Implements markitect/llm/ package with concrete LLMAdapter implementations:
- OpenRouterAdapter: HTTP via urllib with retry/backoff on 429/5xx
- ClaudeCodeAdapter: subprocess-based Claude CLI with stdin piping
- Factory pattern: create_adapter("openrouter") or create_adapter("claude-code")
- API key resolution chain: constructor > env var > project-root key file
- 42 unit tests, 2 integration tests (gated on API key / CLI availability)
Also adds the infospace-with-history example with Wealth of Nations VSM
analysis pipeline, templates, schemas, source chapters, and processed
output for chapters 1-2. process_chapters.py now supports --provider
and --model flags for automatic LLM-driven processing.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
1690 lines
114 KiB
Markdown
1690 lines
114 KiB
Markdown
---
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||
id: book-1-chapter-10
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||
title: "OF WAGES AND PROFIT IN THE DIFFERENT EMPLOYMENTS OF LABOUR AND STOCK."
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||
book: "1"
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chapter: 10
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artifact_type: content
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||
---
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||
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CHAPTER X.
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OF WAGES AND PROFIT IN THE DIFFERENT
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EMPLOYMENTS OF LABOUR AND STOCK.
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The whole of the advantages and disadvantages of the different employments
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of labour and stock, must, in the same neighbourhood, be either perfectly
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equal, or continually tending to equality. If, in the same neighbourhood,
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there was any employment evidently either more or less advantageous than
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the rest, so many people would crowd into it in the one case, and so many
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||
would desert it in the other, that its advantages would soon return to the
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||
level of other employments. This, at least, would be the case in a society
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||
where things were left to follow their natural course, where there was
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perfect liberty, and where every man was perfectly free both to choose
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what occupation he thought proper, and to change it as often as he thought
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proper. Every man’s interest would prompt him to seek the advantageous,
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and to shun the disadvantageous employment.
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Pecuniary wages and profit, indeed, are everywhere in Europe extremely
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different, according to the different employments of labour and stock. But
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this difference arises, partly from certain circumstances in the
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employments themselves, which, either really, or at least in the
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imagination of men, make up for a small pecuniary gain in some, and
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||
counterbalance a great one in others, and partly from the policy of
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Europe, which nowhere leaves things at perfect liberty.
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The particular consideration of those circumstances, and of that policy,
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will divide this Chapter into two parts.
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||
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||
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||
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PART I. Inequalities arising from the nature of the employments
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themselves.
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||
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The five following are the principal circumstances which, so far as I have
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been able to observe, make up for a small pecuniary gain in some
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employments, and counterbalance a great one in others. First, the
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||
agreeableness or disagreeableness of the employments themselves; secondly,
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||
the easiness and cheapness, or the difficulty and expense of learning
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||
them; thirdly, the constancy or inconstancy of employment in them;
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||
fourthly, the small or great trust which must be reposed in those who
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||
exercise them; and, fifthly, the probability or improbability of success
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||
in them.
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||
|
||
First, the wages of labour vary with the ease or hardship, the cleanliness
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||
or dirtiness, the honourableness or dishonourableness, of the employment.
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||
Thus in most places, take the year round, a journeyman tailor earns less
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||
than a journeyman weaver. His work is much easier. A journeyman weaver
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||
earns less than a journeyman smith. His work is not always easier, but it
|
||
is much cleanlier. A journeyman blacksmith, though an artificer, seldom
|
||
earns so much in twelve hours, as a collier, who is only a labourer, does
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||
in eight. His work is not quite so dirty, is less dangerous, and is
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||
carried on in day-light, and above ground. Honour makes a great part of
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||
the reward of all honourable professions. In point of pecuniary gain, all
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||
things considered, they are generally under-recompensed, as I shall
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||
endeavour to shew by and by. Disgrace has the contrary effect. The trade
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||
of a butcher is a brutal and an odious business; but it is in most places
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more profitable than the greater part of common trades. The most
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detestable of all employments, that of public executioner, is, in
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||
proportion to the quantity of work done, better paid than any common trade
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||
whatever.
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||
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Hunting and fishing, the most important employments of mankind in the rude
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||
state of society, become, in its advanced state, their most agreeable
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amusements, and they pursue for pleasure what they once followed from
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||
necessity. In the advanced state of society, therefore, they are all very
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||
poor people who follow as a trade, what other people pursue as a pastime.
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||
Fishermen have been so since the time of Theocritus. {See Idyllium xxi.}.
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A poacher is everywhere a very poor man in Great Britain. In countries
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where the rigour of the law suffers no poachers, the licensed hunter is
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||
not in a much better condition. The natural taste for those employments
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||
makes more people follow them, than can live comfortably by them; and the
|
||
produce of their labour, in proportion to its quantity, comes always too
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||
cheap to market, to afford any thing but the most scanty subsistence to
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||
the labourers.
|
||
|
||
Disagreeableness and disgrace affect the profits of stock in the same
|
||
manner as the wages of labour. The keeper of an inn or tavern, who is
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||
never master of his own house, and who is exposed to the brutality of
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||
every drunkard, exercises neither a very agreeable nor a very creditable
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||
business. But there is scarce any common trade in which a small stock
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||
yields so great a profit.
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||
|
||
Secondly, the wages of labour vary with the easiness and cheapness, or the
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||
difficulty and expense, of learning the business.
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||
|
||
When any expensive machine is erected, the extraordinary work to be
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||
performed by it before it is worn out, it must be expected, will replace
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||
the capital laid out upon it, with at least the ordinary profits. A man
|
||
educated at the expense of much labour and time to any of those
|
||
employments which require extraordinary dexterity and skill, may be
|
||
compared to one of those expensive machines. The work which he learns to
|
||
perform, it must be expected, over and above the usual wages of common
|
||
labour, will replace to him the whole expense of his education, with at
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||
least the ordinary profits of an equally valuable capital. It must do this
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||
too in a reasonable time, regard being had to the very uncertain duration
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||
of human life, in the same manner as to the more certain duration of the
|
||
machine.
|
||
|
||
The difference between the wages of skilled labour and those of common
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||
labour, is founded upon this principle.
|
||
|
||
The policy of Europe considers the labour of all mechanics, artificers,
|
||
and manufacturers, as skilled labour; and that of all country labourers as
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||
common labour. It seems to suppose that of the former to be of a more nice
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||
and delicate nature than that of the latter. It is so perhaps in some
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||
cases; but in the greater part it is quite otherwise, as I shall endeavour
|
||
to shew by and by. The laws and customs of Europe, therefore, in order to
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||
qualify any person for exercising the one species of labour, impose the
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||
necessity of an apprenticeship, though with different degrees of rigour in
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||
different places. They leave the other free and open to every body. During
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||
the continuance of the apprenticeship, the whole labour of the apprentice
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||
belongs to his master. In the meantime he must, in many cases, be
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||
maintained by his parents or relations, and, in almost all cases, must be
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||
clothed by them. Some money, too, is commonly given to the master for
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||
teaching him his trade. They who cannot give money, give time, or become
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||
bound for more than the usual number of years; a consideration which,
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||
though it is not always advantageous to the master, on account of the
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||
usual idleness of apprentices, is always disadvantageous to the
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||
apprentice. In country labour, on the contrary, the labourer, while he is
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||
employed about the easier, learns the more difficult parts of his
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||
business, and his own labour maintains him through all the different
|
||
stages of his employment. It is reasonable, therefore, that in Europe the
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||
wages of mechanics, artificers, and manufacturers, should be somewhat
|
||
higher than those of common labourers. They are so accordingly, and their
|
||
superior gains make them, in most places, be considered as a superior rank
|
||
of people. This superiority, however, is generally very small: the daily
|
||
or weekly earnings of journeymen in the more common sorts of manufactures,
|
||
such as those of plain linen and woollen cloth, computed at an average,
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||
are, in most places, very little more than the day-wages of common
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||
labourers. Their employment, indeed, is more steady and uniform, and the
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||
superiority of their earnings, taking the whole year together, may be
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||
somewhat greater. It seems evidently, however, to be no greater than what
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||
is sufficient to compensate the superior expense of their education.
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||
Education in the ingenious arts, and in the liberal professions, is still
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||
more tedious and expensive. The pecuniary recompence, therefore, of
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||
painters and sculptors, of lawyers and physicians, ought to be much more
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||
liberal; and it is so accordingly.
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||
|
||
The profits of stock seem to be very little affected by the easiness or
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||
difficulty of learning the trade in which it is employed. All the
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||
different ways in which stock is commonly employed in great towns seem, in
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||
reality, to be almost equally easy and equally difficult to learn. One
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||
branch, either of foreign or domestic trade, cannot well be a much more
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||
intricate business than another.
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||
|
||
Thirdly, the wages of labour in different occupations vary with the
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||
constancy or inconstancy of employment.
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||
|
||
Employment is much more constant in some trades than in others. In the
|
||
greater part of manufactures, a journeyman maybe pretty sure of employment
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||
almost every day in the year that he is able to work. A mason or
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||
bricklayer, on the contrary, can work neither in hard frost nor in foul
|
||
weather, and his employment at all other times depends upon the occasional
|
||
calls of his customers. He is liable, in consequence, to be frequently
|
||
without any. What he earns, therefore, while he is employed, must not only
|
||
maintain him while he is idle, but make him some compensation for those
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||
anxious and desponding moments which the thought of so precarious a
|
||
situation must sometimes occasion. Where the computed earnings of the
|
||
greater part of manufacturers, accordingly, are nearly upon a level with
|
||
the day-wages of common labourers, those of masons and bricklayers are
|
||
generally from one-half more to double those wages. Where common labourers
|
||
earn four or five shillings a-week, masons and bricklayers frequently earn
|
||
seven and eight; where the former earn six, the latter often earn nine and
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||
ten; and where the former earn nine and ten, as in London, the latter
|
||
commonly earn fifteen and eighteen. No species of skilled labour, however,
|
||
seems more easy to learn than that of masons and bricklayers. Chairmen in
|
||
London, during the summer season, are said sometimes to be employed as
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||
bricklayers. The high wages of those workmen, therefore, are not so much
|
||
the recompence of their skill, as the compensation for the inconstancy of
|
||
their employment.
|
||
|
||
A house-carpenter seems to exercise rather a nicer and a more ingenious
|
||
trade than a mason. In most places, however, for it is not universally so,
|
||
his day-wages are somewhat lower. His employment, though it depends much,
|
||
does not depend so entirely upon the occasional calls of his customers;
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||
and it is not liable to be interrupted by the weather.
|
||
|
||
When the trades which generally afford constant employment, happen in a
|
||
particular place not to do so, the wages of the workmen always rise a good
|
||
deal above their ordinary proportion to those of common labour. In London,
|
||
almost all journeymen artificers are liable to be called upon and
|
||
dismissed by their masters from day to day, and from week to week, in the
|
||
same manner as day-labourers in other places. The lowest order of
|
||
artificers, journeymen tailors, accordingly, earn their half-a-crown
|
||
a-day, though eighteen pence may be reckoned the wages of common labour.
|
||
In small towns and country villages, the wages of journeymen tailors
|
||
frequently scarce equal those of common labour; but in London they are
|
||
often many weeks without employment, particularly during the summer.
|
||
|
||
When the inconstancy of employment is combined with the hardship,
|
||
disagreeableness, and dirtiness of the work, it sometimes raises the wages
|
||
of the most common labour above those of the most skilful artificers. A
|
||
collier working by the piece is supposed, at Newcastle, to earn commonly
|
||
about double, and, in many parts of Scotland, about three times, the wages
|
||
of common labour. His high wages arise altogether from the hardship,
|
||
disagreeableness, and dirtiness of his work. His employment may, upon most
|
||
occasions, be as constant as he pleases. The coal-heavers in London
|
||
exercise a trade which, in hardship, dirtiness, and disagreeableness,
|
||
almost equals that of colliers; and, from the unavoidable irregularity in
|
||
the arrivals of coal-ships, the employment of the greater part of them is
|
||
necessarily very inconstant. If colliers, therefore, commonly earn double
|
||
and triple the wages of common labour, it ought not to seem unreasonable
|
||
that coal-heavers should sometimes earn four and five times those wages.
