying those who
-suffer by the competition.
-
-We may therefore, in this place, lay down two principles: First, that no
-competition should be _encouraged_ among those who labour for a
-_physical-necessary_; secondly, that in a state which flourishes by her
-foreign trade, competition is to be encouraged in every branch of
-exportation, until the competitors have reduced one another within the
-limits of that necessary.
-
-Farther, I must observe, that this _physical-necessary_ ought to be the
-highest degree of ease, which any one should be able to acquire with
-labour and industry, where no peculiar ingenuity is required. This also
-is a point deserving the attention of a statesman. How frequently do we
-find, in great cities, different employments, such as carrying of water,
-and other burthens, sawing of wood, &c. erected into confraternities,
-which prevent competition, and raise profits beyond the standard of the
-_physical-necessary_. This, I apprehend, is a discouragement to
-ingenuity, and has the bad effect of rendring living dear, without
-answering any one of the intentions of establishing corporations, as
-shall be shewn in another place. The _physical-necessary_, therefore,
-ought to be the reward of _labour_ and _industry_; whatever any workman
-gains above this standard, ought to be in consequence of his superior
-_ingenuity_.
-
-It is not at all necessary to prescribe the limits between these two
-classes; they will sufficiently distinguish themselves by the simple
-operation of competition. Let a particular person fall upon an ingenious
-invention, he will profit by it, and rise above the lower classes which
-are confined to the physical-necessary; but if the invention be such as
-may be easily copied, he will quickly be rivalled to such a degree as to
-reduce his profits within the bounds of that _physical-necessary_; so
-soon as this comes to be the case, his _ingenuity_ disappears, because
-it ceases to be _peculiar_ to him.
-
-Here arises a question: whence does it happen that certain workmen avoid
-this competition, and make considerable gains by their employment, while
-others are rivalled in their endeavours to retain a bare
-physical-necessary?
-
-There is a combination of several causes to operate these effects, which
-we shall examine separately; leaving to the reader to judge, how far the
-combination of them may extend profits beyond the physical-necessary.
-
-I. We have said (chap. 9.) that the value of a workman’s labour is
-determined from the quantity performed, in general, by those of his
-profession, neither supposing them the best nor the worst, nor as having
-any advantage or disadvantage, from the place of their abode. A workman
-therefore, who, to an extraordinary dexterity, joins the advantages of
-place, must gain more than another.
-
-II. We have often remarked, that competition between workmen of the same
-profession, diminishes the profits upon labour. From this it follows,
-that in such arts where the least competition is found, there must be
-the largest profits. Now several circumstances prevent competition.
-First. An extraordinary dexterity in any art, and especially in those
-where the whole excellency depends upon great exactness, such as
-watch-making, painting of all kinds, making mathematical instruments,
-and the like; all which set a celebrated artist in a manner above a
-possibility of rivalship, and make him the master of his price, as
-experience shews. 2d. The difficulty of acquiring the dexterity
-requisite, resulting both from the time and money necessary to be spent
-in apprenticeship, proves a plain obstacle to a numerous competition.
-Few there are, who having the stock sufficient to defray the loss of
-several years fruitless application, have also the turn necessary to
-lead them to that particular branch of ingenuity. 3d. Many there are,
-who have skill and capacity sufficient to enter into competition, but
-are obliged to work for others, because of the expensive apparatus of
-instruments, machines, lodging, and many other things necessary for
-setting out as a master in the art. These, and similar causes, prevent
-competition, and support large profits. 4th. Masters increase their
-profits greatly by sharing that of their journeymen: this share, the
-first have a just title to from the constant employment they procure for
-the latter; and the certainty these have of gaining their
-_physical-necessary_, together with a profit proportional to their
-dexterity, makes them willing to share with their master. The 5th cause
-of considerable gains, and the last I shall mention, is the most
-effectual of all, viz. great oeconomy, and parsimonious living. In
-proportion to the concurrence and combination of these circumstances,
-the fortune of the artist will increase, which is the answer to the
-first part of the question proposed.
-
-We are next to enquire how it happens that many industrious people are
-rivalled in an industry which brings no more than a bare
-physical-necessary. This proceeds from some disadvantage either in their
-personal or political situation. In their personal situation, when they
-are loaded with a numerous family, interrupted by sickness, or other
-accidental avocations. In their political situation, when they happen to
-be under a particular subordination from which others are free, or
-loaded with taxes which others do not pay.
-
-I shall only add, that in computing the value of the
-_physical-necessary_ of the lowest denomination, a just allowance must
-be made for all interruptions of labour: no person can be supposed to
-work every free day; and the labour of the year must defray the expence
-of the year. This is evident. Farther, neither humanity, or policy, that
-is the interest of a state, can suggest a rigorous oeconomy upon this
-essential quantity. If the great abuses upon the price of labour are
-corrected, those which remain imperceptible to the public eye, will
-prove no disadvantage to exportation; and as long as this goes on with
-success, the state is in health and vigour. Exportation _of work_ is
-another pulse of the political body.
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXII.
- _Preliminary Reflections upon inland Commerce._
-
-
-I resume the subject, which, as a rest to the mind, I dropt at the end
-of the 19th chapter.
-
-I am to treat directly of inland commerce, which has been sufficiently
-distinguished from infant, and foreign trade.
-
-We are to consider ourselves now as transported into a new country. Here
-foreign trade has been carried to the greatest height possible; but the
-luxury of the inhabitants, the carelessness, perhaps, of the statesman,
-and the natural advantages of other nations, added to the progress of
-their industry and refinement, have concurred to cut this branch off,
-and thereby to dry up the source which had constantly been augmenting
-national opulence.
-
-We must examine the natural effects of this revolution; we must point
-out how every inconvenience may be avoided, and how a statesman may
-regulate his conduct, so as to prevent the exportation of any part of
-that wealth which the nation may have heaped up within herself, during
-the prosperity of her foreign trade. How he may keep the whole of his
-people constantly employed, and by what means he may promote an equable
-circulation of domestic wealth, as an adequate equivalent given by the
-rich, for services rendred them by the industrious poor. How, by a
-judicious imposition of taxes, he may draw together an equitable
-proportion of every man’s annual income, without reducing any one below
-the standard of a full physical-necessary. How he may, with this public
-fund, preserve in vigour every branch of industry, and be enabled also,
-by the means of it, to profit of the smallest revolution in the
-situation of other nations, so as to re-establish the foreign trade of
-his own people. And lastly, how the society may be thereby sufficiently
-defended against foreign enemies, by a body of men regularly supported
-and maintained at the public charge, without occasioning any sudden
-revolution hurtful to industry, either when it becomes necessary to
-increase their numbers, in order to carry on an unavoidable war, or to
-diminish them, upon the return of peace and tranquility. This is, in few
-words, the object of a statesman’s attention when he is at the head of a
-people living upon their own wealth, without any mercantile connections
-with strangers.
-
-However hurtful the natural and immediate effects of political causes
-may have been formerly, when the mechanism of government was less
-compounded than at present, they are now brought under such
-restrictions, by the complicated system of modern oeconomy, that the
-evil which might otherwise result, is guarded against with ease.
-
-As often, therefore, as we find a notable prejudice resulting to a
-state, from a change of their circumstances, _gradually taking place_,
-we may safely conclude, that negligence, or want of abilities, in those
-who have the direction of public affairs, has more than any other cause
-been the occasion of it.
-
-It was observed, in the third chapter of the first book, that before the
-introduction of modern oeconomy, which is made to subsist by the means
-of taxes, a state was seldom found to be interested in watching over the
-actions of the people. They bought and sold, transferred, transported,
-modified, and compounded productions and manufactures, for public use,
-and private consumption, just as they thought fit. Now it is precisely
-in these operations that a modern state is chiefly interested; because
-proportional taxes are made to affect a people on every such occasion.
-
-The interest the state has in levying these impositions, gives a
-statesman an opportunity of laying such operations under certain
-restrictions; by the means of which, upon every change of circumstances,
-he can produce the effect he thinks fit. Do the people buy from
-foreigners what they can find at home, he imposes a duty upon
-importation. Do they sell what they ought to manufacture, he shuts the
-gates of the country. Do they transfer or transport at home, he
-accelerates or retards the operation, as best suits the common interest.
-Do they modify or compound what the public good requires to be consumed
-in its simple state, he can either prevent it by a positive prohibition,
-or he may permit such consumption to the more wealthy only, by
-subjecting it to a duty.
-
-So powerful an influence over the operations of a whole people, vests an
-authority in a modern statesman, which was unknown in former ages, under
-the most absolute governments. We may discover the effects of this, by
-reflecting on the force of some states, at present, in Europe, where the
-sovereign power is extremely limited, as to every _arbitrary_ exercise
-of it, and where, at the same time, that very power is found to operate
-over the wealth of the inhabitants, in a manner far more efficacious
-than the most despotic and arbitrary authority can possibly do.
-
-It is the order and regularity in the administration of the complicated
-modern oeconomy, which alone can put a statesman in a capacity to exert
-the whole force of his people. The more he has their actions under his
-direction, the easier it is for him to make them concur in advancing the
-general good.
-
-Here it is objected, that any free people who invest a statesman with a
-power to control their most trivial actions, must be out of their wits,
-and considered as submitting to a voluntary slavery of the worst nature,
-as it must be the most difficult to be shaken off. This I agree to;
-supposing the power vested to be of an arbitrary nature, such as we have
-described in the thirteenth chapter of this book. But while the
-legislative power is only exerted in acquiring an influence over the
-actions of individuals, in order to promote a scheme of political
-oeconomy, uniform and consistent in all its parts, the consequence will
-be so far from introducing slavery among the people, that the execution
-of the plan will prove absolutely inconsistent with every arbitrary or
-irregular measure.
-
-The power of a modern Prince, let him be, by the constitution of his
-kingdom, ever so absolute, becomes immediately limited so soon as he
-establishes the plan of oeconomy which we are endeavouring to explain.
-If his authority formerly resembled the solidity and force of the wedge,
-which may indifferently be made use of, for splitting of timber, stones,
-and other hard bodies, and which may be thrown aside and taken up again
-at pleasure; it will, at length come to resemble the watch, which is
-good for no other purpose than to mark the progression of time, and
-which is immediately destroyed, if put to any other use, or touched by
-any but the gentlest hand.
-
-As modern oeconomy, therefore, is the most effectual bridle ever
-invented against the folly of despotism; so the wisdom of so great a
-power shines no where with greater lustre, than when we see it exerted
-in planning and establishing this oeconomy, as a bridle against the
-wanton exercise of power in succeeding generations. I leave it to my
-reader to seek for examples in the conduct of our modern Princes, which
-may confirm what, I think, reason seems to point out: were they less
-striking, I might be tempted to mention them.
-
-The part of our subject we are now to treat of, will present us with a
-system of political oeconomy, still more complicated than any thing we
-have hitherto met with.
-
-While foreign trade flourishes and is extended, the wealth of a nation
-increases daily; but her force is not so easily exerted, as after this
-wealth begins to circulate more at home, as we shall easily shew. But,
-on the other hand, the force she exerts is much more easily recruited.
-In the first case, her frugality enables her to draw new supplies out of
-the coffers of her neighbours; in the last, her luxury affords a
-resource from the wealth of her own citizens.
-
-In opening my chapter, I have introduced my reader into a new country;
-or indeed I may say, that I have brought him back into the same which we
-had under our consideration in the first book.
-
-Here luxury and superfluous consumption will strike his view almost at
-every step. He will naturally compare the system of frugality, which we
-have dismissed, with that of dissipation, which we are now to take up;
-and we may very naturally conclude, that the introduction of the latter,
-must prove a certain forerunner of destruction. The examples found in
-history of the greatest monarchies being broken to pieces, so soon as
-the taste of simplicity was lost, seem to justify this conjecture. It
-is, therefore, necessary to examine circumstances a little, that we may
-compare, in this particular also, the oeconomy of the antients with our
-own; in order to discover whether the introduction of luxury be as
-hurtful at present, as it formerly proved to those states which made so
-great a figure in the world; and which now are only known from history,
-and judged of, from the few scattered ruins which remain to bear
-testimony of their former greatness.
-
-Luxury is the child of wealth; and wealth is acquired by states, as by
-private people, either by a lucrative, or by an onerous title, as the
-civilians speak. The lucrative title, by which a state acquires, is
-either by rapine, or from her mines; the onerous title, or that for a
-valuable consideration, is by industry.
-
-The wealth of the ancient monarchs of Babylon, Persia, Greece, and Rome,
-was the effect of rapine; whereas industry enriched the cities of Sydon,
-Tyre, Carthage, Athens, and Alexandria. The luxury of the first, proved
-the ruin of the luxurious; the luxury of the last, advanced their
-grandeur: because they had no rivals to take advantage of the natural
-effects of this luxury, in cutting off the profits of foreign trade.
-Peace was as hurtful to the plunderers, as war was destructive to the
-industrious.
-
-When an empire was at war, its wealth was thereby made to circulate for
-an equivalent in services performed. So soon as peace was restored,
-every one returned, as it were, to a state of slavery. The monarch then
-possessed himself of all the wealth, and distributed it by caprice.
-Fortunes were made in an instant, and no body knew how: they were lost
-again by transitions equally violent and sudden. The luxury of those
-days was attended with the most excessive oppression. Extraordinary
-consumption was no proof of the circulation of any adequate equivalent
-in favour of the industrious: it had not the effect of giving bread to
-the poor, nor of proportionally diminishing the wealth of the rich. The
-great constantly remained great; and the more they were prodigal, the
-more the small were brought into distress. In one word, luxury had
-nothing to recommend it, but that quality which _solely_ constitutes the
-abuse of it in modern times; to wit, the excessive gratification of the
-passions of the great, which frequently brought on the corruption of
-their manners.
-
-When such a state became luxurious, public affairs were neglected;
-because it was not from a right administration that wealth was to be
-procured. War, under such circumstances, worked effects almost similar
-to the springing up of industry in modern times; it procured employment,
-and this produced a more regular circulation, as has been said.
-
-On the other hand, the wealth and luxury of the trading cities
-abovementioned, which was of the same species with that of modern times,
-proceeded from the alienation of their work; that is, from their
-industry. Nothing was gained for nothing, and when they were forced to
-go to war, they found themselves obliged either to dissipate their
-wealth, by hiring troops, or to abandon the resources of it, the labour
-of their industrious citizens. Thus the punic wars exalted the grandeur
-of plundering Rome, and blotted out the existence of industrious
-Carthage. I do not here pretend to vindicate the justness of these
-reflections in every circumstance, and it is foreign to my present
-purpose to be more particular; all I seek for, is to point out the
-different effects of luxury in antient and modern times.
-
-Antient luxury was quite _arbitrary_; consequently could be laid under
-no limitations, but produced the worst effects, which _naturally_ and
-_mechanically_ could proceed from it.
-
-Modern luxury is _systematical_; it cannot make one step, but at the
-expence of an adequate equivalent, acquired by those who stand the most
-in need of the protection and assistance of their fellow citizens; and
-without producing a vibration in the balance of their wealth. This
-balance is in the hands of the statesman, who may receive a contribution
-upon every such vibration. He has the reins in his hand, and may turn,
-restrain, and direct the luxury of his people, towards whatever object
-he thinks fit.
-
-Luxury here is so far from drawing on a neglect of public affairs, that
-it requires the closest application to the administration of them, in
-order to support it. When these are neglected, the industrious will be
-brought to starve, consumption will diminish; that is, luxury will
-insensibly disappear, and hoarding will succeed it. These and similar
-consequences will undoubtedly take place, and _mechanically_ follow one
-another, when a skilful hand is not applied; to prevent them.
-
-It is impossible not to perceive the advantages of supporting a
-flourishing inland trade, after the extinction of foreign commerce. By
-such means elegance of taste, and the polite arts, may be carried to the
-highest pitch. The whole of the inhabitants may be employed in working
-and consuming; all may be made to live in plenty and in ease, by the
-means of a swift circulation, which will produce a reasonable equality
-of wealth among all the inhabitants. Luxury can never be the cause of
-inequality. Hoarding and parcimony form great fortunes, luxury
-dissipates them and restores equality.
-
-Such a situation would surely be of all others the most agreeable, and
-the most advantageous, were all mankind collected into one society, or
-were the country where it is established cut off from every
-communication with other nations.
-
-The balance between work and demand would then only influence the
-balance of wealth among individuals. If hands became scarce, the balance
-would turn the quicker in favour of the laborious, and the idle would
-grow poor. If hands became too plentiful (which indeed is hardly to be
-expected) every thing would be bought the cheaper; but the same quantity
-of wealth would still remain without any diminution.
-
-Where is, therefore, the great advantage of foreign trade?
-
-I answer by putting another question. Where is the great advantage of a
-person’s making a large fortune in his own country? A man of a small
-estate may, no doubt, be as happy as another with a great one; and the
-same thing would be true of nations, were all equally inspired with a
-spirit of peace and justice; or were they subordinate to a higher
-temporal power, which could protect the weak against the violence and
-injustice of the strong.
-
-It is, therefore, the separate interests of nations who incline to
-communicate together, and consume of one another’s commodities, which
-renders the consideration of the principles of trade, a matter of great
-importance.
-
-While nations contented themselves with their own productions, while the
-difference of their customs, and contrast of their prejudices were
-great, the connections between them were not very intimate.
-
-From this proceeds the great diversity of languages and dialects. When a
-traveller finds a sudden transition from one language to another, or
-from one dialect to another, it is a proof that the manners of such
-people have been long different, and that they have had little
-communication with one another. On the contrary, when dialects change by
-degrees, as in the provinces of the same country, it is a proof that
-there has been no great repugnancy in their customs. In like manner,
-when we find several languages, at present different, but plainly
-deriving from the same source, we may conclude, that there was a time
-when such nations were connected by correspondence, or that the language
-has been transplanted from one to the other, by the migration of
-colonies. But I insensibly wander from my subject.
-
-I have said, that when nations contented themselves with their own
-productions, connections between them were not very intimate. While
-trade was carried on by the exchange of consumable commodities, this
-operation also little interested the state: consumption then was equal
-on both sides; and no balance was found upon either. But so soon as the
-precious metals became an object of commerce, and when, by being rendred
-an universal equivalent for every thing, it became also the measure of
-power between nations, then the acquisition, or at least the
-preservation of a proportional quantity of it, became, to the more
-prudent, an object of the last importance.
-
-We have seen how a foreign trade, well conducted, has the necessary
-effect of drawing wealth from all other nations. We have seen in what
-manner the benefit resulting from this trade may come to a stop, and how
-the balance of it may come round to the other side. We are now to
-examine how the same prudence which set foreign trade on foot, and
-supported it as long as possible, may guard against a sudden revolution,
-and at the same time put an effectual stop to it; to the end that a
-nation enriched by commerce may not, by blindly or mechanically carrying
-it on, when the balance is against her, fall into those inconveniencies
-which other nations must have experienced during her prosperity.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXIII.
-
-_When a Nation, which has enriched herself by a reciprocal Commerce in
-Manufactures with other Nations, finds the Balance of Trade turn against
-her, it is her Interest to put a Stop to it altogether._
-
-Trade having subsisted long in the nation we are now to keep in our eye,
-I shall suppose that, through length of time, her neighbours have
-learned to supply one article of their own and other peoples wants
-cheaper than she can do. What is to be done? No body will buy from her,
-when they can be supplied from another quarter at a less price. I say,
-what is to be done? For if there be no check put upon trade, and if the
-statesman do not interpose with the greatest care, it is certain, that
-merchants will import the produce, and even the manufactures of rival
-nations; the inhabitants will buy them preferably to their own; the
-wealth of the nation will be exported; and her industrious manufacturers
-will be brought to starve. We may therefore look upon this, as a problem
-in trade, to be resolved by the principles already established.
-
-First, then, it must be inquired, if, in the branch in which she is
-undersold, her rivals enjoy a natural advantage above her, which no
-superior industry, frugality, or address on her side, can
-counterbalance? If this be the case, there are three different courses
-to be pursued, according to circumstances.
-
-_1mo._ To renounce that branch of commerce entirely, and to take the
-commodities wanted from foreigners, as they can furnish them cheaper.
-
-_2do._ To prohibit the importation of such commodities altogether.
-
-_3tio._ To impose a duty upon importation, in order to raise the price
-of them so high as to make them dearer than the same kind of commodity
-produced at home.
-
-The first course may be taken, if, upon examining how the hands employed
-in a manufacture may be disposed of, it be found, that they may easily
-be thrown into another branch of industry, in which the nation’s natural
-advantages are as superior to her rivals, as their’s are superior to
-her’s in the branch she intends to abandon; and providing her neighbours
-will agree to open their ports to the free importation of the
-commodities in question. For though there may be little profit in a
-trade by exchange, I still think it adviseable to continue
-correspondence, and to avoid every occasion of cutting off commerce with
-other nations. A laborious, oeconomical, and sagacious nation, such as I
-suppose our traders to be, will be able to profit of many circumstances,
-which would infallibly turn to the disadvantage of others less expert in
-commerce, with whom she trades; and in expectation of favourable
-revolutions, she ought not rashly, nor because of small inconveniencies,
-to renounce trading with them; especially if luxury should appear there
-to be on the growing hand.
-
-But suppose the rival nation will not consent to receive the
-manufactures which the traders may produce with great natural
-advantages, what course then is the best to be taken?
-
-I think she ought to encourage the branch in which she is rivalled, for
-her own consumption, though she must give over exporting it; and, in
-this case, it must be examined, whether that trade with foreigners
-should be prohibited altogether, (which is the second course mentioned
-above) or whether it be more adviseable to prefer the last scheme, viz.
-to allow the commodities to be imported, with a duty which may raise
-their price to so just a height as neither to suffer them to be sold so
-cheap as to discourage the domestic fabrication, nor dear enough to
-raise the profits of manufactures above a reasonable standard, in case
-of an augmentation of demand.
-
-The second course must be taken, when the natural advantages of the
-foreign nations are so great, as to oblige the statesman to raise duties
-to such a height as to give encouragement to smuggling.
-
-The third course seems the best, when the advantages of the rivals are
-more inconsiderable; in which case, the traders, may, in time, and by
-the progress of luxury among their neighbours, or from other
-revolutions, which happen frequently in trading nations, regain their
-former advantages.
-
-This may be a decision, in case a nation be rivalled in a branch where
-she has not equal advantages with her neighbours; and when she cannot
-compensate this inconvenience, either by her frugality or industry, or
-by the means of a proper application of her national wealth. These
-operations have been already fully explained, and are now considered as
-laid aside; not that we suppose they can ever cease to operate their
-effects in all nations, but in order to simplify our ideas, and to point
-out the principles which ought to direct a statesman upon occasions
-where he finds better expedients impracticable, from different
-combinations of circumstances.
-
-Let me next suppose a nation to be rivalled, in her staple manufactures;
-that is, in those where she has the greatest natural advantages in her
-favour.
-
-Whenever such a case happens, it must proceed from some vice within the
-state. Either from the progress of luxury in the workmen, which must
-proceed from consolidated profits, or from accidental disadvantage; such
-as dearness of subsistence, or from taxes injudiciously imposed. These
-(I mean all, except the taxes, of which afterwards) must be removed upon
-the principles above laid down: and if this cannot be compassed, no
-matter why; then comes the fatal period, when all foreign reciprocal
-commerce in manufactures must be given up. For if no profit can be made
-upon branches where a nation has the greatest natural advantages, it is
-more than probable, that every other branch will prove at least equally
-disadvantageous. If upon this revolution the ports of the nation be not
-shut against the importation of foreign manufactures, merchants will
-introduce them, and this will drain off the nation’s wealth, and bring
-the industrious to starve.
-
-It is upon this principle that incorporations are established. Of these
-we shall say a word, and conclude our chapter.
-
-Cities and corporations, may be considered as nations, where luxury and
-taxes have rendred living so expensive, that work cannot be furnished
-but at a high rate. If labour, therefore, of all kinds, were permitted
-to be brought from the provinces, or from the country, to supply the
-demand of the capital and smaller corporations, what would become of
-tradesmen and manufactures who have their residence there? If these, on
-the other hand, were to remove beyond the liberties of such
-corporations, what would become of the public revenue, collected in
-these little states, as I may call them?
-
-By the establishment of corporations, a statesman is enabled to raise
-high impositions upon all sorts of consumption; and notwithstanding that
-these have the necessary consequence of increasing the price of labour,
-yet by other regulations, of which afterwards, the bad consequences
-thereby resulting to foreign trade may be avoided, and every article of
-exportation be prevented from rising above the proper standard for
-making it vendible, in spite of all foreign competition.
-
-The plan of modern taxation seems first to have been introduced into
-cities, while the country was subject to the barons, and remained in a
-manner quite free from them. Cities having obtained the privilege of
-incorporation, began, in consequence of the power vested in their
-magistrates, to levy taxes: and finding the inconveniences resulting
-from external competition (foreign trade) they erected the different
-classes of their industrious into confraternities, or corporations of a
-lower denomination, with power to prevent the importation of work from
-their fellow tradesmen not of the society.
-
-Here arises a question.
-
-Why are corporations complained of in many countries, as being a check
-upon industry; if the establishment of them proceeds from so plain a
-principle as that here laid down?
-
-Let me draw my answer from another question. Why are they not complained
-of in all countries?
-
-The difference between the situation of one country and another, will
-plainly point out the principle which ought to regulate the
-establishment and government of corporations. When this is well
-understood, all disputes concerning the general utility, or harm arising
-from them will be at an end: and the question will be brought to the
-proper issue; to wit, their relative utility considered with respect to
-the actual situation of the country where they are established. In one
-province a corporation will be found useful, in another just the
-contrary.
-
-First then it must be agreed, on all hands, that the principle laid down
-is just. No body ever advanced, that the industry carried on in _towns_,
-where living is dear, ought to suffer a competition with that of the
-_country_, where living is cheap; I mean for the direct consumption of
-the citizens. But it may be advanced, that no subaltern corporation
-should enjoy an exclusive privilege against those who share of every
-burthen imposed by the great corporation from which they draw their
-existence. That they have no right of exclusion against citizens; but
-only against strangers who are not under the same jurisdiction, nor
-liable to the same burthens. Here the dispute lies between the members
-of the great corporation and those of the smaller. Now, I say, while no
-other interest is concerned, the decision of this question ought to be
-left to the corporation itself. But the moment the public good comes to
-be affected by certain privileges enjoyed by individuals, such
-privileges should either be abolished, or put under limitations.
-
-In countries where industry stands at a determined height, while the
-consumption of cities neither augments nor diminishes; when those who
-live upon an income acquired, live uniformly in the same way; when this
-regular consumption is regularly supplied, by a certain number of
-citizens sufficient to supply it; when the hands employed for this
-purpose are in a perfect proportion to the demand made upon them; in
-such countries, I say, any diminution of the privileges of corporations
-would be a means of overturning the equal balance between work and
-demand.
-
-We have said above, that when hands become too many for the work,
-profits fall below the necessary standard of subsistence; that the
-industrious enter into competition for the physical-necessary, and hurt
-one another. Here then is the principle which the corporation ought to
-keep in their eye: the profits upon every trade ought to be in
-proportion to work.
-
-In order to come the better at the knowledge of this proportion, many
-corporations in Germany have the subaltern corporations of trades
-restrained to certain numbers. There is a determined number of
-apothecaries, joiners, smiths, &c. allowed in every town, and no more;
-according as employment is found for them. This seems a good regulation.
-I do not say it may not be abused. But the power of administration must
-be lodged somewhere; and if in a country where industry is making little
-progress, corporations were laid open, the consequence would be, that
-every one would starve another, and the consumers would be ill served.
-
-On the other hand, when industry springs up, when the manners of a
-people change all of a sudden, or by quick degrees, as has been the case
-in many countries in Europe within these threescore years: it is a mark
-of a narrow capacity not to perceive that a change of administration
-becomes necessary; and if on such revolutions those who are at the head
-of corporations should profit of the increase of demand, and occasion
-prices to rise in favour of the incorporated workmen, the infallible
-consequence will be, to make the city become deserted, and deprived of a
-trade, which otherwise would necessarily fall to her share, in
-consequence of the advantage she must draw from establishments already
-made for supplying every branch of consumption[K]. But let the principle
-above mentioned be constantly followed; let profits be kept at a right
-standard; let hands be increased according to demand; let the city
-workmen gain no advantage over those of the country which may not be
-compensated by the difference of the price of subsistence; let the
-disadvantages again on the side of the town affect only their own
-consumption, not the surplus of their industry; let every convenience
-for carrying on foreign trade (every thing here is understood to be
-foreign, which does not enter into the consumption of the town) be
-provided for in the suburbs, or, if you please, in a place out of the
-town walled in for that purpose; let markets there be held for every
-kind of work coming from the country; and then the true intent of a
-corporation will be answered. If it be found that the prosperity of
-trade demands still more liberty, then the corporation may be thrown
-open; but on the other hand, every burthen must be taken off, and every
-incorporated member must be indemnified by the state, for the loss he is
-thereby made to suffer.
-
-Footnote K:
-
- The cities of the Austrian Netherlands are, from these causes, at
- present in a state of depopulation; and the industrious classes are
- assembling in the villages, which are beginning to rival the
- populousness of cities. In these villages, the privileges of the
- cities are not established. Privileges which will in all probability
- end in their bankruptcy as well as depopulation. The depopulation will
- follow from the causes already mentioned; the bankruptcy from the sums
- these corporations lend the sovereign, on the credit of new
- impositions constantly laying upon every branch of consumption. This
- is so true, that the acquisition of this country (one of the most
- fertile and most populous in Europe) would hardly be worth the having,
- if the debts owing by the corporations were to be fairly paid, and
- their ruinous _privileges_ (as they are called) allowed to subsist
- without alteration.
-
-The great change daily operating on the spirit of European nations,
-where corporations have been long established, without any great
-inconvenience having been found to arise from them, suggests these
-reflections, which seem to flow naturally, from the principles we have
-deduced. I shall only add, that from the practice of imposing taxes
-within these little republics (as I have called them) Princes seem to
-have taken the hint of extending that system; by first appropriating to
-the public revenue, what the cities had established in favour of
-themselves, and then by enlarging the plan as circumstances favoured
-their design. That this is the true origin of the modern plan of
-taxation (I mean that upon consumption) may be gathered from hence; that
-the right of imposing taxes appears no where, almost, to have been
-essentially attached to royalty, even in those kingdoms, where Princes
-have long enjoyed an unlimited constitutional authority over the persons
-of their subjects. This right I take to be the least equivocal
-characteristic of an absolute and unlimited power. I know of no
-christian monarchy (except, perhaps, Russia) where either the consent of
-states, or the approbation or concurrence of some political body within
-the state, has not been requisite to make the imposition of taxes
-constitutional; and if more exceptions are found, I believe it will not
-be difficult to trace the origin of such an exertion of sovereign
-authority, without ascending to a very high antiquity. The prerogative
-of Princes in former times, was measured by the power they could
-constitutionally exercise over the _persons_ of their subjects; that of
-modern princes, by the power they have over their _purse_.
-
-Having, therefore, shewn the necessity of putting a stop to foreign
-reciprocal commerce in manufactures, so soon as in every branch this
-trade becomes disadvantageous to a nation; the next question comes to
-be, how to proceed in the execution, so as to avoid a sudden and violent
-revolution in the oeconomy of the state, which is of all things the most
-dangerous: the hurt, therefore, ought to be foreseen at a great
-distance, in order to be methodically prevented.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXIV.
- _What is the proper Method to put a Stop to a foreign Trade in
- Manufactures, when the Balance of it turns against a Nation?_
-
-
-It must not be understood, from what was said in the last chapter, that
-so soon as the balance of foreign trade, either on the whole, or on any
-branch of manufacture, is to be found against a nation, that a statesman
-should then at once put a total stop to it. This is too violent a remedy
-ever to be applied with success.
-
-It is hardly possible, that a considerable revolution in the trade of a
-nation should happen suddenly, either to its advantage, or disadvantage,
-unless in times of civil discord, or foreign wars, which at present do
-not enter into the question.
-
-A sagacious statesman will, at all times, keep a watchful eye upon every
-branch of foreign commerce, especially upon importations. These consist
-either in the natural produce of other countries, or in such produce
-increased in its value by manufacture.
-
-In all trade two things are to be considered in the commodity sold. The
-first is the matter; the second is the labour employed to render this
-matter useful.
-
-The matter exported from a country, is what the country loses; the price
-of the labour exported, is what it gains.
-
-If the value of the matter imported, be greater than the value of what
-is exported, the country gains. If a greater value of labour be
-imported, than exported, the country loses. Why? Because in the first
-case, strangers must have paid, _in matter_, the surplus of labour
-exported; and in the second case, because the country must have paid to
-strangers, _in matter_, the surplus of labour imported.
-
-It is therefore a general maxim, to discourage the importation of work,
-and to encourage the exportation of it.
-
-When any manufacture begins to be imported, which was usually made at
-home, it is a mark that either the price of it begins to rise within the
-country, or that strangers are making a new progress in it. On the other
-hand, when the importation of manufactures consumed within a country
-comes to diminish, and when merchants begin to lose upon such branches
-of trade, it is a proof that industry at home is gaining ground in those
-articles. The statesman then must take the hint, and set out by clogging
-gently the importation of those commodities, not so as to put a stop to
-it all at once; because this might have the effect of carrying profits
-too high upon the home fabrication of them.
-
-All sudden revolutions are to be avoided. A sudden stop upon a large
-importation, raises the prices of domestic industry by jerks, as it
-were; they do not rise gradually; and these sudden profits engage too
-many people to endeavour to share in them. This occasions a desertion
-from other branches of industry equally profitable to the state. Such
-revolutions do great harm; because it is a long time before people come
-to be informed of their true cause, and during the uncertainty, they
-are, as it were, in a wilderness, surprized and delighted with the
-consequences, according as their several interests are affected by them.
-Every one accounts for the phenomena in a different way. Some are for
-applying remedies against the inconveniencies; while others are totally
-taken up in profiting to the utmost of every momentary advantage. In a
-word, nothing is more hurtful than a sudden revolution, in so
-complicated a body as that of the whole class of the industrious, in a
-modern society. When therefore such changes happen, in spite of all a
-statesman can do, the best way to prevent the inconveniencies which they
-draw along with them, is to inform the public of the true causes of
-every change, favourable or hurtful to the several classes of
-inhabitants. This also seems to be the best method to engage every one
-to concur in promoting the proper remedies, when the inconveniencies
-themselves cannot be prevented. So much for a scheme of encouraging
-growing manufactures, or of supporting them in their decline. I proceed
-next to consider the methods of preventing the loss of others already
-established.
-
-We have said, that the importation of any article of consumption usually
-provided at home, was a proof by no means equivocal of a foreign
-rivalship. I shall say nothing, at present, of the methods to be used as
-a remedy for this inconvenience: these have been already discussed. We
-must now suppose, every one that might be contrived for this purpose, to
-become ineffectual; and that foreign industry is so far gaining ground,
-as daily, more and more, to supply the several branches of domestic
-consumption.
-
-Upon this, the statesman will begin by laying the importation of such
-commodities under certain restrictions. If these do not prove
-sufficient, they must be increased; and if the augmentation produces
-frauds, difficult to be prevented, the articles must be prohibited
-altogether. By this method of proceeding, it will be found, that without
-any violent or sudden prohibition laid upon foreign trade, by little and
-little, every pernicious branch of it will be cut off, till at last it
-will cease altogether, as in the case mentioned above; to wit, when the
-most advantageous branches cannot be carried on without loss.
-
-Something, however, must here be added, in order to restrain so general
-a plan of administration. Nothing is more complex than the interests of
-trade, considered with respect to a whole nation. It is hardly possible
-for a people to have every branch of trade favourable for the increase
-of her wealth: consequently, a statesman who, upon the single inspection
-of one branch, would lay the importation of it under limitations, in
-proportion as he found the balance upon it unfavourable to the nation,
-might very possibly undo a flourishing commerce.
-
-He must first examine minutely every use to which the merchandize
-imported is put: if a part is re-exported with profit, this profit must
-be deduced from the balance of loss incurred by the consumption of the
-remainder. If it be consumed upon the account of other branches of
-industry, which are thereby advanced, the balance of loss may still be
-more than compensated. If it be a means of supporting a correspondence
-with a neighbouring nation, otherwise advantageous, the loss resulting
-from it may be submitted to, in a certain degree. But if upon examining
-the whole chain of consequences, he finds the nation’s wealth not at all
-increased, nor her trade encouraged, in proportion to the damage at
-first incurred by the importation, I believe he may decide, that such a
-branch of trade is hurtful; and therefore that it ought to be cut off,
-in the most prudent manner, according to the general rule.
-
-The first object of the care of a statesman, who conducts a nation,
-which is upon the point of losing her foreign trade, without any
-prospect or probability of recovering it, is to preserve her wealth
-already acquired. No motive ought to engage him to sacrifice this
-wealth, the safety alone of the whole society excepted, when suddenly
-threatned by foreign enemies. The gratification of particular people’s
-habitual desires, although the wealth they possess may enable them,
-without the smallest hurt to their private fortunes, to consume the
-productions of other nations; the motive of preventing hoards; that of
-promoting a brisk circulation within the country; the advantages to be
-made by merchants, who may enrich themselves by carrying on a trade
-disadvantageous to the nation; even, to say all in one word, the
-supporting of the same number of inhabitants, ought not to engage his
-consent to the diminution of national wealth.
-
-Here follow my reasons for carrying this proposition so very far, even
-to the length of sacrificing a part of the inhabitants of a country to
-the preservation of its wealth; and I flatter myself, that when duly
-examined, I may avoid the smallest imputation of Machiavellian
-principles, in consequence of so bold an assertion.
-
-While a people are fed with the produce of their own lands, the
-preservation of their numbers is quite consistent with the preservation
-of their wealth. If, therefore, in such a case, their numbers should be
-diminished upon a decay of foreign trade, either by their food’s being
-exported, or by their lands becoming uncultivated, I should never
-hesitate to lay the blame upon the statesman’s administration.
-
-But an industrious people may (as has been said) carry their numbers far
-beyond the proportion of their own subsistence. The deficiency must be
-supplied from abroad, and must be paid with the balance of the trade in
-their favour. Now when this balance comes to turn against them, and
-when, consequently, a stop is put to the disadvantageous foreign trade,
-upon the principles we have been laying down, the statesman is reduced
-to this alternative; either annually to allow a part of the wealth
-already got, to be exported, in order to buy subsistence for the
-_surplus_ of his people, as I may call them, or to reduce their numbers
-by degrees, either by encouragements given to their leaving the country,
-or by establishing colonies, &c. until they are brought down to the just
-proportion of national subsistence. If he prefers the first, supposing
-the execution of such a plan to be possible, the consequence will be,
-that so soon as all the wealth is spent, the whole society, except the
-proprietors of the lands, and these who cultivate them, must go to
-destruction. If he prefers the second, he remains independent of all the
-world with respect to the inhabitants he preserves. They remain in a
-capacity of maintaining themselves, and he may alter the plan of his
-political oeconomy as best suits his circumstances, relatively to other
-nations. While all his subjects are employed and provided for, he will
-remain at the head of a flourishing and happy people.
-
-It may be here objected, that the first alternative is an impossible
-supposition. I allow it to be so, if you suppose it to be carried the
-length to which I have traced it; because no power whatsoever in a
-statesman, can go so far as to preserve numbers at the expence of the
-whole riches of his people. But I can very easily suppose a case, where
-numbers may be supported at an eminent loss to a state which finds
-itself in the situation in which we have represented it in our
-supposition.
-
-Suppose a prince, upon the failure of his foreign trade, to increase his
-army, in proportion as he finds his industrious hands laid idle by a
-deficiency of demand for their labour; and let him fill his magazines
-for their subsistence by foreign importation, leaving the produce of his
-country to feed the rest of his subjects. By such a plan, every body
-will remain employed, and also provided for, and such a prince may be
-looked upon as a most humane governor. This I willingly agree to. I
-should love such a prince; but the more I loved him, the more I should
-regret that his project must fail, from a physical impossibility of its
-being long supported; and when it comes to fail by the exhausting of his
-wealth, it will not be his regrets which will give bread to his
-soldiers, nor employment to his industrious subjects, who will no longer
-find an equivalent for their labour.
-
-Let this suffice at present, upon the general principles which influence
-the stop necessary to be put to the importation of foreign commodities,
-and to the diminution of national wealth, in the case we have had before
-us.
-
-Next as to the articles of exportation. The most profitable branches of
-exportation are those of work, the less profitable those of pure natural
-produce. When work cannot be exported in all its perfection, because of
-its high price, it is better to export it with a moderate degree of
-perfection, than not at all; and if even this cannot be done to
-advantage, then will a people be obliged to renounce working except for
-themselves: and then, if domestic consumption does not increase in
-proportion to the deficiency of foreign demand, a certain number of
-hands will be idle, and a certain quantity of natural produce will
-remain upon hand. The first must disappear in a short time; they will
-starve or desert; the last will become an article of exportation. Here
-then is a new species of trade which takes place upon the extinction of
-the other. When a nation has been forced to reduce her exportations to
-articles of pure natural produce, in conformity to the principles we
-have been laying down, then the plan proposed in the title of this
-chapter is executed. She is then brought as low in point of trade as she
-can be, but at the same time, she may enjoy her natural advantages in
-spite of fortune; and in proportion to them, she may, with a good
-government and frugality, retain a balance of trade in her favour, which
-will constantly go on in augmenting her national wealth.
-
-There is, therefore, a period at which foreign trade may stop in every
-article, but in natural produce. I do not know whether this period be at
-a great distance, when the state of trade is considered relatively to
-certain nations of Europe.
-
-Were industry and frugality found to prevail equally in every part of
-the great political bodies, or were luxury and superfluous consumption,
-every where carried to the same height, trade might, without any hurt,
-be thrown entirely open. It would then cease to be an object of a
-statesman’s care and concern. On the other hand, were all nations
-equally careful to check every branch of unprofitable commerce, a
-general stagnation of trade would soon be brought about. Manufactures
-would no more be the object of traffic; every nation would supply
-itself, and nothing would be either exported or imported but natural
-productions.
-
-But as industry and idleness, luxury and frugality, are constantly
-changing their balance throughout the nations of Europe, able merchants
-make it their business to inform themselves of these fluctuations, and
-able statesmen profit of the discovery for the re-establishment of their
-own commerce; and when they find that this can no more be carried on
-with the manufactures or produce of their own country, they engage their
-merchants to become carriers for their neighbours, and by these means,
-form as it were a third and last entrenchment, which, while they can
-defend it, will not suffer their foreign trade to be quite extinguished;
-because, by this last expedient, it may continue for some time to
-increase their national stock. It is in order to cut off even this
-resource, that some nations lay not only importations under restraint,
-but also the importers[L]. Let such precautions be carried to a certain
-length on all hands, and we shall see an end to the whole system of
-foreign trade, so much alamode, that it appears to become more and more
-the object of the attention as well as of the imitation of all modern
-statesmen.
-
-Footnote L:
-
- By the act of navigation in England.
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXV.
- _When a rich Nation finds her Foreign Trade reduced to the Articles of
-Natural Produce, what is the best plan to be followed? and what are the
- Consequences of such a Change of Circumstances?_
-
-
-There is now no more question of a trading nation; this character is
-lost, the moment there is a stop put to the export of the labour and
-ingenuity of her people.
-
-The first objects of her care should be to increase, by every possible
-means, the quantity of her natural produce; to be as frugal as possible
-in the consumption of it, and to export the surplus to the best
-advantage.
-
-If she finds her exportation of subsistence going forward, while some of
-her people remain in want, she may rest assured that industry is made to
-suffer by some internal vice; and the most probable cause of such an
-effect will be found to be an unequal competition between those of the
-lower classes, who work for a physical-necessary. This must be removed,
-and the statesman should never rest, until he has set the balance of
-work and demand so far right, as to prevent at least _the scale of work_
-from preponderating; for this is the door by which misery gets in among
-the people.
-
-_The scale of demand_ preponderating, will not now be so hurtful, as
-this alteration of the balance will only raise prices, and accelerate
-circulation, and keep the other balance, to wit, that of wealth (of
-which we shall treat in the following chapter) in a constant vibration,
-without diminution of the public stock.
-
-Another object of a statesman’s care in these supposed circumstances, is
-to suffer no work whatever, nor the natural produce of any other country
-conducive to luxury, to be imported; for although I have said, that
-superfluous consumption can do little harm when the interests of foreign
-trade do not enter into the question so as to prevent exportation, by
-raising prices at home; and though the importation of foreign produce,
-in exchange for like commodities of national growth, does no hurt to a
-state with respect to her wealth, yet if such importation be an article
-of mere superfluity, I think a statesman should prudently discourage it;
-because the search of superfluities is of itself a proof of a luxurious
-turn, and I should wish to see this turn improved so as to promote
-national purposes only, that is, to the augmentation and subsistence of
-useful inhabitants.
-
-Let me illustrate this by an example. Foreign wines, I shall suppose,
-become alamode, as a part of the luxury of an elegant table. A
-statesman, by his example, may discourage this, and introduce many other
-articles of expence in entertainments sufficient to compensate it. The
-furniture of apartments may be rendred more magnificent, ornaments of
-the side board, decoration of deserts, new amusements immediately after
-dinner might be introduced, which would have an air of refinement and
-delicacy.
-
-By such examples he might easily substitute one expence, which might
-become a national improvement, in the place of another, where the luxury
-produces no such effect. And when prodigality and expence have neither
-the good effect of giving bread to the poor, nor of accelerating
-circulation at home in favour of the public, I can see no reason why a
-statesman should interest himself for their support; and much less, why
-a speculative person, who examines only the methods of making mankind
-happy by their mutual services to each other, should strain a subject,
-in order to find arguments proper to make either the apology or
-panegyric of the various schemes of dissipation.
-
-I need not add, as a restriction of this principle of discouraging the
-importation of foreign commodities (which become articles of a greater
-superfluous home-consumption) that when such a branch of trade becomes
-necessary to be carried on, in order to engage a neighbouring nation to
-consume of home-superfluities; in this case, the luxury of the consumers
-of the foreign produce, has an evident tendency to national improvement.
-If delicate wines, and raw silk, are imported as a return for salt
-herrings and raw hides, the support of such a trade is only the means of
-making the rich consume these articles of home-production, by converting
-them into burgundy and velvet.
-
-These considerations regard the augmentation, or at least the
-preservation of national wealth. If they are attended to, it is hardly
-possible that any part of what is already acquired, can go abroad; and
-in this case the whole balance of the exportation of natural produce
-becomes clear gain.
-
-There are still several things to be observed with regard to the
-exportation of natural produce. Such articles as are in great abundance,
-and are not produced in other countries, as wines in the southern
-countries of Europe, ought always to be exported by the inhabitants,
-because considerable profits must be made upon a trade where there is no
-rivalship; and on such occasions, a people ought to be wise enough to
-keep such profits for themselves.
-
-But if other nations will not receive them, unless they be imported by
-their own subjects, then the statesman may impose a duty upon
-exportation, which is one way of sharing the profits with the carriers.
-All the precaution necessary, in imposing this duty, is not to raise it
-so high as to diminish the demand; nor to give an encouragement to a
-neighbouring nation, to enter into competition for such a branch of
-trade.
-
-Neighbouring states which furnish the same articles of natural produce,
-regulate, commonly, the duties upon exportation, in such a manner as
-nearly to compensate all differences which strangers may find, between
-trading with the one or with the other. Or they grant particular
-privileges in point of trade, to the nations with whom they find it most
-for their advantage to trade.
-
-If the natural advantages upon such articles are less considerable, no
-duty can be imposed. Exportation may then be encouraged by granting
-still greater privileges to strangers or others, who may promote the
-exportation at little cost to the state.
-
-If in the last place, the natural produce of a country be common to
-others, where it is perhaps equally plentiful; it will be difficult to
-procure the exportation of it; and yet it may happen, that too great an
-abundance of it at home, may occasion inconveniencies. In this case, the
-statesman must give a premium or bounty upon exportation, as the only
-method of getting rid of a superfluity, which may influence so much the
-whole mass of the commodity produced, as to sink the price of the
-industry of those employed in it, below the standard of their
-physical-necessary. By giving, therefore, this premium, he supports
-industry in that branch; he takes nothing from the national wealth; and
-the exportation, which takes place in consequence of the bounty, is all
-clear gain. This is an uncommon operation in trade, but it has so
-intimate a connection with the doctrine of taxes, and the proper
-application of public money, that I will postpone the farther
-consideration of it until I come to that branch of my subject; and the
-rather, that this book is swelling beyond its due proportion.
-
-I have little occasion to speak of importations, into a country which
-exports no manufactures. The ruling principle in such cases, is to
-suffer no importation but what tends to encourage the exportation of the
-surplus of natural produce, and which, at the same time, has no tendency
-to rival any branch of domestic industry. Thus it is much better for a
-northern country to pamper the taste of her rich inhabitants with wines
-and spices, than to discourage agriculture by the importation of rice
-and foreign grain; supposing the alternative quite optional, and the one
-as well as the other to be the returns of her own superfluity.
-
-I come next to the consideration of her inland trade, and consumption of
-her own manufactures. Here there is no question of either an increase or
-diminution of her wealth, but only of making it circulate in the best
-manner to keep every body employed. Several considerations must here
-influence our statesman’s conduct, and a due regard must be had to every
-one of them. I shall reduce them to three different heads, and pass them
-in review very cursorily, as we have already explained sufficiently the
-principles upon which they depend.
-
-_1mo._ To regulate consumption and the progress of luxury, in proportion
-to the hands which are found to supply them.
-
-_2do._ To regulate the multiplication of inhabitants according to the
-extent of the fertility of the soil. These two considerations must
-constantly go hand in hand.
-
-In so far therefore, as the statesman finds his country still capable of
-improvement, in so far he may encourage a demand for work, and even
-countenance new branches of superfluous consumption; since the
-equivalent to be given for them must of necessity prove an encouragement
-to agriculture. But whenever the country becomes thoroughly cultivated
-and peopled to the full proportion of its own produce, a check must be
-put to multiplication, that is, to luxury, or misery and depopulation
-will follow; unless indeed, we suppose that numbers are to be supported
-at the expence of national wealth, the fatal consequences of which we
-have already pointed out.
-
-_3tio._ He should regulate the distribution of the classes of his
-people, according to the political situation of the country.
-
-This is the most complicated case of all. It would be imprudent, for
-example, in a very small state situated on the continent, to distribute
-all its inhabitants into producers and consumers, as we have called them
-on several occasions; that is, into those who live upon a revenue
-already acquired, and those who are constantly employed in acquiring one
-by supplying the wants of the other. There must be a third class; to
-wit, those who are maintained and taken care of at the expence of the
-whole community, to serve as a defence. This set of men give no real
-equivalent for what they receive; that is to say, none which can
-circulate or pass from hand to hand; but still they are usefully
-employed as members of a society mutually tied together by the band of
-reciprocal dependence. Here is no vice implied; but at the same time,
-the statesman must attend to the consequences of such a distribution of
-classes.
-
-The richer any state is, the more it has to fear from its neighbours:
-consequently, the greater proportion of the inhabitants must be
-maintained for its defence, at the expence of the industry of the other
-inhabitants. This must diminish the number of free hands employed in
-manufactures, and in supplying articles of consumption: consequently, it
-would be imprudent to encourage the progress of luxury, while public
-safety calls for a diminution of the hands which must supply it. If in
-such circumstances luxury do not suffer a check, demand will rise above
-the proper standard; living will become dearer daily, prices will rise,
-and they will prove an obstacle to the recovery of foreign trade; an
-object of which a prudent statesman will never lose sight for a moment.
-
-It is for these and other such considerations, that many small states
-are found to fortify their capital; to keep a body of soldiers in
-constant pay, bearing a great proportion to the number of the
-inhabitants; to form arsenals well stored with artillery, and to
-institute sumptuary laws and other regulations proper to check luxury.
-Nothing so wise in every respect! Their territory cannot be extended nor
-improved, nor can their inhabitants be augmented, but at the expence of
-their wealth; for such as gained their livelihood at the expence of
-strangers, are at present out of the question. Were their own citizens
-therefore permitted, out of the abundance of their wealth, to give bread
-to as many as their extravagance could maintain, the public stock would
-be constantly diminishing, in proportion to the foreign subsistence
-imported for these supernumeraries, fed at the expence of the luxurious;
-which would be just so much lost.
-
-In other states which are extended, powerful by means of wealth, and
-strong by nature and situation, whose safety is connected with the
-general system of European politicks, which secures them against
-conquest; such as Spain, France, Great Britain, &c. the progress of
-luxury does little harm (as these territories are still capable of
-infinite improvements) provided it does not descend to the lower classes
-of the people.
-
-It ought to be the particular care of a statesman to check its progress
-there, otherwise there will be small hopes of ever recovering foreign
-trade. Whereas, if the lower classes of a people continue frugal and
-industrious, from these very circumstances trade may open anew, and be
-recovered by degrees, in proportion as luxury comes to get footing in
-other nations, where the common people are less laborious and frugal.
-
-Luxury, among those who live upon a revenue already got, and who, by
-their rank in the state, are not calculated for industry, has the good
-effect of affording bread to those who supply them; but there never can
-be any advantage in having luxury introduced among the lower classes,
-because it is then only a means of rendring their subsistence more
-chargeable, and consequently more precarious.
-
-Having thus briefly laid together the principal objects of a statesman’s
-care, upon the cessation of the foreign trade of his people, I shall
-finish my chapter, by pointing out some general consequences which
-reason and experience shew to be naturally connected with such a
-revolution; not with regard to industry and inland trade, but as they
-influence the spirit, government, and manners of a people.
-
-Nothing is more certain than that the spirit of a nation changes
-according to circumstances. While foreign trade flourishes, the minds of
-the monied people are turned to gain. Money, in such hands, is generally
-employed to procure more, not to purchase instruments of luxury; except
-for the consumption of those prodigal strangers who are thereby becoming
-daily poorer. It is this desire of becoming rich, which produces
-frugality. A man is always frugal while he is making a fortune; another
-very commonly becomes extravagant in the enjoyment of it; just so would
-it be with nations, were a wise statesman never to interpose.
-
-When, by the cessation of foreign trade, the mercantile part of a nation
-find themselves cut off from the profits they used to draw from
-strangers; and on the other hand, perceive the barriers of the nation
-gradually shutting against every article of unprofitable correspondence,
-they begin to withdraw their stocks from trade, and seek to place them
-within the country. This money is often lent to landed men, hitherto
-living within bounds, for two most substantial reasons. First, because
-there was little money to be borrowed, from the high rate of interest,
-owing to the great profits on foreign trade; and because the national
-stock was then only forming. The second, because the taste of the times
-was frugality. But when once the money which was formerly employed in
-buying up loads of work for the foreign markets, falls into the hands of
-landed men, they begin to acquire a taste for luxury. This taste is
-improved and extended by an infinity of arts, which employ the hands
-formerly taken up in furnishing branches of exportation. Thus by degrees
-we see a rich, industrious, frugal, trading nation, transformed into a
-rich, ingenious, luxurious, and polite nation.
-
-As the statesman formerly kept his attention fixed on the preservation
-of an equal balance between work and demand, and on every branch of
-commerce, in order to prevent the carrying off any part of the wealth
-already acquired; he must now direct his attention towards the effects
-of the domestic operations of that wealth. He was formerly interested in
-its accumulation; he must now guard against the consequences of this.
-
-While the bulk of a nation’s riches is in foreign trade, they do not
-circulate within the country; they circulate with strangers, against
-whom the balance is constantly found. In this case, the richest man in a
-state may appear among the poorest at home. In foreign countries you may
-hear of the wealth of a merchant, who is your next door neighbour at
-home, and who, from his way of living, you never knew to be worth a
-shilling. The circulation of money for home-consumption will then be
-very small; consequently, taxes must be very low; consequently,
-government will be poor.
-
-So soon as all this load of money which formerly was continually going
-backwards and forwards, without almost penetrating, as one may say, into
-the country, is taken out of foreign trade, and thrown into domestic
-circulation, a new scene opens.
-
-Every one now begins to appear rich. That wealth which formerly made the
-admiration of foreigners, now astonishes the proprietors themselves. The
-use of money, formerly, was to make more of it: the use of money now, is
-to give it in exchange for those or such like commodities, which were
-then consumed by strangers only.
-
-It is this revolution in the spirit of a people, which renders the
-consideration of the balance of their wealth an object of the greatest
-political concern; because the constant fluctuation of it, among the
-several classes of inhabitants, is what lays the foundation of public
-opulence.
-
-A government must always be respected, feared, and obeyed by the people
-governed; consequently, it must be powerful, and its power must be of a
-nature analogous to that of the subjects. If you suppose a great
-authority vested in the grandees of a kingdom, in consequence of the
-number and dependence of their vassals, the crown must have still a more
-powerful vassalage at its command: if they are powerful by riches, the
-crown must be rich. Without preserving this just balance, no government
-can subsist. All power consists in men, or in money.
-
-If therefore we suppose a vast quantity of wealth thrown into domestic
-circulation, the statesman must follow new maxims. He must promote the
-circulation of it so as to fill up the blank of foreign consumption, and
-preserve all the industrious who have enriched him. The quicker the
-circulation is found to be, the better opportunity will the industrious
-have of becoming rich speedily; and the idle and extravagant will become
-the more quickly poor. Another consequence equally certain, is, that the
-quicker the circulation, the sooner will wealth become equally divided;
-and the more equality there is found in wealth, the more equality will
-be found in power. From these principles it will follow, that upon such
-a revolution of national circumstances, a popular government may very
-probably take place, if the statesman do not take proper care to prevent
-it.
-
-This is done by the imposition of taxes, and these are differently laid
-on, according to the spirit of the government.
-
-By taxes a statesman is enriched, and by means of his wealth, he is
-enabled to keep his subjects in awe, and to preserve his dignity and
-consideration.
-
-By the distribution of taxes, and manner of levying them, the power is
-thrown into such hands as the spirit of the constitution requires it
-should be found in. Are they imposed in a monarchy where every man is
-taught to tremble at the King’s name, the great men will be made rich by
-his bounty, and the lower classes will be loaded and kept poor; that
-they may, on easier terms, be engaged to fill those armies which the
-Prince entertains to support his authority at home, and his influence
-abroad.
-
-Here independent people will always be looked upon with an evil eye, and
-considered as rivals to the Prince, who ought to be the only independent
-person in the state.
-
-In limited governments, where the sovereign has not the sole power of
-taxation, they will be laid on more equally, and less arbitrarily;
-providing the theory of them in general be well understood. Here every
-man must know _what_ he is to pay, and _when_; and the amount of the tax
-must bear a proportion, on one hand, to the exigencies of the state; and
-on the other, to the quantity of circulation which takes place upon the
-payment of it: that is, a man must not be made to pay all the state can
-demand of him for a year, upon his making a trifling, though most
-essential acquisition of a necessary article of subsistence.
-
-I think I have observed one remarkable difference in the point of view
-in levying taxes in countries where these two forms of government are
-established.
-
-Under the pure monarchy, the Prince seems jealous, as it were, of
-growing wealth, and therefore imposes taxes upon people, who are growing
-richer. Under the limited government they are calculated chiefly to
-affect those who are growing poorer.
-
-Thus the monarch imposes a tax upon industry; where every one is rated
-in proportion to the gain _he is supposed_ to make by his profession.
-The poll-tax and _taille_, are likewise proportioned to the _supposed_
-opulence of every one liable to them. These, with others of the same
-nature, are calculated (as it is alledged) to establish an equality in
-the load supported by the subjects; by making the industrious, and money
-gatherers, contribute in proportion to their gains, although the capital
-stock from which these profits arise be concealed from the eyes of the
-public.
-
-In limited governments, impositions are more generally laid upon
-consumption. They encourage industry, and leave the full profits of it
-to make up a stock for the industrious person. When the stock is made,
-that is, when it ceases to grow, it commonly begins to decrease: the
-number of prudent people, who live precisely upon their income, is very
-small. It is therefore upon the dissipation of wealth, in the hands of
-private people, that the state is enriched. Thus the career towards
-poverty is only a little abridged: he who is in the way of spending his
-estate will get at the end of it, if his life be spared; and therefore
-there is no harm done to him, and much good done to the state, in making
-a part of his wealth circulate through the public coffers.
-
-The only precaution necessary to be taken in taxing consumption, is, to
-render the impositions equal, and to prevent their affecting what is
-purely necessary; or operating an unequal competition between people of
-the same denomination. Such impositions have still a worse effect, than
-those which fall upon growing wealth: they prevent the poor from being
-able to subsist themselves. A fellow feeling excites compassion among
-those of the lower classes; they endeavour to assist each other, and by
-this operation, like a pack of cards, set up by children upon a table,
-the first that is thrown down tumbles down another, until all are laid
-flat; that is, misery invades the lower classes: more than one half of a
-people.
-
-From these principles (which I have been obliged to anticipate) we may
-gather the necessity of taxes, in states where foreign trade begins to
-decay. Without them, there is no security for a government against the
-power of domestic wealth. Formerly, Princes lived upon their domain, or
-patrimonial estate. What domain would be sufficient, at present, to
-support the expence of government? And if a government is not able to
-hold the reins of every principle of action within the state, it is no
-government, but an idol, that is, an object of a voluntary respect. The
-statesman, therefore, must hold the reins; and not commit the management
-of the horses to the discretion of those whom he is employed to conduct.
-
-Another consequence of taxes, is, that the more luxury prevails, the
-more the state becomes rich: if luxury, therefore, breeds
-licentiousness, it at the same time provides a curb against its bad
-effects.
-
-This augmentation of wealth produces a double advantage to the
-statesman: for besides the increase of the public revenue, the progress
-of luxury changing the balance of wealth constantly, by removing it from
-the rich and extravagant, to the poor and laborious, renders those who
-were formerly rich, and consequently powerful, dependent upon him for
-their support. By the acquisition of such persons, he gains additional
-credit, and supports his authority. Thus wealth and power circulate, and
-go hand in hand.
-
-It may be asked, how these principles can be reconciled with the vigour
-and strength commonly found in the government of flourishing trading
-nations; for in such we must suppose few taxes? consequently, a poor and
-therefore a weak government; and a rich, consequently, a powerful
-people?
-
-I answer, that under such circumstances, a people are commonly taken up
-with their trade, and are therefore peaceable; and as their wealth does
-not appear, being constantly in circulation with strangers, the
-influence of it is not felt at home. While wealth is employed in pursuit
-of farther gains, it cannot give power; consequently, as to all
-political effects at home, it is as if it did not exist; and therefore
-there is no occasion for the state to be possessed of a wealth they have
-no occasion to employ. If such a nation be attacked by her enemies, she
-becomes wealthy in an instant, every one contributes to ward off the
-common danger: but if, on the contrary, her tranquillity is disturbed at
-home, the rebellion generally proves successful; which is a confirmation
-of the principles laid down. I might illustrate this by many historical
-remarks. I shall only suggest to my reader, to examine the nature of the
-Dutch revolutions, and to compare the success of rebellions in France
-and England, during the last century, with others of a fresher date.
-Here the reader may consult the learned Mr. Hume’s observation upon the
-commencement of the civil war. _History of Great Britain_, Vol. I. p.
-325.
-
-When, therefore, foreign trade has ceased for some time, and luxury has
-filled up the void, a considerable part of national wealth begins to
-circulate through the public treasury. It is natural then for great men
-to resort to court, in order to partake of the profits of government;
-and for the statesman to be fond of attaching such people to his
-interest, in order to be a constant check upon the turbulent spirit,
-which new gotten wealth may excite in the minds of one set of people,
-and desperate fortunes in those of others.
-
-While there was little circulation of money in Europe, and few taxes,
-there was small profit to be made in following of Kings. These were more
-formidable to their enemies, than profitable to their friends. The great
-men of the state lived upon their lands, and their grandeur resembled
-that of the Prince; it consisted in the number and dependence of their
-vassals; who got as little by their Lord, as he did by the King. The
-poor in those days were plundered of the little money they had, by the
-great; now the great are stripped of the largest sums, by the numbers of
-poor, who demand from them on all hands, the just equivalent of their
-industry.
-
-When Princes find their great men all about them, all asking, and all
-depending for different marks of their favour, they may perceive the
-great change of their situation, produced by luxury, and a swift
-circulation. This revolution has not been sudden, it has been the work
-of several centuries; and I think we may distinguish three different
-stages during this period.
-
-The first during the grandeur of the feudal government: then the great
-Barons were to be consulted, and engaged to concur in the King’s wars,
-because it was they who paid the expence, and suffered the greatest
-loss. These are called by some the days of liberty; because the states
-of every country in Europe, almost, were then in all their glory: they
-are called so with great reason, when we consider the condition of the
-great only.
-
-In those days there were seldom any troubles or disturbances in the
-state, seldom any civil wars levied against the King, but such as were
-supported by the grandees; who, either jealous of their own just rights,
-or ambitious of acquiring others at the expence of the crown, used to
-compel their vassals, or engage them by the constitutional influence
-they had over them, to disturb the public tranquillity.
-
-The second stage, I think, may be said to have begun with the times of
-industry, and the springing up of trade. Such Princes, whose subjects
-began to enrich themselves at the expence of other nations, found, on
-one side, the means of limiting the power of the great lords, in favour
-of the extension of public liberty. The lords, on the other side, when
-they wanted to disturb the public tranquillity, did not, as formerly,
-vindicate their own privileges, so much as they combined with the
-people, and moved them to revolt, on popular considerations.
-
-This may be called the period of confusion, out of which has arisen
-certain determined forms of government; some drawing nearer to the
-monarchical, others nearer to the popular form, according as the power
-of Princes has been more or less able to support itself, during the
-shock of the revolution, and the overturn of the balance between public
-and private opulence.
-
-The third and last stage, of which I shall speak at present, may be
-fixed at that period when the proportion of the public revenue became
-adequate to the mass of national wealth; when general laws were made to
-govern, and not the arbitrary power of the great. The grandees now, from
-being a bridle on royal authority, are often found dependent upon it for
-their support. The extraordinary flux of money into the treasury,
-enables Princes to keep splendid courts, where every kind of pleasure
-and amusement is to be had. This draws together the rich men of the
-state. The example of the sovereign prompts these to an imitation of his
-expence, this imitation increases consumption, which in its turn
-augments the King’s income, as it diminishes that of every other person.
-
-When the great men of a kingdom have exhausted their estates, in paying
-a regular court to the Prince, they employ the credit they have acquired
-with him during the time of their dissipation, to obtain marks of his
-favour, in order to support them in their decline. By these they are
-enabled to live in as much state as before. They find no difference in
-their situation; unless perhaps they should accidentally reflect, that
-the fund which produced their former opulence, was in their own
-possession; whereas that of their present wealth is in the hands of
-their master.
-
-To compensate this difference, they are made to acquire, by the favour
-of the court, advantages which they never could have enjoyed from the
-largest independent fortune.
-
-The luxurious system of living, every where introduced, draws the
-wealthy together, either in the capital or in other great cities of the
-kingdom; where every one compares the expence and figure he makes, with
-that of others who are about him. A person honoured with the King’s
-favour, of the same quality with another, acquires, by this
-circumstance, a great superiority. He commands, I shall suppose, in a
-place; he is the person to whom people must apply, in order to obtain
-favours, perhaps justice; he is adorned with a title, or outward mark of
-distinction, which procure him respect and consideration; and, which is
-still more, he is on the road to a farther elevation. It requires a
-great stock both of philosophy and good sense, not to be dazzled with
-these advantages. Independency, compared with them, is but a negative
-happiness. To be truly happy, we must have power, and have other people
-to depend on us.
