1)
Of Systems of political Œconomy
Introduction
·
The first
object of political œconomy is to provide subsistence for the people.
·
Two
different systems proposed for this end will be explained.
a)
Of the Principle of the commercial or mercantile
System
·
Wealth and
money in common language are considered synonymous.
·
Similarly
the Tartars throughout wealth consisted of cattle.
·
Locke
thought gold and silver the most substantial part of the wealth of a nation.
·
Others say
that it is necessary to have much money in order to maintain fleets and armies
abroad.
·
So all
European nations have tried to accumulate gold and silver.
·
At first
by a prohibition of exploration,
·
but
merchants found this inconvenient,
·
and
therefore argued that exportation did not always diminish the stock in the
country,
·
and that
the metals could be retained only by attention to the balance of trade.
·
Their
arguments were partly sophistical,
·
but they
convinced parliaments and councils.
·
The
exportation of foreign coin and bullion was permitted by France and England,
and the exportation of Dutch coin by Holland.
·
That
treasure was obtained by foreign trade became a received maxim.
·
Gold and
silver will be imported without any attention of government
·
They can
be imported more easily than other commodities when there is an effectual
demand.
·
When their
quantity exceeds the demand it is impossible to prevent their exportation,
·
and it
would be equally impossible to prevent their importation if the supply fell
short of the effectual demand.
·
It is this
ease of transportation which makes the value of gold and silver so uniform.
·
If they
did fall short, their place could be supplied by paper.
·
The common
complaint of scarcity of money only means difficulty in borrowing.
·
Money
makes but a small part of the national capital.
·
It is
easier to buy than to sell simply because money is the instrument of commerce.
·
The
durability of a commodity is no reason for accumulating more of it than is
wanted.
·
Accumulation
of gold and silver is not necessary for carrying on distant wars,
·
which may
be paid for by exporting: (1) gold and silver, (2) manufactures, or (3) rude
produce.
·
The gold
and silver consists of money in circulation, plate, and money in the treasury.
·
Little can
be spared from the money in circulation;
·
plate has
never yielded much;
·
accumulation
in the treasury has been abandoned.
·
The
foreign wars of the century have evidently not been paid from the money in
circulation
·
but by
commodities.
·
Part of
the bullion which circulates from country to country may have been employed,
but it must have been purchased with commodities.
·
The finer
manufactures are the most convenient commodities for the purpose.
·
Rude
produce is inconvenient.
·
The
principal benefit of foreign trade is not the importation of gold and silver,
but the carrying out of surplus produce for which there is not demand and
bringing back something for which there is.
·
The
discovery of America has benefited Europe not by the cheapening of gold and
silver,
·
but by
opening up of a new market which improved the productive powers of labour.
·
The
discovery of the sea passage to the East Indies would have been still more
advantageous if the trade to the East Indies had been free.
·
The
exportation of silver to the East Indies is not harmful.
·
Writers
who begin by including lands, houses and consumable goods in wealth often
forget them later.
·
Wealth
being supposed to consist in gold and silver, political economy endeavoured to
diminish imports and encourage exports,
·
by
restraints upon importation
·
and
encouragements to exportation,
·
which
restraints and encouragements will be considered in the next six chapters.
b)
Of Restraints upon the Importation from foreign
Countries of such Goods as can be produced at Home
·
High
duties and prohibitions giving a monopoly to a particular home industry are
very common.
·
They
encourage the particular industry, but neither increase general industry nor
give it the best direction.
·
The number
of persons employed cannot exceed a certain proportion to the capital of the
society,
·
and every
man’s interest leads him to seek that employment of capital which is most
advantageous to the society.
·
(1) He
tries to employ it as near home as possible.
·
(2) He
endeavours to produce the greatest possible value.
·
He can
judge of this much better than the statesman.
·
High
duties and prohibitions direct people to employ capital in producing at home
what they could buy cheaper from abroad.
·
It is as
foolish for a nation as for an individual to make what can be bought cheaper.
·
Sometimes
by such regulations a manufacture may be established earlier than it would
otherwise have been but this would make capital accumulate slower,
·
and the
country might always be just as rich if it never acquired the manufacture.
·
No one
proposes that a country should strive against great natural advantages, but it
is also absurd to strive against smaller advantages whether natural or
acquired.
·
Merchants
and manufactures get the most benefit from high duties and prohibitions.
·
The free
importation of foreign cattle would make no great difference to British graziers.
·
It might
even benefit the cultivated plains at the expense of the rugged mountainous
districts.
·
The free
importation of salt provisions also would make little difference to the
graziers,
·
and even
the free importation of corn would not much affect the farmers.
·
Country
gentlemen and farmers are less subject to the spirit of monopoly than merchants
and manufacturers.
·
The
prohibition of foreign corn and cattle restraints the population.