|
||
In the inquiry made into their condition a few years ago, it was found
|
||
that, at the rate at which they were then paid, they could earn from six
|
||
to ten shillings a-day. Six shillings are about four times the wages of
|
||
common labour in London; and, in every particular trade, the lowest common
|
||
earnings may always be considered as those of the far greater number. How
|
||
extravagant soever those earnings may appear, if they were more than
|
||
sufficient to compensate all the disagreeable circumstances of the
|
||
business, there would soon be so great a number of competitors, as, in a
|
||
trade which has no exclusive privilege, would quickly reduce them to a
|
||
lower rate.
|
||
|
||
The constancy or inconstancy of employment cannot affect the ordinary
|
||
profits of stock in any particular trade. Whether the stock is or is not
|
||
constantly employed, depends, not upon the trade, but the trader.
|
||
|
||
Fourthly, the wages of labour vary according to the small or great trust
|
||
which must be reposed in the workmen.
|
||
|
||
The wages of goldsmiths and jewellers are everywhere superior to those of
|
||
many other workmen, not only of equal, but of much superior ingenuity, on
|
||
account of the precious materials with which they are entrusted. We trust
|
||
our health to the physician, our fortune, and sometimes our life and
|
||
reputation, to the lawyer and attorney. Such confidence could not safely
|
||
be reposed in people of a very mean or low condition. Their reward must be
|
||
such, therefore, as may give them that rank in the society which so
|
||
important a trust requires. The long time and the great expense which must
|
||
be laid out in their education, when combined with this circumstance,
|
||
necessarily enhance still further the price of their labour.
|
||
|
||
When a person employs only his own stock in trade, there is no trust; and
|
||
the credit which he may get from other people, depends, not upon the
|
||
nature of the trade, but upon their opinion of his fortune, probity and
|
||
prudence. The different rates of profit, therefore, in the different
|
||
branches of trade, cannot arise from the different degrees of trust
|
||
reposed in the traders.
|
||
|
||
Fifthly, the wages of labour in different employments vary according to
|
||
the probability or improbability of success in them.
|
||
|
||
The probability that any particular person shall ever be qualified for the
|
||
employments to which he is educated, is very different in different
|
||
occupations. In the greatest part of mechanic trades success is almost
|
||
certain; but very uncertain in the liberal professions. Put your son
|
||
apprentice to a shoemaker, there is little doubt of his learning to make a
|
||
pair of shoes; but send him to study the law, it as at least twenty to one
|
||
if he ever makes such proficiency as will enable him to live by the
|
||
business. In a perfectly fair lottery, those who draw the prizes ought to
|
||
gain all that is lost by those who draw the blanks. In a profession, where
|
||
twenty fail for one that succeeds, that one ought to gain all that should
|
||
have been gained by the unsuccessful twenty. The counsellor at law, who,
|
||
perhaps, at near forty years of age, begins to make something by his
|
||
profession, ought to receive the retribution, not only of his own so
|
||
tedious and expensive education, but of that of more than twenty others,
|
||
who are never likely to make any thing by it. How extravagant soever the
|
||
fees of counsellors at law may sometimes appear, their real retribution is
|
||
never equal to this. Compute, in any particular place, what is likely to
|
||
be annually gained, and what is likely to be annually spent, by all the
|
||
different workmen in any common trade, such as that of shoemakers or
|
||
weavers, and you will find that the former sum will generally exceed the
|
||
latter. But make the same computation with regard to all the counsellors
|
||
and students of law, in all the different Inns of Court, and you will find
|
||
that their annual gains bear but a very small proportion to their annual
|
||
expense, even though you rate the former as high, and the latter as low,
|
||
as can well be done. The lottery of the law, therefore, is very far from
|
||
being a perfectly fair lottery; and that as well as many other liberal and
|
||
honourable professions, is, in point of pecuniary gain, evidently
|
||
under-recompensed.
|
||
|
||
Those professions keep their level, however, with other occupations; and,
|
||
notwithstanding these discouragements, all the most generous and liberal
|
||
spirits are eager to crowd into them. Two different causes contribute to
|
||
recommend them. First, the desire of the reputation which attends upon
|
||
superior excellence in any of them; and, secondly, the natural confidence
|
||
which every man has, more or less, not only in his own abilities, but in
|
||
his own good fortune.
|
||
|
||
To excel in any profession, in which but few arrive at mediocrity, is the
|
||
most decisive mark of what is called genius, or superior talents. The
|
||
public admiration which attends upon such distinguished abilities makes
|
||
always a part of their reward; a greater or smaller, in proportion as it
|
||
is higher or lower in degree. It makes a considerable part of that reward
|
||
in the profession of physic; a still greater, perhaps, in that of law; in
|
||
poetry and philosophy it makes almost the whole.
|
||
|
||
There are some very agreeable and beautiful talents, of which the
|
||
possession commands a certain sort of admiration, but of which the
|
||
exercise, for the sake of gain, is considered, whether from reason or
|
||
prejudice, as a sort of public prostitution. The pecuniary recompence,
|
||
therefore, of those who exercise them in this manner, must be sufficient,
|
||
not only to pay for the time, labour, and expense of acquiring the
|
||
talents, but for the discredit which attends the employment of them as the
|
||
means of subsistence. The exorbitant rewards of players, opera-singers,
|
||
opera-dancers, etc. are founded upon those two principles; the rarity and
|
||
beauty of the talents, and the discredit of employing them in this manner.
|
||
It seems absurd at first sight, that we should despise their persons, and
|
||
yet reward their talents with the most profuse liberality. While we do the
|
||
one, however, we must of necessity do the other, Should the public opinion
|
||
or prejudice ever alter with regard to such occupations, their pecuniary
|
||
recompence would quickly diminish. More people would apply to them, and
|
||
the competition would quickly reduce the price of their labour. Such
|
||
talents, though far from being common, are by no means so rare as
|
||
imagined. Many people possess them in great perfection, who disdain to
|
||
make this use of them; and many more are capable of acquiring them, if any
|
||
thing could be made honourably by them.
|
||
|
||
The over-weening conceit which the greater part of men have of their own
|
||
abilities, is an ancient evil remarked by the philosophers and moralists
|
||
of all ages. Their absurd presumption in their own good fortune has been
|
||
less taken notice of. It is, however, if possible, still more universal.
|
||
There is no man living, who, when in tolerable health and spirits, has not
|
||
some share of it. The chance of gain is by every man more or less
|
||
over-valued, and the chance of loss is by most men under-valued, and by
|
||
scarce any man, who is in tolerable health and spirits, valued more than
|
||
it is worth.
|
||
|
||
That the chance of gain is naturally overvalued, we may learn from the
|
||
universal success of lotteries. The world neither ever saw, nor ever will
|
||
see, a perfectly fair lottery, or one in which the whole gain compensated
|
||
the whole loss; because the undertaker could make nothing by it. In the
|
||
state lotteries, the tickets are really not worth the price which is paid
|
||
by the original subscribers, and yet commonly sell in the market for
|
||
twenty, thirty, and sometimes forty per cent. advance. The vain hopes of
|
||
gaining some of the great prizes is the sole cause of this demand. The
|
||
soberest people scarce look upon it as a folly to pay a small sum for the
|
||
chance of gaining ten or twenty thousand pounds, though they know that
|
||
even that small sum is perhaps twenty or thirty per cent. more than the
|
||
chance is worth. In a lottery in which no prize exceeded twenty pounds,
|
||
though in other respects it approached much nearer to a perfectly fair one
|
||
than the common state lotteries, there would not be the same demand for
|
||
tickets. In order to have a better chance for some of the great prizes,
|
||
some people purchase several tickets; and others, small shares in a still
|
||
greater number. There is not, however, a more certain proposition in
|
||
mathematics, than that the more tickets you adventure upon, the more
|
||
likely you are to be a loser. Adventure upon all the tickets in the
|
||
lottery, and you lose for certain; and the greater the number of your
|
||
tickets, the nearer you approach to this certainty.
|
||
|
||
That the chance of loss is frequently undervalued, and scarce ever valued
|
||
more than it is worth, we may learn from the very moderate profit of
|
||
insurers. In order to make insurance, either from fire or sea-risk, a
|
||
trade at all, the common premium must be sufficient to compensate the
|
||
common losses, to pay the expense of management, and to afford such a
|
||
profit as might have been drawn from an equal capital employed in any
|
||
common trade. The person who pays no more than this, evidently pays no
|
||
more than the real value of the risk, or the lowest price at which he can
|
||
reasonably expect to insure it. But though many people have made a little
|
||
money by insurance, very few have made a great fortune; and, from this
|
||
consideration alone, it seems evident enough that the ordinary balance of
|
||
profit and loss is not more advantageous in this than in other common
|
||
trades, by which so many people make fortunes. Moderate, however, as the
|
||
premium of insurance commonly is, many people despise the risk too much to
|
||
care to pay it. Taking the whole kingdom at an average, nineteen houses in
|
||
twenty, or rather, perhaps, ninety-nine in a hundred, are not insured from
|
||
fire. Sea-risk is more alarming to the greater part of people; and the
|
||
proportion of ships insured to those not insured is much greater. Many
|
||
sail, however, at all seasons, and even in time of war, without any
|
||
insurance. This may sometimes, perhaps, be done without any imprudence.
|
||
When a great company, or even a great merchant, has twenty or thirty ships
|
||
at sea, they may, as it were, insure one another. The premium saved up on
|
||
them all may more than compensate such losses as they are likely to meet
|
||
with in the common course of chances. The neglect of insurance upon
|
||
shipping, however, in the same manner as upon houses, is, in most cases,
|
||
the effect of no such nice calculation, but of mere thoughtless rashness,
|
||
and presumptuous contempt of the risk.
|
||
|
||
The contempt of risk, and the presumptuous hope of success, are in no
|
||
period of life more active than at the age at which young people choose
|
||
their professions. How little the fear of misfortune is then capable of
|
||
balancing the hope of good luck, appears still more evidently in the
|
||
readiness of the common people to enlist as soldiers, or to go to sea,
|
||
than in the eagerness of those of better fashion to enter into what are
|
||
called the liberal professions.
|
||
|
||
What a common soldier may lose is obvious enough. Without regarding the
|
||
danger, however, young volunteers never enlist so readily as at the
|
||
beginning of a new war; and though they have scarce any chance of
|
||
preferment, they figure to themselves, in their youthful fancies, a
|
||
thousand occasions of acquiring honour and distinction which never occur.
|
||
These romantic hopes make the whole price of their blood. Their pay is
|
||
less than that of common labourers, and, in actual service, their fatigues
|
||
are much greater.
|
||
|
||
The lottery of the sea is not altogether so disadvantageous as that of the
|
||
army. The son of a creditable labourer or artificer may frequently go to
|
||
sea with his father’s consent; but if he enlists as a soldier, it is
|
||
always without it. Other people see some chance of his making something by
|
||
the one trade; nobody but himself sees any of his making any thing by the
|
||
other. The great admiral is less the object of public admiration than the
|
||
great general; and the highest success in the sea service promises a less
|
||
brilliant fortune and reputation than equal success in the land. The same
|
||
difference runs through all the inferior degrees of preferment in both. By
|
||
the rules of precedency, a captain in the navy ranks with a colonel in the
|
||
army; but he does not rank with him in the common estimation. As the great
|
||
prizes in the lottery are less, the smaller ones must be more numerous.
|
||
Common sailors, therefore, more frequently get some fortune and preferment
|
||
than common soldiers; and the hope of those prizes is what principally
|
||
recommends the trade. Though their skill and dexterity are much superior
|
||
to that of almost any artificers; and though their whole life is one
|
||
continual scene of hardship and danger; yet for all this dexterity and
|
||
skill, for all those hardships and dangers, while they remain in the
|
||
condition of common sailors, they receive scarce any other recompence but
|
||
the pleasure of exercising the one and of surmounting the other. Their
|
||
wages are not greater than those of common labourers at the port which
|
||
regulates the rate of seamen’s wages. As they are continually going from
|
||
port to port, the monthly pay of those who sail from all the different
|
||
ports of Great Britain, is more nearly upon a level than that of any other
|
||
workmen in those different places; and the rate of the port to and from
|
||
which the greatest number sail, that is, the port of London, regulates
|
||
that of all the rest. At London, the wages of the greater part of the
|
||
different classes of workmen are about double those of the same classes at
|
||
Edinburgh. But the sailors who sail from the port of London, seldom earn
|
||
above three or four shillings a month more than those who sail from the
|
||
port of Leith, and the difference is frequently not so great. In time of
|
||
peace, and in the merchant-service, the London price is from a guinea to
|
||
about seven-and-twenty shillings the calendar month. A common labourer in
|
||
London, at the rate of nine or ten shillings a week, may earn in the
|
||
calendar month from forty to five-and-forty shillings. The sailor, indeed,
|
||
over and above his pay, is supplied with provisions. Their value, however,
|
||
may not perhaps always exceed the difference between his pay and that of
|
||
the common labourer; and though it sometimes should, the excess will not
|
||
be clear gain to the sailor, because he cannot share it with his wife and
|
||
family, whom he must maintain out of his wages at home.