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXVI.
- _Of the Vibration of the Balance of Wealth between the Subjects of a
- modern State._
-
-
-We have frequently mentioned this balance, as an object of great
-importance to a statesman who is at the head of a luxurious nation;
-which having lost its foreign trade, has substituted, in the place of
-it, an extensive inland commerce. This will supply the loss of the
-former, so far, as equally to provide employment, and, consequently,
-subsistence, to every one inclined to be industrious; although it must
-prove quite ineffectual for augmenting the national wealth already
-acquired.
-
-I shall first explain what I mean by the balance of wealth vibrating
-between the members of a society, and from that will be seen why I rank
-this also among the political balances of a modern state.
-
-It has been observed in the beginning of the nineteenth chapter, that
-the great characteristic of what we call liberty, is the circulation of
-an adequate equivalent for every service.
-
-By wealth, I understand this circulating adequate equivalent.
-
-The desires of the rich, and the means of gratifying them, make them
-call for the services of the poor: the necessities of the poor, and
-their desire of becoming rich, make them chearfully answer the summons;
-they submit to the hardest labour, and comply with the inclinations of
-the wealthy, for the sake of an equivalent in money.
-
-This permutation between the two classes, is what we call circulation;
-and the effects produced by it, upon the political situation of the
-parties at the precise time of the circulation, and the consequences
-after it is compleatly effected, explains what is called the balance of
-wealth.
-
-To render our ideas more correct, let us consider the money on one side,
-and the prestations, as the civilians call them, or performances of any
-kind, on the other, as _reciprocal_ equivalents for one another; and
-then let us examine the nature of those prestations which tend to put
-these equivalents into circulation; that is to say, what are the things
-which money can purchase.
-
-These we may divide, with the lawyers, into corporeal and incorporeal.
-The corporeal may again be divided into consumable and inconsumable; and
-the incorporeal into personal service, and what the lawyers call _jura_,
-rights in or to any thing whatever. I cannot fully explain myself
-without the help of this distribution.
-
-Let us next consider the effects of the circulation of money, as it has
-for its object, the acquisition of the four several species here laid
-down.
-
-1. Of inconsumable things. 2. Of things consumable. 3. Of personal
-service. 4. Of rights acquired in or to any thing whatever.
-
-I. The only thing inconsumable is the surface of the earth. This must
-not be taken in a philosophical, and far less in a chemical sense. A
-thing is consumed, so far as it concerns our inquiry, the moment it
-becomes useless, or even when it is lost.
-
-The surface of the earth, therefore, is the only thing inconsumable;
-because, generally speaking, it never can cease to be useful, and never
-can be lost; it may be changed, but the earth must always have a
-surface. What is said of the surface, may be understood likewise of that
-small part of its body accessible to man, for supplying him with what he
-finds useful there, as the produce of mines.
-
-Next to the earth itself, nothing is less consumable than her metals,
-consequently coin may very properly be classed under the head of things
-inconsumable; although it may be lost, and even worn out in circulation.
-
-Let us now consider the effects of circulation in the purchase of land.
-(A), I shall suppose, has a piece of land, and (B) has one thousand
-pounds weight of gold coin, which the laws of society have constituted
-to be an adequate circulating equivalent for every thing vendible. They
-agree to make an exchange. Before the exchange the balance of their
-wealth is equal; the coin is worth the land, the land is worth the coin;
-the exchange makes no alteration, nor has it the effect of making any
-afterwards; the new landlord may apply himself to the improvement of the
-soil, the monied man to the turning of his thousand weight of gold coin
-to the best advantage; consequently, by this transaction, no vibration
-of the balance seems to be affected.
-
-If coin itself be the object of sale, the consequences are much the
-same. (A) has a guinea, (B) has twenty one shillings, the exchange they
-make produces no alteration in their circumstances. The same holds good
-in other species of circulation, such as the transmission of money by
-inheritance. (A) dies and leaves his money to (B); here the possessor of
-the money only changes his name, perhaps his inclinations, and that is
-all. In like manner a person pays his debts, and withdraws his bond, or
-other security; no balance is affected by this circulation, matters
-stand between the parties just as before.
-
-The nature, therefore, of circulation, when one inconsumable commodity
-is given for another, is, that it operates no vibration in the balance
-of wealth between the parties; because, in order to produce this, one
-must remain richer than he was before, and the other proportionally
-poorer.
-
-II. Under the second head of alienation, to wit, that of consumable
-commodities, is comprehended every thing corporeal, except money, and
-land, which money may purchase. In these, two things deserve attention.
-First, the simple substance, or the production of nature; the other, the
-modification, or the work of man. The first I shall call the _intrinsic
-worth_, the other, the _useful value_. The value of the first, must
-always be estimated according to its usefulness after the modification
-it has received is entirely destroyed, and when by the nature of the
-thing both must be consumed together, then the total value is the sum of
-both. The value of the second must be estimated according to the labour
-it has cost to produce it. An example will make this plain.
-
-The intrinsic worth of any silk, woollen, or linnen manufacture, is less
-than the primitive value employed, because it is rendred almost
-unserviceable for any other use but that for which the manufacture is
-intended. But the intrinsic substance of a loaf of bread loses nothing
-by the modification, because the last cannot be consumed without the
-first. In a piece of silver plate curiously wrought, the intrinsic worth
-subsists entire, and independent of the useful value, because it loses
-nothing by the modification. The intrinsic value, therefore, is
-constantly something real in itself: the labour employed in the
-modification represents a portion of a man’s time, which having been
-usefully employed, has given a form to some substance which has rendred
-it useful, ornamental, or in short, fit for man, mediately or
-immediately.
-
-Let us now apply these distinctions to the different circumstances which
-attend consumption, in order to perceive their effects.
-
-The consumption of the intrinsic value of any commodity, takes place the
-moment the matter employed begins to diminish, and is compleated so soon
-as it is consumed totally. The consumption of the useful value proceeds
-in like manner, in proportion as the use it is put to makes the value of
-it diminish, or disappear altogether.
-
-Let us next take an example, and examine the effects of circulation in
-the purchase of things consumable, as to the vibration of the balance of
-wealth. (A) has a piece of coin, (B) has something which his labour has
-produced; they make an exchange. (A) hitherto has neither gained or
-lost, neither has (B); but (A) begins to make use of what he had
-purchased with his coin, and in using it a part disappears; that moment
-the balance begins to turn against him. (B) on the other hand, exchanges
-his piece of coin with another, whom we shall call (C), and gets in
-return a piece of wood; if (B) puts this piece of wood into the fire, in
-proportion as the wood consumes, the balance is returning to its level
-between (A) and (B), and is changing in favour of (C). If (B), instead
-of burning his wood, makes a beam of it for supporting his house, the
-balance will turn more slowly, because the wood is then longer in
-consuming: but if he makes some useful piece of furniture of one part of
-his wood, he may warm himself with the remaining part of it, and with
-the coin he gets for his work, may buy a beam for his house, and even
-food to eat. If (B) stops at this period, and works no more, he will
-find himself just upon a level with (A); so soon as his fire is burnt
-out, his beam rotten, and his food consumed, and the whole balance will
-be found in favour of (C), providing that by his industry he has been
-able to procure for himself all necessaries, and preserve the piece of
-coin entire. Here then is the spur to industry; to wit, the acquisition
-of this balance, which gives a relative superiority even among those of
-the lowest classes, and determines their rank as well as their
-political-necessary, according to the principles laid down in the
-twenty-first chapter.
-
-The essential characteristic of this vibration of the balance of wealth,
-is the change in the relative proportion of riches between individuals.
-But it must be observed, that under this second species we are to
-consider the change of proportion no farther than as it is produced by
-the circulation of a free adequate equivalent, of such a nature as to be
-transferable to another hand without any diminution. The consumption,
-therefore, is the only thing which makes the balance turn. While the
-consumable commodity remains entire in the hands of the purchaser, he
-still remains possessor of the value, and may, by inverting the
-operation, return to the possession of the same species of wealth he had
-before.
-
-Here it may he asked, if money be absolutely necessary for producing a
-vibration of this balance by the means of consumption. We may easily
-conceive the greatest inequality between the numbers of a state, without
-supposing the existence of money. We may suppose the property of lands
-unequally divided, and a great surplus of subsistence found in the hands
-of one individual, which may by him be given in exchange for the produce
-of industry. Under such circumstances then it may be asked, if without
-money there can be no such thing as a vibration in the balance of
-wealth; supposing in this case, the term _wealth_ to imply, in general,
-the means of purchasing whatever man can perform or produce.
-
-I answer, that no doubt the balance may be susceptible of small
-vibrations, because even in the exchange of consumable commodities, the
-consumption may go on faster on one side than on the other; but I think,
-unless the inconsumable fund of wealth (which is what gives the
-superiority, and which in the example alledged, we supposed to be coin)
-can be made to change hands according to the adequate proportion of the
-consumption made, we cannot say properly, that a vibration can be
-operated in any considerable degree.
-
-Let us suppose (A) to be a proprietor of a bit of land, and (B) an
-industrious workman; in order that (B) may purchase the land of (A,) it
-must be supposed that (A) is very extravagant, and that he inclines to
-consume a much greater proportion of work than what is equivalent to all
-the surplus-produce of his land. Now in order to supply (A) to the value
-of the land itself, (B) must distribute his work to many different
-persons, and take in exchange, not such things as he has use for
-himself, but such as may be found useful to (A). But so soon as (A) has
-paid to (B) the whole surplus of his land, what fund of credit will he
-find in order to engage (B) to furnish more? He cannot pay him in land,
-because this fund is not susceptible of circulation; and every expedient
-that could be fallen upon to keep accounts clear between them, is
-neither more or less than the introduction of _money_, either _real_ or
-_symbolical_. These terms must be explained.
-
-By real money, is meant what we call coin, or a modification of the
-precious metals, which by general agreement among men, and under the
-authority of a state, carries along with it its own intrinsic value.
-
-By symbolical money, I understand what is commonly called credit, or an
-expedient for keeping accounts of debt and credit between parties,
-expressed in those denominations of money which are realized in the
-coin. Bank notes, credit in bank, bills, bonds, and merchants books
-(where credit is given and taken) are some of the many species of credit
-included under the term _symbolical money_.
-
-In the example before us, we may suppose that (A) having no more
-circulating equivalent to give (B) for his work, and being desirous to
-consume of it to the value of his land, shall agree to issue notes of
-hand, every one of which shall carry in it a right to an acre of land,
-to a fruit tree, to ten yards of the course of a river, &c. and that
-every such parcel of property, shall be esteemed at a certain proportion
-of work. This agreement made, he goes on with his consumption, and pays
-regularly, and adequately, the value of what he receives; and in
-proportion as consumption proceeds on the side of (A), the balance of
-wealth must turn in favour of (B); whereas while (A) kept his bit of
-land, and (B) his faculty of working up an equivalent for the surplus of
-it, the balance stood even; because the land on one hand, and the
-industry on the other, produced adequate equivalents for each other. The
-produce of both was consumable, and supposed to be consumed; which
-operation being over, the land and the industry remained as before,
-ready to produce anew. Here then is the effect of credit or symbolical
-money; and here I ask, whether or not the notes of hand given by (A) to
-(B), do not contain as real a value, as if he had given gold or silver?
-and farther, whether or not it appears, that the country where they live
-becomes any richer by this invention? does this note any more than
-declare who is the proprietor of the value contained?
-
-Nothing is so easy as to invent a money which may make land circulate as
-well as houses, and every other thing which is of a nature to preserve
-the same value during the time of circulation. Whatever has a value, may
-change hands for an equivalent, and whenever this value is determined,
-and cannot vary, it may be made to circulate; and in the circulation to
-produce a vibration in the balance of wealth, as well as a pound of gold
-or silver made into coin.
-
-Those nations, therefore, who only circulate their metals, confine
-industry to the proportion of the mass of them. Those who would
-circulate their lands, their houses, their manufactures, nay their
-personal service, even their hours, might produce an encouragement for
-industry far beyond what could be done by metals only. And this may be
-done, when the progress of industry demands a circulation beyond their
-power.
-
-This anticipation of the subject of the following book, is here thrown
-in, only to enable my reader to form to himself an idea of the extent of
-the subject we are at present upon, and to help him to judge to what
-length luxury, that is consumption, maybe carried. Since, by what we
-have said, it appears that there is no impossibility for a people to
-throw the whole intrinsic value of their country into circulation. All
-may be cut into paper, as it were, or stamped upon copper, tin, or iron,
-and made to pass current as an adequate equivalent for the produce of
-industry; and as there is no bounds to be set to consumption and
-prodigality, it might he possible, by such an invention, in the compass
-of a year, to circulate an equivalent in consumable commodities produced
-by industry, for the whole property of the most extended and most
-wealthy kingdom. That this is no chimerical supposition, appears plain
-by the activity of many modern geniuses, who, in an inconsiderable space
-of time, find means to get through the greatest fortunes; that is to
-say, in our language, they throw them into circulation by the means of
-the symbolical money of bonds, mortgages, and accounts. But does this
-species of circulation increase the riches of a state? surely no more
-than it would increase the riches of France or England, to carry all the
-plate in the two kingdoms to be coined at the mint. The use of
-symbolical money is no more than to enable those who have effects, which
-by their nature cannot circulate (and which, by the bye, are the
-principal cause of inequality) to give an adequate circulating
-equivalent for the services they demand, to the full extent of all their
-worth. In other words, it is a method of melting down, as it were, the
-very causes of inequality, and of rendring fortunes equal.
-
-The patrons therefore of Agrarian laws and of universal equality,
-instead of crying down luxury and superfluous consumption, ought rather
-to be contriving methods for rendring them more universal. If they blame
-what is called perpetual substitutions of property or entails (made by
-parents in favour of their posterity as yet unborn) because they are in
-some respects prejudicial to industry; they should not, I think, find
-fault with that charming leveler _dissipation_, that nurse of industry,
-and the only thing intended to be prevented by such dispositions.
-
-Some have persuaded themselves, that an equality of fortune would banish
-luxury and superfluous consumption. Among the rest, is M. de
-Montesquieu, an author for whom I have the highest esteem, and who has,
-in this respect, been copied by many others. But I never found his idea
-set in a clear light. Equality of fortune would certainly change the
-nature of luxury, it would diminish the consumption of some, and would
-augment the consumption of others; but without making people idle, it
-could never destroy industry itself, and while this subsists in an equal
-degree, there must be the same quantity of what it produces regularly
-consumed. Farther, this proposition never can be advanced, but on the
-supposition that the luxurious person, that is the consumer, must be
-richer than he who supplies him. This I cannot by any means admit to be
-true. Must the carter who drinks a pot of beer be richer than the
-alehouseman? Must a country girl who buys a bit of ribband, be richer
-than the haberdasher who sells it? Must the beau be richer than his
-taylor? the traveller than the banker who gives him his money? the
-client than the lawyer? the sick than the physician?
-
-How then does it appear that equality must prevent luxury, unless we
-suppose every one confined to an absolute physical-necessary, and either
-deprived of the faculty of contriving, or of the power of acquiring any
-thing beyond it. This principle Lycurgus alone laid down for the basis
-of his republic; and yet riches were known in Sparta as well as poverty.
-
-Absolute equality, _de facto_, is an absurd supposition, if applied to
-human society. Must not frugality amass, and prodigality dissipate?
-These opposite dispositions, are of themselves sufficient to destroy at
-once, the best regulations for supporting equality, and, when carried to
-a certain length, must substitute in its place as great an inequality as
-the quantity of circulation is capable to produce. Whatever circulates,
-may stagnate. Why was there so great equality at Sparta? because there
-was little circulation. Why are the Capucins in a state of perfect
-equality? because among them there is no circulation at all.
-
-If therefore such variations in the balance of wealth depend on the
-difference of _genius_ among men, what scheme can be laid down for
-preserving equality, better than that of an unlimited industry
-equivalent to an universal circulation of all property, whereby
-dissipation may correct the effects of hoarding, and hoarding again
-those of dissipation? This is the most effectual remedy both against
-poverty and overgrown riches; because the rich and the poor are thereby
-perpetually made to change conditions. In these alterations in their
-respective situations, the parties who are changing by degrees, must
-surely in their progress towards a total alteration, become, at one time
-or other, upon a level, that is, to an equality; as the buckets in a
-well meet, before they can pass one another.
-
-_3tio._ The first species of things incorporeal, which may be purchased
-with money, is personal service; such as the attendance of a menial
-servant, the advice of a physician, of a lawyer, the assistance of
-skilful people in order to acquire knowledge, the service of those
-employed in the administration of public affairs at home and abroad, or
-for the defence of a kingdom by sea, or land; the residence of great men
-at court, who do honour to princes, and make their authority respected;
-and even when money is given to procure amusement, pleasure, or
-dissipation, when no durable and transferable value is given in return.
-
-There is a kind of resemblance between the species here enumerated, and
-what we called the _useful value_ in consumable commodities. In the one
-and the other, there is an equivalent given for a man’s time usefully
-employed; but the difference between them lies in this: that the _useful
-value_ being supported, or having for a substratum, as the schoolmen
-call it, the intrinsic substance, is thereby rendred permanent and
-vendible; whereas here, for want of a permanent and transferable
-substance, the personal services though producing advantages which are
-sufficiently felt, cannot however be transferred for the adequate price
-they cost.
-
-The circulation produced by this third species of acquisition, operates
-an instantaneous vibration of the balance. The moment the personal
-service is performed, it may be said to be consumed; and although the
-purchaser has received a just equivalent for the money given, and in
-some cases may even be thereby put in a situation to indemnify himself
-of all his expence, by performing the like services to others, yet every
-body must perceive that such services cannot properly be considered as a
-circulation of the former.
-
-_4to._ The acquisition of the other species of things incorporeal, that
-is, rights, produces little more balance, when an adequate circulating
-equivalent is given for them, than the sale of land; because a right
-implies no more than a power to use, that is, to consume; and by the
-use, the right is not diminished: it is balanced by the use of the
-money; the money therefore and the right being both permanent, there is
-no vibration in the scales. Of this species are all servitudes; the
-purchasing of privileges or immunities, even the lending of money at
-interest, may here not improperly be classed.
-
-Here it will, perhaps, be alledged, that an example be given, where the
-creation of such a right, though purchased with an adequate circulating
-equivalent, produces the greatest vibration in the balance of wealth
-possible. It is when a state contracts debts, and when the public
-creditors acquire a right to general impositions on the people for the
-payment of their interest.
-
-This objection requires a little explanation, and I have proposed it
-chiefly for the sake of introducing an illustration of my subject.
-
-If it be said, that in this example a vibration in the balance of wealth
-_within the state_ is implied, then I say that it must take place either
-1st. between the creditors and the state, or 2d. between the state and
-the people, or 3d. between the creditors and the people. But,
-
-_1mo._ The creditors acquire no balance against the state, because they
-have given one inconsumable commodity for another; to wit, money for an
-annual income. The money is worth the income, the income is worth the
-money. If therefore any change in the balance comes afterwards to take
-place, it must be in consequence of other operations quite independent
-of this transaction. But let us suppose, which is but too frequently the
-case, that here money must be considered as a consumable commodity,
-because it is only borrowed to be spent. In this light does not the
-creditor seem to acquire a balance in his favour against the state, so
-soon as the money is actually spent. I answer in the negative: because a
-state by expending the money borrowed, remains with respect to the
-creditors just as wealthy as before. It is the people who pay the
-interest, for which the state gives them in return no adequate
-_transferable_ equivalent.
-
-_2do._ Here it is urged, that this being the case, the state has
-acquired a balance against the people according to the principles above
-laid down, where it was said, that upon occasions, where money is given
-for personal service, and where nothing transferable is given in return,
-the balance turns instantaneously in favour of him who received the
-money.
-
-To this I answer, that as to the interest paid by the people, the state
-does not receive it for herself, but for the creditors. The personal
-services are then supposed to be already paid for, and the vibration has
-taken place before the interest becomes due. Therefore the balance does
-not turn between the state and the people.
-
-In levying of taxes which are destined to pay the interest of money
-already spent, the public gives no adequate equivalent on one hand; and
-on the other, it is not enriched with respect to the people, any more
-than it was impoverished with respect to the creditors, by spending the
-money borrowed; and since there is no reciprocal change in the situation
-of the two parties, I do not see how we can infer any vibration in the
-balance of wealth between them. We shall presently see between whom the
-balance is made to vibrate.
-
-_3tio._ The balance between the creditors and the people is what at
-first sight appears to be principally affected; because the first
-receive a constant retribution from the latter, in consequence of the
-loan. But neither is any true vibration found here, either adequate to
-the loan, or to the money spent. _1mo._ Because the creditors themselves
-are part of the people who contribute towards all impositions on
-consumptions, which are commonly the most regular, the most permanent,
-and the most familiarly appropriated for the payment of the interest.
-_2do._ Because the money spent by the state, if spent at home, returns
-to other hands indeed, but still returns to the people, of whom we are
-here speaking. And _3tio._ because there is no transaction at all
-between the creditors and the people.
-
-Objection. By this way of reasoning it would appear, that the exhausting
-a people by taxes, makes no vibration in the balance of their wealth.
-
-Answer. If the people be exhausted, it must be by enriching strangers.
-This case should at present be excluded, as we have laid aside the
-consideration of foreign relations. But allowing this circumstance also
-to be implied in the objections made, I agree that every penny of money
-sent out of a country, for no real and permanent equivalent received in
-return, operates a vibration in the wealth between nation and nation;
-but none between subject and subject. To this it is answered, that when
-taxes are high, many people are ruined while others are enriched. This
-operates a vibration. I allow it; but then I reply, that by the very
-supposition in every such case, the money must remain at home; whereas
-in the former, it was supposed to be expended abroad. Now we are not at
-present examining the effects of debts and taxes, in changing the
-balance between man and man, but only between the three cumulative
-interests above specified, the state, the people, and the creditors.
-
-Let me now ask, what is the effect of taxes on the vibration of the
-balance of wealth between individuals?
-
-I answer, that whoever pays a tax, appears to pay for a personal
-service. He receives no corporeal equivalent which can be alienated by
-him for the same value; and he who is employed by the state, and is paid
-with the produce of taxes, acquires a balance in his favour against
-those who pay them. When the amount of taxes goes abroad for foreign
-services, there can be no alteration upon the balance at home, as has
-been said; neither is there any when it remains at home: the people and
-the creditors are as rich as before. Let this suffice at present, as to
-the effects of debts and taxes upon the balance of national wealth.
-
-Industry is the only method of making wealth circulate, so as to change
-its balance between the parties; all kinds of circulation which operate
-no such change, are foreign to the present purpose.
-
-A man dies and leaves his wealth to another, no body loses by this, but
-he who is no more; a second pays his debts, neither debtor, or creditor
-can be said to change circumstances by the operation. A merchant buys a
-quantity of merchandize for ready money, he thereby loses no balance of
-his wealth; it is true he has given money for consumable effects; but
-the balance does not operate until the consumption takes place, and as
-he is not supposed to buy in order to consume, I rank this branch of
-circulation among those which do not influence the balance.
-
-Thus we find two different kinds of circulation in a state; one which
-makes the balance turn, and one which does not. These objects are of no
-small consequence to be attended to in the right imposition of taxes, as
-shall, in its proper place, be more fully explained. At present it is
-sufficient to observe, that the proper time of laying on taxes is at the
-time of circulation: because the imposition may then be always exactly
-proportioned to the sum circulating; consequently, to the faculties of
-the persons severally interested.
-
-In all excises, or taxes upon consumption, it is the money of the
-consumer which is taxed, in the instant of the payment; so that he
-against whom the balance is to turn, has the additional load to pay.
-This species of tax, imposed at the time of circulation, is what
-produces the largest sums to a state. I never heard of a proper
-expedient for taxing the person in whose favour the balance is to turn,
-though from the principles which are afterwards to be laid down, we may
-perhaps discover one.
-
-As for the other species of circulation, where the balance does not
-turn, it is not so much the custom to impose very considerable taxes
-upon it: there are however several examples to be met with which point
-out how they may be imposed. The casualties paid upon the change of
-vassals, or upon the fall of lives, in leases upon upon lands in
-England; the confirmation of testaments in Scotland; investitures in
-Germany; the _centiéme denier_, the _lods et ventes_, and the _control_
-upon the acts of notaries in France; the emoluments of the _Rota_ in
-Spain, and in many Roman Catholic countries, are of this species. Upon
-the same principle, taxes more or less considerable might be laid upon
-every branch of this kind of circulation; for which purpose, it would be
-highly necessary to find out all the ramifications of it, by analysing
-it to the bottom, as we have hitherto run through it very superficially.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXVII.
-_Circulation and the Balance of Wealth, objects worthy of the attention
- of a modern Statesman._
-
-
-Having explained the nature of circulation, and of this balance, we are
-next to point out the objects of a statesman’s attention concerning
-them.
-
-I. _He ought to form to himself a clear and distinct idea of the nature,
-properties, and effects of circulation; a word frequently made use of
-without much meaning, and in a vague and undetermined sense._
-
-The term _circulation_ is, perhaps, one of the most expressive in any
-language, and is therefore easily understood. It represents the
-successive transition of money, or transferable commodities, from hand
-to hand, and their return, as it were in a circle, to the point from
-which they set out. This is the rough idea which every one, who
-understands the word at all, must form of its meaning. But a statesman’s
-perceptions must be more accurate as well as more complex.
-
-He must combine the consequences which result from this successive
-transition, and attend to the effects produced by it. He must not only
-consider the money, which is a permanent value, passing from hand to
-hand, but weigh the consequences of the variety of consumption which it
-draws along with it, in its progress.
-
-Before a guinea can travel from London to York, it may be the means of
-consuming a thousand times its value, and as much more, before it can
-return to London again. Every stop the guinea makes in its course, marks
-a want of desire to consume, in him who possesses it. If, therefore, in
-any country, there were but one guinea in circulation, all consumption
-would stop (or barter would take place) the moment it fell into the
-hands of a miser. This leads us to the second object of a statesman’s
-attention.
-
-II. _He ought at all times to maintain a just proportion between the
-produce of industry, and the quantity of circulating equivalent, in the
-hands of his subjects, for the purchase of it; that, by a steady and
-judicious administration, he may have it in his power at all times,
-either to check prodigality and hurtful luxury, or to extend industry
-and domestic consumption, according as the circumstances of his people
-shall require the one or the other corrective, to be applied to the
-natural bent and spirit of the times._
-
-For this purpose, he must examine the situation of his country,
-relatively to three objects, viz. the propensity of the rich to consume;
-the disposition of the poor to be industrious; and the proportion of
-circulating money, with respect to the one and the other.
-
-If the quantity of money in circulation is below the proportion of the
-two first, industry will never be able to exert itself; because the
-equivalent in the hands of the consumers, is then below the proportion
-of their desires to consume, and of those of the industrious to produce.
-Let me illustrate this by a familiar example taken from a party at
-quadrille.
-
-When, on dealing the cards, every one puts in a fish into the stake,
-according to the old English fashion, a very few are sufficient for the
-circulation of the game: but when you play the aces, the consolation and
-the multiplication of beasts according to the French custom, you must
-have a box with contracts, fishes, and counters; so reducing all to the
-lowest denomination, every player has occasion for above five hundred
-marks. It is therefore plain, that the number of marks must be in
-proportion to the circulation of the game. But at play, as in a state,
-circumstances render this circulation very irregular. Fortune may run so
-equally among the players, during a considerable time, that none of them
-may have occasion to pay away above the value of a hundred counters, and
-while this equality continues, there is not found the smallest
-interruption in the circulation. But let one of the players have a run
-of luck, you will soon see three of the boxes empty, and all the
-circulating marks heaped up before the winner. Fortune at quadrille,
-forms stagnations of the circulating equivalent, as industry and
-frugality form them in a state. At this period of the game, must not the
-players stop, or must they not fall upon a way of drawing back their
-marks into circulation? If they borrow back from the winner, this
-represents loan. If they buy back their marks with money from their
-purses, it represents what I call throwing solid property into
-circulation.
-
-From this familiar example, we may judge how necessary it is that the
-circulating fund be constantly kept up to the proportion of the
-occasions for it. It is impossible to determine the proportion of coin
-necessary for carrying on the circulation of a country, especially of
-one where neither loan, or paper credit, that is the melting down of
-solid property, are familiarly known. Here is the reason: the solution
-of the question does not depend upon the quantity of coin alone, but
-also upon the disposition of those who are the possessors of it; and as
-these are constantly changing, the question thereby becomes insoluble.
-
-It is, therefore, the business of a statesman, who intends to promote
-circulation, to be upon his guard against every cause of stagnation; and
-when he has it not in his power to remove these political obstructions,
-as I may call them, by drawing the coin of the country out of its
-repositories; he ought (in proportion as the other political interests
-of his people are found to require it) to facilitate the introduction of
-symbolical money to supply its place.
-
-A great political genius is better discovered by the extent of his
-perceptions, than by the minute exactness of them in every part of the
-detail. It is far better for a statesman to be able to discern (though
-superficially) every object of government under all its relations, than
-to be able to trace any one with the greatest accuracy. This is apt to
-occupy him too much, and no one relation should ever engross his whole
-attention.
-
-I cannot omit in this place taking notice of a very judicious remark of
-M. de Melon, an eminent political French writer, who was employed by the
-Duke of Orleans in state affairs, during his regency of the kingdom.
-
-“It belongs only (says he) to one who has had the direction of every
-branch of government to lay down a general plan of administration, and
-even then, one must not expert from such a person, very particular
-details with respect to many objects, of which he himself is entirely
-ignorant, and which he has been obliged to confide to the care of others
-subordinate to him. A person who can stoop to a minute exactness in
-small affairs, proves commonly very unequal to the administration of
-great ones. It is enough for such a person to know principles by
-experience and reflection, and to apply fundamental maxims as occasion
-requires.”
-
-I apply this observation to the point in hand. A statesman who allows
-himself to be entirely taken up in promoting circulation, and the
-advancement of every species of luxurious consumption, may carry matters
-too far, and destroy the industry he wishes to promote. This is the
-case, when the consequences of domestic consumption raises prices, and
-thereby hurts exportation.
-
-A principal object of his attention must therefore be, to judge when it
-is proper to encourage consumption, in favour of industry; and when to
-discourage it, in favour of a reformation upon the growth of luxury.
-
-If the country he governs be in a state of simplicity, and that he
-wishes to awaken a taste for industry and refinement, he must, as has
-been said, encourage domestic consumption, for the sake of multiplying,
-and giving bread to the industrious; he must facilitate circulation, by
-drawing into the hands of the public what coin there is in the country,
-in case he finds any part of it locked up; and he must supply the actual
-deficiency of the metals, by such a proportion of paper credit, as may
-abundantly supply the deficiency.
-
-In every country where simplicity prevails, and where there is any
-considerable quantity of coin, a great proportion of it must be locked
-up: because the consumption there must be small; consequently, little
-circulation; consequently, either little coin, or many treasures. In
-such cases, therefore, a statesman must engage the possessors of these
-riches to part with them, at the desire of those who can give security
-for their worth: and he must establish the standard of an annual
-retribution for the loan. If this be difficult to be brought about, from
-the want of confidence in the monied men, he may, in their favour,
-contrive expedients to become the borrower himself, at the expence of
-the alienation of certain rights, or the creation of new privileges, in
-lieu of interest; and when he has engaged them to part with their coin,
-he may lend it out to such as have both solid property and a desire to
-consume; but who, for want of a circulating fund to purchase
-superfluities, have hitherto lived in simplicity.
-
-The introduction, therefore, of loans upon interest, is a very good
-expedient to accelerate circulation, and give birth to industry.
-
-OBJ. But here it is objected, that such a plan is looked upon by some
-nations to be contrary to the precepts of the christian religion, and
-therefore a statesman cannot permit it.
-
-To this I can make no answer, because I am no casuist; but I can propose
-an expedient which will supply the defect of borrowing at interest; and
-as it may serve to illustrate the principles I am now upon, I shall here
-introduce it.
-
-The intention of permitting loans upon interest, is not to provide a
-revenue to those who have ready money locked up, but to obtain the use
-of a circulating equivalent to those who have a sufficient security to
-pledge for it. If the statesman, therefore, shall find himself withheld
-by the canons of his church, from drawing the coin of his subjects into
-circulation, by permitting the loan of it upon interest, nothing is more
-easy than to invent another species of circulation, where no interest at
-all is necessary.
-
-Let him open an office, where every proprietor of lands may receive, by
-virtue of a mortgage thereon, a certain proportional value of
-circulating paper of different denominations, the most proper for
-circulation. He may therein specify a term of payment in favour of the
-debtor, to give him an opportunity to call in his obligation, and
-relieve the engagement of his property. But that term being elapsed, the
-land is to belong to the creditor, or the paper to become payable by the
-state, if required, which may in consequence become authorised either to
-sell the land engaged, or to retain a proportional value of the income,
-or of the property of the land itself, as shall be judged most
-expedient.
-
-Farther, let him constitute a real security for all debts upon every
-species of solid property, with the greatest facility in the liquidation
-of them, in favour of those who shall have given credit to the
-proprietors for merchandise of any kind. To compass this, let all
-entails, substitutions, and _fidei commissa_, or trusts, restraining the
-alienation of land-property, be dissolved; and let such property be
-rendred as saleable as houshold furniture. Let such principles influence
-the spirit of the government; let this sort of paper credit be modified
-and extended according to circumstances, and a taste for consumption
-will soon take place.
-
-The greatest of all obstacles to industry in its infancy, is the general
-want of credit on both sides. The consumers having no circulating value,
-the difficulty of liquidating what they owe by the alienation of their
-lands, prevents their getting credit; and the many examples of
-industrious people giving way, on account of bad payments, discourages
-others from assisting them in the beginning of their undertaking.
-
-From these principles we may gather, that a statesman who intends to
-increase industry and domestic consumption, should set out by providing
-a circulating fund of one kind or other, which ought always to be ready,
-and constantly at the command of those who have any sort of real
-equivalent to give for the consumption they incline to make: for as
-specie may often times be wanting, a contrivance must be fallen upon
-immediately to supply that want.
-
-The utility of this kind of credit, or paper money, is principally at
-the instant of its entring into circulation, because it is then only
-that it supplies the want of real specie; and by this invention, the
-desire to consume creates, as it were, the circulating equivalent,
-without which the alienation of the produce of industry would not have
-taken place; consequently, the industry itself would have suffered a
-check.
-
-But in the after circulation of this paper money from hand to hand, this
-utility comes to cease; because the subsequent consumer, who has another
-man’s paper to give in exchange, is already provided with a circulating
-equivalent, and therefore were it not for the wearing of the specie, or
-difficulty of procuring it, it is quite indifferent both to the state,
-as well as to circulation, whether this paper continues to pass current,
-or whether it be taken up, and realized by the debtor, and gold and
-silver be made to circulate in its place.
-
-Let me now endeavour, to make this whole doctrine still more plain, by
-an example.
-
-Suppose a country where there is a million of pieces of gold employed
-necessarily in carrying on the ordinary circulation, a million of pieces
-of the same value locked up, because the proprietors have no desire to
-spend them. Suppose the revenue of the solid property of the country to
-be worth also a million a year; and that if the fund itself could be
-sold, it might be worth twenty millions of the same specie. Suppose no
-such thing as credit or paper money to be known, and that every man who
-inclines to make any consumption, must be provided previously with a
-part of the circulating million, before he can satisfy his inclination.
-
-Under these circumstances, the statesman resolves to establish industry,
-and finding that by his people’s taking a taste for a greater
-consumption, the million which was formerly sufficient for carrying on
-circulation, is no longer so; he proposes to those who have the other
-million locked up, to borrow it from them at _5 per cent._ and the
-better to engage them to comply with his proposal, he offers to impose
-duties upon the whole of the inhabitants to the annual amount of fifty
-thousand pieces of gold, to be paid annually to the creditors, in return
-for their treasure. If this scheme be adopted, he may lend out his
-million in small sums, to every one who inclines to borrow, upon good
-security; or by premiums and other encouragements given to his infant
-manufactures, he may throw it into the hands of the public, that is,
-into circulation. Here is one method of increasing the quantity of a
-circulating fund, when an augmentation upon the consumption of the
-produce of industry comes to demand it.
-
-But let us now suppose this regular plan of borrowing to be contrary to
-what is called the constitution of the state, to religion, or to the
-spirit of the people, what must be done to supply the place of such a
-scheme?
-
-The statesman must then fall upon another contrivance, by extending the
-use of pledges, and instead of moveables, accept of lands, houses, &c.
-The _Monte pieta_ at Rome issues paper money upon moveable security
-deposited in their hands. Let the statesman, without exacting interest,
-do the same upon the lands of his subjects, the best of all securities.
-While the lands subsist, this paper money must retain its value; because
-I suppose the regulations to be such as to make it convey an
-indisputable right to the lands engaged. The advantage of such an
-establishment will be, that as formerly no man could purchase the
-smallest produce of industry, without having a part of the circulating
-million of pieces of gold; every body now who has an inclination to
-consume, may immediately procure paper money in proportion to his worth,
-and receive in return whatever he desires to possess.
-
-Now let me suppose that this paper money shall in time, and from the
-growing taste for superfluities, amount to the value of five millions of
-pieces of gold. I ask, whether the real value of this paper is any way
-diminished, because it exceeds, by far, all the gold and silver in the
-country, and consequently cannot all at once be liquidated by the means
-of the coin? Certainly not: because it does not draw its value from any
-representation of these metals, but from the lands to which it conveys a
-right. Next, I ask, if the country is thereby become any richer? I
-answer, also, in the negative: because the property of the lands, if
-sold, being supposed worth twenty millions, the proprietors of the paper
-are here supposed to have acquired, by their industry, five millions of
-the twenty; and no more than the remaining fifteen millions belong to
-the landlords.
-
-Let us now suppose a million of this paper money to fall into the hands
-of those who have no inclination to spend it. This is the case of the
-frugal, or money hoarding persons, and they will naturally chuse to
-realize their paper, by taking possession of the lands represented by
-it. The moment this operation takes place, the million of paper money is
-annihilated, and the circulating capital is reduced to four millions of
-paper, and one million of specie. Suppose, on the other hand, that those
-who have treasures which they cannot lend at interest, seeing a paper
-money in circulation, which conveys a right to solid property, shall
-purchase it with their million of pieces of gold, and then lay hold of a
-proportional part of the land: what effect will this double operation
-produce upon the circulating fund? I answer, that instead of being
-composed as formerly, of one million of coin and five millions of paper,
-it will, at first, on the buying up of the paper, consist of two
-millions of coin and five millions of paper; and so soon as the million
-of paper bought up comes to be realized upon the land, and thereby
-extinguished, the circulating coin will be two millions, and the paper
-will be reduced to four. Here then is a very rational method of drawing
-all the coin of the country from the treasures of the frugal, without
-the help of interest. Let me take one step farther, and then I will
-stop, that I may not too far anticipate the subject of the following
-book.
-
-I suppose, that the statesman perceiving that the constant circulation
-of the coin insensibly wears it away, and reflecting that the value of
-it is entirely in proportion to its weight, and that the diminution of
-the mass must be an effectual diminution of the real riches of his
-country, shall call in the metals and deposit them in a treasure, and
-shall deliver, in their place, a paper money having a security upon the
-coin locked up. Is it not plain, that while the treasure remains, the
-paper circulated will carry along with it as real (though not so
-intrinsic) a value as the coin itself could have done? But if this
-treasure comes to be spent, what will the case be then? It is evident,
-that the paper conveying a right to the coin, will then as effectually
-lose its value, as the other species of paper conveying a right to the
-lands, and issued, as we have supposed, by the proprietors of them,
-would have done, had an earthquake swallowed up, or a foreign conqueror
-seized the solid property engaged as a security for this paper.
-
-The expedient, therefore, of symbolical money, which is no more than a
-species of what is called credit, is principally useful to encourage
-consumption, and to increase the demand for the produce of industry. And
-the bringing the largest quantity of coin possible into a country,
-cannot supply the want of it in this respect; because the credit is
-constantly at hand to every one who has property, and the other may fail
-them on a thousand occasions. A man who has credit may always purchase,
-though he may be many times without a shilling in his pocket.
-
-Whenever, therefore, the interest of a state requires that the rich
-inhabitants should increase their consumption, in favour of the
-industrious poor; then the statesman should fall upon every method to
-maintain a proportion between the progress of industry, and the gradual
-augmentation of the circulating fund, by enabling the inhabitants to
-throw with ease their solid property into circulation whenever coin is
-found wanting. Here entails are pernicious.
-
-On the other hand, when luxury begins to make too great a progress, and
-when it threatens to be prejudicial to foreign trade, then might solid
-property be rendred more unwieldy; and entails might then become useful:
-all moveable debts, except bills of exchange in foreign circulation,
-might be stripped of their privileges, and particularly, as in France,
-of the right of arresting the person of the debtor. Usury ought then to
-be punished severely; even something like the _Senatus Consultum
-Macedonianum_, which made the contract of loan void on the side of the
-borrowers, while they remained under the power of their fathers, might
-be introduced. Merchants accounts should no more be allowed to enjoy a
-preference to other debts; but on the contrary, be made liable to a
-short prescription. In a word, domestic circulation should be clogged,
-and foreign circulation accelerated. When foreign trade again comes to a
-stop, then the former plan may be taken up a-new, and domestic
-circulation accelerated and facilitated, in proportion as the produce of
-industry and taste of superfluity require it.
-
-III. _A statesman ought carefully to distinguish between those branches
-of circulation which operate a vibration in the balance of wealth, and
-those_ _which do not, in order to regulate the taxes which he may think
-proper to lay upon his people._
-
-In treating of this third object of a statesman’s attention, I shall
-confine myself to the application of those principles which point out
-the necessity of taxation among a luxurious people, become wealthy by
-the means of trade, where the industrious can no longer be made to
-subsist but by means of a great domestic circulation, which is the
-object of our present inquiry.
-
-In every case where the balance of wealth is made to vibrate by
-circulation, there is an opportunity of imposing a tax upon
-consumptions, perfectly proportioned to the quantity of the circulation.
-Now by the imposition of taxes, and the right employment of the amount
-of them, a statesman has it in his power to retard or to promote the
-consumption of any branch of industry. By the imposition of duties he
-may either check luxury when he finds it calling off too many hands from
-other more necessary occupations; or by granting premiums, he may
-promote consumption or exportation upon branches where it is expedient
-to increase the hands employed, which last is the reverse of taxation;
-or in the third place, when foreign trade begins to bear a small
-proportion to domestic consumption, he may profit of luxury, and draw a
-part of the wealth of the luxurious into the public treasure, by
-_gently_ augmenting the impositions upon it; for when taxes are gently
-increased, consumption is not checked; consequently, this is the proper
-method to be followed, when luxury does no harm. But when it proves
-hurtful, the rise in the impositions should be sudden, that they may
-operate the effects of violent revolutions which are always accompanied
-with inconveniencies, and on such occasions every inconvenience will
-mark the success of the operation. An example will make this plain.
-
-If you want to check the drinking of spirituous liquors, let every
-alteration of your oeconomy concerning them, either as to the
-impositions upon the consumption, or regulations in the retailing them,
-proceed by jerks as it were; if you want to increase the revenue, from
-the propensity people have to poison themselves with spirits, your
-augmentations and alterations may be gentle and progressive.
-
-Here let me observe by the way, that the best method for a statesman to
-curb any sort of vice among his people, is to set out by facilitating
-the gratification of it, in order to bring it once upon a regular and
-systematical footing, and then by sudden and violent revolutions in the
-administration of the oeconomy of it, to destroy it and root it out.
-
-Were all the strumpets in London received into a large and convenient
-building, whither the dissolute might repair for a while with secrecy
-and security, in a short time, no loose women would be found in the
-streets. And it cannot be doubted, but that by having them all together
-under certain regulations, which might render their lives more easy than
-they are at present, the progress of debauchery, and its hurtful
-consequences, might in a great measure be prevented. At Paris, they are
-to be found in their houses, because the police never troubles them
-there while they commit no riot or disturbance. But when they are
-persecuted in their habitations, they break forth into the streets, and
-by the open exercise of their profession, the delicacy of modesty is
-universally hurt and but too frequently blunted, and the example that
-those prostitutes openly set to their own sex, debauches more women than
-all the rakes in town do.
-
-I hope this digression will not be misconstructed into an apology for
-public stews, where, in place of following good regulations for
-suppressing the vices with which they are filled, the principal object
-is frequently to encourage the abuses for the sake of making them turn
-to account as a branch of revenue. Such a plan of administration
-represents a statesman who turns against his people, those arms which he
-had provided for their defence. My intention is very different, it is to
-curb vice as much as possible, and to shut up what cannot be rooted out
-within the bounds of order, and to remove it as a nusance from the eyes
-of the public, and from the contagious imitation of the innocent. I now
-come to the object of a statesman’s attention, relative to that branch
-of circulation which implies no vibration of the balance of wealth
-between the parties concerned.
-
-The more perfect and the more extended any statesman’s knowledge is of
-the circumstances and situation of every individual in the state which
-he governs, the more he has it in his power to do them good or harm. I
-always suppose his inclinations to be virtuous and benevolent.
-
-The circulation of large sums of money brings riches to light for a
-moment, which before and after are commonly hid from the eyes of the
-public. Those branches of property therefore, which have once made their
-appearance in this species of circulation, should not be lost sight of
-until they come naturally to melt away, by returning into the other
-branch of which we have been speaking; that is, until they are fairly
-spent, and the balance be made to turn against the former proprietors of
-them. After this revolution, they will circulate for a while in small
-sums, and remain imperceptible, but in time they will come to form new
-stagnations; then they will be lent out again, or employed in the
-purchase of lands; and falling once more under the eyes of the state,
-they will again become an object of the same attention as formerly.
-
-Nothing is more reasonable, than that all property which produces an
-annual determined income, should be made to contribute to the common
-burthens of a state. But those taxes which are intended to operate upon
-so moveable a property as ready money, ought to be imposed with a most
-gentle hand, and even so as not to appear directly to affect it. The
-statesman here must load his wealthy citizens with duties, as Horace
-loads his sovereign with adulation, never addressing his compliments
-directly to the emperor, but conveying them to him in the most elegant
-manner, through the channel of an interposed person. Thus people
-possessing large capitals of ready money, which in a moment they can
-transport beyond the reach of the most extended jurisdiction, may have
-certain privileges granted them which may attach them to the country (in
-England, for example, a vote in a county or burrow) and then in
-consequence of their rank, not because of their money, be made to come
-under a sort of capitation, or other similar imposition bearing another
-name. Might not the creditors of that nation be represented in
-parliament, and in consequence of so great a privilege, and the
-additional security thereby granted to the funds, be made afterwards to
-come under taxations as well as other proprietors of a determined
-revenue. An admirable hint for the imposition of such taxes, is to be
-met with in a certain great European monarchy, where the highest order
-of knighthood is distinguished with a ribband, a star, and a pension of
-about an hundred and thirty pounds sterling a year. But so soon as any
-one is raised to that dignity, he pays exactly that very sum in lieu of
-capitation. The pension was given by the prince who instituted the
-order; the capitation followed in a subsequent reign, and now appears
-rather a mark of distinction than a burthen.
-
-IV. _The next object of a statesman’s attention proper to be taken
-notice of, is the different political considerations which must occur to
-him when he compares the turning of the balance of wealth against the
-industrious members of a state, with those vibrations which take place
-against the not working part of the inhabitants. In other words, the
-different effect of taxes, as they severally affect those who consume in
-order to reproduce, and those who consume in order to gratify their
-desires._
-
-The one and the other consumption implies a vibration in the balance of
-wealth, and whenever there is a vibration, there we have said that a
-proportional tax may be imposed.
-
-But as the intention of taxes, as I understand them, is only to advance
-the public good (by throwing a part of the wealth of the rich into the
-hands of the industrious poor, and not to exhaust one part of a nation
-to enrich another, no necessary article of consumption should be taxed
-to an industrious person, but in such a way as to enable him to draw
-back the full amount of it, from those who consume his work. By this
-means, the whole load of taxes must fall upon the other category of
-inhabitants, to wit, those who live upon the produce of a fund already
-acquired.
-
-Let me here observe, by the way, that if taxes are rightly laid on, no
-industrious person, any more than another who lives upon his income,
-will ever be able to draw back one farthing of such impositions as he
-has paid _upon his consumption of superfluity_. This shall in its proper
-place be made sufficiently plain; at present it would be a superfluous
-anticipation of the doctrine of taxation, to point out the methods of
-compassing this end. My intention at present is only to recapitulate the
-objects of a statesman’s attention, with regard to the consequences of
-circulation, and the vibrations of the balance of wealth; and having
-shewn how nearly those principles are connected with those of taxation,
-this alone is sufficient to shew their importance.
-
-V. _A statesman ought to attend to the difference between the foreign
-and domestic circulation of the national wealth._
-
-This object, though in part relative to foreign commerce, must not be
-passed over without observation. In fact, there is no nation entirely
-deprived of foreign communications; therefore, although a statesman, who
-is at the head of a luxurious people, may act in general as if there
-were none at all, yet still he must be attentive to the consequences of
-circulation with his neighbours, in so far as it takes place.
-
-Every commercial correspondence with foreign nations, not carried on by
-the exchange of consumable commodities, must produce a vibration of the
-balance of wealth, either in favour or prejudice of the interest we have
-in our eye. But it does not follow, because there is a vibration, that
-therefore a statesman has the same liberty of imposing taxes upon every
-article of consumption, as if the two scales were vibrating within the
-country subject to his administration.
-
-When the consumers are his subjects, he may safely impose the tax, and
-if he raises it by degrees, so high as to diminish the consumption, and
-reduce the amount of the imposition, he will probably gain on the other
-hand, by discouraging the foreign importation, and by keeping the
-nation’s wealth at home, more than he possibly could have got by the
-amount of his tax, in consequence of the dissipation of it.
-
-When the foreigners are the consumers, the case is very different: for
-you cannot oblige a man who is not your subject, to pay beyond the
-advantage he gains by your correspondence. It is therefore, as has been
-said, only upon the exportation of goods, where the nation has great
-natural advantages over her neighbours, that any duty can be raised.
-
-VI. The last object I shall mention as worthy of a statesman’s
-attention, is, _the rules of conduct he should prescribe to himself, as
-to the extending or contracting taxation, according as he finds a
-variation in the proportion between the_ _FOREIGN_ _and_ _DOMESTIC_
-_circulation of his country_.
-
-For this purpose he must know exactly the proportions of the one and the
-other; he must compare the quantity of domestic consumption, with the
-produce of industry and quantity of importations.
-
-If domestic consumption be equal to the sum of both, the country must
-annually lose the value imported. In this case, taxes are to be raised
-by sudden jerks, especially upon importations; not to increase the
-produce of them, but to prevent the increase of luxury, and dissipation
-of national wealth.
-
-If domestic consumption do not exceed the produce of industry, this will
-prove that exportation is at least equal to importation. In this case
-the exportation must be supported; and when that can no otherwise be
-done, a part of the taxes levied upon home consumption must be
-distributed in premiums upon the articles of exportation; and when this
-also becomes ineffectual, then all importations for consumption must be
-cut off, according to the principles above laid down.
-
-If the domestic consumption should really fall short of the produce of
-industry, it marks a flourishing foreign trade. Prices then must be kept
-low, as has been abundantly explained; consequently, there will be less
-profit from taxes; because every penny imposed, which affects the price
-of exportable goods, must be refunded out of the net produce of them,
-and all the expence of collecting that part is entirely lost to the
-public: the remainder, therefore, will be greater or less, according as
-foreign trade is great or small.
-
-In proportion, therefore, as domestic circulation gains ground upon the
-foreign, taxes become necessary; in order, with the amount of them, to
-correct the bad effects of luxury, in raising prices, by giving larger
-premiums to support exportation. And in proportion as a statesman’s
-endeavours to support the trade of his country becomes ineffectual, from
-the growing taste of dissipation in his subjects, the utility of an
-opulent exchequer will be more and more discovered; as he will be
-thereby enabled to support his authority against the influence of the
-great load of riches thrown into domestic circulation, and to defend his
-luxurious and wealthy subjects from the effects of the jealousy of those
-nations which enriched them.
-
-To conclude, the exportation of work, and the supporting a superiority
-in the competition of foreign markets (as has been said, and as shall be
-farther explained) seem to be the most rational inducements to engage a
-statesman to begin a scheme of imposing considerable taxes upon his
-people, while they enjoy any share of foreign commerce. If such taxes
-continue to subsist after the extinction of it, and are then found
-necessary; this necessity is itself a consequence of the change made on
-the spirit and manners of a people become rich and luxurious.
-
-The charge of government, under such circumstances, must greatly
-increase, as well as the price of every thing. Is it not very natural,
-that he who is employed by the state should receive an equivalent
-proportioned to the value of his services? Is it to be supposed, that a
-person born in a high rank, who, from this circumstance alone, acquires
-an advantage, in most nations, hardly to be made up by any acquired
-abilities, will dedicate his time and his attendance for the
-remuneration which might satisfy his inferiors? The talents of great men
-deserve reward as much as those of the lowest among the industrious; and
-the state is with reason made to pay for every service she receives.
-This circulation of an adequate equivalent, we have said to be the
-palladium of liberty, the band of gentle dependence among freemen; and
-the same spirit ought to animate every part of the political body. That
-_nothing is to be done for nothing_, is a fundamental political maxim in
-every free government, and obligations, not liquidated by a just
-equivalent, form pretensions beyond their worth; and are constantly
-accompanied with discontent at one time or other.
-
-Another use of taxes, after the extinction of foreign trade, is to
-assist circulation, by performing, as it were, the function of the heart
-of a child, when at its birth that of the mother can be of no farther
-life to it. The public treasure, by receiving from the amount of taxes,
-a continual flux of money, may throw it out into the most proper
-channels, and thereby keep that industry alive, which formerly
-flourished, and alone depended upon the prosperity of foreign commerce.
-
-In proportion, therefore, as a statesman perceives the rivers of wealth,
-(as we have called them above) which were in brisk circulation with all
-the world, begin to flow abroad more slowly, and to form stagnations,
-which break out into domestic circulation, he ought to set a plan of
-taxation on foot, as a fund for premiums to indemnify exportation for
-the loss it must sustain from the rise of prices, occasioned by luxury;
-and also for securing the state itself, against the influence of
-domestic riches, as well as for recompensing those who are employed in
-its service.
-
-This system ought to be carried on and extended, in proportion to the
-decay of foreign trade; and when this comes in a manner to cease, then
-the increase of taxes, and the judicious application of them, going hand
-in hand, the state itself will support circulation, by receiving with
-one hand, and giving out with the other; until by a prudent management
-under the care and direction of an able statesman, through time and
-perseverance, every internal vice be corrected, and foreign commerce be
-made to flourish once more, from the principles we have been laying
-down, and from what may be farther said to illustrate them in the
-subsequent books of this inquiry.
-
-While industry is kept alive there is still ground for hope. Manners
-change, and the same luxury which extinguished foreign trade, by calling
-home the wealth employed in that species of circulation, may afterwards,
-by keeping industry alive at home, and by throwing a sufficient power of
-wealth into the hands of a good statesman, render the recovery of that
-trade no difficult project, to one who has an instrument in his
-possession, so irresistible in removing every obstacle in the way of his
-undertaking.
-
-This represents a new circulation; to wit, that of the spirit and
-manners of a people, who, under the government of able statesmen, may
-prosper in every situation; and since, from the nature of man, no
-prosperity can be permanent, the next best thing to be done, is, to
-yield to the force which cannot be resisted; and, by address and
-management, reconduct a people to the height of their former prosperity,
-after having made them travel (as I may say) with as little
-inconvenience as possible, through all the stages of decline.
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXVIII.
-_Circulation considered with regard to the rise and fall of the Price of
- Subsistence and Manufactures._
-
-
-The intention of this chapter is to apply the principles we have been in
-search of, to the solution of some questions, which have been treated by
-those great masters of political reasoning, Messrs. de Montesquieu and
-Hume. The ideas they have broached are so pretty, and the theory they
-have laid down for determining the rise and fall of prices so simple,
-and so extensive, that it is no wonder to see it adopted by almost every
-one who has writ after them.
-
-I have not forgot how much I was pleased when first I perused these
-authors, from the easy distribution which a general theory enabled me to
-make of certain classes of my ideas then lying without order, in that
-great repository of human crudities, the memory; which frequently
-retains more materials, than people, commonly, have either time, or
-perhaps capacity rightly to digest.
-
-I am very far from pretending to any superiority of understanding over
-those gentlemen whose opinions I intend to review: accident alone has
-led me to a more minute examination of the particular circumstances,
-upon which they have founded their general combinations; and in
-consequence of my inquiries, I think I have discovered, that in this, as
-in every other part of the science of political oeconomy, there is
-hardly such a thing as a general rule to be laid down.
-
-There is no real or adequate proportion between the value of money and
-of goods; and yet in every country we find one established. How is this
-to be accounted for?
-
-We have, in the fourth chapter of this book, already inquired into the
-principles which point out the influence of trade upon the variation of
-the price of goods; but the question now comes to be, how to fix and
-determine the fundamental price, which is the object of variation. It
-has been said, that the price of a manufacture is to be known by the
-expence of living of the workman, the sum it costs him to bring his work
-to perfection, and his reasonable profit. We are now to examine what it
-is, which in all countries must determine the standard prices of these
-articles of the first necessity; since the value of them does
-necessarily influence that of all others.
-
-The best way to come at truth, in all questions of this nature, is, to
-simplify them as much as possible, that they may be first clearly
-understood.
-
-Whenever a question arises about price, an alienation is necessarily
-implied; and when we suppose a common standard in the price of any
-thing, we must suppose the alienation of it to be frequent and familiar.
-Now I must here observe, that in countries where simplicity reigns
-(which are those where the decision of this question ought regularly to
-be sought for, since it is there only where a complication of
-circumstances do not concur to raise the prices of subsistence) it is
-hardly possible to determine any standard for the price of articles of
-the first necessity.
-
-Let us examine the state of those hunting Indians who live by their bow,
-and of other nations where the inhabitants exercise, I may say
-universally, that species of agriculture which I have called a direct
-method of subsistence, and we shall find, that the articles of food and
-necessaries are hardly found in commerce: no person purchases them;
-because the principal occupation of every body is to procure them for
-himself. What answer would a Scotch highlander have given any one, fifty
-years ago, who would have asked him, for how much he sold a quart of his
-milk, a dozen of his eggs, or a load of his turf? In many provinces,
-unacquainted with trade and industry, there are many things which bear
-no determined price; because they are seldom or never sold.
-
-Sale alone can determine prices, and frequent sale can only fix a
-standard. Now the frequent sale of articles of the first necessity marks
-a distribution of inhabitants into _labourers_, and what we have called
-_free hands_. The first are those who produce the necessaries of life;
-the last are those who must buy them: and as the fund with which they
-purchase is produced from their industry, it follows, that without
-industry there can be no sale of articles of subsistence; consequently,
-no standard price determined.
-
-Another consequence of this reasoning, is, that the sale of subsistence
-implies a superfluity of it in the hands of the seller, and a proper
-equivalent for it in the hands of the buyer; and when the equivalent is
-not money, it also implies a superfluity of the produce of some sort of
-industry; consequently, by the exchange of superfluities upon certain
-articles, a man procures to himself a sufficiency upon every one. This
-represents that gentle dependence which unites the members of a free
-society.
-
-Does it not follow from this analysis of the question, that the prices
-of articles of the first necessity, depend rather upon the occupation
-and distribution of the classes of inhabitants, than either upon the
-abundance of those necessaries, or of the money to purchase them; since
-many examples may be found, where these articles have borne little or no
-price, even in countries where money was not wanting. The reason
-therefore of low prices, is not the vast abundance of the things to be
-sold, but the little occasion any body has to buy them; every one being
-provided for them in one way or other, without being obliged to go to
-market.
-
-How many familiar examples occur every where of this oeconomy! do we not
-find in every country, even when the numbers of the industrious free are
-multiplied exceedingly, more than one half of the inhabitants fed
-directly from the earth? The whole class of farmers does not go to
-market for subsistence. Ask a country gentleman the expence of his
-living, he will tell you the sum of money he yearly spends, perhaps the
-quantity of his rents in kind, which he consumes in his house, and the
-rent of the lands he holds himself in farm; but it will never come into
-his head to reckon the value of every chicken, sheep, or bullock, with
-which his farm provides him, which he consumes without estimation, and
-which in many countries he could not dispose of for any determined
-value.
-
-From this I still conclude, that it is only in countries of industry
-where the standard prices of articles of the first necessity can be
-determined; and since in these, many circumstances concur to render them
-either higher or lower than in other countries, it follows, that in
-themselves they bear no determined proportion whatsoever, to the
-quantity of gold and silver in the country, as I hope presently to make
-still more evident.
-
-What is it then which determines the standard value of these articles,
-in countries of industry? Here follows, in my humble opinion, the best
-answer to this question.
-
-The standard price of subsistence is determined from two considerations.
-The first from the number of those who are obliged to buy, that is to
-say, of those who have them not of their own, and who are not provided
-with them, in lieu of service, by those who have. The second is, from
-the degree of employment found for those who are obliged to purchase
-them.
-
-The _number_ of the buyers of subsistence, nearly determines the
-_quantity_ sold; because it is a necessary article, and must be provided
-in a determined proportion for every one: and the more the sale is
-frequent, the more the price is determined. Next as to the standard:
-this, I apprehend, must depend upon the faculties of the buyers; and
-these again must be determined by the extent of those of the greatest
-numbers of them; that is to say, by the extent of the faculties of the
-lower classes of the people. This is the reason why bread, in the
-greatest famine, never can rise above a certain price; for did it exceed
-the faculties of the great classes of a people, their demand must be
-withdrawn, which would leave the market overstocked for the consumption
-of the rich; consequently, such persons, who in times of scarcity are
-forced to starve, can only be such whose faculties fall, unfortunately,
-below the standard of those of the great class: consequently, in
-countries of industry, the price of subsistence never can rise beyond
-the powers to purchase of that numerous class who enjoy
-physical-necessaries; consequently, never to such an immoderate height
-as to starve considerable numbers of the people; a thing which very
-commonly happens in countries where industry is little known, where
-multitudes depend merely upon the charity of others, and who have no
-resource left, so soon as this comes to fail them.
-
-The faculties, therefore, of those who labour for a physical-necessary,
-must, in industrious nations, determine the standard value of
-subsistence, and the value in money which they receive for their work,
-will determine the standard of their faculties, which must rise or fall
-according to the proportion of the demand for their labour.
-
-By this exposition of the matter, I do not pretend to have dissipated
-every obscurity. The question still remains complex, as the nature of it
-requires it should do; and the solution of it depends upon farther
-considerations, which now lead me to the examination of the doctrine of
-Messrs. de Montesquieu and Hume, concerning the influence of riches upon
-the increase of prices. I shall begin by shortly laying this doctrine
-before my readers, in three propositions.
-
-_1mo._ The prices (say they) of commodities, are always proportioned to
-the plenty of money in the country. So that the augmentation of wealth,
-even fictitious, such as paper, affects the state of prices, _in
-proportion_ to its quantity.
-
-_2do._ The coin and current money in a country, is the representation of
-all the labour and commodities of it. So that _in proportion_ as there
-is more or less of this representation, (money) there goes a greater of
-less quantity of the thing represented (commodities, &c.) to the same
-quantity of it. From this it follows, that
-
-_3tio._ Increase commodities, they become cheaper; increase money, they
-rise in their value.
-
-Nothing can be more beautiful than these ideas. They appear at first
-sight, sufficiently extensive to comprehend every variation of
-circumstances which can happen. Who was the first author of this
-doctrine, I cannot say. I find it in Mr. Locke, and in the Spectator for
-the 19th of October, 1711; but they have been beautifully illustrated by
-Monsr. de Montesquieu; and Mr. Hume has extended the theory, and
-diversified it prettily in his political discourse; which have done much
-honour to that gentleman, and drawn the approbation of the learned world
-so much, that there is hardly a nation in Europe which has not the
-pleasure of reading them in their own language.
-
-Upon examining this theory, when I came to treat of the matters it is
-calculated to influence, I found I could not make answer to the
-principles I had pursued, in the most natural order in which I had been
-able to deduce them: and this consideration obliged me, with regret, to
-lay it aside, and to follow another, much more complex. I have already
-expressed the mortification I have always had upon finding myself forced
-to strike out a general rule, and this, of all others, had at first hit
-my fancy the most; but I am obliged to confess, that upon a close
-examination of the three propositions, I am obliged to range this
-ingenious exposition of a most interesting subject, among those general
-and superficial maxims which never fail to lead to error.
-
-In order to set the matter in as clear a light as possible, I shall make
-a short application of my own principles, relating to the decision of
-the main question, the causes of the rise and fall of prices, and
-conclude my chapter with some remarks upon the three propositions above
-laid down, submitting the whole to the better judgment of my reader.
-
-I have laid it down as a principle, that it is the complicated
-operations of demand and competition, which determines the standard
-price of every thing. If there be many labourers, and little demand,
-work will be cheap. If the increase of riches, therefore, have the
-effect of _raising_ demand, work will increase in its value, because
-_there_ competition is implied; but if it has only the effect of
-_augmenting_ demand, prices will stand as formerly. What then will
-become of the additional quantity of coin, or paper money? I answer,
-that in both cases it will enter into circulation, in proportion to the
-_rise_ or _augmentation_ of demand; with this difference, that in the
-first case, it will have the effect of raising prices; because the
-supply is not supposed to augment in proportion: in the second, prices
-will stand as they were; because the supply is supposed to augment in
-proportion. These are the consequences of the augmentation of wealth,
-when it has the effect of either _raising_ or _augmenting_ demand. But
-if upon this revolution it be found that the state of demand remains
-without any variation, then _the additional coin_ will probably be
-locked up, or converted into plate; because they who have it, not being
-inspired with a desire of increasing their consumption, and far less
-with the generous sentiment of giving their money away, their riches
-will remain without producing more effect than if they had remained in
-the mine. As for the paper money, so soon as it has served the first
-purpose of supplying the demand of him who borrowed it, (because he had
-at that time no coin) it will return upon the debtor in it, and become
-realized; because of the little use found for it in carrying on
-circulation.
-
-Let the specie of a country, therefore, be augmented or diminished, in
-ever so great a proportion, commodities will still rise and fall
-according to the principles of demand and competition, and these will
-constantly depend upon the inclinations of those who have _property_ or
-any kind of _equivalent_ whatsoever to give; but never upon the quantity
-of _coin_ they are possessed of.
-
-Let the quantity of the coin be ever so much increased, it is the desire
-of spending it alone, which will raise prices. Let it be diminished ever
-so low, while there is real property of any denomination in the country,
-and a competition to consume in those who possess it, prices will be
-high, by the means of barter, symbolical money, mutual prestations, and
-a thousand other inventions. Let me give an example.
-
-Suppose a country where prices are determined, and where the specie is
-sufficient for the circulation: is it not plain, that if this country
-has a communication with other nations, there must be a proportion
-between the prices of many kinds of merchandize, there and elsewhere,
-and that the sudden augmentation or diminution of the specie, supposing
-it could _of itself_ operate the effects of raising or sinking prices,
-would be restrained in its operation by foreign competition? But let us
-suppose it cut off from every communication whatsoever, which seems the
-only case, where this theory can operate with any appearance of
-justness, will any body pretend, that the frugal or extravagant turn of
-the inhabitants, will have no influence upon prices, and will it be
-asserted, that no variation in the spirit of a people, as to frugality
-and dissipation, can take place, except upon a variation in the quantity
-of their gold and silver?
