28 KiB
--- ENTITY: wages of labour ---
Wages of Labour
Definition
The monetary compensation paid to workers for their time and effort, which varies according to five principal circumstances: the agreeableness or disagreeableness of the employment itself, the ease or difficulty of learning the trade, the constancy or inconstancy of employment, the degree of trust required in the worker, and the probability or improbability of success in the occupation.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
This entity forms the central focus of the chapter's first part, where Smith systematically analyses how wages differ across occupations and the factors that create these inequalities. The analysis begins with the observation that pecuniary wages and profits vary greatly across different employments, then proceeds to examine each of the five circumstances that explain these variations.
Economic Domain
Distribution
--- ENTITY: profits of stock ---
Profits of Stock
Definition
The returns earned by those who employ capital in various trades and employments, which are affected by the agreeableness or disagreeableness of the business and the risk or security with which it is attended, but are less influenced by the difficulty of learning the trade compared to wages of labour.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
The chapter's second major focus examines how profits differ across employments, noting that while wages vary according to five circumstances, profits are primarily affected by only two: the agreeableness of the business and the risk involved. Smith argues that ordinary rates of profit tend to be more uniform across different employments than wages.
Economic Domain
Distribution
--- ENTITY: apprenticeships ---
Apprenticeships
Definition
A system where young workers serve a master for a fixed term (historically seven years) to learn a trade, during which the apprentice's labour belongs to the master while the master provides training, maintenance, and sometimes a small wage, creating barriers to entry in certain trades.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith critically examines the institution of apprenticeships as a means by which the policy of Europe creates inequalities in labour markets. He argues that long apprenticeships are unnecessary, often counterproductive, and serve primarily to restrict competition and maintain higher wages for established craftsmen at the expense of both apprentices and the public.
Economic Domain
Regulation
--- ENTITY: corporation laws ---
Corporation Laws
Definition
Legal privileges granted to incorporated trades and professions that restrict competition by limiting who may practice the trade, often requiring apprenticeship terms, membership fees, or other barriers to entry, thereby enabling members to charge higher prices than would prevail under free competition.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith identifies corporation laws as the principal mechanism by which European policy creates significant inequalities in economic advantages across different employments. He argues these laws restrain competition in some trades while increasing it in others, and obstruct the free circulation of labour and stock, ultimately harming both workers and consumers.
Economic Domain
Regulation
--- ENTITY: settlement laws ---
Settlement Laws
Definition
Legal provisions that restrict the movement of poor persons by requiring them to obtain official settlement in a parish before residing there, creating significant barriers to labour mobility and preventing workers from moving to areas where their skills might be most valued.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith presents settlement laws as a particularly harmful form of labour market regulation unique to England, which obstructs the free circulation of labour from place to place. He argues these laws prevent the natural adjustment of wages across regions and force workers to remain in parishes where their labour is less valuable.
Economic Domain
Regulation
--- ENTITY: certificates ---
Certificates
Definition
Official documents issued by one parish that certify a person's legal settlement there, allowing them to reside in another parish without gaining settlement rights there, serving as a partial remedy to the settlement laws' restrictions on labour mobility.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith discusses certificates as an administrative mechanism developed to partially restore the free circulation of labour that settlement laws had obstructed. While certificates allow poor persons to move between parishes without automatically gaining settlement rights, Smith notes they are often difficult to obtain and create their own forms of administrative control.
Economic Domain
Regulation
--- ENTITY: public education of professionals ---
Public Education of Professionals
Definition
The practice of funding the education of clergy, lawyers, physicians, and other professionals through public or charitable means, which creates an oversupply of practitioners and drives down their earnings below what would prevail if education were funded privately.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith identifies publicly funded professional education as a policy that creates inequalities by flooding certain professions with candidates willing to work for lower compensation. He argues this practice degrades the quality and remuneration of respected professions like law and medicine, while creating a class of "men of letters" who must write for subsistence.