|
||
|
||
The dangers and hair-breadth escapes of a life of adventures, instead of
|
||
disheartening young people, seem frequently to recommend a trade to them.
|
||
A tender mother, among the inferior ranks of people, is often afraid to
|
||
send her son to school at a sea-port town, lest the sight of the ships,
|
||
and the conversation and adventures of the sailors, should entice him to
|
||
go to sea. The distant prospect of hazards, from which we can hope to
|
||
extricate ourselves by courage and address, is not disagreeable to us, and
|
||
does not raise the wages of labour in any employment. It is otherwise with
|
||
those in which courage and address can be of no avail. In trades which are
|
||
known to be very unwholesome, the wages of labour are always remarkably
|
||
high. Unwholesomeness is a species of disagreeableness, and its effects
|
||
upon the wages of labour are to be ranked under that general head.
|
||
|
||
In all the different employments of stock, the ordinary rate of profit
|
||
varies more or less with the certainty or uncertainty of the returns.
|
||
These are, in general, less uncertain in the inland than in the foreign
|
||
trade, and in some branches of foreign trade than in others; in the trade
|
||
to North America, for example, than in that to Jamaica. The ordinary rate
|
||
of profit always rises more or less with the risk. It does not, however,
|
||
seem to rise in proportion to it, or so as to compensate it completely.
|
||
Bankruptcies are most frequent in the most hazardous trades. The most
|
||
hazardous of all trades, that of a smuggler, though, when the adventure
|
||
succeeds, it is likewise the most profitable, is the infallible road to
|
||
bankruptcy. The presumptuous hope of success seems to act here as upon all
|
||
other occasions, and to entice so many adventurers into those hazardous
|
||
trades, that their competition reduces the profit below what is sufficient
|
||
to compensate the risk. To compensate it completely, the common returns
|
||
ought, over and above the ordinary profits of stock, not only to make up
|
||
for all occasional losses, but to afford a surplus profit to the
|
||
adventurers, of the same nature with the profit of insurers. But if the
|
||
common returns were sufficient for all this, bankruptcies would not be
|
||
more frequent in these than in other trades.
|
||
|
||
Of the five circumstances, therefore, which vary the wages of labour, two
|
||
only affect the profits of stock; the agreeableness or disagreeableness of
|
||
the business, and the risk or security with which it is attended. In point
|
||
of agreeableness or disagreeableness, there is little or no difference in
|
||
the far greater part of the different employments of stock, but a great
|
||
deal in those of labour; and the ordinary profit of stock, though it rises
|
||
with the risk, does not always seem to rise in proportion to it. It should
|
||
follow from all this, that, in the same society or neighbourhood, the
|
||
average and ordinary rates of profit in the different employments of stock
|
||
should be more nearly upon a level than the pecuniary wages of the
|
||
different sorts of labour.
|
||
|
||
They are so accordingly. The difference between the earnings of a common
|
||
labourer and those of a well employed lawyer or physician, is evidently
|
||
much greater than that between the ordinary profits in any two different
|
||
branches of trade. The apparent difference, besides, in the profits of
|
||
different trades, is generally a deception arising from our not always
|
||
distinguishing what ought to be considered as wages, from what ought to be
|
||
considered as profit.
|
||
|
||
Apothecaries’ profit is become a bye-word, denoting something uncommonly
|
||
extravagant. This great apparent profit, however, is frequently no more
|
||
than the reasonable wages of labour. The skill of an apothecary is a much
|
||
nicer and more delicate matter than that of any artificer whatever; and
|
||
the trust which is reposed in him is of much greater importance. He is the
|
||
physician of the poor in all cases, and of the rich when the distress or
|
||
danger is not very great. His reward, therefore, ought to be suitable to
|
||
his skill and his trust; and it arises generally from the price at which
|
||
he sells his drugs. But the whole drugs which the best employed apothecary
|
||
in a large market-town, will sell in a year, may not perhaps cost him
|
||
above thirty or forty pounds. Though he should sell them, therefore, for
|
||
three or four hundred, or at a thousand per cent. profit, this may
|
||
frequently be no more than the reasonable wages of his labour, charged, in
|
||
the only way in which he can charge them, upon the price of his drugs. The
|
||
greater part of the apparent profit is real wages disguised in the garb of
|
||
profit.
|
||
|
||
In a small sea-port town, a little grocer will make forty or fifty per
|
||
cent. upon a stock of a single hundred pounds, while a considerable
|
||
wholesale merchant in the same place will scarce make eight or ten per
|
||
cent. upon a stock of ten thousand. The trade of the grocer may be
|
||
necessary for the conveniency of the inhabitants, and the narrowness of
|
||
the market may not admit the employment of a larger capital in the
|
||
business. The man, however, must not only live by his trade, but live by
|
||
it suitably to the qualifications which it requires. Besides possessing a
|
||
little capital, he must be able to read, write, and account and must be a
|
||
tolerable judge, too, of perhaps fifty or sixty different sorts of goods,
|
||
their prices, qualities, and the markets where they are to be had
|
||
cheapest. He must have all the knowledge, in short, that is necessary for
|
||
a great merchant, which nothing hinders him from becoming but the want of
|
||
a sufficient capital. Thirty or forty pounds a year cannot be considered
|
||
as too great a recompence for the labour of a person so accomplished.
|
||
Deduct this from the seemingly great profits of his capital, and little
|
||
more will remain, perhaps, than the ordinary profits of stock. The greater
|
||
part of the apparent profit is, in this case too, real wages.
|
||
|
||
The difference between the apparent profit of the retail and that of the
|
||
wholesale trade, is much less in the capital than in small towns and
|
||
country villages. Where ten thousand pounds can be employed in the grocery
|
||
trade, the wages of the grocer’s labour must be a very trifling addition
|
||
to the real profits of so great a stock. The apparent profits of the
|
||
wealthy retailer, therefore, are there more nearly upon a level with those
|
||
of the wholesale merchant. It is upon this account that goods sold by
|
||
retail are generally as cheap, and frequently much cheaper, in the capital
|
||
than in small towns and country villages. Grocery goods, for example, are
|
||
generally much cheaper; bread and butchers’ meat frequently as cheap. It
|
||
costs no more to bring grocery goods to the great town than to the country
|
||
village; but it costs a great deal more to bring corn and cattle, as the
|
||
greater part of them must be brought from a much greater distance. The
|
||
prime cost of grocery goods, therefore, being the same in both places,
|
||
they are cheapest where the least profit is charged upon them. The prime
|
||
cost of bread and butchers’ meat is greater in the great town than in the
|
||
country village; and though the profit is less, therefore they are not
|
||
always cheaper there, but often equally cheap. In such articles as bread
|
||
and butchers’ meat, the same cause which diminishes apparent profit,
|
||
increases prime cost. The extent of the market, by giving employment to
|
||
greater stocks, diminishes apparent profit; but by requiring supplies from
|
||
a greater distance, it increases prime cost. This diminution of the one
|
||
and increase of the other, seem, in most cases, nearly to counterbalance
|
||
one another; which is probably the reason that, though the prices of corn
|
||
and cattle are commonly very different in different parts of the kingdom,
|
||
those of bread and butchers’ meat are generally very nearly the same
|
||
through the greater part of it.
|
||
|
||
Though the profits of stock, both in the wholesale and retail trade, are
|
||
generally less in the capital than in small towns and country villages,
|
||
yet great fortunes are frequently acquired from small beginnings in the
|
||
former, and scarce ever in the latter. In small towns and country
|
||
villages, on account of the narrowness of the market, trade cannot always
|
||
be extended as stock extends. In such places, therefore, though the rate
|
||
of a particular person’s profits may be very high, the sum or amount of
|
||
them can never be very great, nor consequently that of his annual
|
||
accumulation. In great towns, on the contrary, trade can be extended as
|
||
stock increases, and the credit of a frugal and thriving man increases
|
||
much faster than his stock. His trade is extended in proportion to the
|
||
amount of both; and the sum or amount of his profits is in proportion to
|
||
the extent of his trade, and his annual accumulation in proportion to the
|
||
amount of his profits. It seldom happens, however, that great fortunes are
|
||
made, even in great towns, by any one regular, established, and well-known
|
||
branch of business, but in consequence of a long life of industry,
|
||
frugality, and attention. Sudden fortunes, indeed, are sometimes made in
|
||
such places, by what is called the trade of speculation. The speculative
|
||
merchant exercises no one regular, established, or well-known branch of
|
||
business. He is a corn merchant this year, and a wine merchant the next,
|
||
and a sugar, tobacco, or tea merchant the year after. He enters into every
|
||
trade, when he foresees that it is likely to be more than commonly
|
||
profitable, and he quits it when he foresees that its profits are likely
|
||
to return to the level of other trades. His profits and losses, therefore,
|
||
can bear no regular proportion to those of any one established and
|
||
well-known branch of business. A bold adventurer may sometimes acquire a
|
||
considerable fortune by two or three successful speculations, but is just
|
||
as likely to lose one by two or three unsuccessful ones. This trade can be
|
||
carried on nowhere but in great towns. It is only in places of the most
|
||
extensive commerce and correspondence that the intelligence requisite for
|
||
it can be had.
|
||
|
||
The five circumstances above mentioned, though they occasion considerable
|
||
inequalities in the wages of labour and profits of stock, occasion none in
|
||
the whole of the advantages and disadvantages, real or imaginary, of the
|
||
different employments of either. The nature of those circumstances is
|
||
such, that they make up for a small pecuniary gain in some, and
|
||
counterbalance a great one in others.
|
||
|
||
In order, however, that this equality may take place in the whole of their
|
||
advantages or disadvantages, three things are requisite, even where there
|
||
is the most perfect freedom. First the employments must be well known and
|
||
long established in the neighbourhood; secondly, they must be in their
|
||
ordinary, or what may be called their natural state; and, thirdly, they
|
||
must be the sole or principal employments of those who occupy them.
|
||
|
||
First, this equality can take place only in those employments which are
|
||
well known, and have been long established in the neighbourhood.
|
||
|
||
Where all other circumstances are equal, wages are generally higher in new
|
||
than in old trades. When a projector attempts to establish a new
|
||
manufacture, he must at first entice his workmen from other employments,
|
||
by higher wages than they can either earn in their own trades, or than the
|
||
nature of his work would otherwise require; and a considerable time must
|
||
pass away before he can venture to reduce them to the common level.
|
||
Manufactures for which the demand arises altogether from fashion and
|
||
fancy, are continually changing, and seldom last long enough to be
|
||
considered as old established manufactures. Those, on the contrary, for
|
||
which the demand arises chiefly from use or necessity, are less liable to
|
||
change, and the same form or fabric may continue in demand for whole
|
||
centuries together. The wages of labour, therefore, are likely to be
|
||
higher in manufactures of the former, than in those of the latter kind.
|
||
Birmingham deals chiefly in manufactures of the former kind; Sheffield in
|
||
those of the latter; and the wages of labour in those two different places
|
||
are said to be suitable to this difference in the nature of their
|
||
manufactures.
|
||
|
||
The establishment of any new manufacture, of any new branch of commerce,
|
||
or of any new practice in agriculture, is always a speculation from which
|
||
the projector promises himself extraordinary profits. These profits
|
||
sometimes are very great, and sometimes, more frequently, perhaps, they
|
||
are quite otherwise; but, in general, they bear no regular proportion to
|
||
those of other old trades in the neighbourhood. If the project succeeds,
|
||
they are commonly at first very high. When the trade or practice becomes
|
||
thoroughly established and well known, the competition reduces them to the
|
||
level of other trades.