-
-It may be answered, that as to articles of superfluity, no doubt the
-genius of a people may influence prices, in combination with the
-quantity of the specie; but that in articles of indispensible necessity,
-they must constantly remain in proportion to the mass of riches. This I
-cannot by any means admit to be just. Let me take the example of grain,
-which is the most familiar. Is it not plain, from what we have said
-above, that the proportion of wealth, found in the hands of the lowest
-class of the people, constantly regulates the price of it; consequently,
-let the rich be ever so wealthy, the price of subsistence can never rise
-above the faculties of the poor. And is it not also plain, that those of
-the lowest class of the people, _who purchase subsistence_, must buy it
-with the returns they receive from the rich for their industry? Now if
-the quantity of the wealth of the latter, does not regulate their demand
-for the service of the former, must it not follow, that the price of
-grain, as well as of every other thing offered to sale, must depend upon
-the degree of competition among the rich for the labour of the poor,
-that is, upon the demand for industry, and not on the quantity of wealth
-in the country?
-
-No body ever denied, that the extraordinary demand for a commodity had
-the effect of raising the price of it: and certainly no body will deny,
-that the demand for a particular commodity may be greater at one time
-than at another, though the same quantity of that commodity be found at
-both times in the country; and the same quantity of specie likewise not
-only in the country, but also in circulation.
-
-I acknowledge that in a country where there is much coin, and where
-credit is little known, a high and extraordinary demand for an article
-of superfluity, may raise the price more than in another where the coin
-is more scarce; because on certain occasions, the price of a thing has
-no other bounds than the extent of the faculties of the buyer. In like
-manner, in other countries where there is almost no coin, nor credit, it
-may be impossible for the highest demand to raise the price of such
-things even to the common standard established in those where there is
-great wealth. But these instances appear to be too particular to serve
-for the foundation of a general rule, with respect to the state of
-prices in the present situation of the nations of Europe, which, less or
-more, are all in communication with one another.
-
-I cannot here omit taking notice of two very remarkable circumstances
-which we learn from undoubted historical authority, which seem to
-contradict one another, and to throw a great obscurity upon the
-principles I have been endeavouring to explain. I shall therefore
-introduce them by way of illustration, and when they are examined, I
-hope they will confirm my doctrine.
-
-The first is, that in Scotland, formerly, when coin and credit were
-certainly very rare, the price of eight pounds weight of oat meal, which
-is now commonly sold at eight pence sterling, was then valued at no more
-than two thirds of one penny: and that a labouring man used to receive
-one penny and one third of a penny sterling for his week’s subsistence;
-that is to say, the value of sixteen pounds of oatmeal, which to this
-day is the regulated quantity given for that purpose.
-
-There is a very curious confirmation of the authenticity of this
-computation, in an hospital at old Aberdeen; where in former times, some
-proprietors of lands had settled a certain quantity of oat meal in
-favours of the poor of the hospital, with a liberty to the hospital to
-accept the meal in kind, or the conversion at two thirds of a penny for
-every eight pounds weight. They imprudently chose the last, and to this
-very day they are paid according to this standard. Now it is certainly
-impossible that any degree of plenty whatsoever, or any failing of
-demand, could at present reduce the price of that commodity so very low;
-consequently, it may be said that it is the augmentation of wealth, not
-that of demand which raises prices.
-
-The second fact we learn from antiquity, that at the time when Greece
-and Rome abounded in wealth, when every rarity, and the work of the
-choicest artists was carried to an excessive price, an ox was bought for
-a mere trifle, and grain was cheaper perhaps than ever it was in
-Scotland.
-
-If the application of our principles to the circumstances of those
-times, produce a solution of these apparent inconsistencies; and if we
-thereby can discover that the low prices of grain, both in Scotland,
-where there was little money, and at Rome where there was a great deal,
-was entirely owing to the little demand for articles of subsistence;
-will it not follow, that our principle is just, and that the other,
-notwithstanding of the ingenuity of the thought, must fail in exactness;
-since it will appear, that low prices may be equally compatible with
-wealth, and with poverty.
-
-Now as to Scotland in former times, as in all countries where there is
-little industry; where the inhabitants are mostly fed directly from the
-earth, without any alienation of her fruits taking place; where
-agriculture is exercised purely as a method of subsisting; where rents
-are low, and where, consequently, the free hands, who live upon them for
-the price of their industry, must be few; the demand for grain in the
-public markets must be very small; consequently, prices will be very
-low, whether there be little, or whether there be much money in the
-country. The reason is plain. The demand is proportioned here, not to
-the number of those who consume, but of those who buy: now those who
-consume, are all the inhabitants, but those who buy, are only the few
-industrious who are free, and who gain an independent livelihood by
-their own labour and ingenuity: now the price of their week’s
-subsistence was one penny one third, consequently the subsistence they
-bought could not rise above this standard.
-
-Next as to the state of Greece and Rome, where slavery was established.
-Those who were fed by the labour of their own slaves, by those of the
-state, or by the grain gratuitously distributed to the people, had no
-occasion to go to market; consequently, they did not enter into
-competition with the buyers. Farther, the simplicity of manners, and the
-few manufactures then known, made wants in general less extensive;
-consequently, the number of the industrious free was small, and _they_
-were the only persons who _could_ have occasion to purchase food and
-necessaries; consequently, the competition of the buyers must have been
-small in proportion, and prices low.
-
-Add to this, the reflections which naturally present themselves upon
-examining the nature of providing the markets. These were supplied
-partly from the surplus produced upon the lands of the great men,
-laboured by slaves; who being fed from the lands, the surplus cost in a
-manner nothing to the proprietors; and as the number of those who had
-occasion to buy, were very few, this surplus was sold cheap. Besides,
-the grain distributed to the people gratis, must necessarily have kept
-down the market, as a part of it would naturally, sometimes, be found
-superfluous to those who received it; and consequently, come to be sold
-in competition with that raised at private expence.
-
-But when a fine mullet was brought to market, or when an artist appeared
-with a curious piece of work, the case was very different. There was
-plenty of money in the country, in the hands of the rich, who all
-appeared in competition for the preference; consequently, prices rose to
-an extravagant height. The luxury of those times, though excessive, was
-confined to a few, and as money, in general, circulated but slowly
-through the hands of the multitude, it was constantly stagnating in
-those of the rich, who found no measure, but their own caprice, in
-regulating the prices of what they wished to possess, and had money to
-purchase.
-
-From what has been said, it appears, that the riches of a country has no
-determined influence upon prices; although, I allow, they may
-accidentally affect them: and if we depart from the principles above
-laid down, to wit, that prices are regulated by the complicated
-operation of demand and competition, in order, to follow the other, we
-must add a restriction (which I observe Mr. Hume has attended to on one
-occasion, although he has lost sight of it on several others) to wit,
-_that the price of every commodity is in proportion to the sum of money
-circulating in the market for that commodity_; which is _almost_ my
-proposition in other words: for the money to be employed in the purchase
-of any commodity, is just the measure of the demand. But even here, the
-money in the market _destined_ only for the purchase of a particular
-commodity, does not regulate the price of it. Nothing but the finishing
-of the transaction, that is, the convention between the buyer and
-seller, can determine the price, and this must depend upon inclination,
-not weight of money, as an example will make plain.
-
-I shall suppose grain to have been at forty shillings _per_ quarter, in
-a country market, for several months together, where the ordinary demand
-for the current consumption is twenty quarters every market day. If at
-any time an extraordinary demand should happen, which may exceed all
-that is to be found in the market, there will be a competition among the
-buyers, which will have the effect of raising the market. Now, according
-to the doctrine of our learned authors, it may be said, that the corn
-rises in proportion to the quantity of the specie which is in the
-market, and that it is because of this increase of specie, that the
-grain rises in its price. I answer, first, allowing this to be true, can
-it be said, that a particular temporary, or perhaps accidental demand
-for a few quarters of corn, more than usual, implies any augmentation of
-the quantity of money in the country, or indeed the smallest variation
-either upon the total consumption, or quantity of grain contained in it?
-For if the demand has risen in one market, it must probably have
-diminished in another, as the same inhabitants cannot consume in two
-places. This I think every person must be convinced of, without farther
-illustration. But I say farther, that prices will not rise in proportion
-to the money in the market; but in proportion to the desire of acquiring
-grain in those who have that money.
-
-Suppose the whole quantity of grain in the market to be thirty quarters;
-if there be no demand for more, these will be sold at forty shillings,
-as the twenty quarters would have been. But suppose the demand to be for
-sixty quarters, and that there is a hundred and twenty pounds sterling
-ready to be employed for corn, does it follow, that grain will rise to
-four pounds a quarter, because the money in the market bears this
-proportion to the quantity of grain? Certainly not.
-
-We must therefore, I think, adopt the other principle, and follow the
-proportions of demand and competition; and then we shall find, that if
-the sellers want to raise their price up to the proportion of the
-specie, all demand will cease, as effectually as if it had never been
-made; and the sellers will afterwards be obliged to accept of such a
-moderate augmentation as shall be in proportion _to the urgency of the
-demand_, but never in proportion _to the money_ ready to be employed.
-
-The circulation of every country, as we have shewn above, must ever be
-_in proportion to the industry of the inhabitants, producing the
-commodities which come to market_: whatever part of these commodities is
-consumed by the very people who produce them, enters not into
-circulation, nor does it in anywise affect prices. If the coin of a
-country, therefore, falls below the _proportion_[M] of the produce of
-industry _offered to sale_, industry itself will come to a stop; or
-inventions, such as symbolical money, will be fallen upon to provide an
-equivalent for it. But if the specie be found above the proportion of
-the industry, it will have no effect in raising prices, nor will it
-enter into circulation: it will be hoarded up in treasures, where it
-must wait not only the call of a desire in the proprietors to consume,
-but of the industrious to satisfy this call.
-
-Footnote M:
-
- Let it be observed, that _proportion_, here, does not mean _value_.
-
-We may therefore conclude, in consequence of the principles we have laid
-down, that whatever be the quantity of money in any nation, in
-correspondence with the rest of the world, there never can remain, _in
-circulation_, but a quantity nearly proportional to the consumption of
-the rich, and to the labour and industry of the poor inhabitants. The
-value of each particular species of which consumption is determined by a
-complication of circumstances at home and abroad; consequently, the
-proportion is not determined by the _quantity_ of money actually in the
-country.
-
-If the contrary is maintained, and if it be affirmed that the proportion
-between specie and manufactures is reciprocal and determined, then I am
-authorised to draw this conclusion, to wit: That if the _greatest_
-produce of industry _must_ be sold for _what specie_ is found in the
-country, _let the sum be ever so small_, so in like manner, the
-_smallest_ produce of industry _must_ be sold for _all the specie_ found
-in the country, _let the sum be ever so great_. Consequently, in the
-first case, we must suppose, that the industrious will never seek for a
-better price from abroad; and in the second, that the monied people
-_must_ spend all they have in supplying their most moderate wants, and
-never seek for cheaper merchandize than what they can find at home.
-Consequently, there can be no foreign trade, nor can there ever be any
-hoarding.
-
-I shall now conclude my chapter, with a few observations upon the three
-propositions as they stand in their order.
-
-PROP. 1. Prices are in proportion to the plenty of money. And thus the
-augmenting even of fictitious wealth, such as paper, affects the state
-of prices, according to its quantity.
-
-From this Mr. Hume disapproves of the introduction of paper money, when
-specie is wanting, and says, that if nothing were allowed to circulate
-but gold and silver, the quantity being less, prices would be lower.
-
-This is neither more or less, in my humble opinion, than a project to
-destroy credit, with a view to support trade and industry. Because it
-would effectually prevent any person from making a consumption, except
-at the time he happened to be provided with ready money. Does the paper
-money in England, keep up the prices of grain at present, January 1759?
-And will not every article of necessaries fall, in a short time, as low
-in that country as in any other in Europe, if the same measures continue
-to be followed?
-
-Were all paper money in that kingdom proscribed at once, no doubt the
-prices of many things would fall very considerably; but such a fall
-would neither be universal or equable. The reason of this fall would not
-be, because the specie would become proportionally divided among all the
-inhabitants, according to the value of their property; nor because of
-the small quantity of it, since prices abroad would still regulate many
-at home: but because of the sudden revolution, and the violent overturn
-thereby produced on the balance of work and demand. The scale of the
-first would preponderate to such a degree, that those classes of the
-industrious, who work for daily subsistence in furnishing superfluities,
-would enter into so strong a competition with one another, that their
-work would fall to nothing, while subsistence would remain at the price
-of exportation. If it be asked what could occasion this difference. I
-answer, because the workmen who supply superfluities, adapted to the
-state of their nation, would find no more demand for them, from the want
-of credit, or of a circulating fund to buy with, and strangers would not
-profit of the fall in the price of a superfluity not adapted to their
-own taste; but they would very willingly become purchasers of every
-bushel of grain become superfluous, by starving so many of the
-inhabitants; and this would keep the price of subsistence upon a pretty
-even level with that of other countries.
-
-But if we suppose all communication cut off with strangers, would this
-proportion between money and prices then hold true? By no means. Here is
-the reason: there are many ways of alienating goods or natural produce,
-without the assistance of specie. Immense quantities of both may be
-consumed by barter, or in lieu of service, where money is never heard
-of: now all this portion alienated, enters into the mass of what is
-called produce and manufactures which come to market; but can have no
-influence upon the specie, nor can specie have any upon it, since the
-money remains inactive during those operations.
-
-Another reason is, that there is no such thing as preserving specie in
-an equal repartition, so as to serve the occasions of every body in
-proportion to their worth. The reason is manifest: money, like every
-other thing, will come into the hands of those who give the greatest
-value for it, and when the quantity of it is small in any country, where
-nothing can be procured without it, such proprietors of lands as have
-the greatest desire to consume, will purchase the specie at a higher
-interest, or with more of their lands than others.
-
-This alone is sufficient to prove that the repartition of specie can
-never be in proportion to property; and this also destroys the
-supposition of prices rising and falling, according to the proportion of
-it, even in a country cut off from every foreign communication. Here is
-the proof: any individual who has, by mortgaging his lands, got together
-a large proportion of the specie of his country, will raise prices in
-his neighbourhood, by making an extraordinary demand for work; and the
-rest of the same country, drained of their circulating value, must
-diminish their demand; consequently, prices will fall elsewhere. I now
-come to the second proposition.
-
-The coin and current money of a country, is the _representation_ of all
-its labour and commodities; so that in proportion as there is more or
-less of this _representation_, a greater or less quantity of it will go
-for the same quantity of the thing represented.
-
-To this _representation_ I cannot agree, and I apprehend it to be the
-source of error. A proper equivalent for labour and manufactures, may,
-in one sense, be called a _representation_; but there is no necessity
-for this equivalent to consist in coin. Are not meat and clothes an
-equivalent for personal service? Is not a free house and a bit of land,
-a very good equivalent for all the manufactures a country weaver can
-work up for me who am his landlord? If there were not one penny of coin
-in a country, would it follow, that there could be no alienation, or
-that every thing might there be got for nothing?
-
-Coin has an intrinsic value; and when it comes into a country, it adds
-to the value of the country, as if a portion of territory were added to
-it: but it has no title to represent any thing vendible, by preference,
-or to be considered as the only equivalent for all things alienable. It
-is made a common price, on no other account than because of its rarity,
-its solidity, its being of a nature to circulate, and to suffer a
-correct division without end, and to carry its value along with it,
-which is a proper equivalent for every thing; and at the same time it is
-by its nature little liable to vary.
-
-Were, indeed, a statesman to perform the operation of circulation and
-commerce, by calling in, from time to time, all the proprietors of
-specie in one body, and all those of alienable commodities, workmen, &c.
-in another; and were he, after informing himself of the respective
-quantities of each, to establish a general tariff of prices, according
-to our author’s rule; this idea of _representation_ might easily be
-admitted; because the parcels of manufactures would then seem to be
-adapted to the pieces of the specie, as the rations of forage for the
-horses of an army are made larger or smaller, according as the magazines
-are well or ill provided at the time: but has this any resemblance to
-the operations of commerce?
-
-The idea of coin being the _representation_ of all the industry and
-manufactures of a country, is pretty; and has been invented for the sake
-of making a general rule for operating an easy distribution of things
-extremely complex in their nature. From this comes error. We substitute
-a complex term, sometimes in one sense, and sometimes in another, and we
-draw conclusions as if it expressed a fixed and determined idea.
-
-If in algebra, _x_, _y_, _z_, &c. ever stood for more than a single
-idea, the science would become useless; but as they never represent but
-the very same notion, they never change their nature through all manner
-of transpositions.
-
-It is not the same of terms in any other science, as abundantly appears
-from the question now before us: coin is called a _representation_,
-because it is an equivalent; and because it is a _representation_, it
-must bear an exact proportion to the thing represented. And since in
-some particular examples, this representation _appears_ to hold;
-therefore the rule is made general, although circumstances may be
-different. If, for example, a merchant, or a private person, has upon
-hand a thousand pounds worth of grain, no doubt that the thousandth part
-of the merchandize is worth the thousandth part of the sum; because both
-are determined in their quantity and quality: but the parcels of this
-corn, though exactly proportioned to the price of the whole, do not draw
-their value from this proportion, but from the total value of the whole
-mass; which is determined from the complicated operations of demand and
-competition, as has been said, and not from the specie of the country,
-which can bear no proportion either to the quantity or quality of the
-grain.
-
-There may be vast quantities of coin in a country of little industry;
-and, _vice versa_, coin is constantly an _equivalent_, but never a
-_representation_, more than any other equivalent which may be contrived.
-Were the doctrine of this second proposition true, every commodity in a
-country should be sold like a parcel of the grain in the foregoing
-example, by the rule of three; as the property of all the labour and
-manufactures of the country is to the part I intend to alienate, so is
-all the gold and silver in the country to the part I am entitled to
-receive. This way of regulating prices may be very ingenious, but it is
-not very common. I now proceed to the third and last proposition.
-
-Increase the commodities, they become cheaper: increase the money, they
-rise in their value.
-
-This proposition is much too general: the first part of it is commonly
-true, the last part is more commonly false.
-
-What can increase commodities, but a demand for them? If the demand be
-equal to the augmentation, there will be no alteration in the price.
-
-Let extraordinary plenty increase subsistence, it will naturally fall in
-the price; but it may be hoarded up, and made to rise in spite of the
-plenty; it may be demanded from abroad; this also will make it rise.
-
-Let the production of superfluities, not exportable, be produced by
-workmen whose branch is overstocked, prices will undoubtedly fall.
-
-The same observations are true of a diminution in the quantity of
-commodities. If this diminishes by degrees, from a diminution of demand,
-the price of them will not rise.
-
-If the quantity of subsistence falls below the necessary consumption of
-the inhabitants, prices will undoubtedly rise.
-
-If the articles of superfluity are diminished, prices will only rise in
-proportion to the eagerness to buy, that is, to the competition, not to
-the deficiency. On the other hand, as to coin or money,
-
-Increase the money, nothing can be concluded as to prices, because it is
-not certain, that people will increase their expences in proportion to
-their wealth; and although they should, the moment their additional
-demand has the effect of producing a sufficient supply, prices will
-return to the old standard.
-
-But diminish the quantity of specie _employed in circulation_, you both
-retard this, and hurt the industrious; because we suppose the former
-quantity exactly sufficient to preserve both in the just proportion to
-the desires and wants of the inhabitants.
-
-These are but a few of the numberless modifications necessary to be
-applied to this general rule; and I hope what I have said, will justify
-the observation I have made on the whole doctrine; to wit, that it is
-much more specious than solid, in every one of its three branches.
-
-Let me just propose one question more upon this subject, and then I
-shall conclude.
-
-Suppose the specie of Europe to continue increasing in quantity every
-year, until it amounts to ten times the present quantity, would prices
-rise in proportion?
-
-I answer, that such an augmentation might happen, without the smallest
-alteration upon prices, or that it might occasion a very great one,
-according to circumstances. If industry increases to ten times what it
-is at present, that is to say, were the produce of it increased to ten
-times its present value, according to the actual standard of prices, the
-value of every manufacture and produce might remain without alteration.
-This supposition is possible; because no man can tell to what extent
-demand may carry industry. If, on the other hand, the scale of demand
-could be supposed to preponderate, so as to draw all the wealth into
-circulation, without having the effect of augmenting the supply (which I
-take to be impossible) then prices would rise to ten times the present
-standard, at least in many articles.
-
-This solution is entirely consistent both with Mr. Hume’s principle and
-mine; because nothing is so easy in an hypothesis, as to establish
-proportions between things, which in themselves are beyond all the
-powers of computation.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXIX.
- _Circulation with foreign Nations, the same thing as the Balance of
- Trade._
-
-
-We have endeavoured to shew in a former chapter, how the circulation of
-money, given in exchange for consumable commodities, produces a
-vibration in the balance of domestic wealth: we are now to apply the
-same principles to the circulation of foreign trade; in order to find
-out, if there can really be such a thing as a balance upon it, which may
-enrich one country, and impoverish another.
-
-It has been said, that when money is given for a consumable commodity,
-the person who gets it acquires a balance in his favour, so soon as he
-with whom he has exchanged, has begun to consume.
-
-That if two consumable commodities are exchanged, the balance comes to a
-level, when both are consumed. That it is only the wealth which is found
-in circulation, which can change its balance, and the remainder must be
-found locked up, made into plate, or employed in foreign trade. And it
-has been observed, that the quantity of money found in circulation, is
-ever in proportion to the sale of the produce of industry and
-manufactures; and that when the quantity of metals is not sufficient to
-carry on a circulation, proportioned to the demands of those who have
-any real equivalent to give, that symbolical money may be made to fill
-up the void, when the interest of the state comes to require it.
-
-We have also laid it down as a kind of general rule, that while luxury
-only tends to keep up demand to the reasonable proportion of power and
-inclination in the industrious part of a people to supply it, that then
-it is advantageous to a nation; and that so soon as it begins to make
-the scale of home-demand preponderate, by forming a competition among
-the natives, to consume what strangers seek for, that then it is
-hurtful, and has an evident tendency to root out foreign trade. These
-principles are all analogous to one another, and should be retained
-while we examine the question before us.
-
-I must still add, that the fluctuation of the balance of wealth is
-constantly inclining in favour of the industrious, and against the idle
-consumer. This however admits of a restriction, viz. The industrious
-must be supposed to be frugal; and the idle, extravagant. For if the
-industrious man consumes the produce of his industry, he will only have
-laboured to increase his consumption, not his wealth: and if the idle
-person, by his frugality, keeps within the bounds of his yearly income,
-he will thereby repair every disadvantage incurred by his sloth, the
-balance then will stand even between them; the industry in one scale,
-and the fund already provided in the other, will keep both parties on a
-level as before.
-
-In order, therefore, to make the balance of domestic wealth turn in
-favour of a poor man, he must be both industrious and frugal.
-
-Now let us apply these principles to a whole nation, considered as an
-individual in the great society of mankind. A private person who
-conducts his affairs with prudence, must either be in a way of growing
-richer by his industry, or of spending his income with oeconomy and
-discretion: so I must suppose a nation which is well governed, either to
-be growing rich by foreign trade, or at least in a state of not becoming
-poorer by it.
-
-It is the duty of every statesman to watch over the conduct of those who
-hold the foreign correspondence, as it is the duty of the master of a
-family to watch over those he sends to market.
-
-I find it is the opinion of the learned Mr. Hume, that there is no such
-thing as a balance of trade, that money over all the world is like a
-fluid, which must ever be upon a level, and that so soon as in any
-nation that level is destroyed by any accident, while the nation
-preserves the number of its inhabitants, and its industry, the wealth
-must return to a level as before.
-
-To prove this, he supposes four fifths of all the money in Great Britain
-annihilated in one night, the consequence of which he imagines would be,
-that all labour and commodities would sink in their price, and that
-foreign markets would be thereby entirely supplied by that industrious
-people, who would immediately begin to draw back such a proportion of
-wealth, as would put them again upon a level with their neighbours.
-
-This reasoning is consistent with the principles we have examined, and
-humbly rejected in the preceding chapter; both stand upon the same
-foundation, and lead to a chain of consequences totally different from
-the whole plan of this inquiry.
-
-My intention is not so much to refute the opinions of others, as briefly
-to pass them in review. General propositions, such as those we have been
-treating of, are only true or false, according as they are understood to
-be accompanied with certain restrictions, applications, and limitations:
-I shall therefore say nothing as to the proposition itself, but only
-examine how far the example he has taken of the sudden annihilation of a
-great proportion of a nation’s wealth, can naturally be followed by the
-consequences he supposes.
-
-For this purpose, let me suggest another consequence (different from
-that of the author, and flowing from the doctrine we have established)
-which possibly might happen, upon the annihilation of four fifths of all
-the money in Great Britain. I shall take no notice of the effects which
-so sudden a revolution might occasion; these have not been attended to
-by the author, and therefore I shall consider them as out of the
-question. I suppose the event to have happened, prices to have been
-reduced, and every immediate inconvenience to have been prevented. My
-only inquiry shall be directed towards the unavoidable consequences of
-such a revolution, as to foreign trade, as to drawing back the money
-annihilated, and as to the preserving the same number of inhabitants,
-and the same degree of industry as before. If I can shew, that the event
-alone of annihilating the specie, and reducing prices in proportion,
-(which I shall allow to be the consequence of it) will have the effect
-of annihilating both industry and the industrious, it cannot afterwards
-be insisted on, that the revolution can have the effect of drawing back
-a proportional part of the general wealth of Europe: because the
-preservation of the industrious is considered as the requisite for this
-purpose.
-
-Here then is the consequence, which, in my humble opinion, would very
-probably happen upon so extraordinary an emergency; and I flatter myself
-that my reader has already anticipated my decision.
-
-The inhabitants of Great Britain, who, upon such an occasion, would be
-found in possession of all the exportable necessaries of life, and of
-many other kinds of goods demanded in foreign markets, instead of
-selling them to their poor countrymen, for a price proportioned to our
-author’s tariff, and to the diminution of the specie, which he takes to
-be the representation of them, would export them to France, to Holland,
-or to any other country where they could get the best price, and the
-inhabitants of Britain would starve.
-
-If it be replied, that the exportation would not be allowed. I answer,
-that such a prohibition would be highly seasonable; but quite contrary
-to the principle of laying trade open, and impossible to be effectual,
-as that author justly observes, when he says, “Can one imagine, that all
-commodities could be sold in France, for a tenth of the price they would
-yield on the other side of the Pyrenees, without finding their way
-thither, and drawing from that immense treasure?” Suppose this phrase to
-run thus. Can any one imagine, that provisions could be sold in Britain,
-for a fourth part of the price they would yield on the other side of the
-water, without finding their way thither, and drawing from that immense
-treasure? This is entirely consistent with our principles, and ruins the
-whole of Mr. Hume’s former supposition: because the exportation of them
-would annihilate the inhabitants.
-
-From this I conclude, that a nation, though industrious and populous,
-may reduce itself to poverty in the midst of wealthy neighbours, as a
-private person, though rich, may reduce himself to want, in the midst of
-the amusements and luxury of London or of Paris. And that both the one
-and the other, by following a different conduct, may amass great sums of
-wealth, far above the proportion of it among their neighbours.
-
-This is not a matter of long discussion. It is not by the importation of
-foreign commodities, and by the exportation of gold and silver, that a
-nation becomes poor; it is by consuming those commodities when imported.
-The moment the consumption begins, the balance turns; consequently, it
-is evidently against the principles which we now examine, either to sell
-at home, or destroy confiscated goods. The only way of repairing the
-damage done by such frauds, is to export the merchandize, and by selling
-them cheap in other countries, to hurt the trade of the country which
-first had furnished them. From this also we may conclude, that those
-nations which trade to India, by sending out gold and silver, for a
-return in superfluities of the most consumable nature, the consumption
-of which they prohibit at home, do not in effect spend their own specie,
-but that of their neighbours who purchase the returns of it for their
-own consumption. Consequently, a nation may become immensely rich by the
-constant exportation of her specie, and importation of all sorts of
-consumable commodities. But she would do well to beware of this trade,
-when her inhabitants have taken a luxurious turn, lest she should come
-to resemble the drunkard who commenced wine merchant, in order to make
-excellent chear in wine with all his friends who came to see him; or the
-millener, who took it into her head to wear the fine laces she used to
-make up for her customers.
-
-If a rich nation, where luxury is carried to the highest pitch, where a
-desire of gain serves as a spur to industry, where all the poor are at
-work, in order to turn the balance of domestic wealth in their favour,
-if such a nation, I say, is found to consume not only the whole work of
-the inhabitants, but even that of other countries, it must have a
-balance of trade against it, equivalent to the foreign consumption; and
-this must be paid for in specie, or in an annual interest, to the
-diminution of the former capital. Let this trade continue long, they
-will not only come at the end of their metals, but they may even succeed
-in exporting their lands. This last appears a paradox, and yet it is no
-uncommon thing. The Corsicans have exported, that is sold, the best part
-of their island to Genoa; and now, after having spent the price in
-wearing damask and velvet, they want to bring it back, by confiscating
-the property of the Genoese, who have both paid for the island, and
-drawn back the price of it by the balance of their trade against these
-islanders. It were to be wished that Corsica alone afforded an example
-of this kind.
-
-Is it not, therefore, the duty of a statesman to prevent the consumption
-of foreign produce? If tapestry or other elegant furniture, such as is
-seen in a certain great capital in Europe, were allowed to be imported
-into a neighbouring nation, who doubts but this article would carry
-money out of that nation?
-
-It may be answered, that as much elegance of another kind may be sent in
-return. True; and it would be very lucky if this could be the case; but
-then you must suppose an equality of elegance in both countries, and
-farther, you must suppose a reciprocal taste for the respective species
-of elegance. Now the taste of one country may, indeed, be common to
-both; but it may happen that the taste of the one may not be that of the
-other, though nothing inferior, perhaps, in the opinion of a third
-party. And the difference may proceed from this; that the young people
-of one country travel into the other, where the inhabitants stay at
-home: a circumstance which would prove very prejudicial to the country
-of the travellers, if a wise statesman did not, by seasonable
-prohibitions upon certain articles of foreign consumption, prevent the
-bad consequences of adopting a taste for what his subjects cannot
-produce.
-
-This furnishes a hint, that it might not be a bad maxim in a great
-monarchy, to have houses built in the capital for every foreign
-minister, where the general distribution of the apartments of each might
-be, as much as possible, analogous to the taste of the country for whose
-minister it is calculated: but as to the furniture, to have it made of
-the most elegant domestic manufactures easily exportable, nicely adapted
-also to the uses and fashions of every foreign country. Such a
-regulation could never fail of being highly acceptable, as it would
-prove a great saving to foreign ministers, and would insensibly give
-them a taste for the manufactures and luxury of the country they reside
-in. On the other hand, I would be so far from expecting a return of this
-civility, that I would recommend a set of furniture, as a gratification,
-to every minister sent abroad, who should regularly sell it off upon the
-expiration of his commission. Such an expence would not cost one penny
-to the nation, and would be a means of captivating unwary strangers, who
-might be thereby made to pay dearly for such marks of politeness and
-civility. I return.
-
-Without being expert in the computation of exports and imports, or very
-accurate in combining the different courses of exchange between the
-different cities of Europe, a statesman may lay it down as a maxim, that
-whatever foreign commodity, of whatsoever kind it be, is found to be
-consumed within the nation he governs, so far the balance of trade is
-against her; and that so far as any commodity produced either by the
-soil, or labour of the inhabitants, is consumed by foreigners, so far
-the balance is for her.
-
-A nation may in some measure be compared to a country gentleman, who
-lives upon his land. This I suppose to be his all. From it he draws
-directly his nourishment, perhaps his clothes are worked up in his
-family. If he be so very frugal as never to go to market for any thing,
-any spare produce which he can sell, is clear money in his purse. If he
-indulges now and then in a bottle of wine, which his farm does not
-produce, he must go to market with his purse in his hand; and so soon as
-his bottle is out, I think he is effectually so much poorer than he was
-before. If he goes on, and increases his consumption of such things as
-he is obliged to buy, he will run out the money he had in his purse, and
-be reduced to the simple production of his farm. If then this country
-gentleman be poorer, certainly some body is richer; and as it is no body
-in his family, it must be some of his neighbours.
-
-Just so a nation which has no occasion to have recourse to foreign
-markets, in order to supply her own consumption, must certainly grow
-rich in proportion to her exportation.
-
-These riches again will not circulate at home, in proportion to the
-domestic consumption of natural produce and manufactures, but in
-proportion to the alienation of them for money: the surpluswealth will
-stagnate in one way or other, in the hands of the money gatherers, who
-are the small consumers.
-
-While there is found a sufficient quantity of money for carrying on
-reciprocal alienations; those money gatherers will not be able to employ
-their stagnated wealth within the nation; but so soon as this gathering
-has the effect of diminishing the specie, below the proportion found
-necessary to carry on the circulation, it will begin to be lent out, and
-so return to circulate for a time, until by the operation of the same
-causes it will fall back into its former repositories.
-
-Should it be here objected, that upon the augmentation of a nation’s
-riches, no money can stagnate; because _prices rising in proportion to
-the augmentation of them_, all the additional wealth must be thrown into
-circulation: surely both reason and experience must point out the
-weakness of such an objection.
-
-While a favourable balance, therefore, is preserved upon foreign trade,
-a nation grows richer daily; and still prices remain regulated as
-before, by the complicated operations of demand and competition; and
-when one nation is grown richer, others must be growing poorer: this is
-an example of a favourable balance of trade.
-
-When this superfluity of riches is only profited of by the luxurious
-individuals, instead of being turned to profit by the state itself, with
-a view to secure the advantages thereby acquired, then the balance takes
-a contrary turn: this is the case whenever foreign importations for
-consumption, are either permitted as a gratification to the luxurious
-desires of the wealthy, or because of the rise in the price of goods at
-home, in consequence of domestic competition. If it be permitted purely
-in favour of the first, it marks a levity and want of attention unworthy
-of a statesman: if on account of the second, it shews either an
-ignorance of the real consequences of so temporary an expedient, or a
-disregard for the welfare of the lower classes of the people.
-
-Every augmentation of prices at home, must be a necessary consequence of
-many domestic circumstances, and must be removed by correcting them, as
-has been, I think, made clear. But let it be supposed, that from the
-augmentation of wealth _alone_, manufactures can no more produce work so
-cheap as other nations; I think that both in humanity and prudence, a
-people should submit to the inconvenience of paying dearer. In humanity,
-because by the introduction of foreign manufactures, you starve those
-very people, who by their labour have enriched you: in prudence, because
-by opening your ports to such importation you deliberately throw away
-that superiority of riches you have been at so much pains to acquire.
-
-I freely grant, that particular people do not regulate either their
-expence or their schemes of getting money, with a view to promote the
-public good. One who has a coat to buy, will be very glad to find a
-piece of foreign manufacture at a cheap rate; another will wish to
-smuggle a piece of goods on which there is a high duty. But the question
-is, whether a statesman is to allow this foreign consumption? I think it
-is much the same question, as if it were asked, whether the master of a
-family should, in good oeconomy, allow his servants to invite their
-friends to drink in his cellar, instead of carrying them to a public
-house.
-
-But suppose it said, that “by laying trade open, you are sure that
-wealth will naturally come to a balance, in all countries, and that all
-fears of a wrong balance of trade are only the effect of a gloomy
-imagination.” See Mr. Hume’s _Political Discourses_, Sect. v.
-
-Several answers may be made to this objection. The first, that it is in
-order to prevent this kind of balance, that every nation gives
-themselves disquiet: for by balance here, is understood an equality of
-wealth; and it is rich nations only who are anxious, lest they should be
-brought to such an equality. In the question here before us, it is the
-loss of the superiority which is understood by a balance turning against
-a nation. If, therefore, it be the interest of a nation, poor in respect
-of its neighbours, to have trade laid open, that wealth may, like a
-fluid, come to an equilibrium; I am sure it is the interest of a rich
-nation, to cut off the communication of hurtful trade, by such
-impediments as restrictions, duties, and prohibitions, upon importation;
-that thereby, as by dykes, its wealth may be kept _above_ the level of
-the surrounding element.
-
-Another answer is, that laying trade open would not have the effect
-proposed; because it would destroy industry in some countries, at least,
-if not every where. A manufacture must be very solidly established
-indeed, not to suffer any prejudice by a permission to import the like
-commodities from other countries. The very nature of luxury is such,
-that it prompts people often to consume, from caprice and novelty, what
-is really inferior to home-production. It may be answered, that this
-argument cuts two ways: for if a nation from caprice consumes foreign
-commodities, why may not other nations from caprice likewise, take off
-those which are left on hand? This reasoning may appear good, in a
-theory which does not take in every political consideration. But a poor
-manufacturer who cannot find work, because the branch he works in is
-supplied from abroad, cannot live till the caprice of foreigners makes
-them demand his labour. If a certain number of inhabitants be employed
-in a necessary branch of consumption, there must be a _certain_ demand
-preserved for it; and whatever can render this precarious, will ruin the
-undertaking, and those employed in it.
-
-A third answer is, that any nation who would open its ports to all
-manner of foreign importation, without being assured of a reciprocal
-permission from all its neighbours, would, I think, very soon be ruined;
-and if this be true, it is a proof that a balance of trade is a possible
-supposition, and that proper restrictions upon importation may turn to
-the advantage of a state.
-
-In order to promote industry, a statesman must act, as well as permit
-and protect. Could ever the woollen manufacture have been introduced
-into France, from the consideration of the great advantage England had
-drawn from it, if the King had not undertaken the support of it, by
-granting many privileges to the undertakers, and by laying strict
-prohibitions on all foreign cloths? Is there any other way of
-establishing a new manufacture any where?
-
-Laying, therefore, trade quite open would have this effect, it would
-destroy at first, at least, all the luxurious arts; consequently, it
-would diminish consumption; consequently, diminish the quantity of
-circulating cash; consequently, it would promote hoarding; and
-consequently, would bring on poverty in all the _states_ of Europe.
-Nothing, I imagine, but an universal monarchy, governed by the same
-laws, and administred according to one plan well concerted, can be
-compatible with an universally open trade. While there are different
-states, there must be different interests; and when no one statesman is
-found at the head of these interests, there can be no such thing as a
-common good; and when there is no common good, every interest must be
-considered separately. But as this scheme of laying trade quite open, is
-not a thing likely to happen, we may save ourselves the trouble of
-inquiring more particularly into what might be its consequences; it is
-enough to observe, that they must, in their nature, be exceedingly
-complex, and if we have mentioned some of them, it has only been to
-apply principles, and shew how consequences _may_ follow one another: to
-foretel what _must_ follow is exceedingly difficult, if not impossible.
-
-In discoursing of the balance of trade, I have hitherto considered it
-only so far as the specie of a country is augmented by it. In the
-subsequent book, when we shall have occasion to bring this subject once
-more upon the carpet, I shall shew how a balance may be extremely
-favourable without augmenting the mass of the precious metals; to wit,
-by providing subsistence for an additional number of inhabitants; by
-increasing the quantity of shipping, which is an article of wealth; by
-constituting all other nations debtors to it; by the importation of many
-durable commodities, which may be considered also as articles of wealth;
-as a well furnished house, a well stored cellar, an ample wardrobe, and
-a fine stable of horses, are articles which enhance the value of the
-inheritance of a landed man.
-
-Then we shall have occasion to shew how industry heightens the permanent
-value of a nation, as agriculture increases its annual produce.
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXX.
- _Miscellaneous Questions and Observations relative to Trade and
- Industry._
-
-
-It is now time to draw to a conclusion of this book. The subject of
-trade and industry is inexhaustible, if considered in all its branches,
-and traced through every consequence. My intention has been to inquire
-into the original principles which influence general operations, and
-which, less or more, enter into every combination. I have represented
-trade in its infancy, manhood, and old age; and have endeavoured to
-prescribe a general regimen of health for every period. It is sufficient
-to be thoroughly master of the principles, to be able to apply them to
-particular cases, providing every circumstance be exactly known.
-
-The intention of this chapter, is, to review some parts of our subject,
-which I think have not received all the light necessary to be thrown
-upon them, to suggest some remarkable differences between antient and
-modern oeconomy, with regard to circulation and industry; and, in
-general, to lay certain circumstances together, which may point out the
-spirit of modern times, from which we are endeavouring to extract a set
-of consistent principles. Every thing which points out relations is
-useful; because we know nothing, but through this channel. Now certain
-relations are too frequently taken for granted, and nothing is more
-essential in political reasonings, than to point them out clearly, to
-proceed by the shortest steps, and still to keep experience and matter
-of fact before our eyes, when we draw a conclusion from a general
-proposition. Let the conclusion appear ever so just, if, when compared
-with experience, a disagreement appears, it is ten to one we have
-overlooked some circumstance, which ought to have entred into the
-combination.
-
-To illustrate this, let me cite a mistake of my own, which I purposely
-left uncorrected, in the second chapter of the first book, where I very
-confidently declare, that a statesman, who, upon certain occasions,
-which seem favourable for raising great sums upon a people, increases
-taxes only in proportion to the interest of the money borrowed, must be
-shortsighted and regardless of futurity. This, I remember, appeared to
-me at the time I wrote, so clear and evident, that I thought I ran no
-risk in making it enter into a preliminary chapter. But when I came to
-look a little more particularly into the matter, I found I had been
-grosly mistaken; as I hope to shew evidently in its proper place. Had
-every such mistake been treated with the same indulgence, I should have
-been more employed in the correction of my own blunders, than in the
-prosecution of my subject. People who reason with tolerable exactness on
-such subjects, generally fall into mistakes, from the generality of
-their propositions. These may commonly be true enough, within the
-compass of the author’s combinations at the time, and yet may not be
-true in every other case. From which I infer, that every one of my
-readers, who can form combinations more extensive than mine, will find
-sufficient matter for criticism in every page of this inquiry. So much
-the better: it is by such criticisms and discussions, that particular
-branches of knowledge are brought to the certainty of science.
-
-The more simple any plan of political oeconomy is, the more it is easy
-to govern by general rules; the more complex it becomes, the more it is
-necessary for a statesman to enter into combinations. But when general
-rules have been long established, they gain such an authority over the
-minds of a people, that any deviation from them appears like heresy in
-religion: and how seldom does it happen, that a people is blessed with a
-governor, who has both penetration to discover, art to persuade, and
-power to execute a plan adapted to every combination of circumstances.
-
-No change can happen in a state, but what is advantageous to some class
-or other, and when the public good requires that a stop should be put to
-such advantages, numbers of discontented people will always be found.
-Circumstances, therefore, ought to be well weighed before new plans of
-administration are entred upon; and when once adopted, those who pretend
-to criticise, must suppose themselves provided with superior talents and
-better informations as to every circumstance, than the author of the
-innovation. For this reason, there is little danger in censuring a
-statesman’s opinion, when he delivers it; but a great deal in finding
-fault with his conduct, when his motives are not known.
-
-In the former chapters, we have been treating of the nature and
-consequences of circulation, the effects of augmentations and
-diminutions of specie, and the doctrine of Mr. Hume concerning the
-balance of trade. The perspicuity with which this author writes, renders
-his ideas easy to conceive; and when people understand one another, most
-disputes are soon at an end.
-
-In order, therefore, to throw a little more light upon the nature of the
-balance of trade between nations, let me examine the following questions
-while we have the subject of the last chapter fresh in our memory.
-
-QUEST. 1. Can any judgment be formed concerning the state of the balance
-of trade of a nation, barely from the quantity of specie that is found
-in it?
-
-I answer in the negative. A great proportion of all the specie of
-Europe, may be found in a country against which the balance of trade has
-stood regularly for many years. An inconsiderable proportion of it may
-be found in another, which has had it as regularly in its favour for the
-same time.
-
-The balance upon every article of trade, may be favourable to a nation
-which squanders away more than the returns of it, upon foreign wars.
-
-The balance of every article of trade, may be against a country which
-receives more than all the loss incurred, either from her mines, from
-countries tributary to her, or who willingly furnish subsidies upon many
-political considerations.
-
-Besides these varieties, there are still other combinations, relative to
-the specie itself. The money found in a country, may either be said to
-belong _absolutely_ to the country, when neither the state itself, or
-the particular people of it, are in debt to foreigners; or only so _by
-virtue of a loan_. Now, whether it is borrowed or not, the property of
-it belongs to the country; but the difference consists in this, that
-when it is borrowed, the acquisition of the metals adds nothing to the
-national patrimony, that is to say, there is no acquisition of wealth
-thereby made; but when it is gained by industry, the money adds to the
-real value of the country, in consequence of the principles laid down in
-the 26th chapter.
-
-May not a nation then, having very little gold and silver, open a
-subscription for millions, at so much _per cent_? Will not strangers
-lend to her; when her own subjects cannot? May she not yearly, by paying
-away the interest of the money borrowed, and by a heavy balance of trade
-against her, be constantly diminishing her specie, and yet by new
-contracts, keep up, and even increase the mass of the circulating value,
-to such a degree, as to be possessed of a greater proportion of specie
-than any of her neighbours? Farther,
-
-Is it not certain, that all nations will endeavour to throw their ready
-money, not necessary for their own circulation, into that country where
-the interest of money is high with respect to their own, and where
-consequently the value of property in land is low; since they may either
-draw a high interest from it, or make the acquisition of solid property?
-Forbidding therefore the acquisition of solid property to strangers, is,
-in effect, a prohibition upon the gratuitous importation of specie. I
-allow there may be examples of people who make such purchases, with a
-view to draw the rents of the lands bought, out of the country; but
-whatever be the intention at the time of purchase, such however is the
-effect of an established fortune in a country, that, sooner or later, it
-draws the proprietor to it; and when this does not happen, a subsequent
-alienation commonly takes place.
-
-Were the purchase, therefore, of lands permitted universally, and were
-it established, that property in land, to a certain value, should give a
-right to naturalization, no doubt large sums would be brought into those
-countries, where lands are found cheapest; and as no exportable
-commodity is given in return, the specie of such countries might mark
-the quantity of lands sold, as well as that of merchandize exported. For
-want of a sufficient extension of these and many other combinations,
-which it would be easy to contrive, Mr. Belloni, in his _Dissertation
-upon Commerce_, Chap. I. Sect. 5. falls into several mistakes, when he
-judges of the exportation of commodities of a particular country, by the
-quantities of money found in it.
-
-_Essendo adunque da ciò venuto_ (says he) _che l’abondanza del danaro,
-ovunque si ritrovi, significa l’abodanza stessa delle cose, delle quali
-egli é misura: perciò diviziosi meritamente sono stati detti quegli
-uomini, e ricco altersi quel regno, dove si ritrova gran copia di
-danaro. Dal altro canto poi, se si considera lo stato di un regno, ed il
-danaro, che è dentro di esso, tenendo sempre salda l’essenza della
-moneta (che altro non sia, che misura di cose, e prezzo, che viene in
-compenso di mercanzie) ovunque di essa vedrasi affluenza, ognuno ben
-vede, doversi subito necessariamente arguire, un gran traffico di quel
-dominio, con esito di merci, in uso degli esteri, e all’incontro ovunque
-questa venga a mancare, doversene dedurre grande introito di merci, che
-sieno subentrate nel luogo della moneta, e che l’abbiano fatta uscire._
-
-These consequences are only just so far as money comes into, or goes out
-of a country, as the price of merchandize exported or imported. But how
-much money has not this author himself drawn into Rome from England, for
-the exportation of nothing but the bills of travellers?
-
-On the other hand, may not a country, which is actually in possession of
-great quantities of gold and silver, call in these metals, and
-circulate, in their place, a symbolical money? May not a nation then, as
-well as a private person, employ this specie in a profitable foreign
-trade, and gain daily by it? May she not, after some time, withdraw her
-stock, by calling in her debts? And may she not also call in her paper,
-and remain with an additional acquisition of specie in her pocket?
-Consequently, during the circulation of the paper, no judgment can be
-formed as to the balance of her trade, by examining the state of her
-specie; because I can suppose that at this time every shilling of it may
-be in the hands of strangers. Consequently, the richest nation in Europe
-may be the poorest in circulating specie.
-
-“The writings of Mr. Gee (says Mr. Hume, in his _Political Discourse
-upon the Balance of Trade_) struck all the nation with a pannic fear, by
-shewing from a long enumeration of particulars, that the balance
-inclined so much against us, and for so considerable sums, that in the
-space of five or six years, there would not remain one shilling in
-England. But happily twenty years are elapsed since, we have supported a
-long and expensive foreign war, and nevertheless, it is commonly
-believed, that money is at present as plentiful in the kingdom as ever.”
-I quote from the French translation.
-
-Mr. Gee was in the wrong to conclude, that the balance of trade would
-have the effect of carrying off the coin: and Mr. Hume has been misled
-by this mistake, to conclude, that Mr. Gee’s calculations were false. I
-know nothing as to the matter of fact; nor whether Mr. Gee was a good or
-a bad judge of the question he treated; but from what has been said, I
-hope it appears, that the state of the coin in England, at the time Mr.
-Hume wrote, was no proof on either side.
-
-To judge of the balance of trade is one thing; to judge of the wealth of
-a nation as to specie is another. England may greatly increase her
-specie by her trade, and greatly diminish it by her wars: perhaps this
-may be the fact. She may also, at certain times, have a balance of trade
-against her; and great sums laid out in foreign wars, may be the means
-of making it return in her favour. Should that nation begin to pay off
-her debts to strangers, in ready coin, might she not soon diminish,
-perhaps exhaust, the specie she is now possessed of; yet surely none
-ever became poorer by paying off their debts. Nothing is so easy as to
-have specie, when one has solid property to pledge for it; and nothing
-can be worse judged, than to purchase specie from strangers, at the
-expence of paying an interest for it, when they can contrive a
-circulating value in paper money, representing the solid value which
-must have been pledged to strangers for the loan of their metals.
-
-But still it may be asked, how it happens, that notwithstanding of the
-most unfavourable balance of trade, no nation is ever found to be
-entirely drained of her specie; and since we have proved, that the
-specie of a country may be diminished by a disadvantageous trade, what
-are the principles which prevent the total dissipation of it?
-
-This is a very curious question, and opens a door to a multitude of new
-ideas, which will furnish abundant matter of speculation, when we come
-to treat more directly of credit. I shall here examine it in general,
-only for the sake of applying the principles we have laid down.
-
-I. It may be said, that as common prudence prevents a private person
-from spending to his last shilling; so the like prudence commonly
-engages a people to put a stop to trade, before it has had time totally
-to drain them. Although most people drink wine, there is no reason why
-every body should be drunk.
-
-II. Nothing is so complicated as the balance of trade, considered among
-many nations. The general wealth circulates from one to another, as the
-money which the farmer gives the landlord circulates back to the farmer.
-In the number of hands through which the money passes, some are of the
-class of the luxurious, some of the frugal; the first represents those
-nations who lose by the balance, the latter those who gain. But the most
-industrious nations of all, and those who, considered abstractedly from
-extraordinary accidents, appear in the way to swallow up the wealth of
-the rest, are, by the means of such accidents, made liable to terrible
-restitutions. How many millions, for example, has England restored to
-the continent, in consequence of her wars and subsidies? She then lays a
-foundation for many more years of favourable balance, and accordingly we
-see it return to her, as the money which the state spends within the
-nation, returns into the exchequer at the end of the year.
-
-III. It may be asked, how it happens that no nation has ever spent to
-its last farthing, as many an individual has done? I answer, that I am
-far from believing that this has never happened; nay, I believe there is
-nothing more frequent or familiar than this very case, providing the
-riches of a country be here supposed to mean no more than the specie
-_absolutely_ belonging to herself, not borrowed from other nations.
-
-I have said above, that the acquisition of money by industry, increased
-the real value of a country, as much as the addition of a portion of
-territory: now what should hinder a people from spending their ready
-money, and, at the same time, preserving their land? Because a young
-gentleman, whose father has left him a fine estate in land, and ten
-thousand pounds in ready money, has spent the ten thousand pounds, does
-it follow, that he is without a shilling? Upon this view of the
-question, it will, I believe, be granted, that Dr. Swift’s idea that all
-the specie of Ireland would in a short time be exported, in consequence
-of an unfavourable balance of trade, is very far from being chimerical,
-and might be exactly true; although at this time there be six times more
-in circulation than ever; just as a person who is running through his
-fortune, has commonly more money in his hands than his father used to
-have, when he was acquiring it. Let Ireland pay her debts to England,
-and then count her specie. Let England pay her’s to all the world, and
-then weigh her gold and silver. Suppose that on summing up the accounts,
-there is not found one shilling in either country, is this any proof of
-their being undone? By no means: _coin is one article of our wealth, but
-never can be the measure of it_.
-
-I know little of the state of Ireland; but if it be true, that paper
-money is increasing daily in that country, it is, I suppose, because the
-specie is daily exported to England, as the returns of estates belonging
-to people who reside there, and that the Irish, instead of buying it
-back again for their own use in circulation, augment their paper, in
-proportion to the progress of their industry; and only buy such
-quantities of specie as are necessary for paying the balance of their
-trade. Now by buying specie, I do not suppose, that they bring any over
-to Ireland, in order to send it back to England; but that they send over
-goods to the value, which the English merchants pay in specie, or in
-English paper, to those who are creditors upon Ireland, for the value of
-their rents, &c.
-
-Suppose then, for a farther illustration of some principles, that all
-the lands of Ireland belonged to Englishmen residing in their own
-country, and annually drawing from Ireland the income belonging to them,
-what would the consequence be? As long as this portion of the produce of
-lands, which goes for rent, (and which, as we have said, is the fund
-provided for the subsistence of the free hands who purchase their own
-necessaries) could be bought and consumed by the Irish themselves, that
-is, in other words, while in Ireland there was a demand for this portion
-of the fruits, it would be paid for, either in coin, to the diminution
-of their specie, or in something which might be converted into money;
-that is, by the produce of their industry, and thus, by the means of
-trade, would come into the hands of the English proprietors, either in
-specie, or in any other form they judged proper.
-
-That so soon as the demand for this portion of fruits came to fail, for
-want of money, or industry, in Ireland to purchase it, what remained on
-hand would be sent over to England in kind; or by the way of trade, be
-made to circulate with other nations (in beef, butter, tallow, &c.) who
-would give silver and gold for it, to the proprietors of the Irish
-lands. By such a diminution of demand in the country, for the fruits of
-the earth, the depopulation of Ireland would be implied; because they
-who consumed them formerly, consume them no more; that is to say, they
-either died, or left the country.
-
-To conclude, a great part of the value of a country is its produce and
-manufactures; but it does not follow, as Mr. Belloni asserts, that these
-should as necessarily draw a proportional sum of the gold and silver of
-Europe into that country, as a shoal of small fishes draws water fowl,
-or as charity draws the poor, or as beauty draws admiration.
-
-QUEST. 2. Can no rule be found to judge of the balance of trade from the
-state of specie, or at least to perceive the effects of that balance in
-augmenting or diminishing the mass of riches?
-
-Could it be supposed that specie never circulated between nations, but
-in the way of trade, and in exchange for exportable commodities, this
-would be a rule.
-
-In nations where the earth produces neither gold or silver, and where
-these metals are imported as the returns of industry only, the balance
-in their favour, from the introduction of specie, to this day, would be
-measured by the quantity of it which they possess. Here Mr. Belloni’s
-opinion is just.
-
-Farther, the consumption made by any nation for the same term of years,
-is equal to the whole natural produce and labour of the inhabitants for
-that time, _minus_ the quantity of such produce and labour, as is, or
-has been equal in value to the actual national specie.
-
-On the other hand, in nations where gold and silver are produced by the
-earth, the balance of trade against them, from the time these metals
-became the object of trade, to this day, may be estimated by the
-quantity of them which has been exported.
-
-And farther, the consumption made by such nations, for the same term of
-years, is equal to the whole natural produce and labour of the
-inhabitants for that time, _plus_ the quantity of such produce and
-labour, as is, or has been equal to the quantity of these metals
-exported.
-
-These positions are by much too general to be laid down as principles,
-because trade is not concerned in every acquisition or alienation of
-specie; but they may serve, in the mean time, to illustrate the doctrine
-we have been considering, and even in many cases may be found pretty
-exact. For example,
-
-If it be true, that in any nation of Europe, there be now just as much
-silver and gold as there was ten years ago, and if that nation during
-this period, has supported, without borrowing from strangers, an
-expensive war which may have cost it, I suppose, five millions, it is
-certain, that during this period, the home consumption must have been
-the value of five millions less than the natural produce, labour, and
-industry of the inhabitants; which sum of five millions must have come
-from abroad, in return for a like value of the production, labour, &c.
-remaining over and above their own consumption.
-
-In this supposition, the national wealth (the metals) remains as before,
-the balance of it only is changed. How this change is performed, and
-what are its consequences, may be discovered by an application of the
-principles already laid down.
-
-QUEST. 3. What were the effects of riches before the introduction of
-trade and industry?
-
-I never can sufficiently recommend to my readers to compare
-circumstances, in the oeconomy of the antients, with that of modern
-times; because I see a multitude of new doctrines laid down, which, I
-think, never would have been broached, had such circumstances been
-properly attended to. I have endeavoured to shew, that the price of
-goods, but especially of articles of the first necessity, have little or
-no connection with the quantities of specie in a country. The slightest
-inspection into the state of circulation, in different ages, will
-fortify our reasoning: but the general taste of dissipation which is
-daily gaining ground, makes people now begin to imagine, that wealth and
-circulation are synonimous terms; whereas nothing is more contrary both
-to reason and matter of fact. A slight review of this matter, in
-different ages, will set it in a clearer light than a more abstract
-reasoning can.
-
-It is a question with me, whether the mines of Potosi and Brasil, have
-produced more riches to Spain and Portugal, within these two hundred
-years, than the treasures heaped up in Asia, Greece, and Egypt, after
-the death of Alexander, furnished to the Romans, during the two hundred
-years which followed the defeat of Perseus, and the conquest of
-Macedonia.
-
-From the treasures mentioned by all the historians who have writ of the
-conquest of those kingdoms by the Romans, I do not think I am far from
-truth, when I compare the treasures of the frugal Greeks to the mines of
-the new world.
-
-What effect, as to circulation, had the accumulation of these vast
-treasures? Not any to accelerate it, surely: and no person, the least
-conversant in antiquity, will pretend that the circulating specie in
-those times, bore as great a proportion to their treasures, as what is
-at present circulating among us, bears to the wealth of the most
-oeconomising Prince in Europe. If any one doubt of this particular, let
-him listen to Appian, who says, that the successors of Alexander, the
-possessors of those immense riches, lived with the greatest frugality.
-Those treasures were then, as I have said, a real addition to the value
-of their kingdoms; but had not the smallest influence upon prices. In
-those days of small circulation, the prices of every thing must have
-been vastly low, not from the great abundance of them, but because of
-the little demand; and as a proof of this, I cite the example of a
-country, which, within the space of fifty years, possessed in _specie_
-at one time, considerably beyond the worth of the land, houses, slaves,
-merchandize, natural produce, moveables, and ready money, at another.
-The example is mentioned by Mr. Hume, and I am surprized the consequence
-of it did not strike him. For if the money they possessed was greatly
-above the worth of all their property, moveable and immoveable, surely
-it never could be considered as a representation of their industry,
-which made so small a part of the whole. Athens possessed, before the
-Peloponesian war, a treasure of ten thousand talents; and fifty years
-afterwards, all Athens, in the several articles above specified, did not
-amount to the value of six thousand. Hume’s _Political Discourses upon
-the Balance of Trade_.
-
-These treasures were spent in the war, and they had been laid up for no
-other purpose. Therefore I was in the right, when I observed above,
-Chap. 22. that war in antient times, had the effect that industry has
-now: it was the only means of making wealth circulate. But peace
-producing a general stagnation of circulation, people returned to the
-antient simplicity of their manners, and the prices of subsistence
-remained on the former footing; because there was no increase of
-appetite, or rising of demand upon any necessary article. So much for
-the state of wealth during the days of frugality.
-
-The Romans subdued all those kingdoms of the Greeks, and drew their
-treasures to Rome. The republic went to destruction, and a succession of
-the most prodigal Princes ever known in history succeeded one another
-for about two hundred years. Those monstrous treasures were then thrown
-into circulation, and I must now give an idea of the effects produced by
-such a revolution.
-
-I have already observed (Chap. 28.) that in consequence of the great
-prodigality of those times, the prices of superfluities rose to a
-monstrous height; while those of necessaries kept excessively low. The
-fact is indisputable, and any one who inclines to satisfy himself
-farther, may look into that valuable collection of examples of antient
-luxury, wealth, and at the same time of simplicity, found in Mr.
-Wallace’s _Dissertation upon the Numbers of Mankind in antient and
-modern Times_, p. 132. et seq.
-
-But how is it to be accounted for, that the prices of superfluities
-should stand so high, while necessaries were so low? The reason is
-plain, from the principles we have laid down. The circulation of money
-had no resemblance to that of modern times: fortunes were made by
-corruption, fraud, concussion, rapine, and penury; not by trade and
-industry. Seneca amassed in four years 2,400,000 pounds sterling. An
-augur was worth 3 millions sterling. M. Antony owed on the Ides of
-March, 322,916 pounds sterling, and paid it before the calends of April.
-We know of no such circulation. Every revolution was violent: the
-powerful were rapacious and prodigal, the weak were poor and lived in
-the greatest simplicity: consequently, the objects of the desires of the
-rich were immensely dear; and the necessaries for the poor were
-excessively cheap. This is a confirmation of the principles we have laid
-down in Chap. 28. that the price of subsistence must ever be in
-proportion to the faculties of the numerous classes of those who buy:
-that the price of every thing must be in proportion to the demand made
-for it; and that in every case, where the supply can naturally increase
-in proportion to the demand, there must be a determined proportion
-between the price of such articles and that of subsistence. Now in the
-examples given by Mr. Wallace, of such articles as were found at
-monstrous prices, we only find such as could not be increased according
-to demand: here is the enumeration of them. Large asses brought from
-Spain, peacocks, fine doves, mullets, lampreys, peaches, large
-asparagus, purple, wool, jewels, carpets, _vestes Byssinæ_, slaves
-skilled in the finer arts, pictures, statues, books, and rewards to
-those who taught the sciences. By casting a glance upon the catalogue,
-we may easily perceive that the extraordinary price must have proceeded
-from the impossibility of augmenting the supply in proportion to the
-demand; not from the abundance of the money, which had no effect in
-raising the price of necessaries. The cheapness again of these, did not
-proceed from vast plenty; but because the price must have remained in
-proportion to the faculties of the numerous poor; and because the
-augmentation of the wealth of the rich never could increase their
-consumption of any necessary article. Had the Roman empire been governed
-with order and tranquility, this taste of luxury, by precipitating money
-into the hands of the numerous classes, would, in time, have wrought the
-effects of multiplying the number of the industrious, by purging the
-lands; consequently, of increasing the demand for vendible subsistence;
-consequently, of raising the price of it. And on the other hand, the
-adequate proportion between services and rewards given by the public,
-would have checked the other branch of circulation which produced those
-monstrous fortunes, to wit, rapine and corruption: and industry
-receiving a regular encouragement, every article of extraordinary demand
-for delicate aliments, birds, fishes, fruits, &c. would have been
-supplied with sufficient abundance; and consequently, would have fallen
-in its price. But when either despotism or slavery were the patrimonial
-inheritance of every one on coming into the world, we are not to expect
-to see the same principles operate, as in ages where the monarch and the
-peasant are born equally free to enjoy the provision made for them by
-their forefathers.
-
-I shall now come nearer home, and examine a very remarkable difference
-between the oeconomy in practice some hundred years ago, and that of the
-present time, with regard to the method of levying men and money.
-
-This change is a consequence of trade and industry, and as I have been
-preparing the way for the introduction of other matters which equally
-owe their existence to them, it may not be improper, in this last
-chapter, to point out the natural causes of this change in modern
-politics. When people consider effects only, without examining the
-causes which produce them, they commonly blame rashly, or fall into an
-idle admiration of fortune. It is only by tracing natural causes, that
-we come at the means of forming a solid judgment of the nature of every
-abuse, and of every advantage.
-
-The general taste for the extension of industry, is what has brought
-such loads of money into circulation; not the discovery of America. We
-read of treasures in antient times which appear to rival the wealth of
-modern Europe. Appian, as cited by Mr. Hume, mentions a treasure of the
-Kings of Egypt, of near two hundred millions sterling; and says, that
-all the successors of Alexander were nearly as rich, and fully as
-frugal. Frugality then is compatible with the greatest wealth. Therefore
-the wealth of America, has not been the cause of European refinement;
-but the extension of civil liberty has obliged the possessors of
-treasures, which in all ages have been coveted by man, to open their
-repositories, in order to procure the service of those who formerly made
-a branch of the property of the most wealthy. This is the foundation of
-trade and industry.
-
-Why, therefore, has trade and industry laid the foundation of taxes and
-standing armies, which appear so contrary to the one and the other?
-
-I answer shortly, that very little change has been made as to things
-themselves by that revolution; but with respect to the order of things,
-the difference is great. Trade and industry cannot flourish without
-method and regularity; taxes and standing armies are only a systematical
-execution of the old plan, for preserving the power, safety, and
-independence of the nations of Europe.
-
-Taxes are no more than the liquidation of those services which formerly
-were performed in kind. Standing armies are become necessary, that the
-call of the rich luxurious, who are insatiable in their demand for the
-service of the poor, may not be able to engross also the hands necessary
-for the defence of the state. Personal services were the taxes of former
-times. Let no man imagine, that ever any state could subsist without the
-contribution of its subjects. But a more authentic proof of this opinion
-is, that in the year 1443, while Charles the VIIth was engaged in the
-long war with the Kings of England, who disputed with him the monarchy
-of France, the services of the vassals of that kingdom (by the edict of
-Saumur of the 14th of September) were formally converted into the
-perpetual _Taille_; and this may be considered, as the foundation of the
-regular military force of the French nation. No body, in those days,
-imagined such an imposition to be oppressive or unjust: and if those who
-remain subject to it, appear under oppression at present, it is only
-because they continue in their antient situation. Personal services are
-the heaviest of all impositions.
-
-QUEST. 4. Why, therefore, are taxes so generally cried out against, why
-do they appear so new an invention, and why do people flatter
-themselves, that there is a possibility of putting an end to so general
-an oppression? I answer, because people commonly attend to words, and
-not to things. In former times, the great bulk of the inhabitants lived
-upon the lands, and were bound to personal service. This kind of
-imposition was familiar, general, and equal; every class of the people
-was bound to services analogous to their rank in the state. The
-industrious who lived without any dependence upon the lands, and who did
-not enjoy the privileges of cities and corporations, were so few, that
-they were not an object of public attention. Farther, most privileges
-then known, were in consequence of land-property; consequently, those
-independent people were in a manner without protection, they were
-vassals to no body; consequently, had no body to interest themselves for
-them; consequently, were a prey to every one who had power, and no body
-was sorry to see a rich fellow, who had got plenty of ready money, and
-who seemed to do nothing for it, plundered by a lord who appeared in the
-service of his country. We see in the time of the croisades how odious
-all those money gatherers were; these were what we now call traders, it
-was principally in hatred to them, that the borrowing of money at
-interest was declared antichristian; because the Jews were principally
-in those days the merchants or the money lenders.
