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>
1457 lines
100 KiB
Markdown
1457 lines
100 KiB
Markdown
---
|
||
id: book-4-chapter-05
|
||
title: "OF BOUNTIES."
|
||
book: "4"
|
||
chapter: 5
|
||
artifact_type: content
|
||
---
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER V.
|
||
OF BOUNTIES.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bounties upon exportation are, in Great Britain, frequently petitioned
|
||
for, and sometimes granted, to the produce of particular branches of
|
||
domestic industry. By means of them, our merchants and manufacturers, it
|
||
is pretended, will be enabled to sell their goods as cheap or cheaper than
|
||
their rivals in the foreign market. A greater quantity, it is said, will
|
||
thus be exported, and the balance of trade consequently turned more in
|
||
favour of our own country. We cannot give our workmen a monopoly in the
|
||
foreign, as we have done in the home market. We cannot force foreigners to
|
||
buy their goods, as we have done our own countrymen. The next best
|
||
expedient, it has been thought, therefore, is to pay them for buying. It
|
||
is in this manner that the mercantile system proposes to enrich the whole
|
||
country, and to put money into all our pockets, by means of the balance of
|
||
trade.
|
||
|
||
Bounties, it is allowed, ought to be given to those branches of trade only
|
||
which cannot be carried on without them. But every branch of trade in
|
||
which the merchant can sell his goods for a price which replaces to him,
|
||
with the ordinary profits of stock, the whole capital employed in
|
||
preparing and sending them to market, can be carried on without a bounty.
|
||
Every such branch is evidently upon a level with all the other branches of
|
||
trade which are carried on without bounties, and cannot, therefore,
|
||
require one more than they. Those trades only require bounties, in which
|
||
the merchant is obliged to sell his goods for a price which does not
|
||
replace to him his capital, together with the ordinary profit, or in which
|
||
he is obliged to sell them for less than it really cost him to send them
|
||
to market. The bounty is given in order to make up this loss, and to
|
||
encourage him to continue, or, perhaps, to begin a trade, of which the
|
||
expense is supposed to be greater than the returns, of which every
|
||
operation eats up a part of the capital employed in it, and which is of
|
||
such a nature, that if all other trades resembled it, there would soon be
|
||
no capital left in the country.
|
||
|
||
The trades, it is to be observed, which are carried on by means of
|
||
bounties, are the only ones which can be carried on between two nations
|
||
for any considerable time together, in such a manner as that one of them
|
||
shall always and regularly lose, or sell its goods for less than it
|
||
really cost to send them to market. But if the bounty did not repay to the
|
||
merchant what he would otherwise lose upon the price of his goods, his own
|
||
interest would soon oblige him to employ his stock in another way, or to
|
||
find out a trade in which the price of the goods would replace to him,
|
||
with the ordinary profit, the capital employed in sending them to market.
|
||
The effect of bounties, like that of all the other expedients of the
|
||
mercantile system, can only be to force the trade of a country into a
|
||
channel much less advantageous than that in which it would naturally run
|
||
of its own accord.
|
||
|
||
The ingenious and well-informed author of the Tracts upon the Corn Trade
|
||
has shown very clearly, that since the bounty upon the exportation of corn
|
||
was first established, the price of the corn exported, valued moderately
|
||
enough, has exceeded that of the corn imported, valued very high, by a
|
||
much greater sum than the amount of the whole bounties which have been
|
||
paid during that period. This, he imagines, upon the true principles of
|
||
the mercantile system, is a clear proof that this forced corn trade is
|
||
beneficial to the nation, the value of the exportation exceeding that of
|
||
the importation by a much greater sum than the whole extraordinary expense
|
||
which the public has been at in order to get it exported. He does not
|
||
consider that this extraordinary expense, or the bounty, is the smallest
|
||
part of the expense which the exportation of corn really costs the
|
||
society. The capital which the farmer employed in raising it must likewise
|
||
be taken into the account. Unless the price of the corn, when sold in the
|
||
foreign markets, replaces not only the bounty, but this capital, together
|
||
with the ordinary profits of stock, the society is a loser by the
|
||
difference, or the national stock is so much diminished. But the very
|
||
reason for which it has been thought necessary to grant a bounty, is the
|
||
supposed insufficiency of the price to do this.
|
||
|
||
The average price of corn, it has been said, has fallen considerably since
|
||
the establishment of the bounty. That the average price of corn began to
|
||
fall somewhat towards the end of the last century, and has continued to do
|
||
so during the course of the sixty-four first years of the present, I have
|
||
already endeavoured to show. But this event, supposing it to be real, as I
|
||
believe it to be, must have happened in spite of the bounty, and cannot
|
||
possibly have happened in consequence of it. It has happened in France, as
|
||
well as in England, though in France there was not only no bounty, but,
|
||
till 1764, the exportation of corn was subjected to a general prohibition.
|
||
This gradual fall in the average price of grain, it is probable,
|
||
therefore, is ultimately owing neither to the one regulation nor to the
|
||
other, but to that gradual and insensible rise in the real value of
|
||
silver, which, in the first book of this discourse, I have endeavoured to
|
||
show, has taken place in the general market of Europe during the course of
|
||
the present century. It seems to be altogether impossible that the bounty
|
||
could ever contribute to lower the price of grain.
|
||
|
||
In years of plenty, it has already been observed, the bounty, by
|
||
occasioning an extraordinary exportation, necessarily keeps up the price
|
||
of corn in the home market above what it would naturally fall to. To do so
|
||
was the avowed purpose of the institution. In years of scarcity, though
|
||
the bounty is frequently suspended, yet the great exportation which it
|
||
occasions in years of plenty, must frequently hinder, more or less, the
|
||
plenty of one year from relieving the scarcity of another. Both in years
|
||
of plenty and in years of scarcity, therefore, the bounty necessarily
|
||
tends to raise the money price of corn somewhat higher than it otherwise
|
||
would be in the home market.
|
||
|
||
That in the actual state of tillage the bounty must necessarily have this
|
||
tendency, will not, I apprehend, be disputed by any reasonable person. But
|
||
it has been thought by many people, that it tends to encourage tillage,
|
||
and that in two different ways; first, by opening a more extensive foreign
|
||
market to the corn of the farmer, it tends, they imagine, to increase the
|
||
demand for, and consequently the production of, that commodity; and,
|
||
secondly by securing to him a better price than he could otherwise expect
|
||
in the actual state of tillage, it tends, they suppose, to encourage
|
||
tillage. This double encouragement must they imagine, in a long period of
|
||
years, occasion such an increase in the production of corn, as may lower
|
||
its price in the home market, much more than the bounty can raise it in
|
||
the actual state which tillage may, at the end of that period, happen to
|
||
be in.
|
||
|
||
I answer, that whatever extension of the foreign market can be occasioned
|
||
by the bounty must, in every particular year, be altogether at the expense
|
||
of the home market; as every bushel of corn, which is exported by means of
|
||
the bounty, and which would not have been exported without the bounty,
|
||
would have remained in the home market to increase the consumption, and to
|
||
lower the price of that commodity. The corn bounty, it is to be observed,
|
||
as well as every other bounty upon exportation, imposes two different
|
||
taxes upon the people; first, the tax which they are obliged to
|
||
contribute, in order to pay the bounty; and, secondly, the tax which
|
||
arises from the advanced price of the commodity in the home market, and
|
||
which, as the whole body of the people are purchasers of corn, must, in
|
||
this particular commodity, be paid by the whole body of the people. In
|
||
this particular commodity, therefore, this second tax is by much the
|
||
heaviest of the two. Let us suppose that, taking one year with another,
|
||
the bounty of 5s. upon the exportation of the quarter of wheat raises the
|
||
price of that commodity in the home market only 6d. the bushel, or 4s. the
|
||
quarter higher than it otherwise would have been in the actual state of
|
||
the crop. Even upon this very moderate supposition, the great body of the
|
||
people, over and above contributing the tax which pays the bounty of 5s.
|
||
upon every quarter of wheat exported, must pay another of 4s. upon every
|
||
quarter which they themselves consume. But according to the very well
|
||
informed author of the Tracts upon the Corn Trade, the average proportion
|
||
of the corn exported to that consumed at home, is not more than that of
|
||
one to thirty-one. For every 5s. therefore, which they contribute to the
|
||
payment of the first tax, they must contribute £6:4s. to the payment of
|
||
the second. So very heavy a tax upon the first necessary of life-must
|
||
either reduce the subsistence of the labouring poor, or it must occasion
|
||
some augmentation in their pecuniary wages, proportionable to that in the
|
||
pecuniary price of their subsistence. So far as it operates in the one
|
||
way, it must reduce the ability of the labouring poor to educate and bring
|
||
up their children, and must, so far, tend to restrain the population of
|
||
the country. So far as it operates in the other, it must reduce the
|
||
ability of the employers of the poor, to employ so great a number as they
|
||
otherwise might do, and must so far tend to restrain the industry of the
|
||
country. The extraordinary exportation of corn, therefore occasioned by
|
||
the bounty, not only in every particular year diminishes the home, just as
|
||
much as it extends the foreign market and consumption, but, by restraining
|
||
the population and industry of the country, its final tendency is to stint
|
||
and restrain the gradual extension of the home market; and thereby, in the
|
||
long-run, rather to diminish than to augment the whole market and
|
||
consumption of corn.