Economic Domain
Distribution
--- ENTITY: speculative trade ---
Speculative Trade
Definition
A form of commerce where merchants rapidly shift between different commodities and markets based on anticipated profit opportunities, rather than maintaining regular, established business operations in specific trades, characterized by irregular and unpredictable returns.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith contrasts speculative trade with regular established business, noting that while it can produce sudden fortunes through successful speculation, it is equally likely to produce losses. He observes that this form of trade can only be carried on in places with extensive commerce and correspondence where intelligence about market conditions is readily available.
Economic Domain
Exchange
--- ENTITY: natural state of employments ---
Natural State of Employments
Definition
The condition of economic activities when they are left to follow their natural course without artificial restraints or encouragements, where wages and profits adjust freely according to supply and demand, allowing inequalities to be compensated by corresponding advantages or disadvantages.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith establishes the concept of the "natural state" as a baseline for analysing how European policy creates artificial inequalities in wages and profits. He argues that in a perfectly free society with perfect liberty, all employments would tend toward equality in their overall advantages and disadvantages, with temporary imbalances quickly corrected by market forces.
Economic Domain
General Theory
--- ENTITY: ordinary state of employments ---
Ordinary State of Employments
Definition
The typical or usual condition of economic activities when demand for labour fluctuates around normal levels, as opposed to periods of extraordinary demand or declining industries, representing the baseline against which exceptional wage variations are measured.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith distinguishes between the ordinary or natural state of employments and periods when demand for specific types of labour rises above or falls below usual levels. He uses this distinction to explain how temporary variations in demand affect wages differently across occupations, with some trades maintaining more constant employment than others.
Economic Domain
General Theory
--- ENTITY: principal employments ---
Principal Employments
Principal Employments
Definition
The main or primary occupation through which individuals derive their subsistence, as opposed to secondary or occasional work undertaken during leisure time, which affects how wages are determined and how workers value their time.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith argues that equality in the advantages and disadvantages of different employments can only occur when those employments are the principal means of subsistence for the workers. When people engage in a trade only occasionally while maintaining other primary occupations, they may accept lower wages, disrupting the natural equilibrium of compensation.
Economic Domain
Distribution
--- ENTITY: public mourning effects ---
Public Mourning Effects
Definition
The temporary increase in demand for black cloth and related mourning goods that raises their market price above the natural price, creating higher profits for dealers in these commodities during periods of national bereavement.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith uses public mourning as an example of how extraordinary demand can temporarily raise the price of specific commodities above their natural price, affecting the profits of those engaged in producing or selling these goods. This illustrates his broader point about how variations in demand create temporary inequalities in profits across different employments.
Economic Domain
Exchange
--- ENTITY: piece-work wages ---
Piece-Work Wages
Piece-Work Wages
Definition
A system of compensation where workers are paid according to the quantity of output they produce rather than receiving a fixed daily or weekly wage, creating a direct incentive for increased productivity and diligence.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith identifies piece-work as a wage system that encourages industriousness because workers benefit directly from their efforts. He contrasts this with the apprenticeship system where young workers have no immediate interest in being productive, arguing that direct financial incentives better promote the development of good work habits.
Economic Domain
Distribution
--- ENTITY: common labour wages ---
Common Labour Wages
Definition
The standard compensation paid to unskilled or semi-skilled workers performing basic manual tasks, which serves as a benchmark against which wages in other occupations are compared and often adjusted.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith frequently references common labour wages as a baseline for comparing compensation across different employments. He notes that wages in skilled trades and manufacturing often differ only slightly from common labour wages, with the difference generally sufficient only to compensate for the expense of education and training.
Economic Domain
Distribution
--- ENTITY: scarcity of hands ---
Scarcity of Hands
Definition
A condition in specific localities where the supply of available workers falls short of demand, causing wages to rise above their normal level as employers compete for limited labour resources.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith explains that scarcity of hands in one parish cannot be relieved by the superabundance of workers in another when settlement laws obstruct labour mobility. This creates artificial wage disparities between regions that would not exist under free movement of labour, demonstrating how policy can prevent natural market adjustments.