-
-In the beginning of the sixteenth century, when Princes began to take a
-taste for magnificence, finding no body, almost, within their own
-country capable to supply them, they used to send to Flanders and
-Venice, the great trading states in those days, for many kinds of
-manufactures. This is the fountain of foreign trade in Europe. These two
-states perceiving the great benefit resulting to them from this new
-taste of dissipation, gave great encouragement to the industrious. Had
-they begun to impose high taxes upon them, they would have ruined all.
-Industry, then, was encouraged at first, and little loaded with any
-imposition. This is perfectly consistent with our doctrine. Some
-Princes, perceiving the daily diminution of their wealth, made efforts
-to restore this antient simplicity, by forbidding this hurtful trade;
-others, such as Francis I. of France, and Henry VIII. of England,
-endeavoured all they could to establish industry in their own states.
-For this purpose, great privileges were granted to the industrious, who
-thereby increased daily. But this revolution naturally purged the lands,
-and by that operation diminished the number of personal service-men; or,
-as in France, where personal service was at an end, the number of those
-subject to the _taille_. I shall not trace this progress very minutely,
-but come directly to the period of extensive taxation. When industry was
-fairly established, and when nations began to be well clothed with the
-produce of their own soil, wrought up in a thousand different forms, by
-their own industrious subjects, Princes soon perceived their treasures
-to melt away, and saw plainly, that without a method of drawing back the
-money from this new class of inhabitants, the whole wealth of the state
-would come to center in their hands; but the means of coming at money
-was extremely difficult. The proprietors of the riches had no solid
-property in proportion; and their money was inaccessible. Some betook
-themselves to violence, and others to fraud: the one and the other
-produced the worst effects. The violence destroyed industry, and rendred
-the industrious miserable: for we have observed, that when inhabitants
-are once purged from off the lands, they have no resource left them but
-their industry; whereas let a peasant be robbed ever so often of his
-money, he still has the earth to maintain him. The fraudulent corrupted
-the great; the ministers of Princes became the terror of every man who
-had money; they enriched themselves by accepting of compositions, and
-the state remained constantly in want. At last, the scheme of
-proportional taxes took place: but for this purpose it was necessary to
-obtain the consent of the whole state; for no Prince’s power extended so
-far, and they were not come to the time of being able to enlarge their
-prerogative. Such impositions, therefore, were first introduced in
-republics, and mixed governments. In monarchies they were established
-with more difficulty; because the great were equally affected by them
-with the small. But when long and expensive wars rendred supplies of
-money absolutely necessary, then were taxes consented to; and the Prince
-who had not power enough to _establish_ them, easily found means to
-_keep them up_, when once introduced.
-
-From this progress we may easily discover the reason why taxes are cried
-out against. The system appears new, because we remember, in a manner,
-the doubling of the impositions, and we see them daily gaining ground;
-but we never reflect on the change of circumstances, and seldom attend
-to the consequences of that new species of circulation, which is carried
-on between the public and those employed by it. The state now pays for
-every service, because the people furnish it with money for this
-purpose.
-
-If the blood therefore be let out, in modern times, at a thousand
-orifices of the body politic, there are just as many absorbitories (if I
-may be allowed such an expression) opened to receive it back. From this
-last circumstance I imply the perpetuity of taxes, while this system of
-political oeconomy prevails. We have not as yet seen an example of any
-state abolishing them, though many indeed have had such a scheme in
-view. But to resume my former comparison, I may suggest, that if all the
-orifices through which the blood issues, should be bound up, all the
-absorbitories which are fed with the returning blood, must be starved.
-But more of this in its proper place.
-
-QUEST. 5. Why are standing armies a consequence of trade and industry?
-
-In the first place, armies in all ages, past, present, and to come, have
-been, are, and will be calculated for offensive and defensive war; while
-therefore war subsists among men, armies in one way or other, will be
-necessary.
-
-The advantage of regular armies has been known in all ages; and yet we
-find, that for many centuries they appeared in a manner discontinued;
-that is to say, we read neither of legions, nor of regiments, nor of any
-denomination of bodies of warlike men, kept up and exercised in time of
-peace, as was the custom while the Roman empire subsisted: and now,
-since trade has been established, we see the antient Roman military
-oeconomy again revived. Let us therefore apply our principles, in order
-to account for this revolution also.
-
-During the Roman empire, there was a very great flux of money into the
-coffers of the state, which proceeded more from rapine than from taxes.
-Consequently, it was an easy matter to keep up large bodies of regular
-forces.
-
-With these they subdued the world, as I may call it, that is, all the
-polite nations then known; the Carthaginians, Greeks, and Asiatics. Had
-they remained satisfied, their empire might possibly have subsisted;
-because people who are rich, luxurious, and polite, are commonly
-peaceable. But nothing could satisfy their ambition: they conquered
-Gaul, and stretched the boundary of their empire from the streights of
-Gibraltar to the mouth of the Rhine. All was peaceable on that side, and
-in two or three centuries, both Spain and Gaul had adopted the spirit,
-language, and manners of the Roman people. But when they passed the
-Rhine, the Danube, and the Euphrates, they found mankind still less
-cultivated, and very little known. Their enemies fled before them, and
-left a territory which was not worth possessing. This of all barriers is
-the strongest. By carrying on war against such people, the match was
-very unequal; those nations had every thing to gain, and nothing to
-lose; the Romans had all to lose, and nothing to win. Those wars
-continued until the Barbarians learned the Roman discipline, and became
-warriors. It was the most profitable trade for them, as well as the only
-means of safety. That this was the plan of their oeconomy appears
-plainly from the form of government every where established by them.
-Where every free man was a soldier, there was no occasion for a regular
-militia.
-
-Men are governed by prejudice more than by reason: to this I attribute
-the sudden change in the government of Europe. In place of one man
-governing the world, as was the case of the Emperors, the new spirit
-was, that all soldiers were equal, and a King was but _primus inter
-pares_. The sudden revolution had the effect of ruining every thing:
-learning, industry, politics, all went to wreck. _One hundred years of
-barbarity must ruin the effects of a thousand centuries of politeness._
-This is the date of the annihilation of standing armies. A powerful
-Prince, such as Charles the Great, who acted in a high sphere, and who
-made the world his own, might, during his lifetime, establish the old
-oeconomy. But the general establishment of the feudal form of
-government, which, no doubt, was the best for preserving a great empire,
-filled with barbarity every where, joined with the weakness of that
-Prince’s successors, introduced a new form less barbarous than the
-former, but equally compatible with a numerous standing militia. Every
-Baron became a sovereign, and his vassals were bred to arms; but as they
-were forced to attend the plough for subsistence, as well as the camp;
-wars were carried on consistently with agriculture. Certain months of
-the year were appropriated for war; others for peace. This was easily
-accomplished: war was constantly at the door; a campaign was finished in
-a week, because every man’s nearest neighbour was commonly his worst
-enemy.
-
-Europe remained in this general state of confusion for some centuries.
-Princes had, during that period, a most precarious authority, and when
-any nation chanced to be under the government of one who had talents to
-unite his subjects, he became so formidable that there was no
-possibility of resisting him. In those days, it was a hard matter to
-form an idea of a balance of power; because there was no rule to
-determine the force of nations. Under the Otho’s, Germany threatned
-Italy with chains; under Edward and Henry, England seemed on the road of
-adding all France to her monarchy; Ferdinand the catholic, laid the
-foundation of the Spanish greatness, and his successors bid fair for the
-universal monarchy of Europe. In our days, the acquisition of a small
-province, nay of a considerable town, is not to be made by conquest,
-without a general convention between all the powers of Europe, and those
-who are conversant in foreign affairs, can estimate, in a minute, the
-force of Princes, by the troops they are able to maintain; nothing is so
-easy as to lay down, on a sheet of paper, a state of all the armed men
-in Europe. A Prince can hardly add a soldier to a company, but all the
-world is informed of it. Excepting the extent of their credit, and the
-talents of their generals and counsellors, every thing relative to power
-is become the object of computation. Hence the balance of power,
-formerly unknown, is now become familiar. So much is sufficient for the
-matter of fact; let us now examine why _trade_ and _industry_ have given
-rise to so regular a system of war.
-
-The reason is, because in a state where those are introduced, every
-thing must be made regular, or all will go to wreck. The keeping up of
-large armies, is the remains of that turbulent spirit which animated
-royalty for so many centuries. All literature is filled with warlike
-sentiments, from.the books of Moses to the news papers of this day. A
-young person cannot learn to read without imbibing the fire of war. But
-as nothing is so evident, from the consideration of the total revolution
-in the spirit of the people of Europe, as that war is inconsistent with
-the prosperity of a modern state, I sometimes allow my imagination to
-carry me so far as to believe the time is at hand when war will come to
-cease. But there is no such thing as predicting in political matters:
-general peace is a contingent consequence which a thousand accidents may
-prevent; and one among the rest is, that the whole plan of modern policy
-may be broken to pieces, before Princes come to discover that it is
-their interest to be quiet. The ambition of one, arms all the rest, and
-when once they are at the head of their armies, want of money only
-assembles a congress, not to make peace, but that the parties may have
-some years to gather new force.
-
-It is not therefore trade and industry which have given birth to
-standing armies, they have only rendred war impossible without them. It
-is the ambition of Princes to extend their dominion, and even sometimes
-to extend their commerce, which gives occasion to war. And we see daily
-how difficult it becomes to provide troops for this purpose, from no
-other reason so much as from the progress of trade and industry. Those
-who have the money cannot have the men, those who have the men cannot
-have the money. Do we not see how the greatest monarchy in Europe, the
-Prince who has the most millions of subjects, cannot preserve the rank
-of power he has prescribed to himself (_his political-necessary for
-war_) without a body of above thirty thousand strangers, in the time of
-the most profound peace, and after the greatest reduction judged
-consistent with the safety of the country? These cost vastly more than
-national troops, and brave men of all countries are alike; so that the
-only reason for keeping up so large a body of foreigners, is to
-facilitate augmentations when occasion requires it; and not to spare the
-subjects who are willing to serve, but to spare agriculture and
-industry, after the superfluities of these have fallen in, to compleat
-that body of troops which experience has determined to be proportioned
-to such superfluities.
-
-From this short exposition let me deduce a principle. That since every
-state has occasion, according to the present system of Europe, for a
-certain number of armed men for their defence, the first care of a
-statesman, is, to discover to what number those of his subjects, who
-willingly prefer the conditions offered for military service to the
-occupations of industry, may amount. If he finds these exceed the number
-wanted for recruiting the army, it is a good reason to diminish the pay;
-until the encouragement comes upon a level with the supply demanded. If
-on the contrary, the number of volunteers falls below the standard
-required, he must examine the state of the balance of work and demand,
-before he can give any farther encouragement. If this balance stands
-even, he must take care that the pay given to soldiers be not carried so
-high, as to engage those of the lowest class of profitable industry to
-desert it.
-
-What measures, therefore, can be fallen upon? There are two. Either to
-hire foreign troops, as many states do; and I suppose for good reasons,
-only because it is done. But I should prefer another method, which is to
-create a new class of inhabitants, appropriated for supplying the army,
-upon the principle above laid down, that he who feeds may have as many
-mouths as he pleases.
-
-I would therefore fix the military pay at a rate below the profits of
-useful industry, and accept of such as should offer. For the
-augmentation of this class, I would receive all male children who should
-be given or exposed by their parents. These should be bred to every sort
-of labour for which the state has occasion, and their numbers might be
-carried to twenty _per cent._ above that which might be judged necessary
-in time of the hottest war. Out of this class only, the standing forces
-might be recruited: those who remained might be employed in every public
-service; such as working in arsenals, docks, highways, public buildings,
-&c. By taking care of the children of this whole class, their numbers
-would rise to whatever height might be judged necessary. The same spirit
-would be kept up; they might serve by turns, and all become disciplined.
-This is a good scheme, in many cases, and is an improvement upon the
-distribution of the inhabitants: the execution is gradual; therefore no
-sudden revolution is implied. But it is fit only for a state which can
-augment its numbers, without seeking for subsistence from without. It
-would spare the land and manufactures, and be a ready outlet for all
-supernumeraries in every class.
-
-This subject shall be resumed in the fifth book, when we come to the
-application of the amount of taxes. At present it has found a place,
-only because the support of a national force has been ranked among the
-objects of attention of those statesmen who are at the head of rich and
-luxurious nations which have lost their foreign trade.
-
-QUEST. 6. What are the principles upon which the relative force of
-nations is to be estimated?
-
-Without some limitations, no question can be more difficult to resolve
-than this; it must therefore be examined only in so far as it comes
-under the influence of certain principles. It is as impossible to
-estimate the real force of a nation, as it is to estimate that of any
-considerable quantity of gun-powder, and for the same reason. The nation
-cannot exert all its force at once, no more than the powder can be all
-inflamed at once, and the successive efforts of a small power, are never
-equally effectual with the momentous shock of a great one. In
-proportion, therefore, as the spirit of individuals is moved to concur
-with the public measure, a people become powerful; and as I know of no
-principle which can regulate such affections of the mind, we must throw
-them quite out of the question, and measure the power of nations by the
-quantity of men and money at a statesman’s command, in consequence of
-the oeconomy he has established. Let me then suppose two nations, where
-the number of inhabitants, and weight of gold and silver are absolutely
-the same, military genius and discipline quite equal. From what has been
-said, we must determine that nation to be the strongest, which, without
-disturbing the oeconomy of their state, can raise the greatest
-proportion of men, and draw the greatest proportion of money into the
-public coffers.
-
-When the number of inhabitants is given, the first thing to be known is
-the nature of the produce of the country, whether mostly in corn, wine,
-or pasture: the more the ground is laboured, and the more crops it
-yearly produces, the fewer free hands it will maintain in proportion to
-the whole, this computation must then proceed upon the principles laid
-down above, Book I. Chap. 8.
-
-When once you come at the number of free hands, you must examine the
-state of luxury. Luxury is justly said to effeminate a nation, because
-the great multitude of hands taken up in supplying the instruments of it
-to the rich, diminishes greatly the number of such as can be employed in
-war. If manufacturers and folks accustomed to a sedentary life, are at a
-certain age taken from trades, to compose armies, they will make bad
-soldiers; and the strength of a nation lies chiefly in the valour and
-strength of the soldiery. Luxury therefore effeminates a nation in
-general; but it does not follow from hence, that the most luxurious are
-the most effeminate, and most improper for war; on the contrary, they
-are found to be the bravest and most proper. The effeminacy and baseness
-of mind, in point of courage, are found in the sedentary multitude. The
-truth of this might be proved from many examples in antient history, if
-the present situation of Europe left the smallest room to doubt of it.
-
-The more therefore that luxury prevails in a country, the fewer good
-troops can be raised in it, and _vice versa_. But it is not sufficient
-to have men for war, the men must be enabled to subsist, and in the
-modern way of making war, their subsistence and other expences require
-large sums of money. We must then examine what proportion of the general
-wealth may be applied to this purpose.
-
-If in any country the riches be found in few hands, the state will be
-poor; because the opulence of the public treasure depends greatly upon a
-right and proportional distribution of wealth among the inhabitants.
-Riches are only acquired three ways. First, Gratuitously, as by
-succession, gift, or the like; secondly, by industry; and lastly, by
-penury. Those who are poor are seldom enriched gratuitously, never by
-penury, and always by industry; when a poor man grows rich in any state,
-he changes in so far the balance of wealth, for what is added to him is
-taken from another. When a spirit of industry prevails, the balance is
-always turning in favour of the industrious, and as it is a pretty
-general rule, that the rich are not the most laborious, so the balance
-is generally turning against them. This being the case, the more that
-industry prevails, the quicker will this revolution be brought on. By
-such revolutions, wealth becomes _equably distributed_; for by being
-_equably distributed_, I do not mean, that every individual comes to
-have an _equal_ share, but an equal chance, I may say a certainty, of
-becoming rich in proportion to his industry. Riches which are acquired
-by succession, or any other gratuitous means, do not in the least
-contribute to circulation, the owner, as has been said, only changes his
-name. Those made by penury or hoarding, instead of adding to, evidently
-diminish circulation. It is, therefore, by industry alone that wealth is
-made to circulate, and it is by its circulation only, that money is
-useful. When large sums are locked up, they produce nothing; they are
-therefore locked up not to be useful while they remain secreted; but
-that they may be useful when brought out in order to be alienated. In a
-state, therefore, where there are a few very rich and many very poor,
-there must be much money locked up; for without money none can be rich,
-and if it were not locked up it must fall into the hands of the poor.
-Why? Because the rich will not give it to the rich, gratuitously, nor
-will they labour to acquire it; either then the common people must be
-lazy and unwilling to work, or the rich must be so penurious and
-addicted to hoarding as to keep it out of the hands of the poor. In both
-which cases, if there be money in the country, it must be found in
-coffers.
-
-From these positions it may be concluded, that wealth which produces
-nothing to its owner, cannot be supposed to produce any thing to the
-state: consequently, that state in which there is the quickest
-circulation of money, is, _cæteris paribus_, that in which the greatest
-proportion of the general wealth may be raised for the public service.
-This is all that is necessary to observe at present: when we have
-examined the nature of credit and taxes, and the principles upon which
-they may be levied in different countries, and under different forms of
-government, we shall discover more rules for estimating the force of
-different states.
-
-The principles of industry have been so interwoven with those of trade,
-through all the chapters of this second book, that it is now proper,
-before we dismiss the subject, to examine a little into the nature of
-the first, considered more abstractedly, and more detached from its
-relation to the equivalent given for it, which is the proper
-characteristic of trade, and from which proceeds the intimate connection
-between them.
-
-The object of our enquiry hitherto has been to discover the method of
-engaging a free people in the advancement of the one and the other, as a
-means of making their society live in ease, by reciprocally contributing
-to the relief of each others wants. Let us next examine some farther
-consequences. We are now to cast our eyes upon another view of this
-extensive landscape, where the personal advantages, immediately felt
-from this gentle band of mutual dependence, are not to fix our attention
-so much as the effects produced by industry upon the face of things, and
-manners of a people.
-
-The better to transmit this idea, which I find a little dark, let me
-say, that hitherto we have treated our subject, according to the
-principles which should direct a statesman, to advance trade and
-industry, by engaging the rich to give bread to the poor. Now we are to
-examine the consequences resulting from the execution of this plan; and
-compare the difference between a country which has been inhabited by a
-people abundantly provided for without industry and labour, and one
-occupied by another who have subsisted by these means: and farther, we
-are to examine industry as producing effects more or less hurtful to the
-simplicity of manners, and more or less permanent and beneficial,
-according as it has been directed towards different objects.
-
-I can easily suppose a nation living in the greatest simplicity, even
-going naked, but abundantly fed, either with the spontaneous fruits of
-the earth, or by an agriculture proportioned to the wants of every one,
-and where very little alienation or exchange takes place. From this
-primitive life, as I may call it, the degrees of industry, like
-imperceptible shades, may be augmented; and the augmentation, as I
-apprehend, is to be measured, not so much by the degree of occupation
-which the inhabitants pursue, as by the quantity of permutation among
-them; because I think permutation implies superfluity of something[N].
-
-Footnote N:
-
- Our first parents, placed in Paradise, were fed from the hand of God,
- and freed by the constitution of their nature, from every uneasy
- animal desire. Since the fall, the whole human species have been
- employed in contriving and executing methods for relieving the wants
- which are the consequences of such desires.
-
- Hence I conclude, that had the fall never taken place, the pursuits of
- man would have been totally different from what they are at present.
- May I be allowed to suppose, that in such a happy state, he might have
- been endowed with a faculty of transmitting his most complex ideas
- with the same perspicuity with which we now transmit those relating to
- geometry, numbers, colours, &c. From this I infer, there would have
- been no difference of sentiment, no dispute, no competition between
- man and man. The progress in acquiring useful knowledge, the pleasure
- of communicating discoveries, would alone have provided a fund of
- happiness, as inexhaustible as knowledge itself.
-
- Mankind, therefore, set out upon a system of living without labour,
- without industry, without wants, without dependence, without
- subordination; consequently, had they remained in that state, the
- lapse of time would have produced no change upon any thing, but the
- state of knowledge. Banished from Paradise, man began to plow the
- ground, consequently to change her surface: he built houses, made
- bridges, traced roads, and by degrees has come, in different ages, to
- please and gratify his inclinations, by numberless occupations and
- pursuits, constantly dictated to him by his wants; that is, by his
- imperfections, and by the desires which they inspire. When these are
- satisfied, his physical happiness is carried as far as possible; but
- as mankind seldom remain in a state of contentment, and that our
- nature constantly prompts us to add something new to our former
- enjoyments, so it naturally happens, that societies once established,
- and living in peace, pass from one degree of refinement to another,
- that is to say, man daily becomes more laborious.
-
-A people then lives in the utmost simplicity, when the earth is so far
-in common, as that none can acquire the property of it, but in virtue of
-his possession as the means of subsistence; and when every one is
-employed in providing necessaries for himself, and for those who belong
-to him. The moment any one has occasion for the service of another,
-independent of him, he must have an equivalent to give. This equivalent
-must be something moveable, some fruit of the earth, pure or modified,
-superfluous, not necessary, not the earth itself, because this is the
-foundation of his subsistence; and he can never alienate what is
-essential to his being, in order to procure a superfluity. From this we
-may deduce a principle that the alienation of consumable commodities is
-a consequence of superfluity alone, as this again is the bane of
-simplicity. Consequently, he who would carry simplicity to the utmost
-length, ought to proscribe all alienation; consequently, all dependence
-among men; consequently, all subordination: every one ought to be
-entirely dependent upon his own labour, and nothing else.
-
-Were man either restored to his primitive state of innocence, or reduced
-to a state of brutality; were his pursuits either purely spiritual, or
-did they extend no farther than to the gratification of his animal
-desires, and acquisition of his physical-necessary; such an oeconomy
-might be compatible with society. But as we stand in a middle state
-between the two, and have certain desires which participate of the one
-and of the other, the gratification of which constitute what we have
-called our _political-necessary_ (which we cannot procure to ourselves,
-because the very nature of it implies superiority and subordination, as
-well as a mutual dependence among men) a total obstruction to alienation
-becomes compatible with government, consequently with human society; and
-this being the case, all simplicity of manners is only relative. Our
-fathers looked upon the manners of their ancestors as simple, these
-again admired the simplicity of the patriarchs; and perhaps the time may
-come, when the manners of the eighteenth century may be called the noble
-simplicity of the antients.
-
-As simplicity of manners is therefore relative, let us decide, that as
-long as superfluity does more good in providing for the poor, than hurt
-in corrupting the rich; so far it is to be approved of and no farther.
-
-Here it is urged, that since superfluity is only good, so far as it
-provides subsistence for the poor, why may not the pursuits of industry
-be turned towards objects which cannot corrupt the mind? Why, in place
-of fine clothes, elegant entertainments, magnificent furniture, carving,
-gildings, and embroidery, with all the splendor to be seen in palaces,
-gardens, operas, balls, and masquerades, processions, shews,
-horse-races, and diversions of every kind, why might not, I say, the
-multitudes which are employed in supplying these transitory
-gratifications of human weakness (not to call them by a worse name) be
-employed in making highways, bridges, canals, fountains, fortifications,
-harbours, public buildings, and a thousand other works, both useful to
-society, and of good example to succeeding generations? Such employments
-are eternal monuments of grandeur, they are of lasting utility, and are
-no more to be compared to the trifling industry of our days, than an
-Egyptian pyramid is to be compared with the luxury of Cleopatra, or the
-_via appia_ with the suppers of Heliogabalus. This was the taste in the
-virtuous days of antient simplicity: the greatness of a people appeared
-in the magnificence of useful works, and as virtue disappeared, a luxury
-resembling that of modern times took place. The aqueducts, common
-sewers, temples, highways, and burying places were the ornaments of
-consular Rome. The imperial grandeur of that city shone out in
-amphitheatres and baths; and the turpitude of manners (say the patrons
-of simplicity) which brought on the decline, ought to terrify those who
-make the apology of modern luxury and dissipation.
-
-In order to set this question in a clear light, and to do justice both
-to the antients and moderns, let us once more enter into an examination
-of circumstances, and seek for effects in the causes which produce them.
-These are uniform in all ages; and if manners are different, the
-difference must be accounted for, without overturning the principles of
-reason and common sense.
-
-QUEST. 7. In what manner, therefore, may a statesman establish industry,
-so as not to destroy simplicity, nor occasion a sudden revolution in the
-manners of his people, the great classes of which are supposed to live
-secure in ease and happiness; and, at the same time, so as to provide
-every one with necessaries who may be in want?
-
-The observations we are going to make will point out the answer to this
-question: they will unfold still farther the political oeconomy of the
-antients, and explain how manners remained so pure from vicious luxury,
-notwithstanding the great and sumptuous works carried on, which strike
-us with so lofty an idea of their useful magnificence and noble
-simplicity. These observations will also confirm the justness of a
-distinction made, in the first chapter of this book, between labour and
-industry; by shewing that _labour_ may ever be procured, even by force,
-at the expence of furnishing man with his physical-necessary, from which
-no superfluity can proceed: whereas industry cannot be established, but
-by an adequate equivalent, proportioned, not to the absolutely
-necessary, but to the reasonable desire of the industrious; which
-equivalent becomes afterwards the means of diffusing a luxurious
-disposition among all the classes of a people.
-
-If a statesman finds certain individuals in want, he must either feed
-them, in which case he may employ them as he thinks fit; or he must give
-them a piece of land, as the means of feeding themselves. If he gives
-the land, he can require no equivalent for it, because a person who has
-nothing can give nothing but his labour; and if he be obliged to labour
-for his food, he cannot purchase with labour the earth itself, which is
-the object of it. If it be asked, whether a statesman does better to
-give the food, or to give the land? I think it will appear very evident,
-that the first is the better course, because he can then exact an
-equivalent; and since in either way the person is fed, the produce of
-his labour is always clear gain. But in order to give the food, he must
-have it to give; in which case, it must either be a surplus-produce of
-public lands, or a contribution from the people. In both which cases, is
-implied a labour carried on beyond the personal wants of those who
-labour the ground. If this fund be applied in giving bread to those whom
-he employs in improving the soil of the country in general, it will have
-no immediate effect of destroying the simplicity of their manners; it
-will only extend the fund of their subsistence. If he employs them in
-making highways, aqueducts, common sewers, bridges, and the like; it
-will extend the correspondence between the different places of the
-country, and render living in cities more easy and agreeable: and these
-changes have an evident tendency towards destroying simplicity. But here
-let it be remarked, that the simplicity of individuals is not hurt by
-the industry carried on at the expence of the public. The superfluous
-food at the statesman’s disposal, is given to people in necessity, who
-are employed in relieving _the wants of the public, not of private
-persons_. But if, in consequence of the roads made, any inhabitant shall
-incline to remove from place to place in a chariot, instead of riding on
-horseback, or walking, he must engage some body to make the machine:
-this is a farther extension to occupation, on the side of those who
-labour; but the consequence of the employment is very different, when
-considered with regard to the simplicity of manners. The reason is
-plain: the ingenuity here must be paid for; and this superfluity in the
-hands of the workman is a fund for his becoming luxurious.
-
-Industry destroys simplicity of manners in him who gives an equivalent
-for an article of superfluity; and the equivalent given frequently gives
-rise to a subordinate species of luxury in the workman. When industry
-therefore meets with encouragement from individuals, who give an
-equivalent in order to satisfy growing desires, it is a proof that they
-are quitting the simplicity of their manners. In this case, the wants
-and desires of mankind prove the mother of industry, which was the
-supposition in the first book; because, in fact, the industry of Europe
-is owing to this cause alone.
-
-But the industry of antient times was very different, where the
-multitude of slaves ready to execute whatever was demanded, either by
-the state or by their masters, for the equivalent of simple maintenance
-only, prevented wealth from ever falling into the hands of industrious
-free men; and he who has no circulating equivalent to give for
-satisfying a desire of superfluity, must remain in his former
-simplicity. The labour therefore of those days producing no circulation,
-could not corrupt the manners of the people; because, remaining
-constantly poor, they never could increase their consumption of
-superfluity.
-
-I must, in this place, insert the authority of an antient author, in
-order both to illustrate and to prove the justness of this
-representation of the political oeconomy of the antients.
-
-There remains a discourse of Xenophon upon the improvement of the
-revenue of the state of Athens. Concerning the authenticity of this
-work, I have not the smallest doubt. It is a _chef d’oeuvre_ of its
-kind, and from it more light is to be had, in relation to the subject we
-are here upon, than from any thing I have ever seen, antient or modern.
-
-From this antient monument we learn the sentiments of the author with
-regard to the proper employment of the three principal classes of the
-Athenian people, viz. the citizens, the strangers, and the slaves. From
-the plan he lays down we plainly discover, that, in the state of Athens,
-(more renowned than any other of antiquity for the arts of luxury and
-refinement) it never entred into the imagination of any politician to
-introduce industry even among the lowest classes of the _citizens_; and
-Xenophon’s plan was to reap all the benefits we at present enjoy from
-it, without producing any change upon the spirit of the Athenian people.
-
-The state at this time was in use to impose taxes upon their confederate
-cities, in order to maintain their own common people, and Xenophon’s
-intention in this discourse was, not to lay down a plan to make them
-maintain themselves by industry, but to improve the revenue of the state
-in such a manner as out of it to give every citizen a pension of three
-oboli a day, or three pence three farthings of our money.
-
-I shall not here go through every branch of his plan, nor point out the
-resources he had fallen upon to form a sufficient fund for that purpose;
-but he says, that in case of any deficiency in the domestic revenue of
-the state, people from all quarters, Princes and strangers of note, in
-all countries, would be proud of contributing towards it, for the honour
-of being recorded in the public monuments of Athens, and having their
-names transmitted to posterity as benefactors to the state in the
-execution of so grand a design.
-
-In our days, such an idea would appear ridiculous; in the days of
-Xenophon, it was perfectly rational. At that time great quantities of
-gold and silver were found locked up in the coffers of the rich: this
-was in a great measure useless to them, in the common course of life,
-and was the more easily parted with from a sentiment of vanity or
-ostentation.
-
-In our days, the largest income is commonly found too small for the
-current expence of the proprietor. From whence it happens, that
-presents, great expence at funerals and marriages, godfathers gifts, &c.
-so very familiar among ourselves in former times, are daily going out of
-fashion. These are extraordinary and unforeseen expences which our
-ancestors were fond of, because they flattered their vanity, without
-diminishing the fund of their current expence: but as now we have no
-full coffers to fly to, we find them excessively burthensome, and
-endeavour to retrench them as soon as we can, not from frugality, God
-knows, but in consequence o£ a change in our manners.
-
-Besides providing this daily pension of three pence three farthings a
-day for every citizen of Athens, rich and poor, he proposed to build, at
-the public charge, many trading vessels, a great many inns and houses of
-entertainment for all strangers in the sea ports, to erect shops,
-warehouses, exchanges, &c. the rents of which would increase the
-revenue, and add great beauty and magnificence to the city. In short,
-Xenophon recommends to the state to perform, by the hands of their
-slaves and strangers, what a free people in our days are constantly
-employed in doing in every country of industry. While the Athenian
-citizens continued to receive their daily pensions, proportioned to the
-value of their pure physical-necessary, their business being confined to
-their service in the army in time of war, their attendance in public
-assemblies, and the theatres in times of peace, clothed like a parcel of
-capucins, they, as became freemen, were taught to despise industrious
-labour, and to glory in the austerity and simplicity of their manners.
-The pomp and magnificence of the Persian Emperors were a subject of
-ridicule in Greece, and a proof of their barbarity, and of the slavery
-of their subjects. From this plain representation of Xenophon’s plan, I
-hope, the characteristic difference between antient and modern oeconomy
-is manifest; and for such readers as take a particular delight in
-comparing the systems of simplicity and luxury, I recommend the perusal
-of this most valuable discourse.
-
-Combining, therefore, all these circumstances, and comparing them with
-the contrast which is found as to every particular, in our times, I
-think it is but doing justice to the moderns, to allow, that the
-extensive luxury which daily diffuses itself through every class of a
-people, is more owing to the abolishing of slavery, the equal
-distribution of riches, and the circulation of an adequate equivalent
-for every service, than to any greater corruption of our manners, than
-what prevailed among the antients.
-
-In order to have industry directed towards the object of public utility,
-the public, not individuals, must have the equivalent to give. Must not
-the employment be adapted to the taste of him who purchases it? Now, in
-antient times, most public works were performed either by slaves, or at
-the price of the pure physical-necessary of free men. We find the price
-of a pyramid, recorded to us by Herodotus, in the quantity of turnips,
-onions, and garlic, consumed by the builders of it. Those who made the
-_via appia_, I apprehend, were just as poor when it was finished as the
-day it was begun; and this must always be the case, when the work
-requires no peculiar dexterity in the workmen. If, on the other hand,
-examples can be brought where workmen gained high wages, then the
-consequences must have been the same as in our days.
-
-So long, therefore, as industry is not directed to such objects as
-require a particular address, which, by the principles laid down in the
-twenty first chapter, raise profits above the physical-necessary, the
-industrious never can become rich; and if they are paid in money, this
-money must return into the hands of those who feed them: and if no
-superfluity be found any where, but in the hands of the state, such
-industry may consume a surplus of subsistence, but never can draw one
-penny into circulation. This I apprehend to be a just application of our
-principles, to the state of industry under the Roman republic, and that
-species of industry which we call _labour_. We are not therefore to
-ascribe the taste for employment in those days to the virtue of the
-times. A man who had riches, and who spent them, spent them no doubt
-then, as at present, to gratify his desires; and if the simplicity of
-the times furnished no assistance to his own invention, in diversifying
-them, the consequence was, that the money was not spent, but locked up.
-I have heard many a man say, had I so much money I should not know how
-to spend it. The thing is certainly true; for people do not commonly
-take it into their head to lay it out for the public.
-
-No body, I believe, will deny that money is better employed in building
-a house, or in producing something useful and permanent, than in
-providing articles of mere transitory superfluity. But what principle of
-politics can influence the taste of the proprietors of wealth? This
-being the case, a statesman is brought to a dilemma; either to allow
-industry to run into a channel little beneficial to the state, little
-permanent in its nature, or to deprive the poor of the advantage
-resulting from it. May I not farther suggest, that a statesman, who is
-at the head of a people, whose taste is directed towards a trifling
-species of expence, does very well to diminish the fund of their
-prodigality, by calling in, by means of taxes, a part of the circulating
-equivalent which they gave for it? When once he is enriched by these
-contributions, he comes to be in the same situation with antient
-statesmen, with this difference, that they had their slaves at their
-command, whom they fed and provided for; and that he has the free, for
-the sake of an equivalent with which they feed and provide for
-themselves. He then can set public works on foot, and inspire, by his
-example, a taste for industry of a more rational kind, which may advance
-the public good, and procure a lasting benefit to the nation.
-
-I have said above, that the acquisition of money, by the sale of
-industry to strangers, or in return for consumable commodities, was a
-way of augmenting the general worth of a nation. Now I say, that whoever
-can transform the most consumable commodities of a country into the most
-durable and most beneficial works, makes a high improvement. If
-therefore meat and drink, which are of all things the most consumable,
-can be turned into harbours, high roads, canals, and public buildings,
-is not the improvement inexpressible? This is in the power of every
-statesman to accomplish, who has subsistence at his disposal; and beyond
-the power of all those who have it not. There is no occasion for money
-to improve a country. All the magnificent buildings which ornament
-Italy, are a much more proper representation of a scanty subsistence,
-than of the gold and silver found in that country at the time they were
-executed. Let me now conclude with a few miscellaneous observations on
-what has been said.
-
-OBSER. 1. When I admire the magnificence and grandeur of publick works
-in any country, such as stupendous churches, amphitheatres, roads,
-dykes, canals; in a word, when I examine Holland, the greatest work
-perhaps ever done by man, I am never struck with the expence. I compare
-them with the numbers of men who have lived to perform them. When I see
-another country well inhabited, where no such works appear, the contrast
-suggests abundance of reflections.
-
-As to the first, I conclude, that while these works were carried on,
-either slavery, or taxes must have been established; because it seldom
-happens, that a Prince will, out of his own patrimony, launch out into
-such expences, purely to serve the public. Public works are carried on
-by the public; and for this purpose, either the persons or purses of
-individuals, must be at its command. The first I call slavery; that is
-service: the second taxes; that is public contributions in money or in
-necessaries.
-
-OBSER. 2. I farther conclude, that nothing is to be gathered from those
-works, which should engage us to entertain a high opinion of the wealth,
-or other species of magnificence in the people who executed them. All
-that can be determined positively concerning their oeconomy as to this
-particular, is, that at the time they were performed, agriculture must
-have been exercised as a trade, in order to furnish a surplus sufficient
-to maintain the workmen; or that subsistence must have come from abroad,
-either as a return for other species of industry, or gratuitously, that
-is, by rapine, tribute, &c.
-
-OBSER. 3. That the consequence of such works, is, to make meat, drink,
-and necessaries circulate, from the hands of those who have a
-superfluity of them, into those who are employed to labour; or to oblige
-those who formerly worked for themselves only, to work also in part for
-others. To execute this, there must be a subordination: for who will
-increase his labour, voluntarily, in order to feed people who do not
-work for him, but for the public? This combination was neglected
-throughout the first book; because we there left mankind at liberty to
-follow the bent of their inclinations. This was necessary to give a
-right idea of the subject we then intended to treat, and to point out
-the different effects of slavery and liberty; but now, that we have
-formed trading nations, and riveted a multitude of reciprocal
-dependencies, which tie the members together, there is less danger of
-introducing restraints; because the advantages which people find, from a
-well ordered society, make them put up the better with the
-inconveniencies of supporting and improving it. It is an universal
-principle, that instruction must be given with gentleness. A young horse
-is to be caressed when the saddle is first put upon his back: any thing
-that appears harsh, let it be ever so useful or necessary, must be
-suspended in the beginning, in order to captivate the inclination of the
-creature which we incline to instruct.
-
-OBSER. 4. When a statesman knows the extent and quality of the territory
-of his country, so as to be able to estimate what numbers it may feed;
-he may lay down his plan of political oeconomy, and chalk out a
-distribution of inhabitants, as if the number were already compleat. It
-will depend upon his judgment alone, and upon the combination of
-circumstances, foreign and domestic, to distribute, and to employ the
-classes, at every period during this execution, in the best manner to
-advance agriculture, so as to bring all the lands to a thorough
-cultivation. A ruling principle here, is, to keep the husbandmen closely
-employed, that their surplus may be carried as high as possible; because
-this surplus is the main spring of all alienation and industry. The next
-thing is to make this surplus circulate; no man must eat of it for
-nothing. What a prodigious difference does a person find, when he
-considers two countries, equally great, equally fertile, equally
-cultivated, equally peopled, the one under the oeconomy here
-represented; the other, where every one is employed in feeding and
-providing for himself only.
-
-A statesman, therefore, under such circumstances, should reason thus: I
-have a country which maintains a million of inhabitants, I suppose, and
-which is capable of maintaining as many more; I find every one employed
-in providing for himself, and considering the simplicity of their
-manners, a far less number will be sufficient to do all the work: the
-consequence is, that many are almost idle, while others, who have many
-children, are starving. Let me call my people together, and shew them
-the inconvenience of having no roads. He proposes that every one who
-chooses to work at those shall be fed and taken care of by the
-community, and his lands distributed to those who incline to take them.
-The advantage is felt, the people are engaged to work a little harder,
-so as to overtake the cultivations of the portions of those who have
-abandoned them. Upon this revolution, labour is increased, the soil
-continues cultivated as before, and the additional labour of the farmers
-appears in a fine high road. Is this any more than a method to engage
-one part of a people to labour, in order to maintain another?
-
-OBSER. 5. Here I ask, whether it be not better to feed a man, in order
-to make him labour and be useful, than to feed him in order to make him
-live and digest his victuals? This last was the case of multitudes
-during the ages of antient slavery, as well as the consequence of ill
-directed modern charity. One and the other being equally well calculated
-for producing a simplicity of manners: and Horace has painted it to the
-life, when he says,
-
- _Nos numerus sumus, et fruges consumere nati._
-
-This I have heard humorously translated, though nastily I confess; We
-add to the number of t—d-mills. A very just representation of many of
-the human species! to their shame be it spoken, as it equally casts a
-reflection on religion and on government.
-
-Consistently with these principles, we find no great or public work
-carried on in countries of great liberty. Nothing of that kind is to be
-seen among the Tartars, or hunting Indians. These I call free nations,
-but not our European republics, where I have found just as much
-subordination and constraint as any where else.
-
-I have, on several occasions, let drop some expressions with regard to
-charity, which I am sensible might be misinterpreted. It will therefore
-be proper to make some apology, which no body can suspect of
-insincerity; because my reason for introducing it, is with a view to a
-farther illustration of my subject.
-
-When I see a rich and magnificent monastery of begging friars, adorned
-with profusion of sculpture, a stupendous pile of building, stately
-towers, incrustations of marble, beautiful pavements; when I compare the
-execution and the expence of all these, with the faculties of a person
-of the largest fortune, I find there is no proportion between what the
-beggars have executed with the produce of private charities, and what
-any Lord has done with his overgrown estate. Nay monasteries there are
-which, had they been executed by Princes, would have been cited by
-historians, from generation to generation, as eternal monuments of the
-greatest prodigality and dissipation. Here then is an effect of charity,
-which I have heard condemned by many, and I think without much reason.
-What prostitution of riches! say they: how usefully might all this money
-have been employed, in establishing manufactures, building a navy, and
-in many other good purposes? Whereas I am so entirely taken up with the
-effects arising from the execution of the work, that I seldom give
-myself time to reflect upon its intention. The building of this
-monastery has fed the industrious poor, has encouraged the liberal arts,
-has improved the taste of the inhabitants, has opened the door to the
-curiosity of strangers: and when I examine my purse, I find that in
-place of having contributed to the building of it from a charitable
-disposition, my curiosity to see it has obliged me to contribute my
-proportion of the expence. I spend my money in that country, and so do
-other strangers, without bringing away any thing for it. No balance of
-trade is clearer than this. The miraculous tongue of St. Anthony of
-Padua, has brought more clear money into that city than the industry of
-a thousand weavers could have done: the charity given is not to the
-monks, but to the poor whom they employ. If young wits, therefore, make
-a jest of such a devotion; I ask, who ought to be laughed at, those who
-give, or those who receive money for the show?
-
-In a country where such works are usually carried on, they cease in a
-great measure to be useful, whenever they are finished; and a new one
-should be set on foot directly, or what will become of those who are
-without work? It must not be concluded from this, that the usefulness of
-public works is not a principal consideration. The more a work is useful
-after it is done, so much the better; because it may then have the
-effect of giving bread to those who have not built it. But whether
-useful or not afterwards, it must be useful while it is going on; and
-many, who with pleasure will give a thousand pounds to adorn a church,
-would not give a shilling to build Westminster bridge, or the port of
-Rochefort; and the poor live equally by the execution of either.
-Expensive public works, are therefore a means of giving bread to the
-poor, of advancing industry, without hurting the simplicity of manners;
-which is an answer to the seventh question.
-
-OBSER. 6. Great works found in one country, and none found in another,
-is no proof that the first have surpassed the second in labour and
-industry: the contrast only marks the different division of property, or
-taste of expence. Every undertaking marks a particular interest. Palaces
-are a representation of rich individuals; snug boxes, in the
-neighbourhood of cities, represent small but easy fortunes; hutts point
-out poverty; aqueducts, highways, &c. testify an opulent common good:
-and if these be found in a country where no vestige of private expence
-appears, I then must conclude, they have been executed by slaves, or by
-oppression; otherwise somebody, at least, would have gained by the
-execution; and his gains would appear in one species of expence or
-another.
-
-OBSER. 7. In countries where fortunes have been unequally divided, where
-there have been few rich and many poor, it is common to find lasting
-monuments of labour; because great fortunes only are capable of
-producing them. As a proof of this let us compare the castles of antient
-times (I mean four or five hundred years ago) with the houses built of
-late. At that time fortunes were much more unequal than at present, and
-accordingly we find the habitations of the great in most countries not
-numerous, but of an extraordinary bulk and solidity. Now a building is
-never to be judged of by the money it cost, but by the labour it
-required. From the houses in a country I judge of the opulence of the
-great, and of the proportion of fortunes among the inhabitants. The
-taste in which these old castles are built, marks the power of those who
-built them, and, as their numbers are small, we may judge, from the
-nature of man, who loves imitation, that the only reason for it was,
-that there were few in a condition to build them. Why do we find in
-modern times a far less disproportion between the conveniency with which
-every body is lodged, than formerly; but only because riches are more
-equally divided, from the operations of industry above-described.
-
-OBSER. 8. From this we may gather, that lasting monuments are no
-adequate measure of the industry of a country. The expence of a modern
-prince, in a splendid court, numerous armies, frequent journeys,
-magnificent banquets, operas, masquerades, tournaments, and shews, may
-give employment and bread to as many hands, as the taste of him who
-built the pyramid; and the smoke of the gun-powder at his reviews, of
-the flambeaus and wax lights at his entertainments, may be of as great
-use to posterity, as the shadow of the pyramid, which is the only
-visible effect produced by it; but the one remains for ever, the other
-leaves no vestige behind it. The very remaining of the work, however
-useless in itself, becomes useful, in so far as it is ornamental,
-inspires noble sentiments of emulation to succeeding princes, the
-effects of which will still be productive of the good consequences of
-keeping people employed. The expence of the other flatters the senses,
-and gives delight: there is no question of choice here. All useless
-expence gratifies vanity only; accident alone makes one species
-permanent, another transitory.
-
-Those who have money may be _engaged_ to part with it in favour of the
-poor, but never forced to part with it, to the prejudice of their
-posterity. Inspire, if you can, a good and useful taste of expence;
-nothing so right; but never check the dissipation of ready money, with a
-view to preserve private fortunes. Leave such precautions to the
-prudence of every individual. Every man, no doubt, has as good a right
-to perpetuate and provide for his own posterity, as a state has to
-perpetuate the welfare of the whole community; it is the combination of
-every private interest which forms the common weal. From this I
-conclude, that, without the strongest reasons to the contrary, perpetual
-substitutions of property should be left as free to those who possess
-lands, as locking up in chests should be permitted to those who have
-much money.
-
-QUEST. 8. What are the principles which influence the establishment of
-mercantile companies; and what effects do these produce upon the
-interests of trade?
-
-There is a close connexion between the principles relating to companies,
-and those we have examined in the twenty third chapter, concerning
-corporations. The one and the other have excellent consequences, and
-both are equally liable to abuse. A right examination of principles is
-the best method to advance the first and to prevent the latter.
-
-The advantages of companies are chiefly two.
-
-1. That by uniting the _stocks_ of several merchants together, an
-enterprise far beyond the force of any one, becomes practicable to the
-community.
-
-2. That by uniting the _interests_ of several merchants, who direct
-their _foreign_ commerce towards the same object, the competition
-between them _abroad_ is taken away; and whatever is thus gained, is so
-much clear profit, not only to the company, but to the society of which
-they are members.
-
-It is in consideration of the last circumstance, that companies for
-foreign commerce have a claim to extensive privileges. But no
-encouragement given to such associations should be carried farther than
-the public good necessarily requires it should be. The public may reward
-the ingenuity, industry and inventions of particular members, and
-support a private undertaking as far as is reasonable; but every
-encouragement given, ought to be at the expence of the whole community,
-not at that of particular denominations of inhabitants.
-
-The disadvantages proceeding from companies are easily to be guessed at,
-from the very nature of the advantages we have been setting forth: and
-the relation between the one and the other will point out the remedies.
-
-1. The weight of money in the hands of companies, and the public
-encouragement given, them, crush the efforts of private adventurers,
-while their success inspires emulation, and a desire in every individual
-to carry on a trade equally profitable.
-
-Here a statesman ought nicely to examine the advantages which the
-company reaps from the incorporation of their stock, and those which
-proceed from the public encouragement given to the undertaking; that
-with an impartial hand, he may make an equal distribution of public
-benefits. And when he finds it impossible to contribute to the
-advancement of the public good, by communicating the privileges of
-companies to private adventurers, he ought to facilitate the admittance
-of every person properly qualified into such associations.
-
-2. The second disadvantage of companies, is, a concomitant of that
-benefit so sensibly felt by the state, from the union of their interest,
-while they purchase in foreign markets: the same union which, at the
-time of buying, secures the company from all competitions, proves
-equally disadvantageous to those who purchase from them at home. They
-are masters of their price, and can regulate their profits by the
-_height_ of demand; whereas they ought to keep them constantly
-proportioned to the real value of the merchandize.
-
-The advantages resulting from the union of many private stocks is common
-to all companies; but those we have mentioned to proceed from the union
-of their interest, is peculiar to those who carry on an exclusive trade
-in certain distant parts of the world. We have, in a former chapter,
-laid down the maxims which influence the conduct of a statesman in
-regulating the prices of merchandize, by watching over the balance of
-work and demand, and by preserving the principles of competition in
-their full activity. But here a case presents itself, where, upon one
-side of the contract, competition can have no effect, and where its
-introduction, by destroying the exclusive privilege of the company to
-trade in certain countries, is forbid for the sake of the public good.
-
-What method, therefore, can be fallen upon to preserve the advantage
-which the nation reaps from the company’s buying in foreign parts
-without being exposed to competition; and at the same time to prevent
-the disadvantage to which the individuals of the society are exposed at
-home, when they endeavour, in competition with one another, to purchase
-from a company, who, in virtue of the same exclusive privilege, are
-united in their interest, and become masters to demand what price they
-think fit.
-
-It may be answered, that it cannot be said of companies as of private
-dealers, that they profit of every little circumstance of competition,
-to raise their price. Those have a fixed standard, and all the world
-buys from them at the same rate; so that retailers, who supply the
-consumption, have in one respect this notable advantage, that all buying
-at the same price, no one can undersell another; and the competition
-between them secures the public from exorbitant prices.
-
-I agree that these advantages are felt, and that they are real; but
-still they prove no more than that the establishment of companies is not
-so hurtful to the interest of those who consume their goods, as it would
-be could they profit to the utmost of their exclusive privilege in
-selling by retail. But it does not follow from this, that the profits
-upon such a trade do not rise (in consequence of their privilege) above
-the standard proper for making the whole commerce of a nation flourish.
-The very jealousy and dissatisfaction, conceived by other merchants,
-equally industrious and equally well deserving of the public, because of
-the great advantages enjoyed by those incorporated, under the protection
-of exclusive privileges, is a hurt to trade in general, is contrary to
-that principle of impartiality which should animate a good statesman,
-and should be prevented if possible. Let us therefore go to the bottom
-of this affair; and, by tracing the progress of such mercantile
-undertakings, as are proper objects for the foundation of companies, and
-which entitle them to demand and to obtain certain exclusive privileges,
-let us endeavour to find out a method by which a statesman may establish
-such societies, so as to have it in his power to lay their inland sales
-under certain regulations, capable to supply the want of competition;
-and to prevent the profits of exclusive trade from rising, considerably,
-above the level of _that_ which is carried on without any such
-assistance from the public.
-
-While the interest of companies is in few hands, the union of the
-members is more intimate, and their affairs are carried on with more
-secrecy. This is always the case in the infancy of such undertakings.
-But the want of experience frequently occasions considerable losses; and
-while this continues to be the case, no complaints are heard against
-such associations. Few pretend to rival their undertaking, and it
-becomes at first more commonly the object of raillery than of jealousy.
-During this period, the statesman should lay the foundation of his
-authority; he ought to spare no pains nor encouragement to support the
-undertaking; he ought to inquire into the capacity of those at the head
-of it; order their projects to be laid before him; and when he finds
-them reasonable, and well planned, he ought to take unforeseen losses
-upon himself: he is working for the public, not for the company; and the
-more care and expence he is at in setting the undertaking on foot, the
-more he has a right to direct the prosecution of it towards the general
-good. This kind of assistance given, entitles him to the inspection of
-their books; and from this, more than any thing, he will come at an
-exact knowledge of every circumstance relating to their trade. By this
-method of proceeding, there will be no complaints on the side of the
-adventurers, they will engage with chearfulness, being made certain of
-the public assistance, in every reasonable undertaking; their stock
-becomes in a manner insured, individuals are encouraged to give them
-credit, and from creditors they will naturally become associates in the
-undertaking. So soon as the project comes to such a bearing as to draw
-jealousy, the bottom may be enlarged by opening the doors to new
-associates, in place of permitting the original proprietors to augment
-their stock with borrowed money; and thus the fund of the company may be
-increased in proportion to the employment found for it, and every one
-will be satisfied.
-
-When things are conducted in this way, the authority of public
-inspection is no curb upon trade; the individuals who serve the company
-are cut off from the possibility of defrauding: no mysteries, no
-secrets, from which abuses arise, will be encouraged; trade will become
-honourable and secure, not fraudulent and precarious; because it will
-grow under the inspection of its protector, who only protects it for the
-public good.
-
-Why do companies demand exclusive privileges, and why are they ever
-granted, but as a recompense to those who have been at great expence in
-acquiring a knowledge which has cost nothing to the state? And why do
-they exert their utmost efforts to conceal the secrets of their trade,
-and to be the only sharers in the profits of it, but to make the public
-refund tenfold the expence of their undertaking.
-
-When companies are once firmly established, the next care of a
-statesman, is, to prevent the profits of their trade from rising above a
-certain standard. We speak at present of those only, who, by exclusive
-privileges, are exposed to no competition at their sales. One very good
-method to keep down prices, is, to lay companies under a necessity of
-increasing their stock as their trade can bear it, by the admission of
-new associates; for by increasing the company’s stock, you increase, I
-suppose, the quantity of goods they dispose of, and consequently
-diminish the competition of those who demand of them: but as even this
-will not have the effect, of reducing prices to the adequate value of
-the merchandize (a thing only to be done by competition) the statesman
-himself may interpose an extraordinary operation. He may support high
-profits to the company, upon all articles of luxury consumed at home, in
-favour of keeping down the prices of such goods as are either for
-exportation or manufacture.
-
-This can only be done when he has companies to deal with: in every other
-case, the principles of competition between different merchants, trading
-in the same goods, upon separate interests, makes the thing impossible.
-But where the interests of the sellers, which are the company, are
-united, and where there is no competition, they are masters of their
-price, according to the principles laid down in the seventh chapter.
-Now, provided the dividend upon the whole stock be a sufficient
-recompense both for the value of the fund, and the industry of those who
-are employed to turn it to account, the end is accomplished.
-Extraordinary profits upon any particular species of trade cast a
-discouragement upon all others.
-
-We very frequently see that great trading companies become the means of
-establishing public credit; on which occasions, it is proper to
-distinguish between the trading stock of the company, which remains in
-their possession, and the actions, bonds, annuities, contracts, &c.
-which carry their name, and which have nothing but the name in common.
-The price of the first is constantly regulated by the profits upon the
-trade; the price of the other, by the current value of money.
-
-Let me next observe the advantage which might result to a nation, from a
-prudent interposition of the statesman, in the regulation of a tarif of
-prices for such goods as are put to sale without any competition on the
-side of the sellers.
-
-The principles we have laid down, direct us to proscribe, as much as
-possible, all foreign consumption, especially that of work; and to
-encourage as much as possible the exportation of it. Now, if what the
-India company of England, for example, sells to strangers, and exports
-for a return in money, is equal to the money she herself has formerly
-exported, the balance upon the India trade will stand even. But if the
-competition of the French and Dutch is found hurtful to the English
-company in her outward sales, may not the government of that nation lend
-a hand towards raising the profits of the company, upon tea, china, and
-japan wares, which are articles of superfluity consumed by the rich, in
-order to enable the company to afford her silk and cotton stuffs to
-strangers, at a more reasonable rate? These operations, I say, are
-practicable, where a company sells without competition, but are never to
-be undertaken, but when the state of its affairs are perfectly well
-known; because the prices of exportable goods might, perhaps, be kept up
-by abuse and mismanagement, and not by the superior advantages which
-other nations have in carrying on a like commerce. The only remedy
-against abuse is reformation. But how often do we see a people laid
-under contribution in order to support that evil!
-
-Companies, we have said, owe their beginning to the difficulties to
-which an infant commerce is exposed: these difficulties once surmounted,
-and the company established upon a solid foundation, new objects of
-profit present themselves daily; so much, that the original institution
-is frequently eclipsed, by the accessary interests of the society. It is
-therefore the business of a statesman to take care that the exclusive
-privileges granted to a society, for a certain purpose, be not extended
-to other interests, nowise relative to that which set the society on
-foot, and gave it a name. And when exclusive privileges are given, a
-statesman should never fail to stipulate for himself, a particular
-privilege of inspection into all the affairs of the company, in order to
-be able to take measures which effectually prevent bad consequences to
-the general, interest of the nation, or to that of particular classes.
-
-Let this suffice at present, as to the privileges enjoyed by companies
-in foreign trade. Let me now examine the nature of such societies in
-general, in order to discover their influence on the mercantile
-interests of a nation, and how they tend to bring every branch of trade
-to perfection, when they are established and carried on under the eye of
-a wise administration.
-
-Besides the advantages and disadvantages above mentioned, there are
-others found to follow the establishment of trading companies. The first
-proceed from _union_, that is, a common interest; the last from
-_disunion_, that is, from separate interests.
-
-A common interest unites, and a separate interest disunites the members
-of every society; and did not the first preponderate among mankind,
-there would be no society at all. Those of the same nation may have a
-common interest relative to foreigners, and a separate interest relative
-to one another; those of the same profession may have a common interest
-relative to the object of their industry, and a separate interest
-relative to the carrying it on: the members of the same mercantile
-company may have the same interest in the dividend, and a separate
-interest in the administration of the fund which produces it. The
-children of the same family; nay even a man and his wife, though tied by
-the bonds of a common interest, may be disjoined by the effects of a
-separate one. Mankind are like loadstones, they draw by one pole, and
-repel by another. And a statesman, in order to cement his society,
-should know how to engage every one, as far as possible, to turn his
-attracting pole towards the particular center of common good.
-
-From this emblematical representation of human society, I infer, that it
-is dangerous to the common interest, to permit too close an union
-between the members of any subaltern society. When the members of these
-are bound together, as it were by every articulation, they in some
-measure become independent of the great body; when the union is less
-intimate, they admit of other connections, which cement them to the
-general mass[O].
-
-Footnote O:
-
- This was writ before the society of Jesuits was suppressed in France.
-
-Companies ought to be permitted, consistently with these principles.
-Their mercantile interests alone ought to be united, in so far as union
-is required to carry on their undertaking with reasonable profits; but
-beyond this, every subaltern advantage by which the associates might
-profit, in consequence of their union, ought to be cut off; and the
-public should take care to support the interest of any private person
-against them, on all occasions, where they take advantage of their union
-to hurt the right of individuals. Let me illustrate this by an example.
-Several weavers, fishermen, or those of any other class of the
-industrious, unite their stocks, in order to overcome those difficulties
-to which single workmen are exposed, from a multiplication of expences,
-which might be saved by their association. This company makes a great
-demand for the materials necessary for carrying on their business. By
-this demand they attach to themselves a great many of the industrious
-not incorporated, who thereby get bread and employment. So far these
-find an advantage: but in proportion as the undertaking is extended, and
-the society becomes able to engross the whole, or a considerable part of
-such a manufacture, they destroy their competitors; and by forming a
-single interest, in the purchase of the materials requisite, and in the
-sale of their manufactures, they profit in the first case, by reducing
-the gains of their subaltern assistants below the proper standard; and
-in the second, they raise their own profits too far above what is
-necessary.
-
-The method, therefore, to prevent such abuses, is, for a statesman to
-interpose; not by restraining the operations of the company, but by
-opposing the force of principles similar to those by which they profit,
-in such a manner as to render their unjust dealings ineffectual. If the
-weavers oppress the spinners, for instance, methods may be fallen upon,
-if not by incorporating the last, at least by uniting their interests,
-so as to prevent a hurtful competition among them. He may discourage too
-extensive companies, by establishing and supporting others, which may
-serve to preserve competition; and he may punish, severely, every
-transgression of the laws, tending to establish an arbitrary dependence
-on the company. In short, while such societies are forming, he ought to
-be their protector; and when they are formed, he ought to take those
-whom they might be apt to oppress under his protection.
-
-In establishing companies for manufactures, it is a good expedient to
-employ, in such undertakings, none but those who have been bred to the
-different branches of their business. When people of fortune, ignorant
-and projecting, interest themselves in infant manufactures, with a view
-to become suddenly rich, they are so bent upon making vast profits,
-proportioned to their stock, that their hopes are generally
-disappointed, and the undertaking fails. Pains-taking people, bred to
-frugality, content themselves with smaller gains; but under the public
-protection, these will swell into a large sum, and the accumulation of
-small profits will form a new class of opulent people, who adopt, or
-rather retain the sentiments of frugality with which they were born.
-
-Thus, for instance, in establishing fisheries, in place of private
-subscriptions from those who put in their money from public spirit, and
-partly with a view to draw an interest for it; or from those who are
-allured by the hopes of being great gainers in the end, (the last I call
-projectors) the public should be at the great expence requisite; and
-coopers, sail-makers, rope-makers, ship-carpenters, net-makers; in
-short, every one useful to the undertaking, should be gratuitously taken
-in for a small share of the profits; and by their being lodged together
-in a building, or town, proper for carrying it on, every workman becomes
-an undertaker to the company, for the articles of his own work. No man
-concerned directly in the enterprize, should reside elsewhere than in
-the place: any one of the associates may undertake to furnish what
-cannot be manufactured at home at fixed prices. Thus the whole expence
-of the public in the support of the undertaking, may circulate through
-the hands of those who carry it on; and every one becomes a check upon
-another, for the sake of the dividend upon the general profits. One
-great advantage in carrying on undertakings in this manner, is, that
-although those concerned draw no profit at all upon the undertaking
-itself, they find their account in it, upon the several branches of
-their own industry. The herring trade was at first set on foot in
-Holland by a company of merchants, who failed; and their stock of
-busses, stores, &c. being sold at an under value, were bought by private
-people, who had been instructed (at the expence of the company’s
-miscarriage) in every part of the trade, and who carried it on with
-success. Had the company been set up at first in the manner here
-mentioned, their trade would never have suffered any check.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XXXI.
- _Recapitulation of the Second Book._
-
-
-Having paved the way in the first book, for a particular inquiry into
-the principles of modern political oeconomy; in the introduction to
-this, I shew that the ruling principle of the science, in all ages, has
-been to proceed upon the supposition that every one will act, in what
-regards the public, from a motive of private interest; and that the only
-public spirited sentiment any statesman has a right to exact of his
-subjects, is their strict obedience to the laws. The union of every
-private interest makes the common good: this it is the duty of a
-statesman to promote; this consequently ought to be the motive of all
-his actions; because the goodness of an action depends on the conformity
-between the motive and the duty of the agent. We can, therefore, no more
-subject the actions of a statesman to the laws of private morality, than
-we can judge of the dispensations of providence by what _we_ think right
-and wrong[P].
-
-Footnote P:
-
- From the want of attending duly to this distinction, some have been
- led into the blasphemy of imputing evil to the Supreme Being. There is
- no such thing as evil in the universe; all is good, all is absolutely
- perfect. The most flagitious actions tend to universal good: even
- these, in one respect, may be called the actions of God, as all that
- is done is done by him; but with respect to the _motive_ which God had
- in doing them, it is pure in the most sublime degree; the action is
- impious and wicked, with respect only to the agent; and his wickedness
- does not proceed from the action itself, but from the want of
- conformity between his duty and his motive in acting. Now if the
- punishment of such a transgression (which is also considered as the
- action of the Supreme Being) enters into the system of general good,
- is it not a monstrous folly to call it unjust? We know the duties of
- man, we know the duties of governors, but we know not the duties of
- God, if we may be allowed to make use of so very improper an
- expression, and it is for this reason only, that we cannot judge of
- the goodness of his providence. We must therefore take it for granted;
- and this is one object of what divines call _faith_, the belief of
- things not seen, when the disbelief of them would imply an absurdity.
-
-_CHAP._ I. In treating the principles of any science, many things must
-be blended together, at first, which in themselves are very different.
-In the first book I considered multiplication and agriculture as the
-same subject; in the second, trade and industry are represented as
-mutually depending on one another. To point out this relation, I give a
-definition of the one and the other, by which it appears, that to
-constitute trade, there must be a consumer, a manufacturer, and a
-merchant. To constitute their industry, there must be freedom in the
-industrious. His motive to work must be in order to procure for himself,
-by the means of trade, an equivalent, with which he may purchase every
-necessary, and remain with something over, as the reward of his
-diligence. Consequently, industry differs from labour, which may be
-forced, and which draws no other recompence, commonly, than bare
-subsistence. Here I take occasion to shew the hurtful effects of slavery
-on the progress of industry; from which I conclude, that its progress
-was in a great measure prevented by the subordination of classes under
-the feudal government; and that the dissolution of that system
-established it. Whether trade be the cause of industry, or industry the
-cause of trade, is a question of little importance, but the principle
-upon which both depend is a taste for superfluity in those who have an
-equivalent to give; this taste is what produces _demand_, and this again
-is the main spring of the whole operation.
-
-_CHAP._ II. We have substituted throughout this book, the term _demand_,
-to express the idea we conveyed in the last by that of _wants_; and
-since the subject becomes more complex, and that we have many more
-relations to take in, I must make a recapitulation of all the different
-acceptations of this term _demand_.
-
-_Demand_, in the first place, is always relative to _merchandize_; it is
-the buyer who demands; the seller offers to sale. 2. It is said to be
-_reciprocal_, when there is a double operation, that is, when the seller
-in the first, becomes the buyer in the second case; and then, taking the
-two operations in one view, we call those _demanders_ who have paid the
-highest price. 3. Demand is _simple_, or _compound_; _simple_, when
-there is no competition among the buyers; _compound_, when there is. 4.
-It is _great_ or _small_, according to the _quantity_ demanded. And 5.
-_high_ or _low_, according to the _price_ offered. The nature of a
-_gradual_ increase of demand, is to encourage industry, by augmenting
-the supply; that of a _sudden_ increase, is to make prices rise. This
-principle has not every where the same efficacy in producing these
-varieties: it is checked in its operations between merchants, who seek
-their profit; and it is accelerated among private people, who seek for
-subsistence, necessaries, or luxurious gratifications.
-
-_CHAP._ III. I come next to deduce the origin of trade and industry,
-which I discover from the principles of the first book, where bartering
-of necessaries was understood to be trade; and I find that the progress
-of this is owing to the progress of multiplication and agriculture. When
-a people arrive at a moral impossibility of increasing in numbers, there
-is a stop put to the progress of barter. This grows into trade, by the
-introduction of a new want (money) which is the universal object of
-desire to all men. While the desires of man are regulated by their
-physical wants, they are circumscribed within certain limits. So soon as
-they form to themselves others of a political nature, then all bounds
-are broken down. The difficulty of adapting wants to wants, naturally
-introduces money, which is an adequate equivalent for every thing. This
-constitutes sale, which is a refinement on barter. Trade is only a step
-farther; it is a double sale, the merchant buys, not for himself, but
-for others. A merchant is a machine of a complex nature. Do you want, he
-supplies you; have you any superfluities, he relieves you of them; do
-you want some of the universal equivalent money, he gives it you, by
-creating in you a credit in proportion to your circumstances. The
-introduction of so useful a machine, prompts every one to wish for the
-power of using it; and this is the reason why mankind extend their
-labour beyond the mere supply of their physical wants.