·
There are
two cases which are exceptional,
·
(1) when a
particular industry is necessary for the defence of the country, like shipping,
which is properly encouraged by the act of navigation,
·
a wise
act, though dictated by animosity,
·
and
unfavourable to foreign commerce;
·
and (2)
when there is a tax on the produce of the like home manufacture.
·
Some
people say that this principle justifies a general imposition of duties on
imports to counterbalance taxes levied at home on necessaries,
·
but there
is a difference,
·
since (a)
the effect of taxes on necessaries cannot be exactly known,
·
and (b)
taxes on necessaries are like poor soil or bad climate: they cannot justify an
attempt to give capital an unnatural direction.
·
Taxes on
necessaries are commonest in the richest countries because no others could
support them.
·
There are
two other possible exceptions to the general principle:
·
(1)
Retaliation
·
may be
good policy where it is likely to secure the abolition of foreign restraints.
·
(2) It may
be desirable to introduce freedom of trade by slow gradations.
·
But the
disorder occasioned by its sudden introduction would be less than is supposed
since
·
(a) no
manufacture which is now exported would be affected;
·
(b) the
people thrown out of one employment would easily find another,
·
especially
if the privileges of corporations and the law of settlement were abolished.
·
Private
interests are too strong to allow of the restoration of freedom of trade in
Great Britain.
·
The fact
that equitable regard is due to the manufacturer who has fixed capital in his
business is an argument against the establishment of new monopolies.
·
Customs
duties imposed for revenue remain to be considered hereafter.
c)
Of the extraordinary Restraints upon the
Importation of Goods of almost all Kinds, from those Countries with which the
Balance is supposed to be disadvantageous
i)
Of the Unreasonableness of those Restraints even
upon the Principle of the Commercial System
·
British
restraints on imports from France are an example.
·
Such
restraints are unreasonable on the principles of the mercantile system, since
·
(1) if
free trade with France did lead to an unfavourable balance with France, it
might yet not do so with the world in general,
·
(2) a part
of French imports might be re-exported and bring back gold and silver,
·
and (3)
the balance cannot be certainly known:
·
custom-house
books are useless,
·
and the
course of exchange is little better.
·
A
favourable exchange with a particular country does not prove a favourable
balance with that country.
·
Besides,
the ordinary computation of exchange is often misleading, since
·
(1) money
is often below its nominal standard.
·
(2) coin
is sometimes raised by seignorage above the value of the bullion contained in
it,
·
and (3)
bank money bears an agio.
(1)
Digression concerning Banks of Deposit,
particularly concerning that of Amsterdam
·
Small
states must admit foreign coin, which is of uncertain value.
·
Banks are
then established to pay in standard money regardless of the condition of the
coin, and this money bears an agio.
·
Before
1609 the common currency of Amsterdam was 9 per cent. below the standard.
·
The bank
was then established to receive and pay coin at its intrinsic value in good
standard money.
·
Money in
the bank was not only up to the standard, but also secure and easily
transferred, so that it bore an agio.
·
The bank
receives bullion as well as coin, giving in exchange a credit in bank money to
95 per cent. of the value.
·
It also
gives a receipt which entitles the bearer to recover the bullion on repaying
the sum advanced and paying ¼ per cent. for silver and ½ per cent. for gold.
·
The
receipts are generally worth something, and are renewed at the end of each six
months.
·
The
depositor usually parts which his receipt.
·
The bank
money and the receipt together equal in value the bullion deposited.
·
Receipts
for current coin are also given, but these are often of no value and are
allowed to expire.
·
So there
is a considerable sum of bank money for which the receipts have expired, but it
is not a large proportion of the whole.
·
This
cannot be drawn out of the bank.
·
So that if
all the holders of bank money desired to exchange it for coin and bullion
receipts might command an exorbitant price,
·
but it is
supposed in an emergency the bank would pay out money or bullion without
receipts being offered.
·
Of late
years the bank has always sold bank money at 5 per cent. agio and bought at 4
per cent.
·
If
professes to lend out no part of the deposits.
·
The amount
of treasure in the bank is a subject of conjecture.
·
The city
derives a considerable revenue from the various profits of the bank.
ii)
Of the Unreasonableness of those extraordinary Restraints
upon other Principles
·
The whole
doctrine of the balance of trade is absurd.
·
Where
there is an even balance and the exchange consists wholly of native commodities
two countries trading will gain nearly equally.
·
If one
exported nothing but native commodities, and the other nothing but foreign,
both would gain, but the first would gain most.
·
Mixed
cases conform to the principle.
·
It would
be no worse for England to pay in gold and silver than in tobacco.
·
The
arguments against the French wine trade are fallacious.
·
The
sneaking arts of underling tradesmen have been erected into political maxims
and commerce has become a source of discord instead of unity.