|
||
|
||
This enhancement of the money price of corn, however, it has been thought,
|
||
by rendering that commodity more profitable to the farmer, must
|
||
necessarily encourage its production.
|
||
|
||
I answer, that this might be the case, if the effect of the bounty was to
|
||
raise the real price of corn, or to enable the farmer, with an equal
|
||
quantity of it, to maintain a greater number of labourers in the same
|
||
manner, whether liberal, moderate, or scanty, than other labourers are
|
||
commonly maintained in his neighbourhood. But neither the bounty, it is
|
||
evident, nor any other human institution, can have any such effect. It is
|
||
not the real, but the nominal price of corn, which can in any considerable
|
||
degree be affected by the bounty. And though the tax, which that
|
||
institution imposes upon the whole body of the people, may be very
|
||
burdensome to those who pay it, it is of very little advantage to those
|
||
who receive it.
|
||
|
||
The real effect of the bounty is not so much to raise the real value of
|
||
corn, as to degrade the real value of silver; or to make an equal quantity
|
||
of it exchange for a smaller quantity, not only of corn, but of all other
|
||
home made commodities; for the money price of corn regulates that of all
|
||
other home made commodities.
|
||
|
||
It regulates the money price of labour, which must always be such as to
|
||
enable the labourer to purchase a quantity of corn sufficient to maintain
|
||
him and his family, either in the liberal, moderate, or scanty manner, in
|
||
which the advancing, stationary, or declining, circumstances of the
|
||
society, oblige his employers to maintain him.
|
||
|
||
It regulates the money price of all the other parts of the rude produce of
|
||
land, which, in every period of improvement, must bear a certain
|
||
proportion to that of corn, though this proportion is different in
|
||
different periods. It regulates, for example, the money price of grass and
|
||
hay, of butcher’s meat, of horses, and the maintenance of horses, of land
|
||
carriage consequently, or of the greater part of the inland commerce of
|
||
the country.
|
||
|
||
By regulating the money price of all the other parts of the rude produce
|
||
of land, it regulates that of the materials of almost all manufactures; by
|
||
regulating the money price of labour, it regulates that of manufacturing
|
||
art and industry; and by regulating both, it regulates that of the
|
||
complete manufacture. The money price of labour, and of every thing that
|
||
is the produce, either of land or labour, must necessarily either rise or
|
||
fall in proportion to the money price of corn.
|
||
|
||
Though in consequence of the bounty, therefore, the farmer should be
|
||
enabled to sell his corn for 4s. the bushel, instead of 3s:6d. and to pay
|
||
his landlord a money rent proportionable to this rise in the money price
|
||
of his produce; yet if, in consequence of this rise in the price of corn,
|
||
4s. will purchase no more home made goods of any other kind than 3s. 6d.
|
||
would have done before, neither the circumstances of the farmer, nor those
|
||
of the landlord, will be much mended by this change. The farmer will not
|
||
be able to cultivate much better; the landlord will not be able to live
|
||
much better. In the purchase of foreign commodities, this enhancement in
|
||
the price of corn may give them some little advantage. In that of home
|
||
made commodities, it can give them none at all. And almost the whole
|
||
expense of the farmer, and the far greater part even of that of the
|
||
landlord, is in home made commodities.
|
||
|
||
That degradation in the value of silver, which is the effect of the
|
||
fertility of the mines, and which operates equally, or very nearly
|
||
equally, through the greater part of the commercial world, is a matter of
|
||
very little consequence to any particular country. The consequent rise of
|
||
all money prices, though it does not make those who receive them really
|
||
richer, does not make them really poorer. A service of plate becomes
|
||
really cheaper, and every thing else remains precisely of the same real
|
||
value as before.
|
||
|
||
But that degradation in the value of silver, which, being the effect
|
||
either of the peculiar situation or of the political institutions of a
|
||
particular country, takes place only in that country, is a matter of very
|
||
great consequence, which, far from tending to make anybody really richer,
|
||
tends to make every body really poorer. The rise in the money price of all
|
||
commodities, which is in this case peculiar to that country, tends to
|
||
discourage more or less every sort of industry which is carried on within
|
||
it, and to enable foreign nations, by furnishing almost all sorts of goods
|
||
for a smaller quantity of silver than its own workmen can afford to do, to
|
||
undersell them, not only in the foreign, but even in the home market.
|
||
|
||
It is the peculiar situation of Spain and Portugal, as proprietors of the
|
||
mines, to be the distributers of gold and silver to all the other
|
||
countries of Europe. Those metals ought naturally, therefore, to be
|
||
somewhat cheaper in Spain and Portugal than in any other part of Europe.
|
||
The difference, however, should be no more than the amount of the freight
|
||
and insurance; and, on account of the great value and small bulk of those
|
||
metals, their freight is no great matter, and their insurance is the same
|
||
as that of any other goods of equal value. Spain and Portugal, therefore,
|
||
could suffer very little from their peculiar situation, if they did not
|
||
aggravate its disadvantages by their political institutions.
|
||
|
||
Spain by taxing, and Portugal by prohibiting, the exportation of gold and
|
||
silver, load that exportation with the expense of smuggling, and raise the
|
||
value of those metals in other countries so much more above what it is in
|
||
their own, by the whole amount of this expense. When you dam up a stream
|
||
of water, as soon as the dam is full, as much water must run over the
|
||
dam-head as if there was no dam at all. The prohibition of exportation
|
||
cannot detain a greater quantity of gold and silver in Spain and Portugal,
|
||
than what they can afford to employ, than what the annual produce of their
|
||
land and labour will allow them to employ, in coin, plate, gilding, and
|
||
other ornaments of gold and silver. When they have got this quantity, the
|
||
dam is full, and the whole stream which flows in afterwards must run over.
|
||
The annual exportation of gold and silver from Spain and Portugal,
|
||
accordingly, is, by all accounts, notwithstanding these restraints, very
|
||
near equal to the whole annual importation. As the water, however, must
|
||
always be deeper behind the dam-head than before it, so the quantity of
|
||
gold and silver which these restraints detain in Spain and Portugal, must,
|
||
in proportion to the annual produce of their land and labour, be greater
|
||
than what is to be found in other countries. The higher and stronger the
|
||
dam-head, the greater must be the difference in the depth of water behind
|
||
and before it. The higher the tax, the higher the penalties with which the
|
||
prohibition is guarded, the more vigilant and severe the police which
|
||
looks after the execution of the law, the greater must be the difference
|
||
in the proportion of gold and silver to the annual produce of the land and
|
||
labour of Spain and Portugal, and to that of other countries. It is said,
|
||
accordingly, to be very considerable, and that you frequently find there a
|
||
profusion of plate in houses, where there is nothing else which would in
|
||
other countries be thought suitable or correspondent to this sort of
|
||
magnificence. The cheapness of gold and silver, or, what is the same
|
||
thing, the dearness of all commodities, which is the necessary effect of
|
||
this redundancy of the precious metals, discourages both the agriculture
|
||
and manufactures of Spain and Portugal, and enables foreign nations to
|
||
supply them with many sorts of rude, and with almost all sorts of
|
||
manufactured produce, for a smaller quantity of gold and silver than what
|
||
they themselves can either raise or make them for at home. The tax and
|
||
prohibition operate in two different ways. They not only lower very much
|
||
the value of the precious metals in Spain and Portugal, but by detaining
|
||
there a certain quantity of those metals which would otherwise flow over
|
||
other countries, they keep up their value in those other countries
|
||
somewhat above what it otherwise would be, and thereby give those
|
||
countries a double advantage in their commerce with Spain and Portugal.
|
||
Open the flood-gates, and there will presently be less water above, and
|
||
more below the dam-head, and it will soon come to a level in both places.
|
||
Remove the tax and the prohibition, and as the quantity of gold and silver
|
||
will diminish considerably in Spain and Portugal, so it will increase
|
||
somewhat in other countries; and the value of those metals, their
|
||
proportion to the annual produce of land and labour, will soon come to a
|
||
level, or very near to a level, in all. The loss which Spain and Portugal
|
||
could sustain by this exportation of their gold and silver, would be
|
||
altogether nominal and imaginary. The nominal value of their goods, and of
|
||
the annual produce of their land and labour, would fall, and would be
|
||
expressed or represented by a smaller quantity of silver than before; but
|
||
their real value would be the same as before, and would be sufficient to
|
||
maintain, command, and employ the same quantity of labour. As the nominal
|
||
value of their goods would fall, the real value of what remained of their
|
||
gold and silver would rise, and a smaller quantity of those metals would
|
||
answer all the same purposes of commerce and circulation which had
|
||
employed a greater quantity before. The gold and silver which would go
|
||
abroad would not go abroad for nothing, but would bring back an equal
|
||
value of goods of some kind or other. Those goods, too, would not be all
|
||
matters of mere luxury and expense, to be consumed by idle people, who
|
||
produce nothing in return for their consumption. As the real wealth and
|
||
revenue of idle people would not be augmented by this extraordinary
|
||
exportation of gold and silver, so neither would their consumption be much
|
||
augmented by it. Those goods would probably, the greater part of them, and
|
||
certainly some part of them, consist in materials, tools, and provisions,
|
||
for the employment and maintenance of industrious people, who would
|
||
reproduce, with a profit, the full value of their consumption. A part of
|
||
the dead stock of the society would thus be turned into active stock, and
|
||
would put into motion a greater quantity of industry than had been
|
||
employed before. The annual produce of their land and labour would
|
||
immediately be augmented a little, and in a few years would probably be
|
||
augmented a great deal; their industry being thus relieved from one of the
|
||
most oppressive burdens which it at present labours under.