|
||
|
||
Secondly, this equality in the whole of the advantages and disadvantages
|
||
of the different employments of labour and stock, can take place only in
|
||
the ordinary, or what may be called the natural state of those
|
||
employments.
|
||
|
||
The demand for almost every different species of labour is sometimes
|
||
greater, and sometimes less than usual. In the one case, the advantages of
|
||
the employment rise above, in the other they fall below the common level.
|
||
The demand for country labour is greater at hay-time and harvest than
|
||
during the greater part of the year; and wages rise with the demand. In
|
||
time of war, when forty or fifty thousand sailors are forced from the
|
||
merchant service into that of the king, the demand for sailors to merchant
|
||
ships necessarily rises with their scarcity; and their wages, upon such
|
||
occasions, commonly rise from a guinea and seven-and-twenty shillings to
|
||
forty shillings and three pounds a-month. In a decaying manufacture, on
|
||
the contrary, many workmen, rather than quit their own trade, are
|
||
contented with smaller wages than would otherwise be suitable to the
|
||
nature of their employment.
|
||
|
||
The profits of stock vary with the price of the commodities in which it is
|
||
employed. As the price of any commodity rises above the ordinary or
|
||
average rate, the profits of at least some part of the stock that is
|
||
employed in bringing it to market, rise above their proper level, and as
|
||
it falls they sink below it. All commodities are more or less liable to
|
||
variations of price, but some are much more so than others. In all
|
||
commodities which are produced by human industry, the quantity of industry
|
||
annually employed is necessarily regulated by the annual demand, in such a
|
||
manner that the average annual produce may, as nearly as possible, be
|
||
equal to the average annual consumption. In some employments, it has
|
||
already been observed, the same quantity of industry will always produce
|
||
the same, or very nearly the same quantity of commodities. In the linen or
|
||
woollen manufactures, for example, the same number of hands will annually
|
||
work up very nearly the same quantity of linen and woollen cloth. The
|
||
variations in the market price of such commodities, therefore, can arise
|
||
only from some accidental variation in the demand. A public mourning
|
||
raises the price of black cloth. But as the demand for most sorts of plain
|
||
linen and woollen cloth is pretty uniform, so is likewise the price. But
|
||
there are other employments in which the same quantity of industry will
|
||
not always produce the same quantity of commodities. The same quantity of
|
||
industry, for example, will, in different years, produce very different
|
||
quantities of corn, wine, hops, sugar, tobacco, etc. The price of such
|
||
commodities, therefore, varies not only with the variations of demand, but
|
||
with the much greater and more frequent variations of quantity, and is
|
||
consequently extremely fluctuating; but the profit of some of the dealers
|
||
must necessarily fluctuate with the price of the commodities. The
|
||
operations of the speculative merchant are principally employed about such
|
||
commodities. He endeavours to buy them up when he foresees that their
|
||
price is likely to rise, and to sell them when it is likely to fall.
|
||
|
||
Thirdly, this equality in the whole of the advantages and disadvantages of
|
||
the different employments of labour and stock, can take place only in such
|
||
as are the sole or principal employments of those who occupy them.
|
||
|
||
When a person derives his subsistence from one employment, which does not
|
||
occupy the greater part of his time, in the intervals of his leisure he is
|
||
often willing to work at another for less wages than would otherwise suit
|
||
the nature of the employment.
|
||
|
||
There still subsists, in many parts of Scotland, a set of people called
|
||
cottars or cottagers, though they were more frequent some years ago than
|
||
they are now. They are a sort of out-servants of the landlords and
|
||
farmers. The usual reward which they receive from their master is a house,
|
||
a small garden for pot-herbs, as much grass as will feed a cow, and,
|
||
perhaps, an acre or two of bad arable land. When their master has occasion
|
||
for their labour, he gives them, besides, two pecks of oatmeal a-week,
|
||
worth about sixteen pence sterling. During a great part of the year, he
|
||
has little or no occasion for their labour, and the cultivation of their
|
||
own little possession is not sufficient to occupy the time which is left
|
||
at their own disposal. When such occupiers were more numerous than they
|
||
are at present, they are said to have been willing to give their spare
|
||
time for a very small recompence to any body, and to have wrought for less
|
||
wages than other labourers. In ancient times, they seem to have been
|
||
common all over Europe. In countries ill cultivated, and worse inhabited,
|
||
the greater part of landlords and farmers could not otherwise provide
|
||
themselves with the extraordinary number of hands which country labour
|
||
requires at certain seasons. The daily or weekly recompence which such
|
||
labourers occasionally received from their masters, was evidently not the
|
||
whole price of their labour. Their small tenement made a considerable part
|
||
of it. This daily or weekly recompence, however, seems to have been
|
||
considered as the whole of it, by many writers who have collected the
|
||
prices of labour and provisions in ancient times, and who have taken
|
||
pleasure in representing both as wonderfully low.
|
||
|
||
The produce of such labour comes frequently cheaper to market than would
|
||
otherwise be suitable to its nature. Stockings, in many parts of Scotland,
|
||
are knit much cheaper than they can anywhere be wrought upon the loom.
|
||
They are the work of servants and labourers who derive the principal part
|
||
of their subsistence from some other employment. More than a thousand pair
|
||
of Shetland stockings are annually imported into Leith, of which the price
|
||
is from fivepence to seven-pence a pair. At Lerwick, the small capital of
|
||
the Shetland islands, tenpence a-day, I have been assured, is a common
|
||
price of common labour. In the same islands, they knit worsted stockings
|
||
to the value of a guinea a pair and upwards.
|
||
|
||
The spinning of linen yarn is carried on in Scotland nearly in the same
|
||
way as the knitting of stockings, by servants, who are chiefly hired for
|
||
other purposes. They earn but a very scanty subsistence, who endeavour to
|
||
get their livelihood by either of those trades. In most parts of Scotland,
|
||
she is a good spinner who can earn twentypence a-week.
|
||
|
||
In opulent countries, the market is generally so extensive, that any one
|
||
trade is sufficient to employ the whole labour and stock of those who
|
||
occupy it. Instances of people living by one employment, and, at the same
|
||
time, deriving some little advantage from another, occur chiefly in poor
|
||
countries. The following instance, however, of something of the same kind,
|
||
is to be found in the capital of a very rich one. There is no city in
|
||
Europe, I believe, in which house-rent is dearer than in London, and yet I
|
||
know no capital in which a furnished apartment can be hired so cheap.
|
||
Lodging is not only much cheaper in London than in Paris; it is much
|
||
cheaper than in Edinburgh, of the same degree of goodness; and, what may
|
||
seem extraordinary, the dearness of house-rent is the cause of the
|
||
cheapness of lodging. The dearness of house-rent in London arises, not
|
||
only from those causes which render it dear in all great capitals, the
|
||
dearness of labour, the dearness of all the materials of building, which
|
||
must generally be brought from a great distance, and, above all, the
|
||
dearness of ground-rent, every landlord acting the part of a monopolist,
|
||
and frequently exacting a higher rent for a single acre of bad land in a
|
||
town, than can be had for a hundred of the best in the country; but it
|
||
arises in part from the peculiar manners and customs of the people, which
|
||
oblige every master of a family to hire a whole house from top to bottom.
|
||
A dwelling-house in England means every thing that is contained under the
|
||
same roof. In France, Scotland, and many other parts of Europe, it
|
||
frequently means no more than a single storey. A tradesman in London is
|
||
obliged to hire a whole house in that part of the town where his customers
|
||
live. His shop is upon the ground floor, and he and his family sleep in
|
||
the garret; and he endeavours to pay a part of his house-rent by letting
|
||
the two middle storeys to lodgers. He expects to maintain his family by
|
||
his trade, and not by his lodgers. Whereas at Paris and Edinburgh, people
|
||
who let lodgings have commonly no other means of subsistence; and the
|
||
price of the lodging must pay, not only the rent of the house, but the
|
||
whole expense of the family.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
PART II.—Inequalities occasioned by the Policy of Europe.
|
||
|
||
Such are the inequalities in the whole of the advantages and disadvantages
|
||
of the different employments of labour and stock, which the defect of any
|
||
of the three requisites above mentioned must occasion, even where there is
|
||
the most perfect liberty. But the policy of Europe, by not leaving things
|
||
at perfect liberty, occasions other inequalities of much greater
|
||
importance.
|
||
|
||
It does this chiefly in the three following ways. First, by restraining
|
||
the competition in some employments to a smaller number than would
|
||
otherwise be disposed to enter into them; secondly, by increasing it in
|
||
others beyond what it naturally would be; and, thirdly, by obstructing the
|
||
free circulation of labour and stock, both from employment to employment,
|
||
and from place to place.
|
||
|
||
First, The policy of Europe occasions a very important inequality in the
|
||
whole of the advantages and disadvantages of the different employments of
|
||
labour and stock, by restraining the competition in some employments to a
|
||
smaller number than might otherwise be disposed to enter into them.
|
||
|
||
The exclusive privileges of corporations are the principal means it makes
|
||
use of for this purpose.
|
||
|
||
The exclusive privilege of an incorporated trade necessarily restrains the
|
||
competition, in the town where it is established, to those who are free of
|
||
the trade. To have served an apprenticeship in the town, under a master
|
||
properly qualified, is commonly the necessary requisite for obtaining this
|
||
freedom. The bye-laws of the corporation regulate sometimes the number of
|
||
apprentices which any master is allowed to have, and almost always the
|
||
number of years which each apprentice is obliged to serve. The intention
|
||
of both regulations is to restrain the competition to a much smaller
|
||
number than might otherwise be disposed to enter into the trade. The
|
||
limitation of the number of apprentices restrains it directly. A long term
|
||
of apprenticeship restrains it more indirectly, but as effectually, by
|
||
increasing the expense of education.
|
||
|
||
In Sheffield, no master cutler can have more than one apprentice at a
|
||
time, by a bye-law of the corporation. In Norfolk and Norwich, no master
|
||
weaver can have more than two apprentices, under pain of forfeiting five
|
||
pounds a-month to the king. No master hatter can have more than two
|
||
apprentices anywhere in England, or in the English plantations, under pain
|
||
of forfeiting; five pounds a-month, half to the king, and half to him who
|
||
shall sue in any court of record. Both these regulations, though they have
|
||
been confirmed by a public law of the kingdom, are evidently dictated by
|
||
the same corporation-spirit which enacted the bye-law of Sheffield. The
|
||
silk-weavers in London had scarce been incorporated a year, when they
|
||
enacted a bye-law, restraining any master from having more than two
|
||
apprentices at a time. It required a particular act of parliament to
|
||
rescind this bye-law.
|
||
|
||
Seven years seem anciently to have been, all over Europe, the usual term
|
||
established for the duration of apprenticeships in the greater part of
|
||
incorporated trades. All such incorporations were anciently called
|
||
universities, which, indeed, is the proper Latin name for any
|
||
incorporation whatever. The university of smiths, the university of
|
||
tailors, etc. are expressions which we commonly meet with in the old
|
||
charters of ancient towns. When those particular incorporations, which are
|
||
now peculiarly called universities, were first established, the term of
|
||
years which it was necessary to study, in order to obtain the degree of
|
||
master of arts, appears evidently to have been copied from the term of
|
||
apprenticeship in common trades, of which the incorporations were much
|
||
more ancient. As to have wrought seven years under a master properly
|
||
qualified, was necessary, in order to entitle any person to become a
|
||
master, and to have himself apprentices in a common trade; so to have
|
||
studied seven years under a master properly qualified, was necessary to
|
||
entitle him to become a master, teacher, or doctor (words anciently
|
||
synonymous), in the liberal arts, and to have scholars or apprentices
|
||
(words likewise originally synonymous) to study under him.