·
The
sophistry of merchants inspired by the spirit of monopoly has confounded the
common-sense of mankind.
·
Wealthy
neighbours are an advatange to a nation as well as an individual.
·
The French
trade, if not restrained, would be much more advantageous to Great Britain than
the American.
·
But the
traders of France and England are jealous of each other.
·
No country
has ever been improverished by an unfavourable balance, and those which have
the freest trade have been the most enriched by foreign trade.
·
Prosperity
and decay depend on the balance of produce and consumption,
·
which is
quite different from the balance of trade,
·
and may be
constantly in favour of a nation when the balance of trade is against it.
d)
Of Drawbacks
·
Merchants
demand encouragements to exportation.
·
Drawbacks
of duty paid on domestic produce are reasonable, as they preserve the natural
distribution of labour.
·
So are
also drawbacks of duty paid on goods imported.
·
Under the
old subsidy a drawback of one-half is allowed.
·
Of more
recent duties the whole is generally allowed,
·
and in
some cases the whole even of the old subsidy is allowed.
·
In the
case of some prohibited goods there is no drawback.
·
French
imports generally are allowed a smaller drawback on re-exportation.
·
Wines have
been peculiarly favoured,
·
especially
when exported to the American colonies,
·
though the
export of other foreign commodities to those colonies was discouraged.
·
Drawbacks
were originally granted to encourage the carrying trade, which was absurd, but
they are reasonable enough.
·
The
revenue gains by their existence when they do not amount to the whole of the
duty paid.
·
They would
be justified even if they always did amount to the whole duty paid
·
but only
to independent countries, not to those in respect of which there is a monopoly
of trade.
·
They give
rise to frauds.
e)
Of Bounties
·
Foreigners
cannot be forced to buy our goods, so it is proposed to pay them to do so.
·
Bounties
are not demanded for any but losing trades,
·
and their
effect is to force trade into disadvantageous channels.
·
Charles
Smith forgets the cost of raising the corn upon which the bounty is paid.
·
The fall
in the price of corn since the establishment of the bounty is due to other
causes.
·
The bounty
keeps up the price both in years of plenty and of scarcity.
·
It has
been supposed to encourage cultivation and so to lower price.
·
The
addition to the price of corn at home caused by the bounty is a heavy tax on
the people, which restraints population and industry and in the long run tends
to diminish the consumption of corn.
·
The
enhancement of price would encourage production if it was an enhancement of
real price, but it is not;
·
it is only
a degradation of the value of silver,
·
for corn
regulates the money price of labour,
·
of all
rude produce,
·
and of
almost all manufactures.
·
So farmers
and landlords are not benefited by the increased price due to the bounty,
·
A
worldwide degradation of the value of silver is of little consequence,
·
but
degradation confined to one country discourages the industry of that country.
·
In Spain
and Portugal gold and silver are naturally cheaper than in the rest of Europe,
·
but by the
hindrances to exportation they are made still cheaper,
·
And
agriculture and manufactures are thereby discouraged.
·
The corn
bounty acts in the same way;
·
it
discourages manufactures without much benefiting farmers and country gentlemen.
·
It is
essentially serviceable only to the corn merchants.
·
The
country gentlemen established the duties on the importation of corn, and the
bounty, in imitation of the manufactures,
·
without
attending to the essential difference between corn and other goods.
·
All the
expedients of the mercantile system force industry into less advantageous
channels: bounties on exports force it into actually disadvantageous channels:
the bounty on corn does not encourage its production.
·
A bounty
on production would be more effectual than one on exportation and would lower
the price of commodity,
·
but such
bounties have been rare,
·
owing to
the interest of merchants and manufacturers.
·
The
herring whale fishery bounties are in part given on production.
·
They are
supposed to augment the number of sailors and ships.
·
In granting
the herring bounties Parliament has been imposed on, since (1) the herring buss
bounty is too large,
·
(2) the
bounty is not proportioned to the fish caught,
·
(3) the
bounty is given to busses, whereas the fishery ought to be carried on by boats,
·
(4) the
bounty has raised, or at any rate not lowered, the price of herring.
·
Profits in
the busines have not been high.
·
Bounties
for manufactures necessary for the defence of the country are not unreasonable.
·
It is less
absurd to give bounties in times of prosperity than in times of distress.
·
Some
allowances called bounties are, properly speaking, drawbacks.
·
Prizes to
successful artists and manufacturers do not divert industry to less
advantageous channels, but encourage perfection.
f)
Digression concerning the Corn Trade and Corn
Laws
·
The corn
bounty and corn laws are undeserving of praise.
·
There are
four branches of the corn trade:
·
I. The
Inland Dealer, whose interest is the same as that of the people, viz., that the
consumption should be proportioned to the supply available.