|
||
|
||
The bounty upon the exportation of corn necessarily operates exactly in
|
||
the same way as this absurd policy of Spain and Portugal. Whatever be the
|
||
actual state of tillage, it renders our corn somewhat dearer in the home
|
||
market than it otherwise would be in that state, and somewhat cheaper in
|
||
the foreign; and as the average money price of corn regulates, more or
|
||
less, that of all other commodities, it lowers the value of silver
|
||
considerably in the one, and tends to raise it a little in the other. It
|
||
enables foreigners, the Dutch in particular, not only to eat our corn
|
||
cheaper than they otherwise could do, but sometimes to eat it cheaper than
|
||
even our own people can do upon the same occasions; as we are assured by
|
||
an excellent authority, that of Sir Matthew Decker. It hinders our own
|
||
workmen from furnishing their goods for so small a quantity of silver as
|
||
they otherwise might do, and enables the Dutch to furnish theirs for a
|
||
smaller. It tends to render our manufactures somewhat dearer in every
|
||
market, and theirs somewhat cheaper, than they otherwise would be, and
|
||
consequently to give their industry a double advantage over our own.
|
||
|
||
The bounty, as it raises in the home market, not so much the real, as the
|
||
nominal price of our corn; as it augments, not the quantity of labour
|
||
which a certain quantity of corn can maintain and employ, but only the
|
||
quantity of silver which it will exchange for; it discourages our
|
||
manufactures, without rendering any considerable service, either to our
|
||
farmers or country gentlemen. It puts, indeed, a little more money into
|
||
the pockets of both, and it will perhaps be somewhat difficult to persuade
|
||
the greater part of them that this is not rendering them a very
|
||
considerable service. But if this money sinks in its value, in the
|
||
quantity of labour, provisions, and home-made commodities of all different
|
||
kinds which it is capable of purchasing, as much as it rises in its
|
||
quantity, the service will be little more than nominal and imaginary.
|
||
|
||
There is, perhaps, but one set of men in the whole commonwealth to whom
|
||
the bounty either was or could be essentially serviceable. These were the
|
||
corn merchants, the exporters and importers of corn. In years of plenty,
|
||
the bounty necessarily occasioned a greater exportation than would
|
||
otherwise have taken place; and by hindering the plenty of the one year
|
||
from relieving the scarcity of another, it occasioned in years of scarcity
|
||
a greater importation than would otherwise have been necessary. It
|
||
increased the business of the corn merchant in both; and in the years of
|
||
scarcity, it not only enabled him to import a greater quantity, but to
|
||
sell it for a better price, and consequently with a greater profit, than
|
||
he could otherwise have made, if the plenty of one year had not been more
|
||
or less hindered from relieving the scarcity of another. It is in this set
|
||
of men, accordingly, that I have observed the greatest zeal for the
|
||
continuance or renewal of the bounty.
|
||
|
||
Our country gentlemen, when they imposed the high duties upon the
|
||
exportation of foreign corn, which in times of moderate plenty amount to a
|
||
prohibition, and when they established the bounty, seem to have imitated
|
||
the conduct of our manufacturers. By the one institution, they secured to
|
||
themselves the monopoly of the home market, and by the other they
|
||
endeavoured to prevent that market from ever being overstocked with their
|
||
commodity. By both they endeavoured to raise its real value, in the same
|
||
manner as our manufacturers had, by the like institutions, raised the real
|
||
value of many different sorts of manufactured goods. They did not,
|
||
perhaps, attend to the great and essential difference which nature has
|
||
established between corn and almost every other sort of goods. When,
|
||
either by the monopoly of the home market, or by a bounty upon
|
||
exportation, you enable our woollen or linen manufacturers to sell their
|
||
goods for somewhat a better price than they otherwise could get for them,
|
||
you raise, not only the nominal, but the real price of those goods; you
|
||
render them equivalent to a greater quantity of labour and subsistence;
|
||
you increase not only the nominal, but the real profit, the real wealth
|
||
and revenue of those manufacturers; and you enable them, either to live
|
||
better themselves, or to employ a greater quantity of labour in those
|
||
particular manufactures. You really encourage those manufactures, and
|
||
direct towards them a greater quantity of the industry of the country than
|
||
what would properly go to them of its own accord. But when, by the like
|
||
institutions, you raise the nominal or money price of corn, you do not
|
||
raise its real value; you do not increase the real wealth, the real
|
||
revenue, either of our farmers or country gentlemen; you do not encourage
|
||
the growth of corn, because you do not enable them to maintain and employ
|
||
more labourers in raising it. The nature of things has stamped upon corn a
|
||
real value, which cannot be altered by merely altering its money price. No
|
||
bounty upon exportation, no monopoly of the home market, can raise that
|
||
value. The freest competition cannot lower it, Through the world in
|
||
general, that value is equal to the quantity of labour which it can
|
||
maintain, and in every particular place it is equal to the quantity of
|
||
labour which it can maintain in the way, whether liberal, moderate, or
|
||
scanty, in which labour is commonly maintained in that place. Woollen or
|
||
linen cloth are not the regulating commodities by which the real value of
|
||
all other commodities must be finally measured and determined; corn is.
|
||
The real value of every other commodity is finally measured and determined
|
||
by the proportion which its average money price bears to the average money
|
||
price of corn. The real value of corn does not vary with those variations
|
||
in its average money price, which sometimes occur from one century to
|
||
another; it is the real value of silver which varies with them.
|
||
|
||
Bounties upon the exportation of any homemade commodity are liable, first,
|
||
to that general objection which may be made to all the different
|
||
expedients of the mercantile system; the objection of forcing some part of
|
||
the industry of the country into a channel less advantageous than that in
|
||
which it would run of its own accord; and, secondly, to the particular
|
||
objection of forcing it not only into a channel that is less advantageous,
|
||
but into one that is actually disadvantageous; the trade which cannot be
|
||
carried on but by means of a bounty being necessarily a losing trade. The
|
||
bounty upon the exportation of corn is liable to this further objection,
|
||
that it can in no respect promote the raising of that particular commodity
|
||
of which it was meant to encourage the production. When our country
|
||
gentlemen, therefore, demanded the establishment of the bounty, though
|
||
they acted in imitation of our merchants and manufacturers, they did not
|
||
act with that complete comprehension of their own interest, which commonly
|
||
directs the conduct of those two other orders of people. They loaded the
|
||
public revenue with a very considerable expense: they imposed a very heavy
|
||
tax upon the whole body of the people; but they did not, in any sensible
|
||
degree, increase the real value of their own commodity; and by lowering
|
||
somewhat the real value of silver, they discouraged, in some degree, the
|
||
general industry of the country, and, instead of advancing, retarded more
|
||
or less the improvement of their own lands, which necessarily depend upon
|
||
the general industry of the country.
|
||
|
||
To encourage the production of any commodity, a bounty upon production,
|
||
one should imagine, would have a more direct operation than one upon
|
||
exportation. It would, besides, impose only one tax upon the people, that
|
||
which they must contribute in order to pay the bounty. Instead of raising,
|
||
it would tend to lower the price of the commodity in the home market; and
|
||
thereby, instead of imposing a second tax upon the people, it might, at
|
||
least in part, repay them for what they had contributed to the first.
|
||
Bounties upon production, however, have been very rarely granted. The
|
||
prejudices established by the commercial system have taught us to believe,
|
||
that national wealth arises more immediately from exportation than from
|
||
production. It has been more favoured, accordingly, as the more immediate
|
||
means of bringing money into the country. Bounties upon production, it has
|
||
been said too, have been found by experience more liable to frauds than
|
||
those upon exportation. How far this is true, I know not. That bounties
|
||
upon exportation have been abused, to many fraudulent purposes, is very
|
||
well known. But it is not the interest of merchants and manufacturers, the
|
||
great inventors of all these expedients, that the home market should be
|
||
overstocked with their goods; an event which a bounty upon production
|
||
might sometimes occasion. A bounty upon exportation, by enabling them to
|
||
send abroad their surplus part, and to keep up the price of what remains
|
||
in the home market, effectually prevents this. Of all the expedients of
|
||
the mercantile system, accordingly, it is the one of which they are the
|
||
fondest. I have known the different undertakers of some particular works
|
||
agree privately among themselves to give a bounty out of their own pockets
|
||
upon the exportation of a certain proportion of the goods which they dealt
|
||
in. This expedient succeeded so well, that it more than doubled the price
|
||
of their goods in the home market, notwithstanding a very considerable
|
||
increase in the produce. The operation of the bounty upon corn must have
|
||
been wonderfully different, if it has lowered the money price of that
|
||
commodity.
|
||
|
||
Something like a bounty upon production, however, has been granted upon
|
||
some particular occasions. The tonnage bounties given to the white herring
|
||
and whale fisheries may, perhaps, be considered as somewhat of this
|
||
nature. They tend directly, it may be supposed, to render the goods
|
||
cheaper in the home market than they otherwise would be. In other
|
||
respects, their effects, it must be acknowledged, are the same as those of
|
||
bounties upon exportation. By means of them, a part of the capital of the
|
||
country is employed in bringing goods to market, of which the price does
|
||
not repay the cost, together with the ordinary profits of stock.