Economic Domain
Distribution
--- ENTITY: overstocked market conditions ---
Overstocked Market Conditions
Definition
A situation where the supply of workers in a particular trade exceeds the demand for their services, forcing wages down below what would be necessary to attract new entrants and causing existing practitioners to accept lower compensation.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith identifies overstocked markets as a consequence of publicly funded professional education and other policies that encourage excessive entry into certain professions. He argues this condition degrades the quality and remuneration of respected professions while creating a class of underemployed intellectuals.
Economic Domain
Distribution
--- ENTITY: advancing state of manufacture ---
Advancing State of Manufacture
Definition
A condition of industrial development where production is expanding, creating continual demand for new workers and maintaining higher wages due to the growing need for labour in the expanding enterprise.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith contrasts advancing manufactures with declining ones, noting that the former maintain constant demand for labour while the latter experience increasing surplus of workers. This distinction helps explain why wages differ between regions and industries based on their stage of development rather than inherent qualities of the work itself.
Economic Domain
Production
--- ENTITY: declining manufacture ---
Declining Manufacture
Declining Manufacture
Definition
A condition of industrial contraction where production is decreasing, leading to surplus labour supply as workers cannot easily transition to other employments due to legal and institutional barriers, forcing wages down below sustainable levels.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith identifies declining manufactures as creating severe labour market distortions when workers cannot easily move to growing industries. He argues that institutional barriers like apprenticeship requirements prevent the natural reallocation of labour from shrinking to expanding sectors, causing unnecessary hardship for displaced workers.
Economic Domain
Production
--- ENTITY: inland trade ---
Inland Trade
Definition
Commercial exchange that occurs within the boundaries of a single country, as distinguished from foreign trade, which Smith notes is generally less uncertain in its returns and therefore typically offers lower profit rates than foreign commerce.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith observes that profits of stock vary with the certainty or uncertainty of returns, noting that inland trade is generally less risky than foreign trade. This observation contributes to his broader analysis of how different employments of capital offer varying risk-adjusted returns, though he argues these differences are less pronounced than wage differentials.
Economic Domain
Exchange
--- ENTITY: foreign trade ---
Foreign Trade
Definition
Commercial exchange between different countries, which Smith identifies as generally more uncertain in its returns than inland trade, though the degree of uncertainty varies among different branches of foreign commerce.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith notes that foreign trade, particularly certain branches like trade to North America, offers higher potential profits than inland trade due to greater uncertainty of returns. This observation about risk and reward in different types of commerce forms part of his analysis of profit differentials across employments of stock.
Economic Domain
Exchange
--- ENTITY: smuggling trade ---
Smuggling Trade
Definition
The illegal transportation of goods across borders to avoid customs duties and trade restrictions, which Smith identifies as the most hazardous of all trades but also potentially the most profitable when successful.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith uses smuggling as an extreme example of how risk affects profits, noting that while it offers the highest potential returns, it also carries the greatest risk of bankruptcy. He argues that competition among smugglers eventually reduces profits to levels that only barely compensate for the risk involved.
Economic Domain
Exchange
--- ENTITY: common returns of stock ---
Common Returns of Stock
Definition
The typical or average profits earned by capital employed in various trades under normal market conditions, which Smith argues should be sufficient to compensate for occasional losses and provide a surplus profit comparable to insurance returns if risk were fully compensated.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith uses the concept of common returns to analyse whether different employments of stock offer adequate compensation for their risks. He argues that if hazardous trades like smuggling offered full compensation for risk, bankruptcies would not be more frequent in these trades than in safer enterprises, suggesting that risk is systematically underpriced.
Economic Domain
Distribution
--- ENTITY: extraordinary profits ---
Extraordinary Profits
Definition
Returns on capital that significantly exceed the common or average profits in a particular trade or location, typically occurring when new enterprises are established or when demand conditions temporarily favour certain commodities.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith notes that extraordinary profits often occur when new manufactures are established or when particular trades experience unusual demand. However, he argues that competition eventually reduces these exceptional returns to the common level, demonstrating the equilibrating tendency of free markets.