·
The
interest of monopoly might perhaps be to destroy a portion of the crop, but
corn cannot be monopolised where the trade is free.
·
Dearths
are never occasioned by combination, but always by scarcity, and famines are
always caused by the supposed remedies for dearths applied by government.
·
Scarcities
are never great enough to cause famine.
·
Governments
cause famines by ordering corn to be sold at a reasonable price:
·
The corn
merchant is odious to the populace,
·
and this
deters respectable people from entering the trade.
·
This
popular odium was encouraged by legislation.
·
Many
restraints were imposed on traders.
·
Endeavours
were made to force the farmers to be retailers, though manufacturers were
forbidden to be so.
·
The dealer
confined to one branch of business can sell cheaper.
·
Laws
preventing the manufacturer from being a shopkeeper and compelling the farmer
to be a corn merchant were both impolitic and unjust, but the latter was the
most pernicious,
·
by
obstructing the improvement of land.
·
Corn merchants
support the farmers just as wholesale dealers support the manufacturers.
·
Wholesale
dealers allow manufacturers to devote their whole capital to manufacturing.
·
So corn
merchants should allow farmers to devote their whole capital to cultivation.
·
Accordingly
the statue of Edward VI. endeavoured to annihiliate a trade which is the best
palliative and preventative of a dearth.
·
Its
provisions were moderated by later statutes down to 14 Car. II., c.7,
·
which is
absurd, as it supposes,
·
(1) that
engrossing is likely to be hurtful after a certain price has been reached,
·
(2) that
forestalling is likely to be hurtul after a certain price has been reached.
·
The fear
of engrossing and forestalling is as groundless as that of witchcraft.
·
Still, the
15 Car. II., c. 7, is the best of the corn laws, as it gives the inland corn
trade all the freedom it possesses.
·
The inland
trade is much more important than the foreign.
·
II. The
Importer, whose trade benefits the people and does not really hurt the farmers
and country gentlemen.
·
The Act of
22 Car. II., c. 13, imposed very high duties on importation
·
but its
operation was generally suspended in years of scarcity.
·
Restraint
was necessary on account of the bounty.
·
III. The
Exporter, whose trade indirectly contributes to the plentiful supply of the
home market.
·
Liberty
exportation was made complete in 1700,
·
though the
interest of the exporter sometimes differs from that of the people of his
country.
·
The bad
policy of some great countries may sometimes render it necessary for small
countries to restrain exportation.
·
The corn
laws are like the laws on religion.
·
IV. The
Merchant Carrier, whose trade contributes to the plentiful supply of the home
market.
·
British
law in effect prohibited the carrying trade in corn.
·
The
prosperity of Great Britain is not due to the corn bounty, but to the security
of enjoying the fruits of labour.
·
That the
greatest prosperity has been subsequent proves nothing.
·
Spain and
Portugal are poorer than Great Britain because their bad policy is more effectual,
·
and not
counteracted by general liberty and security.
·
The 13
Geo. III., c. 43,
·
opens the
home market at lower prices,
·
stops the
bounty earlier,
·
and admits
corn for re-export duty free;
·
which are
improvements,
·
but it
gives a bounty on the export of oats,
·
and
prohibits exportation of grain at prices much too low.
·
It is as
good a law as can be expected at present.
g)
Of Treaties of Commerce
·
Treaties
of commerce are advantageous to the favoured,
·
but
disadvantageous to the favouring country.
·
Treaties
have been concluded with the object of obtaining a favourable balance of trade,
·
e.g., the
Methuen treaty, [Art. I. II. III.]
·
which is
evidently advantageous to Portugal and disadvantageous to Great Britain.
·
Portugal
sends much gold to England;
·
at one
time nearly the whole of this gold was said to be on account of other European
nations,
·
but even
if it were not so, the trade would not be more valuable than another of equal
magnitude.
·
Most of
the gold must be sent abroad again and exchanged for goods, and it would be better
to buy the goods direct with home produce instead of buying gold in Portugal.
·
Britain
would find little difficulty in procuring gold even if excluded from trade with
Portugal.
·
It is said
that all our gold comes from Portugal, but if it did not come from Portugal it
would come from other countries.
·
If the
attempt of France and Spain to exclude British ships from Portuguese ports had
been successful, it would have been an advantage to England.
·
The great
importation of gold and silver is for foreign trade.
·
Very
little is required for plate and coin.
·
New gold
plate is mostly made from old.
·
New coin
is mostly made from old, as there is a profit on melting good coin.
·
A
seignorage raises the value of coin above that of bullion equal weight,
·
as in
France.
·
It diminishes
or destroys the profit obtained by melting coin.
·
The
abolition of seignorage in England was probably due to the bank of England,
·
but the
bank would have lost nothing by a seignorage whether it equalled the
depreciation,
·
exceeded
it,
·
or fell
short of it.