|
||
|
||
By the 5th of Elizabeth, commonly called the Statute of Apprenticeship, it
|
||
was enacted, that no person should, for the future, exercise any trade,
|
||
craft, or mystery, at that time exercised in England, unless he had
|
||
previously served to it an apprenticeship of seven years at least; and
|
||
what before had been the bye-law of many particular corporations, became
|
||
in England the general and public law of all trades carried on in market
|
||
towns. For though the words of the statute are very general, and seem
|
||
plainly to include the whole kingdom, by interpretation its operation has
|
||
been limited to market towns; it having been held that, in country
|
||
villages, a person may exercise several different trades, though he has
|
||
not served a seven years apprenticeship to each, they being necessary for
|
||
the conveniency of the inhabitants, and the number of people frequently
|
||
not being sufficient to supply each with a particular set of hands. By a
|
||
strict interpretation of the words, too, the operation of this statute has
|
||
been limited to those trades which were established in England before the
|
||
5th of Elizabeth, and has never been extended to such as have been
|
||
introduced since that time. This limitation has given occasion to several
|
||
distinctions, which, considered as rules of police, appear as foolish as
|
||
can well be imagined. It has been adjudged, for example, that a
|
||
coach-maker can neither himself make nor employ journeymen to make his
|
||
coach-wheels, but must buy them of a master wheel-wright; this latter
|
||
trade having been exercised in England before the 5th of Elizabeth. But a
|
||
wheel-wright, though he has never served an apprenticeship to a
|
||
coachmaker, may either himself make or employ journeymen to make coaches;
|
||
the trade of a coachmaker not being within the statute, because not
|
||
exercised in England at the time when it was made. The manufactures of
|
||
Manchester, Birmingham, and Wolverhampton, are many of them, upon this
|
||
account, not within the statute, not having been exercised in England
|
||
before the 5th of Elizabeth.
|
||
|
||
In France, the duration of apprenticeships is different in different towns
|
||
and in different trades. In Paris, five years is the term required in a
|
||
great number; but, before any person can be qualified to exercise the
|
||
trade as a master, he must, in many of them, serve five years more as a
|
||
journeyman. During this latter term, he is called the companion of his
|
||
master, and the term itself is called his companionship.
|
||
|
||
In Scotland, there is no general law which regulates universally the
|
||
duration of apprenticeships. The term is different in different
|
||
corporations. Where it is long, a part of it may generally be redeemed by
|
||
paying a small fine. In most towns, too, a very small fine is sufficient
|
||
to purchase the freedom of any corporation. The weavers of linen and
|
||
hempen cloth, the principal manufactures of the country, as well as all
|
||
other artificers subservient to them, wheel-makers, reel-makers, etc. may
|
||
exercise their trades in any town-corporate without paying any fine. In
|
||
all towns-corporate, all persons are free to sell butchers’ meat upon any
|
||
lawful day of the week. Three years is, in Scotland, a common term of
|
||
apprenticeship, even in some very nice trades; and, in general, I know of
|
||
no country in Europe, in which corporation laws are so little oppressive.
|
||
|
||
The property which every man has in his own labour, as it is the original
|
||
foundation of all other property, so it is the most sacred and inviolable.
|
||
The patrimony of a poor man lies in the strength and dexterity of his
|
||
hands; and to hinder him from employing this strength and dexterity in
|
||
what manner he thinks proper, without injury to his neighbour, is a plain
|
||
violation of this most sacred property. It is a manifest encroachment upon
|
||
the just liberty, both of the workman, and of those who might be disposed
|
||
to employ him. As it hinders the one from working at what he thinks
|
||
proper, so it hinders the others from employing whom they think proper. To
|
||
judge whether he is fit to be employed, may surely be trusted to the
|
||
discretion of the employers, whose interest it so much concerns. The
|
||
affected anxiety of the lawgiver, lest they should employ an improper
|
||
person, is evidently as impertinent as it is oppressive.
|
||
|
||
The institution of long apprenticeships can give no security that
|
||
insufficient workmanship shall not frequently be exposed to public sale.
|
||
When this is done, it is generally the effect of fraud, and not of
|
||
inability; and the longest apprenticeship can give no security against
|
||
fraud. Quite different regulations are necessary to prevent this abuse.
|
||
The sterling mark upon plate, and the stamps upon linen and woollen cloth,
|
||
give the purchaser much greater security than any statute of
|
||
apprenticeship. He generally looks at these, but never thinks it worth
|
||
while to enquire whether the workman had served a seven years
|
||
apprenticeship.
|
||
|
||
The institution of long apprenticeships has no tendency to form young
|
||
people to industry. A journeyman who works by the piece is likely to be
|
||
industrious, because he derives a benefit from every exertion of his
|
||
industry. An apprentice is likely to be idle, and almost always is so,
|
||
because he has no immediate interest to be otherwise. In the inferior
|
||
employments, the sweets of labour consist altogether in the recompence of
|
||
labour. They who are soonest in a condition to enjoy the sweets of it, are
|
||
likely soonest to conceive a relish for it, and to acquire the early habit
|
||
of industry. A young man naturally conceives an aversion to labour, when
|
||
for a long time he receives no benefit from it. The boys who are put out
|
||
apprentices from public charities are generally bound for more than the
|
||
usual number of years, and they generally turn out very idle and
|
||
worthless.
|
||
|
||
Apprenticeships were altogether unknown to the ancients. The reciprocal
|
||
duties of master and apprentice make a considerable article in every
|
||
modern code. The Roman law is perfectly silent with regard to them. I know
|
||
no Greek or Latin word (I might venture, I believe, to assert that there
|
||
is none) which expresses the idea we now annex to the word apprentice, a
|
||
servant bound to work at a particular trade for the benefit of a master,
|
||
during a term of years, upon condition that the master shall teach him
|
||
that trade.
|
||
|
||
Long apprenticeships are altogether unnecessary. The arts, which are much
|
||
superior to common trades, such as those of making clocks and watches,
|
||
contain no such mystery as to require a long course of instruction. The
|
||
first invention of such beautiful machines, indeed, and even that of some
|
||
of the instruments employed in making them, must no doubt have been the
|
||
work of deep thought and long time, and may justly be considered as among
|
||
the happiest efforts of human ingenuity. But when both have been fairly
|
||
invented, and are well understood, to explain to any young man, in the
|
||
completest manner, how to apply the instruments, and how to construct the
|
||
machines, cannot well require more than the lessons of a few weeks;
|
||
perhaps those of a few days might be sufficient. In the common mechanic
|
||
trades, those of a few days might certainly be sufficient. The dexterity
|
||
of hand, indeed, even in common trades, cannot be acquired without much
|
||
practice and experience. But a young man would practice with much more
|
||
diligence and attention, if from the beginning he wrought as a journeyman,
|
||
being paid in proportion to the little work which he could execute, and
|
||
paying in his turn for the materials which he might sometimes spoil
|
||
through awkwardness and inexperience. His education would generally in
|
||
this way be more effectual, and always less tedious and expensive. The
|
||
master, indeed, would be a loser. He would lose all the wages of the
|
||
apprentice, which he now saves, for seven years together. In the end,
|
||
perhaps, the apprentice himself would be a loser. In a trade so easily
|
||
learnt he would have more competitors, and his wages, when he came to be a
|
||
complete workman, would be much less than at present. The same increase of
|
||
competition would reduce the profits of the masters, as well as the wages
|
||
of workmen. The trades, the crafts, the mysteries, would all be losers.
|
||
But the public would be a gainer, the work of all artificers coming in
|
||
this way much cheaper to market.
|
||
|
||
It is to prevent this reduction of price, and consequently of wages and
|
||
profit, by restraining that free competition which would most certainly
|
||
occasion it, that all corporations, and the greater part of corporation
|
||
laws have been established. In order to erect a corporation, no other
|
||
authority in ancient times was requisite, in many parts of Europe, but
|
||
that of the town-corporate in which it was established. In England,
|
||
indeed, a charter from the king was likewise necessary. But this
|
||
prerogative of the crown seems to have been reserved rather for extorting
|
||
money from the subject, than for the defence of the common liberty against
|
||
such oppressive monopolies. Upon paying a fine to the king, the charter
|
||
seems generally to have been readily granted; and when any particular
|
||
class of artificers or traders thought proper to act as a corporation,
|
||
without a charter, such adulterine guilds, as they were called, were not
|
||
always disfranchised upon that account, but obliged to fine annually to
|
||
the king, for permission to exercise their usurped privileges {See Madox
|
||
Firma Burgi p. 26 etc.}. The immediate inspection of all corporations, and
|
||
of the bye-laws which they might think proper to enact for their own
|
||
government, belonged to the town-corporate in which they were established;
|
||
and whatever discipline was exercised over them, proceeded commonly, not
|
||
from the king, but from that greater incorporation of which those
|
||
subordinate ones were only parts or members.
|
||
|
||
The government of towns-corporate was altogether in the hands of traders
|
||
and artificers, and it was the manifest interest of every particular class
|
||
of them, to prevent the market from being overstocked, as they commonly
|
||
express it, with their own particular species of industry; which is in
|
||
reality to keep it always understocked. Each class was eager to establish
|
||
regulations proper for this purpose, and, provided it was allowed to do
|
||
so, was willing to consent that every other class should do the same. In
|
||
consequence of such regulations, indeed, each class was obliged to buy the
|
||
goods they had occasion for from every other within the town, somewhat
|
||
dearer than they otherwise might have done. But, in recompence, they were
|
||
enabled to sell their own just as much dearer; so that, so far it was as
|
||
broad as long, as they say; and in the dealings of the different classes
|
||
within the town with one another, none of them were losers by these
|
||
regulations. But in their dealings with the country they were all great
|
||
gainers; and in these latter dealings consist the whole trade which
|
||
supports and enriches every town.
|
||
|
||
Every town draws its whole subsistence, and all the materials of its
|
||
industry, from the country. It pays for these chiefly in two ways. First,
|
||
by sending back to the country a part of those materials wrought up and
|
||
manufactured; in which case, their price is augmented by the wages of the
|
||
workmen, and the profits of their masters or immediate employers;
|
||
secondly, by sending to it a part both of the rude and manufactured
|
||
produce, either of other countries, or of distant parts of the same
|
||
country, imported into the town; in which case, too, the original price of
|
||
those goods is augmented by the wages of the carriers or sailors, and by
|
||
the profits of the merchants who employ them. In what is gained upon the
|
||
first of those branches of commerce, consists the advantage which the town
|
||
makes by its manufactures; in what is gained upon the second, the
|
||
advantage of its inland and foreign trade. The wages of the workmen, and
|
||
the profits of their different employers, make up the whole of what is
|
||
gained upon both. Whatever regulations, therefore, tend to increase those
|
||
wages and profits beyond what they otherwise: would be, tend to enable the
|
||
town to purchase, with a smaller quantity of its labour, the produce of a
|
||
greater quantity of the labour of the country. They give the traders and
|
||
artificers in the town an advantage over the landlords, farmers, and
|
||
labourers, in the country, and break down that natural equality which
|
||
would otherwise take place in the commerce which is carried on between
|
||
them. The whole annual produce of the labour of the society is annually
|
||
divided between those two different sets of people. By means of those
|
||
regulations, a greater share of it is given to the inhabitants of the town
|
||
than would otherwise fall to them, and a less to those of the country.
|
||
|
||
The price which the town really pays for the provisions and materials
|
||
annually imported into it, is the quantity of manufactures and other goods
|
||
annually exported from it. The dearer the latter are sold, the cheaper the
|
||
former are bought. The industry of the town becomes more, and that of the
|
||
country less advantageous.
|
||
|
||
That the industry which is carried on in towns is, everywhere in Europe,
|
||
more advantageous than that which is carried on in the country, without
|
||
entering into any very nice computations, we may satisfy ourselves by one
|
||
very simple and obvious observation. In every country of Europe, we find
|
||
at least a hundred people who have acquired great fortunes, from small
|
||
beginnings, by trade and manufactures, the industry which properly belongs
|
||
to towns, for one who has done so by that which properly belongs to the
|
||
country, the raising of rude produce by the improvement and cultivation of
|
||
land. Industry, therefore, must be better rewarded, the wages of labour
|
||
and the profits of stock must evidently be greater, in the one situation
|
||
than in the other. But stock and labour naturally seek the most
|
||
advantageous employment. They naturally, therefore, resort as much as they
|
||
can to the town, and desert the country.
|
||
|
||
The inhabitants of a town being collected into one place, can easily
|
||
combine together. The most insignificant trades carried on in towns have,
|
||
accordingly, in some place or other, been incorporated; and even where
|
||
they have never been incorporated, yet the corporation-spirit, the
|
||
jealousy of strangers, the aversion to take apprentices, or to communicate
|
||
the secret of their trade, generally prevail in them, and often teach
|
||
them, by voluntary associations and agreements, to prevent that free
|
||
competition which they cannot prohibit by bye-laws. The trades which
|
||
employ but a small number of hands, run most easily into such
|
||
combinations. Half-a-dozen wool-combers, perhaps, are necessary to keep a
|
||
thousand spinners and weavers at work. By combining not to take
|
||
apprentices, they can not only engross the employment, but reduce the
|
||
whole manufacture into a sort of slavery to themselves, and raise the
|
||
price of their labour much above what is due to the nature of their work.