|
||
|
||
But though the tonnage bounties to those fisheries do not contribute to
|
||
the opulence of the nation, it may, perhaps, be thought that they
|
||
contribute to its defence, by augmenting the number of its sailors and
|
||
shipping. This, it may be alleged, may sometimes be done by means of such
|
||
bounties, at a much smaller expense than by keeping up a great standing
|
||
navy, if I may use such an expression, in the same way as a standing army.
|
||
|
||
Notwithstanding these favourable allegations, however, the following
|
||
considerations dispose me to believe, that in granting at least one of
|
||
these bounties, the legislature has been very grossly imposed upon:
|
||
|
||
First, The herring-buss bounty seems too large.
|
||
|
||
From the commencement of the winter fishing 1771, to the end of the winter
|
||
fishing 1781, the tonnage bounty upon the herring-buss fishery has been at
|
||
thirty shillings the ton. During these eleven years, the whole number of
|
||
barrels caught by the herring-buss fishery of Scotland amounted to
|
||
378,347. The herrings caught and cured at sea are called sea-sticks. In
|
||
order to render them what are called merchantable herrings, it is
|
||
necessary to repack them with an additional quantity of salt; and in this
|
||
case, it is reckoned, that three barrels of sea-sticks are usually
|
||
repacked into two barrels of merchantable herrings. The number of barrels
|
||
of merchantable herrings, therefore, caught during these eleven years,
|
||
will amount only, according to this account, to 252,231¼. During these
|
||
eleven years, the tonnage bounties paid amounted to £155,463:11s. or
|
||
8s:2¼d. upon every barrel of sea-sticks, and to 12s:3¾d. upon every barrel
|
||
of merchantable herrings.
|
||
|
||
The salt with which these herrings are cured is sometimes Scotch, and
|
||
sometimes foreign salt; both which are delivered, free of all excise duty,
|
||
to the fish-curers. The excise duty upon Scotch salt is at present 1s:6d.,
|
||
that upon foreign salt 10s. the bushel. A barrel of herrings is supposed
|
||
to require about one bushel and one-fourth of a bushel foreign salt. Two
|
||
bushels are the supposed average of Scotch salt. If the herrings are
|
||
entered for exportation, no part of this duty is paid up; if entered for
|
||
home consumption, whether the herrings were cured with foreign or with
|
||
Scotch salt, only one shilling the barrel is paid up. It was the old
|
||
Scotch duty upon a bushel of salt, the quantity which, at a low
|
||
estimation, had been supposed necessary for curing a barrel of herrings.
|
||
In Scotland, foreign salt is very little used for any other purpose but
|
||
the curing of fish. But from the 5th April 1771 to the 5th April 1782, the
|
||
quantity of foreign salt imported amounted to 936,974 bushels, at
|
||
eighty-four pounds the bushel; the quantity of Scotch salt delivered from
|
||
the works to the fish-curers, to no more than 168,226, at fifty-six pounds
|
||
the bushel only. It would appear, therefore, that it is principally
|
||
foreign salt that is used in the fisheries. Upon every barrel of herrings
|
||
exported, there is, besides, a bounty of 2s:8d. and more than two-thirds
|
||
of the buss-caught herrings are exported. Put all these things together,
|
||
and you will find that, during these eleven years, every barrel of
|
||
buss-caught herrings, cured with Scotch salt, when exported, has cost
|
||
government 17s:11¾d.; and, when entered for home consumption, 14s:3¾d.;
|
||
and that every barrel cured with foreign salt, when exported, has cost
|
||
government £1:7:5¾d.; and, when entered for home consumption, £1:3:9¾d.
|
||
The price of a barrel of good merchantable herrings runs from seventeen
|
||
and eighteen to four and five-and-twenty shillings; about a guinea at an
|
||
average. {See the accounts at the end of this Book.}
|
||
|
||
Secondly, The bounty to the white-herring fishery is a tonnage bounty, and
|
||
is proportioned to the burden of the ship, not to her diligence or success
|
||
in the fishery; and it has, I am afraid, been too common for the vessels
|
||
to fit out for the sole purpose of catching, not the fish but the bounty.
|
||
In the year 1759, when the bounty was at fifty shillings the ton, the
|
||
whole buss fishery of Scotland brought in only four barrels of sea-sticks.
|
||
In that year, each barrel of sea-sticks cost government, in bounties
|
||
alone, £113:15s.; each barrel of merchantable herrings £159:7:6.
|
||
|
||
Thirdly, The mode of fishing, for which this tonnage bounty in the white
|
||
herring fishery has been given (by busses or decked vessels from twenty to
|
||
eighty tons burden ), seems not so well adapted to the situation of
|
||
Scotland, as to that of Holland, from the practice of which country it
|
||
appears to have been borrowed. Holland lies at a great distance from the
|
||
seas to which herrings are known principally to resort, and can,
|
||
therefore, carry on that fishery only in decked vessels, which can carry
|
||
water and provisions sufficient for a voyage to a distant sea; but the
|
||
Hebrides, or Western Islands, the islands of Shetland, and the northern
|
||
and north-western coasts of Scotland, the countries in whose neighbourhood
|
||
the herring fishery is principally carried on, are everywhere intersected
|
||
by arms of the sea, which run up a considerable way into the land, and
|
||
which, in the language of the country, are called sea-lochs. It is to
|
||
these sea-lochs that the herrings principally resort during the seasons in
|
||
which they visit these seas; for the visits of this, and, I am assured, of
|
||
many other sorts of fish, are not quite regular and constant. A
|
||
boat-fishery, therefore, seems to be the mode of fishing best adapted to
|
||
the peculiar situation of Scotland, the fishers carrying the herrings on
|
||
shore as fast as they are taken, to be either cured or consumed fresh. But
|
||
the great encouragement which a bounty of 30s. the ton gives to the
|
||
buss-fishery, is necessarily a discouragement to the boat-fishery, which,
|
||
having no such bounty, cannot bring its cured fish to market upon the same
|
||
terms as the buss-fishery. The boat-fishery; accordingly, which, before
|
||
the establishment of the buss-bounty, was very considerable, and is said
|
||
to have employed a number of seamen, not inferior to what the buss-fishery
|
||
employs at present, is now gone almost entirely to decay. Of the former
|
||
extent, however, of this now ruined and abandoned fishery, I must
|
||
acknowledge that I cannot pretend to speak with much precision. As no
|
||
bounty was-paid upon the outfit of the boat-fishery, no account was taken
|
||
of it by the officers of the customs or salt duties.
|
||
|
||
Fourthly, In many parts of Scotland, during certain seasons of the year,
|
||
herrings make no inconsiderable part of the food of the common people. A
|
||
bounty which tended to lower their price in the home market, might
|
||
contribute a good deal to the relief of a great number of our
|
||
fellow-subjects, whose circumstances are by no means affluent. But the
|
||
herring-bus bounty contributes to no such good purpose. It has ruined the
|
||
boat fishery, which is by far the best adapted for the supply of the home
|
||
market; and the additional bounty of 2s:8d. the barrel upon exportation,
|
||
carries the greater part, more than two-thirds, of the produce of the
|
||
buss-fishery abroad. Between thirty and forty years ago, before the
|
||
establishment of the buss-bounty, 16s. the barrel, I have been assured,
|
||
was the common price of white herrings. Between ten and fifteen years ago,
|
||
before the boat-fishery was entirely ruined, the price was said to have
|
||
run from seventeen to twenty shillings the barrel. For these last five
|
||
years, it has, at an average, been at twenty-five shillings the barrel.
|
||
This high price, however, may have been owing to the real scarcity of the
|
||
herrings upon the coast of Scotland. I must observe, too, that the cask or
|
||
barrel, which is usually sold with the herrings, and of which the price is
|
||
included in all the foregoing prices, has, since the commencement of the
|
||
American war, risen to about double its former price, or from about 3s. to
|
||
about 6s. I must likewise observe, that the accounts I have received of
|
||
the prices of former times, have been by no means quite uniform and
|
||
consistent, and an old man of great accuracy and experience has assured
|
||
me, that, more than fifty years ago, a guinea was the usual price of a
|
||
barrel of good merchantable herrings; and this, I imagine, may still be
|
||
looked upon as the average price. All accounts, however, I think, agree
|
||
that the price has not been lowered in the home market in consequence of
|
||
the buss-bounty.