·
Nor would
it lose if there were no depreciation.
·
A
seignorage is paid by no one,
·
and could
not have augmented the expense of the bank.
·
The
government loses and nobody gains by the absence of seignorage.
·
Supposing
the coin should again become depreciated, a seignorage would preserve the bank
from considerable loss.
·
The saving
to the government may be regarded as too trifling, but that of the bank is
worth considerable.
h)
Of Colonies
i)
Of the Motives for establishing new Colonies
·
Greek
colonies were sent out when the population grew too great at home.
·
The mother
city claimed no authority.
·
Roman
colonies were sent out to satisfy the demand for lands and to establish
garrisons in conquerred territories;
·
they were
entirely subject to the mother city.
·
The utility
of the American colonies is not so evident.
·
The
Venetians had a profitable trade in East India goods,
·
which was
envied by the Portuguese and led them to discover the Cape of Good Hope
passage,
·
while
Columbus endeavoured to reach the East Indies by sailing westwards.
·
Columbus
mistook the countries he found for the Indies.
·
Hence the
names East and West Indies.
·
The
countries discovered were not rich
·
in animals
·
or
vegetables,
·
cotton
being not then considered of great consequence.
·
So
Columbus relied on the minerals.
·
The
Council of Castile was attracted by the gold, Columbus proposing that the
Government should have half the gold and silver discovered.
·
This was
an impossible tax and was soon reduced.
·
The
subsequent Spanish enterprises were all prompted by the same motive.
·
A prudent
lawgiver would not wish to encourage gold and silver mining,
·
but people
have always believed in an Eldorado.
·
In this
case expectations were to some extent realised, so far as the Spaniards were
concerned,
·
but the
other nations were not so successful.
ii)
Causes of the Prosperity of New Colonies
·
Colonists
take out knowledge and regular government,
·
land is
plentiful and cheap,
·
wages are
high,
·
and
children are taken care of and are profitable.
·
Population
and improvement, which mean wealth and greatness, are encouraged.
·
The
progress of the Greek colonies was very rapid.
·
That of
the Roman colonies much less so.
·
the
American colonies have had plenty of land and not very much interference from
their mother countries.
·
The
progress of the Spanish colonies, Mexico and Peru, has been very considerable.
·
The
Portuguese colony of Brazil is very populous.
·
When Spain
declined, various countries obtained a footing in America.
·
The
Swedish colony of New Jersey was prospering when swallowed up by New York.
·
The Danish
colonies of St. Thomas and Santa Cruz have been very prosperous the exclusive
company was discovered.
·
The Dutch
colony of Surinam is prosperous though still under an exclusive company.
·
The French
colony of Canada has shown rapid progress since the dissolution of the
exclusive company.
·
St.
Domingo, in spite of various obstacles, and the other French sugar colonies,
are very thriving.
·
Both the
progress of the English colonies has been the most rapid.
·
They have
not so much good land at the Spanish and Portuguese, but their institutions are
more favourable to its improvement.
·
(1) The
engrossing of uncultivated land has been more restrained.
·
(2)
Primogeniture and entails are less prevalent and alienation more frequent.
·
(3) Taxes
are more moderate.
·
(4) The
trade monopoly of the mother country has been less oppressive,
·
since
there has been no exclusive company with its interest to buy the produce of the
colonies as cheap as possible,
·
nor any
restriction of commerce to a particular port and to particular licensed ships,
·
but
freedom for every subject to trade with every port in the mother country,
·
and
freedom to export everything but the enumerated commodities to other places
besides the mother country.
·
Some most
important productions are not enumerated,
·
as grain,
·
timber,
·
cattle,
·
fish,
·
sugar,
·
and rum.
·
Grain,
meat and fish would have competed too strongly with British produce if forced
into the British market.
·
Originally
nonenumerated commodities could be exported to any part of the world. Recently
they have been confined to countries south of Cape Finisterre.
·
The
enumerated commodities are (1) commodities not produced at all in the mother
country, and (2) commodities of which only a small part of the supply is
produced in the mother country.
·
On the
importation of naval stores to Great Britain a bounty was given.
·
American
pig iron is exempt from duty.
·
These
regulations have raised the value of timber and thus helped to clear the
country.
·
Freedom of
trade prevails between the British American coloneis and the British West
indies.
·
British
liberality does not extend to refined manufactures.
·
Manufactured
sugar is subject to heavy duty.
·
Steel
furnaces and slit-mills may not be erected in the colonies.
·
Hats,
wools and woollen goods produced in America may not be carried in bulk from
province to province.
·
Such
prohibitions, though a violation of sacred rights, have not as yet been very
hurtful.