-
-Trade therefore abridges the tedious operations of sale and barter, and
-brings to light many things highly important for individuals, who live
-by relieving the wants of others, to know. It marks the standard of
-_demand_, which is, in a manner, the voice of the statesman, conducting
-the operations of industry towards the relief of wants; and directing
-the circulation of subsistence towards the habitations of the
-necessitous.
-
-_CHAP._ IV. The consequence of this, is to determine the value of
-commodities, and to mark the difference between _prime cost_ and
-_selling prices_. The first depends upon the time employed, the expence
-of the workman, and the value of the materials. The second is the sum of
-these, added to the profit upon alienation. It is of consequence to
-distinguish exactly between these two constituent parts of price, the
-cost and the profit: the first is invariable after the first
-determination, but the second is constantly increasing, either from
-delay in selling off, or by the multiplicity of alienations; and the
-more exactly every circumstance with regard to the whole analysis of
-manufactures is examined, the easier it is for a statesman to correct
-every vice or abuse which tends to carry prices beyond the proper
-standard.
-
-_CHAP._ V. Nothing tends to introduce an advantageous foreign trade more
-than low and determined prices. In the first place, it draws strangers
-to market. This we call _passive commerce_. Secondly, it gives merchants
-an opportunity to distribute the productions of their country with
-greater advantage among other nations, which is what we call _active
-foreign trade_. In this chapter, I trace the effects of the last
-species. I shew how merchants profit at first of the ignorance of their
-correspondents; how they engage them to become luxurious; how the
-competition between themselves, when profits are high, make them betray
-one another; and how the most ignorant savages are taught to take
-advantage of the discovery; how this intercourse tends to unite the most
-distant nations, as well as to improve them; and how naturally their
-mutual interest leads them to endeavour to become serviceable to one
-another.
-
-_CHAP._ VI. I next endeavour to shew the effects of trade upon those
-nations who are passive in the operation. Here I take an opportunity of
-bringing in a connexion between the principles of trade, and those of
-agriculture, and I shew on what occasions passive trade may tend to
-advance the cultivation of lands, and when it cannot. Upon this, I build
-a principle, that when passive trade implies an augmentation of the
-domestic consumption of subsistence, in order to carry it on, then will
-agriculture be advanced by it, and not otherwise; and as the first is
-commonly the case, from this I conclude, that trade naturally has the
-effect of increasing the numbers of mankind in every country where it is
-established. I next trace the consequences of a growing taste for
-superfluity, among nations living in simplicity; and I shew how
-naturally it tends to promote industry among the lower classes,
-providing they be free; or to make them more laborious, supposing them
-to be slaves: from which I conclude, that where the advancement of
-refinement requires the head, that is, the ingenuity and invention of
-man, those who are free have the advantage; and where it requires hands,
-that is to say labour, that the advantage is on the side of the slaves:
-slavery, for example, might have made Holland; but liberty alone could
-have made the Dutch.
-
-_CHAP._ VII. Having given a rough idea of trade in general, I come to a
-more accurate examination of the principles which a statesman must keep
-in view, in order to carry it to perfection, by rendring it a means of
-promoting ease and affluence at home, as well as power and superiority
-abroad. As a private person becomes easy in his circumstances in
-proportion to his industry, and so rises above the level of his fellows,
-in like manner, does an industrious nation become wealthy, and acquires
-a superiority over all her less industrious neighbours.
-
-The principle which set trade on foot we have shewn to be _demand_, what
-supports it and carries it to its perfection is _competition_. These
-terms are often confounded, or at least so blended together as to
-produce ideas incorrect, dark, and often contradictory: for this reason
-I have judged an analysis of them necessary, comparing them together,
-and pointing out their relations, differences, and coincidences.
-
-_Demand_ and _competition_ are both relative to buying and selling; but
-_demand_ can only be applied to _buying_, and _competition_ may be
-applied to _either_.
-
-_Demand_ marks an inclination to have, _competition_ an emulation to
-obtain a preference.
-
-_Demand_ can exist without _competition_, but _competition_ must
-constantly imply _demand_.
-
-_Demand_ is called _simple_, when there appears only one interest on the
-side of the buyers.
-
-_Competition_ is called _simple_, when it takes place on one side of the
-contract only, or when the emulation is at least much stronger on one
-side than on the other.
-
-_Demand_ is called _compound_, when more interests than one are found
-among those who desire to buy.
-
-_Competition_ is called _compound_, when an emulation is found to
-prevail on both sides of the contract at once.
-
-_Simple competition_ raises prices; _double competition_ restrains them
-to the adequate value of the merchandize.
-
-While _double competition_ prevails, the balance of work and demand
-stands even, under a gentle vibration; _simple competition_ destroys and
-overturns it.
-
-The objects of _competition_ frequently determine its force. Merchants
-buy in order to sell; consequently, their _competition_ is in proportion
-to their views of profit. Hungry people buy to eat, and their
-_competition_ is in proportion to their funds. The luxurious buy to
-gratify their desires, their _competition_ is in proportion to these.
-Strong _competition_ on one side, makes it diminish on the other; and
-when it becomes so strong as effectually to unite the interests on one
-side of the contract, then it becomes absolutely _simple_; this totally
-overturns the balance, and must in a short time destroy the divided
-interest.
-
-_CHAP._ VIII. I next examine the relative terms of _expence_, _profit_
-and _loss_. The relations they bear, are often not expressed, which
-involves those who use them in ambiguities proper to be avoided. I
-therefore call expence _national_, when the national stock is diminished
-by it, in favour of other states; it is _public_, when the money
-proceeding from a national contribution is expended by the state within
-the country; and _private expence_ is the laying out of money belonging
-to private people or private interests: this has no other effect than to
-promote domestic circulation. I farther distinguish between what we call
-_spending_, and what is called _advancing of money_; the first marks an
-intention to consume; the second marks a view to a subsequent
-alienation.
-
-Profit is either _positive_, _relative_, or _compound_.
-
-_Positive_, when some body gains and no body loses; _relative_, when
-some body gains exactly what is lost by another; and _compound_, when
-the gain of one implies a loss to another, but not equal to the full
-value of the gain. The same distinction may be applied to loss.
-
-_CHAP._ IX. Having laid down the fundamental principles which influence
-the operations of trade and industry, I take a view of their political
-consequences, and of the effects resulting to a state, which has begun
-to subject her political oeconomy to the interests of commerce; and such
-a state I call a _trading nation_.
-
-The first consequence is an augmentation of demand for the work of the
-people; because they begin now to supply strangers. If this augmentation
-is sudden, it will _raise_ demand; if it be gradual, it will _increase_
-it. If prices rise upon one extensive branch of industry, they must rise
-upon all; because a competition for hands must take place: the farmer
-looks out for servants, and must dispute them with the loom; and the
-first must draw back his additional expence upon the sale of his
-articles of the first necessity. Upon this revolution, wo to those who
-cannot increase their fund of subsistence in proportion to the
-augmentation of their expence! Nothing is so agreeable as the gradual
-rise of profits upon industry, and nothing so melancholy as the stop,
-which is the necessary consequence of all augmentations. When prices
-rise high, the market is deserted, and other nations profit of this
-circumstance to obtain a preference. From hence I conclude, that the
-_rise_ of demand is the forerunner of decay in trade; and the
-_augmentation_ of it, the true foundation of lasting opulence. But as an
-augmentation of supply may imply an augmentation of inhabitants, the
-statesman must constantly keep subsistence in an easy proportion to the
-demand for it: on this the whole depends. Plentiful subsistence is the
-infallible means of keeping prices low; and sudden and violent
-revolutions in the value of it, must ruin industry, in spite of a
-combination of every other favourable circumstance. The reason is plain:
-that article alone, comprehends two thirds of the whole expence of all
-the lower classes, and their gains must be in proportion to their
-expence; but as the gains of those who work for exportation are fixed,
-in a trading nation, by the effects of foreign competition, if their
-subsistence is not kept at an equal standard, they must live
-precariously, or in a perpetual vicissitude between plenty and want.
-From this may be gathered the infinite importance of distinguishing, in
-every trading nation, where the prices of subsistence are liable to
-great and sudden variations, these who supply strangers from those who
-supply their countrymen. As also the inconceivable advantage which would
-result from such a police upon grain, as might keep the price of it
-within determined limits.
-
-_CHAP._ X. This doctrine leads me naturally to consider the proportions
-between _demand_ and _supply_, and for the better conveying my ideas, I
-have considered them as two quantities suspended in the scales of a
-political balance, which I call that _of work and demand_; preferring
-the word _work_ to that of _supply_, because it is the interests of the
-workmen which chiefly come under our consideration.
-
-When the _work_ is proportioned to the _demand_, the balance vibrates
-under the influence of double competition; trade and industry flourish:
-but as the operation of natural causes must destroy this equilibrium,
-the hand of a statesman becomes constantly necessary to preserve it.
-
-After representing the different ways in which the balance comes to be
-subverted (by the _positive_ or _relative_ preponderancy of either
-scale) I point out the consequences of this neglect in the statesman’s
-administration. If the scale of _work_ should preponderate, that is, if
-there be more work than demand, either the workmen enter into a hurtful
-competition, which reduces their profit below the proper standard and
-makes them starve; or a part of the goods lie upon their hands, to the
-discouragement of industry. If the scale of demand should preponderate,
-then either prices will rise and profits consolidate, which prepares the
-way for establishing foreign rivalship, or the demand will immediately
-cease, which marks a check given to the growth of industry.
-
-Every subversion, therefore, of this balance, implies one of four
-inconveniencies, either the industrious starve one another; or a part of
-their work provided lies upon hand; or their profits rise and
-consolidate; or a part of the demand made, is not answered by them.
-These I call the immediate effects of the subversion of this balance. I
-next point out the farther consequences which they draw along with them,
-when the statesman is not on his guard to prevent them.
-
-A statesman must be constantly attentive, and so soon as he perceives a
-too frequent tendency in any one of the scales to preponderate, he ought
-gently to load the opposite scale, but never except in cases of the
-greatest necessity, take any thing out of the heavy one. Thus when the
-scale of demand is found to preponderate, he ought to give encouragement
-to the establishment of new undertakings, for augmenting the supply, and
-for preserving prices at their former standard: when the scale of work
-is on the preponderating hand, then every expedient for increasing
-exportation must be employed, in order to prevent profits from falling
-below the price of subsistence.
-
-_CHAP._ XI. I next examine how this equal balance comes at last to be
-destroyed.
-
-_1mo._ The constant increase of work implies an augmentation of numbers,
-and consequently of food; but the quantity of food depends on the extent
-and fertility of the soil: so soon therefore as the soil refuses to give
-more food, it must be sought for from abroad, and when the expence of
-procuring it rises above a certain standard, subsistence becomes dear;
-this raises the prices, the market is deserted, and the scale of work is
-made to preponderate, until the industrious enter into a hurtful
-competition and starve one another: here the application of public money
-becomes necessary.
-
-_2do._ When an idle people, abundantly fed, betake themselves to
-industry, they can afford, for a while, manufactures at the cheapest
-rate; because they do not _live_ by their industry, but _amuse
-themselves_ with it. Hence the cheapness of all sorts of country work,
-in former times, and of Nuns work in those we live in. But when the
-lands become purged of superfluous mouths, and when those purged off
-come to be obliged to live by their industry alone, then prices rise,
-and the market is deserted.
-
-_3tio._ When a statesman imprudently imposes taxes, in such a way as to
-oblige strangers to refund that part paid by the industrious who supply
-them; this also raises prices, and the market is deserted. Thus the
-operation of natural causes must bring every augmentation to a stop,
-unless the hand of a statesman be employed to check their immediate bad
-effects. When subsistence becomes scarce, and the improvement of lands
-too expensive, he must make the public contribute towards the
-improvement of the soil: when the price of subsistence still rises, from
-farther augmentations, he must keep it down with public money: and when
-this operation becomes too extensive, he must content himself with
-effectuating a diminution of price upon that part of subsistence which
-is consumed by those who supply foreign markets.
-
-_CHAP._ XII. Domestic vices alone are not sufficient to undo a trading
-nation; she must have rivals who are able to profit of them.
-
-While her balance of _work_ and _demand_ is made to vibrate by alternate
-_augmentations_, she marches on triumphant, and has nothing to fear:
-when these come to a stop, she must learn how to stand still, by the
-help of alternate _augmentations_ and _diminutions_, until the abuses in
-other nations shall enable her again to vibrate by _augmentations_. But
-so soon as a preponderancy of the scale of work is rectified, by
-retrenching the number of the industrious, and that the vibrations of
-the balance are carried on by alternate _diminutions_, in favour of
-supporting high profits upon industry, then all goes to wreck, and
-foreign nations, in spite of every disadvantage attending new
-undertakings, establish a successful rivalship: they take the bread out
-of the mouths of those who formerly served them; and profiting of the
-advantages formerly enjoyed by the traders, they make their own balance
-vibrate by augmentations, which sink the trade of the others by slow
-degrees, until it becomes extinct.
-
-_CHAP._ XIII. The rivalship between nations, leads me to inquire how far
-the form of their government may be favourable or unfavourable to the
-competition between them. Here I am led into a digression concerning the
-origin of power and subordination among men, so far as it is rational
-and consistent with natural equity; and I conclude, that all
-_subordination_ between man and man, in whatever relation they stand to
-one another, ought to be in proportion to their _mutual dependence_. The
-degrees of which are as various as the shades of a colour. I divide them
-however into four. 1. That of slaves upon their masters. 2. That of
-children upon their parents. 3. That of labourers upon the proprietors
-of lands. 4. That of the free hands, employed in trades and
-manufactures, upon their customers. And ascending a moment beyond my
-sphere, I say, that the subordination of subjects to their sovereigns,
-in all free governments, extends no farther than to a punctual obedience
-to the laws. I then proceed to an examination of former principles, and
-from a confrontation of the politics of our ancestors with the modern
-system, I conclude, that the great political impediment to the progress
-of trade and industry, proceeds more from an arbitrary, irregular, and
-undetermined subordination between classes, and between individuals,
-than from differences in the regular and established form of their
-government, legislation, and execution or administration of the supreme
-authority. While laws only govern, it is of the less importance who
-makes them, or who puts them in execution.
-
-_CHAP._ XIV. In this chapter I endeavour to amuse my reader with an
-application of our principles to the political oeconomy of the
-Lacedemonian commonwealth, where I shew, that trade and industry are not
-essential to security and happiness. By making an analysis of Lycurgus’s
-plan, I shew that its perfection was entirely owing to the simplicity of
-the institution.
-
-_CHAP._ XV. I come next to the application of general principles to
-particular modifications of trade.
-
-The balance of work and demand promotes the _foreign_ and _domestic_
-interests of a nation, equally. The _first_, by advancing her power and
-superiority abroad; the _last_, by keeping every one employed and
-subsisted at home. These interests are influenced by principles entirely
-different; and this opens a new combination highly proper to be attended
-to.
-
-In the first book, we considered the consumers and suppliers as members
-of the same society, and as having their interests blended together; but
-the moment that a question about foreign trade arises, they become
-entirely separated. Every country appears to be put under the direction
-of a particular statesman, and these must play against one another as if
-they were playing at chess. He who governs the consumers, must use his
-utmost endeavours to teach his people how to supply themselves. He who
-is at the head of the suppliers, must do what _he_ can to render the
-efforts of the other ineffectual, by selling cheap, and by making it the
-immediate interest of the subjects of his rival to employ the suppliers
-preferably to his own countrymen. Here then are two plans, opposite and
-contrary, to be executed; and we endeavour to point out the principles
-which ought to influence the conduct of the respective undertakers, in
-every stage of their prosperity or decline. We lay down the methods of
-improving every favourable circumstance, so as to advance the end
-proposed, and shew how to season every unavoidable inconvenience with
-the best palliatives, when a perfect remedy becomes impracticable.
-
-_CHAP._ XVI. In this chapter I continue the thread of my reasoning, in
-order to draw the attention of my readers to the difference between the
-principles of _foreign_ and _domestic_ commerce; and setting the latter
-apart for a subsequent examination, I enter upon an inquiry into the
-difference between those branches of foreign trade which make nations
-depend on one another _necessarily_, and those where the dependence is
-only _contingent_. The first may be reckoned upon, but the last being of
-a precarious nature, the preservation of them ought to be the particular
-care of the statesman.
-
-The method to be followed for this purpose, is, to keep the price of
-every article of exportation at a standard, proportioned to the
-possibility of furnishing it; and never to allow it to rise higher, let
-the foreign demand afford ever so favourable an opportunity. The danger
-to be avoided, is not the high profits, but the _consolidation_ of them;
-this consideration, therefore, must direct the statesman’s conduct in
-this particular. On the other hand, he must take care that the great
-classes of the industrious, who supply foreign demand, and who, from
-political considerations, are reduced to the _minimum_ of profits, be
-not by an accidental diminution of that foreign demand reduced below
-this necessary standard: he therefore must supply the want of foreign
-demand, by procuring a sale, in one way or other, for whatever part of
-this industry is found to lie upon hand; and if loss be incurred in this
-operation, it is better that it should fall on the whole community, who
-may be able to bear it, than on a single class, who must be crushed
-under the burthen.
-
-_CHAP._ XVII. When manufacturers are found without employment, the first
-thing to be done is to inquire minutely into the cause of it. It may
-proceed from a rise in the price of subsistence, from a diminution of
-demand from abroad, or from new establishments of manufactures at home;
-for each of which the proper remedy must be applied. The complaints of
-manufacturers are not the infallible sign of a decaying trade; they
-complain most when their exorbitant profits are cut off. The complaints
-of the real sufferers, those who lose _the necessary_, are feeble, and
-seldom extend farther than the sphere of their own misery. The true
-symptoms of a decaying trade, is to be sought for in the mansions of the
-rich, where foreign consumption makes its first appearance. A statesman
-will judge of the decay of _that_ trade _which supports and enriches the
-people_, more certainly from the _ease_ of the industrious classes, than
-from their _distress_. Foreign nations will willingly give _bread_ to
-those who serve them, but very seldom _any thing more_; and from hence I
-conclude, that the more manufacturers are at their ease, the more a
-statesman ought to be upon his guard to prevent this temporary advantage
-from bringing on both national poverty and private distress.
-
-When home consumption begins to be supplied from abroad, and when
-foreigners desert the market, or refuse our merchandize when we carry it
-to them, then we have an infallible proof of declining commerce;
-although the increase of home demand may immediately relieve every
-industrious person made idle, and even furnish them with better
-employment than ever, in supplying the luxury of their countrymen.
-
-A statesman ought to be provided with remedies against every disease.
-When luxury is on the road of rooting out foreign trade, let him lie
-upon the catch to pick up every workman made idle from the caprice of
-fashions, in order to give him useful employment: he may set his own
-example in opposition to that of the more luxurious, and in proportion
-as he gains ground upon them, he must open every channel to carry off
-the manufactures of those he has set to work for the re-establishment of
-foreign trade. If, on the other hand, he himself be of a luxurious
-disposition, and that he inclines to encourage it, he ought to take care
-that the example of dissipation he gives, may not have the effect of
-diminishing the hands employed for supplying both home consumption and
-foreign demand. This is accomplished by preserving a plentiful
-subsistence in the country, and by keeping down the prices of every
-species of manufacture, by gradually augmenting the hands employed, in
-proportion to the augmentation of demand; thus his luxury will increase
-his numbers, without hurting his foreign trade: the great art,
-therefore, is to adapt administration to circumstances, and to regulate
-it according to invariable principles.
-
-_CHAP._ XVIII. But as a statesman is not always the architect of that
-oeconomy by which his people must be governed, he should know how to
-remove inconveniencies as well as to prevent them; because he is
-answerable, in a great measure, for the consequences of the faults of
-those who have gone before him. Thus when his predecessors have allowed
-the operation of natural causes to raise prices, and to destroy foreign
-trade, he must descend into the most minute analysis of every
-circumstance relating to industry, in order to pluck up by the root the
-real cause of such augmentations. Mistaken remedies, applied in a
-disease not rightly understood, produce frequently the most fatal
-consequences.
-
-If a statesman, for instance, should apply the remedy against
-_consolidated profits_, by multiplying the hands employed in a
-manufacture, at a time when high prices proceed only from the dearness
-of living, by this simple mistake he will ruin all: those who really
-gain no more than a physical-necessary, will then enter into a hurtful
-competition, and starve one another. But if instead of multiplying hands
-he augments subsistence, prices will fall; and then by keeping hands
-rightly proportioned to demand, they will naturally and gradually come
-down to the lowest standard; and exportation will go on prosperously.
-
-I consider _consolidated profits_, and _high prices of subsistence_, as
-vices in a state, within the compass of a statesman’s care to redress.
-But there is a third cause of high prices, (that is relatively high,
-when compared with those in other countries) which will equally ruin
-foreign trade, in spite of all precautions.
-
-This happens when other nations have learned to profit of their superior
-natural advantages. I have shewn how vices at home enable foreigners to
-become our rivals; but without this assistance, every nation well
-governed, will be able to profit of its own natural superiority, in
-spite of the best management on the other side. The only remedy in such
-a case, is, for the nation whose trade begins to decline, in consequence
-of the natural superiority of other nations, to adhere closely to her
-_frugality_; to leave no stone unturned to inspire a luxurious taste in
-her rivals; and to wait with patience until the unwary beginners shall,
-from that cause, fall into the inconveniencies of dear living, and
-consolidated profits. Besides this expedient, there are others which
-depend on a judicious application of public money: an irresistible
-engine in trade, capable of ruining the commerce of any other nation,
-(not supporting it by similar operations) and of carrying on
-exportation, in spite of great natural disadvantages. But these
-principles are reserved for the fifth book, when we come to treat of the
-application of taxes.
-
-Having pointed out the methods of preserving a foreign trade already
-established, I next examine how those nations which have been
-contributing inadvertently to the exaltation of others more industrious,
-by carrying on with them a trade hurtful to themselves, may put a stop
-to the exhausting of their own treasures; may learn to supply themselves
-with every thing necessary; and may be taught to profit of their own
-natural advantages, so as to become the rivals of those who have perhaps
-reduced them to poverty; and even to recover, not only their former
-rank, but to lay the foundation of a political oeconomy capable of
-raising them to the level of the most flourishing states.
-
-I conclude my chapter, by calling for the attention of my reader to the
-wide difference there is between _theory_, where all the vices to be
-corrected appear clear and uncompounded; and _practice_, where they are
-often difficult to be discovered, and so complicated with one another,
-that it is hardly possible to apply any remedy which will not be
-productive of very great inconveniencies. Were the remedies for abuse as
-easily applied as theory seems to suggest, they would quickly be
-corrected every where.
-
-Let theorists, therefore, beware of trusting to their science, when in
-matters of administration, they either advise those who are disposed
-blindly to follow them; or when they undertake to meddle in it
-themselves. An old practitioner feels difficulties which he cannot
-reduce to principles, nor render intelligible to every body; and the
-theorist who boldly undertakes to remedy every evil, and who foresees
-none on the opposite side, will most probably miscarry, and then give a
-very rational account for his ill success. A good theorist, therefore,
-may be excellent in deliberation, but without a long and confirmed
-practice, he will ever make a blundering statesman in practice.
-
-_CHAP._ XIX. Having treated of the fundamental principles of _trade_ and
-_industry_; having explained the doctrine of _demand_ and _competition_;
-the theory of _prices_, with the causes of their _rise_ and _fall_; the
-difference between _prime cost_ and _profits_; the _consolidation_ of
-these; and the effects of such _consolidation_ in any branch of
-manufacture; I set my subject in a new light, and present it to my
-readers under a more extended view. Having, as I may say, studied the
-map of every province, we are now to look at that of the whole country.
-Here the principal rivers and cities are marked; but all brooks,
-villages, &c. are suppressed. This is no more than a short
-recapitulation of what has been gone through already. Trade, considered
-in this view, divides itself into three districts, or into three stages
-of life, as it were, _infancy_, _manhood_, and _old age_.
-
-During the _infancy_ of trade, the statesman should lay the foundation
-of _industry_. He ought to multiply wants, encourage the supply of them;
-in short, pursue the principles of the first book, with this addition,
-that he must exclude all importation of foreign work. While luxury tends
-only to banish idleness, to give bread to those who are in want, and to
-advance dexterity, it is productive of the best effects.
-
-When a people have fairly taken a laborious turn, when sloth is
-despised, and dexterity carried to perfection, then the statesman must
-endeavour to remove the incumbrances which must have proceeded from the
-execution of the first part of his plan. The scaffolding must be taken
-away when the fabric is compleated. These incumbrances are high prices,
-at which he has been obliged to wink, while he was inspiring a taste for
-industry in the advancement of agriculture and of manufactures; but now
-that he intends to supply foreign markets, he must multiply hands; set
-them in competition; bring down the price both of subsistence and work;
-and when the luxury of his people render this difficult, he must attack
-the manners of the rich, and give a check to the domestic consumption of
-superfluity, in order to have the more hands for the supply of
-strangers.
-
-The last stage of trade is by far the most brilliant; when, upon the
-extinction of foreign trade, the wealth acquired comes to circulate at
-home. The variety of new principles which arise upon this revolution,
-makes the subject of what remains to be examined in the succeeding
-chapters.
-
-_CHAP._ XX. Before I enter upon the principles of inland commerce, I
-prepare the way, by a short dissertation upon the term luxury. I
-endeavour to analyse the word to the bottom, to discover, and to range
-in order, every idea which can be conveyed by it. In this way I
-vindicate the definition I have given of it (which is the consumption of
-superfluity) and shew that luxury, as I recommend it, is free from the
-imputation either of being vicious or abusive.
-
-I distinguish, therefore, between _luxury_, _sensuality_, and _excess_,
-three terms often confounded, but conveying very different ideas. A
-person may consume great quantities of superfluity from a principle of
-ostentation, or even with a political view to encourage industry; him I
-call _luxurious_. _Sensuality_ may be indulged in a cottage, as well as
-in a palace; and excess is purely relative to circumstances. _Luxury_,
-therefore, as well as _sensuality_, or any other passion, may be carried
-to _excess_, and so become vicious. Now _excess_ in consumption is
-vicious in proportion as it affects our _moral_, _physical_, _domestic_,
-or _political_ interests; that is to say, our _mind_, our _body_, our
-_private fortune_, or the _state_. When the consumption we make, does no
-harm in any of these respects, it may be called moderate and free from
-vice.
-
-Our _moral_ and _physical_ interests are hurt by excess, in _eating_,
-_drinking_, _love_, and _ease_, or indolence; according as these
-gratifications do respectively affect the _mind_, or the _body_, or
-both.
-
-Our _domestic_ interest frequently obliges us to call that _excess_,
-which nature hardly finds _sufficient_; and, on other occasions, both
-mind and body go to destruction, by _excesses_ which have contributed to
-amass the greatest fortunes.
-
-The most direct _political_ inconvenience of excessive luxury, is, the
-loss of foreign trade. The more indirect follow as consequences of those
-already described; because they may render those employed in the service
-of the state, negligent and unfit, rapacious and corrupt, but these
-evils are more properly the _direct_ effects of the imperfections of the
-mind, than consequences resulting _naturally_ from excess in the
-consumption of superfluity. They ought, therefore, to be considered as
-secondary effects, since they may proceed from avarice as well as
-prodigality. The correcting of political vices resembles the weeding a
-bed of tender flowers, the roots are all blended together, and the
-leaves are almost alike. It is proper, therefore, to have both the
-discernment and dexterity of a good gardner for such an operation.
-
-_CHAP._ XXI. From _luxury_ I pass to the _physical-necessary_, which I
-define from the consumption implied by it: a man has his
-physical-necessary when _he is fed, clothed, and protected from harm_.
-But as these enjoyments, we find, do by no means satisfy his desires, I
-am led to establish another _necessary_ which I call _political_. This I
-measure also by the consumption implied by it, to wit, that which is
-suitable to the _rank_ of the person.
-
-_Rank_ again is determined by the _common opinion of men_, and this
-_opinion_ is founded upon circumstances, which relate to the _birth_,
-_education_, or _habits_ of the person. When common opinion has placed
-any one in a certain rank, he becomes entitled to enjoy certain articles
-of _physical-superfluity_, which enter into the composition of his
-_political-necessary_: thus, such as are raised above the level of the
-very lowest class of inhabitants, are entitled to have a Sunday’s dress;
-the farmer has a better coat than a labouring servant; the priest of the
-parish must have a gown; the magistrate of a little town must have
-ruffles, perhaps silk stockings; a provost a velvet coat, and a lord
-mayor a state coach; these and such like articles constitute what I call
-the _political-necessary_.
-
-A man’s rank sometimes obliges him to certain articles of expence, which
-may possibly affect even his _physical-necessary_. How frequently do we
-see people cover their shoulders, at the expence of their belly. The
-competition between the desires of our _mind_, and those which proceed
-from our _animal oeconomy_ is so strong, that it is frequently hard to
-determine, whether the incapacity to supply our _physical wants_,
-proceeds from our having too far gratified our other desires, or from
-real poverty.
-
-The lowest classes of a people, in a country of trade, must be
-restrained to their physical-necessary; but this restraint must be
-brought about, not by _oppression_, but by the effects of _competition_
-alone. While this is supported among people of the same class, it has
-the effect to reduce them all to the _physical-necessary_, and when it
-reduces them lower it is a vice, and ought to be checked. A peculiar
-ingenuity in some workmen of the same class, will raise them above this
-level; and the more they can raise themselves above competition, the
-greater will their gains be. By becoming masters in any art, they share
-the profits of those whom they employ; and thus rise in rank and
-fortune, provided their frugality concur with every other natural or
-acquired advantage. It is therefore a principle, _to encourage
-competition universally, until it has had the effect to reduce people of
-industry to the physical-necessary, and to prevent it ever from bringing
-them lower_: from this results the necessity of applying every expedient
-for relieving certain classes of the load of their children, if you
-incline they should breed; and of preventing taxes and other burthens
-from affecting them unequally.
-
-_CHAP._ XXII. I now come to treat directly of inland commerce, as taking
-place upon the extinction of foreign trade, when all attempts to recover
-it are found to be vain. In such a situation, a wealthy nation is not to
-consider itself as undone: an able statesman must know how to make his
-people happy in every situation. It is an universal principle of
-conduct, private and political, to look forward, and to improve the
-present from the experience of the past. One great inconvenience
-resulting from a foreign trade _already lost_, is, that there is no
-farther question of making any new acquisition of wealth, or of
-replacing one farthing of what at any time may be sent out of the
-country. But the greatest inconveniencies are felt in the losing such a
-trade: these are numberless, when an able statesman is not at hand to
-prevent them.
-
-That I may point them out in order, I make a short recapitulation of our
-principles: the slightest hint is sufficient to shew their force; and
-when my reader is sensible of a repetition, which he finds superfluous,
-let him reflect that this very circumstance is proof of their exactness.
-In this science we must use our principles as a carpenter uses his
-foot-rule; there is nothing new to him in this instrument; but still he
-must have it in his hand, to be able to know any thing, with accuracy,
-concerning his work.
-
-In this chapter I throw in a short dissertation upon the difference
-between antient and modern luxury. Their natures and effects are briefly
-insisted on. I point out the resemblance between the luxury of modern
-times, and that of the few great trading cities of antiquity; such as
-Tyre and Carthage; and I shew in what respect it differed from that
-luxury which proved the downfall of the empires of Asia and Rome.
-
-When empires were once formed, they were ruined by luxury, and preserved
-by means of their wars: because these made their wealth circulate.
-
-When the trading states took a military turn, and became ambitious of
-conquest, their ruin soon followed: because war destroyed the industry
-which made their greatness.
-
-The cause of difference I find to proceed from this; that in the
-_monarchy_, the riches from which the luxury sprung was the effect of
-rapine; in the _other_, the effect of industry. The first gave no
-equivalent for their wealth; the others did. Where no equivalent is
-given in the acquisition, all proportion is lost in the dissipation. The
-luxury of the robbers was monstrous and violent: that of the merchants,
-systematical and proportional. The luxury of the monarchies brought on
-neglect in public affairs: in the cities, it was this neglect which
-destroyed their luxury. The luxury of the monarchies had nothing to
-recommend it, but the gratification of the passions: the luxury of the
-others produced no harm, but from this very circumstance. From the
-contrast I have drawn, I establish the difference between antient and
-modern luxury. The first was violent; the last is systematical, and can
-be supported by industry and liberty only. A farther consequence is,
-that as rapine is incompatible with industry, so is arbitrary power:
-consequently, those absolute princes who establish industry in their
-country, in order to taste of the sweets of luxury and wealth, put
-insensibly a bridle in the mouths of their successors, who must, from
-this consideration alone, submit their government to a regular system of
-laws and political œconomy.
-
-This is a better scheme for limiting the arbitrary power of Princes than
-all the rebellions that ever were contrived. Confusion establishes
-arbitrary power, and order destroys it.
-
-_CHAP._ XXIII. When a nation, which has long dealt and enriched herself
-by a reciprocal commerce in manufactures with other nations, finds the
-balance of trade turn against her, it is her interest to put a total
-stop to it, and to remain as she is, rather than to persist habitually
-in a practice, which, by a change of circumstances, must have effects
-very opposite to those advantages which it produced formerly. Such a
-stop may be brought about by the means of duties and prohibitions, which
-a statesman can lay on importations, so soon as he perceives that they
-begin to preponderate with respect to the _exportations_ of his own
-country.
-
-I illustrate this principle by an examination of those which influence
-the establishment of incorporated cities and boroughs. I shew how these
-may be considered as so many states, which domestic luxury, taxes, and
-the high price of living, have put out of a capacity to support a
-competition with strangers (that is with the open country) which here
-represents the rest of the world. I shew the reasonableness of such
-exclusive privileges, in favour of those who share the burthens peculiar
-to the community, in so far only as regards the supply of their own
-consumption; and I point out, by what methods any discouragements to
-industry may be prevented, as often as that industry has for its object
-the supplying the wants of those who are not included in the
-corporation.
-
-From the long and constant practice of raising _taxes_ within
-incorporated cities, I conclude, that _taxes_ are a very natural
-consequence of luxury, and of the loss of foreign trade; and as Princes
-have taken the hint from the cities, to extend them universally, it is
-no wonder to see foreign trade put an end to, in consequence of such
-injudicious extensions.
-
-_CHAP._ XXIV. I next proceed to the methods proper to be used, in the
-delicate operation of so great a revolution as that of degrading a
-people from their right of being considered as a trading nation.
-
-If a statesman keeps a watchful eye over every article of importation;
-and examines minutely, the use every article imported is put to; he will
-easily discern, when it is proper to encourage, when to restrain, and
-when to prohibit.
-
-In this examination, however, every relation must be taken in: because
-the importation of a foreign commodity affects many different interests,
-some within, some without the nation; some directly, others only
-consequentially. Nothing is so complex as the interests of trade. The
-importation of a commodity may first advance the interest of those at
-home, who furnish the commodities exported, of which the importation is
-the return. The importation may be useful for the advancement of
-manufactures, providing it consist in matter fit for them; yet if the
-whole manufacture produced from it be for home-consumption, the national
-interest will, on the whole, be hurt by the importation. The importation
-of wines and brandies is a great saving upon subsistence, in northern
-countries, where liquors distilled from grain are made to supply the
-place of them. These and many other relations must be examined, before a
-statesman can pass sentence upon an article of importation. The inquiry
-made, and accounts balanced on both sides, every hurtful article of
-importation should be cut off; and when this is done, if the consequence
-should prove a general stop to exportation, then is foreign trade
-decently interred, without any violent revolution; because the statesman
-is supposed to have proceeded gradually, and to have been all the while
-labouring to increase consumption at home, in proportion as the
-industrious have been forced to lie idle by the other operations.
-
-When foreign trade is at an end, the number of inhabitants must be
-reduced to the proportion of home-subsistence, in case their former
-prosperity had carried them beyond it. The nation’s wealth must be kept
-entire, and made to circulate, so as to provide subsistence and
-employment for every body.
-
-_CHAP._ XXV. Let a nation be reduced ever so low in point of foreign
-commerce, she will always find a demand from abroad for the
-superfluities of her natural productions; which, if rightly conducted,
-will prove a means of advancing her national wealth.
-
-If the exportation of subsistence should go forward, while many are
-found in want at home, a restraint laid upon exportation will not
-redress the inconvenience; because the wretched will still remain so,
-unless they are assisted and put in a capacity to dispute the
-subsistence of their own country with foreign nations. The principal
-cause of this phenomenon is the preponderancy of the scale of work at
-home. When home-demand does not fill up the void, of which we have
-spoken, a vicious competition takes place among those who work for a
-physical-necessary; the price of their labour falls below the general
-standard of subsistence _abroad_; their portion is exported, and they
-are forced to starve.
-
-A statesman, therefore, at the head of a luxurious people, must
-endeavour to keep his balance even; and if a subversion is necessary, it
-is far better it should happen by the preponderancy of the scale of
-demand. Here is my reason for preferring this alternative.
-
-All subversions are bad, and are attended with bad consequences. If the
-scale of work preponderates, the industrious will starve, their
-subsistence will be exported; the nation gains by the balance, but
-appears in a manner to sell her inhabitants. If the scale of demand
-preponderates, luxury must increase, but the poor are fed at the expence
-of the rich, and the national stock of wealth stands as it was. Upon the
-cessation, therefore, of foreign trade, you must either lose your
-people, or encourage luxury.
-
-The statesman having regulated the concerns of his outward commerce,
-must apply more closely than ever to his domestic concerns. I reduce the
-principal objects of his attention to three. 1. To regulate the progress
-of luxury according to the hands ready to supply the demand for it. 2.
-To circumscribe the bounds of it, that is, the multiplication of his
-people, to the proportion of the extent and fertility of the soil. And
-in the last place, to distribute his people into classes, according as
-circumstances (of which he is not master) may demand.
-
-Here I point out the reasons why the progress of luxury does less hurt
-to a great kingdom than to a small state. Why sumptuary laws are good in
-an imperial town of Germany, and why they would be hurtful in London or
-Paris. Why the establishment of a standing army, _in a country fully
-peopled_ and rich, should be accompanied with endeavours to diminish
-luxury, in order to prevent too great a preponderancy of the scale of
-demand, and the rising of prices, which would cut off the hopes of
-recovering a foreign trade.
-
-Having briefly gone through the objects of the statesman’s concern, I
-come to examine the natural consequences of this revolution upon the
-spirit, government, and manners of a people, who from industrious and
-frugal are become luxurious and polite.
-
-The traders withdraw their stocks as trade decays, and lend it out at
-home to landed men, who thereby are enabled to become luxurious. This
-indemnifies the industrious for the loss of foreign demand. When the
-money, formerly employed in order to gain more, begins to circulate at
-home, for providing superfluities, and augmenting domestic consumption,
-the country appears daily to be growing more opulent; tradesmen and
-manufacturers, who were formerly confined to a physical-necessary, are
-now easy in their circumstances; they increase their consumption; this
-accelerates circulation; an air of plenty and ease spreads over the face
-of the country; and the very consequences of their decline, are
-construed as invincible proofs of their growing prosperity.
-
-Riches may be considered by a statesman in three different lights; as a
-mine when they are locked up; as an object of trade when they are
-employed in order to gain more; or as an object of luxury, and fund for
-taxation, when they are spent in the gratification of our political
-wants.
-
-The general cast of mind and disposition of the inhabitants of every
-country (in so far as regards money) may, I think, be reduced to one or
-other of these three modifications. It is the business of a statesman to
-work upon the spirit of his people, so as to model their taste of
-expence by insensible degrees, and to bring it to be analogous to that
-principle which is most conducive to national prosperity. Hoarding in
-private people, can hardly ever be advantageous to a state; when the
-state hoards, the case is very different, as shall be shewn. While money
-is employed to gain more, it never can procure to the proprietor, either
-power or authority; but when, in the last case, it is employed for the
-gratification of our desires, in the hands of the ambitious, it acquires
-power; consequently, may rival that influence which no person ought to
-enjoy, but he who is at the head of the state. This is the mother of
-faction, and the root from which all hurtful parties spring. It is by
-such means that governments (be they good or bad) are brought into
-anarchy. Private wealth corrupted, and at last destroyed the excellence
-of the Roman commonwealth: and private wealth alone established the
-liberty of Holland upon the ruins of Spanish tyranny. So soon therefore
-as the inhabitants of a country begin to employ their riches to gratify
-their inclinations, at the same time should a statesman begin to make
-himself rich, in order to preserve that superiority which is essential
-to _him_ who sits at the head of every principle of action. And whenever
-this lies beyond his reach, the power he had will soon disappear; and
-the government will take a new form.
-
-A statesman acquires wealth by imposing taxes upon his people: rapine is
-the tax of the despote; capitation, land tax, and others which affect
-persons, are those of the monarch; excises upon consumption are imposed
-by limited governments. The first lay all flat, the second affect
-growing wealth, the last accelerate dissipation. I conclude my chapter
-with some little historical illustrations concerning the power and
-influence of great men in a state, under different circumstances.
-
-_CHAP._ XXVI. I next consider the nature of what I call the _balance of
-wealth_. The more circulation there is in a country, the more this
-object becomes important. While the greatest part of a nation’s coin was
-locked up; or while it circulated by rapine and extortion, the effects
-discovered in modern times, where it circulates by industry, and as an
-adequate equivalent for services, were hardly perceived.
-
-The specie, or circulating coin of a country, must be considered as a
-part of the national patrimony. This is constantly changing hands in a
-country of industry, and he who is proprietor of any part of it, is in
-so far a proprietor of the public stock.
-
-With this species of property, every other may be acquired. When it is
-given as the price of land, such an exchange produces no alteration in
-the respective situation of the parties. An estate in land is neither
-better or worse than another in coin of the same value. If I purchase an
-annuity, or pay off my debts with the coin I have in my pocket, neither
-I or the person with whom I transact, make any change of situation in
-point of wealth.
-
-But if I lay out my coin for consumable commodities for my own use, then
-so soon as any part of what I buy is consumed, I become poorer: for this
-operation annihilates, in a manner, as to me, the coin I had. This I
-call a vibration in the balance of wealth; I grow poorer, and he who
-produced the consumable commodity for my use, is so far richer: the
-balance, therefore, is turned against me, in his favour.
-
-As many people, therefore, live by producing consumable commodities, one
-use of coin is to render inconsumable, as it were, that part of them
-which is superfluous to our own consumption. By this operation the
-superfluity passes into other hands who consume it, and the coin which
-the industrious receive in return purchases a supply for all their
-wants, in proportion as they choose to relieve them.
-
-The vibration of the balance of wealth, therefore, is no more than the
-changes which are daily taking place, as to the relative proportion of
-riches between the individuals of a state: and as this vibration can
-only be produced when the coin any one possesses comes to disappear,
-without his retaining the possession of any real equivalent which he can
-alienate for the same value; it follows, that the balance is constantly
-turning in favour of those who either sell their effects, their service,
-or their work; and this balance they retain, in proportion as their
-gains exceed their own consumption. On the other hand, the balance is
-constantly turning against the idle consumers; because they are supposed
-to produce nothing; consequently, the whole of their consumption goes in
-diminution of their wealth.
-
-Hitherto the question has only been about the balance of moveable
-wealth, that is coin; but the introduction of this, together with a
-taste for superfluity, has the effect of melting down _solid property_
-into what I call _symbolical money_.
-
-When once this refinement upon the use of money takes place, we see
-houses, lands, jurisdictions, provinces, principalities, crowns,
-scepters and empires, thrown into circulation by means of the symbolical
-money called bank notes, transfer in bank stock, accounts, bonds,
-mortgages, alienations of domain, mortgage of taxes, and cessions made
-in definitive treaties.
-
-As frugality and industry are in our days capable of amassing the
-greatest fortunes in solid property, so is dissipation, by the means of
-symbolical money, as certain an expedient for the annihilation of them.
-From this I conclude, that dissipation implies frugality, and frugality
-dissipation. In every country of great circulation, they balance and
-destroy one another; and since there is no such thing as equality of
-fortune to be preserved without proscribing alienation, that is
-circulation, the next best expedient for making people equal, I think,
-is to enrich them by turns.
-
-I conclude my chapter by inquiring into the effects of national debts
-upon the vibration of this balance; and I conclude, from the principles
-laid down, that with respect to the collective interests of the state,
-that is, between the state itself, the creditors, and the people, there
-is no vibration of wealth produced by loans to the public. But that
-according as the money borrowed is spent in the country or abroad, in so
-far the balance is either made to vibrate between individuals at home,
-or to turn against the state in favour of foreign nations.
-
-_CHAP._ XXVII. I next endeavour to shew how necessary a thing it is for
-a statesman to acquire a thorough knowledge of the nature and effects of
-circulation. By this he is able to judge, when the coin _circulating_ in
-the country is sufficient for carrying on alienation; and when it is
-not, he is taught how to augment the quantity of it, either by drawing
-it from the repositories as oft as he finds the inhabitants disposed to
-lock it up; or by substituting symbolical or paper money in place of it,
-when the metals are really wanting.
-
-Here I observe, that the _circulating_ or _current_ money of any nation
-is constantly in proportion to the taste of dissipation in the rich, and
-application to industry in the poor.
-
-When the dissipation of the rich, tends to call off the industrious from
-supplying the branches of exportation, then the statesman, in place of
-facilitating the melting down of solid property in favour of domestic
-circulation, by the easy introduction of symbolical money, should render
-this operation more difficult, permitting the lands to be loaded by
-entails, substitutions, trusts, settlements, and other inventions which
-may hurt the credit of young people, such as retarding the term of
-coming to full age, and others of a like nature.
-
-On the other hand, while lands remain ill cultivated; while the numerous
-classes remain idle and poor; and while much money is found locked up,
-the very opposite administration is expedient: Every method then must be
-employed to facilitate and establish the credit of those who have solid
-property; such as the introduction of loans upon interest; the breaking
-entails upon estates; the facilitating the sale of them, in favour of
-the liquidation of all claims competent to the industrious, against the
-proprietors, even declaring the cause of creditors the favourable side
-in all ambiguous law-suits; and, last of all, allowing arrestment of the
-person for moveable debts, which is supporting the interest of creditors
-as far, I think, as is possible, in any free nation. Every regulation
-becomes, in short, expedient, which can favour the industrious,
-accelerate circulation, and establish a credit to every one in
-proportion to his worth.
-
-The more money becomes necessary for carrying on consumption, the more
-it is easy to levy taxes; the use of which is to advance the public
-good, by drawing from the rich, a fund sufficient to employ both the
-_deserving_, and the _poor_, in the service of the state; or to correct
-the bad consequences of domestic luxury as to foreign trade, by
-providing a fund for the payment of bounties upon exportation.
-
-In imposing taxes, a statesman should attend to the nature of those
-branches of circulation where the balance is made to vibrate, in order
-to distinguish them from those where no vibration is implied. When a man
-buys an estate, it would be absurd to make him pay a tax of _cent. per
-cent._ though you may safely make him pay at that rate, when he buys a
-pint of gin, or a pound of chocolate.
-
-In taxes, again, upon consumption, a particular attention is to be had,
-not to confound those which are paid by people who consume to gratify
-their desires, with those which are paid by such as consume in order to
-produce; that is to say, those which affect the rich, with those which
-affect the industrious.
-
-Farther, a statesman must see with perspicuity how far the imposition of
-taxes may influence the prices of exportable goods; and in so far as
-prices are influenced by them, they must be refunded with interest, and
-even when that is not sufficient to support the foreign competition,
-premiums or bounties are to be thrown in, at the expence of new
-impositions upon domestic consumption.
-
-As all augmentations must at last come to a stop, so must these
-expedients for the support of foreign trade against the influence of
-domestic abuse; but when trade comes to a stop, taxes may be increased;
-because the considerations in favour of exportation are removed. The
-statesman then must change his plan, and make use of the power and
-influence he acquires by an opulent exchequer, to root out the abuses
-which have dried up the spring from which his country used to receive a
-continual augmentation of wealth.
-
-I conclude my chapter with this reflection: That under a wise
-administration, every vice in a state carries a proper antidote along
-with it.
-
-If luxury extinguishes foreign trade it gives birth to taxation; and
-money in the hands of a good statesman is an irresistible engine for
-correcting every abuse.
-
-In treating of taxes, I frequently look no farther than my pen, when I
-raise my head and look about, I find the politics of my closet very
-different from those of the century in which I live. I agree that the
-difference is striking; but still reason is reason, and there is no
-impossibility in the supposition of its becoming practice.
-
-_CHAP._ XXVIII. Prices imply alienation for money, and frequent and
-familiar alienations only can fix a standard.
-
-The price of articles of the first necessity regulate, in a great
-measure, the price of every thing else. Now the frequent and familiar
-alienation of such articles implies industry, and a numerous class of
-free hands; because these only are the buyers. No alienation is implied
-in the consumption of necessaries, by those whose occupation it is to
-produce them for themselves. Did every one, therefore, supply himself
-with necessaries, there would be no alienation of them; consequently, no
-price fixed. From hence it follows, that the price of necessaries
-depends on the occupations of a people, and not on the quantity of their
-specie.
-
-The standard price of _subsistence_ is in the compound proportion of the
-number of those who are obliged to buy, and of the demand found for
-their labour. Subsistence never can rise above the level of the
-faculties of the numerous classes of a people; because so soon as a
-price rises above the faculties of the buyer, his demand is withdrawn;
-and when the demand of a numerous class is withdrawn, subsistence is
-found in too great plenty for the rich, to bear a high price.
-
-The more equal, therefore, the faculties of the industrious populace of
-any country are, the less distress will follow upon scarcity, and those
-only, whose means cannot reach that standard price, run any risk of
-starving.
-
-The faculties, therefore, of the _physical-necessarians_ (as we have
-taken the liberty to call them) will, in countries of industry,
-determine the standard value of subsistence; and the value, _in money_,
-which they receive for their work, will determine the standard of those
-faculties; consequently, the price of subsistence must rise and fall
-according to the number of workmen, and demand for their work: that is
-to say, the price of subsistence must be in the compound proportion
-above mentioned.
-
-Here I am led into an examination of the opinion of Messrs. De
-Montesquieu and Hume, who think that the price of every thing depends
-upon the _quantity of specie_ in the country, which they consider as the
-representation of _every thing vendible_; as if these two quantities,
-the _commodities_, and the _specie_, were divided into aliquot parts,
-exactly proportioned to one another. I do my endeavour to investigate
-the meaning of these propositions, in order to shew in what respect they
-lead to error, in place of throwing light upon an intricate question:
-and then I propose another doctrine, which is, that nothing can
-determine the value of a vendible commodity, any where, _but the
-complicated operations of demand and competition_, which however
-frequently _influenced_ by wealth, yet never can be _regulated_ by it.
-
-_CHAP._ XXIX. In this chapter I follow the succession of Mr. Hume’s
-ideas, in his political discourses; and as he is led from his principles
-to believe, that there is no such thing as a wrong balance of trade
-against a nation, but on the contrary thinks that the nature of money
-resembles that of a fluid, which tends every where to a level: In
-pursuing the consequences of our former reasoning, I shew, that nothing
-is so easy, or more common than a right or a wrong balance of trade; and
-I observe, that what we mean by a balance, is not the bringing the fluid
-to a level, but either the accumulating or raising it in some countries,
-by the means of national industry and frugality, which is a right
-balance; or the depressing it in others, by national luxury and
-dissipation, which is a wrong one. Thus the general doctrine of the
-_level_ can only take place, on the supposition that all nations are
-equally frugal and industrious; or rather, that they have an equal
-mixture of these and their opposite qualities, together with a
-reciprocal trade entirely laid open. When the ideas of different people
-are fairly exposed, every question comes to be resolved without
-disputation: vices in reasoning seldom take place but when terms are not
-rightly understood.
-
-_CHAP._ XXX. As the intention of this inquiry is not to treat of
-population, agriculture, trade, industry, &c. as particular subjects,
-but as objects influencing the political œconomy of modern states, my
-end is answered, so soon as I find the general principles relating to
-each sufficiently deduced and ranged under general heads. The use,
-therefore, of a chapter of miscellaneous questions and observations, is
-to serve as an exercise on what is gone before; to introduce, without a
-direct connection, questions analogous to the subject of the book, or to
-give a further extension to such as I have treated, in the course of the
-chapters, with too much brevity.
-
-In the first and second questions, I endeavour to shew, that the
-quantity of coin in any country, is no sufficient rule for judging of
-the state of her foreign trade; because money may be acquired and
-expended by operations nowise mercantile. A nation, may borrow from
-foreigners more than the amount of the balance against her: she may pay
-away, in subsidies, and foreign wars, sums greatly beyond the value of a
-right balance on her trade. She may call in her specie, and trade with
-it abroad, while paper is made to circulate in its place at home: or she
-may lock it up in banks, where it never may appear. In short, the riches
-of a trading nation may resemble those of a trading man; who may be
-immensely rich, with very little specie in his possession.
-
-On the other hand, the riches of a prodigal nation may resemble those of
-a prodigal man; who may be full of money, borrowed from all hands, upon
-the credit of a large fund of solid property.
-
-The third question concerns the effects of riches in those countries
-where trade and industry are little known. Under such circumstances,
-coin must be locked up, or virtue will go to wreck. Why? Because, if
-coin circulate where there is no industry, it must circulate for no
-adequate equivalent in work or service; that is, for the gratification
-of the passions, or in monstrous prodigality. Experience demonstrated
-the truth of this principle. While the Greek Monarchs of Asia and Ægypt
-remained in possession of their vast treasures, virtue and simplicity
-stood their ground; when those riches were thrown into circulation,
-under the first Roman Emperors, we see the horrible consequences which
-ensued. What could produce such monsters, except a taste of dissipation,
-without rational objects to discharge their wealth upon? All the money
-in the universe, thrown into the hands of an extravagant modern Prince,
-would not affect his morals; the taste of luxury would soon discharge
-him of it; and the consequence would be, to enrich those who gratified
-his desires, and that nearly in proportion to their service. But in
-antient times, the violence of government stopped the progress of
-industry: the consequence of which was, that the few productions of it
-were sold for the most exorbitant prices, and the wealth accumulated by
-private people commonly occasioned their destruction; because rapine was
-the only expedient Princes had fallen upon to draw back money into their
-coffers.
-
-Comparing the antient with our modern œconomy, I find both are
-curious and entertaining. A contrast often makes us reflect upon
-circumstances which otherwise might escape our observation.
-
-In the fourth and fifth questions, I apply the principles we have laid
-down, in order to discover why the establishment of trade and industry
-has naturally given rise to an established system of taxation, and
-regular standing armies.
-
-This leads me to compare circumstances relative to the œconomy of
-Europe some centuries ago, when taxes were almost unknown, with the
-present times, when they are becoming daily more familiar; and I shew
-that they are, in a great part, paid in lieu of the personal service to
-which the subjects were formerly bound, and by the means of which states
-were supported; and if they are extended beyond this proportion, it is
-in consequence of a new circulation opened between the state and those
-who serve it: so that the effect of taxes, spent within a country well
-governed, is to draw money gratuitously from those who have a
-superfluity of it, in order to bestow it upon those who are willing and
-capable to advance the service of the state; that is, in other words, to
-oblige private people to lay out their money for the service of their
-country.
-
-From the same principles, and from a very succinct historical deduction
-of the facts relating to the state of the militia of Europe, from the
-time of the Romans, I endeavour to shew, that standing armies in our
-days are become necessary, while Princes have the rage of making war;
-because, without keeping up such bodies of men in time of peace, the
-call of the luxurious would provide employment for them, which they
-would not choose to quit, when the will of their sovereign might command
-their attendance.
-
-These questions lead me to inquire into the method of estimating the
-relative power of different states in making war.
-
-Here I reduce power to the two principles of men and money; the men at
-the command of a state, are those who have a poor and precarious living,
-or at least a worse condition than that which the state can offer for
-their military service; consequently, the more a people are usefully
-employed, the less they are calculated for filling armies. From hence it
-is that luxury is said to render a nation effeminate: a true
-proposition, when rightly understood, relatively to the industrious, not
-to the luxurious classes of the people.
-
-The annual revenue of a state is in proportion to the circulation;
-because it is at the time of circulation only that national
-contributions can be levied with the fewest inconveniencies. Money which
-does not circulate is of no use to the proprietors, and consequently can
-be of no utility to the state.
-
-Credit is in proportion to the capacity of paying the interest of money
-borrowed.
-
-Having abundantly insisted on the advantages of industry in providing
-for the poor, I now come to consider its permanent effects, after the
-first end has been accomplished. If a thousand pounds are bestowed upon
-making a fire-work, a number of people are thereby employed, and gain a
-temporary livelihood. If the same sum is bestowed for making a canal for
-watering the fields of a province, a like number of people may reap the
-same benefit, and hitherto accounts stand even: but the fire-work played
-off, what remains, but the smoke and stink of the powder? Whereas the
-consequence of the canal is a perpetual fertility to a formerly barren
-soil. Here I enter again into an examination and confrontation of
-antient and modern oeconomy. I shew that the magnificence of the
-antients had not the same tendency to destroy simplicity, as the luxury
-of modern times has; because they owed their magnificence to the slavery
-of the inferior classes of people, who got no return for their labour
-farther than bare subsistence. Whereas modern magnificence depends upon
-industry; which draws after it such a retribution in money, as soon
-enables those who at first contributed to the luxury of others, to call
-for the like services from an inferior class, who are entering on the
-course which the more wealthy abandon.
-
-I conclude this chapter with an inquiry into the principles which ought
-to regulate the establishment of trading companies. Those principles
-relate to the _advantages_ and _disadvantages_ which severally attend
-them. The principal advantage in common to all, proceeds from the union
-of private stocks; consequently, the statesman ought to protect
-companies so far only as this union promotes the end for which they were
-instituted: but whenever he finds that the strength of united stocks is
-made use of to oppress the unincorporated industrious, he ought to take
-these under his protection, by providing an outlet for _their_ industry,
-by which he will frustrate any attempt of turning that into a monopoly,
-which was intended only to extend trade and industry.
-
-The second advantage is peculiar to such companies as trade to foreign
-parts under exclusive privileges. By these a state reaps the benefit of
-keeping prices low in foreign markets; because the company is freed from
-the competition of their own countrymen. But the inconvenience resulting
-in consequence of this, is, that as the company _buys_, so they also
-_sell_ without competition. The method, therefore, of preventing the bad
-consequence of this, is, for the state constantly to be at the great
-expence of every such settlement in favour of foreign trade; and to
-grant the exclusive privilege in favour of commerce in general, and not
-in the common way, as an indemnification to particular people for the
-expence of making the settlement, or from other political
-considerations. When an exclusive privilege is granted upon such
-principles, the state may retain a power of inspection into all their
-affairs, and may open the doors of the company to new subscribers, in
-proportion to the demand for the trade, in place of allowing the company
-to swell their stock with borrowed money. By such means frauds are
-prevented; a foundation is laid for several mercantile operations, which
-advance the prosperity of the state, without hurting the company; and
-jealousy is taken away, by preventing the too close connection between
-the members of it, when few in number, from degenerating into an
-oppressive and scandalous monopoly.
-
-END OF THE SECOND BOOK.
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
-
-
-
- AN
- INQUIRY
- INTO THE
- PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL OECONOMY.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- BOOK III.
-
- OF MONEY AND COIN.
-
-
-
-
- PART I.
-
- THE PRINCIPLES OF MONEY DEDUCED, AND
- APPLIED TO THE COIN OF GREAT BRITAIN.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- ADVERTISEMENT.
-
-This book, which treats of money, contains such variety of matter, that
-I have found an advantage in dividing it into two parts. In the first,
-the principles are deduced and applied principally to the domestic
-circumstances of Great Britain in the year 1760, when this book was
-written. In the second, the interests of foreign trade, and state of
-coin in the two great commercial nations with whom we are in
-correspondence are taken in.
-
-Instead of a chapter of recapitulation at the end of the book, I found
-here that a full table of contents would give the reader a general view
-of the subject, and serve the purpose of recollection better.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- AN
- INQUIRY
- INTO THE
- PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL OECONOMY.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- BOOK III.
- OF MONEY AND COIN.
-
-
-
-
- PART I.
- THE PRINCIPLES OF MONEY DEDUCED AND APPLIED TO THE COIN OF GREAT
- BRITAIN.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION.
-
-
-In an inquiry like this, where, at almost every step, we find it
-branching out into new relations, which lead to different chains of
-consequences, it is of use to have recourse to every expedient for
-connecting the whole together.
-
-For this purpose, an introductory chapter at the beginning of a new
-subject seems necessary.
-
-The reader will have observed that the last chapters of the preceding
-book (those I mean which treat of the vibration of the balance of wealth
-and of circulation) have been writ with a view to introduce the subject
-of money.
-
-I thought it better to anticipate some principles by connecting them
-directly with those of trade, than to introduce this part of my subject
-as a new treatise.
-
-The assistance our memory receives from such a distribution must
-compensate the inconvenience of a few repetitions.
-
-I have, in the last chapters of the second book here referred to, had
-occasion to mention, and slightly to point out some essential
-differences between coin and paper money. I have shewn the great
-usefulness of the latter in supporting circulation.
-
-Although, in giving the definition of paper money in the twenty-sixth
-chapter of the second book, I mentioned credit as being a term
-synonimous with it; yet this was done only for the sake of simplifying
-our ideas: one of the best expedients for casting light upon an
-intricate subject. It is now requisite to point out the difference
-between them.
-
-Symbolical or paper money is but a species of credit: it is no more than
-the measure by which credit is reckoned. Credit is the basis of all
-contracts between men: few can be so simultaneous as not to leave some
-performance, or prestation, as the civilians call it, on one side or
-other, at least for a short time, in suspence. He therefore who fulfils
-his part, gives credit to the party who only promises to fulfil, and
-according to the variety of contracts, the nature of the prestations, or
-performances, therein stipulated, and the security given for fulfilling
-what is not performed, credit assumes different forms, and communicates
-to us different ideas. Paper credit or symbolical money, on the other
-hand, is more simple. It is an obligation to pay the intrinsic value of
-certain denominations of money contained in the paper. Here then lies
-the difference between a payment made in intrinsic value, and another
-made in paper. He who pays in intrinsic value, puts the person to whom
-he pays in the real possession of what he owed; and this done, there is
-no more place for credit. He who pays in paper puts his creditor only in
-possession of another person’s obligation to make that value good to
-him: here credit is necessary even after the payment is made.
-
-Some intrinsic value or other, therefore, must be found out to form the
-basis of paper money: for without that it is impossible to fix any
-determinate standard-worth for the denominations contained in the paper.
-
-I have found no branch of my subject so difficult to reduce to
-principles, as the doctrine of money: this difficulty, however, has not
-deterred me from undertaking it. It is of great consequence to a
-statesman to understand it thoroughly; and it is of the last importance
-to trade and credit, that the money of a nation be kept stable and
-invariable.
-
-To circumscribe combinations as much as the nature of this subject will
-admit, I have in the first part adhered to a deduction of general
-principles, taking by way of illustration, as I go along, the present
-state of the British currency.
-
-In the second part, I shall examine the effects of turning coin into a
-manufacture, by superadding the price of fabrication to its value; and
-point out the consequences of this additional combination upon exchange,
-and the interest of trading nations.
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. I.
- _Of Money of Accompt._
-
-
-[Sidenote: What money is.]
-
-I. The metals have so long performed the use of money, that money and
-coin are become almost synonimous, although in their principles they be
-quite different.
-
-The first thing therefore to be done in treating of money, is, to
-separate two ideas, which, by being blended together, have very greatly
-contributed to throw a cloud upon the whole subject.
-
-[Sidenote: Definitions.]
-
-Money, which I call of account, is no more than _an arbitrary scale of
-equal parts, invented for measuring the respective value of things
-vendible_.
-
-_Money_ of _account_, therefore, is quite a different thing from
-_money-coin_, which is _price_, and might exist, although there was no
-such thing in the world as any substance which could become an adequate
-and proportional equivalent, for every commodity.
-
-The subject therefore of the first chapter shall be, 1. To point out the
-principles which determine the value of things; 2. The use of an
-invariable scale to measure their value; 3. How the invention of money
-of account is exactly adapted for measuring the value on the one hand,
-and measuring the price on the other; and 4. How it preserves itself
-invariable amidst all the fluctuations, not only of the value of things
-themselves, but of the metals which are commonly considered as the
-measures of their value.
-
-[Sidenote: Money, a scale for measuring value.]
-
-_1mo._ Money of account, which I shall here call _money_, performs the
-same office with regard to the value of things, that degrees, minutes,
-seconds, &c. do with regard to angles, or as scales do to geographical
-maps, or to plans of any kind.
-
-In all these inventions, there is constantly some denomination taken for
-the unit.
-
-In angles, it is the degree; in geography, it is the mile, or league; in
-plans, the foot, yard, or toise; in money, it is the _pound_, _livre_,
-_florin_, &c.
-
-The degree has no determinate length, so neither has that part of the
-scale upon plans which marks the unit: the usefulness of all those
-inventions being solely confined to the marking of proportion.
-
-Just so the unit in money can have no invariable determinate proportion
-to any part of value, that is to say, it cannot be fixed to any
-particular quantity of gold, silver, or any other commodity whatsoever.
-
-The unit once fixed, we can by multiplying it, ascend to the greatest
-value; and when we descend below the subaltern divisions of this unit,
-we have the assistance of measures and weights, which render the
-operation easy. Thus in England, where a farthing is the lowest
-denomination of money, the grains of wheat are bought by measure, and
-cherries by the pound.
-
-[Sidenote: Principles which determine the value of things.]
-
-II. The value of things depend upon the general combination of many
-circumstances, which however may be reduced to four principal heads:
-
-_1mo._ The abundance of the things to be valued.
-
-_2do._ The demand which mankind make for them.
-
-_3tio._ The competition between the demanders; and
-
-_4to._ The extent of the faculties of the demanders. The function
-therefore of money is to publish and make known the value of things, as
-it is regulated by the combination of all these circumstances.
-
-[Sidenote: Prices not regulated by the quantity of money,]
-
-This proposition I think is self-evident, and it is susceptible of a
-thousand proofs; I shall only mention one.
-
-Were there a determinate proportion between certain quantities of gold
-and silver, and certain quantities of other things vendible, I do not
-see how prices could vary while the proportion of quantity to quantity
-between metals and things remained the same.
-
-But if the desires of men to possess any particular commodity and the
-competition between them to acquire it be capable to raise a thing,
-formerly of the lowest value, to any height, and if the absence of these
-circumstances can debase a thing formerly of great value, to the lowest
-rate, is it not evident, that the _price_, that is, the gold and silver
-people possess (even allowing that it may upon many occasions promote a
-competition among them) can never be the measure of their fancies or
-caprices, which are what constitutes the value of things.
-
-Substances are valued either according to their weight, their
-superficial measure, the measure of their bulk, or by the piece. These
-may be considered as the four classes of vendible corporeal commodities.
-
-All the species of each class according to their different qualities of
-goodness, may be reduced to a proportion of value. A pound of gold, of
-lead, of different grains, of different butters, or of what you will,
-valued by the pound, may at any precise time, be reduced to a scale of
-proportional values, which the wants, demands, competition and faculties
-of buyers and sellers, keep in a perpetual fluctuation.
-
-As far therefore, as an increase of the metals and coin shall produce an
-increase of demand, and a greater competition than before, so far will
-that circumstance influence the rise of prices, and no farther.
-
-[Sidenote: But by the relative proportion between commodities and
- the wants of mankind.]