|
||
|
||
The inhabitants of the country, dispersed in distant places, cannot easily
|
||
combine together. They have not only never been incorporated, but the
|
||
incorporation spirit never has prevailed among them. No apprenticeship has
|
||
ever been thought necessary to qualify for husbandry, the great trade of
|
||
the country. After what are called the fine arts, and the liberal
|
||
professions, however, there is perhaps no trade which requires so great a
|
||
variety of knowledge and experience. The innumerable volumes which have
|
||
been written upon it in all languages, may satisfy us, that among the
|
||
wisest and most learned nations, it has never been regarded as a matter
|
||
very easily understood. And from all those volumes we shall in vain
|
||
attempt to collect that knowledge of its various and complicated
|
||
operations which is commonly possessed even by the common farmer; how
|
||
contemptuously soever the very contemptible authors of some of them may
|
||
sometimes affect to speak of him. There is scarce any common mechanic
|
||
trade, on the contrary, of which all the operations may not be as
|
||
completely and distinctly explained in a pamphlet of a very few pages, as
|
||
it is possible for words illustrated by figures to explain them. In the
|
||
history of the arts, now publishing by the French Academy of Sciences,
|
||
several of them are actually explained in this manner. The direction of
|
||
operations, besides, which must be varied with every change of the
|
||
weather, as well as with many other accidents, requires much more judgment
|
||
and discretion, than that of those which are always the same, or very
|
||
nearly the same.
|
||
|
||
Not only the art of the farmer, the general direction of the operations of
|
||
husbandry, but many inferior branches of country labour require much more
|
||
skill and experience than the greater part of mechanic trades. The man who
|
||
works upon brass and iron, works with instruments, and upon materials of
|
||
which the temper is always the same, or very nearly the same. But the man
|
||
who ploughs the ground with a team of horses or oxen, works with
|
||
instruments of which the health, strength, and temper, are very different
|
||
upon different occasions. The condition of the materials which he works
|
||
upon, too, is as variable as that of the instruments which he works with,
|
||
and both require to be managed with much judgment and discretion. The
|
||
common ploughman, though generally regarded as the pattern of stupidity
|
||
and ignorance, is seldom defective in this judgment and discretion. He is
|
||
less accustomed, indeed, to social intercourse, than the mechanic who
|
||
lives in a town. His voice and language are more uncouth, and more
|
||
difficult to be understood by those who are not used to them. His
|
||
understanding, however, being accustomed to consider a greater variety of
|
||
objects, is generally much superior to that of the other, whose whole
|
||
attention, from morning till night, is commonly occupied in performing one
|
||
or two very simple operations. How much the lower ranks of people in the
|
||
country are really superior to those of the town, is well known to every
|
||
man whom either business or curiosity has led to converse much with both.
|
||
In China and Indostan, accordingly, both the rank and the wages of country
|
||
labourers are said to be superior to those of the greater part of
|
||
artificers and manufacturers. They would probably be so everywhere, if
|
||
corporation laws and the corporation spirit did not prevent it.
|
||
|
||
The superiority which the industry of the towns has everywhere in Europe
|
||
over that of the country, is not altogether owing to corporations and
|
||
corporation laws. It is supported by many other regulations. The high
|
||
duties upon foreign manufactures, and upon all goods imported by alien
|
||
merchants, all tend to the same purpose. Corporation laws enable the
|
||
inhabitants of towns to raise their prices, without fearing to be
|
||
undersold by the free competition of their own countrymen. Those other
|
||
regulations secure them equally against that of foreigners. The
|
||
enhancement of price occasioned by both is everywhere finally paid by the
|
||
landlords, farmers, and labourers, of the country, who have seldom opposed
|
||
the establishment of such monopolies. They have commonly neither
|
||
inclination nor fitness to enter into combinations; and the clamour and
|
||
sophistry of merchants and manufacturers easily persuade them, that the
|
||
private interest of a part, and of a subordinate part, of the society, is
|
||
the general interest of the whole.
|
||
|
||
In Great Britain, the superiority of the industry of the towns over that
|
||
of the country seems to have been greater formerly than in the present
|
||
times. The wages of country labour approach nearer to those of
|
||
manufacturing labour, and the profits of stock employed in agriculture to
|
||
those of trading and manufacturing stock, than they are said to have done
|
||
in the last century, or in the beginning of the present. This change may
|
||
be regarded as the necessary, though very late consequence of the
|
||
extraordinary encouragement given to the industry of the towns. The stocks
|
||
accumulated in them come in time to be so great, that it can no longer be
|
||
employed with the ancient profit in that species of industry which is
|
||
peculiar to them. That industry has its limits like every other; and the
|
||
increase of stock, by increasing the competition, necessarily reduces the
|
||
profit. The lowering of profit in the town forces out stock to the
|
||
country, where, by creating a new demand for country labour, it
|
||
necessarily raises its wages. It then spreads itself, if I my say so, over
|
||
the face of the land, and, by being employed in agriculture, is in part
|
||
restored to the country, at the expense of which, in a great measure, it
|
||
had originally been accumulated in the town. That everywhere in Europe the
|
||
greatest improvements of the country have been owing to such over flowings
|
||
of the stock originally accumulated in the towns, I shall endeavour to
|
||
shew hereafter, and at the same time to demonstrate, that though some
|
||
countries have, by this course, attained to a considerable degree of
|
||
opulence, it is in itself necessarily slow, uncertain, liable to be
|
||
disturbed and interrupted by innumerable accidents, and, in every respect,
|
||
contrary to the order of nature and of reason. The interests, prejudices,
|
||
laws, and customs, which have given occasion to it, I shall endeavour to
|
||
explain as fully and distinctly as I can in the third and fourth books of
|
||
this Inquiry.
|
||
|
||
People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and
|
||
diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public,
|
||
or in some contrivance to raise prices. It is impossible, indeed, to
|
||
prevent such meetings, by any law which either could be executed, or would
|
||
be consistent with liberty and justice. But though the law cannot hinder
|
||
people of the same trade from sometimes assembling together, it ought to
|
||
do nothing to facilitate such assemblies, much less to render them
|
||
necessary.
|
||
|
||
A regulation which obliges all those of the same trade in a particular
|
||
town to enter their names and places of abode in a public register,
|
||
facilitates such assemblies. It connects individuals who might never
|
||
otherwise be known to one another, and gives every man of the trade a
|
||
direction where to find every other man of it.
|
||
|
||
A regulation which enables those of the same trade to tax themselves, in
|
||
order to provide for their poor, their sick, their widows and orphans, by
|
||
giving them a common interest to manage, renders such assemblies
|
||
necessary.
|
||
|
||
An incorporation not only renders them necessary, but makes the act of the
|
||
majority binding upon the whole. In a free trade, an effectual combination
|
||
cannot be established but by the unanimous consent of every single trader,
|
||
and it cannot last longer than every single trader continues of the same
|
||
mind. The majority of a corporation can enact a bye-law, with proper
|
||
penalties, which will limit the competition more effectually and more
|
||
durably than any voluntary combination whatever.
|
||
|
||
The pretence that corporations are necessary for the better government of
|
||
the trade, is without any foundation. The real and effectual discipline
|
||
which is exercised over a workman, is not that of his corporation, but
|
||
that of his customers. It is the fear of losing their employment which
|
||
restrains his frauds and corrects his negligence. An exclusive corporation
|
||
necessarily weakens the force of this discipline. A particular set of
|
||
workmen must then be employed, let them behave well or ill. It is upon
|
||
this account that, in many large incorporated towns, no tolerable workmen
|
||
are to be found, even in some of the most necessary trades. If you would
|
||
have your work tolerably executed, it must be done in the suburbs, where
|
||
the workmen, having no exclusive privilege, have nothing but their
|
||
character to depend upon, and you must then smuggle it into the town as
|
||
well as you can.
|
||
|
||
It is in this manner that the policy of Europe, by restraining the
|
||
competition in some employments to a smaller number than would otherwise
|
||
be disposed to enter into them, occasions a very important inequality in
|
||
the whole of the advantages and disadvantages of the different employments
|
||
of labour and stock.
|
||
|
||
Secondly, the policy of Europe, by increasing the competition in some
|
||
employments beyond what it naturally would be, occasions another
|
||
inequality, of an opposite kind, in the whole of the advantages and
|
||
disadvantages of the different employments of labour and stock.
|
||
|
||
It has been considered as of so much importance that a proper number of
|
||
young people should be educated for certain professions, that sometimes
|
||
the public, and sometimes the piety of private founders, have established
|
||
many pensions, scholarships, exhibitions, bursaries, etc. for this
|
||
purpose, which draw many more people into those trades than could
|
||
otherwise pretend to follow them. In all Christian countries, I believe,
|
||
the education of the greater part of churchmen is paid for in this
|
||
manner. Very few of them are educated altogether at their own expense.
|
||
The long, tedious, and expensive education, therefore, of those who are,
|
||
will not always procure them a suitable reward, the church being crowded
|
||
with people, who, in order to get employment, are willing to accept of a
|
||
much smaller recompence than what such an education would otherwise have
|
||
entitled them to; and in this manner the competition of the poor takes
|
||
away the reward of the rich. It would be indecent, no doubt, to compare
|
||
either a curate or a chaplain with a journeyman in any common trade. The
|
||
pay of a curate or chaplain, however, may very properly be considered as
|
||
of the same nature with the wages of a journeyman. They are all three
|
||
paid for their work according to the contract which they may happen to
|
||
make with their respective superiors. Till after the middle of the
|
||
fourteenth century, five merks, containing about as much silver as ten
|
||
pounds of our present money, was in England the usual pay of a curate or
|
||
a stipendiary parish priest, as we find it regulated by the decrees of
|
||
several different national councils. At the same period, fourpence a-day,
|
||
containing the same quantity of silver as a shilling of our present
|
||
money, was declared to be the pay of a master mason; and threepence
|
||
a-day, equal to ninepence of our present money, that of a journeyman
|
||
mason. {See the Statute of Labourers, 25, Ed. III.} The wages of both
|
||
these labourers, therefore, supposing them to have been constantly
|
||
employed, were much superior to those of the curate. The wages of the
|
||
master mason, supposing him to have been without employment one-third of
|
||
the year, would have fully equalled them. By the 12th of Queen Anne, c.
|
||
12. it is declared, “That whereas, for want of sufficient
|
||
maintenance and encouragement to curates, the cures have, in several
|
||
places, been meanly supplied, the bishop is, therefore, empowered to
|
||
appoint, by writing under his hand and seal, a sufficient certain stipend
|
||
or allowance, not exceeding fifty, and not less than twenty pounds
|
||
a-year”. Forty pounds a-year is reckoned at present very good pay
|
||
for a curate; and, notwithstanding this act of parliament, there are many
|
||
curacies under twenty pounds a-year. There are journeymen shoemakers in
|
||
London who earn forty pounds a-year, and there is scarce an industrious
|
||
workman of any kind in that metropolis who does not earn more than
|
||
twenty. This last sum, indeed, does not exceed what is frequently earned
|
||
by common labourers in many country parishes. Whenever the law has
|
||
attempted to regulate the wages of workmen, it has always been rather to
|
||
lower them than to raise them. But the law has, upon many occasions,
|
||
attempted to raise the wages of curates, and, for the dignity of the
|
||
church, to oblige the rectors of parishes to give them more than the
|
||
wretched maintenance which they themselves might be willing to accept of.
|
||
And, in both cases, the law seems to have been equally ineffectual, and
|
||
has never either been able to raise the wages of curates, or to sink
|
||
those of labourers to the degree that was intended; because it has never
|
||
been able to hinder either the one from being willing to accept of less
|
||
than the legal allowance, on account of the indigence of their situation
|
||
and the multitude of their competitors, or the other from receiving more,
|
||
on account of the contrary competition of those who expected to derive
|
||
either profit or pleasure from employing them.
|
||
|
||
The great benefices and other ecclesiastical dignities support the honour
|
||
of the church, notwithstanding the mean circumstances of some of its
|
||
inferior members. The respect paid to the profession, too, makes some
|
||
compensation even to them for the meanness of their pecuniary recompence.