·
The
importation into Great Britain of various colonial productions is encouraged
either by abatement of duties or by bounties.
·
In regards
to imports from Europe the British colonies have had more liberal treatment
than those of other countries,
·
drawbacks
being allowed,
·
owing to
the advice of interested merchants.
·
Except in
regard to foreign trade the English colonies have complete liberty.
·
The
absolute governments of Spain, or Portugal, and in a less degree of France, are
even more violent in the colonies than at home.
·
The sugar
colonies of France are more prosperous than the English because they are not
discouraged from refining, and slaves are better managed,
·
absolute
government being more favourable to the slaves than republican,
·
as may be
seen in Roman history.
·
The
superiority of the French sugar colonies is the more remarkable inasmuch as
they have accumulated their own stock.
·
The policy
of Europe has done nothing for the prosperity of the colonies.
·
Folly and
injustice directed the first project.
·
The more
respectable adventurers of later times were sent out by the disorder and
injustice of European governments.
·
To the actual
establishment of the colonies the governments of Europe contributed little,
·
and
discouraged rather than encouraged them after they were established.
·
Europe has
done nothing except provide the men who founded the colonies.
iii)
Of the Advantages which Europe has derived from
the Discovery of America, and from that of a Passage to the East Indies by the
Cape of Good Hope
·
The
advantages derived by Europe from America are (1) the advantages of Europe in
general, and (2) the advantages of the particular countries which have
colonies.
·
(1) The
general advantages to Europe are,
·
(a) an
increase of enjoyments,
·
(b) an
augmentation of industry not only in the countries which trade with America
directly, but also in other countries which do not send their produce to America,
·
or even
receive any produce from America.
·
The
exclusive trade of the mother countries reduces the enjoyments and industry of
all Europe and America, especially the latter.
·
(2) The
particular advantages of the colonising countires are (a) the common advantages
derived from provinces, (b) the peculiar advantages derived from provinces in
America: (a) the common advantages are contributions of military forces and
revenue,
·
but none
of the colonies have ever furnished military force,
·
and the
colonies of Spain and Portugal alone have contributed revenue.
·
(b) the
exclusive trade is the sole peculiar advantage.
·
The
exclusive trade of each country is a disadvantage to the other countries,
·
rather
than an advantage to that country,
·
e.g.,
England gets tobacco cheaper than France, but not cheaper than it would if
there were no exclusive trade.
·
To subject
other countries to this disadvantage England has made two sacrifices.
·
The
withdrawal of foreign capital from the colony trade raised profits in it and
drew capital from other British trades and thereby raised profits in them,
·
and
continues to do so.
·
The colony
trade has increased faster than the whole British capital,
·
and the
colonial monopoly has merely changed the direction of British trade.
·
The
monopoly has kept the rate of profit in British trade higher than it naturally
would have been,
·
and this
puts the country at a disadvantage in the trades of which she has no monopoly,
·
making her
buy less and sell less,
·
and
enabling other countries to undersell her in foreign markets.
·
High
profits raise the price of manufactures more than high wages.
·
So British
capital has been taken from European and Mediterranean trade,
·
partly
attracted by high profit in the colony trade,
·
partly
driven out by foreign competition.
·
While
raising British profit, the monopoly has lowered foreign profits.
·
The colony
trade is supposed to be more advantageous than others,
·
but trade
with a neighbouring country is more advantageous than with a distant one, and a
direct trade is more advantageous than a roundabout,
·
while the
monopoly has forced capital into (1) a distant and (2) a roundabout about
trade.
·
(1) The
trade with America and the West Indies is distant and the returns peculiarly
infrequent.
·
(2) It is
also largely a roundabout trade.
·
The
monopoly has also forced part of the capital of Great Britain into a carrying
trade,
·
and makes
her whole industry and commerce less secure owing to its being driven into one
channel.
·
The
gradual relaxation of the monopoly is desirable.
·
The
present exclusion from the trade with the twelve provinces would have been more
severely felt but for five transitory circumstances.
·
The
monopoly is bad,
·
but the
trade itself is good.
·
The trade
in its natural state increases the productive labour of Great Britain,
·
The
monopoly diminishes it.
·
The
natural good effects of the trade more than counterbalance the bad effects of
the monopoly.
·
The
colonies offer a market for the manufactured rather than the rude produce of
Europe,
·
but the
monopoly has not maintained the manufactures of Spain and Portugal,
·
where the
bad effects of the monopoly have nearly overbalanced the good effects of the
trade.
·
In England
the good effects of the trade have greatly counteracted the bad effects of the
monopoly.
·
The trade
has benefited British manufactures in spite of the monopoly, not in consequence
of it.
·
The
monopoly reduces wages in the mother country,
·
raises
profits, and thereby tends to lower rents and the price of land.