-
-The value of commodities therefore, depending upon a general combination
-of circumstances relative to themselves and to the fancies of men, their
-value ought to be considered as changing only with respect to one
-another; consequently, any thing which troubles or perplexes the
-ascertaining those changes of proportion by the means of a general,
-determinate and invariable scale, must be hurtful to trade and a clog
-upon alienation. This trouble and perplexity is the infallible
-consequence of every vice in the policy of money or of coin.
-
-[Sidenote: Necessity of distinguishing between money and price.]
-
-III. It may here be demanded what necessity there is to have recourse to
-such a metaphysical deduction upon so familiar a subject. Do we not see
-every where, that things are valued by silver and gold coin, and that
-there is no occasion to reject them at this time, in order to introduce
-an imaginary scale.
-
-I answer, that nothing but necessity obliges me to introduce this
-imaginary scale, and that not with any intention to reject the service
-of the metals in performing the office of a measure, but as an
-assistance to our understanding for comprehending the doctrine of money,
-and for rightly distinguishing the ideas which are daily proposed to us
-by those who write and speak concerning its theory.
-
-Could gold and silver coin exactly perform the office of money, it would
-be absurd to introduce any other measure of value; but there are moral
-and physical incapacities in the metals, which prevent their performing
-the function of a scale: and the common opinion being, that there are no
-such incapacities, makes it necessary to expose them in the clearest
-light, by shewing the exact difference between _price_ (that is coin)
-considered as a measure, and _price_ considered as an equivalent for
-value.
-
-The inconsistencies which follow, when we depend blindly upon the
-infallibility of the metal’s discharging this double office, tend to
-confound the whole system of our ideas concerning those matters.
-
-The moral as well as physical incapacities inherent in the metals, which
-prevent their performing exactly the office of money, shall be
-afterwards pointed out. I must at present explain a little farther the
-nature of this ideal money.
-
-[Sidenote: Money of account what and how contrived.]
-
-IV. Money, strictly and philosophically speaking, is, as has been said,
-an ideal scale of equal parts. If it be demanded what ought to be the
-standard value of one part? I answer, by putting another question; What
-is the standard length of a degree, a minute, a second?
-
-It has none, and there is no necessity of its having any other than what
-by convention mankind think fit to give it. But so soon as one part
-becomes determined, by the nature of a scale, all the rest must follow
-in proportion.
-
-The first step being perfectly optional, people may adjust one or more
-of those parts to a precise quantity of the precious metals; and so soon
-as this is done, and that money becomes realized, as it were, in gold
-and silver, then it acquires a new definition; it then becomes the
-_price, as well as the measure of value_.
-
-It does not follow from this adjusting the metals to the scale of value,
-that they themselves should therefore become the scale, as any one must
-readily perceive.
-
-But in former times, before the introduction of commerce, when mankind
-had less occasion to measure value with a scrupulous exactness, the
-permanent nature of the metals rendred them sufficiently correct, both
-to serve as the scale, and as the price in every alienation. Since the
-introduction of commerce, nations have learned the importance of
-reducing their respective interests and debts, to the nicest equations
-of value; and this has pointed out the inconvenience of admitting the
-metals, as formerly, to serve both as the measure and the price in such
-operations.
-
-Just so geographers and astronomers were long of opinion, that a degree
-of the equator was a determinate length to measure every degree of
-latitude upon the globe.
-
-They then considered the earth as a sphere, and no great inconveniency
-was found to result from this supposition. But as accuracy made a
-progress, that measure was found to be incorrect. Degrees of latitude
-are now found to be of different lengths in different climates; and
-perhaps in time, it will be found that no two degrees of any great
-circle described upon the globe, are in a geometrical equality.
-
-That money, therefore, which constantly preserves an equal value, which
-poises itself, as it were, in a just equilibrium between the fluctuating
-proportion of the value of things, is the only permanent and equal
-scale, by which value can be measured.
-
-[Sidenote: Examples of it.]
-
-Of this kind of money, and of the possibility of establishing it, we
-have two examples: the first, among one of the most knowing; the second,
-among one of the most ignorant nations of the world. The bank of
-Amsterdam presents us with the one, the coast of Angola with the other.
-
-A florin banco has a more determinate value than a pound of fine gold,
-or silver; it is an unit which the invention of men, instructed in the
-arts of commerce, have found out.
-
-[Sidenote: Bank money.]
-
-This bank money stands invariable like a rock in the sea. According to
-this ideal standard are the prices of all things regulated; and very few
-people can tell exactly what it depends upon. The precious metals, with
-their intrinsic value, vary with regard to this common measure, like
-every other thing. A pound of gold, a pound of silver, a thousand
-guineas, a thousand crowns, a thousand piastres, or a thousand ducats,
-are sometimes worth more, sometimes worth less of this invariable
-standard; according as the proportion of the metals of which they are
-made vary between themselves.
-
-No adulterations in the weight, fineness, or denominations of coin have
-any effect upon bank money. These currencies which the bank looks upon
-as merchandize, like every other thing, are either worth more or less
-bank money, according to the actual value of the metals they are made
-of. All is merchandize with respect to this standard; consequently, it
-stands unrivalled in the exercise of its function of a common measure.
-
-[Sidenote: Angola money.]
-
-The second example is found among the savages upon the African coast of
-Angola, where there is no real money known. The inhabitants there reckon
-by _macoutes_; and in some places this denomination is subdivided into
-decimals, called pieces. One _macoute_ is equal to ten pieces. This is
-just a scale of equal parts for estimating the trucks they make. If a
-sheep, e. g. be worth 10, an ox may be worth 40, and a handful of gold
-dust 1000.
-
-Money of account, therefore, cannot be fixed to any material substance,
-the value of which may vary with respect to other things. The operations
-of trade, and the effects of an universal circulation of value, over the
-commercial world, can alone adjust the fluctuating value of all kinds of
-merchandize, to this invariable standard. This is a representation of
-the bank money of Amsterdam, which may at all times be most accurately
-specified in a determinate weight of silver and gold; but which can
-never be tied down to that precise weight for twenty-four hours, any
-more than to a barrel of herrings.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. II
- _Of Artificial or Material money._
-
-[Sidenote: Usefulness of the precious metals for making of money.]
-
-I. From infancy of the world, at least as far back as our accounts of
-the transactions of mankind reach, we find they had adopted the precious
-metals, that is silver and gold, as the common measure of value, and as
-the adequate equivalent for every thing alienable.
-
-The metals are admirably adapted for this purpose; they are perfectly
-homogeneous: When pure, their masses, or bulks, are exactly in
-proportion to their weights: No physical difference can be found between
-two pounds of gold, or silver, let them be the production of the mines
-of Europe, Asia, Africa, or America: They are perfectly malleable,
-fusible, and suffer the most exact division which human art is capable
-to give them: They are capable of being mixed with one another, as well
-as with metals of a baser, that is, of a less homogeneous nature, such
-as copper. By this mixture they spread themselves uniformly through the
-whole mass of the composed lump, so that every atom of it becomes
-proportionally possessed of a share of this noble mixture; by which
-means the subdivision of the precious metals is rendred very extensive.
-
-Their physical qualities are invariable; they lose nothing by keeping;
-they are solid and durable; and though their parts are separated by
-friction, like every other thing, yet still they are of the number of
-those which suffer least by it.
-
-If money, therefore, can be made of any thing, that is, if the
-proportional value of things vendible can be measured by any thing
-material, it may be measured by the metals.
-
-[Sidenote: Adjusting a standard, what?]
-
-II. The two metals being pitched upon as the most proper substances for
-realizing the ideal scale of money, those who undertake the operation of
-adjusting a standard must constantly keep in their eye the nature and
-qualities of a scale, as well as the principles upon which it is formed.
-
-The unit of the scale must constantly be the same, although realized in
-the metals, or the whole operation fails in the most essential part.
-This realizing the unit is like adjusting a pair of compasses to a
-geometrical scale, where the smallest deviation from the exact opening
-once given must occasion an incorrect measure. The metals, therefore,
-are to money what a pair of compasses is to a geometrical scale.
-
-This operation of adjusting the metals to the money of account, implies
-an exact and determinate proportion of both metals to the money-unit,
-realized in all the species and denominations of coin, adjusted to that
-standard.
-
-The smallest particle of either metal added to, or taken away from any
-coin, which represents certain determinate parts of the scale, overturns
-the whole system of material money. And if, notwithstanding such
-variation, these coins continue to bear the same denominations as
-before, this will as effectually destroy their usefulness in measuring
-the value of things, as it would overturn the usefulness of a pair of
-compasses, to suffer the opening to vary, after it is adjusted to the
-scale representing feet, toises, miles, or leagues, by which the
-distances upon the plan are to be measured.
-
-[Sidenote: Debasing and raising a standard, what.]
-
-III. Debasing the standard is a good term; because it conveys a clear
-and distinct idea. It is diminishing the weight of the pure metal
-contained in that denomination by which a nation reckons, and which we
-have called the money-unit. Raising the standard requires no farther
-definition, being the direct contrary.
-
-[Sidenote: The alteration of a standard, how to be discovered.]
-
-IV. Altering the standard (that is raising or debasing the value of the
-money-unit) is like altering the national measures or weights. This is
-best discovered by comparing the thing altered with things of the same
-nature which have suffered no alteration. Thus if the foot of measure
-was altered at once over all England, by adding to it, or taking from
-it, any proportional part of its standard length, the alteration would
-be best discovered, by comparing the new foot with that of Paris, or of
-any other country, which had suffered no alteration. Just so, if the
-pound sterling, which is the English unit, shall be found any how
-changed, and if the variation it has met with be difficult to ascertain,
-because of a complication of circumstances, the best way to discover it
-will be to compare the former and the present value of it with the money
-of other nations which has suffered no variation. This the course of
-exchange will perform with the greatest exactness.
-
-[Sidenote: Of alloy.]
-
-V. Artists pretend, that the precious metals, when absolutely pure from
-any mixture, are not of sufficient hardness to constitute a solid and
-lasting coin. They are found also in the mines mixed with other metals
-of a baser nature, and the bringing them to a state of perfect purity
-occasions an unnecessary expence. To avoid, therefore, the inconvenience
-of employing them in all their purity, people have adopted the expedient
-of mixing them with a _determinate proportion_ of other metals, which
-hurts neither their fusibility, malleability, beauty, or lustre. This
-metal is called _alloy_, and being considered only as a support to the
-principal metal, is accounted of no value in itself. So that eleven
-ounces of gold, when mixed with one ounce of silver, acquires, by that
-addition, no augmentation of value whatever.
-
-This being the case, we shall, as much as possible, overlook the
-existence of alloy, in speaking of money, in order to render language
-less subject to ambiguity. I must except such cases, where the
-considering the mass of the compound metal, according to its weight, can
-be accompanied with no inconvenience.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. III.
- _Incapacities of the Metals to perform the office of an invariable
- measure of value._
-
-[Sidenote: They vary in their relative value to one another.]
-
-I. Were there but one species of such a substance as we have represented
-gold and silver to be: were there but one metal possessing the qualities
-of purity, divisibility, and durability; the inconveniences in the use
-of it for money would be fewer by far than they are found to be as
-matters stand.
-
-Such a metal might then, by an unlimited division into parts exactly
-equal, be made to serve as a tolerable steady and universal measure. But
-the rivalship between the metals, and the perfect equality which is
-found between all their physical qualities, so far as regards purity,
-and divisibility, render them so equally well adapted to serve as the
-common measure of value, that they are universally admitted to pass
-current as money.
-
-[Sidenote: All measures ought to be invariable.]
-
-What is the consequence of this? That the one measures the value of the
-other, as well as that of every other thing. Now the moment any measure
-begins to be measured by another, whose proportion to it is not
-physically, perpetually, and invariably the same, all the usefulness of
-such a measure is lost. An example will make this plain.
-
-A foot of measure is a determinate length. An English foot may be
-compared with the Paris foot, or with that of the Rhine; that is to say,
-it may be measured by them; and the proportion between their lengths may
-be expressed in numbers; which proportion will be the same perpetually.
-The measuring the one by the other will occasion no uncertainty; and we
-may speak of lengths by Paris feet, and be perfectly well understood by
-others who are used to measure by the English foot, or by the foot of
-the Rhine.
-
-[Sidenote: Consequences when they vary.]
-
-But suppose that a youth of twelve years old takes it into his head to
-measure from time to time, as he advances in age, by the length of his
-own foot, and that he divides this growing foot into inches and
-decimals: what can be learned from his account of measures? As he
-increases in years, his foot, inches, and subdivisions, will be
-gradually lengthening; and were every man to follow his example, and
-measure by his own foot, then the foot of a measure now established
-would totally cease to be of any utility.
-
-This is just the case with the two metals. There is no determinate
-invariable proportion between their value; and the consequence of this
-is, that when they are both taken for measuring the value of other
-things, the things to be measured, like the lengths to be measured by
-the young man’s foot, without changing their relative proportion between
-themselves, change however with respect to the denominations of both
-their measures. An example will make this plain.
-
-Let us suppose an ox to be worth three thousand pounds weight of wheat,
-and the one and the other to be worth an ounce of gold, and the ounce of
-gold to be worth exactly fifteen ounces of silver: If the case should
-happen, that the proportional value between gold and silver should come
-to be as 14 is to 1, would not the ox, and consequently the wheat, be
-estimated at less in silver, and more in gold, than formerly? I ask
-farther, if it would be in the power of any state to prevent this
-variation in the measure of the value of oxen and wheat, without putting
-into the unit of their money less silver and more gold than formerly.
-
-[Sidenote: Defects of a silver standard.]
-
-If therefore any particular state should fix the standard of the unit of
-their money to one species of the metals, while in fact both the one and
-the other are actually employed in measuring value; does not such a
-state resemble the young man, who measures all by his growing foot. For,
-if silver, for example, be retained as the standard, while it is gaining
-upon gold one fifteenth additional value; and if gold continues all the
-while to determine the value of things as well as silver, it is plain
-that, to all intents and purposes, this silver measure is lengthening
-daily, like the young man’s foot, since the same weight of it must
-become every day equivalent to more and more of the same commodity;
-notwithstanding that we suppose the same proportion to subsist, without
-the least variation, between that commodity and every other species of
-things alienable.
-
-[Sidenote: Arguments in favours of it.]
-
-After having exposed the matter in this light, I think it can hardly,
-with reason, be urged, that notwithstanding it be admitted that gold and
-silver may change their proportion of value with regard to one another,
-yet still this does not prevent silver from remaining the standard,
-without any inconvenience; for the following reasons.
-
-_1mo._ Because, when it is considered as a standard, it never ought to
-be looked upon as changing its value with regard to gold; but that gold
-ought to be considered as changing its value with regard to silver.
-
-_2do._ Because being the measure itself, it is absurd to consider it as
-the thing measured; that therefore it retains all the requisites of an
-invariable scale; since it measures all things according to the
-proportion they bear to itself, which physically never can vary. And,
-
-_3tio._ That a person who has borrowed a certain weight of silver from
-another, is obliged to repay the same weight of silver he had borrowed;
-although at that time silver should be of greater value than when he
-borrowed it.
-
-[Sidenote: Answers to these arguments.]
-
-I answer to the first argument: That if in fact silver becomes of more
-or less value with respect to merchandize, with respect to gold, and
-with respect to bank money, by there being a greater or less demand for
-it than there was before; I cannot see how calling it a standard, can
-remove this inconvenience, which is inseparable from the nature of the
-thing; nor how we can change a _matter of fact_, by changing our
-_language_, and by saying, that merchandize, gold, and bank money,
-become of more value, or of less value, with respect to silver, in
-proportion as the demand for them is greater or less. This language we
-must use, although we know for certain that these things remain in the
-exact relative proportion of quantity and demand as before: And although
-it should evidently appear, that a demand for silver has raised the
-price of it, with respect to every thing it measured the day before.
-
-If the yard in a mercer’s shop should be subject to such revolutions, in
-consequence of the wood it was made of; and if in measuring a piece of
-stuff to a customer, which the mercer had bought by this yard the day
-before for 50 yards, he should find the piece measure but 40, it would
-not be easy to persuade him, I believe, that his piece was become
-shorter; but suppose he should have the curiosity to measure over again
-all the pieces in his shop, and that he should find exactly one fifth
-diminution upon the length of every one, would he not very rationally
-conclude that his yard was grown longer, and would he not run
-immediately to his neighbour’s shop and compare it?
-
-As to the second argument, I agree that silver may at all times very
-exactly measure the value of things with respect to itself; but this
-gives us no idea of an universal measure.
-
-I can measure the proportion of the length of things, with any rod or
-with any line, the length of which I know nothing about; but no body
-calls this measuring, because I cannot compare the things measured, with
-any other thing which I have not measured with the same rod or line, as
-I might easily do, had I measured with a foot, yard, or toise;
-consequently the intention of measuring in such a case is almost
-entirely lost.
-
-To the third argument, I answer, that I subscribe very willingly to the
-truth of that proposition; providing that by silver is understood the
-bare metal, without attending to its additional quality of the universal
-standard measure of value. But if I borrow the silver not as bullion,
-but as coin (the common measure of value) then I say, that I overpay in
-giving back the same weight I had received. Is there any thing more
-familiar than such examples? I borrow 100_l._ from my neighbour, he
-proposes to give so much of the value in grain; I accept. The price of
-grain rises about the term of payment; can I be obliged to repay an
-equal quantity of grain in payment of a proportional part of what I owe?
-By no means; because I did not receive the grain as any thing but as a
-species of money. But if I borrow some quarters of grain to be repaid in
-harvest, then I am obliged to restore grain for grain, because in that
-case I did not receive the grain as money, but as a commodity.
-
-[Sidenote: Usefulness of an universal measure.]
-
-Buying and selling are purely conventional, and no man is obliged to
-give his merchandize at what may be supposed to be the proportion of its
-worth. The use, therefore, of an universal measure, is, to mark, not
-only the relative value of the things to which it is applied as a
-measure, but to discover in an instant the proportion between the value
-of those, and of every other commodity valued by a determinate measure
-in all the countries of the world.
-
-Were pounds sterling, livres, florins, piastres, &c. which are all money
-of account, invariable in their values, what a facility would it produce
-in all conversions, what an assistance to trade! But as they are all
-limited or fixed to coins, and consequently vary from time to time, this
-example shews the utility of the invariable measure which we have
-described.
-
-[Sidenote: They have two values, one as coin, and one as metals.]
-
-There is another circumstance which incapacitates the metals from
-performing the office of money; the substance of which the coin is made,
-is a commodity, which rises and sinks in its value with respect to other
-commodities, according to the wants, competition, and caprices of
-mankind. The advantage, therefore, found in putting an intrinsic value
-into that substance which performs the function of money of account, is
-compensated by the instability of that intrinsic value; and the
-advantage obtained by the stability of paper, or symbolical money, is
-compensated by the defect it commonly has of not being at all times
-susceptible of realization into solid property, or intrinsic value.
-
-In order, therefore, to render material money more perfect, this quality
-of metal, that is of a commodity, should be taken from it; and in order
-to render paper money more perfect, it ought to be made to circulate
-upon metallic or land security. The expedient with regard to the metals
-shall find a place in this inquiry (in the chapter of miscellaneous
-questions at the end of this book, article 4th). What regards the paper
-is foreign to our purpose, and belongs to the doctrine of credit.
-
-[Sidenote: Smaller inconveniences attending material money.]
-
-II. There are several smaller inconveniences accompanying the use of the
-metals, which we shall here shortly enumerate, reserving the discussion
-of all the consequences they draw along with them, until we come to
-consider the operations of trade and money, upon the complicated
-interests of mankind.
-
-[Sidenote: It wears in circulation.]
-
-_1mo._ No money made of gold or silver can circulate long, without
-losing of its weight, although it all along preserves the same
-denomination. This represents the contracting a pair of compasses which
-had been rightly adjusted to the scale. Such a defect must appear
-striking, when we reflect upon the principles (already laid down) which
-necessarily influence the fixing of a standard.
-
-[Sidenote: It is inaccurately coined.]
-
-_2do._ Another inconvenience proceeds from the fabrication of money.
-Supposing the faith of Princes who coin money to be inviolable, and the
-probity, as well as capacity, of those to whom they commit the
-inspection of the fineness of the metals to be sufficient, it is hardly
-possible for workmen to render every piece exactly of a proper weight,
-or to preserve the due proportion between pieces of different
-denominations; that is to say, to make every ten sixpences exactly of
-the same weight with every crown piece and every five shillings struck
-in a coinage. In proportion to such inaccuracies, the parts of the scale
-become unequal.
-
-[Sidenote: The coinage adds to its value without adding to its
- weight.]
-
-_3tio._ Another inconvenience, and far from being inconsiderable, flows
-from the expence requisite for the coining of money. This expence adds
-to its value as a manufacture, without adding any thing to its weight. I
-shall take notice, in the proper place, of the consequences which attend
-this inconvenience, even to nations where coinage is free.
-
-[Sidenote: The value of it may be arbitrarily changed.]
-
-_4to._ The last inconvenience I shall mention, is, that by fixing the
-money of account entirely to the coin, without having any independent
-common measure (to mark and control these deviations from mathematical
-exactness, which are either inseparable from the metals themselves, or
-from the fabrication of them) the whole measure of value, and all the
-relative interests of debtors and creditors, become at the disposal not
-only of workmen in the mint, of Jews who deal in money, of clippers and
-washers of coin, but they are also entirely at the mercy of Princes, who
-have the right of coinage, and who have frequently also the right of
-raising or debasing the standard of the coin, according as they find it
-most for their present and temporary interest.
-
-[Sidenote: Trade profits of the smallest defects in the coin.]
-
-Several of the inconveniences we have here enumerated, may appear
-trifling, and so they are found to be in countries where commerce is
-little known; but the operations of trade surpass in nicety the
-conceptions of any man but a merchant; and as a proof of this, it may be
-affirmed with truth, that one shilling can hardly lose a grain of its
-weight, either by fraud or circulation, without contributing by that
-circumstance, towards the diminution of the standard value of the
-money-unit, or pound sterling, over all England, as I hope to be able to
-shew both by reason and facts.
-
-All and every one of these inconveniences to which coin is exposed,
-disappear in countries where the use of pure ideal money of account is
-properly established.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. IV.
-_Methods which may be proposed for lessening the several inconveniences
- to which material Money is liable._
-
-
-I. In this chapter, I shall point out the methods which may be proposed
-for lessening the inconveniences to which all coin is liable, in order
-thereby to make it resemble as much as possible the invariable scale of
-ideal money of accompt.
-
-[Sidenote: Use of theory in political matters.]
-
-To propose the throwing out of coin altogether, because it is liable to
-inconveniences, and the reducing all to an ideal standard, is acting
-like the tyrant who adjusted every man’s length to that of his own bed,
-cutting from the length of those who were taller than himself, and
-racking and stretching the limbs of such as he found to be of a lower
-stature. The use of theory in political matters is not only to discover
-the methods of removing all abuses, it must also lend its aid towards
-palliating inconveniences which are not easily cured.
-
-[Sidenote: Five remedies against the effects of the variation
- between the value of the metals.]
-
-The inconveniences from the variation in the relative value of the
-metals to one another, may in some measure be obviated by the following
-expedients.
-
-_1mo._ By considering one only as the standard, and leaving the other to
-seek its own value, like any other commodity.
-
-_2do._ By considering one only as the standard, and fixing the value of
-the other from time to time by authority, according as the market price
-of the metals shall vary.
-
-_3tio._ By fixing the standard of the unit according to the mean
-proportion of the metals, attaching it to neither; regulating the coin
-accordingly; and upon every considerable variation in the proportion
-between them, either to make a new coinage, or to raise the denomination
-of one of the species, and lower it in the other, in order to preserve
-the unit exactly in the mean proportion between the gold and silver.
-This idea is dark, but it shall afterwards be sufficiently explained.
-
-_4to._ To have two units, and two standards, one of gold, and one of
-silver, and to allow every body to stipulate in either.
-
-_5to._ Or last of all, to oblige all debtors to pay one half in gold and
-one half in the silver standard.
-
-I have here proposed the attaching the standard to one of the species,
-as a remedy against the effects of variation between the metals, because
-when that is done, the consequences are not so hurtful as when the unit
-is affixed to both, as I shall prove in its proper place.
-
-The regulating the proportion of that metal which is considered as
-merchandize, to the other which is considered as the standard, upon
-every variation in the market price of bullion, as well as the other
-expedient of striking the unit according to the mean proportion, is an
-endless labour, and implies a necessity either of perpetually recoining,
-or of introducing fractions of value into the current coin, which cannot
-fail to embarrass circulation.
-
-The establishing two units, the one of gold, and the other of silver,
-does not render the unit of money any more invariable than before; all
-that can be said for this expedient, is, that money becomes thereby more
-determinate, and that people who enter into permanent contracts are, at
-least, apprised of the consequences of the varying of the proportion of
-the metals, and may regulate their interests accordingly.
-
-The last expedient of making debtors pay half in gold and half in
-silver, would answer every inconvenience, providing all creditors were
-supposed to melt the money down upon receiving it, in order to sell it
-for bullion; but as that is not the case, it would be proper, together
-with this expedient, to be also very exact in observing the market
-proportion of the metals in the coin; because it cannot be supposed,
-that every small payment can be made in both species, and wherever this
-is omitted, every former inconvenience may take place.
-
-[Sidenote: Remedies against the other inconveniences.]
-
-II. The other imperfections of coin have been already enumerated. They
-relate either to its wear, the want of exactness in the fabrication, the
-price of coinage, or the opportunity thereby afforded to Princes to
-adulterate and change the standard.
-
-[Sidenote: Against the wearing of the coin.]
-
-_1mo._ As to the first the best expedients are, 1. To strike the
-greatest part of the coin in large solid pieces, having as little
-surface as possible, consistently with beauty and ease of fabrication.
-
-2. To order large sums (of silver at least) to circulate in bags of
-determinate sums, and determinate weights, all in pieces of the larger
-denominations.
-
-3. To make all light coin whatsoever go by weight, upon the requisition
-of the person who is to receive it.
-
-[Sidenote: Against inaccuracy of coinage.]
-
-_2do._ As to the inaccuracy of the fabrication, there is no other remedy
-than a strict attention in government to a matter of so great
-consequence.
-
-[Sidenote: Against the expence of coinage.]
-
-_3tio._ The price of coinage principally affects the interest of nations
-with regard to foreign trade; consequently, trading states should
-endeavour, as nearly as possible, to observe the same regulations with
-their neighbours, in every thing which regards the coin. The consequence
-of this inconvenience to those within the society is unavoidable, and
-therefore no remedy can be proposed.
-
-[Sidenote: Against arbitrary changes on the value of coin.]
-
-_4to._ The establishment of public credit is the best security against
-all adulterations of the standard. No fundamental law can bind up a
-Prince’s hands so effectually as his own interest. While a Prince lives
-within his income, he will have no occasion to adulterate the coin; when
-he exceeds it, he will (in a trading nation) have recourse to credit,
-and if once he establishes that, he must give over meddling with the
-standard of his coin, or he will get no body to lend him any more. The
-only Prince who can gain by adulterating of the standard, is he who
-seeks for extraordinary supplies out of a treasure already formed.
-
-These are, briefly, the expedients to be put in practice by those
-governments which have the prosperity of their subjects at heart. The
-infinite variety of circumstances relating to every state can alone
-decide as to those which are respectively proper to be adopted by each.
-Our business at present is to point out the variations to which the
-value of the money-unit is exposed, from every disorder in the coin; and
-to shew that as far as the value of the unit shall appear affected by
-them, so far must material money in such a case be defective.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. V.
- _Variations to which the Value of the Money-unit is exposed from every
- disorder in the Coin._
-
-
-I. Let suppose, at present, the only disorder to consist in a want of
-the due proportion between the gold and silver in the coin.
-
-[Sidenote: How the market price of the metals is made to vary.]
-
-This proportion can only be established by the market price of the
-metals; because an augmentation and rise in the demand for gold or
-silver has the effect of augmenting the value of the metal demanded. Let
-us suppose that to-day one pound of gold may buy fifteen pounds of
-silver; if to-morrow there be a high demand for silver, a competition
-among merchants, to have silver for gold, will ensue, they will contend
-who shall get the silver at the rate of fifteen pounds for one of gold:
-this will raise the price of it, and in proportion to their views of
-profit, some will accept of less than the fifteen pounds.
-[Sidenote: The variation ought to be referred to the rising metal,
-and never to the sinking.] This is plainly a rise in the silver, more
-properly than a fall in the gold; because it is the competition for the
-silver which has occasioned the variation in the former proportion
-between the metals. Had the competition for gold carried the proportion
-above 1 to 15, I should then have said that the gold had risen.
-
-As it is, therefore, the _active demand_ for either gold or silver which
-makes the price of the metals to vary, I think language would be more
-correct (in speaking concerning the metals only) never to mention the
-_sinking_ of the price of either gold or silver. As to every other
-merchandize, the expression is very proper; because the diminishing of
-the price of one commodity, does not so essentially imply the rise of
-any other, as the sinking of one of the metals must imply the rising of
-the other, since they are the only measures of one another’s worth. I
-would not be here understood to mean that the term _sinking_ of the
-price of gold or silver is improper; all I say is, that the other being
-equally proper, and conveying with it the cause of the variation (to
-wit, the competition to acquire one metal preferably to the other) may
-be preferred, and this the rather, that from using these terms
-promiscuously (gold has _fallen_, in place of silver has _risen_) we are
-apt to believe, that the falling of the price of the metal, must proceed
-from some augmentation of the quantity of it; whereas it commonly
-proceeds from no other cause than a higher demand than formerly for the
-other.
-
-Let us now suppose that a state having, with great exactness, examined
-the proportion of the metals in the market, and having determined the
-precise quantity of each for realizing or representing the money-unit,
-shall execute a most exact coinage of gold and silver coin. As long as
-that proportion continues unvaried in the market, no inconvenience can
-result from that quarter, in making use of the metals for money of
-account.
-
-[Sidenote: How the money-unit of account is made to vary in its
- value from the variation of the metals.]
-
-[Sidenote: Consequences of this.]
-
-But let us suppose the proportion to change; that the silver, for
-example, shall rise in its value with regard to gold; will it not
-follow, from that moment, that the unit realized in the silver, will
-become of more value than the unit realized in the gold coin?
-
-But as the law has ordered them to pass as equivalents for one another,
-and as debtors have always the option of paying in what legal coin they
-think fit, will they not all choose to pay in gold, and will not then
-the silver coin be melted down or exported, in order to be sold as
-bullion, above the value it bears when it circulates in coin? Will not
-this paying in gold also really diminish the value of the money-unit,
-since upon this variation every thing must sell for more gold than
-before, as we have already observed?
-
-[Sidenote: The true unit is the mean proportional between the
- value of the metals.]
-
-Consequently, merchandize which have not varied in their relative value
-to any other thing but to gold and silver, must be measured by the mean
-proportion of the metals, and the application of any other measure to
-them is altering the standard. If they are measured by the gold, the
-standard is debased; if by silver, it is raised, as shall presently be
-proved.
-
-If to prevent the inconvenience of melting down the silver, the state
-shall give up affixing the value of their unit to both species at once,
-and shall fix it to one, leaving the other to seek its price as any
-other commodity, in that case no doubt the melting down of the coin will
-be prevented; but will ever this restore the value of the money-unit to
-its former standard? Would it, for example, in the foregoing
-supposition, raise the debased value of the money-unit in the gold coin,
-if that species were declared to be the standard? It would indeed render
-silver coin purely a merchandize, and by allowing it to seek its value,
-would certainly prevent it from being melted down as before; because the
-pieces would rise conventionally in their denomination; or an agio, as
-it is called, would be taken in payments made in silver; but the gold
-would not, on that account, rise in its value, or begin to purchase any
-more merchandize than before. Were therefore the standard fixed to the
-gold, would not this be an arbitrary and a violent revolution in the
-value of the money-unit, and a debasement of the standard?
-
-If, on the other hand, the state should fix the standard to the silver,
-which we suppose to have risen in its value, would that ever sink the
-advanced value which the silver coin had gained above the worth of the
-former standard unit, and would not this be a violent and an arbitrary
-revolution in the value of the money-unit, and a raising of the
-standard?
-
-The only expedient, therefore, as has been said, is in such a case to
-fix the numerary unit to neither of the metals, but to contrive a way to
-make it fluctuate in a mean proportion between them; which is in effect
-the introduction of a pure ideal money of account. This shall be farther
-explained as we go along.
-
-[Sidenote: The unit to be attached to the mean proportion, upon a
- new coinage, not after the metals have varied.]
-
-I have only one observation to make in this place, to wit, that the
-regulation of fixing the unit by the mean proportion, ought to take
-place at the instant the standard unit is affixed with exactness both to
-the gold and silver. If it be introduced long after the market
-proportion between the metals has deviated from the proportion
-established in the coin, and if the new regulation is made to have a
-retrospect, with regard to the acquitting of permanent contracts entred
-into, while the value of the money-unit had attached itself to the
-lowest currency, in consequence of the principle above laid down, then
-the restoring the money-unit to that standard where it ought to have
-remained (to wit, to the mean proportion) is an injury to all debtors
-who have contracted since the time that the proportion of the metals
-began to vary.
-
-This is clear from the former reasoning. The moment the market price of
-the metals differs from that in the coin, every one who has payments to
-make pays in that species which is the highest rated in the coin;
-consequently, he who lends, lends in that species. If after the
-contract, therefore, the unit is carried up to the mean proportion, this
-must be a loss to him who had borrowed.
-
-[Sidenote: It is better to affix the unit to one than to both
- metals.]
-
-From this we may perceive why, in the first article of the preceding
-chapter, it was said, that there was less inconvenience from the varying
-of the proportion of the metals, where the standard is fixed to one of
-them, than when it is fixed to both. In the first case, it is at least
-uncertain whether the _standard_ or the _merchandize-species_ is to
-rise; consequently it is uncertain whether the debtors or the creditors
-are to gain by a variation. If the _standard_ species should rise, the
-creditors will gain; if the _merchandize-species_ rises, the debtors
-will gain; but when the unit is attached to both species, then the
-creditors never can gain, let the metals vary as they will: if silver
-rises, then debtors will pay in gold; if gold rises, debtors will pay in
-silver. But whether the unit be attached to one or to both species, the
-infallible consequence of a variation is, that one half of the
-difference is either gained or lost by debtors and creditors. The
-invariable unit is constantly the mean proportional between the two
-measures.
-
-I intended to have postponed the entring upon what concerns the
-interests of debtors and creditors in all variations of the coin, until
-I came to treat particularly of that matter; but as it is a thing of the
-greatest consequence to be attended to, in every proposal for altering
-or regulating the coin of a nation, it will, perhaps, upon that account,
-bear a repetition.
-
-[Sidenote: Variation to which the money-unit is exposed, from the
- wearing of the coin.]
-
-II. To render our ideas as distinct as possible, we must keep them
-simple. Let us now suppose that the metals are perfectly well
-proportioned in the coin, but that the coin is worn by use.
-
-If this be the case, we must either suppose it to be all equally worn,
-or unequally worn.
-
-If all be equally worn, I think it needs no demonstration to prove, that
-the money-unit which was attached to the coin, when weighty, (drawing
-its value from the metals contained in it) must naturally diminish in
-its value in proportion as the metals are rubbed away.
-
-If the coin be unequally worn, the money-unit will be variously
-realized, or represented; that is to say, it will be of different
-values, according to the weight of the pieces.
-
-The consequence of this is the same as in the disorder of the proportion
-of the metals: debtors will choose to pay in the light pieces, and the
-heavy will be melted down. In proportion, therefore, to this disorder,
-will the value of the unit gradually descend. This was the great
-disorder in England in 1695; while the standard of the pound sterling
-was affixed to the silver only, the gold being left to seek its own
-value.
-
-[Sidenote: Variations to which the money-unit is exposed, from the
- inaccuracy in the fabrication of the money.]
-
-III. Since the invention of the money wheel, the inaccuracy in the
-fabrication is greatly prevented. Formerly, when money was coined with
-the hammer, the mint-masters weighed the coin delivered by the workmen,
-_in cumulo_, by the pound troy weight, without attending very exactly to
-the proportion of the pieces. At present exactness is more necessary,
-and every piece must be weighed by itself.
-
-It is of very great consequence that all the pieces and denominations of
-coin be in exact proportion to that of their current value, which is
-always relative to the money-unit of accompt. When any inequality
-happens there, it is easy to perceive how all the pieces which are above
-the proportion of their just weight, will be immediately picked up, and
-melted down, and none but the light ones will remain in circulation.
-
-This, from the principles already laid down, must proportionally
-diminish the value of the money-unit.
-
-From what has been observed concerning the deviations in the coin from
-the proportion in the market price of the metals, and from the legal
-weight, we may lay down this undoubted principle, _That the value of the
-money-unit of accompt is not to be sought for in the statutes and
-regulations of the mint, but in the actual intrinsic value of that
-currency in which all obligations are acquitted, and all accompts are
-kept_.
-
-[Sidenote: Variations to which the money-unit is exposed, from the
- imposition of coinage.]
-
-IV. As I have at present principally in view to lay down certain
-principles with regard to money, which I intend afterwards to apply to
-the state of the British coin; and as these principles are here
-restricted to the effects which every variation in the coin has upon the
-value of the unit of money in accompt, I shall in this place only
-observe, as to the imposition of coinage,
-
-That coin being necessary in every country where the money-unit is
-attached to the metals, it must be procured by those who are obliged to
-acquit their obligations in material money.
-
-If, therefore, the state shall oblige every one who carries the metals
-to the mint to pay the coinage, the coin they receive must be valued,
-not only at the price the metals bear in the market, when they are sold
-as bullion, (or mere metal, of no farther value than as a physical
-substance) but also at the additional value these metals receive in
-being rendred useful for purchasing commodities, and acquitting
-obligations. This additional value is the price of coinage.
-
-[Sidenote: When coinage is imposed, bullion must be cheaper than
- coin.]
-
-If, therefore, in a country where coinage is free, as in England, this
-coinage shall come to be imposed, the money-unit continuing to be
-affixed as before to the same quantity of the metals, ought to rise in
-its value; that is, ought to become equal to a greater quantity of every
-sort of merchandize than before; consequently, as the rough metals of
-which the coin is made are merchandize, like every other thing, the same
-number of money-units realized, or represented in the coin, ought to
-purchase more of the metals than before: That is to say, _that in every
-country where coinage is imposed, bullion must be cheaper than coin_.
-
-This proposition would be liable to no exception; were it true that no
-debt could be exacted but in the nation’s coin; because in that case,
-the creditor would be constantly obliged to receive it at its full
-value.
-
-[Sidenote: Exception from this rule.]
-
-But when nations owe to one another, the party debtor must pay the party
-creditor in _his_ coin: the debtor, therefore, is obliged to sell his
-own coin for what he can get for it, and with that he must buy of the
-coin of his creditor’s country, and with this he must pay him.
-
-Let us, to avoid abstract reasoning, take an example: and we cannot
-choose a better than that of England and France. In England, coinage is
-free, in France it costs 82⁄10 _per cent._ as shall be made out in its
-proper place.
-
-France owes England 1000_l._ sterling. In paying the bullion contained
-in this sum, either in gold or silver, in the market of London, the debt
-is paid; because the coining of it costs nothing. Here France acquits
-her debt cheaper than by sending her own coin as bullion; because the
-bullion she sends is not worth an equal weight of her coin.
-
-England owes France 20,000 livres. In paying the bullion contained in
-this sum, England is not quit; she must also pay France 82⁄10 _per
-cent._ in order to put it into coin.
-
-I reserve the farther examination of all the intricate consequences of
-this principle, until I come to the application of it, in the Second
-part.
-
-[Sidenote: Variation to which the money-unit is exposed, by the
- arbitrary operations of Princes in raising and debasing the
- coin.]
-
-V. The operation of raising and debasing the coin is performed in three
-ways.
-
-_1mo_, By augmenting or diminishing the weight of the coin.
-
-_2do_, By augmenting or diminishing the proportion of alloy in the coin.
-
-_3tio_, By augmenting or diminishing the proportion between the money
-(coin) and the money of accompt, as if every sixpence were called a
-shilling, and every twenty sixpences a pound sterling.
-
-The French call this increasing or diminishing the _numerary value_: and
-as I think it is a better term than that of raising or sinking the
-denomination, I shall take the liberty now and then to employ it.
-
-These three operations may be reduced to one, and expressed by one term:
-they all imply the augmenting or diminishing the weight of the pure
-metals in the money-unit of accompt.
-
-It would require a separate treatise, to investigate all the artifices
-which have been contrived, to make mankind lose sight of the principles
-of money, in order to palliate and make this power in the sovereign of
-changing the value of the coin, appear reasonable. But these artifices
-seem to be at an end, and Princes now perceive that the only scheme to
-get money when occasion requires, is to preserve their credit, and to
-allow the coin, by which that credit is reckoned to remain in a stable
-condition. There are still, however, examples of such operations to be
-met with; for which reason I shall subjoin, towards the end of this
-book, a particular inquiry into the interest of Princes with regard to
-the altering the value of their coin, which is a synonimous term with
-that of altering the value of the unit of money.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. VI.
- _How the Variations in the intrinsic value of the unit of Money must
- affect all the domestic Interests of a Nation._
-
-
-[Sidenote: How this variation affects the interests of debtors and
- creditors.]
-
-I. We have briefly pointed out the effects of the imperfections of the
-metals in producing a variation in the value of the unit of accompt, we
-must now point out the consequences of this variation.
-
-If the changing the content of the bushel by which grain is measured,
-would affect the interest of those who are obliged to pay, or who are
-intitled to receive, a certain number of bushels of grain for the rent
-of lands; in the same manner must every variation in the value of the
-unit of accompt affect all persons who, in permanent contracts, are
-obliged to make payments, or who are intitled to receive sums of money
-stipulated in multiples or in fractions of that money-unit.
-
-Every variation, therefore, upon the intrinsic value of the money-unit,
-has the effect of benefiting the class of creditors, at the expence of
-debtors, or _vice versa_.
-
-This consequence is deduced from an obvious principle. Money is more or
-less valuable in proportion as it can purchase more or less of every
-kind of merchandize. Now without entring a-new into the causes of the
-rise and fall of prices, it is agreed upon all hands, I suppose, that
-whether an augmentation of the general mass of money in circulation has
-the effect of raising prices in general, or not, any augmentation of the
-quantity of the metals appointed to be put into the money-unit, must at
-least augment the value of that money-unit, and make it purchase more of
-any commodity than before; that is to say, if 113 grains of fine gold,
-the present weight of a pound sterling in gold, can buy 113 pounds of
-flour; were the pound sterling raised to 114 grains of the same metal,
-it would buy 114 pounds of flour; consequently, were the pound sterling
-augmented by one grain of gold, every miller who paid a rent of ten
-pounds a year, would be obliged to sell 1140 pounds of his flour, in
-order to procure 10 pounds to pay his rent, in place of 1130 pounds of
-flour which he sold formerly to procure the same sum; consequently by
-this innovation, the miller must lose yearly ten pounds of flour, which
-his master consequently must gain. From this example, I think it is
-plain, that every augmentation of metals put into the pound sterling,
-either of silver or gold, must imply an advantage to the whole class of
-creditors who are paid in pounds sterling, and consequently, must be a
-proportional loss to all debtors who must pay by the same denomination.
-
-[Sidenote: A mistake of Mr. Locke.]
-
-I should not have been so particular in giving a proof of so plain a
-proposition, had it not escaped the penetration of the great Mr. Locke.
-
-In 1695 there was a proposal made to the government of England, to
-diminish the value of the pound sterling by 20 _per cent._ by making a
-new coinage of all the silver, and by making every shilling ⅕ lighter
-than before. The author of this project (Mr. Lowndes) having given his
-scheme to the public, was answered by Mr. Locke, That this debasing the
-value of the money-unit was effectually defrauding all the landed
-interest of 20 _per cent._ of their rents. Lowndes replied, that silver
-was augmented 20 _per cent._ in its value, and that therefore the pound
-sterling, though reduced 20 _per cent._ in its weight of pure silver,
-was still as valuable as before. This proposition Mr. Locke exploded
-with the most solid reasoning, and indeed nothing could be more absurd,
-than to affirm, that silver had risen in value with respect to itself.
-But though Mr. Locke _felt_ that all the landed interest, and all those
-who were creditors in permanent contracts, must lose 20 _per cent._ by
-Mr. Lowndes’s scheme, yet he did not _perceive_ (which is very
-wonderful) that the debtors in these contracts must gain. This led him
-to advance a very extraordinary proposition, which abundantly proves
-that the interests of debtors and creditors, which are now become of the
-utmost consequence to be considered attentively by modern statesmen,
-were then but little attended to, and still less understood.
-
-We find in the 46th page of Mr. Locke’s _Farther Considerations
-concerning the raising the value of Money_, that Mr. Lowndes had
-affirmed in support of his scheme, that this new money would pay as much
-debt, and buy as many commodities as the then money which was one fifth
-heavier. Then adds Mr. Locke, “What he says of debts is true; but yet I
-would have it well considered by our English gentlemen, that though
-creditors will lose ⅕ of their principal and use, and landlords will
-lose ⅕ of their income, _yet the debtors and tenants will not get it_.
-It may be asked, who will get it? Those, I say, and those only, who have
-great sums of weighty money (whereof one sees not a piece now in
-payments) hoarded up by them, will get it. To these, by the proposed
-change of our money, will be an increase of ⅕ added to their riches,
-paid out of the pockets of the rest of the nation.”
-
-If the authority of any man could prevail, where reason is dark, it
-would be that of Mr. Locke; and had any other person than Mr. Locke
-advanced such a doctrine, I should have taken no notice of it.
-
-Here that great man, through inadvertency, at once gives up the argument
-in favour of his antagonist, after he had refuted him in the most solid
-manner: for if a man, who at that time had hoarded heavy money, was to
-gain ⅕ upon its being coined into pieces ⅕ lighter, Mr. Locke must agree
-with Mr. Lowndes, that a light piece was as much worth as a heavy one.
-
-Those who had heavy money at that time locked up in their coffers, would
-gain no doubt, _provided they were debtors_; because having, I shall
-suppose, borrowed 4000_l._ sterling in heavy money, and having it
-augmented to 5000_l._ by Mr. Lowndes’s plan, they might pay their debt
-of 4000_l._ and retain one thousand clear profit for themselves. But
-supposing them to have no debts, which way could they possibly gain by
-having heavy money, since the 5000_l._ after the coinage, would have
-bought no more land, nor more of any commodities, than 4000_l._ would
-have done before the coinage.
-
-[Sidenote: When the value of the unit is diminished, creditors
- lose; when it is augmented, debtors lose.]
-
-We may therefore safely conclude, that every _diminution_ of the metals
-contained in the money-unit, must imply a loss to all creditors; and
-that in proportion to that loss, those who are debtors must gain.
-
-That on the contrary, whatever _augmentation_ is made of the money-unit,
-such augmentation must be hurtful to debtors, and proportionally
-advantageous to creditors.
-
-In the preceding chapters, I have laid down, with as much distinctness
-as I am capable of, the most general principles which influence the
-doctrine of money, and to those I think every other may be applied.
-
-The combination, however, of these principles with one another,
-occasions a surprizing variety of problems, relating to money, coin, and
-bullion, which are difficult to resolve, only by the difficulty there is
-found in applying them to the rule.
-
-In order therefore to render this inquiry more useful, I shall now apply
-the principles I have laid down, to the state of the British coin, and
-to the resolution of every question which shall occur during the
-examination of the disorder into which it has fallen. A deviation from
-the standard weight of the coin, and proportion of the metals (small if
-compared with what was common in former ages) has introduced very great
-obstructions in the circulation of the two species, and presents very
-great inconveniencies when there is any question of removing them by a
-new regulation of the mint.
-
-The most distinct method of treating such matters, is, to consider all
-coin as reduced to the weight of the pure metals; and to avoid the
-perplexity of different denominations of weights, I shall examine all by
-the troy grain.
-
-The interests I intend to combine in this matter not being confined to
-those of England alone, I have entred into the most accurate calculation
-possible, with regard to the coin of those nations which I shall have
-occasion to mention, and to compare with that of England. These I have
-reduced to a general table which is inserted at the end of this volume.
-The reader may have recourse to it upon every occasion where mention is
-made of the conversion of money into grains of silver and gold, and
-thereby form to himself a far better idea of many things than I could
-otherwise have given him.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. VII.
-_Of the disorder in the British Coin, so far as it occasions the melting
- down or the exporting of the Specie._
-
-[Sidenote: Defects in the British coin.]
-
-The defects in the British coin are three.
-
-_1mo._ The proportion between the gold and silver in it is found to be
-as 1 to 152⁄10, whereas the market price may be supposed to be nearly as
-1 to 14½.
-
-_2do._ Great part of the current money is worn and light.
-
-_3tio._ From the second defect proceeds the third, to wit, that there
-are several currencies in circulation which pass for the same value,
-without being of the same weight.
-
-_4to._ From all these defects results the last and greatest
-inconvenience, to wit, that some innovation must be made, in order to
-set matters on a right footing.
-
-I shall take no notice of the inaccuracies of fabrication, because these
-are inseparable from the imperfections of human art, and as long as they
-are not very considerable, no profit can be made in discovering them,
-and therefore no bad consequence can result from them.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the standard of the English coin and money-unit.]
-
-The English, besides the unit of their money which they call the pound
-sterling, have also the unit of their weight for weighing the precious
-metals.
-
-This is called the pound troy, and consists of 12 ounces, every ounce of
-20 penny weight, and every penny weight of 24 grains. The pound troy,
-therefore, consists of 240 penny weight, and 5760 grains.
-
-The fineness of the silver is reckoned by the number of ounces and penny
-weights of the pure metals in the pound troy of the composed mass; or in
-other words, the pound troy, which contains 5760 grains of standard
-silver, contains 5328 grains of fine silver, and 432 grains of copper,
-called alloy.
-
-Thus standard silver is 11 ounces 2 penny weights of fine silver in the
-pound troy, to 18 penny weights copper, or 111 parts fine silver to 9
-parts alloy.
-
-Standard gold is 11 ounces fine to one ounce silver or copper employed
-for alloy, which together make the pound troy; consequently, the pound
-troy of standard gold, contains 5280 grains fine, and 480 grains alloy,
-which alloy is reckoned of no value.
-
-[Sidenote: A pound sterling by statute contains 1718.7 grains
- troy, fine silver.]
-
-This pound of standard silver is ordered, by statute of the 43d of
-Elizabeth, to be coined into 62 shillings, 20 of which make the pound
-sterling; consequently the 20 shillings contain 1718.7 grains of fine
-silver, and 1858.06 standard silver.
-
-[Sidenote: The guinea 118.644 grains of fine gold.]
-
-The pound troy of standard gold, 11⁄12 fine, is ordered by an act of
-King Charles II. to be cut into 44½ guineas; that is to say, every
-guinea contains 129.43 grains of standard gold, and 118.644 of fine
-gold, and the pound sterling, which is 20⁄21 of the guinea, contains
-112.994, which we may state at 113 grains of fine gold, as has been
-said.
-
-[Sidenote: Coinage in England free.]
-
-The coinage in England is entirely defrayed at the expence of the state.
-The mint price for the metals is the very same with the price of the
-coin. Whoever carries to the mint an ounce of standard silver, receives
-for it in silver coin 5_s._ 2_d._ or 62_d._ whoever carries an ounce of
-standard gold receives in gold coin 3_l._ 17_s._ 10_d_½. the one and the
-other making exactly an ounce of the same fineness with the bullion.
-Coin, therefore, can have no value in the market above bullion;
-consequently, no loss can be incurred by those who melt it down.
-
-When the guinea was first struck, the government (not inclining to fix
-the pound sterling to the gold coin of the nation) fixed the guinea at
-20 shillings, (which was then below its proportion to the silver)
-leaving it to seek its own price above that value, according to the
-course of the market.
-
-By this regulation no harm was done to the English silver standard;
-because the guinea, or 118.644 grains fine gold being worth more, at
-that time, than 20 shillings, or 1718.7 grains fine silver, no debtor
-would pay with gold at its standard value, and whatever it was received
-for above that price was purely conventional.
-
-[Sidenote: The standard not attached to the gold coin, till the
- year 1728.]
-
-Accordingly guineas sought their own price until the year 1728, that
-they were fixed a-new, not below their value as at first, but at what
-was then reckoned their exact value, according to the proportion of the
-metals, to wit, at 21 shillings, and at this they were ordered to pass
-current in all payments.
-
-[Sidenote: Consequence of this regulation to debase the standard.]
-
-This operation had the effect of making the gold a standard as well as
-the silver. Debtors then paid indifferently in gold as well as in
-silver, because both were supposed to be of the same intrinsic as well
-as current value; in which case no inconvenience could follow upon this
-regulation. But, in time, silver came to be more demanded; the making of
-plate began to prevail more than formerly, and the exportation of silver
-to the East Indies increasing yearly, made the demand for it greater; or
-perhaps brought its quantity to be proportionally less than before. This
-changed the proportion of the metals, and by slow degrees they have come
-from that of 1 to 15.2 (the proportion they were supposed to have when
-the guineas were fixed and made a lawful money at 21 shillings) to that
-of 14.5 the present _supposed_ proportion.
-
-The consequence of this has been, that the same guinea which was worth
-1804.6 grains fine silver, at the time it was fixed at 21 shillings, is
-now worth no more than 1719.9 grains of fine silver according to the
-proportion of 14½ to 1.
-
-[Sidenote: That debtors will not pay in silver but in gold.]
-
-Consequently, debtors, who have always the option of the legal species
-in paying their debts, will pay pounds sterling no more in silver but in
-gold; and as the gold pounds they pay in, are not intrinsically worth
-the silver pounds they paid in formerly, according to the statute of
-Elizabeth, it follows that the pound sterling in silver is really no
-more the standard, since no body will pay at that rate, and since no
-body can be compelled to do it.
-
-Besides this want of proportion between the metals, the silver coined
-before the reign of George I. is now become light by circulation; and
-the guineas coined by all the Princes since Charles II. pass by tale,
-though many of them are considerably diminished in their weight.
-
-Let us now examine what profit the want of proportion, and the want of
-weight in the coin can afford to the money jobbers, in melting it down
-or exporting it.
-
-Did every body consider coin only as the measure for reckoning value,
-without attending to its value as a metal, the deviations of gold and
-silver coin from perfect exactness either as to proportion or weight,
-would occasion little inconvenience.
-
-[Sidenote: That some people consider coin a money of accompt,]
-
-Great numbers indeed, in every modern society, consider coin in no other
-light, than that of money of accompt, and have great difficulty to
-comprehend what difference any one can find between a light shilling and
-a heavy one; or what inconvenience there can possibly result from a
-guinea’s being some grains of fine gold too light to be worth 21
-shillings standard weight. And did every one think in the same way,
-there would be no occasion for coin of the precious metals at all;
-leather, copper, iron, or paper, would keep the reckoning as well as
-gold and silver.
-
-[Sidenote: others consider it as a metal.]
-
-But although there be many who look no farther than at the stamp on the
-coin, there are others whose sole business it is to examine its
-intrinsic worth as a commodity, and to profit of every irregularity in
-the weight and proportion of metals.
-
-By the very institution of coinage, it is implied, that every piece of
-the same metal, and same denomination with regard to the money-unit,
-shall pass current for the same value.
-
-It is, therefore, the employment of those money jobbers, as I shall call
-them, to examine, with a scrupulous exactness, the precise weight of
-every piece of coin which comes into their hands.
-
-[Sidenote: Operations of money jobbers when the coin deviates from
- the market proportion of the metals, or from the legal
- weight.]
-
-The first object of their attention, is, the price of the metals in the
-market: a jobber finds, at present, that with 14.5 pounds of fine silver
-bullion, he can buy one pound of fine gold bullion.
-
-[Sidenote: They melt down when the metals in it are wrong
- proportioned.]
-
-He therefore buys up with gold coin, all the new silver as fast as it is
-coined, of which he can get at the rate of 15.2 pounds for one in gold;
-these 15.2 pounds silver coin he melts down into bullion, and converts
-that back into gold bullion, giving at the rate of only 14.5. pounds for
-one.
-
-By this operation he remains with the value of 7⁄10 of one pound weight
-of silver bullion clear profit upon the 15½ pounds he bought; which 7⁄10
-is really lost by the man who inadvertently coined silver at the mint,
-and gave it to the money jobber for his gold. Thus the state loses the
-expence of the coinage, and the public the convenience of change for
-their guineas.
-
-[Sidenote: And when the coin is of unequal weight.]
-
-But here it may be asked, Why should the money jobber melt down the
-silver coin, can he not buy gold with it as well without melting it
-down? I answer, he cannot; because when it is in coin, he cannot avail
-himself of its being new and weighty. Coin goes by tale, not by weight;
-therefore, were he to come to market with his new silver coin, gold
-bullion being sold at the mint price I shall suppose, viz. at 3_l._
-17_s._ 10½_d._ sterling money _per_ ounce, he would be obliged to pay
-the price of what he bought with heavy money, which he can equally do
-with light.
-
-He therefore melts down the new silver coin, and sells it for bullion,
-at so many pence an ounce, the price of which bullion is, in the English
-market, always above the price of silver at the mint, for the reasons
-now to be given.
-
-[Sidenote: Why silver bullion is dearer than coin.]
-
-When you sell standard silver bullion at the mint, you are paid in
-weighty money; that is, you receive for your bullion the very same
-weight in standard coin; the coinage costs nothing; but when you sell
-bullion in the market, you are paid in worn out silver, in gold, in bank
-notes, in short, in every species of lawful current money. Now all these
-payments have some defect: the silver you are paid with is worn and
-light; the gold you are paid with is over-rated, and perhaps also light;
-and the bank notes must have the same value with the specie with which
-the bank pays them, that is, with light silver or over-rated gold.
-
-It is for these reasons, that silver bullion, which is bought by the
-mint at 5_s._ 2_d._ _per_ ounce of heavy silver money, may be bought at
-market at 65 pence[Q] the ounce in light silver, over-rated gold, or
-bank notes, which is the same thing.
-
-Footnote Q:
-
- The price of silver is constantly varying in the London market; I
- therefore take 65 pence _per_ ounce as a mean price, the less to
- perplex calculations, which here are all hypothetical.
-
-[Sidenote: Because that species has risen in the market price as
- bullion, and not as coin.]
-
-Farther, we have seen how the imposition of coinage has the effect of
-raising coin above the value of bullion, by adding a value to it which
-it had not as a metal.
-
-Just so when the unit is once affixed to certain determined quantities
-of both metals, if one of the metals should afterwards rise in value in
-the market, the coin made of that metal must lose a part of its value as
-coin, although it retains it as a metal. Consequently, as in the first
-case, it acquired an additional value by being coined, it must now
-acquire an additional value by being melted down. From this we may
-conclude, that when the standard is affixed to both the metals in the
-coin, and when the proportion of that value is not made to follow the
-price of the market, that species which rises in the market is melted
-down, and the bullion is sold for a price as much exceeding the mint
-price, as the metal has risen in its value.
-
-If, therefore, in England the price of silver bullion is found to be at
-65 pence the ounce, while at the mint it is rated at 62; this proves
-that silver has risen 3⁄65 above the proportion observed in the coin,
-and that all coin of standard weight may consequently be melted down
-with a profit of 3⁄65. But as there are several other circumstances to
-be attended to, which regulate and influence the price of bullion, we
-shall here pass them in review the better to discover the nature of this
-disorder in the English coin, and the advantages which money jobbers may
-draw from it.
-
-[Sidenote: What regulates the price of bullion.]
-
-The price of bullion, like that of every other merchandize, is regulated
-by the value of the money it is paid with.
-
-If bullion, therefore, sells in England for 65 pence an ounce, paid in
-silver coin, it must sell for 65 shillings the pound troy; that is to
-say, the shillings it is commonly paid with, do not exceed the weight of
-2⁄65 of a pound troy: for if the 65 shillings with which the pound of
-bullion is paid weighed more than a pound troy, it would be a shorter
-and better way for him who wants bullion, to melt down the shillings and
-make use of the metal, than to go to market with them in order to get
-less.
-
-We may, therefore, be very certain, that no man will buy silver bullion
-at 65 pence an ounce, with any shilling which weighs above 1⁄65 of a
-pound troy.
-
-We have gone upon the supposition that the ordinary price of bullion in
-the English market is 65 pence _per_ ounce. This has been done upon the
-authority of some late writers on this subject[R]: it is now proper to
-point out the causes which may make it deviate from that value.
-
-Footnote R:
-
- This was writ in Germany, _anno_ 1759, when I was not well informed of
- certain facts, and it is not worth while to make any alterations, as
- it is only a supposition.
-
-[Sidenote: The intrinsic value of the currency.]
-
-I. It may vary and certainly will vary in the price according as the
-currency is better or worse. When the expences of a war, or a wrong
-balance of trade, have carried off a great many heavy guineas, it is
-natural that bullion should rise; because then it will be paid for more
-commonly in light gold and silver; that is to say, with pounds sterling,
-below the value of 113 grains fine gold, the worth of the pound sterling
-in new guineas.
-
-[Sidenote: A demand for exporting bullion.]
-
-II. This wrong balance of trade, or a demand for bullion abroad,
-becoming very great, may occasion a scarcity of the metals in the
-market, as well as a scarcity of the coin; consequently, an advanced
-price must be given for it in proportion to the greatness and height of
-the demand. In this case, both the specie and the bullion must be bought
-with paper. But I must observe, that the rise in the price of bullion
-proceeds from the demand for the metals, and the competition between
-merchants to procure them, and not because the paper given as the price
-is at all of inferior value to the specie. The least discredit of this
-kind would not tend to diminish the value of the paper; it would
-annihilate it at once. Therefore, since the metals must be had, and that
-the paper cannot supply the want of them when they are to be exported,
-the price rises in proportion to the difficulties in finding metals
-elsewhere than in the English market.
-
-[Sidenote: Or for making of plate.]
-
-III. A sudden call for bullion, for the making of plate. A gold-smith
-can well afford to give 67 pence for an ounce of silver, that is to say,
-he can afford to give one pound of gold for 14 pounds of silver, and
-perhaps for less, notwithstanding that what he gives be more than the
-ordinary proportion between the metals, because he indemnifies himself
-amply by the price of his workmanship: just as a tavern-keeper will pay
-any price for a fine fish, because, like the goldsmith, he buys for
-other people.
-
-[Sidenote: Exchange raises, and the mint price brings down
- bullion.]
-
-IV. The mint price has as great an effect in bringing down the price of
-bullion, as exchange has in raising it. In countries where the metals in
-the coin are justly proportioned, where all the currencies are of legal
-weight, and where coinage is imposed, the operations of trade make the
-price of bullion constantly to fluctuate between the value of the coin
-and the mint price of the metals. This shall afterwards be sufficiently
-explained, in the second part.
-
-[Sidenote: Continuation of the operations of money-jobbers]
-
-Now let us suppose that the current price of silver bullion in the
-market is 65 pence the ounce, paid in lawful money, no matter of what
-weight, or of what metal. [Sidenote: Their rule for melting the coin.]
-Upon this the money-jobber falls to work. All shillings which are above
-1⁄65 of a pound troy, he throws into his melting pot, and sells them as
-bullion, for 65_d._ _per_ ounce; all those which are below that weight
-he carries to market, and buys bullion with them, at 65 pence _per_
-ounce.
-
-What is the consequence of this?
-
-That those who sell the bullion, finding the shillings which the
-money-jobber pays with perhaps not above 1⁄66 of a pound troy, they on
-their side raise the price of their bullion to 66 pence the ounce.
-
-This makes new work for the money-jobber; for he must always gain. He
-now weighs all shillings as they come to hand; and as formerly he threw
-into his melting-pot those only which were worth more than 1⁄65 of a
-pound troy, he now throws in all that are in value above 1⁄66. He then
-sells the melted shillings at 66 pence the ounce, and buys bullion with
-the light ones, at the same price.
-
-This is the consequence of ever permitting any species of coin to pass
-by the authority of the stamp, without controlling it at the same time
-by the weight: and this is the manner in which money-jobbers gain by the
-currency of light money.
-
-[Sidenote: The pence in guineas equal to the pence of shillings of
- 65 in the pound troy.]
-
-It is no argument against this exposition of the matter to say, that
-silver bullion is seldom bought with silver coin; because the pence in
-new guineas are worth no more than the pence of shillings of 65 in the
-pound troy: that is to say, that 240 pence contained in 20⁄21 of a new
-guinea, and 240 pence contained in 20 shillings of 65 to the pound troy,
-differ no more in the intrinsic value than 0.88 of a grain of fine
-silver upon the whole, which is a mere trifle[S].
-
-Footnote S:
-
- See table, English coins, N^o. 6, & 7.
-
-[Sidenote: When guineas may be melted down with profit.]
-
-Whenever, therefore, shillings come below the weight of 1⁄65 of a pound
-troy, then there is an advantage in changing them for new guineas; and
-when that is the case, the new guineas will be melted down, and profit
-will be found in selling them for bullion, upon the principles we have
-just been explaining.
-
-It would be very tedious to enumerate all the fraudulent operations
-which are occasioned by this defect of proportion between the metals in
-the coin, and by the unequal weight of coins carrying the same
-denomination.
-
-[Sidenote: Silver is exported preferably to gold.]
-
-We have already given a specimen of the domestic operations of the
-money-jobbers; but these are not the most prejudicial to national
-concerns. The jobbers may be supposed to be Englishmen; and in that case
-the profit they make remains at home; but whenever there is a call for
-bullion to pay the balance of trade, it is evident that this will be
-paid in silver coin, never in gold, if heavy silver can be got; and this
-again carries away the silver coin, and renders it at home so rare, that
-great inconveniencies are found for want of the lesser denominations of
-it. The loss, however, here is confined to an inconvenience; because the
-balance of trade being a debt which must be paid, I don’t consider the
-exportation of the silver for that purpose as any consequence of the
-disorder of the coin. But besides this exportation which is necessary,
-there are others which are arbitrary, and which are made only with a
-view to profit of the wrong proportion.
-
-When the money-jobbers find difficulty in carrying on the traffic we
-have described, in the English market, because of the competition among
-themselves, they carry the silver coin out of the country, and sell it
-abroad for gold, upon the same principles that the East India company
-send silver to China, in order to purchase gold.
-
-[Sidenote: This hurtful, when done by foreigners.]
-
-It may be demanded, what hurt this trade can do to England, since those
-who export silver bring back the same value in gold? I answer, that were
-this trade carried on by natives, there would be no loss; because they
-would bring home gold for the whole intrinsic value of the silver. But
-if we suppose foreigners sending over gold to be coined at the English
-mint, and changing that gold into English silver coin, and then carrying
-off this coin, I think it is plain that they must gain the difference,
-as well as the money-jobbers. But it may be answered, that having given
-gold for silver at the rate of the mint, they have given value for what
-they have received. Very right; but so did Sir Hans Sloane, when he paid
-five guineas for an overgrown toad: he got value for his money; but it
-was value only to himself. Just so, whenever the English government
-shall be obliged to restore the proportion of the metals, (as they must
-do) this operation will annihilate that imaginary value which they have
-hitherto set upon gold; which imagination is the only thing which
-renders the exchange of their silver against the foreign gold equal.
-
-But it is farther objected, that foreigners cannot carry off the heavy
-silver; because there is none to carry off. Very true; but then I say
-they have carried off a great quantity already: or if the English Jews
-have been too sharp to allow such a profit to fall to strangers, (which
-may or may not have been the case) then I say that this disorder is an
-effectual stop to any more coinage of silver for circulation.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. VIII.