|
||
|
||
When the undertakers of fisheries, after such liberal bounties have been
|
||
bestowed upon them, continue to sell their commodity at the same, or even
|
||
at a higher price than they were accustomed to do before, it might be
|
||
expected that their profits should be very great; and it is not improbable
|
||
that those of some individuals may have been so. In general, however, I
|
||
have every reason to believe they have been quite otherwise. The usual
|
||
effect of such bounties is, to encourage rash undertakers to adventure in
|
||
a business which they do not understand; and what they lose by their own
|
||
negligence and ignorance, more than compensates all that they can gain by
|
||
the utmost liberality of government. In 1750, by the same act which first
|
||
gave the bounty of 30s. the ton for the encouragement of the white herring
|
||
fishery (the 23d Geo. II. chap. 24), a joint stock company was erected,
|
||
with a capital of £500,000, to which the subscribers (over and above all
|
||
other encouragements, the tonnage bounty just now mentioned, the
|
||
exportation bounty of 2s:8d. the barrel, the delivery of both British and
|
||
foreign salt duty free) were, during the space of fourteen years, for
|
||
every hundred pounds which they subscribed and paid into the stock of the
|
||
society, entitled to three pounds a-year, to be paid by the
|
||
receiver-general of the customs in equal half-yearly payments. Besides
|
||
this great company, the residence of whose governor and directors was to
|
||
be in London, it was declared lawful to erect different fishing chambers
|
||
in all the different out-ports of the kingdom, provided a sum not less
|
||
than £10,000 was subscribed into the capital of each, to be managed at its
|
||
own risk, and for its own profit and loss. The same annuity, and the same
|
||
encouragements of all kinds, were given to the trade of those inferior
|
||
chambers as to that of the great company. The subscription of the great
|
||
company was soon filled up, and several different fishing chambers were
|
||
erected in the different out-ports of the kingdom. In spite of all these
|
||
encouragements, almost all those different companies, both great and
|
||
small, lost either the whole or the greater part of their capitals; scarce
|
||
a vestige now remains of any of them, and the white-herring fishery is now
|
||
entirely, or almost entirely, carried on by private adventurers.
|
||
|
||
If any particular manufacture was necessary, indeed, for the defence of
|
||
the society, it might not always be prudent to depend upon our neighbours
|
||
for the supply; and if such manufacture could not otherwise be supported
|
||
at home, it might not be unreasonable that all the other branches of
|
||
industry should be taxed in order to support it. The bounties upon the
|
||
exportation of British made sail-cloth, and British made gunpowder, may,
|
||
perhaps, both be vindicated upon this principle.
|
||
|
||
But though it can very seldom be reasonable to tax the industry of the
|
||
great body of the people, in order to support that of some particular
|
||
class of manufacturers; yet, in the wantonness of great prosperity, when
|
||
the public enjoys a greater revenue than it knows well what to do with, to
|
||
give such bounties to favourite manufactures, may, perhaps, be as natural
|
||
as to incur any other idle expense. In public, as well as in private
|
||
expenses, great wealth, may, perhaps, frequently be admitted as an apology
|
||
for great folly. But there must surely be something more than ordinary
|
||
absurdity in continuing such profusion in times of general difficulty and
|
||
distress.
|
||
|
||
What is called a bounty, is sometimes no more than a drawback, and,
|
||
consequently, is not liable to the same objections as what is properly a
|
||
bounty. The bounty, for example, upon refined sugar exported, may be
|
||
considered as a drawback of the duties upon the brown and Muscovado
|
||
sugars, from which it is made; the bounty upon wrought silk exported, a
|
||
drawback of the duties upon raw and thrown silk imported; the bounty upon
|
||
gunpowder exported, a drawback of the duties upon brimstone and saltpetre
|
||
imported. In the language of the customs, those allowances only are called
|
||
drawbacks which are given upon goods exported in the same form in which
|
||
they are imported. When that form has been so altered by manufacture of
|
||
any kind as to come under a new denomination, they are called bounties.
|
||
|
||
Premiums given by the public to artists and manufacturers, who excel in
|
||
their particular occupations, are not liable to the same objections as
|
||
bounties. By encouraging extraordinary dexterity and ingenuity, they serve
|
||
to keep up the emulation of the workmen actually employed in those
|
||
respective occupations, and are not considerable enough to turn towards
|
||
any one of them a greater share of the capital of the country than what
|
||
would go to it of its own accord. Their tendency is not to overturn the
|
||
natural balance of employments, but to render the work which is done in
|
||
each as perfect and complete as possible. The expense of premiums,
|
||
besides, is very trifling, that of bounties very great. The bounty upon
|
||
corn alone has sometimes cost the public, in one year, more than £300,000.
|
||
|
||
Bounties are sometimes called premiums, as drawbacks are sometimes called
|
||
bounties. But we must, in all cases, attend to the nature of the thing,
|
||
without paying any regard to the word.
|
||
|
||
Digression concerning the Corn Trade and Corn Laws.
|
||
|
||
I cannot conclude this chapter concerning bounties, without observing,
|
||
that the praises which have been bestowed upon the law which establishes
|
||
the bounty upon the exportation of corn, and upon that system of
|
||
regulations which is connected with it, are altogether unmerited. A
|
||
particular examination of the nature of the corn trade, and of the
|
||
principal British laws which relate to it, will sufficiently demonstrate
|
||
the truth of this assertion. The great importance of this subject must
|
||
justify the length of the digression.
|
||
|
||
The trade of the corn merchant is composed of four different branches,
|
||
which, though they may sometimes be all carried on by the same person,
|
||
are, in their own nature, four separate and distinct trades. These are,
|
||
first, the trade of the inland dealer; secondly, that of the
|
||
merchant-importer for home consumption; thirdly, that of the
|
||
merchant-exporter of home produce for foreign consumption; and, fourthly,
|
||
that of the merchant-carrier, or of the importer of corn, in order to
|
||
export it again.
|
||
|
||
I. The interest of the inland dealer, and that of the great body of the
|
||
people, how opposite soever they may at first appear, are, even in years
|
||
of the greatest scarcity, exactly the same. It is his interest to raise
|
||
the price of his corn as high as the real scarcity of the season
|
||
requires, and it can never be his interest to raise it higher. By raising
|
||
the price, he discourages the consumption, and puts every body more or
|
||
less, but particularly the inferior ranks of people, upon thrift and good
|
||
management. If, by raising it too high, he discourages the consumption so
|
||
much that the supply of the season is likely to go beyond the consumption
|
||
of the season, and to last for some time after the next crop begins to
|
||
come in, he runs the hazard, not only of losing a considerable part of
|
||
his corn by natural causes, but of being obliged to sell what remains of
|
||
it for much less than what he might have had for it several months
|
||
before. If, by not raising the price high enough, he discourages the
|
||
consumption so little, that the supply of the season is likely to fall
|
||
short of the consumption of the season, he not only loses a part of the
|
||
profit which he might otherwise have made, but he exposes the people to
|
||
suffer before the end of the season, instead of the hardships of a
|
||
dearth, the dreadful horrors of a famine. It is the interest of the
|
||
people that their daily, weekly, and monthly consumption should be
|
||
proportioned as exactly as possible to the supply of the season. The
|
||
interest of the inland corn dealer is the same. By supplying them, as
|
||
nearly as he can judge, in this proportion, he is likely to sell all his
|
||
corn for the highest price, and with the greatest profit; and his
|
||
knowledge of the state of the crop, and of his daily, weekly, and monthly
|
||
sales, enables him to judge, with more or less accuracy, how far they
|
||
really are supplied in this manner. Without intending the interest of the
|
||
people, he is necessarily led, by a regard to his own interest, to treat
|
||
them, even in years of scarcity, pretty much in the same manner as the
|
||
prudent master of a vessel is sometimes obliged to treat his crew. When
|
||
he foresees that provisions are likely to run short, he puts them upon
|
||
short allowance. Though from excess of caution he should sometimes do
|
||
this without any real necessity, yet all the inconveniencies which his
|
||
crew can thereby suffer are inconsiderable, in comparison of the danger,
|
||
misery, and ruin, to which they might sometimes be exposed by a less
|
||
provident conduct. Though, from excess of avarice, in the same manner,
|
||
the inland corn merchant should sometimes raise the price of his corn
|
||
somewhat higher than the scarcity of the season requires, yet all the
|
||
inconveniencies which the people can suffer from this conduct, which
|
||
effectually secures them from a famine in the end of the season, are
|
||
inconsiderable, in comparison of what they might have been exposed to by
|
||
a more liberal way of dealing in the beginning of it the corn merchant
|
||
himself is likely to suffer the most by this excess of avarice; not only
|
||
from the indignation which it generally excites against him, but, though
|
||
he should escape the effects of this indignation, from the quantity of
|
||
corn which it necessarily leaves upon his hands in the end of the season,
|
||
and which, if the next season happens to prove favourable, he must always
|
||
sell for a much lower price than he might otherwise have had.
|
||
|
||
Were it possible, indeed, for one great company of merchants to possess
|
||
themselves of the whole crop of an extensive country, it might perhaps be
|
||
their interest to deal with it, as the Dutch are said to do with the
|
||
spiceries of the Moluccas, to destroy or throw away a considerable part of
|
||
it, in order to keep up the price of the rest. But it is scarce possible,
|
||
even by the violence of law, to establish such an extensive monopoly with
|
||
regard to corn; and wherever the law leaves the trade free, it is of all
|
||
commodities the least liable to be engrossed or monopolised by the force
|
||
a few large capitals, which buy up the greater part of it. Not only its
|
||
value far exceeds what the capitals of a few private men are capable of
|
||
purchasing; but, supposing they were capable of purchasing it, the manner
|
||
in which it is produced renders this purchase altogether impracticable.