Economic Domain
Distribution
--- ENTITY: public registers of manufactures ---
Public Registers of Manufactures
Definition
Official records maintained in towns that list the names and locations of tradesmen practicing specific occupations, which Smith argues facilitates the formation of trade combinations and price-fixing agreements by making it easier for competitors to communicate and coordinate.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith identifies public registers as a policy that inadvertently facilitates anti-competitive behaviour by making it easier for tradesmen to assemble and conspire against the public interest. He argues that while such meetings cannot be entirely prevented, the law should not facilitate them through administrative mechanisms.
Economic Domain
Regulation
--- ENTITY: exclusive corporation ---
Exclusive Corporation
Definition
A legally privileged trading organisation that restricts membership and limits competition within its trade, enabling members to maintain higher prices and profits than would prevail under free market conditions.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith criticises exclusive corporations as mechanisms that weaken the natural discipline of the market by protecting members from competition. He argues that when workers must be employed regardless of performance, quality deteriorates and consumers suffer, while the public interest is sacrificed to private gain.
Economic Domain
Regulation
--- ENTITY: adulterine guilds ---
Adulterine Guilds
Definition
Unauthorised trade associations that attempt to exercise corporate privileges without formal legal incorporation, which Smith notes were sometimes tolerated by medieval kings in exchange for annual fines, representing early forms of rent-seeking behaviour.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith mentions adulterine guilds as examples of how the crown's prerogative to grant corporate charters was often used to extract revenue rather than protect public liberty. This historical observation supports his broader critique of how institutional arrangements can serve private interests at public expense.
Economic Domain
Regulation
--- ENTITY: university of trades ---
University of Trades
Definition
The medieval term for incorporated trades and crafts, which Smith notes was the proper Latin name for any incorporation, drawing a parallel between the seven-year terms for apprenticeships and the seven-year terms for obtaining academic degrees.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith uses the historical terminology of "universities" for trades to illustrate the common origin of both craft guilds and academic institutions in medieval incorporation practices. This etymological observation supports his argument that long apprenticeship requirements have no rational basis in the nature of the work itself.
Economic Domain
Regulation
--- ENTITY: assize of bread ---
Assize of Bread
Definition
A legal regulation that fixes the price of bread based on the price of wheat, which Smith identifies as one of the few remaining examples of medieval attempts to regulate merchant profits by controlling commodity prices.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith discusses the assize of bread as a remnant of older regulatory practices that attempted to control profits by fixing prices. He argues that where competition exists, it regulates prices more effectively than any legal assize, and that such regulations are generally unnecessary and potentially harmful.
Economic Domain
Regulation
--- ENTITY: retail trade ---
Retail Trade
Definition
The sale of goods in small quantities directly to consumers, which Smith notes typically offers higher apparent profits than wholesale trade due to the additional labour and skill required, though much of this apparent profit represents disguised wages.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith analyses retail trade to demonstrate how apparent profit differentials often reflect differences in labour rather than capital returns. He argues that the higher apparent profits of retail merchants largely compensate for the additional skill, effort, and risk involved in direct consumer transactions.
Economic Domain
Exchange
--- ENTITY: wholesale trade ---
Wholesale Trade
Definition
The sale of goods in large quantities to retailers or other businesses rather than directly to consumers, which Smith notes typically offers lower apparent profits than retail trade but represents more purely the returns to capital investment.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith contrasts wholesale with retail trade to illustrate how profit differentials across employments often reflect differences in the nature of the work rather than pure returns to capital. He argues that wholesale merchants earn more modest but more genuine profits on their stock investments.
Economic Domain
Exchange
--- ENTITY: public lottery ---
Public Lottery
Definition
A government-sponsored gambling scheme where participants purchase tickets for chances to win prizes, which Smith uses as an analogy to illustrate how people systematically overvalue potential gains while undervaluing probable losses.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith employs the public lottery as a metaphor for certain professions where a few individuals achieve great success while most fail completely. He argues that just as lottery players overvalue their chances of winning, people entering professions like law or the arts often overestimate their probability of success.