-_Of the disorder in the British coin, so far as it affects the value of
- the pound sterling currency._
-
-
-[Sidenote: Two legal pounds sterling in England.]
-
-From what has been said, it is evident, that there must be found in
-England two legal pounds sterling, of different values; the one worth
-113 grains of fine gold, the other worth 1718.7 grains of fine silver. I
-call them different; because these two portions of the precious metals
-are of different values all over Europe.
-
-[Sidenote: And several others, in consequence of the wearing of
- the coin.]
-
-But besides these two different pounds sterling, which the change in the
-proportion of the metals have created, the other defects of the
-circulating coin produce similar effects. The guineas coined by all the
-Princes since K. Charles II. have been of the same standard weight and
-fineness, 44½ in a pound troy of standard gold 11⁄12 fine: these have
-been constantly wearing ever since they have been coined; and in
-proportion to their wearing they are of less value.
-
-If, therefore, the new guineas are below the value of a pound sterling
-in silver, standard weight, the old must be of less value still. Here
-then is another currency, that is, another pound sterling; or indeed
-more properly speaking, there are as many different pounds sterling as
-there are guineas of different weights. This is not all; the
-money-jobbers having carried off all the weighty silver, that which is
-worn with use, and reduced even below the standard of gold, forms one
-currency more, and totally destroys all determinate proportion between
-the money-unit and the currencies which are supposed to represent it.
-
-[Sidenote: Why any silver coin remains in England.]
-
-It may be asked, how, at this rate, any silver at all has remained in
-England? I answer, that the few weighty shillings which still remain in
-circulation, have marvellously escaped the hands of the money-jobbers;
-and as for the rest, the rubbing and wearing of these pieces has done
-what the slate might have done; that is to say, it has reduced them to
-their due proportion with the lightest gold.
-
-The disorder, therefore, of the English coin has rendered the standard
-of a pound sterling quite uncertain. To say that it is 1718.7 grains of
-fine silver, is quite ideal. Who are paid in such pounds? To say that it
-is 113 grains of pure gold, may also not be true; because there are many
-currencies worse than the new guineas.
-
-[Sidenote: Value of a pound sterling current.]
-
-What then is the consequence of all this disorder? What effect has it
-upon the current value of a pound sterling? And which way can the value
-of that be determined?
-
-[Sidenote: Determined by the operations of trade.]
-
-The operations of trade bring value to an equation, notwithstanding the
-greatest irregularities possible, and so in fact a pound sterling has
-acquired a determinate value over all the world by the means of foreign
-exchange. This is a kind of ideal scale for measuring the British coin,
-although it has not all the properties of that described above.
-
-[Sidenote: To the mean value of all the currencies.]
-
-Exchange considers the pound sterling as a value determined according to
-the combination of the values of all the different currencies, in
-proportion as payments are made in the one or the other; and as debtors
-generally take care to pay in the worst species they can, it
-consequently follows, that the value of the pound sterling should fall
-to that of the lowest currency.
-
-Were there a sufficient quantity of worn gold and silver to acquit all
-bills of exchange, the pound sterling would come down to the value of
-them; but if the new gold be also necessary for that purpose, the value
-of it must be proportionally greater.
-
-All these combinations are liquidated and compensated with one another,
-by the operations of trade and exchange: and the pound sterling, which
-is so different in itself, becomes thereby, in the eyes of commerce, a
-determinate unit, subject however to variations, from which it never can
-be exempted.
-
-Here is then the proof of what was said in the end of the first chapter,
-that the wearing of one shilling had the effect of contributing towards
-the diminution of the value of the pound sterling every where; a
-proportion which, at first sight, has the air of a paradox, though, when
-it is understood, nothing is more consistent with the ruling principles
-of commerce.
-
-[Sidenote: Exchange a good measure for the value of a pound
- sterling.]
-
-Exchange, therefore, in my humble opinion, is one of the best measures
-for valuing a pound sterling, present currency. Here occurs a question.
-
-Does the great quantity of paper money in England tend to diminish the
-value of the pound sterling?
-
-[Sidenote: The use of paper money not hurtful in debasing the
- standard.]
-
-I answer (according to my weak conceptions) in the negative. _Paper
-money_ is just as good as gold or silver money, and no better. The
-variation of the standard, we have already said, and I think proved,
-must influence the interests of debtors and creditors proportionally
-every where. From this it follows, that all augmentation of the value of
-the money-unit in the specie must hurt the debtors in the paper money;
-and all diminutions on the other hand must hurt the creditors in the
-paper money, as well as every where else. The payments, therefore, made
-in paper money, never can contribute to the regulation of the standard
-of the pound sterling; it is the specie received in liquidation of that
-paper money which alone can contribute to mark the value of the British
-unit; because it is affixed to nothing else.
-
-[Sidenote: The pound sterling not regulated by statute, but by the
- mean value of the current money.]
-
-From this we may draw a principle, _That in countries where the
-money-unit is entirely affixed to the coin, the actual value of it is
-not according to the legal standard of that coin, but according to the
-mean proportion of the actual worth of those currencies in which debts
-are paid_.
-
-[Sidenote: Why exchange appears so commonly against England.]
-
-From this we see the reason why the exchange between England and all the
-trading towns in Europe has long appeared so unfavourable. People
-calculate the real par, upon the supposition that a pound sterling is
-worth 1718.7 grains troy of fine silver, when in fact the currency is
-not perhaps worth 1638, the value of a new guinea in silver, at the
-market proportion of 1. to 14.5; that is to say, the currency is but
-95.3. _per cent._ of the silver standard of the 43d of Elizabeth. No
-wonder then if the exchange be thought unfavourable.
-
-[Sidenote: How the market prices of bullion marks the value of the
- pound sterling.]
-
-From the principle we have just laid down, we may gather a confirmation
-of what we advanced concerning the cause of the advanced price of
-bullion in the English market.
-
-When people buy bullion with current money at a determinate price, that
-operation, in conjunction with the course of exchange, ought naturally
-to mark the actual value of the pound sterling with great exactness.
-
-[Sidenote: Shillings at present weigh no more than 1⁄65 of a pound
- troy,]
-
-If therefore the price of standard bullion in the English market, when
-no demand is found for the exportation of the metals, that is to say,
-when paper is found for paper upon exchange, and when merchants, versed
-in these matters, judge exchange (that is remittances) to be at par, if
-then, I say, silver bullion cannot be bought at a lower price than 65
-pence the ounce, it is evident that this bullion might be bought with 65
-pence in shillings, of which 65 might be coined out of the pound troy
-English standard silver; since 65 pence per ounce implies 65 shillings
-for the 12 ounces or pound troy.
-
-This plainly shews how standard silver bullion should sell for 65 pence
-the ounce, in a country where the ounce of standard silver in the coin
-is worth no more than 62; and were the market price of bullion to stand
-uniformly at 65 _per_ ounce, that would shew the value of the pound
-sterling to be tolerably fixed. All the heavy silver coin is now carried
-off[T]; because it was intrinsically worth more than the gold it passed
-for in currency. The silver therefore which remains is worn down to the
-market proportion of the metals, as has been said, that is to say, 20
-shillings in silver currency are worth 113 grains of fine gold, at the
-proportion of 1 to 14.5 between gold and silver. Now,
-
- as 1 is to 14.5, so is 113 to 1638.
-
-so the 20 shillings current weigh but 1638 grains fine silver, instead
-of 1718.7, which they ought to do according to the standard.
-
-Footnote T:
-
- This was writ during last war.
-
-Now let us speak of standard silver, since we are examining how far the
-English coin must be worn by use.
-
-[Sidenote: and are worn 4.29 troy grains light of their standard
- weight.f]
-
-The pound troy contains 5760 grains. This, according to the standard, is
-coined into 62 shillings; consequently, every shilling ought to weigh
-92.9 grains. Of such shillings it is impossible that ever standard
-bullion should sell at above 62 pence _per_ ounce. If therefore such
-bullion sells for 65 _pence_, the shillings with which it is bought must
-weigh no more than 88.64 grains standard silver; that is, they must lose
-4.29 grains, and are reduced to 1⁄65 of a pound troy.
-
-But it is not necessary that bullion be bought with shillings; no
-stipulation of _price_ is ever made farther, than at so many pence
-sterling _per_ ounce. Does not this virtually determine the value of
-such currency with regard to all the currencies in Europe? Did a
-Spaniard, a Frenchman, or a Dutchman, know the exact quantity of silver
-bullion which can be bought in the London market for a pound sterling,
-would he inform himself any farther as to the intrinsic value of that
-money-unit; would he not understand the value of it far better from that
-circumstance than by the course of any exchange, since exchange does not
-mark the intrinsic value of money, but only the value of that money
-transported from one place to another.
-
-The price of bullion, therefore, when it is not influenced by
-extraordinary demand (such as for the payment of a balance of trade, or
-for making an extraordinary provision of plate) but when it stands at
-what every body knows to be meant by the common market price, is a very
-tolerable measure of the value of the _actual_ money-standard in any
-country.
-
-[Sidenote: A pound sterling worth at present no more than 1638
- grains troy fine silver, according to the price of bullion;]
-
-If it be therefore true, that a pound sterling cannot purchase above
-1638 grains of fine silver bullion, it will require not a little logic
-to prove that it is really, or has been for these many years, worth any
-more; notwithstanding that the standard weight of it in England is
-regulated by the laws of the kingdom at 1718.7 grains of fine silver.
-
-[Sidenote: and according to the course of exchange,]
-
-If to this valuation of the pound sterling drawn from the price of
-bullion, we add the other drawn from the course of exchange; and if by
-this we find, that when paper is found for paper upon exchange, a pound
-sterling cannot purchase above 1638 grains of fine silver in any country
-in Europe, upon these two authorities, I think, we may very safely
-conclude (as to the matter of fact at least) that the pound sterling is
-not worth more, either in London or in any other trading city, and if
-this be the case, it is just worth 20 shillings of 65 to the pound troy.
-
-[Sidenote: shillings coined at 65 in the pound troy, would be in
- proportion with the gold,]
-
-If therefore the mint were to coin shillings at that rate, and pay for
-silver bullion at the market price, that is, at the rate of 65 pence
-_per_ ounce in those new coined shillings, they would be in proportion
-to the gold: silver would be carried to the mint equally with gold, and
-would be as little subject to be exported or melted down.
-
-It may be inquired in this place, how far the coining the pound troy
-into 65 shillings is contrary to the laws of England?
-
-[Sidenote: which shews that the standard has been debased,]
-
-The moment a state pronounces a certain quantity of gold to be worth a
-certain quantity of silver, and orders these respective quantities of
-each metal to be received as equivalents of each other, and as lawful
-money in payments, that moment gold is made a standard as much as
-silver. If therefore too small a quantity of gold be ordered or
-permitted to be considered as an equivalent for the unit, the silver
-standard is from that moment debased; or indeed more properly speaking,
-all silver money is from that moment proscribed; for who, from that
-time, will ever pay in silver, when he can pay cheaper in gold? Gold,
-therefore, by such a law is made the standard, and all declarations to
-the contrary are against the matter of fact.
-
-[Sidenote: and that the preserving it where it is, is no new
- debasement.]
-
-Were the King, therefore, to coin silver at 65 shillings in the pound,
-it is demonstration _that by such an act_ he would commit no
-adulteration upon the standard: the adulteration is already committed.
-The standard has descended to where it is, by slow degrees, and by the
-operation of political causes only, and nothing prevents it from falling
-lower, but the standard of the gold coin. Let guineas be now left to
-seek their value as they did formerly, and let light silver continue to
-go by tale, we shall see the guineas up at 30 shillings in 20 years
-time, as was the case in 1695.
-
-[Sidenote: Proof that the standard has been debased by law,]
-
-It is as absurd to say that the standard of Queen Elizabeth has not been
-debased by enacting, that the English unit shall be acquited with 113
-grains of fine gold, as it would be to affirm that it would not be
-debased from what it is at present, by enacting, That a pound of butter
-should every where be received in payment for a pound sterling; although
-the pound sterling should continue to consist of 3 ounces, 17 penny
-weights, and 10 grains of standard silver, according to the statute of
-the 43 Elizabeth. I believe in that case most debtors would pay in
-butter, and silver would, as at present, acquire a conventional value as
-a metal, but would be looked upon no longer as a standard, or as money.
-
-If therefore, by the law of England, a pound sterling must consist of
-1718.7 grains troy of fine silver, by the law of England also, 113
-grains of gold must be of the same value, but no law can establish that
-proportion; consequently, in which ever way a reformation be brought
-about, some law must be reversed; consequently, expediency, and not
-compliance with law, must be the motive in reforming the abuse.
-
-[Sidenote: and is at present reduced to the value of the gold.]
-
-From what has been said, it is not at all surprising that the pound
-sterling should in fact be reduced nearly to the value of the gold.
-Whether it ought to be kept at that value is another question; and shall
-be examined in its proper place. All that we here decide, is, that
-coining the pound troy into 65 shillings would restore the proportion of
-the metals, and render both species common in circulation. But restoring
-the weight and proportion of the coin is not the difficulty, as I
-conjecture, which prevents a reformation of the English coinage.
-
-I have dwelt longer, perhaps, than what was necessary upon this
-estimation of the present value of the pound sterling, and in setting
-the matter in different lights, have been forced into repetitions. The
-importance of that point in the present inquiry must plead my excuse.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. IX.
- _Historical account of the Variations of the British Coin._
-
-[Sidenote: Purport of this treatise not to dictate, but to
- inquire]
-
-The whole purport of this part of my inquiry, is, to examine and
-investigate the principles relating to money; to range them in order,
-and to render them easily applicable to any combination of circumstances
-which may occur. If I have applied my reasoning to the state of the
-British coin, it has been with no intention to erect myself as a judge
-of the interests of that nation, or with a design to point out to them
-what measure is the most expedient to be followed. I am a stranger to
-the true state of the question, and I reason only upon suppositions, not
-from exact information; upon this footing I intend to proceed.
-
-I shall take a view of every scheme which I think may be proposed as a
-remedy against the disorder, and examine all the consequences which can
-result from each, according to the influence of the different principles
-under which they fall. _Circumstances hid_ from me will nevertheless
-work their full effect, and may render the best deduced principles quite
-delusive, when, without attending to _them_, we pretend to draw
-conclusions.
-
-[Sidenote: how the disorder in the coin may be remedied without
- inconveniences,]
-
-We have examined the nature of the disorder of the coin of Great
-Britain, and such it certainly is, as demands some reformation. A nation
-so justly renowned for knowledge, so thoroughly versed in the arts of
-commerce, and so expert in every matter of calculation, cannot be
-supposed to be at any loss for a method to remove the cause of the
-disorder. The question is not, therefore, how to fix the standard, how
-to restore the proportion between the metals in the coin, nor how to
-render all the current money of its just weight. But the question is,
-how to execute this without incurring greater inconveniences than those
-at present felt.
-
-If the smallest change should be made upon the present value of the
-pound sterling, the operation is arbitrary; and those who either advise
-it or execute it, would be answerable for every consequence. If the
-consequences should prove salutary to the nation, the projector will
-meet with applause; but if they should be attended with injustice, he
-will merit blame; if with perplexity and confusion, he may very possibly
-never see himself approved of.
-
-The present disorder has proceeded from neglect on the part of
-government; a neglect however which admits of an apology, for reasons
-afterwards to be assigned. When an abuse creeps in by degrees, no
-particular person can be charged with it: when it is to be corrected,
-some person or other must undertake the work; and few are found who
-incline to be volunteers in the service of the public, upon an occasion
-where the interest of the nation is not clear and evident.
-
-[Sidenote: by making the nation itself choose the remedy.]
-
-The best way therefore to accomplish such a work, is, to put it into the
-hands of the nation itself. When the people are fully instructed in the
-matter, when the state of the question is laid before them in a clear
-light, and stripped of all money-jargon, they will see the natural
-consequences of every innovation; and when they have well considered of
-them, they may resolve whether they will keep the pound sterling they
-have, or whether they will take another.
-
-[Sidenote: If the present standard is departed from, every other
- to be pitched upon is arbitrary.]
-
-The question to be determined, is, what the weight of the pound sterling
-now is, and what it ought to be. If it be made different from what it is
-at present, that operation must be conducted with justice and
-impartiality. If a new standard is to be pitched upon, the choice is
-quite arbitrary, as has been said; and were any weight to be preferred
-to another, the best of any, no doubt, would be the pound troy of
-standard silver. This was the pound sterling for many ages, and the most
-that can be said for Queen Elizabeth’s act, is, that it is the last
-_deliberate_ adulteration by law of the English coin.
-
-The next question is, how to conduct that operation so as to do justice
-to every man in the nation in contracts already entred into; how to do
-justice to the creditors of Great Britain; how to do justice to Great
-Britain with respect to her creditors; how to do all this, I say, and at
-the same time to make an innovation upon the present state of the coin.
-
-[Sidenote: People imagine the present standard is the same with
- that of Queen Elizabeth.]
-
-Debasing the standard is odious in the opinion of every mortal; and it
-seems also to be the opinion of many, that every regulation which shall
-not carry the value of a pound sterling, to the value of the silver
-appointed to enter into it by the statute of Queen Elizabeth, is a
-debasing of it from what it is at present.
-
-In order to cast more light upon the historical part of the English
-coinage, I shall here lay together some short observations upon the
-state of that question from the reformation to the present time.
-
-[Sidenote: Debasements of the standard during the reformation.]
-
-Henry VIII. and Edward VI. during the violent convulsions of the
-reformation, so sophisticated the fineness of the coin, and so curtailed
-the weight of it, that all proportion of value was lost.
-
-[Sidenote: Raised by Edward VI.]
-
-This run the whole nation into inextricable confusion, and forced the
-ministers of the young King Edward, in 1552, to restore the purity of
-the metals, and to raise the weight of the coin in the pound sterling,
-from 220 grains troy of fine silver, to which it was then debased, to
-1884. Mary reduced it to 1880 grains, at which it stood during her
-reign. [Sidenote: Debased by Elizabeth.] From this Elizabeth raised
-it in the second year of her reign to 1888 grains; and in the 43d she
-passed the famous statute by which it was debased to 1718.7, the present
-legal silver standard. [Sidenote: Supported by her successors,]
-During the reign of James I. trade began to take root in England; and
-this pointed out the necessity of preserving the standard of their money
-invariable. The confusions occasioned by the former adulterations left a
-strong impression on the minds of the English nation in the succeeding
-reigns, a statute which had been preserved without alteration for many
-years acquired in time great authority, and the standard continued
-constantly attached to the silver. Gold was occasionally coined; but
-circulated only under a conventional value, and was not made a legal
-money. The interests of trade at last required a more extensive
-circulation, and King Charles II. when he first coined guineas,
-determined a value for their currency, in order to compass that end: but
-very well observing that without fixing the gold at a price below its
-true proportion to the silver, there was no possibility of preventing it
-from becoming also a standard for the pound sterling, and thereby
-introducing a confusion, the guinea was valued no higher than 20
-shillings, and allowed to find its own value above that price.
-
-The guinea accordingly fluctuated in its value; sometimes at 22
-shillings, which marks the proportion of the metals at 1 to 15.84,
-sometimes at 21_s._ 6_d._ which marks the proportion at 1 to 15.6, at
-last at 21 shillings, which marks the proportion as 1 to 15.2, and now
-it is worth no more than its original statute value, to wit, 20
-shillings, which marks the proportion as 1 to 14.5. These conversions
-are formed upon the supposition, that in all the variations the
-shillings are of the statute weight, and that the guinea circulated
-according to the market proportion of the metals; two circumstances
-which are by no means to be depended on.
-
-[Sidenote: until it was debased by the clipping after the
- revolution.]
-
-About the time of the revolution, silver money had begun to be coined
-with the wheel, or fly-press, (which prevented the frauds to which coin
-was formerly exposed from clipping and washing) and then the custom of
-weighing the current money went into disuse. But as at that time there
-were still great quantities of the hammered money remaining, the
-clippers profited of the inattention of the public, and fell to work
-with the hammered money. The consequence of this was, that those who
-were obliged to pay, paid in clipped money; the value of the pound
-sterling fell to the rate of the then currency; all weighty coin was
-locked up or melted down; the guineas rose to 30 shillings, and 100_l._
-sterling, which in silver ought to weigh above 32 pounds troy, did not
-commonly exceed one half.
-
-The kingdom at this time was involved in a war, and was annually obliged
-to borrow large sums, paid in those pounds sterling currency, which were
-worth no more than 2⁄3 of a guinea, or 14 shillings of such currency as
-the present of 65 to the pound troy. This is evident, since the guinea
-was then worth 30 shillings, or 1½ pound sterling; and that at present
-it is worth 21 shillings of 65 to the pound troy.
-
-[Sidenote: Lowndes’s scheme refuted by Locke, the standard raised
- to that of Elizabeth, and the consequences of that measure.]
-
-Lowndes contended strongly for having the pound sterling reduced 20 _per
-cent._ Locke insisted upon the old standard of Queen Elizabeth: the
-latter carried his point. A new coinage was made in 1695, and the
-government acquitted a great part of the debts they had contracted from
-the revolution (which had been paid them at the value of between ten and
-fourteen shillings present currency) at the rate of 20 shillings of the
-standard of Queen Elizabeth. This is the matter of fact: whether this
-was doing justice to the nation, I leave every man to determine. It must
-not however be believed that there was no reason for this extraordinary
-step. By the raising of the standard, the state gained considerably upon
-the score of taxes, as well as the creditors upon their capitals and
-interest; and the nation, which was the principal loser, was pleased;
-because their standard was not debased: thus all the three parties were
-satisfied.
-
-Upon this coinage in 1695, the coin was once more set upon a solid
-footing: all money was of weight, and the pound was rightly attached to
-the silver standard. Upon that footing it remained, until the guinea was
-made a legal coin, and fixed at its then supposed intrinsic worth: here
-is the æra of the present confusion.
-
-[Sidenote: Silver has been rising from the beginning of this
- century.]
-
-From the beginning of this century, silver has been rising in its price.
-In 1709, the French found it as 1 to 15, in the great coinage, by edict
-of the month of May; and so early as 1726, they found the proportion to
-be nearly as 1 to 14½, and fixed their coinage accordingly.
-
-[Sidenote: The English standard has been debased by law, since
- 1726.]
-
-We may therefore conclude, that from 1726, at least, if not several
-years before, a pound sterling ought to have been worth at least 118½
-grains troy of fine gold, according to the proportion of the silver
-standard; and yet from the inattention of government, it has constantly
-been suffered to be acquitted with 113. Has not this been a plain
-debasement of the standard for near 40 years, which we can ascertain? If
-it is at this time restored to where it was, will not that be raising it
-from what it is at present?
-
-[Sidenote: The trading interest chiefly to be blamed for this
- neglect.]
-
-We have seen, from a deduction of the plainest principles, the utter
-impossibility of keeping an unit, which ought to be invariable, attached
-at once to the two metals, which are constantly varying between
-themselves. To this the state has not attended, nor has it probably been
-sufficiently informed of it, by those who were most capable, but least
-interested to point out the consequences.
-
-[Sidenote: Debasing the standard chiefly affects permanent
- contracts,]
-
-The variations of the standard affect chiefly those who are engaged in
-permanent contracts, which is not the case of trading men: the
-obligations they contract are in a perpetual fluctuation, and by the
-assistance of their pen, they avoid the inconveniences which other
-people, who do not calculate, are liable to.
-
-The rising of the value of silver has been all along advantageous to
-this class; and it would be still more advantageous to them were
-government to allow guineas at this time to seek their own value; as we
-shall observe in its proper place. Every thing which tends gradually and
-insensibly to debase the value of the money unit, and promote confusion,
-is advantageous to merchants. When this debasement proceeds by slow
-degrees, it is not to be discovered but by foreign exchange; _because at
-home there is no invariable standard for money, as there is for every
-other kind of measure_. This shall be proved.
-
-The unit therefore being solely attached to the coin, must vary as it
-does.
-
-[Sidenote: and prevents prices from rising as they should do.]
-
-Now the value of the coin has varied imperceptibly; and this is the
-reason why people imagine that such variations or debasements of the
-standard are not of great consequence. The greatest mistake any person
-can labour under! By this imperceptible debasement, prices do not rise
-as they ought to do; the ignorant, and those who do not perceive the
-gradual diminution, keep to the same nominal prices as formerly, and the
-merchants profit in the mean time. Is not this sacrificing the interest
-of all the people of England to that of the trading part of it?
-
-The competition between the merchants betrays the secret to the
-multitude from time to time; but they ascribe the appearances to a wrong
-cause; they think every thing is growing dearer, whereas the reason is,
-that price (i. e. coin) is growing lighter: and as this disorder is
-always going on, the merchants, being the first informed of the progress
-of the decline of the value of the coin, must constantly be in the way
-to profit of the ignorance of those who have not the opportunity of
-measuring the value of the coin they receive by any standard measure.
-
-This being the case, it is no wonder that the trading part of the nation
-has not informed government of a disorder which has brought, by slow
-degrees, the pound sterling to about 95 _per cent._ of its former value.
-This is a short review of the vicissitudes of the English coin from the
-reformation to this day: and it is at the same time an apology for the
-neglect of the British administration in a matter of so great
-consequence.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CHAP. X.
- _Of the disorder of the British Coin, so far as it affects the
-Circulation of Gold and Silver Coin; and of the Consequences of reducing
- Guineas to Twenty Shillings._
-
-
-I must now take notice of the inconveniences which this disorder has
-occasioned to the public, and of the consequences which might follow
-upon adopting the remedy proposed[U] for removing it, to wit, by fixing
-the currency of guineas at 20 shillings, without recoining the silver at
-the standard of Elizabeth.
-
-Footnote U:
-
- By Mr. Harris, in his _Essay on Money and Coins_.
-
-[Sidenote: Why silver coin is so scarce.]
-
-The great inconvenience felt by the public is the scarcity of silver
-coin, occasioned by the disproportion of the metals. No mortal will
-ever, as matters stand, carry silver to be coined; that which is worn by
-circulation, is not sufficient, even for changing gold, much less for
-all those small payments which, in the course of business, are
-absolutely necessary. This being the case, all considerable payments
-must be made in guineas; and as there are great numbers of these already
-become light by use, all the weighty are picked up, and either exported,
-or perhaps frequently melted down: so that, in general, the current
-specie of England is not sufficient for the occasions of the nation.
-
-[Sidenote: Consequences of fixing the guinea at 20 shillings, with
- regard to circulation,]
-
-The great scarcity of silver coin in England, being evidently occasioned
-by the disproportion between the metals in the coin, it has been
-proposed to remedy that disorder all at once, by crying down the value
-of guineas to 20 shillings, without making a new coinage, or taking any
-measures for preventing the horrid consequences which would follow upon
-such a step, as matters stand at present. Whoever inclines to read all
-that may be said in favour of this operation, may consult Mr. Harris’s
-_Essay upon Money and Coins_, Part II. p. 84. et seq.
-
-My intention is not to refute the sentiments of particular people, but
-to trace out the principles I have laid down, and to apply them to the
-removing such objections as I think either plausible in themselves, or
-which may appear plausible to people who do not thoroughly understand
-those matters.
-
-I shall then, in the first place, examine what consequence this bringing
-down the legal currency of guineas to 20 shillings would have upon
-common voluntary circulation; that is to say, buying and selling,
-abstracting from unvoluntary circulation which takes place when people
-are about to pay, or acquit obligations; two things totally different in
-themselves, and which ought carefully to be set asunder.
-
-[Sidenote: will make coin disappear altogether.]
-
-The consequences of reducing guineas to 20 shillings, without a
-re-coinage of the silver, will be, 1. To fix the standard of the pound
-sterling to the mean proportion of the worn out silver money in present
-currency. 2. To make the light guineas, which are below the value of 20
-old shillings, to pass by tale for pounds sterling; though intrinsically
-not worth the new guineas. 3. To occasion the melting down of all the
-new guineas. And 4. When once the coin is brought to consist of nothing
-but old unequal pieces, to occasion the heaviest of these to be melted
-down in their turn, until at last coin must disappear altogether.
-
-If to supply specie, government shall send silver or gold to be coined
-at the mint at the legal standard, the moment it appears, the old
-shillings and the light gold will buy it up, and it will be thrown into
-the melting pot. This will stop even the melting down of the more
-weighty pieces of the old specie; because (by this trade) they will
-become more valuable; since in currency they will be an equivalent for
-the new specie of full standard weight. No private person surely will
-carry either of the metals to the mint, because there they would receive
-but 62 shillings or 44½ guineas for their troy pound of the respective
-metals, whereas in the market they will get a greater number of old
-shillings and guineas to buy, weight for weight, which will serve the
-same purpose in circulation.
-
-[Sidenote: How light shillings are bought by weight.]
-
-Let not my reader laugh at the scheme of buying old shillings at the
-market by weight. The thing is done every day. For whether I sell my
-silver bullion for 65 shillings _per_ pound (paid in shillings, guineas,
-or bank-notes) or buy old shillings weight for weight, it is quite the
-same thing. The reason why people do not sell the old shillings by the
-pound, is only because they are not all of the same weight, although
-they be all of the same value in circulation; but they sell their
-bullion, as it were, against old worn shillings reduced to a mean
-proportion of value; which sale of bullion is virtually buying old
-shillings at market by weight. A man, therefore, who can with a pound of
-silver bullion buy the value of 65 old shillings, will certainly never
-employ it to buy 62 heavy ones from the mint, which are no where worth
-more, except in the melting pot. The same is true of the gold.
-
-[Sidenote: Consequences as to circulation with merchants and
- bankers.]
-
-I have endeavoured to shew by the plainest arguments, that no silver
-coin, the value of which is above the value of any other currency within
-the kingdom, can remain in circulation, or can escape the money-jobber
-and the melting pot. I think this is a point pretty well agreed on all
-hands; because it is the argument made use of against those who propose
-to introduce shillings of base metal into circulation, as an expedient
-for procuring change for the gold: a scheme so entirely repugnant to all
-the principles of money, that I have taken no notice of it.
-
-[Sidenote: That guineas would still pass current for 21
- shillings:]
-
-If, therefore, it be true, that the shillings are really worth no more
-than 1⁄21 of a guinea, what effect would the law, reducing guineas to 20
-shillings, have as to merchants? Guineas would pass as before with every
-banker in London for 21 shillings, and 21 shillings for a guinea.
-
-[Sidenote: That the standard would be affixed to the light silver,
- as it was in 1695:]
-
-But as we suppose no new coinage set on foot, and that the light silver
-would continue to pass current by tale, as at present, what security
-would there be for the pound sterling not falling every year lower? The
-standard would then be entirely affixed to the old silver; and no man
-would pay in guineas at 20 shillings, any more than he will now pay in
-silver of standard weight. The only expedient then to obtain coin would
-be, to allow guineas to seek their own value. Upon this they would rise
-to 21 shillings, which is their intrinsic worth. In this case, would not
-the shillings, by becoming lighter, become of less value in proportion
-to the guinea? Was not this the case 1695? Did not this abuse raise the
-price of guineas, and proportionally debase the worth of the pound
-sterling?
-
-[Sidenote: That merchants would gain by it;]
-
-As every thing, therefore, which gradually debases the standard, must be
-advantageous to those who can avail themselves of it, so the making gold
-a merchandize, while the bulk of the nation has no standard to measure
-it with, must be advantageous to those who have a sure one, to wit, the
-foreign exchange.
-
-[Sidenote: debtors would be ruined.]
-
-Besides the evident tendency such a measure would have to debase the
-standard, below the present value, it would be accompanied with the most
-ruinous consequences to all the class of debtors. I shall beg leave to
-state an example. A person is debtor, I shall suppose, for a great sum,
-100,000_l._ his creditor demands payment. He offers guineas at the
-current and conventional value of 21 shillings, the creditor refuses the
-offer; he offers bank notes, refused: it is no excuse to say that
-100,000_l._ of silver coin cannot be picked up; he who owes must find
-it. The creditor tells him that the mint is open. Here the debtor is
-obliged either to part with his guineas at 20 shillings value, or to
-carry silver, which costs him 65 shillings the pound troy, to the mint,
-and to pay it to his creditor at the rate of 62. There would be still
-some consolation, if, from such a hard necessity, the state were to be
-provided with weighty coin; but that is not the consequence. The
-creditor is no sooner paid in silver, than he throws his coin into the
-melting pot, and then sends the bullion to market to be sold at 65 pence
-the ounce in bank notes.
-
-[Sidenote: Consequences as to the bank.]
-
-He next goes to the bank, and demands payment of his notes, It is not to
-be supposed that there is old worn silver enough there to pay all the
-notes in circulation. The bank must be in the same situation with every
-debtor, it must send silver to the mint; not as perhaps at present to be
-afterwards exported, or to furnish work for the mint and then to be
-melted down again, but to acquit the notes which it had issued in lieu
-of light silver, or guineas at 21 shillings. The creditor melts down his
-new silver again, sells it as bullion for bank notes as before, and
-returns upon the hank with a new demand.
-
-[Sidenote: Reducing guineas to 20 shillings, is the same as making
- them a commodity.]
-
-It is the same thing as to this last supposition, whether the guineas be
-left as merchandize to seek their value, or be fixed at 20 shillings;
-for no man upon earth will give a heavy guinea for 20 shillings present
-currency; and if debtors were obliged to pay at that rate, the hardship
-would be exactly the same as in the foregoing supposition; for the
-difference in paying with heavy silver or with good guineas at 20
-shillings, is no more than that of 1718.7 to 1719.9; a guinea, which
-weighs 118½ grains fine gold, being worth 1719.9 grains of fine silver,
-according to the proportion of 1 to 14½, and a pound sterling, according
-to statute, is worth no more than 1718.7 grains of the same metal.
-
-We may therefore conclude, that the scheme of reducing guineas to 20
-shillings must proceed upon the supposition of a new coinage of all the
-silver: without this, the same confusion as to the coin would remain as
-formerly; a new disproportion of the metals would take place; no body
-would pay in gold, as at present no body will pay in silver.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CHAP. XI.
- _Method of restoring the Money-unit to the Standard of Elizabeth, and
- the Consequences of that Revolution._
-
-[Sidenote: How to fix the pound sterling at the standard of Queen
- Elizabeth.]
-
-I come now to the proposal of restoring the standard to that of the
-statute of Elizabeth, which is in other words the same with what has
-been proposed in bringing down the guineas to 20 shillings; only that it
-implies a new coinage of all the silver specie and of all the old gold.
-Nothing is more easy than to execute this reformation.
-
-I. The first step is to order all coin, gold and silver, coined
-preceeding a certain year, to pass by weight only.
-
-II. To preserve the mint price of silver as formerly, at 5 _s._ 2 _d._
-the ounce, and to fix that of gold at 3 _l._ 14 _s._ 2¼ _d._
-
-III. To order the pound troy standard silver to be coined as formerly,
-into 62 shillings, and the pound of gold into 44½ guineas.
-
-IV. And last of all, to order these guineas to pass for 20 shillings.
-
-Thus the standard is restored to the value of the silver by the statute
-of Elizabeth, the metals are put at within a mere trifle of the
-proportion of 1 to 14½: all the coin in the kingdom is brought to
-standard weight: no profit will be found in melting or exporting one
-species preferably to another: exchange will answer, when at par, to the
-real par (when rightly calculated) of either silver or gold, with
-nations, such as France, who observe the same proportions: and the pound
-sterling will remain attached to both the gold and silver, as before.
-
-[Sidenote: The consequences of this reformation will be to raise
- the standard 5 _per cent._]
-
-The consequences of this reformation will be, that the pound sterling
-will be raised from 1638 grains fine silver (the value of the present
-worn silver currency) to 1718.7; and from 113 grains fine gold (the
-present gold currency) to 118.644; that is to say, the value of the
-pound sterling will be raised upon both species 4.9 _per cent._ above
-the value of the present. This all creditors will gain, and all debtors
-will lose. From the day of the regulation, the exchange upon all the
-places in Europe will rise 4.9 _per cent._ in favour of England, and
-every man who is abroad, and who draws for the rents of his estate, will
-yearly gain 4.9 _per cent._ upon his draughts or remittances made to
-him. Whether prices in England will fall in proportion I do not know;
-one thing is pretty certain, that every article bought for foreign
-exportation will fall; for this good reason, that merchants will not be
-the dupe of this innovation, nor will they buy with heavy money at the
-same rate they were in use to buy with light. Justice will be done to
-all gentlemen whose ancestors let their lands in the reign of Queen
-Elizabeth, or at any time since, when gold and silver were at the
-proportion of 1 to 14½, and when the silver coin was at its standard
-weight. All taxes imposed by pounds, shillings, and pence, will be
-raised; all those imposed at so much _per cent._ of the value will stand
-the same, but will appear to sink in the denomination; that is, they
-will produce as much value, but fewer pounds, shillings, and pence, than
-before. The nation will lose 4.9 _per cent._ upon the whole capital and
-interest of the public debts; this the creditors will gain. The bank
-will gain in its quality of creditor upon the public, and will lose
-(together with all the bankers in England) 4.9 _per cent._ upon all
-their circulating paper. All annuitants, landlords, and creditors of
-every denomination, whose contracts are under 30 years standing, will
-gain. All debtors, mortgagors, tenants, whose contracts are of a fresher
-date, will lose. All merchandize whatsoever ought to fall 4.9 _per
-cent._ in its value; and every farthing any thing falls less in its
-price is lost to the consumers.
-
-These are some of the most evident consequences which must result from
-this plan of reformation, and the nation is the best judge how far they
-will contribute to her advantage.
-
-Either this reasoning is just, or all the principles I have laid down
-are false from the beginning.
-
-[Sidenote: Every interest in a nation equally entitled to
- protection,]
-
-A wise nation, I apprehend, is actuated by a spirit of justice. Every
-class, every denomination of inhabitants is equally entitled to the
-protection of a good government. Whatever step of administration can
-profit one set of men, to the detriment of another, is ill combined:
-whatever step can do justice to one set of men who have wrongfully
-suffered loss, to the detriment of another who have unjustly gained, is
-well combined. Upon these principles it is impossible to approve of the
-operation we have described. It is a political hodge-podge: it is, as it
-were, throwing all the interests of Great Britain into a bag, and
-drawing them as in a lottery.
-
-[Sidenote: Those who suffer by the debasement of the standard,]
-
-We must, therefore, enter into a more particular examination of those
-opposite and jarring interests; we must inquire into the interests which
-have suffered, and which continue to suffer, from the actual debasement
-of the standard, and into those which must suffer upon a restitution of
-it according to the plan proposed. When we are informed concerning the
-sufferers, we shall easily perceive who must be the gainers.
-
-Those who suffer by the debasement of the standard, are
-
-_1mo._ Every person who is creditor in a contract entered into before
-the debasement of the standard.
-
-_2do._ In proportion as the disorder in the coin continues, and as the
-currency becomes lighter, every man who sells to merchants is a loser.
-
-In a trading nation such as England, it is not possible that any
-currency can long sustain itself by virtue of the stamp, at a higher
-value than its intrinsic worth. Whoever therefore, from a habit of
-selling any particular merchandize, continues to consider a currency
-which is daily becoming lighter as remaining at the same value, is
-deceived in his dealings by every man who is instructed in the matter of
-fact.
-
-[Sidenote: ought only to benefit by the restitution,]
-
-Those, I think, are the only persons who are really losers by the
-debasement of the standard, and who have a right to be redressed.
-
-I must not omit however, to mention another set of people infinitely
-more considerable than both, who think fit to rank themselves in this
-class, without having the smallest pretension to enter into it.
-
-These are such who would be gainers, were the government of England to
-restore the standard upon the supposition that justice required it,
-without giving themselves the trouble to examine into the merits of that
-important question.
-
-[Sidenote: and not the whole class of creditors,]
-
-Of this class are all the public creditors, all enjoying any salary,
-pension, or pay whatsoever for personal service; all annuitants,
-landlords, &c. In short, every man in the kingdom, so far as he is a
-creditor upon any public or private interest.
-
-But to this class I must beg leave to put a question: What title has any
-person to receive in payment one grain of silver or gold more than he
-had stipulated from his debtor at the time of contracting, because the
-government of Great Britain thinks proper to make a new regulation with
-respect to their coin? If it be true that every man has a right to
-complain of the _debasement_ of the standard so far as he is thereby
-defrauded of that weight of the fine metals which he was entitled to
-receive, surely every man has a right to complain of the _rising_ of the
-standard, who thereby becomes obliged to repay more weight of the fine
-metals than ever he received value for.
-
-In justice and in common sense, the raising of the standard of the coin
-ought never to be allowed to benefit any person but those who have been
-unjustly sufferers by the debasement of it, nor ought it ever to be
-prejudicial to any person but to such as by the debasement have been
-unjustly gainers.
-
-[Sidenote: whose claim ought to be liable to a conversion,]
-
-In every contrast where neither of the parties can produce any palpable
-loss sustained by the former debasement of the standard, the alteration
-ought to have no manner of effect. All debts of whatever kind, ought to
-be liable to a fair conversion, as much as those contracted in guilders,
-florins, livres, &c. when they come to be paid in pounds sterling. The
-old and the new standards are not the same, because they carry the same
-denominations of value, any more than a piastre is a pound, because they
-begin with the same letter.
-
-All the world must agree that the standard of queen Elizabeth is
-debased, and that a pound sterling is no longer worth 1718.7 grains troy
-fine silver. Every body must also agree that were the standard restored,
-merchandize of every kind ought to fall in value.
-
-[Sidenote: according to justice and impartiality.]
-
-If therefore, after the restitution, a person who has merchandize to
-buy, shall have the privilege to proportion his price according to the
-change of money, why should another who is a debtor be in a worse
-situation? Why should permanent contracts be obligatory according to
-language, and momentary contracts, such as sale, be obligatory according
-to things?
-
-Two people hire each a servant, the one stipulates to pay twenty guineas
-wages, the other stipulates twenty-one pounds sterling: the standard is
-in a short time after restored in the manner we have been describing;
-can any thing be more absurd, than that he who stipulated the twenty
-guineas, shall be quit after the restitution, on paying the twenty
-guineas as before, and that he who stipulated the twenty-one pounds
-sterling, shall be obliged to pay twenty-one guineas?
-
-What pretension therefore can any man who is possessed of a salary, an
-annuity, or of a bond or other security for a sum due to him by another,
-have to be paid the same number of pounds sterling stipulated at first,
-when the pound comes to be increased in its intrinsic value 5 per cent.
-above the value it had when the obligation was contracted?
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XII.
-_Objections stated against the Principles laid down in this Inquiry, and
- Answers to them._
-
-
-I hope it will be remarked, that I do not pretend that the coining the
-pound troy standard silver into 65 shillings, or the making a new
-coinage upon the old footing of 62, reducing the guineas to 20
-shillings, and then allowing conversions from the old to the new
-standard at a deduction of 5 per cent. upon permanent contracts formerly
-entred into, is not a manifest debasement of the value of the pound
-sterling, from what it was while affixed to the silver according to the
-statute of Elizabeth. All I pretend to allege is, that neither of these
-operations (which are nearly the same thing) would be a debasement of
-the present value of the pound sterling, or of what it has been worth
-for these thirty years past at least.
-
-But as this opinion is by no means generally adopted, I must now do
-justice to its adversaries, and set before the reader the several
-objections which may be opposed to it.
-
-[Sidenote: That a pound will always be considered as a pound.]
-
-_OBJECTION_ I. That the force of habit is so strong in uniting the ideas
-of value to the denominations of coin, that a pound sterling, whether it
-be raised or no, will always carry along with it the same measure of
-value: that merchandize will not sink in price according to the due
-proportion of the rise: that if conversions are suffered, the confusion
-will be endless; and that in the main, the diminution thereby operated
-upon the _numerary_, will turn out a real diminution upon the
-_intrinsic_ value.
-
-[Sidenote: That the standard is not debased at present, being
- affixed to the statute not to the coin.]
-
-_OBJ._ II. That the disorder in the proportion of the coin, and the
-wearing and lightness of the currency are not a real debasement of the
-standard. That the money-unit preserves its intrinsic value, in virtue
-of the statute of Elizabeth which establishes it. That it is false to
-allege that the English standard is solely affixed to the coin, or that
-it has no invariable measure to be compared with. That the pound
-sterling is really fixed to that statute not to the coin; and therefore
-that no variation of the coin, but only a variation of that statute, can
-change the standard.
-
-[Sidenote: That the pound sterling is virtually worth 1718.7
- grains fine silver.]
-
-_OBJ._ III. That the pound sterling is still virtually, and in many
-respects worth the silver statute of Elizabeth, although traders in
-bills of exchange, and jobbers in the metals may make it appear
-otherwise. That consequently a new regulation either by the coinage of
-silver at 65 shillings in the pound troy, or by admitting deductions of
-5 per cent. upon the old standard, on pretence that a pound sterling is
-worth no more at present than 1638 grains of fine silver, is not
-preserving the standard at what it has been these thirty years, but
-really a debasement of it from the present value.
-
-[Sidenote: That these principles imply a progressive debasement of
- the standard every new coinage.]
-
-_OBJ._ IV. That if the rubbing and wearing of the coin be said to debase
-the standard in spite of all statutes, and if every new coinage is to be
-regulated by the weight of the former grown light, in order to support
-the actual value of the money-unit, it is plain, that in time that unit
-must be reduced to nothing.
-
-[Sidenote: That the same argument holds for debasing the standard
- measures of weights, capacity, &c.]
-
-_OBJ._ V. That were the measures in common use, by wear and by
-fraudulent practices, rendred less than the standard measures kept in
-the exchequer, it would appear manifestly absurd, for that reason, to
-diminish these standard measures. That for the same reason, while the
-statute of Elizabeth subsists, it would be equally absurd to diminish
-the silver standard of the pound sterling.
-
-[Sidenote: That the wearing of the coin falls on them who possess
- it at the crying down, but does not debase the standard.]
-
-_OBJ._ VI. That debasing the standard by law is violently invading every
-man’s property; that when the coin is debased by circulation, the loss
-only falls upon him who happens to be in possession of any part of it at
-the time it is cried down.
-
-[Sidenote: That inland dealings, not the price of bullion, or
- course of exchange, regulate the standard.]
-
-_OBJ._ VII. That although merchants and money-jobbers may consider the
-value of a pound sterling according to its weight of silver or of gold;
-and although exchange and the price of bullion may make it appear to be
-at present of no greater value than 113 grains of fine gold, and 1638
-grains of fine silver; yet still in inland dealings it is worth its
-standard weight, to wit, 1718.7 grains of silver; because the
-inhabitants of England never consider their money by its weight, but by
-tale. The currency by tale regards the standard, as currency by weight
-regards the coins themselves.
-
-That the quantity of money which goes abroad, or even the quantity of
-foreign dealings, is so inconsiderable, when compared with domestic
-circulation, that the value foreigners put upon English money can but
-very little affect the value of it in the country.
-
-[Sidenote: That public currency supports the value of the coin.]
-
-_OBJ._ VIII. That the coin, though light, being received by the King in
-all the public offices for its value, keeps up that value to the
-standard, notwithstanding its being under the weight.
-
-[Sidenote: That this scheme is the same with that of Lowndes.]
-
-_OBJ._ IX. That the scheme proposed is the same with that proposed by
-Lowndes in 1695, so fully refuted by Mr. Locke, and rejected by the
-decision of the nation on a parallel occasion.
-
-[Sidenote: Answers to these objections.]
-
-In order to leave nothing unsaid which can tend to set this matter in a
-clear light, I shall briefly give an answer to all these objections, in
-the most distinct manner I am capable of. I have gathered them from
-every quarter, particularly from Mr. Harris. I have endeavoured to state
-them in all their force, and I shall answer them with candor, according
-to the principles laid down, and according to uncontroverted matters of
-fact.
-
-[Sidenote: That a pound will be considered at its worth by all
- debtors, and those who buy.]
-
-_ANSWER TO OBJECTION_ I. Here I reply, that no habit any people can
-contract, is strong enough to blind them with regard to their interest.
-Nothing is so familiar in many countries, as to raise and sink
-arbitrarily the numerary value of the several denominations of coins;
-but no sooner is the change made, than it becomes familiar, even to the
-children of twelve and fourteen years old; and any person who has had
-occasion to travel, must have been astonished at the acuteness of the
-common people in their knowledge of the value of coins. The habit of
-uniting ideas to old pounds sterling will, upon a restitution of the
-standard only, be found in the heads of sellers and creditors; buyers
-and debtors will very quickly learn to profit of a deduction of 5 _per
-cent._ provided they are legally authorised to do it. It will greatly
-depend upon government to oblige commodities to follow the just
-proportion of their worth, by making conversions of the taxes, new
-regulations of assize, for bread, beer, &c. and by putting into the
-hands of the people convenient tables for that purpose. When the thing
-is once understood, the execution will be easy.
-
-[Sidenote: If the standard was affixed to the statute, people
- would be obliged to pay by weight.]
-
-_ANSW._ II. Could it be made out that the standard of the pound sterling
-is affixed to the statute of Elizabeth, and not to the coin, this
-objection would be invincible. But were the matter so, the payment of
-all obligations might be exacted by weight of silver; because the
-statute regulates nothing else. A man owes me a thousand pounds, he
-makes me a legal offer of silver or gold coin to the current value, were
-the standard affixed to that statute, I should have the privilege to
-refuse both the current species, if light or ill proportioned, and
-demand of him to weigh me down 1718700 grains of fine silver, or 1858060
-grains weight of the nation’s silver coin.
-
-As this is not the case, the standard is not affixed to the statute of
-Elizabeth; consequently, not affixed to an invariable measure;
-consequently, must vary according as the coin varies, to which alone it
-is by law attached.
-
-[Sidenote: No body can be obliged to pay 1718.7 grains of fine
- silver for a pound sterling.]
-
-_ANSW._ III. That if it is said, that the pound sterling is in any case
-of the value of 1718.7 grains of fine silver, I am entitled to ask who
-can force any man in Great Britain to pay him at that rate? But if it be
-true on the contrary, that there is not any pound sterling due within
-that kingdom which may not be legally acquitted with 113 grains of fine
-gold, or with 1638 grains of fine silver, then I am authorised to state
-the present value of the pound sterling at that rate. If this be the
-case, then the addition of one grain of silver or of gold more, in a new
-coinage, necessarily implies a raising of the standard.
-
-[Sidenote: That it is not the regulation of the mint, but the
- disorder of the coin which must debase the standard.]
-
-_ANSW._ IV. This objection lies against the rubbing of the coin, not
-against the regulation of the mint. I have frequently observed, that it
-is the rubbing of the coin which of itself debases the standard, in
-spite of the statute as it stands, but not in spite of what it might be.
-
-There is no doubt, that as long as any nation permits her current coin
-to pass below the standard weight, by virtue of the stamp, she by that
-neglect, opens a door to the debasement of the standard, and totally
-disappoints that part of the statute which regulates the weight;
-consequently the act of making a new coinage afterwards, at the then
-debased value, is not of itself a new debasement.
-
-The new coinage, in that case, is a temporary interruption put to the
-circulation of coin unequally worn, which is what occasions, more than
-any thing, the progressive debasement of the standard; but it is no new
-debasement in itself, nor is it any preservative against debasements for
-the future.
-
-If it be not provided by statute, that debtors shall make good the
-weight of the coin with which they pay, in one way or other, of
-necessity the state must either go on regularly debasing her standard
-every new coinage, or be obliged to raise it by jerks, to the detriment
-of all the debtors who have contracted during the preceding debasement.
-
-[Sidenote: That people are obliged to measure by the standard
- weight, but are not obliged to pay by the standard pound.]
-
-_ANSW._ V. The comparison between the standard weights in the exchequer,
-with the standard of the pound sterling, is not just. If a merchant
-offers me grain, bullion, or cloth, by a measure which is not of the
-legal content, weight, or length, I may refuse it. I have even an action
-against him for fraudulent dealing, in case I shall have unwarily
-accepted of the merchandize. But I cannot reclaim (as has been said) the
-measure of the money-unit according to the statute.
-
-Now let me suppose, that for 40 years no access could be got to the
-standard measures of the exchequer, that during this time all the
-measures of the nation should be debased; that notwithstanding this, the
-landlords over all England should continue to stipulate their rents in
-grain, by the debased bushel of their respective counties: if after 40
-years of such confusion, the exchequer should be opened, and all
-measures fitted to the standards, would it not be a horrid piece of
-injustice not to allow both landlords and farmers who had entred into
-leases within the 40 years, the liberty of converting their rents from
-the _debased_ to the _standard_ bushel.
-
-[Sidenote: That the loss upon light money when called in does not
- fall upon the possessors.]
-
-_ANSW._ VI. This objection proceeds entirely on the supposition, that it
-is the _altering the statute_, and not the _rubbing of the coin_, or the
-_changing the proportion of the market price of the metals_ which
-debases the standard.
-
-Were that proposition true, the consequence drawn from it would be true
-also, to wit, that the loss by the wearing of the coin remains entirely
-suspended until the worn coin is all at once cried down. But if I can
-prove, that the wearing of the coin does not fall upon the person in
-whose hands it is found when cried down, except only so far as it
-happens to be below the mean weight of the whole currency, or so far as
-the person is a debtor, and unjustly obliged, by an arbitrary law, to
-pay what he had received in light, with heavy coin. If this, I say, be
-true, I hope it will follow, that there is not the least force in this
-objection. This consequence is plain.
-
-It is certain, that by the wearing of the coin there is a loss incurred
-by somebody; if it be proved that it is not incurred by the person in
-whose hands the light coin is found when cried down, it must follow,
-that it has already fallen proportionally upon those who, in the mean
-time, have been considering it as of the standard value, while it has
-been really below it.
-
-Here follows the proof of this proposition.
-
-I shall suppose the silver coin of Great Britain is actually so worn as
-to be 5 _per cent._ lighter than its standard weight at a medium. If at
-that time the silver is ordered to be recoined of the standard weight, I
-say the currency, after the coinage, will be 5 _per cent._ better than
-before. Ought not then all merchandize to fall 5 _per cent._ in value
-upon this revolution.
-
-Two men (A) and (B) have, the day before the calling in of the light
-specie, each a thousand pounds sterling of it in tale; (A) goes to
-market and buys corn with his thousand pounds, (B) keeps his coin, and
-next day is obliged to carry it to the mint, where he sells it at 5 _per
-cent._ discount; that is, for nine hundred and fifty pounds of new heavy
-silver coin. (B) after this operation goes to market; and finding grain
-fallen in the price 5 _per cent._ he with his nine hundred and fifty
-pounds, buys just as much as (A) had bought the day before with his
-thousand pounds. I ask what loss (B) has suffered in carrying his silver
-to the mint?
-
-But if we suppose the thousand pounds in silver tale money, which (B)
-had, to be worn more than at the rate of 5 _per cent._ then he would
-lose all the difference; because the price of things would fall only
-according to the general proportion of the rise upon the value of the
-currency: but on the other hand, he would gain upon the supposition that
-his thousand pounds should happen to be less worn than the 5 _per cent._
-
-Can any thing, therefore, be more absurd, than to appoint by law, that
-one, who shall at this time happen to be indebted for a thousand pounds,
-shall be obliged to pay this thousand pounds in heavy money, when he had
-borrowed it in light.
-
-We have seen how (B) in buying corn with nine hundred and fifty pounds
-of the new coin, got as much as (A) had got the day before with his
-thousand. But suppose they had both bought grain the day before the
-crying down of the coin, (A) with his money, (B) with a note payable
-next day, how absurd must any law be, which should oblige (B), for one
-day’s credit, to pay at the rate of 5 _per cent._ increase of price; and
-this because of the accident of calling in of the money: an event he
-could neither foresee or prevent.
-
-We may, therefore, conclude, that while the coin of a nation is upon the
-decline from the standard value of the unit (as it ought to be preserved
-by some invariable measure) those only through whose hands it
-circulates, lose upon what they have, in proportion to the debasement of
-the standard, while the coin remains in their hands.
-
-[Sidenote: That inland dealings cannot support the standard where
- there are money-jobbers or foreign commerce.]
-
-_ANSW._ VII. It has been said, and I think proved, that in a trading
-nation, such as England is, nothing can long support the value of the
-money-unit (while affixed entirely to the coin, and while coinage is
-free) above the intrinsic value of the metals contained in it. I must
-now shew how the operations of foreign trade have the effect of
-regulating the value of the currency, in the hands even of those who
-consider coin merely as money of accompt; who give it and receive it by
-tale; and who never attend to the circumstances of weight, or proportion
-between the metals.
-
-The price of commodities, in a trading nation, is not settled by private
-convention, but by market prices. Foreign markets regulate the price of
-grain, which regulates, in a great measure, that of every other thing;
-and the price of grain is regulated by the value which other nations pay
-for the pound sterling, by which the grain is bought. If, therefore, the
-lightness of the coin debases the value of the pound sterling in foreign
-markets, it must, for the same reason, raise the price of the grain
-bought with these pounds sterling; because the value of the pound
-sterling has no influence upon the value of grain abroad. The domestic
-competition between the merchants in the buying of the grain at home,
-informs the farmers of its value abroad; and they, without combination
-of circumstances, esteem it and sell it for inland consumption, at a
-value proportioned to what it bears in foreign markets; that is to say,
-proportioned to the actual value of the coin. Thus English farmers,
-although in buying and selling they do not attend to the weight of the
-coin, regulate their prices exactly as if they did.
-
-I ask, What is meant by this expression, _that the lightness of the
-coins is no ways considered in any of our internal dealings with one
-another. Currency by tale refers only to the legal standard, as currency
-by weight doth to the coins themselves_? (Essay upon money, Part 2d, p.
-79.) Will a person who considers his light shilling as a standard coin,
-buy more with it than if he considered it by its weight? Will any man in
-England sell cheaper to a porter, who never considered his shilling
-farther than to look at the King’s head, than he would to a Jew, who has
-had his shilling in a scale, and who knows to the fraction of a grain
-what it weighs? Which way, therefore, (in a trading nation) can money
-possibly be worth more than its weight? I comprehend very well how one
-shilling may be better than another to a money-jobber; but I cannot
-conceive how any shilling whatever, which passes by tale, be it light or
-weighty, can ever be worth more than according to the mean weight of the
-present currency. People, therefore, who know nothing of the value of
-money, may lose by giving away their heavy coin; but I cannot see how
-ever they can gain in their inland dealings, or how they can ever
-circulate their light coin for more than the value of the present
-currency.
-
-We may, therefore, lay down the following principles: _1mo_, That, in a
-trading nation such as Great Britain, where coinage is free, the value
-of tale-money is exactly in proportion to the mean weight of the whole
-currency. _2do_, That the money-unit being only affixed to the coin, is
-exactly in proportion to its weight. _3tio_, That when the intrinsic
-value of all the coin is not in the exact proportion of its
-denomination, the operations of trade will strike the average, or mean
-proportional. _4to_, That when this is done, those who pay by tale, in
-coin which is worth more than the mean proportion, are really losers;
-and those who pay by tale in coin below that value, are really gainers,
-whether they know it or not.
-
-[Sidenote: That public currency supports the authority of the
- coin, not the value of the pound sterling.]
-
-_ANSW._ VIII. The authority given to coin, by its being every where
-received in the King’s offices, is entirely confined to its currency,
-and not to its value. The consequence of its being received at the
-exchequer according to tale; makes coin which is not worth a pound
-sterling pass as if it were so. This debases the value of the pound, but
-gives no additional value to the coin. Is not this debasing the standard
-by authority, since it may oblige a creditor who lent 100 _l._ to accept
-of 95⁄100 of the value, as a legal payment.
-
-The pounds sterling paid into the exchequer are no better, nor will they
-buy more of any commodity, than the worst pound sterling that ever came
-out of the hands of a money-jobber; and therefore contribute nothing to
-keep up the value of the coin. Merchants who know the value of coin, are
-those who regulate prices; and the public sale of one hundredth, nay of
-one thousandth part of a commodity sold by retail through all the
-nation, is sufficient to regulate the price of it every where. If this
-be true, to suppose that a pound sterling being regulated by statute,
-can add any thing to its value; or that my right is left unviolated,
-when I have been every day for these forty years giving my pound for
-what I ought to buy for 19 shillings of Queen Elizabeth’s standard, is
-as ideal a representation of the value of right as any thing I have ever
-heard.
-
-If it be said, that this right implies a title to be indemnified by a
-reformation, or a restitution of the standard, for the loss I have
-sustained by the gradual debasement of it: I reply, that a state must
-examine the nature of my claim, and do me justice, without all doubt;
-but it does not follow as a consequence, that because a creditor in an
-old contract has been a loser by his debtor, that therefore all the
-creditors in the nation should share in the benefit of his restitution,
-at the expence of debtors, from whom they have suffered no loss.
-
-[Sidenote: That the scheme is similar to, tho’ not the same with
- that of Lowndes.]
-
-_ANSW._ IX. I own the scheme proposed is pretty much the same with that
-proposed by Mr. Lowndes; and I must here give a satisfactory answer how
-a project so solidly refuted in 1695, can possibly be eligible in 1760.
-
-[Sidenote: Lowndes reasoned upon wrong principles;]
-
-First then, I say, that the question was not then understood. Mr.
-Lowndes put it upon a wrong issue, and supported his argument upon wrong
-principles. He insisted, that his scheme implied no debasement of the
-former standard. He ascribed the rise of the price of bullion to the
-rise of the intrinsic value of silver, and not to the lightness of the
-coin with which it was bought. He always supposed, that the stamp, and
-not the substance, made the currency. A light shilling and a heavy one
-were both shillings, according to him. He proposed reducing the weight
-of the silver coin 20 _per cent._ below the standard of Elizabeth,
-because he was ashamed to propose more; but a reduction of 33 _per
-cent._ or rather 50, would hardly have brought the pound sterling to the
-mean value of the silver currency at that time.
-
-[Sidenote: Locke attended to supporting the standard, without
- attending to the consequences.]
-
-Mr. Locke, on the other hand, supposed the whole dispute to rest upon
-one point, to wit, Whether or not Mr. Lowndes’s scheme implied a
-debasement of the standard? He reasoned upon sound principles, and with
-good sense; but he did not turn his attention to the only object which
-fixes ours at present, to wit, the interests of those who are engaged in
-permanent contracts.
-
-Mr. Lowndes’s great argument for reducing the standard was, that silver
-bullion was risen to 6 _s._ 5 _d._ _per_ ounce, (_that is, that it might
-have been bought with 77 pence of shillings of 1⁄77 part of a pound
-troy_) and therefore he was of opinion, that the pound troy should be
-coined into 77 shillings; which was diminishing the value of the pound
-sterling about 20 _per cent._ or 1⁄5. Mr. Locke answered him very well,
-that the 77 pence were paid in clipped money, and that those 77 pence
-were not in weight above 62 pence standard coin. This answer is quite
-satisfactory. But I ask, whether Mr. Locke would have been of opinion
-that any man who had borrowed 1000 _l._ sterling in this clipped money,
-ought to have been obliged, upon a reformation of the standard, to pay
-back 1000 _l._ sterling in standard weight? These gentlemen, Mr. Lowndes
-and Mr. Locke, examined very slightly the influence which altering the
-standard might have upon the interest of debtors and creditors; which is
-the only consideration that makes the reformation difficult to adjust at
-present. So great an influence in every political matter has the change
-of circumstances! Credit then was little known; consequently the mass of
-debts in England was small: now it is universally established, and the
-mass of debts active and passive is very great, and forms a very
-considerable interest in Great Britain.
-
-In those days the landed interest, and the interest of the crown, were
-only attended to. Trade at that time was almost at a stop, and had been
-ruined by a piratical war. The evil was past a remedy, consistent with
-justice. Credit was very low, and daily declining, and demanded an
-instant reformation of the coin. Restoring the standard was the most
-favourable, both for the landed interest and the exchequer; and so it
-was gone into. The nation, and every debtor, was robbed by their
-creditors; but they did not perceive it; and what we do not see, seems
-to do us no harm. The question, therefore, is very different:
-circumstances must constantly be examined, and according to these every
-political question must be decided.
-
-I have already observed, how the introduction of milled coin had the
-effect of introducing the clipping of that part which had been coined
-with the hammer. Guineas, at the revolution, (if I am well informed)
-passed for 21 shillings and sixpence. Gold was then to silver, over all
-Europe, rather above the proportion of 1 to 15, as appears by the famous
-regulation in 1690, called the convention of Leipzick, when the German
-coinage was settled; and it appears also by the proportion observed in
-France; and in Spain it was still higher, being as 1 to 16. At this rate
-we may be certain, that at the revolution the English silver was
-standard weight; because the guinea being left to seek its own price
-above 20 shillings, the statute value, did not rise above 21 shillings 6
-pence, which marks the proportion to have been as 15.6 is to 1. The
-guinea, therefore, would not have failed to have risen higher, had the
-silver coin been light.
-
-From 1692 to 1695, that is, in _three years time_, (Locke’s Farther
-Consid. p. 74.) the progress of clipping went on with such rapidity,
-that guineas rose from 21 shillings 6 pence, to 30 shillings; and
-according to a very sensible letter which lies before me, signed G. D.
-and printed in 1695, intituled, _A Letter from an English merchant at
-Amsterdam, to his friend in London_, I find there was at that time no
-determinate value at all for the pound sterling: so great was the
-difference of the currencies! As a proof, he says, that _100 pounds
-sterling in silver, which ought to weigh 32 pounds troy, weighed then
-commonly between 14 and 18_. At which rate guineas were very cheap at 30
-shillings: they were worth above 40 shillings: and Davenant says, that
-five millions then borrowed by the state did not produce the value of
-two millions and a half.
-
-[Sidenote: Political circumstances are greatly changed.]
-
-It would be foreign to the present purpose to enter into a particular
-disquisition, in order to shew the difference between the political
-state of England then, and at present: let it suffice to remark in
-general,
-
-I. That there was then no possibility of determining what the current
-value of a pound sterling was. It varied every month, and was daily
-declining. At present it is nearly of the same standard as it has been
-for many years.
-
-II. The money-unit then had nothing to preserve it at any determinate
-value. The silver, to which it was affixed, was clipped three times in a
-year, while the gold sought its value as a commodity. At present the
-gold cannot vary: the guinea is fixed, and must pass for 21 shillings,
-let the silver be ever so light; and this gives a determinate value to
-the pound sterling.
-
-III. In 1695, the whole disorder had been coming on with rapidity; at
-present it has advanced with imperceptible steps: consequently,
-
-IV. At that time the number of permanent contracts which stretched
-beyond the æra of the debasement of the standard, were many; at present
-they are few.
-
-V. In 1695, a money’d interest was hardly known. The rich had their
-money in their chests; now they have it in their pocket-book.
-
-VI. The different between the currency and the legal standard in 1695,
-was one half: at present it is one twentieth.
-
-VII. The debts of the nation did not then exceed 12 millions: now they
-exceed 140[V].
-
-Footnote V:
-
- In 1766.
-
-VIII. Many sums then had been borrowed on assignments of certain
-branches of the excise, the amount of which was uncertain, and
-deficiencies (which in such cases are unavoidable) were not made good to
-the creditors. At present all is paid in determinate sums of pounds
-sterling.
-
-IX. And lastly, the question was not understood. Locke and Lowndes
-_felt_, but did not _see_ distinctly, wherein the difference of their
-sentiments consisted: and those who only _feel_ never describe with
-perspicuity.
-
-It was then generally imagined that a _pound_ could never be more than a
-_pound_; but at present people know how to reckon coin by grains, and
-see clearly that 1718 is more than 1638.