|
||
As, in every civilized country, it is the commodity of which the annual
|
||
consumption is the greatest; so a greater quantity of industry is annually
|
||
employed in producing corn than in producing any other commodity. When it
|
||
first comes from the ground, too, it is necessarily divided among a
|
||
greater number of owners than any other commodity; and these owners can
|
||
never be collected into one place, like a number of independent
|
||
manufacturers, but are necessarily scattered through all the different
|
||
corners of the country. These first owners either immediately supply the
|
||
consumers in their own neighbourhood, or they supply other inland dealers,
|
||
who supply those consumers. The inland dealers in corn, therefore,
|
||
including both the farmer and the baker, are necessarily more numerous
|
||
than the dealers in any other commodity; and their dispersed situation
|
||
renders it altogether impossible for them to enter into any general
|
||
combination. If, in a year of scarcity, therefore, any of them should find
|
||
that he had a good deal more corn upon hand than, at the current price, he
|
||
could hope to dispose of before the end of the season, he would never
|
||
think of keeping up this price to his own loss, and to the sole benefit of
|
||
his rivals and competitors, but would immediately lower it, in order to
|
||
get rid of his corn before the new crop began to come in. The same
|
||
motives, the same interests, which would thus regulate the conduct of any
|
||
one dealer, would regulate that of every other, and oblige them all in
|
||
general to sell their corn at the price which, according to the best of
|
||
their judgment, was most suitable to the scarcity or plenty of the season.
|
||
|
||
Whoever examines, with attention, the history of the dearths and famines
|
||
which have afflicted any part of Europe during either the course of the
|
||
present or that of the two preceding centuries, of several of which we
|
||
have pretty exact accounts, will find, I believe, that a dearth never has
|
||
arisen from any combination among the inland dealers in corn, nor from any
|
||
other cause but a real scarcity, occasioned sometimes, perhaps, and in
|
||
some particular places, by the waste of war, but in by far the greatest
|
||
number of cases by the fault of the seasons; and that a famine has never
|
||
arisen from any other cause but the violence of government attempting, by
|
||
improper means, to remedy the inconveniencies of a dearth.
|
||
|
||
In an extensive corn country, between all the different parts of which
|
||
there is a free commerce and communication, the scarcity occasioned by the
|
||
most unfavourable seasons can never be so great as to produce a famine;
|
||
and the scantiest crop, if managed with frugality and economy, will
|
||
maintain, through the year, the same number of people that are commonly
|
||
fed in a more affluent manner by one of moderate plenty. The seasons most
|
||
unfavourable to the crop are those of excessive drought or excessive rain.
|
||
But as corn grows equally upon high and low lands, upon grounds that are
|
||
disposed to be too wet, and upon those that are disposed to be too dry,
|
||
either the drought or the rain, which is hurtful to one part of the
|
||
country, is favourable to another; and though, both in the wet and in the
|
||
dry season, the crop is a good deal less than in one more properly
|
||
tempered; yet, in both, what is lost in one part of the country is in some
|
||
measure compensated by what is gained in the other. In rice countries,
|
||
where the crop not only requires a very moist soil, but where, in a
|
||
certain period of its growing, it must be laid under water, the effects of
|
||
a drought are much more dismal. Even in such countries, however, the
|
||
drought is, perhaps, scarce ever so universal as necessarily to occasion a
|
||
famine, if the government would allow a free trade. The drought in Bengal,
|
||
a few years ago, might probably have occasioned a very great dearth. Some
|
||
improper regulations, some injudicious restraints, imposed by the servants
|
||
of the East India Company upon the rice trade, contributed, perhaps, to
|
||
turn that dearth into a famine.
|
||
|
||
When the government, in order to remedy the inconveniencies of a dearth,
|
||
orders all the dealers to sell their corn at what it supposes a reasonable
|
||
price, it either hinders them from bringing it to market, which may
|
||
sometimes produce a famine even in the beginning of the season; or, if
|
||
they bring it thither, it enables the people, and thereby encourages them
|
||
to consume it so fast as must necessarily produce a famine before the end
|
||
of the season. The unlimited, unrestrained freedom of the corn trade, as
|
||
it is the only effectual preventive of the miseries of a famine, so it is
|
||
the best palliative of the inconveniencies of a dearth; for the
|
||
inconveniencies of a real scarcity cannot be remedied; they can only be
|
||
palliated. No trade deserves more the full protection of the law, and no
|
||
trade requires it so much; because no trade is so much exposed to popular
|
||
odium.
|
||
|
||
In years of scarcity, the inferior ranks of people impute their distress
|
||
to the avarice of the corn merchant, who becomes the object of their
|
||
hatred and indignation. Instead of making profit upon such occasions,
|
||
therefore, he is often in danger of being utterly ruined, and of having
|
||
his magazines plundered and destroyed by their violence. It is in years of
|
||
scarcity, however, when prices are high, that the corn merchant expects to
|
||
make his principal profit. He is generally in contract with some farmers
|
||
to furnish him, for a certain number of years, with a certain quantity of
|
||
corn, at a certain price. This contract price is settled according to what
|
||
is supposed to be the moderate and reasonable, that is, the ordinary or
|
||
average price, which, before the late years of scarcity, was commonly
|
||
about 28s. for the quarter of wheat, and for that of other grain in
|
||
proportion. In years of scarcity, therefore, the corn merchant buys a
|
||
great part of his corn for the ordinary price, and sells it for a much
|
||
higher. That this extraordinary profit, however, is no more than
|
||
sufficient to put his trade upon a fair level with other trades, and to
|
||
compensate the many losses which he sustains upon other occasions, both
|
||
from the perishable nature of the commodity itself, and from the frequent
|
||
and unforeseen fluctuations of its price, seems evident enough, from this
|
||
single circumstance, that great fortunes are as seldom made in this as in
|
||
any other trade. The popular odium, however, which attends it in years of
|
||
scarcity, the only years in which it can be very profitable, renders
|
||
people of character and fortune averse to enter into it. It is abandoned
|
||
to an inferior set of dealers; and millers, bakers, meal-men, and
|
||
meal-factors, together with a number of wretched hucksters, are almost the
|
||
only middle people that, in the home market, come between the grower and
|
||
the consumer.
|
||
|
||
The ancient policy of Europe, instead of discountenancing this popular
|
||
odium against a trade so beneficial to the public, seems, on the contrary,
|
||
to have authorised and encouraged it.
|
||
|
||
By the 5th and 6th of Edward VI cap. 14, it was enacted, that whoever
|
||
should buy any corn or grain, with intent to sell it again, should be
|
||
reputed an unlawful engrosser, and should, for the first fault, suffer two
|
||
months imprisonment, and forfeit the value of the corn; for the second,
|
||
suffer six months imprisonment, and forfeit double the value; and, for the
|
||
third, be set in the pillory, suffer imprisonment during the king’s
|
||
pleasure, and forfeit all his goods and chattels. The ancient policy of
|
||
most other parts of Europe was no better than that of England.
|
||
|
||
Our ancestors seem to have imagined, that the people would buy their corn
|
||
cheaper of the farmer than of the corn merchant, who, they were afraid,
|
||
would require, over and above the price which he paid to the farmer, an
|
||
exorbitant profit to himself. They endeavoured, therefore, to annihilate
|
||
his trade altogether. They even endeavoured to hinder, as much as
|
||
possible, any middle man of any kind from coming in between the grower and
|
||
the consumer; and this was the meaning of the many restraints which they
|
||
imposed upon the trade of those whom they called kidders, or carriers of
|
||
corn; a trade which nobody was allowed to exercise without a licence,
|
||
ascertaining his qualifications as a man of probity and fair dealing. The
|
||
authority of three justices of the peace was, by the statute of Edward VI.
|
||
necessary in order to grant this licence. But even this restraint was
|
||
afterwards thought insufficient, and, by a statute of Elizabeth, the
|
||
privilege of granting it was confined to the quarter-sessions.
|
||
|
||
The ancient policy of Europe endeavoured, in this manner, to regulate
|
||
agriculture, the great trade of the country, by maxims quite different
|
||
from those which it established with regard to manufactures, the great
|
||
trade of the towns. By leaving a farmer no other customers but either the
|
||
consumers or their immediate factors, the kidders and carriers of corn, it
|
||
endeavoured to force him to exercise the trade, not only of a farmer, but
|
||
of a corn merchant, or corn retailer. On the contrary, it, in many cases,
|
||
prohibited the manufacturer from exercising the trade of a shopkeeper, or
|
||
from selling his own goods by retail. It meant, by the one law, to promote
|
||
the general interest of the country, or to render corn cheap, without,
|
||
perhaps, its being well understood how this was to be done. By the other,
|
||
it meant to promote that of a particular order of men, the shopkeepers,
|
||
who would be so much undersold by the manufacturer, it was supposed, that
|
||
their trade would be ruined, if he was allowed to retail at all.
|
||
|
||
The manufacturer, however, though he had been allowed to keep a shop, and
|
||
to sell his own goods by retail, could not have undersold the common
|
||
shopkeeper. Whatever part of his capital he might have placed in his shop,
|
||
he must have withdrawn it from his manufacture. In order to carry on his
|
||
business on a level with that of other people, as he must have had the
|
||
profit of a manufacturer on the one part, so he must have had that of a
|
||
shopkeeper upon the other. Let us suppose, for example, that in the
|
||
particular town where he lived, ten per cent. was the ordinary profit both
|
||
of manufacturing and shopkeeping stock; he must in this case have charged
|
||
upon every piece of his own goods, which he sold in his shop, a profit of
|
||
twenty per cent. When he carried them from his workhouse to his shop, he
|
||
must have valued them at the price for which he could have sold them to a
|
||
dealer or shopkeeper, who would have bought them by wholesale. If he
|
||
valued them lower, he lost a part of the profit of his manufacturing
|
||
capital. When, again, he sold them from his shop, unless he got the same
|
||
price at which a shopkeeper would have sold them, he lost a part of the
|
||
profit of his shop-keeping capital. Though he might appear, therefore, to
|
||
make a double profit upon the same piece of goods, yet, as these goods
|
||
made successively a part of two distinct capitals, he made but a single
|
||
profit upon the whole capital employed about them; and if he made less
|
||
than his profit, he was a loser, and did not employ his whole capital with
|
||
the same advantage as the greater part of his neighbours.