·
It reduces
the absolute amount of profit,
·
thus
rendering all the original sources of revenue less abundant.
·
More fatal
still, it destroys parsimony.
·
The policy
of the monopoly is a policy of shopkeepers.
·
The
expenditure of Great Britain on the colonies has all been laid out to support
the monopoly, and is enormous.
·
A voluntary
separation would be very advantageous.
·
The
colonies do not furnish nearly sufficient revenue to make them advantageous.
·
The
colonial assemblies will never vote enough,
·
and have
no knowledge of what is required.
·
It has
been proposed that parliament should tax the colonies by requisition,
·
as the
King of France taxes some of his provinces,
·
but
parliament has not sufficient authority,
·
and
resistance breaks out.
·
Representation
in parliament in proportion to taxation should be offered.
·
Otherwise
it seems hopeless to expect submission,
·
and
resistance will be as obstinate as that of Paris.
·
The
discovery of representation makes the case different from that of Rome and
Italy.
·
The
American representatives could be managed.
·
The
Americans would not be oppressed.
·
The
discovery of America and the Cape passage are the greatest events in history:
the misfortunes of the natives of the East and West Indies may be temporary, so
the results may be beneficial to all.
·
Meantime
the discovery has exalted the mercantile system.
·
The
countries which possess America and trade to the East Indies appear to get all
the advantage, but this is not the case.
·
The
monopoly regulations sometimes harm the country which establishes them more
than others.
·
The mother
countries have engrossed only the expense and inconveniences of possessing
colonies.
·
The
monopoly of American trade is a dazzling object.
·
The stock
of a country naturally seeks the employment most advantageous to the country,
·
preferring
the near to the more distant employments,
·
unless
profits are higher in the more distant, which indicates that the more distant
employment is necessary.
·
If too
much goes to any employment, profit falls in that employment and the proper
distribution is soon restored.
·
The
mercantile system disturbs this distribution, especially in regard to American
and Indian trade.
·
The
Portuguese attempted at first to exclude all other nations from trading in the
Indian Seas, and the Dutch still exclude all other nations from trade with the
Spice Islands.
·
Now the principal
ports are open, but each country has established an exclusive company.
·
Monopolies
of the American kind always attract, but monopolies of exclusive companies
sometimes attract, sometimes repel stock.
·
In poor
countries they attract,
·
in rich
they repel.
·
Both
effects are hurtful,
·
A country
which cannot trade to the East Indies without an exclusive company should not
trade there.
·
The idea
that the large capital of a company is necessary is fallacious.
·
There are
not numerous and thriving colonies in Africa and the East Indies, as in
America.
·
The Dutch
exclusive company destroys spices and nutmeg trees,
·
and has
reduced the population of the Moluccas.
·
The
English company has the same tendency.
·
This
destructive system is contrary to their interest as sovereigns,
·
but they
prefer the transitory profits of the monopolist merchant to the permanent
revenue of the sovereign.
·
The
administration in India thinks only of buying cheap and selling dear,
·
its
members trade on their own accont and cannot be prevented from doing so,
·
and this
private trade is more extensive and harmful than the public trade of the
company.
·
The
interest of the servants is not, like the real interest of the company, the
same as that of the country.
·
The evils
come from the system, not from the character of the men who administer it.
·
Exclusive
companies are nuisances.
i)
Conclusion of the Mercantile System
·
The
mercantile system discourages the exporation of materials of manufacture and
instruments of trade.
·
It
encourages the importation of materials though not of instruments of trade.
·
Various
materials are exempt from customs duties.
·
Yarn,
though a manufactured article, is free from duty,
·
because
the spinners are poor, unprotected people, and the master weavers are rich and
powerful.
·
This
exemption and also the bounty on the exportation of linen are given by a
temporary law.
·
Bounties
on imported materials have been chiefly given to American produce, such as
naval stores,
·
colonial
indigo,
·
colonial
hemps or undressed flax,
·
American
wood,
·
colonial
raw silk,
·
colonial
barrel staves,
·
Irish
hemp.
·
These
commodities were subject to duties when coming from foreign countries. It was
alleged that the interest of the colonies and of the mother country was the
same.
·
The
exporation of wool and live sheep is forbidden under heavy penalties,
·
at one
time mutilation and death,
·
but now
twenty shillings for every sheep with forfeiture of the sheep and the owner’s
share in the ship,
·
and three
shillings for every pound of wool, with other pains and penalties.
·
To prevent
clandestine exportation the inland commerce of wool is much hampered by
restrictions,
·
especially
in Kent and Sussex,
·
and so
also is the coasting trade.
·
The
manufactures alleged that English wool was superior to all others, which is
entirely false.
·
These
regulations have depressed the price of wool, as was desired,
·
but this
has not much reduced the quantity of wool grown,
·
nor its
quality,
·
so that
the growers of wool have been less hurt than might have been expected.