Economic Domain
General Theory
--- ENTITY: maritime employment ---
Maritime Employment
Definition
Work in the shipping and naval services, which Smith analyses as offering better prospects for advancement and fortune than military service, though still involving significant risks and hardships that are compensated through wages and the hope of prize money.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith compares maritime with military employment to illustrate how different occupations offer varying combinations of risk, reward, and advancement opportunities. He notes that while sailors earn wages comparable to common labourers, the possibility of prize money and advancement makes the trade attractive despite its hardships.
Economic Domain
Distribution
--- ENTITY: military employment ---
Military Employment
Definition
Service in the armed forces, which Smith analyses as offering poor compensation relative to the risks involved, with limited prospects for advancement and wages that fall below those of common labourers, sustained only by romantic notions of honour and distinction.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith uses military service as an example of an occupation where the actual compensation falls far below what would be necessary to attract volunteers if people calculated risks and rewards rationally. He argues that romantic notions of honour sustain recruitment despite poor material conditions.
Economic Domain
Distribution
--- ENTITY: public executioner ---
Public Executioner
Public Executioner
Definition
The state official responsible for carrying out capital punishment, which Smith identifies as the most detestable of all employments yet paradoxically better paid than most common trades relative to the amount of work performed.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith uses the public executioner as an extreme example of how disagreeable employment commands premium compensation. This illustrates his broader principle that wages vary not only with the skill required but also with the agreeableness or disagreeableness of the work itself.
Economic Domain
Distribution
--- ENTITY: poacher ---
Poacher
Definition
An individual who illegally hunts or fishes on private property, which Smith identifies as typically being very poor even in countries where poaching is severely punished, illustrating how natural enjoyment of certain activities can drive down compensation.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith uses the example of poachers to demonstrate how natural human inclinations toward certain activities can create oversupply of labour in those occupations, driving wages down to subsistence levels. This illustrates his principle that agreeable employments tend to be poorly compensated.
Economic Domain
Distribution
--- ENTITY: coal-heaver ---
Coal-Heaver
Definition
A labourer who unloads coal from ships, which Smith identifies as performing work that is extremely arduous, dirty, and subject to irregular employment, commanding wages that are four to five times higher than common labour.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith uses coal-heavers to illustrate how the combination of disagreeable work, physical hardship, and irregular employment can drive wages far above the common level. This example demonstrates how multiple factors can combine to create significant wage differentials.
Economic Domain
Distribution
--- ENTITY: collier ---
Collier
Definition
A coal miner, which Smith identifies as performing extremely dangerous and dirty work that commands wages double or triple those of common labour, illustrating how hazardous and disagreeable employment commands premium compensation.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith uses coal miners to demonstrate how the disagreeable and dangerous nature of certain employments commands higher wages. He notes that while the work can be constant if desired, the inherent hardships justify the substantial wage premium over common labour.
Economic Domain
Distribution
--- ENTITY: butcher trade ---
Butcher Trade
Definition
The commercial activity of slaughtering and selling meat, which Smith identifies as a brutal and odious business that nonetheless offers higher profits than most common trades due to its disagreeable nature.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith uses the butcher trade as an example of how disagreeable employment affects profits of stock as well as wages of labour. This illustrates his principle that the unattractiveness of certain businesses to potential entrants allows those who do engage in them to earn above-normal returns.
Economic Domain
Distribution
--- ENTITY: inn or tavern keeper ---
Inn or Tavern Keeper
Definition
An individual who operates a lodging and drinking establishment, which Smith identifies as a business that is neither agreeable nor creditable due to the lack of household autonomy and exposure to difficult customers, yet can yield substantial profits relative to the capital required.
Source Chapter
Book I, Chapter 10
Context
Smith uses inn and tavern keeping to illustrate how disagreeable business conditions can lead to higher profits. Despite the personal drawbacks of the trade, the potential for significant returns attracts entrepreneurs willing to accept these disadvantages.
Economic Domain
Distribution