|
||
In England, and in all Roman catholic countries, the lottery of the church
|
||
is in reality much more advantageous than is necessary. The example of the
|
||
churches of Scotland, of Geneva, and of several other protestant churches,
|
||
may satisfy us, that in so creditable a profession, in which education is
|
||
so easily procured, the hopes of much more moderate benefices will draw a
|
||
sufficient number of learned, decent, and respectable men into holy
|
||
orders.
|
||
|
||
In professions in which there are no benefices, such as law and physic, if
|
||
an equal proportion of people were educated at the public expense, the
|
||
competition would soon be so great as to sink very much their pecuniary
|
||
reward. It might then not be worth any man’s while to educate his son to
|
||
either of those professions at his own expense. They would be entirely
|
||
abandoned to such as had been educated by those public charities, whose
|
||
numbers and necessities would oblige them in general to content themselves
|
||
with a very miserable recompence, to the entire degradation of the now
|
||
respectable professions of law and physic.
|
||
|
||
That unprosperous race of men, commonly called men of letters, are pretty
|
||
much in the situation which lawyers and physicians probably would be in,
|
||
upon the foregoing supposition. In every part of Europe, the greater part
|
||
of them have been educated for the church, but have been hindered by
|
||
different reasons from entering into holy orders. They have generally,
|
||
therefore, been educated at the public expense; and their numbers are
|
||
everywhere so great, as commonly to reduce the price of their labour to a
|
||
very paltry recompence.
|
||
|
||
Before the invention of the art of printing, the only employment by which
|
||
a man of letters could make any thing by his talents, was that of a public
|
||
or private teacher, or by communicating to other people the curious and
|
||
useful knowledge which he had acquired himself; and this is still surely a
|
||
more honourable, a more useful, and, in general, even a more profitable
|
||
employment than that other of writing for a bookseller, to which the art
|
||
of printing has given occasion. The time and study, the genius, knowledge,
|
||
and application requisite to qualify an eminent teacher of the sciences,
|
||
are at least equal to what is necessary for the greatest practitioners in
|
||
law and physic. But the usual reward of the eminent teacher bears no
|
||
proportion to that of the lawyer or physician, because the trade of the
|
||
one is crowded with indigent people, who have been brought up to it at the
|
||
public expense; whereas those of the other two are encumbered with very
|
||
few who have not been educated at their own. The usual recompence,
|
||
however, of public and private teachers, small as it may appear, would
|
||
undoubtedly be less than it is, if the competition of those yet more
|
||
indigent men of letters, who write for bread, was not taken out of the
|
||
market. Before the invention of the art of printing, a scholar and a
|
||
beggar seem to have been terms very nearly synonymous. The different
|
||
governors of the universities, before that time, appear to have often
|
||
granted licences to their scholars to beg.
|
||
|
||
In ancient times, before any charities of this kind had been established
|
||
for the education of indigent people to the learned professions, the
|
||
rewards of eminent teachers appear to have been much more considerable.
|
||
Isocrates, in what is called his discourse against the sophists,
|
||
reproaches the teachers of his own times with inconsistency. “They make
|
||
the most magnificent promises to their scholars,” says he, “and undertake
|
||
to teach them to be wise, to be happy, and to be just; and, in return for
|
||
so important a service, they stipulate the paltry reward of four or five
|
||
minae.” “They who teach wisdom,” continues he, “ought certainly to be wise
|
||
themselves; but if any man were to sell such a bargain for such a price,
|
||
he would be convicted of the most evident folly.” He certainly does not
|
||
mean here to exaggerate the reward, and we may be assured that it was not
|
||
less than he represents it. Four minae were equal to thirteen pounds six
|
||
shillings and eightpence; five minae to sixteen pounds thirteen shillings
|
||
and fourpence. Something not less than the largest of those two sums,
|
||
therefore, must at that time have been usually paid to the most eminent
|
||
teachers at Athens. Isocrates himself demanded ten minae, or £ 33:6:8 from
|
||
each scholar. When he taught at Athens, he is said to have had a hundred
|
||
scholars. I understand this to be the number whom he taught at one time,
|
||
or who attended what we would call one course of lectures; a number which
|
||
will not appear extraordinary from so great a city to so famous a teacher,
|
||
who taught, too, what was at that time the most fashionable of all
|
||
sciences, rhetoric. He must have made, therefore, by each course of
|
||
lectures, a thousand minae, or £ 3335:6:8. A thousand minae, accordingly,
|
||
is said by Plutarch, in another place, to have been his didactron, or
|
||
usual price of teaching. Many other eminent teachers in those times appear
|
||
to have acquired great fortunes. Georgias made a present to the temple of
|
||
Delphi of his own statue in solid gold. We must not, I presume, suppose
|
||
that it was as large as the life. His way of living, as well as that of
|
||
Hippias and Protagoras, two other eminent teachers of those times, is
|
||
represented by Plato as splendid, even to ostentation. Plato himself is
|
||
said to have lived with a good deal of magnificence. Aristotle, after
|
||
having been tutor to Alexander, and most munificently rewarded, as it is
|
||
universally agreed, both by him and his father, Philip, thought it worth
|
||
while, notwithstanding, to return to Athens, in order to resume the
|
||
teaching of his school. Teachers of the sciences were probably in those
|
||
times less common than they came to be in an age or two afterwards, when
|
||
the competition had probably somewhat reduced both the price of their
|
||
labour and the admiration for their persons. The most eminent of them,
|
||
however, appear always to have enjoyed a degree of consideration much
|
||
superior to any of the like profession in the present times. The Athenians
|
||
sent Carneades the academic, and Diogenes the stoic, upon a solemn embassy
|
||
to Rome; and though their city had then declined from its former grandeur,
|
||
it was still an independent and considerable republic.
|
||
|
||
Carneades, too, was a Babylonian by birth; and as there never was a people
|
||
more jealous of admitting foreigners to public offices than the Athenians,
|
||
their consideration for him must have been very great.
|
||
|
||
This inequality is, upon the whole, perhaps rather advantageous than
|
||
hurtful to the public. It may somewhat degrade the profession of a public
|
||
teacher; but the cheapness of literary education is surely an advantage
|
||
which greatly overbalances this trifling inconveniency. The public, too,
|
||
might derive still greater benefit from it, if the constitution of those
|
||
schools and colleges, in which education is carried on, was more
|
||
reasonable than it is at present through the greater part of Europe.
|
||
|
||
Thirdly, the policy of Europe, by obstructing the free circulation of
|
||
labour and stock, both from employment to employment, and from place to
|
||
place, occasions, in some cases, a very inconvenient inequality in the
|
||
whole of the advantages and disadvantages of their different employments.
|
||
|
||
The statute of apprenticeship obstructs the free circulation of labour
|
||
from one employment to another, even in the same place. The exclusive
|
||
privileges of corporations obstruct it from one place to another, even in
|
||
the same employment.
|
||
|
||
It frequently happens, that while high wages are given to the workmen in
|
||
one manufacture, those in another are obliged to content themselves with
|
||
bare subsistence. The one is in an advancing state, and has therefore a
|
||
continual demand for new hands; the other is in a declining state, and the
|
||
superabundance of hands is continually increasing. Those two manufactures
|
||
may sometimes be in the same town, and sometimes in the same
|
||
neighbourhood, without being able to lend the least assistance to one
|
||
another. The statute of apprenticeship may oppose it in the one case, and
|
||
both that and an exclusive corporation in the other. In many different
|
||
manufactures, however, the operations are so much alike, that the workmen
|
||
could easily change trades with one another, if those absurd laws did not
|
||
hinder them. The arts of weaving plain linen and plain silk, for example,
|
||
are almost entirely the same. That of weaving plain woollen is somewhat
|
||
different; but the difference is so insignificant, that either a linen or
|
||
a silk weaver might become a tolerable workman in a very few days. If any
|
||
of those three capital manufactures, therefore, were decaying, the workmen
|
||
might find a resource in one of the other two which was in a more
|
||
prosperous condition; and their wages would neither rise too high in the
|
||
thriving, nor sink too low in the decaying manufacture. The linen
|
||
manufacture, indeed, is in England, by a particular statute, open to every
|
||
body; but as it is not much cultivated through the greater part of the
|
||
country, it can afford no general resource to the work men of other
|
||
decaying manufactures, who, wherever the statute of apprenticeship takes
|
||
place, have no other choice, but either to come upon the parish, or to
|
||
work as common labourers; for which, by their habits, they are much worse
|
||
qualified than for any sort of manufacture that bears any resemblance to
|
||
their own. They generally, therefore, chuse to come upon the parish.
|
||
|
||
Whatever obstructs the free circulation of labour from one employment to
|
||
another, obstructs that of stock likewise; the quantity of stock which can
|
||
be employed in any branch of business depending very much upon that of the
|
||
labour which can be employed in it. Corporation laws, however, give less
|
||
obstruction to the free circulation of stock from one place to another,
|
||
than to that of labour. It is everywhere much easier for a wealthy
|
||
merchant to obtain the privilege of trading in a town-corporate, than for
|
||
a poor artificer to obtain that of working in it.
|
||
|
||
The obstruction which corporation laws give to the free circulation of
|
||
labour is common, I believe, to every part of Europe. That which is given
|
||
to it by the poor laws is, so far as I know, peculiar to England. It
|
||
consists in the difficulty which a poor man finds in obtaining a
|
||
settlement, or even in being allowed to exercise his industry in any
|
||
parish but that to which he belongs. It is the labour of artificers and
|
||
manufacturers only of which the free circulation is obstructed by
|
||
corporation laws. The difficulty of obtaining settlements obstructs even
|
||
that of common labour. It may be worth while to give some account of the
|
||
rise, progress, and present state of this disorder, the greatest, perhaps,
|
||
of any in the police of England.
|
||
|
||
When, by the destruction of monasteries, the poor had been deprived of the
|
||
charity of those religious houses, after some other ineffectual attempts
|
||
for their relief, it was enacted, by the 43d of Elizabeth, c. 2. that
|
||
every parish should be bound to provide for its own poor, and that
|
||
overseers of the poor should be annually appointed, who, with the
|
||
church-wardens, should raise, by a parish rate, competent sums for this
|
||
purpose.
|
||
|
||
By this statute, the necessity of providing for their own poor was
|
||
indispensably imposed upon every parish. Who were to be considered as the
|
||
poor of each parish became, therefore, a question of some importance. This
|
||
question, after some variation, was at last determined by the 13th and
|
||
14th of Charles II. when it was enacted, that forty days undisturbed
|
||
residence should gain any person a settlement in any parish; but that
|
||
within that time it should be lawful for two justices of the peace, upon
|
||
complaint made by the church-wardens or overseers of the poor, to remove
|
||
any new inhabitant to the parish where he was last legally settled; unless
|
||
he either rented a tenement of ten pounds a-year, or could give such
|
||
security for the discharge of the parish where he was then living, as
|
||
those justices should judge sufficient.
|
||
|
||
Some frauds, it is said, were committed in consequence of this statute;
|
||
parish officers sometimes bribing their own poor to go clandestinely to
|
||
another parish, and, by keeping themselves concealed for forty days, to
|
||
gain a settlement there, to the discharge of that to which they properly
|
||
belonged. It was enacted, therefore, by the 1st of James II. that the
|
||
forty days undisturbed residence of any person necessary to gain a
|
||
settlement, should be accounted only from the time of his delivering
|
||
notice, in writing, of the place of his abode and the number of his
|
||
family, to one of the church-wardens or overseers of the parish where he
|
||
came to dwell.
|
||
|
||
But parish officers, it seems, were not always more honest with regard to
|
||
their own than they had been with regard to other parishes, and sometimes
|
||
connived at such intrusions, receiving the notice, and taking no proper
|
||
steps in consequence of it. As every person in a parish, therefore, was
|
||
supposed to have an interest to prevent as much as possible their being
|
||
burdened by such intruders, it was further enacted by the 3rd of William
|
||
III. that the forty days residence should be accounted only from the
|
||
publication of such notice in writing on Sunday in the church, immediately
|
||
after divine service.