|
||
|
||
What the manufacturer was prohibited to do, the farmer was in some measure
|
||
enjoined to do; to divide his capital between two different employments;
|
||
to keep one part of it in his granaries and stack-yard, for supplying the
|
||
occasional demands of the market, and to employ the other in the
|
||
cultivation of his land. But as he could not afford to employ the latter
|
||
for less than the ordinary profits of farming stock, so he could as little
|
||
afford to employ the former for less than the ordinary profits of
|
||
mercantile stock. Whether the stock which really carried on the business
|
||
of a corn merchant belonged to the person who was called a farmer, or to
|
||
the person who was called a corn merchant, an equal profit was in both
|
||
cases requisite, in order to indemnify its owner for employing it in this
|
||
manner, in order to put his business on a level with other trades, and in
|
||
order to hinder him from having an interest to change it as soon as
|
||
possible for some other. The farmer, therefore, who was thus forced to
|
||
exercise the trade of a corn merchant, could not afford to sell his corn
|
||
cheaper than any other corn merchant would have been obliged to do in the
|
||
case of a free competition.
|
||
|
||
The dealer who can employ his whole stock in one single branch of
|
||
business, has an advantage of the same kind with the workman who can
|
||
employ his whole labour in one single operation. As the latter acquires a
|
||
dexterity which enables him, with the same two hands, to perform a much
|
||
greater quantity of work, so the former acquires so easy and ready a
|
||
method of transacting his business, of buying and disposing of his goods,
|
||
that with the same capital he can transact a much greater quantity of
|
||
business. As the one can commonly afford his work a good deal cheaper, so
|
||
the other can commonly afford his goods somewhat cheaper, than if his
|
||
stock and attention were both employed about a greater variety of objects.
|
||
The greater part of manufacturers could not afford to retail their own
|
||
goods so cheap as a vigilant and active shopkeeper, whose sole business it
|
||
was to buy them by wholesale and to retail them again. The greater part of
|
||
farmers could still less afford to retail their own corn, to supply the
|
||
inhabitants of a town, at perhaps four or five miles distance from the
|
||
greater part of them, so cheap as a vigilant and active corn merchant,
|
||
whose sole business it was to purchase corn by wholesale, to collect it
|
||
into a great magazine, and to retail it again.
|
||
|
||
The law which prohibited the manufacturer from exercising the trade of a
|
||
shopkeeper, endeavoured to force this division in the employment of stock
|
||
to go on faster than it might otherwise have done. The law which obliged
|
||
the farmer to exercise the trade of a corn merchant, endeavoured to hinder
|
||
it from going on so fast. Both laws were evident violations of natural
|
||
liberty, and therefore unjust; and they were both, too, as impolitic as
|
||
they were unjust. It is the interest of every society, that things of this
|
||
kind should never either he forced or obstructed. The man who employs
|
||
either his labour or his stock in a greater variety of ways than his
|
||
situation renders necessary, can never hurt his neighbour by underselling
|
||
him. He may hurt himself, and he generally does so. Jack-of-all-trades
|
||
will never be rich, says the proverb. But the law ought always to trust
|
||
people with the care of their own interest, as in their local situations
|
||
they must generally be able to judge better of it than the legislature can
|
||
do. The law, however, which obliged the farmer to exercise the trade of a
|
||
corn merchant was by far the most pernicious of the two.
|
||
|
||
It obstructed not only that division in the employment of stock which is
|
||
so advantageous to every society, but it obstructed likewise the
|
||
improvement and cultivation of the land. By obliging the farmer to carry
|
||
on two trades instead of one, it forced him to divide his capital into two
|
||
parts, of which one only could be employed in cultivation. But if he had
|
||
been at liberty to sell his whole crop to a corn merchant as fast as he
|
||
could thresh it out, his whole capital might have returned immediately to
|
||
the land, and have been employed in buying more cattle, and hiring more
|
||
servants, in order to improve and cultivate it better. But by being
|
||
obliged to sell his corn by retail, he was obliged to keep a great part of
|
||
his capital in his granaries and stack-yard through the year, and could
|
||
not therefore cultivate so well as with the same capital he might
|
||
otherwise have done. This law, therefore, necessarily obstructed the
|
||
improvement of the land, and, instead of tending to render corn cheaper,
|
||
must have tended to render it scarcer, and therefore dearer, than it would
|
||
otherwise have been.
|
||
|
||
After the business of the farmer, that of the corn merchant is in reality
|
||
the trade which, if properly protected and encouraged, would contribute
|
||
the most to the raising of corn. It would support the trade of the farmer,
|
||
in the same manner as the trade of the wholesale dealer supports that of
|
||
the manufacturer.
|
||
|
||
The wholesale dealer, by affording a ready market to the manufacturer, by
|
||
taking his goods off his hand as fast as he can make them, and by
|
||
sometimes even advancing their price to him before he has made them,
|
||
enables him to keep his whole capital, and sometimes even more than his
|
||
whole capital, constantly employed in manufacturing, and consequently to
|
||
manufacture a much greater quantity of goods than if he was obliged to
|
||
dispose of them himself to the immediate consumers, or even to the
|
||
retailers. As the capital of the wholesale merchant, too, is generally
|
||
sufficient to replace that of many manufacturers, this intercourse between
|
||
him and them interests the owner of a large capital to support the owners
|
||
of a great number of small ones, and to assist them in those losses and
|
||
misfortunes which might otherwise prove ruinous to them.
|
||
|
||
An intercourse of the same kind universally established between the
|
||
farmers and the corn merchants, would be attended with effects equally
|
||
beneficial to the farmers. They would be enabled to keep their whole
|
||
capitals, and even more than their whole capitals constantly employed in
|
||
cultivation. In case of any of those accidents to which no trade is more
|
||
liable than theirs, they would find in their ordinary customer, the
|
||
wealthy corn merchant, a person who had both an interest to support them,
|
||
and the ability to do it; and they would not, as at present, be entirely
|
||
dependent upon the forbearance of their landlord, or the mercy of his
|
||
steward. Were it possible, as perhaps it is not, to establish this
|
||
intercourse universally, and all at once; were it possible to turn all at
|
||
once the whole farming stock of the kingdom to its proper business, the
|
||
cultivation of land, withdrawing it from every other employment into which
|
||
any part of it may be at present diverted; and were it possible, in order
|
||
to support and assist, upon occasion, the operations of this great stock,
|
||
to provide all at once another stock almost equally great; it is not,
|
||
perhaps, very easy to imagine how great, how extensive, and how sudden,
|
||
would be the improvement which this change of circumstances would alone
|
||
produce upon the whole face of the country.
|
||
|
||
The statute of Edward VI. therefore, by prohibiting as much as possible
|
||
any middle man from coming in between the grower and the consumer,
|
||
endeavoured to annihilate a trade, of which the free exercise is not only
|
||
the best palliative of the inconveniencies of a dearth, but the best
|
||
preventive of that calamity; after the trade of the farmer, no trade
|
||
contributing so much to the growing of corn as that of the corn merchant.
|
||
|
||
The rigour of this law was afterwards softened by several subsequent
|
||
statutes, which successively permitted the engrossing of corn when the
|
||
price of wheat should not exceed 20s. and 24s. 32s. and 40s. the quarter.
|
||
At last, by the 15th of Charles II. c.7, the engrossing or buying of corn,
|
||
in order to sell it again, as long as the price of wheat did not exceed
|
||
48s. the quarter, and that of other grain in proportion, was declared
|
||
lawful to all persons not being forestallers, that is, not selling again
|
||
in the same market within three months. All the freedom which the trade of
|
||
the inland corn dealer has ever yet enjoyed was bestowed upon it by this
|
||
statute. The statute of the twelfth of the present king, which repeals
|
||
almost all the other ancient laws against engrossers and forestallers,
|
||
does not repeal the restrictions of this particular statute, which
|
||
therefore still continue in force.
|
||
|
||
This statute, however, authorises in some measure two very absurd popular
|
||
prejudices.
|
||
|
||
First, It supposes, that when the price of wheat has risen so high as 48s.
|
||
the quarter, and that of other grain in proportion, corn is likely to be
|
||
so engrossed as to hurt the people. But, from what has been already said,
|
||
it seems evident enough, that corn can at no price be so engrossed by the
|
||
inland dealers as to hurt the people; and 48s. the quarter, besides,
|
||
though it may be considered as a very high price, yet, in years of
|
||
scarcity, it is a price which frequently takes place immediately after
|
||
harvest, when scarce any part of the new crop can be sold off, and when it
|
||
is impossible even for ignorance to suppose that any part of it can be so
|
||
engrossed as to hurt the people.