·
Though
prohibition of exportation cannot be justified, a duty on the exportation of
wool might furnish revenue with little inconvenience.
·
The
exportation of fuller’s earth has been subjected to the same penalties as the
exportation of wool.
·
The
exportation of raw hides is forbidden,
·
horns,
·
woollen yarn
and worsted, white cloths, watch cases, etc., also
·
some
metals.
·
On various
other materials of manufacture considerable export duties are imposed.
·
Gum senega
has a peculiar history and is subject to a large export duty,
·
beaver
skins exported are charged seven pence,
·
and coals
five shillings a ton.
·
The
exportation of the instruments of trade is commonly prohibited.
·
Similarly
it is a grave offense to entice an artificer abroad,
·
and the
artificer who exercises or teaches his trade abroad may be ordered to return.
·
The object
is to depress the manufactures of our neighbours.
·
The
mercantile system absurdly considers production and not consumption to be the
end of industry and commerce.
·
Restraints
on importation of competing commodities sacrifice the interest of the consumer
to the producer,
·
and so do
bounties on exportation and the provisions of the Methuen treaty,
·
but the
most extravagant case of all is that of the management of the American and West
Indian colonies.
·
The
contrivers of the whole mercantile system are the producers and especially the
merchants and manufacturers.
j)
Of the Agricultural Systems, or of those Systems
of Political Œconomy, which represent the Produce of Land as either the sole or
the principal Source of the Revenue and Wealth of every Country
·
The
agricultural systems will require less lengthy explanation than the mercantile
system.
·
Colbert
adopted the mercantile system and favoured town industry,
·
with the
result that the French philosophers who support the agricultural system
undervalue town industry.
·
There are
three classes in their system: (1) proprietors, (2) cultivators, and (3)
artificers, manufactures and merchants.
·
Proprietors
contribute to production by expenses on improvement of land,
·
cultivators,
by original annual expenses of cultivation.
·
These
expenses should be free from all taxation.
·
All other
expenses and orders of people are unproductive,
·
artificers
and manufacturers in particular, and the expense of employing them:
·
mercantile
stock also.
·
The labour
of artificers and manufacturers adds nothing to the value of the annual
produce.
·
Artificers,
manufacturers and merchants can augment revenue only by privation.
·
The
unproductive class is maintained at the expense of the other two,
·
but is
useful to them,
·
and it is
not their interest to discourage its industry;
·
nor is it
ever the interest of the unproductive class to oppress the others.
·
Mercantile
states similarly are maintained at the expense of landed states,
·
but are
greatly useful to them,
·
and it is
not the interest of landed nations to discourage their industry by high duties.
·
Freedom of
trade would in due time supply artificers etc., at home,
·
in
consequence of the increase of their capital, which would first employ
manufacturers,
·
and
afterwards overflow into foreign trade.
·
Freedom of
trade therefore is best for introducing manufactures and foreign trade.
·
High
duties and prohibitions sink the value of agricultural produce, raise
mercantile and manufacturing profit,
·
and could
only raise up manufacturers and merchants prematurely.
·
The
distribution of the produce of land is represented in the Economical Trade.
·
Nations
can prosper in spite of hurtful regulations.
·
The system
is wrong in representing artificers, etc., as unproductive, since,
·
(1) they
reproduce at least their annual consumption and continue the capital which
employs them,
·
(2) they
are not like menial servants,
·
(3) their
labour increases the real revenue of the society,
·
(4) for
augmenting annual produce parsimony is just as much required from farmers as
from them,
·
and (5)
trade and manufactures can procure that subsistence which the system regards as
the only revenue.
·
In spite
of its errors the system has been valuable.
·
Some
nations have favoured agriculture.
·
China, for
example,
·
China is
itself of very great extent, but more foreign trade would be advantageous to
it.
·
Egypt and
the Gentoo government of Indostan favoured agriculture.
·
The people
were divided into castes in these countries.
·
Irrigation
was attended to there.
·
Egypt and
India were dependent on other nations for foreign trade.
·
The land
tax gave eastern sovereigns a particular interest in agriculture.
·
Ancient
Greece and Rome discouraged manufactures and foreign trade, and carried on
manufactures only by slave labour, which is expensive.
·
Everything
which raises the price of manufactures discourages agriculture,
·
and this
is done by systems which restrain manufactures and foreign trade.
·
So all
systems of encouragements and restraints retard the progress of society.
·
The system
of natural liberty leaves the sovereigns only three duties: (1) the defence of
the country; (2) the administratino of justice, and (3) the maintenance of
certain public works.
·
The next
book will treat of the necessary expenses of the sovereign, the methods of
contribution towards the expenses of the whole society, and the causes and
effects of public debts.
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