|
||
|
||
“After all,” says Doctor Burn, “this kind of settlement, by continuing
|
||
forty days after publication of notice in writing, is very seldom
|
||
obtained; and the design of the acts is not so much for gaining of
|
||
settlements, as for the avoiding of them by persons coming into a parish
|
||
clandestinely, for the giving of notice is only putting a force upon the
|
||
parish to remove. But if a person’s situation is such, that it is doubtful
|
||
whether he is actually removable or not, he shall, by giving of notice,
|
||
compel the parish either to allow him a settlement uncontested, by
|
||
suffering him to continue forty days, or by removing him to try the
|
||
right.”
|
||
|
||
This statute, therefore, rendered it almost impracticable for a poor man
|
||
to gain a new settlement in the old way, by forty days inhabitancy. But
|
||
that it might not appear to preclude altogether the common people of one
|
||
parish from ever establishing themselves with security in another, it
|
||
appointed four other ways by which a settlement might be gained without
|
||
any notice delivered or published. The first was, by being taxed to parish
|
||
rates and paying them; the second, by being elected into an annual parish
|
||
office, and serving in it a year; the third, by serving an apprenticeship
|
||
in the parish; the fourth, by being hired into service there for a year,
|
||
and continuing in the same service during the whole of it. Nobody can gain
|
||
a settlement by either of the two first ways, but by the public deed of
|
||
the whole parish, who are too well aware of the consequences to adopt any
|
||
new-comer, who has nothing but his labour to support him, either by taxing
|
||
him to parish rates, or by electing him into a parish office.
|
||
|
||
No married man can well gain any settlement in either of the two last
|
||
ways. An apprentice is scarce ever married; and it is expressly enacted,
|
||
that no married servant shall gain any settlement by being hired for a
|
||
year. The principal effect of introducing settlement by service, has been
|
||
to put out in a great measure the old fashion of hiring for a year; which
|
||
before had been so customary in England, that even at this day, if no
|
||
particular term is agreed upon, the law intends that every servant is
|
||
hired for a year. But masters are not always willing to give their
|
||
servants a settlement by hiring them in this manner; and servants are not
|
||
always willing to be so hired, because, as every last settlement
|
||
discharges all the foregoing, they might thereby lose their original
|
||
settlement in the places of their nativity, the habitation of their
|
||
parents and relations.
|
||
|
||
No independent workman, it is evident, whether labourer or artificer, is
|
||
likely to gain any new settlement, either by apprenticeship or by service.
|
||
When such a person, therefore, carried his industry to a new parish, he
|
||
was liable to be removed, how healthy and industrious soever, at the
|
||
caprice of any churchwarden or overseer, unless he either rented a
|
||
tenement of ten pounds a-year, a thing impossible for one who has nothing
|
||
but his labour to live by, or could give such security for the discharge
|
||
of the parish as two justices of the peace should judge sufficient.
|
||
|
||
What security they shall require, indeed, is left altogether to their
|
||
discretion; but they cannot well require less than thirty pounds, it
|
||
having been enacted, that the purchase even of a freehold estate of less
|
||
than thirty pounds value, shall not gain any person a settlement, as not
|
||
being sufficient for the discharge of the parish. But this is a security
|
||
which scarce any man who lives by labour can give; and much greater
|
||
security is frequently demanded.
|
||
|
||
In order to restore, in some measure, that free circulation of labour
|
||
which those different statutes had almost entirely taken away, the
|
||
invention of certificates was fallen upon. By the 8th and 9th of William
|
||
III. it was enacted that if any person should bring a certificate from the
|
||
parish where he was last legally settled, subscribed by the church-wardens
|
||
and overseers of the poor, and allowed by two justices of the peace, that
|
||
every other parish should be obliged to receive him; that he should not be
|
||
removable merely upon account of his being likely to become chargeable,
|
||
but only upon his becoming actually chargeable; and that then the parish
|
||
which granted the certificate should be obliged to pay the expense both of
|
||
his maintenance and of his removal. And in order to give the most perfect
|
||
security to the parish where such certificated man should come to reside,
|
||
it was further enacted by the same statute, that he should gain no
|
||
settlement there by any means whatever, except either by renting a
|
||
tenement of ten pounds a-year, or by serving upon his own account in an
|
||
annual parish office for one whole year; and consequently neither by
|
||
notice nor by service, nor by apprenticeship, nor by paying parish rates.
|
||
By the 12th of Queen Anne, too, stat. 1, c.18, it was further enacted,
|
||
that neither the servants nor apprentices of such certificated man should
|
||
gain any settlement in the parish where he resided under such certificate.
|
||
|
||
How far this invention has restored that free circulation of labour, which
|
||
the preceding statutes had almost entirely taken away, we may learn from
|
||
the following very judicious observation of Doctor Burn. “It is obvious,”
|
||
says he, “that there are divers good reasons for requiring certificates
|
||
with persons coming to settle in any place; namely, that persons residing
|
||
under them can gain no settlement, neither by apprenticeship, nor by
|
||
service, nor by giving notice, nor by paying parish rates; that they can
|
||
settle neither apprentices nor servants; that if they become chargeable,
|
||
it is certainly known whither to remove them, and the parish shall be paid
|
||
for the removal, and for their maintenance in the mean time; and that, if
|
||
they fall sick, and cannot be removed, the parish which gave the
|
||
certificate must maintain them; none of all which can be without a
|
||
certificate. Which reasons will hold proportionably for parishes not
|
||
granting certificates in ordinary cases; for it is far more than an equal
|
||
chance, but that they will have the certificated persons again, and in a
|
||
worse condition.” The moral of this observation seems to be, that
|
||
certificates ought always to be required by the parish where any poor man
|
||
comes to reside, and that they ought very seldom to be granted by that
|
||
which he purposes to leave. “There is somewhat of hardship in this matter
|
||
of certificates,” says the same very intelligent author, in his History of
|
||
the Poor Laws, “by putting it in the power of a parish officer to imprison
|
||
a man as it were for life, however inconvenient it may be for him to
|
||
continue at that place where he has had the misfortune to acquire what is
|
||
called a settlement, or whatever advantage he may propose himself by
|
||
living elsewhere.”
|
||
|
||
Though a certificate carries along with it no testimonial of good
|
||
behaviour, and certifies nothing but that the person belongs to the parish
|
||
to which he really does belong, it is altogether discretionary in the
|
||
parish officers either to grant or to refuse it. A mandamus was once moved
|
||
for, says Doctor Burn, to compel the church-wardens and overseers to sign
|
||
a certificate; but the Court of King’s Bench rejected the motion as a very
|
||
strange attempt.
|
||
|
||
The very unequal price of labour which we frequently find in England, in
|
||
places at no great distance from one another, is probably owing to the
|
||
obstruction which the law of settlements gives to a poor man who would
|
||
carry his industry from one parish to another without a certificate. A
|
||
single man, indeed who is healthy and industrious, may sometimes reside by
|
||
sufferance without one; but a man with a wife and family who should
|
||
attempt to do so, would, in most parishes, be sure of being removed; and,
|
||
if the single man should afterwards marry, he would generally be removed
|
||
likewise. The scarcity of hands in one parish, therefore, cannot always be
|
||
relieved by their superabundance in another, as it is constantly in
|
||
Scotland, and I believe, in all other countries where there is no
|
||
difficulty of settlement. In such countries, though wages may sometimes
|
||
rise a little in the neighbourhood of a great town, or wherever else there
|
||
is an extraordinary demand for labour, and sink gradually as the distance
|
||
from such places increases, till they fall back to the common rate of the
|
||
country; yet we never meet with those sudden and unaccountable differences
|
||
in the wages of neighbouring places which we sometimes find in England,
|
||
where it is often more difficult for a poor man to pass the artificial
|
||
boundary of a parish, than an arm of the sea, or a ridge of high
|
||
mountains, natural boundaries which sometimes separate very distinctly
|
||
different rates of wages in other countries.
|
||
|
||
To remove a man who has committed no misdemeanour, from the parish where
|
||
he chooses to reside, is an evident violation of natural liberty and
|
||
justice. The common people of England, however, so jealous of their
|
||
liberty, but like the common people of most other countries, never rightly
|
||
understanding wherein it consists, have now, for more than a century
|
||
together, suffered themselves to be exposed to this oppression without a
|
||
remedy. Though men of reflection, too, have sometimes complained of the
|
||
law of settlements as a public grievance; yet it has never been the object
|
||
of any general popular clamour, such as that against general warrants, an
|
||
abusive practice undoubtedly, but such a one as was not likely to occasion
|
||
any general oppression. There is scarce a poor man in England, of forty
|
||
years of age, I will venture to say, who has not, in some part of his
|
||
life, felt himself most cruelly oppressed by this ill-contrived law of
|
||
settlements.
|
||
|
||
I shall conclude this long chapter with observing, that though anciently
|
||
it was usual to rate wages, first by general laws extending over the whole
|
||
kingdom, and afterwards by particular orders of the justices of peace in
|
||
every particular county, both these practices have now gone entirely into
|
||
disuse. “By the experience of above four hundred years,” says Doctor Burn,
|
||
“it seems time to lay aside all endeavours to bring under strict
|
||
regulations, what in its own nature seems incapable of minute limitation;
|
||
for if all persons in the same kind of work were to receive equal wages,
|
||
there would be no emulation, and no room left for industry or ingenuity.”
|
||
|
||
Particular acts of parliament, however, still attempt sometimes to
|
||
regulate wages in particular trades, and in particular places. Thus the
|
||
8th of George III. prohibits, under heavy penalties, all master tailors in
|
||
London, and five miles round it, from giving, and their workmen from
|
||
accepting, more than two shillings and sevenpence halfpenny a-day, except
|
||
in the case of a general mourning. Whenever the legislature attempts to
|
||
regulate the differences between masters and their workmen, its
|
||
counsellors are always the masters. When the regulation, therefore, is in
|
||
favour of the workmen, it is always just and equitable; but it is
|
||
sometimes otherwise when in favour of the masters. Thus the law which
|
||
obliges the masters in several different trades to pay their workmen in
|
||
money, and not in goods, is quite just and equitable. It imposes no real
|
||
hardship upon the masters. It only obliges them to pay that value in
|
||
money, which they pretended to pay, but did not always really pay, in
|
||
goods. This law is in favour of the workmen; but the 8th of George III. is
|
||
in favour of the masters. When masters combine together, in order to
|
||
reduce the wages of their workmen, they commonly enter into a private bond
|
||
or agreement, not to give more than a certain wage, under a certain
|
||
penalty. Were the workmen to enter into a contrary combination of the same
|
||
kind, not to accept of a certain wage, under a certain penalty, the law
|
||
would punish them very severely; and, if it dealt impartially, it would
|
||
treat the masters in the same manner. But the 8th of George III. enforces
|
||
by law that very regulation which masters sometimes attempt to establish
|
||
by such combinations. The complaint of the workmen, that it puts the
|
||
ablest and most industrious upon the same footing with an ordinary
|
||
workman, seems perfectly well founded.
|
||
|
||
In ancient times, too, it was usual to attempt to regulate the profits of
|
||
merchants and other dealers, by regulating the price of provisions and
|
||
ether goods. The assize of bread is, so far as I know, the only remnant of
|
||
this ancient usage. Where there is an exclusive corporation, it may,
|
||
perhaps, be proper to regulate the price of the first necessary of life;
|
||
but, where there is none, the competition will regulate it much better
|
||
than any assize. The method of fixing the assize of bread, established by
|
||
the 31st of George II. could not be put in practice in Scotland, on
|
||
account of a defect in the law, its execution depending upon the office of
|
||
clerk of the market, which does not exist there. This defect was not
|
||
remedied till the third of George III. The want of an assize occasioned no
|
||
sensible inconveniency; and the establishment of one in the few places
|
||
where it has yet taken place has produced no sensible advantage. In the
|
||
greater part of the towns in Scotland, however, there is an incorporation
|
||
of bakers, who claim exclusive privileges, though they are not very
|
||
strictly guarded. The proportion between the different rates, both of
|
||
wages and profit, in the different employments of labour and stock, seems
|
||
not to be much affected, as has already been observed, by the riches or
|
||
poverty, the advancing, stationary, or declining state of the society.
|
||
Such revolutions in the public welfare, though they affect the general
|
||
rates both of wages and profit, must, in the end, affect them equally in
|
||
all different employments. The proportion between them, therefore, must
|
||
remain the same, and cannot well be altered, at least for any considerable
|
||
time, by any such revolutions.
|