-
-For these reasons I apprehend, that a scheme, similar to that proposed
-by Mr. Lowndes, may now be mentioned without offence; that the people of
-Great Britain are just now as good judges of what is for their interest,
-as they were in 1695. And if the decision of a former parliament is
-alledged in favour of the old standard, I answer, that such arguments
-are only good, when people are disposed to pay a greater deference to
-the sentiments of their fathers than their own; which I am apt to
-believe is not the case at present.
-
-[Sidenote: Reconciliation of the two opinions.]
-
-If these answers are found satisfactory, we may conclude, that in
-whatever way the disorder of the British coin is removed, the change
-ought to be made in such a manner as neither to benefit or to prejudice
-any, but such as have lost or gained by the debasement of the standard.
-Lest, however, that these answers should be perplexing only, without
-drawing conviction along with them, (which in matters of dispute is
-frequently the case) I shall say something farther upon this subject,
-with a view to reconcile two opinions, which are perhaps more opposite
-in appearance than in reality.
-
-I have already apprized the reader, that I pretend to reason only upon
-principles, not upon exact information of facts. Circumstances which are
-hid from me, will nevertheless work their full effect, and may render
-the best deduced principles delusive, when, without attending to them,
-we pretend to draw conclusions.
-
-Now, such circumstances in the present case there must certainly be;
-otherwise every body in England would agree, that the standard is at
-present actually debased, and that the restitution of it would
-effectually be raising it from what it has been for these many years.
-Upon this supposition, the consequences we have drawn must be allowed by
-every body to be just and natural.
-
-Nothing, I think, is more certain, than that all men would be of the
-same opinion upon every proposition, were such propositions well
-understood, and did all parties make the application of them to the same
-object, and in the same sense.
-
-If this be true, let me try to give a reason how it happens that there
-are different sentiments in England upon the method of restoring the
-standard.
-
-[Sidenote: The question in dispute is not understood.]
-
-I. First then, the question is not understood; and the principal thing
-which obscures people’s ideas concerning it, is their constantly
-attending to the denominations of the money of accompt, instead of
-attending to the denominations of the coin. These two things are
-universally confounded. A pound sterling is always a pound sterling, no
-doubt; but the grains of silver which compose one pound sterling are not
-the same in number with those which compose every pound sterling. Now,
-the moment money is realized in the metals, and that the standard
-measure of value is affixed to them, let them be worn or not, it is very
-evident that nothing but the grains of the metal in the several pieces
-can represent the scale by which the coin becomes a measure of value.
-Whenever, therefore, people lose sight of this undoubted truth, and
-begin to measure by the denominations of the ideal money of accompt,
-without examining whether that value be exactly realized or not, it is
-just the same thing as if they were to measure a length upon a plan
-without adjusting their compasses to the scale, and upon a bare
-supposition that the opening they had, by accident might answer to the
-length they were to measure.
-
-[Sidenote: The true characteristic of a change in the standard is
- not attended to.]
-
-II. The state, in every country almost, is negligent in instructing the
-people of the consequences of every variation in the coin; and likewise
-negligent in providing against the inconveniences which result from all
-changes in those matters. It is not to be supposed that the common
-people can exactly comprehend the consequences of making a pound
-sometimes consist of more silver and sometimes of less. When the pieces
-are heavy however, they weigh them in their hand, and say _this is good
-money_; but when they find that they must give as much in tale of this
-good money to pay their debts, as if it had been light, they _feel_ a
-regret, but they do not _see_ the injustice of such a regulation.
-
-Farther, when people find that upon a reformation of the coin they are
-still obliged to acquit their obligations with the same denominations as
-before, is it not very natural for sellers to insist upon having the
-former prices for all sorts of commodities. This is the reason why the
-universal experience of France (which nation has been more accustomed to
-variations in their coin, than England) proves that merchandize does not
-immediately rise and fall according to the variations of the coin. But
-the operations of foreign trade, which are immediately felt and profited
-of by the trading part of the nation, insensibly affect the dealings of
-the body of the people, and produce, after a certain time, those
-effects, which ought to have followed immediately upon the innovation.
-
-[Sidenote: Principles will not operate their effect without the
- assistance of the state.]
-
-Now it is very certain that the principles we have been laying down will
-not, in practice, answer, unless the state should lend a hand, both by
-instructing their subjects in the nature of the change intended, and by
-interposing their authority to see justice done among them.
-
-[Sidenote: When people understand one another, they soon agree.]
-
-Those who oppose the doctrine we have been laying down, go upon the
-supposition that the law ought to order all obligations to be acquitted
-according to their denomination after the reformation of the standard. I
-go upon the supposition that it is just they should be acquitted
-according to the intrinsic value. Where then lies the difference between
-our sentiments? We are of the same opinion, as to the main question: for
-were it true that prices were not to sink 5 _per cent._ after the
-reformation, I should be the last man to propose, that debtors ought to
-be allowed conversions in paying with the new standard; and I suppose
-that those who support the contrary sentiment would be just as little
-inclined to oppose a conversion, upon the supposition that ninety five
-pounds, after the supposed reformation, were to be equivalent, to all
-intents and purposes, to a hundred at present.
-
-[Sidenote: Permanent contracts are confounded with sale in this
- dispute.]
-
-III. The clearest and the best reasoners I have met with upon this
-subject, are apt upon some occasions to confound the two species of
-circulation which we have endeavoured carefully to distinguish; to wit,
-the involuntary which takes place in acquitting _contracts already
-made_, with the voluntary which takes place in common sales. As an
-example of this, and as a means of reconciling opinions, and not with
-any intention of entring upon refutations, I shall here extract a
-passage from Mr. Harris upon coins, Part II. p. 96. and insert in
-Italics what I think will explain the difference between our sentiments.
-
-“You affirm (says he) that if the rate of a guinea be reduced one
-shilling, there would be a loss of the one and twentieth part upon all
-the guineas in the nation;” (_yes, as often as debtors might be obliged
-to give them to their creditors for pounds sterling_) “but that there
-would be no loss at all upon guineas, if they were ordered to pass for
-twenty one shillings, having in them no more silver than there is at
-present in twenty standard shillings.” (_no, certainly; because the
-debtor would pay his debt with the same number of guineas which he had
-borrowed._) "Strange, very strange indeed, that there should be such
-magic in the word shilling, and the number twenty one, as to make the
-same thing, only calling it by different names, have such different
-effects! It is scarce necessary to take any farther notice of such a
-mere jingle of words; but out of tenderness to these young logicians,
-but more out of regard to those who may be deceived by them, if any such
-there can be, I shall endeavour to shew, that our scheme is more
-favourable to them than their own.
-
-“It is self-evident that the nation would not lose one farthing upon all
-the gold it exported, by a reduction of the mint price of gold: for this
-reduction would not in the least debase the intrinsic quality of the
-gold, and every guinea that went into foreign parts, would fetch there
-as much afterwards, as it doth at present.”
-
-What I have put in Italics clears up the opinion which the author
-endeavours to refute. He seems much surprized to find magic concealed
-under the word _shilling_, and _twenty one_, whereas there are no words
-more magical in all the jargon of astrology than in these, and in every
-term relating to the denominations of money of accompt. Is it not very
-magical, that the same quantity of silver at present found in twenty one
-light shillings, being coined into twenty standard shillings, should
-only acquit a pound sterling of debt, and that were it coined again into
-twenty one shillings, it would acquit one pound one shilling of debt?
-Nay more, were it coined into a hundred shillings, it would acquit a
-debt of five pounds.
-
-The doctrine, therefore, which the author endeavours to combat in this
-place, is not so ridiculous as it appeared to him; but he has not, in
-this place, attended to the difference between paying what one owes, and
-buying merchandize in the course of foreign trade. Let me illustrate
-this by an example.
-
-I come to my creditor with a guinea, and I say, I owe you twenty one
-shillings; there you have them. No, says my creditor, that piece is but
-twenty, by the new regulation; I must have one shilling more. There is
-no reasoning here, the denomination of the coin must decide between us,
-not the weight, not the intrinsic value of what I had borrowed. But I go
-to a shop to buy a hat, the hatter asks twenty shillings; I offer him a
-guinea and demand a shilling to be returned; says the hatter, That
-guinea is worth but twenty shillings: Very well, say I, if my piece of
-gold is worth no more than 20 shillings, your hat was, yesterday, worth
-a shilling less than it, and, consequently, to day is worth no more than
-19 shillings.
-
-In the last example, magic has no effect, and to such cases Mr. Harris
-has only attended in the passage cited; but in the first, the magical
-word of a statute, is capable to undo one half of the nation; although
-their ruin does not imply the exportation of a shilling out of the
-kingdom, or any benefit to foreigners, unless they be creditors to Great
-Britain.
-
-[Sidenote: The interest of creditors is always the predominant,
- and determines the opinion of a nation.]
-
-IV. The sentiments which the people of England generally form upon this
-subject, are directed by those of the higher classes. These are all of
-the class of creditors, and very naturally retain sentiments analogous
-to their own interest. I am far from insinuating any thing here to the
-prejudice of this class; all I mean is, that upon an obscure point,
-people lean naturally to that side which favours themselves, especially
-when the nation’s interest, and the interest of justice, do not
-evidently declare against it.
-
-I call the higher classes of a people creditors; because they live upon
-a fortune already made, and draw their income from permanent contracts:
-and those are the debtors, who are bound on the opposite side of such
-contracts. Besides these two interests, there is another which can never
-be at the mercy of any arbitrary regulation as to money: those, to wit,
-who live upon their industry, and who enter into no contract but that of
-sale: they regulate their prices according to the intrinsic value of the
-coin at the time; whereas the others who are engaged in permanent
-contracts, must regulate theirs according to the words of their
-contract, and the interpretation which the law puts upon those words.
-Every man therefore, whose fortune is already made, either in land,
-money, or salary, has an interest in seeing the standard raised, and
-those who are bound in permanent contracts with them, are those only who
-can be hurt by it.
-
-Farther, the higher classes in Great Britain have always the penning of
-the law. Is it then surprising, to find the interest of creditors
-constantly attended to, in new regulations of the standard? When Princes
-arbitrarily debase the standard, they debase it because at such a time
-they are virtually in the class of debtors: their expence then exceeds
-their income. On the contrary, when wars come to cease, and when their
-expences are reduced within the compass of their revenue, they raise the
-standard: because they become then of the class of creditors.
-
-This principle is a key to all the mystery of the raising and sinking of
-the numerary value of the French coin in former times, before public
-credit was established among them.
-
-Now let us apply this reasoning to the present case.
-
-Since in all changes upon the coin we find (of late) the interest of
-creditors constantly attended to in Great Britain, is it not very
-natural for people to reason upon the supposition that there is no
-injustice in raising the standard; and is it not natural to suppose that
-government will act upon the same principles in their future regulations
-of the standard, as upon the last occasion in 1695? Every one,
-therefore, whose fortune is made, finds it his interest to have the
-standard brought back to what it was formerly; and he does not perceive
-the injury such a regulation would do to his debtors. On the other hand,
-the merchants see plainly that if this standard should be restored upon
-an imaginary principle of justice, the prices of commodities will not
-fall as they ought to do, and as foreign trade requires they should;
-they are therefore against raising the standard, because it will be a
-prejudice to trade, a clog upon exportation, and therefore a loss to
-themselves.
-
-This, I think, very naturally accounts for the difference of opinion
-among the people of England, upon a matter of very general concern, and
-nothing is so easy as to reconcile all those interests by doing justice
-to every one, and injustice to none.
-
-[Sidenote: Application of principles to the change lately made by
- the Dutch with respect to their coin.]
-
-As an illustration of this subject, I shall cite a recent example of a
-change made in the circulation of Dutch ducats, executed by that wise
-nation, seemingly in direct opposition to the principles here laid down,
-and exactly consistent with those we are endeavouring to explode.
-
-The States General lately called down all the light ducats, and ordered
-them to go by weight, as bullion, without making any allowance to such
-as might suffer by it.
-
-This regulation, and a new coinage of ducats, had the immediate effect
-of raising the value of that species of current money; consequently, it
-may be said, that debtors by that regulation have been proportionally
-hurt, by an act of one of the wisest governments in Europe, if our
-principles are admitted to be just. But before this conclusion can be
-drawn, circumstances must be examined.
-
-Ducats in Holland are the _price_, _not_ the _measure_ of value, having
-no fixed legal denomination. The current silver coin is what the state,
-and all the mercantile interest attend to: and in proportion as this
-current silver coin or bank species is become light, the agio upon that
-currency has risen. The agio then, in combination with every currency,
-furnishes an invariable measure for value, as well as the bank money of
-Amsterdam; and to that every one attends who regards his interest.
-
-The state, therefore, by this arbitrary measure, or sudden revolution on
-the ducats, did not hurt any debtor; because debtors never were obliged
-to give ducats in payment.
-
-Will any one say that the Dutch silver currency, now that the agio is
-high, is of equal value in inland dealings as formerly when it was low:
-and must not the same argument hold with respect to the currency of
-Great Britain, although no such thing as agio be there known? Or will it
-be said, that because the Dutch, who have an invariable measure of value
-independent of their coin, make an arbitrary operation upon their
-currency, which is only price; that therefore the English, who have no
-invariable measure of value independent of their coin, may make a
-similar operation upon theirs?
-
-[Sidenote: All decisions in political questions depend upon
- circumstances.]
-
-Thus it is that circumstances influence our decisions upon all political
-matters; and principles well deduced do not cease to be true, although
-they appear contradictory to experience, in cases where every
-circumstance is not exactly known. For this reason, I shall be very far
-from deciding as to the part proper to be taken by the British
-government; I go no farther than to point out plain principles; it is
-the business of statesmen to apply them according to circumstances.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XIII.
-_In what Sense the Standard may be said to have been debased by Law, and
- in what Sense it may be said to have suffered a gradual Debasement by
- the Operation of political Causes._
-
-
-[Sidenote: These proportions appear contradictory.]
-
-In the course of this inquiry, the standard has been represented
-sometimes as having been debased by law, above thirty years ago, to 113
-grains fine gold, at which it remains at present, and sometimes as
-having gradually declined for these many years.
-
-These propositions are true, though they appear inconsistent, or at
-least inaccurate; and they must now be set in a clear light.
-
-I have had no opportunity of tracing the progress of the variations as
-to the price of the metals in the English market from the beginning of
-this century; and to supply the want of exact observation, I have gone
-upon the following suppositions: 1. That while the guineas were left to
-find their own value (being regulated by the law below their worth, and
-not being considered as a lawful money) they naturally would fix
-themselves according to the market proportion of the metals. 2. That, at
-the time the standard was affixed to the guineas in conjunction with the
-silver, and both were made lawful money, the value of the guineas was
-exactly inquired into and regulated at their precise value.
-
-[Sidenote: Debased by law when affixed to the gold.]
-
-From these circumstances I conclude, that after this affixing the
-standard to both species, the least variation in the proportion of the
-metals must have had the effect of _throwing the standard_ (as I may
-call it) upon that metal which was the least valuable in the coin: and
-since it is certain, that for thirty years backward, at least, gold coin
-of equal denomination has been less valuable than silver, payments have
-been made, commonly, in gold, under the sanction of law, while the
-silver has been melted down or exported; for these reasons, I have
-frequently represented the standard as long ago debased by law to the
-value of 113 grains fine gold; and I believe I have advanced nothing but
-the truth.
-
-[Sidenote: Effects which the changing the proportion of the metals
- has upon melting the coin and regulating payments.]
-
-Here we may conclude, that it is impossible for any law to keep the
-standard attached both to the gold and the silver coin at once, without
-preserving constantly the market proportion of the metals at par, with
-the numerary value of the coins. The rise of silver for one week in the
-London market is a cause of the silver coin’s being melted; and during
-that week, all payments will be made in gold. If the week following,
-gold should rise above the proportion fixed in the coin, gold coin would
-be melted, and payments would be made in silver.
-
-[Sidenote: Payments made by bankers regulate all others.]
-
-I do not, at present, consider the small circulation either among the
-nobility, or among the commons; but I attend to the great circulation
-among bankers, who have all the specie in the nation in their hands once
-in a year; and I say, that the payments they make must influence those
-of all others. Every gentleman pays with the money his banker gives him:
-did the bank of England find its interest in paying in silver, would it
-not soon become plentiful in circulation, and would not payments begin
-to be made in it preferably to gold?
-
-The standard, therefore, has been debased by law by being affixed to the
-gold, of which metal the pound sterling has uniformly, for these thirty
-years past, been worth 113 grains, in new guineas.
-
-But I have also said, that the standard has been gradually diminishing;
-consequently it might be objected, that if a pound sterling was, thirty
-years ago, equal to 113 grains of gold, if it has been ever since at
-that standard, and if it be to-day 113 grains of gold, it cannot be said
-to have been gradually diminishing. The answer is evident, when we
-reflect upon our principles.
-
-[Sidenote: The standard gradually debased, by the rising of the
- silver.]
-
-The standard affixed to the _gold_ has been diminishing, because these
-113 grains of gold have been diminishing in their value with regard to
-the _silver_. When the guinea, in 1728, was fixed at 21 shillings, the
-pound sterling was fixed thereby at 113 grains fine gold, as has been
-said; consequently, if that weight of gold was then worth 1718.7 fine
-silver, there was no debasement made by that statute: but in consequence
-of that statute, the debasement must take place the moment the silver
-rose in its value.
-
-I am not authorized, by any fact, to advance, that at the time the
-guineas were brought down from 21 shillings 6 pence to 21 shillings, the
-metals in the coin were not put at the exact proportion they then bore
-in the English market. The great Sir Isaac Newton was the person
-consulted in that matter, and to criticise his decision without plain
-evidence, would be rash. All I shall say is, that in France the
-proportion then was 1 to 14½, although according to the English statute
-it was regulated as 1 to 15.21.
-
-[Sidenote: The proportion of the metals, in 1728, supposed to have
- been as 15.21 is to 1.]
-
-Let us therefore suppose, that in 1728, the metals were at the
-proportion of 1 to 15.21; and that 113 grains of fine gold were really
-worth 1718.7 grains of fine silver.
-
-[Sidenote: By what progression the silver standard has been
- debased.]
-
-But the silver having risen, the standard, for this reason, has been
-thrown upon the gold, and has constantly remained at 113 grains (that
-is, in new guineas;) and as the metals have varied from the proportion
-of 1 to 15.21, to that of 1 to 14.5, by the same steps has the value of
-the pound sterling, in silver, changed from 1718.7, to 1638.5; which
-1638.5 is to 113 as 14.5 is to 1: and were the proportion between gold
-and silver to come by slow degrees to the Chinese proportion of 1 to 10,
-the pound sterling would still remain at 113 grains of fine gold, as it
-has been since the year 1728; but the silver coin would either be melted
-down, or so rubbed away, as to make a pound sterling of it weigh no more
-than 1130 grains of fine silver, so as to bring it to the proportion of
-10 to 1, together with the metals.
-
-Does not this evidently shew the defect of fixing the standard either to
-one or to both the species?
-
-As a farther illustration of this matter, which, because of its
-importance, cannot, I think, be too often repeated, I shall shew, in a
-very few words, how far people are mistaken, when they imagine that by
-reducing the guineas to 20 shillings, and re-coining the silver
-according to the plan proposed, the standard of the pound sterling will
-be brought to that of Elizabeth.
-
-[Sidenote: The standard of Elizabeth for the pound sterling, was
- 1718.7 grains silver, and 157.6 grains gold, both fine.]
-
-When Elizabeth fixed the standard of the pound sterling at 1718.7 grains
-of fine silver, the proportion of the metals, according to the table in
-the essay of money and coins above cited, was as 10.905 to 1;
-consequently that pound paid in gold was, in 1601, equal to 157.6 grains
-fine gold.
-
-[Sidenote: The gold standard of her pound worth, at present,
- 2285.3 grains fine silver.]
-
-Had, therefore, by accident, the standard been then fixed to the gold,
-in place of the silver, and had the silver ever since been considered as
-a commodity, the pound sterling at present would be worth 157.6 grains
-of fine gold, and consequently worth 2285.3 grains fine silver, at the
-proportion of 14.5 to 1; whereas, having been fixed to the silver, it
-has been kept at the old standard of 1718.7, and consequently is worth
-no more than 118.5 grains of fine gold.
-
-[Sidenote: The variation of the metals has produced three
- different standards of Elizabeth.]
-
-Now supposing that in the year 1601, three different payments of a pound
-sterling had been made, and locked up in a chest till this day, let us
-inquire what would be the value of each at present, were they to be
-melted down, and sold as bullion in the English market. The first
-payment I shall suppose to have been made in silver, to the value of
-1718.7 grains fine silver, which make of standard silver 1858.06 grains;
-this sold at the rate of 65 pence an ounce, the present supposed value
-of silver, at the rate [Sidenote: One worth £1 0 11⅜ present
-currency.] of the gold, when full weight, makes £1 0 11⅜. The second
-payment I shall suppose to have been made in gold,[Sidenote:
-Another worth £1 7 10⅞] to the value of 157.6 grains fine gold, which
-makes of standard gold 171.9 grains, this at the mint price of gold,
-that is, £3 17 10½ the ounce, makes of present sterling, £1 7 10⅞.
-
-[Sidenote: And a third worth £1 4 5⅛.]
-
-The third payment I suppose to have been made, one half in gold, one
-half in silver, which makes 859.36 grains fine silver, and 78.8 grains
-of fine gold, which, at the above conversions,
-
- makes for the silver £0
- 10 511⁄16
-
- And for the gold £0 13 117⁄16
-
- —————
-
- Together £1 4 5⅛
-
-[Sidenote: The last is the true standard of Elizabeth for the
- pound sterling, and worth at present 2002 grains fine silver,
- and 138 ditto gold.]
-
-Here we have three different pounds sterling, produced purely by the
-variation in the proportion of the metals, although in 1601, they must
-have been absolutely the same. Which of the three, therefore, is the
-standard of Elizabeth? Is it not evident, that it can be no other than
-according to the value of that pound which was paid, half in gold, and
-half in silver? And is it not also plain, that this is the exact
-arithmetical mean proportional between the gold and the silver? Let the
-silver and the gold pounds be added together, they make £2 8 10¼; the
-half of which is the value of that pound which was paid half in gold,
-and half in silver, to wit, £1 4 5⅛ of the present gold currency,
-reckoning standard silver at 65 pence _per_ ounce, and gold at the mint
-price. To realize this value exactly in gold and silver, while the
-proportion remains as 1 to 14.5, it would be proper to put into the
-pound sterling 2001.9 grains troy fine silver, and 138.04 grains of fine
-gold. These quantities of the metals would answer exactly to the value
-of £1 4 10¼, the mean proportional above mentioned.
-
-Here then is the standard of Elizabeth: if it has any excellence in it
-above all others, it might be preferred.
-
-[Sidenote: But may vary at every moment.]
-
-It must however be observed, that it will remain the standard only
-whilst the proportion of 1 to 14.5, upon which it has been established,
-shall remain unvaried between the metals; and it will vary from where it
-might be at present settled, in the same manner as it has varied at all
-times from the year 1601, to wit, according to the vicissitudes which
-shall happen in the proportion of the metals. But at every period of
-time, and in all different varieties of proportion between gold and
-silver, no problem is more easily resolved than that of the mean
-proportional between the gold and silver, the moment one knows the
-proportion of the metals at the time; as shall be demonstrated in a
-following chapter.
-
-[Sidenote: Gold rose during the whole 17th century;]
-
-During the whole seventeenth century, gold rose in its value; or to
-express this as the French writers do, the _proportion of the metals was
-increasing_, from that of 1 to 10.905, to that of 1 to 15; and in Spain
-it got up to that of 1 to 16. The standard, therefore being fixed by
-Elizabeth to the silver, was then attached to that metal which was the
-least sought for; and who knows whether the mercantile interest at that
-time, and in the succeeding reigns, did not find it their interest to
-keep it attached to the silver, for the same reason they now wish it
-attached to the gold?
-
-[Sidenote: and silver has risen since the beginning of this
- century.]
-
-Since the beginning of this century the metals have taken a different
-turn, and now the _proportion is diminishing_; that is to say, the value
-of _silver is rising_; the consequence of which is, that the mercantile
-interest would gladly have the standard fixed to the gold; because in
-this case, (the proportion of the metals being upon the diminishing
-hand) the standard of the pound will gradually diminish, and trading men
-will thereby gain, according to the principles above laid down.
-
-From what has been said, the reader may reconcile me with myself, when I
-sometimes have spoken of the standard of the pound sterling, as having
-been debased by law thirty years ago, to 113 grains of gold; and when,
-upon other occasions, I have represented it as having descended by
-degrees to where it is at present. Had I involved my reasoning in all
-the distinctions which I have now explained, I should have lost my way,
-and perplexed my subject, instead of throwing light upon it. I shall
-hereafter examine how these circumstances may be attended to in a new
-regulation of the mint.
-
-Providing the subject be well understood, men of capacity will be found
-to execute this great operation according to justice, in spight of the
-most perplexing combinations.
-
-Let me here recapitulate a few positions, which we may now have occasion
-to apply.
-
-[Sidenote: Some positions recapitulated.]
-
-I. The standard is debased by being fixed by statute to 113 grains of
-fine gold, not by the act of fixing it, but by the rising of the silver
-since that time, which the statute could not prevent: and gold being now
-the metal the least sought for, is become the standard of the pound
-sterling, and regulates its value so, that no silver coin, which is
-above the proportion of the gold, can remain in currency.
-
-II. That according as the proportion of the metals shall diminish from
-what it is at present, the standard will still fall lower with respect
-to silver, but will remain fixed with respect to gold, at 113 grains.
-
-III. That the true value of the pound sterling will always be found in
-the mean proportion between 113 grains fine gold, and 1638.5 grains fine
-silver.
-
-IV. That if light guineas are allowed to pass current, the standard will
-fall below the 113 grains, and the price of gold bullion will rise above
-£3 17 10½ in the English market.
-
-V. That upon calling in the light guineas afterwards, a hurt will be
-done to all those who have contracted during their currency.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XIV.
- _Circumstances to be attended to in a new Regulation of the British
- Coin._
-
-
-I think I have sufficiently laid open all the principles which can
-influence a new regulation of the British standard, as far as a change
-may influence either the value of the money-unit, or the interests
-within the state.
-
-As to the first, it has been said above, that if, by the future
-regulation, any change whatsoever shall be made upon the value of the
-money-unit, as it stands at present, the adopting any other whatsoever
-is a thing purely arbitrary.
-
-[Sidenote: The adopting the standard of Elizabeth has an air of
- justice.]
-
-To people who do not understand the nature of such operations, it may
-have an air of justice to support the unit at what is commonly believed
-to be the standard of Queen Elizabeth, to wit, at 1718.5 grains of fine
-silver.
-
-[Sidenote: Advantages of that of Mary I.]
-
-The regulating the standard of both silver and gold to 11⁄12 fine, and
-the pound sterling to four ounces standard silver, as it stood during
-the reign of Queen Mary I. has also its advantages, as Mr. Harris has
-observed. It makes the crown piece to weigh just one ounce, the shilling
-four penny weight, and the penny eight grains; consequently, were the
-new statute to bear, that the weight of the coin should regulate its
-currency upon certain occasions, the having the pieces adjusted to
-certain aliquot parts of weight, would make weighing easy, and would
-accustom the common people to judge of the value of money by its weight,
-and not by the stamp.
-
-In that case, there might be a conveniency in striking the gold coins of
-the same weight with the silver; because the proportion of their values
-would then constantly be the same with the proportion of the metals. The
-gold crowns would be worth at present, 3_l._ 12_s._ 6_d._ the half
-crowns 1_l._ 16_s._ 3_d._ the gold shillings 14_s._ and 6_d._ and the
-half 7_s._ and 3_d._ This was antiently the practice in the Spanish
-mints.
-
-I have, in one place, mentioned the _pound troy_ as the best weight of
-all for the pound sterling; and so it would be, were the pound sterling,
-by its nature, susceptible of being fixed to any determinate quantity of
-the metals. But what I there suggested was only thrown out to shew, that
-the choice of any other value than the present is a matter of no
-consequence, when all interests within doors are properly taken care of,
-and when confusion and perplexity are avoided in making the alteration.
-
-[Sidenote: Conversions necessary in every case.]
-
-The interests within the state can, I think, be nowise perfectly
-protected but by permitting conversions of value from the old to the new
-standard, whatever it be, and by regulating the footing of such
-conversions by act of parliament, according to circumstances. The
-intention of this chapter is to point out some circumstances to which it
-would be proper to attend; and to propose a scheme of establishing a new
-standard, which might perhaps render conversions and regulations less
-necessary.
-
-Schemes are here proposed, not to be adopted, but as a means of setting
-this important matter in different lights, and thereby, perhaps, of
-furnishing hints to some superior genius, who may form a plan liable to
-fewer inconveniences than any I can devise.
-
-[Sidenote: Every interest within the state to be examined.]
-
-For this purpose, I shall examine those interests which will chiefly
-merit the attention of government, when they form a regulation for the
-future acquitting of permanent contracts already entred into. Such as
-may be contracted afterwards will naturally follow the new standard.
-
-[Sidenote: Landed interest examined.]
-
-The landed interest is, no doubt, the most considerable in the nation.
-Let us therefore examine, in the first place, what regulations it may be
-proper to make, in order to do justice to this great class, with respect
-to the land-tax on one hand, and with respect to their lessees on the
-other.
-
-The valuation of the lands of England was made many years ago, and
-reasonably ought to be supported at the real value of the pound sterling
-at that time, according to the principles already laid down. The general
-valuation, therefore, of the whole kingdom will rise according to this
-scheme. This will be considered as an injustice; and no doubt it would
-be so, if, for the future, the land tax be imposed as heretofore,
-without attending to this circumstance; but as that imposition is
-annual, as it is laid on by the landed interest itself, who compose the
-parliament, it is to be supposed that this great class will, at least,
-take care of their own interest.
-
-Were the valuation of the lands to be stated according to the valuation
-of the pound sterling of 1718.7 grains of silver, which is commonly
-supposed to be the standard of Elizabeth, there would be no great injury
-done: this would raise the valuation only 5 _per cent._ and the land tax
-in proportion.
-
-There is no class of inhabitants in all England so much at their ease,
-and so free from taxes, as the class of farmers. By living in the
-country, and by consuming the fruits of the earth without their
-suffering any alienation, they avoid the effect of many excises, which,
-by those who live in corporations, are felt upon _many articles_ of
-their consumption, as well as on those which are immediately loaded with
-these impositions. For this reason it will not, perhaps, appear
-unreasonable, if the additional 5 _per cent._ on the land tax were
-thrown upon this class, and not upon the landlords.
-
-With respect to leases, it may be observed, that we have gone upon the
-supposition that the pound sterling, in the year 1728, was worth 1718.7
-grains of fine silver, and 113 grains of fine gold.
-
-There would, I think, be no injustice done the lessees of all the lands
-in the kingdom, were their rents to be fixed at the mean proportion of
-these values. We have observed how the pound sterling has been gradually
-diminishing in its worth from that time, by the gradual rise of the
-silver. This mean proportion, therefore, will nearly answer to what the
-value of the pound sterling was seventeen years ago; that is to say, in
-1743; supposing the rise of the silver to have been uniform: and
-seventeen years, I apprehend, is not much above the mean proportion of
-the time elapsed of all the leases entred into with the landed interest
-of England.
-
-It may be farther alleged in favour of the landlords, that the gradual
-debasement of the standard has been more prejudicial to their interest
-in letting their lands, than to the farmers in disposing of the fruits
-of them. Proprietors cannot so easily raise their rents upon new leases,
-as farmers can raise the prices of their grain, according to the
-debasement of the value of the currency. We have shewn how the
-operations of trade communicate their influence to country markets; but
-as the cause of the rise of prices is not rightly understood by country
-people, and as it is commonly ascribed rather to accident than to any
-thing permanent, it is easy to perceive how such a circumstance must be
-prejudicial to the landed interest. These combinations are too
-complicated to fall under any calculation, and nothing but the wisdom
-and penetration of the legislature is capable of estimating them at
-their just value.
-
-The pound sterling, thus regulated at the mean proportion of its worth,
-as it stands at present, and as it stood in 1728, may be realized in
-1678.6 grains of fine silver, and 115.76 grains fine gold; which is 2.4
-_per cent._ above the value of the present currency. No injury,
-therefore, would be done to lessees, and no unreasonable gain would
-accrue to the landed interest, in appointing conversions of all land
-rents at 2½ _per cent._ above the value of the present currency.
-
-Without a thorough knowledge of every circumstance relating to Great
-Britain, it is impossible to lay down any plan. It is sufficient, here,
-briefly to point out the principles upon which it must be regulated.
-
-[Sidenote: The interest of the public creditors examined.]
-
-The next interest to be considered is that of the nation’s creditors.
-The right regulation of their concerns will have a considerable
-influence in establishing public credit upon a solid basis, by making it
-appear to all the world, that no political operation upon the money of
-Great Britain can in any respect either benefit or prejudice the
-interest of those who lend their money upon the faith of the nation. The
-regulating also the interest of so great a body, will serve as a rule
-for all creditors who are in the same circumstances, and will, upon
-other accounts, be productive of greater advantages to the nation in
-time coming, as we shall presently make appear.
-
-In 1749, a new regulation was made with the public creditors, when the
-interest of the whole redeemable national debt was reduced to 3 _per
-cent._ This circumstance infinitely facilitates the matter, with respect
-to this class, since, by this innovation of all former contracts, the
-whole national debt may be considered as contracted at, or posterior to
-the 25th of December 1749.
-
-Were the state by any arbitrary operation upon money (which every
-reformation must be) to diminish the value of the pound sterling, in
-which the parliament at that time, bound the nation to acquit those
-capitals and the interest upon them, would not all Europe say, that the
-British parliament had defrauded their creditors. If therefore the
-operation proposed to be performed should have a contrary tendency, to
-wit, to augment the value of the pound sterling, with which the
-parliament at that time bound the nation to acquit those capitals and
-interests, must not all Europe also agree, that the British parliament
-had defrauded the nation?
-
-This convention with the antient creditors of the state, who, in
-consequence of the debasement of the standard, might have justly claimed
-an indemnification for the loss upon their capitals, lent at a time when
-the pound sterling was at the value of the heavy silver, removes all
-cause of complaint from that quarter. There was in the year 1749, an
-innovation in all their contracts, and they are now to be considered as
-creditors only from the 25th of December of that year.
-
-I shall now give a sketch of a regulation which may be made, not only
-for the national creditors at present, but in all times to come, which,
-by setting money upon a solid footing, may be an advantage both to the
-nation, to the creditors, and to credit in general.
-
-Let the value of the pound sterling be inquired into during one year
-preceding and one posterior to the transaction of the month of December
-1749. The great sums borrowed and paid back by the nation, during that
-period, will furnish data sufficient for that calculation. Let this
-value of the pound be specified in troy grains of fine silver and fine
-gold bullion, without mentioning any denomination of money according to
-the exact proportion of the metals at that time. And let this pound be
-called the _pound of national credit_.
-
-This first operation being determined, let it be enacted, that the pound
-sterling, by which the state is to borrow for the future, and that in
-which the creditors are to be paid, shall be the exact mean proportion
-between the quantities of gold and silver above specified, according to
-the actual proportion of the metals at the time such payments shall be
-made; or that the sums shall be borrowed or acquitted, one half in gold
-and one half in silver, at the respective requisitions of the creditors
-or of the state, when borrowing. All debts contracted posterior to 1749,
-may be made liable to conversions.
-
-The consequence of this regulation will be the insensible establishment
-of a bank-money, the usefulness of which has been explained. Nothing
-would be more difficult to establish by a positive institution than such
-an invariable measure, and nothing will be found so easy as to let it
-establish itself by its own advantages. This bank-money will be liable
-to much fewer inconveniences than that of Amsterdam. There the persons
-transacting must be upon the spot, here, the sterling currency may,
-every quarter of a year, be adjusted by the exchequer to this invariable
-standard, for the benefit of all debtors and creditors, who incline to
-profit of the stability of this measure of value.
-
-This scheme is liable to no inconvenience from the variation of the
-metals, let them be ever so frequent, or hard to be determined; because
-upon every occasion where there is the smallest doubt as to the actual
-proportion, the option competent to creditors to be paid half in silver
-and half in gold, will remove.
-
-Such a regulation will also have this good effect, that it will give the
-nation more just ideas of the nature of money, and consequently of the
-influence it ought to have upon prices.
-
-If the value of the pound sterling shall be found to have been by
-accident less in December 1749, than it is at present; or if at present
-(upon the account of the war, and the exportation of the more weighty
-coin) the currency be found below what has commonly been since 1749, in
-justice to the creditors, and to prevent all complaints, the nation may
-grant them the mean proportion of the value of the pound sterling from
-1749 to 1760; or any other which may to parliament appear reasonable.
-
-This regulation must appear equitable in the eyes of all Europe, and the
-strongest proof of it will be, that it will not produce the smallest
-effect prejudicial to the interest of the foreign creditors. The course
-of exchange with regard to them will stand precisely as before.
-
-A Dutch, French, or German creditor, will receive the same value for his
-interest in the English stocks as heretofore. This must silence all
-clamours at home, being the most convincing proof, that the new
-regulation of the coin will have made no alteration upon the real value
-of any man’s property, let him be debtor or creditor.
-
-The interest of every other denomination of creditors, whose contracts
-are of a fresh date, may be regulated upon the same principles. But
-where debts are of an old standing, justice demands, that attention be
-had to the value of money at the time of contracting. Nothing but the
-stability of the English coin, when compared with that of other nations,
-can make such a proposal appear extraordinary. Nothing is better known
-in France than this stipulation added to obligations, _argent au cours
-de ce jour_, that is to say, that the sum shall be repaid in coin of the
-same intrinsic value with what has been lent. Why should such a clause
-be thought reasonable for guarding people against arbitrary operations
-upon the numerary value of the coin, and not be found just upon every
-occasion where the numerary value of it is found to be changed, let the
-cause be what it will.
-
-[Sidenote: Interest of trade examined.]
-
-The next interest we shall examine is that of trade, when men have
-attained the age of twenty one, they have no more occasion for
-guardians. This may be applied to traders: they can parry with their
-pen, every inconvenience which may result to other people from the
-changes upon money, provided only the laws permit them to do themselves
-justice with respect to their engagements. This class demands no more
-than a right to convert all reciprocal obligations, into denominations
-of coin of the same intrinsic value with those they have contracted in.
-
-The next interest is that of buyers and sellers; that is, of
-manufacturers, with regard to consumers, and of servants, with respect
-to those who hire their personal service.
-
-[Sidenote: Interest of buyers and sellers examined.]
-
-The interest of this class requires a most particular attention. They
-must, literally speaking, be put to school, and taught the first
-principles of their trade, which is buying and selling. They must learn
-to judge of price by the grains of silver and gold they receive. They
-are children of a mercantile mother, however warlike the father’s
-disposition may be. If it be the interest of the state that their bodies
-be rendred robust and active, it is no less the interest of the state,
-that their minds be instructed in the first principle of the trade they
-exercise.
-
-For this purpose, tables of conversion from the old standard to the new
-must be made, and ordered to be put up in every market, in every shop.
-All duties, all excises, must be converted in the same manner.
-Uniformity must be made to appear every where. The smallest deviation
-from this will be a stumbling block to the multitude.
-
-Not only the interest of the individuals of the class we are at present
-considering, demands the nation’s care and attention in this particular;
-but the prosperity of trade and the well being of the nation, are also
-deeply interested in the execution.
-
-The whole delicacy of the intricate combinations of commerce, depends
-upon a just and equable vibration of prices, according as circumstances
-demand it. The more therefore the industrious classes are instructed in
-the principles which influence prices, the more easily will the machine
-move. A workman then learns to sink his price without regret, and can
-raise it without avidity. When principles are not understood, prices
-cannot gently fall, they must be pulled down; and merchants dare not
-suffer them to rise, for fear of abuse, even although the perfection of
-an infant manufacture should require it.
-
-[Sidenote: Interest of the bank examined.]
-
-The last interest I shall examine is that of the bank of England, which
-naturally must regulate that of every other.
-
-Had this great company followed the example of other banks, and
-established a bank-money of an invariable standard, as the measure of
-all their debts and credits, they would not have been liable to any
-inconvenience upon a variation of the standard.
-
-I am not sufficiently versed in English affairs to be able to sift out
-every reason which that company may have had to neglect a thing which
-other companies have found of such importance.
-
-An attention to the circumstances of the time of its institution, and to
-others relative to the principles of English government with regard to
-money, may help us to guess at what other people, who have access to be
-informed, may discover with certainty.
-
-The bank of England was projected about the year 1694, at a time when
-the current money of the nation was in the greatest disorder, and
-government in the greatest distress, both for money and for credit.
-Commerce was then at a very low ebb, and the only, or at least the most
-profitable trade of any, was jobbing in coin, and carrying backwards and
-forwards the precious metals from Holland to England. Merchants profited
-also greatly from the effects which the utter disorder of the coin
-produced upon the price of merchandize.
-
-At such a juncture the resolution was taken to make a new coinage, and
-upon the prospect of this, a company was found, who, for an exclusive
-charter to hold a bank for 13 years, willingly lent the government
-upwards of a million sterling at 8 _per cent._ (in light money I
-suppose) with a prospect of being repaid both interest and capital in
-heavy. This was not all: part of the money lent, was to be applied for
-the establishment of the bank, and no less than 4000 pounds a year was
-allowed to the company, above the full interest, for defraying the
-charge of management.
-
-Under such circumstances the introduction of bank-money was very
-superfluous, and would have been very impolitic. That invention is
-calculated against the raising of the standard; but here the bank
-profited of that rise in its quality of creditor for the money lent, and
-took care not to commence debtor by circulating their paper, until the
-effect of the new regulation took place in 1695. That is after the
-general recoinage of all the clipped silver.
-
-From that time till now, the bank of England has been the basis of the
-nation’s credit; and with great reason, has been constantly under the
-most intimate protection of every minister.
-
-The value of the pound sterling, as we have seen, has been declining
-ever since the year 1601, the standard being fixed to silver during all
-that century, while the gold was constantly rising. No sooner had the
-proportion taken another turn, and silver begun to rise, than the
-government of England threw the standard, virtually, upon the gold, by
-regulating the value of the guineas at the exact proportion of the
-market, whether at the instigation of the bank, or not, I shall not
-pretend to determine. By these operations, however, the company has
-constantly been a gainer (in its quality of debtor) upon all the paper
-in circulation; and therefore has lost nothing by not having established
-a bank-money.
-
-The interest of this great company being established upon the principles
-we have endeavoured to explain, it is very evident that the government
-of England never will take any step in the reformation of the coin,
-which in its consequences can prove hurtful to the bank. Such a step
-would be contrary both to justice and to common sense. To make a
-regulation which, by raising the standard, will prove beneficial to the
-public creditors, to the prejudice of the bank (which I may call the
-public debtor) would be an operation upon public credit, like that of a
-person who is at great pains to support his house by props upon all
-sides, and who at the same time blows up the foundation of it with
-gun-powder.
-
-We may therefore conclude, that with regard to the bank of England, as
-well as every other private banker, the notes which are constantly
-payable upon demand, must be made liable to a conversion at the actual
-value of the pound sterling at the time of the new regulation.
-
-That the bank will gain by this, is very certain; but the circulation of
-their notes is so swift that it would be absurd to allow to the then
-possessors of them, that indemnification, which naturally should be
-shared by all those through whose hands they have passed, in proportion
-to the debasement of the standard during the time of their respective
-possession.
-
-Having now shortly examined the several interests within the state,
-according to that combination of circumstances, which, with lame
-information, I can form to myself, I must again observe that other
-circumstances, to which I am a stranger, will nevertheless operate their
-effects. These must be carefully examined, and strictly attended to,
-before the proper regulation can be established.
-
-My reasoning has proceeded entirely upon the supposition that the
-reformation of the standard implies a change upon the intrinsic value of
-the unit of money of accompt, and that strict justice is to be done to
-every one, so as to render the change neither profitable or hurtful to
-any, but such as have been unjustly gainers or losers by the former
-disorder in the coin.
-
-[Sidenote: Inconveniences attending all innovations.]
-
-No quality in a statesman is more amiable or more admirable, than
-justice and impartiality in every step which can affect the complicated
-interests of the people he governs. Such however is the nature of human
-society, that the inconveniences resulting from every innovation, do
-frequently more than overbalance all the advantages which are obtained
-from the closest attention to material and distributive justice upon
-such occasions. For this reason, innovations are to be avoided as much
-as possible, especially when by their nature they must be sudden.
-
-[Sidenote: Argument for preserving the standard at the present
- value.]
-
-Were the pound sterling preserved at its present value, it would, no
-doubt, be a plain adulteration of the former standard, and yet I do not
-know if it would be a more unpopular measure than another which might
-restore it, and at the same time do justice to every interest within the
-state; because I apprehend that the greatest hurt done to most people,
-with regard to their pecuniary interest, consists in the change. Every
-one _feels_ a sudden change, but those only who reflect and who combine,
-_perceive_ the consequences of a gradual one.
-
-[Sidenote: That every change must either hurt the bank or the
- public creditors.]
-
-Besides these considerations which are in common to all states, the
-government of Great Britain has one peculiar to itself. The interest of
-the bank, and that of the creditors, are diametrically opposite: every
-thing which raises the standard hurts the bank, every thing which can
-sink it, hurts the creditors: and upon the right management of the one
-and the other, depends the solidity of public credit. For these reasons
-I am apt to believe, that, without the most certain prospect of
-conducting a restitution of the standard to the general advantage, as
-well as approbation of the nation, no minister will ever undertake so
-dangerous an operation.
-
-[Sidenote: A more easy method of making a change upon the
- standard.]
-
-I shall now propose an expedient which may remove at least some of the
-inconveniences which would result from so extensive an undertaking as
-that of regulating the respective interests in Great Britain by a
-positive law, upon a change in the value of their money of accompt.
-
-Suppose then, that before any change is made in the coin, government
-should enter into a transaction with the public creditors, and ascertain
-a permanent value for the pound sterling for the future, specified in a
-determined proportion of the fine metals in common bullion, without any
-regard to money, of accompt, or to any coin whatever.
-
-This preliminary step being taken, let the intended alteration of the
-standard be proclaimed a certain time before it is to commence. Let the
-nature of the change be clearly explained, and let all such as are
-engaged in contracts which are dissolvable at will upon the prestations
-stipulated, be acquitted between the parties, or innovated as they shall
-think proper, with certification, that posterior to a certain day, the
-stipulations formerly entred into, shall be binding according to the
-denominations of the money of accompt in the new standard.
-
-As to permanent contracts, which cannot at once be fulfilled and
-dissolved, such as leases, the parliament may either prescribe the
-methods and terms of conversion; or a liberty may be given to the
-parties to annul the contract, upon the debtor’s refusing to perform his
-agreement according to the new standard. Contracts, on the other hand,
-might remain stable, with respect to creditors who would be satisfied
-with payments made on the footing of the old standard. If the rise
-intended should not be very considerable, no great injustice can follow
-such a regulation.
-
-Annuities are now thoroughly understood, and the value of them is
-brought to so nice a calculation, that nothing will be easier than to
-regulate these upon the footing of the value paid for them, or of the
-subject affected by them. If by the regulation land-rents are made to
-rise in denomination, the annuities charged upon them, ought to rise in
-proportion; if in intrinsic value, the annuity should remain as it was.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAP. XV.
-_Regulations which the Principles of this Inquiry point out as expedient
- to be made by a new Statute for regulating_ the British _Coin_.
-
-
-Let us now examine what regulations it may be proper to make by a new
-statute concerning the coin of Great Britain, in order to preserve
-always the same exact value of the pound sterling realized in gold and
-in silver, in spite of all the incapacities inherent in the metals to
-perform the functions of an invariable scale or measure of value.
-
-[Sidenote: 1. Regulation, as to the standard.]
-
-I shall not pretend to determine the precise standard which government
-may prefer as the best to be chosen for the value of a pound sterling in
-all future times; but let it be what it will, the first point is to
-determine the exact number of grains of fine gold and fine silver which
-are to compose it, according to the then proportion of the metals in the
-London market.
-
-[Sidenote: 2. As to the weight.]
-
-2. To determine the proportion of these metals with the pound troy, and
-in regard that the standard of gold and silver is different, let the
-mint price of both metals be regulated according to the pound troy fine.
-
-[Sidenote: 3. Mint price.]
-
-3. To fix the mint price within certain limits: that is to say, to leave
-to the King and Council, by proclamation, to carry the mint price of
-bullion up to the value of the coin, as is the present regulation, or to
-sink it to _per cent._ below that price, according as government
-shall incline to impose a duty upon coinage.
-
-[Sidenote: 4. Denominations.]
-
-4. To order that silver and gold coin shall be struck of such
-denominations as the King shall think fit to appoint; in which the
-proportion of the metals above determined, shall be constantly observed
-through every denomination of the coin, until necessity shall make a new
-general coinage unavoidable.
-
-[Sidenote: 5. Marking the weight on the coin.]
-
-5. To have the number of grains of the fine metal in every piece marked
-upon the exergue, or upon the legend of the coin, in place of some
-initial letters of titles, which not one person in a thousand can
-decypher; and to make the coin of as compact a form as possible,
-diminishing the surface of it as much as is consistent with beauty.
-
-[Sidenote: 6. Liberty to stipulate payment in gold or silver.]
-
-6. That it shall be lawful for all contracting parties to stipulate
-their payments either in gold or silver coin, or to leave the option of
-the species to one of the parties.
-
-[Sidenote: 7. Creditors may demand payment half in gold and half
- in silver.]
-
-7. That where no particular stipulation is made, creditors shall have
-power to demand payment, half in one species, half in the other; and
-when the sum cannot fall equally into gold and silver coins, the
-fractions to be paid in silver.
-
-[Sidenote: 8. Regulations as to sale.]
-
-8. That in buying and selling, when no particular species has been
-stipulated, and when no act in writing has intervened, the option of the
-species shall be competent to the buyer.
-
-[Sidenote: 9. Ditto, as to payments to and from banks, &c.]
-
-9. That all sums paid or received by the King’s receivers, or by
-bankers, shall be delivered by weight, if demanded.
-
-[Sidenote: 10. All coin to be of full weight when paid away.]
-
-10. That all money which shall be found under the legal weight, from
-whatever cause it may proceed, may be rejected in every payment
-whatsoever; or if offered in payment of a debt above a certain sum, may
-be taken according to its weight, at the then mint price, in the option
-of the creditor.
-
-[Sidenote: 11. Liberty to melt and export coin, but death to clip
- or wash.]
-
-11. That no penalty shall be incurred by those who melt down or export
-the nation’s coin; but that washing, clipping, or diminishing the weight
-of any part of it shall be deemed felony, as much as any other theft, if
-the person so degrading the coin shall afterwards make it circulate for
-lawful money.
-
-To prevent the inconveniences proceeding from the variation in the
-proportion between the metals, it may be provided,
-
-[Sidenote: 12. Rule for changing the mint price of the metals.]
-
-12. That upon every variation of proportion in the market price of the
-metals, the price of both shall be changed, according to the following
-rule.
-
-Let the price of the pound troy fine gold in the coin be called G.
-
-Let the price of ditto in the silver be called S.
-
-Let the new proportion between the market price of the metals be called
-P.
-
-Then state this formula:
-
-G/2P + S/2 = to a pound troy fine silver, in sterling currency.
-
-S/2 × P + G/2 = to a pound troy fine gold, in sterling currency.
-
-This will be a rule for the mint, to keep the price of the metals
-constantly at par with the price of the market; and coinage may be
-imposed as has been described, by fixing the mint price of them at a
-certain rate below the value of the fine metals in the coin.
-
-[Sidenote: 13. When to change the mint price.]
-
-13. As long as the variation of the market price of the metals shall not
-carry the price of the rising metal so high as the advanced price of the
-coin above the bullion, no alteration need be made on the denomination
-of either species.
-
-[Sidenote: 14. Rule for changing the denomination of the coins.]
-
-14. So soon as the variation of the market price of the metals shall
-give a value to the rising species, above the difference between the
-coin and the bullion; then the King shall alter the denominations of all
-the coin, silver and gold, adding to the coins of the rising metal
-exactly what is taken from those of the other. An example will make this
-plain.
-
-Let us suppose that the coinage has been made according to the
-proportion of 14.5 to 1; that 20 shillings, or 4 crown pieces, shall
-contain, in fine silver, 14.5 times as many grains as the guinea, or the
-gold pound, shall contain grains of fine gold. Let the new proportion of
-the metals be supposed to be 14 to 1. In that case, the 20 shillings, or
-the 4 crowns, will contain 1⁄29 more value than the guinea. Now since
-there is no question of making a new general coinage upon every
-variation, in order to adjust the proportion of the metals in the weight
-of the coins, that proportion must be adjusted by changing their
-respective denominations according to this formula.
-
-Let the 20 shillings, or 4 crowns, in coin, be called S. Let the guinea
-be called G. Let the difference between the old proportion and the new,
-which is 1⁄29, be called P. Then say,
-
-S - P/2 = a pound sterling, and G + P/2 = a pound sterling.
-
-By this it appears that all the silver coin must be raised in its
-denomination 1⁄58, and all the gold coin must be lowered in its
-denomination 1⁄58; yet still S + G, will be equal to two pounds
-sterling, as before, whether they be considered according to the old, or
-according to the new denominations.
-
-But it may be observed, that the imposition of coinage rendering the
-value of the coin greater than the value of the bullion, that
-circumstance gives a certain latitude in fixing the new denominations of
-the coin, so as to avoid minute fractions. For providing the deviation
-from the exact proportion shall fall within the advanced price of the
-coin, no advantage can be taken by melting down one species preferably
-to another; since, in either case, the loss incurred by melting the coin
-must be greater than the profit made upon selling the bullion. The mint
-price of the metals, however, may be fixed exactly, that is, within the
-value of a farthing upon a pound of fine silver or gold. This is easily
-reckoned at the mint; although upon every piece in common circulation
-the fractions of farthings would be inconvenient.
-
-[Sidenote: 15 How contracts are to be fulfilled, after a change in
- the denominations has taken place.]
-
-15. That notwithstanding of the temporary variations made upon the
-denomination of the gold and silver coins, all contracts formerly entred
-into, and all stipulations in pounds, shillings, and pence, may continue
-to be acquitted according to the old denominations of the coins, paying
-one half in gold, and one half in silver; unless in the case where a
-particular species has been stipulated; in which case, the sums must be
-paid according to the new regulation made upon the denomination of that
-species, to the end that neither profit or loss may result to any of the
-parties.
-
-[Sidenote: 16. The weight of the several coins never to be
- changed, except upon a general recoinage of one denomination
- at least.]
-
-16. That notwithstanding the alterations on the mint price of the
-metals, and in the denomination of the coins, no change shall be made
-upon the weight of the particular pieces of the latter, except in the
-case of a general recoinage of one denomination at least: that is to
-say, the mint must not coin new guineas, crowns, &c. of a different
-weight from those already in currency, although by so doing the
-fractions might be avoided. This would occasion confusion, and the
-remedy would cease to be of any use upon a new change in the proportion
-of the metals. But it may be found convenient, for removing the small
-fractions in shillings and sixpences, to recoin such denominations all
-together, and to put them to their integer numbers, of twelve, and of
-six pence, without changing in any respect their proportion of value to
-all other denominations of the coin: this will be no great expence, when
-the bulk of the silver coin is put into 5 shilling pieces.
-
-[Sidenote: How this will preserve the same value to the pound
- sterling at all times, and how fractions in the denominations
- of coin may be avoided.]
-
-By this method of changing the denominations of the coin, there never
-can result any alteration in the value of the pound sterling: and
-although fractions of value may now and then be introduced, in order to
-prevent the abuses to which the coin would otherwise be exposed, by the
-artifice of those who melt it down, yet still the inconvenience of such
-fractions may be avoided in paying, according to the old denominations,
-in both species, by equal parts. This will also prove demonstratively
-that no change is thereby made in the true value of the national unit of
-money.
-
-[Sidenote: 17. Small coins to be current only for twenty years,
- and larger coins for forty years or more.]
-
-17. That it be ordered that shillings and sixpences shall only be
-current for twenty years, and all other coins, both gold and silver, for
-forty years, or more. For ascertaining which term, there may be marked,
-upon the exergue of the coin, the last year of their currency, in place
-of the date of their fabrication. This term elapsed, or the date
-effaced, that they shall have no more currency whatsoever; and when
-offered in payment, may be received as bullion at the actual price of
-the mint, or refused, at the option of the creditor.
-
-[Sidenote: 18. All foreign coin to pass for bullion only.]
-
-18. That no foreign coin shall have any _legal_ currency, except as
-bullion at the mint price.
-
-By these or the like regulations may be prevented, _1mo_, The melting or
-exporting of the coin in general. _2do_, The melting or exporting one
-species, in order to sell it as bullion, at an advanced price.
-[Sidenote: Consequences of these regulations.]_3tio_, The profit in
-acquitting obligations preferably in one species to another. _4to_, The
-degradation of the standard, by the wearing of the coin, or by a change
-in the proportion between the metals. _5to_, The circulation of the coin
-below the legal weight. _6to_, The profit that other nations reap by
-paying their debts more cheaply to Great Britain than Great Britain can
-pay hers to them.
-
-And the great advantage of it is, that it is an uniform plan, and may
-serve as a perpetual regulation, compatible with all kinds of
-denominations of coins, variations in the proportion of the metals, and
-with the imposition of a duty upon coinage; or with the preserving it
-free; and farther, that it may in time be adopted by other nations, who
-will find the advantage of having their money of accompt preserved
-perpetually at the same value, with respect to the denominations of all
-foreign money of accompt established on the same principles.
-
- A TABLE OF COINS,
-
- Shewing the Quantity of Fine Metal contained in them.
-
-The number of grains of fine metal in every coin is sought for in the
-regulations of the mint of the country where it is coined, and is
-expressed in the grains in use in that mint: from that weight it is
-converted into those of other countries, according to the following
-proportions:
-
-3840 Troy-grains, 4676.35 Paris-grains, 5192.8 Holland-aces or grains,
-and 4649.06 Colonia-grains, are supposed to be equal weights; and the
-coins in the table are converted according to those proportions.
-
-Table of Coins, reduced to Grains of fine Metal, according to the Troy,
-Paris, Colonia, and Holland-weights.
-
- ──────────────────────────────────┬───────────────────────────────────
- │ Gold Coins.
- │Troy. │Paris. │Colonia.│Holland.
- ──────────────────────────────────┼────────┼────────┼────────┼────────
- English Coins. │ │ │ │
- 1 A Guinea by statute │— │144.46 │143.65 │160.45
- 2 A Crown by statute │— │— │— │—
- 3 A Shilling by statute │— │— │— │—
- 4 A Silver Pound sterling by │ │ │ │
- statute 1601 │ │ │ │
- 5 A Gold Pound sterling by statute│113. │137.61 │136.8 │152.8
- 1728 │ │ │ │
- 6 A Silver Pound sterling in │— │— │— │—
- currency = 20⁄65 lib. troy │ │ │ │
- 7 A Silver Pound sterl. at the │113. │137.61 │136.8 │152.8
- proportion of gold to silver as │ │ │ │
- 1 to 14½ │ │ │ │
- 8 A Gold Pound sterling at the │118.4 │144.18 │143.34 │160.11
- same proportion of 1 to 14½ │ │ │ │
- 9 A Pound sterling at the mean │115.769 │140.98 │140.16 │156.55
- proportion in gold and in silver│ │ │ │
- 10 A Shilling current = 1⁄65 of a │— │— │— │—
- pound troy │ │ │ │
- 11 A Guinea in silver, or 21 │— │— │— │—
- shillings standard weight │ │ │ │
- 12 A Guinea at the proportion of 1│— │— │— │—
- to 14½, worth in silver │ │ │ │
- 13 A Pound troy, or 12 ounces │5760. │7019.2 │6973.5 │7789.2
- English weight │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- French Coins. │ │ │ │
- 1 A Louis d’or │113.27 │137.94 │137.13 │153.17
- 2 A Crown of six livres │— │— │— │—
- 3 A Crown of three ditto │— │— │— │—
- 4 A Livre │— │— │— │—
- 5 A Louis d’or, or 24 livres in │— │— │— │—
- silver │ │ │ │
- 6 A Marc of Paris weight, fine │3783.87 │4608. │4581.1 │5116.9
- gold or silver │ │ │ │
- 7 A Marc of gold coin effective │3398.3 │4138.5 │4114.3 │4593.4
- weight, in fine │ │ │ │
- 8 A Marc of silver coin effective │— │— │— │—
- weight, in fine │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- German Coins. │ │ │ │
- 1 A Carolin legal weight │115.45 │140.6 │139.78 │156.12
- 2 A Ducat of the Empire ditto │52.8 │64.37 │64. │71.48
- 3 A Florin of Convention │— │— │— │—
- 4 A Dollar of Convention │— │— │— │—
- 5 A Dollar of Exchange, the │17.85 │21.74 │21.615 │24.14
- Carolin = 9 flor. 42 kreutzers │ │ │ │
- 6 A Florin current = 1⁄11 of a │10.54 │12.84 │12.77 │14.26
- Carolin │ │ │ │
- 7 A Carolin in Silver at the │— │— │— │—
- proportion of 1 to 14½ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- Dutch Coins. │ │ │ │
- 1 A Dutch Ducat │51.76 │63. │62.67 │70.
- 2 A Florin in silver │— │— │— │—
-
- │ Silver Coins.
- ──────────────────────────────────┼────────┬────────┬────────┬────────
- │Troy. │Paris. │Colonia.│Holland.
- ──────────────────────────────────┼────────┼────────┼────────┼────────
- English Coins. │ │ │ │
- 1 A Guinea by statute │— │— │— │—
- 2 A Crown by statute │429.68 │523.2 │520.2 │581.
- 3 A Shilling by statute │85.935 │104.65 │104. │116.2
- 4 A Silver Pound sterling by │1718.7 │2093. │2080.8 │2324.1
- statute 1601 │ │ │ │
- 5 A Gold Pound sterling by statute│— │— │— │—
- 1728 │ │ │ │
- 6 A Silver Pound sterling in │1639.38 │1996.4 │1984.7 │2216.
- currency = 20⁄65 lib. troy │ │ │ │
- 7 A Silver Pound sterl. at the │1638.5 │1995.3 │1983.7 │2215.7
- proportion of gold to silver as │ │ │ │
- 1 to 14½ │ │ │ │
- 8 A Gold Pound sterling at the │1718.7 │2093. │2080.8 │2324.1
- same proportion of 1 to 14½ │ │ │ │
- 9 A Pound sterling at the mean │1078.6 │2041.2 │2032.2 │2269.9
- proportion in gold and in silver│ │ │ │
- 10 A Shilling current = 1⁄65 of a │81.961 │99.8 │99. │110.82
- pound troy │ │ │ │
- 11 A Guinea in silver, or 21 │1804.6 │2197.6 │2184.8 │2440.3
- shillings standard weight │ │ │ │
- 12 A Guinea at the proportion of 1│1720.4 │2095.1 │2082.8 │2326.4
- to 14½, worth in silver │ │ │ │
- 13 A Pound troy, or 12 ounces │— │— │— │—
- English weight │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- French Coins. │ │ │ │
- 1 A Louis d’or │— │— │— │—
- 2 A Crown of six livres │409.94 │499.22 │496.3 │554.3
- 3 A Crown of three ditto │204.97 │249.61 │248.15 │277.1
- 4 A Livre │68.34 │83.23 │82.74 │92.42
- 5 A Louis d’or, or 24 livres in │1639.7 │1996.9 │1985.2 │2217.4
- silver │ │ │ │
- 6 A Marc of Paris weight, fine │3783.87 │4608. │4581.1 │5116.9
- gold or silver │ │ │ │
- 7 A Marc of gold coin effective │— │— │— │—
- weight, in fine │ │ │ │
- 8 A Marc of silver coin effective │3402.3 │4143.4 │4119.2 │4600.9
- weight, in fine │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- German Coins. │ │ │ │
- 1 A Carolin legal weight │— │— │— │—
- 2 A Ducat of the Empire ditto │— │— │— │—
- 3 A Florin of Convention │179.73 │218.87 │217.6 │243.
- 4 A Dollar of Convention │269.59 │328.31 │326.4 │364.5
- 5 A Dollar of Exchange, the │— │— │— │—
- Carolin = 9 flor. 42 kreutzers │ │ │ │
- 6 A Florin current = 1⁄11 of a │— │— │— │—
- Carolin │ │ │ │
- 7 A Carolin in Silver at the │1674. │2038.6 │2026.8 │2263.8
- proportion of 1 to 14½ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- Dutch Coins. │ │ │ │
- 1 A Dutch Ducat │— │— │— │—
- 2 A Florin in silver │148. │180.3 │179·2 │200.21
-
- [The Binder is desired to place this TABLE at the End of Vol. I.
- and not to cut off the Margin, but to fold it.]
-
- END OF THE FIRST VOLUME.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Transcriber’s Note
-
-Beginning on p. #362, there is an enumerated outline, summarized as
-having four parts (1), (2), (3) and (4). The indicated sections
-subsequently appear, inconsistently, as ‘1’ (arguably ‘I’), ‘II’, ‘3tio’
-and ‘4to’. These have been retained, adopting ‘I’ for the first section.
-
-A large table, appearing between pages 638 and 639, was, according to a
-bracketed note included in the text, to be bound at the end of Volume I.
-That wish has been granted. The Table itself has been redesigned to
-better display in this medium.
-
-The table of contents mistakenly implies that two sections (‘The
-question in dispute is not understood’, and the section following)
-appear on p. 606. They appear a page later, on p.607. This has been
-corrected.
-
-Spelling, generally, is not ‘corrected’, given the age of the text,
-unless there is a clear preponderance of an alternate more standard
-spelling. ‘Knowledge’ appears three times as ‘knowlege’, but more than
-twenty times with the ‘d’. Verbs ending with -er (‘enter’, ‘render’) are
-frequently spelled without the ‘e’ when used in other tenses, as
-‘entred’, ‘rendring’, etc.
-
-Diacritical marks in non-English languages are frequently missing, and
-have not been added.
-
-On p. 388, a parenthetical remark beginning ‘(by throwing a part of the
-wealth...’ is not closed, and it is not obvious where the author
-intended it to close. It is left to the reader to close it.
-
-Errors deemed most likely to be the printer’s have been corrected, and
-are noted here. The references are to the page and line in the original.
-The following issues should be noted, along with the resolutions.
-
-P. 569 was mispaginated as p. 561, which has no impact on this version.
-
- ix.12 Men of parts and knowle[d]ge Inserted.
- xvii.4 a perfect knowle[d]ge of facts Inserted.
- 22.24 an entire depend[a/e]nce Replaced.
- 78.4 seven times that number, or than 201[,]887 Inserted.
- 137.17 no difference as to agricultu[t/r]e Replaced.
- 296.20 to enable it to undersel[l] Added.
- 301.5 after travelling over [eh/the] regions Most likely.
- 307.7 that the wor[l]d _luxury_ Removed.
- 331.6 drain off the nation[’]s wealth Inserted.
- 368.30 as saleable as [houshold] furniture _sic_
- 506.7 and accounts bal[l]anced on both sides Removed.
- 518.26 lead me to inqu[i]re Inserted.
- 592.11 who is possessed of a sal[l]ary Removed.
- 624.31 Without a thorough knowle[d]ge Inserted.
- 635.2 or to sink it to _per cent._ below that Missing.
- price
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL OECONOMY ***
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