|
||
|
||
Secondly, It supposes that there is a certain price at which corn is
|
||
likely to be forestalled, that is, bought up in order to be sold again
|
||
soon after in the same market, so as to hurt the people. But if a merchant
|
||
ever buys up corn, either going to a particular market, or in a particular
|
||
market, in order to sell it again soon after in the same market, it must
|
||
be because he judges that the market cannot be so liberally supplied
|
||
through the whole season as upon that particular occasion, and that the
|
||
price, therefore, must soon rise. If he judges wrong in this, and if the
|
||
price does not rise, he not only loses the whole profit of the stock which
|
||
he employs in this manner, but a part of the stock itself, by the expense
|
||
and loss which necessarily attend the storing and keeping of corn. He
|
||
hurts himself, therefore, much more essentially than he can hurt even the
|
||
particular people whom he may hinder from supplying themselves upon that
|
||
particular market day, because they may afterwards supply themselves just
|
||
as cheap upon any other market day. If he judges right, instead of hurting
|
||
the great body of the people, he renders them a most important service. By
|
||
making them feel the inconveniencies of a dearth somewhat earlier than
|
||
they otherwise might do, he prevents their feeling them afterwards so
|
||
severely as they certainly would do, if the cheapness of price encouraged
|
||
them to consume faster than suited the real scarcity of the season. When
|
||
the scarcity is real, the best thing that can be done for the people is,
|
||
to divide the inconvenience of it as equally as possible, through all the
|
||
different months and weeks and days of the year. The interest of the corn
|
||
merchant makes him study to do this as exactly as he can; and as no other
|
||
person can have either the same interest, or the same knowledge, or the
|
||
same abilities, to do it so exactly as he, this most important operation
|
||
of commerce ought to be trusted entirely to him; or, in other words, the
|
||
corn trade, so far at least as concerns the supply of the home market,
|
||
ought to be left perfectly free.
|
||
|
||
The popular fear of engrossing and forestalling may be compared to the
|
||
popular terrors and suspicions of witchcraft. The unfortunate wretches
|
||
accused of this latter crime were not more innocent of the misfortunes
|
||
imputed to them, than those who have been accused of the former. The law
|
||
which put an end to all prosecutions against witchcraft, which put it out
|
||
of any man’s power to gratify his own malice by accusing his neighbour of
|
||
that imaginary crime, seems effectually to have put an end to those fears
|
||
and suspicions, by taking away the great cause which encouraged and
|
||
supported them. The law which would restore entire freedom to the inland
|
||
trade of corn, would probably prove as effectual to put an end to the
|
||
popular fears of engrossing and forestalling.
|
||
|
||
The 15th of Charles II. c. 7, however, with all its imperfections, has,
|
||
perhaps, contributed more, both to the plentiful supply of the home
|
||
market, and to the increase of tillage, than any other law in the statute
|
||
book. It is from this law that the inland corn trade has derived all the
|
||
liberty and protection which it has ever yet enjoyed; and both the supply
|
||
of the home market and the interest of tillage are much more effectually
|
||
promoted by the inland, than either by the importation or exportation
|
||
trade.
|
||
|
||
The proportion of the average quantity of all sorts of grain imported into
|
||
Great Britain to that of all sorts of grain consumed, it has been computed
|
||
by the author of the Tracts upon the Corn Trade, does not exceed that of
|
||
one to five hundred and seventy. For supplying the home market, therefore,
|
||
the importance of the inland trade must be to that of the importation
|
||
trade as five hundred and seventy to one.
|
||
|
||
The average quantity of all sorts of grain exported from Great Britain
|
||
does not, according to the same author, exceed the one-and-thirtieth part
|
||
of the annual produce. For the encouragement of tillage, therefore, by
|
||
providing a market for the home produce, the importance of the inland
|
||
trade must be to that of the exportation trade as thirty to one.
|
||
|
||
I have no great faith in political arithmetic, and I mean not to warrant
|
||
the exactness of either of these computations. I mention them only in
|
||
order to show of how much less consequence, in the opinion of the most
|
||
judicious and experienced persons, the foreign trade of corn is than the
|
||
home trade. The great cheapness of corn in the years immediately preceding
|
||
the establishment of the bounty may, perhaps with reason, he ascribed in
|
||
some measure to the operation of this statute of Charles II. which had
|
||
been enacted about five-and-twenty years before, and which had, therefore,
|
||
full time to produce its effect.
|
||
|
||
A very few words will sufficiently explain all that I have to say
|
||
concerning the other three branches of the corn trade.
|
||
|
||
II. The trade of the merchant-importer of foreign corn for home
|
||
consumption, evidently contributes to the immediate supply of the home
|
||
market, and must so far be immediately beneficial to the great body of the
|
||
people. It tends, indeed, to lower somewhat the average money price of
|
||
corn, but not to diminish its real value, or the quantity of labour which
|
||
it is capable of maintaining. If importation was at all times free, our
|
||
farmers and country gentlemen would probably, one year with another, get
|
||
less money for their corn than they do at present, when importation is at
|
||
most times in effect prohibited; but the money which they got would be of
|
||
more value, would buy more goods of all other kinds, and would employ more
|
||
labour. Their real wealth, their real revenue, therefore, would be the
|
||
same as at present, though it might be expressed by a smaller quantity of
|
||
silver, and they would neither be disabled nor discouraged from
|
||
cultivating corn as much as they do at present. On the contrary, as the
|
||
rise in the real value of silver, in consequence of lowering the money
|
||
price of corn, lowers somewhat the money price of all other commodities,
|
||
it gives the industry of the country where it takes place some advantage
|
||
in all foreign markets and thereby tends to encourage and increase that
|
||
industry. But the extent of the home market for corn must be in proportion
|
||
to the general industry of the country where it grows, or to the number of
|
||
those who produce something else, and therefore, have something else, or,
|
||
what comes to the same thing, the price of something else, to give in
|
||
exchange for corn. But in every country, the home market, as it is the
|
||
nearest and most convenient, so is it likewise the greatest and most
|
||
important market for corn. That rise in the real value of silver,
|
||
therefore, which is the effect of lowering the average money price of
|
||
corn, tends to enlarge the greatest and most important market for corn,
|
||
and thereby to encourage, instead of discouraging its growth.
|
||
|
||
By the 22d of Charles II. c. 13, the importation of wheat, whenever the
|
||
price in the home market did not exceed 53s:4d. the quarter, was subjected
|
||
to a duty of 16s. the quarter; and to a duty of 8s. whenever the price did
|
||
not exceed £4. The former of these two prices has, for more than a century
|
||
past, taken place only in times of very great scarcity; and the latter
|
||
has, so far as I know, not taken place at all. Yet, till wheat has risen
|
||
above this latter price, it was, by this statute, subjected to a very high
|
||
duty; and, till it had risen above the former, to a duty which amounted to
|
||
a prohibition. The importation of other sorts of grain was restrained at
|
||
rates and by duties, in proportion to the value of the grain, almost
|
||
equally high. Before the 13th of the present king, the following were the
|
||
duties payable upon the importation of the different sorts of grain:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Grain. Duties. Duties Duties.
|
||
Beans to 28s. per qr. 19s:10d. after till 40s. 16s:8d. then 12d.
|
||
Barley to 28s. - 19s:10d. - 32s. 16s. - 12d.
|
||
Malt is prohibited by the annual malt-tax bill.
|
||
Oats to 16s. - 5s:10d. after - 9½d.
|
||
Pease to 40s. - 16s: 0d. after - 9¾d.
|
||
Rye to 36s. - 19s:10d. till 40s. 16s:8d - 12d.
|
||
Wheat to 44s. - 21s: 9d. till 53s:4d. 17s. - 8s.
|
||
till £4, and after that about 1s:4d.
|
||
Buck-wheat to 32s. per qr. to pay 16s.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
These different duties were imposed, partly by the 22d of Charles II. in
|
||
place of the old subsidy, partly by the new subsidy, by the one-third and
|
||
two-thirds subsidy, and by the subsidy 1747. Subsequent laws still further
|
||
increased those duties.
|
||
|
||
The distress which, in years of scarcity, the strict execution of those
|
||
laws might have brought upon the people, would probably have been very
|
||
great; but, upon such occasions, its execution was generally suspended by
|
||
temporary statutes, which permitted, for a limited time, the importation
|
||
of foreign corn. The necessity of these temporary statutes sufficiently
|
||
demonstrates the impropriety of this general one.
|
||
|
||
These restraints upon importation, though prior to the establishment of
|
||
the bounty, were dictated by the same spirit, by the same principles,
|
||
which afterwards enacted that regulation. How hurtful soever in
|
||
themselves, these, or some other restraints upon importation, became
|
||
necessary in consequence of that regulation. If, when wheat was either
|
||
below 48s. the quarter, or not much above it, foreign corn could have been
|
||
imported, either duty free, or upon paying only a small duty, it might
|
||
have been exported again, with the benefit of the bounty, to the great
|
||
loss of the public revenue, and to the entire perversion of the
|
||
institution, of which the object was to extend the market for the home
|
||
growth, not that for the growth of foreign countries.
|
||
|
||
III. The trade of the merchant-exporter of corn for foreign consumption,
|
||
certainly does not contribute directly to the plentiful supply of the home
|
||
market. It does so, however, indirectly. From whatever source this supply
|
||
maybe usually drawn, whether from home growth, or from foreign
|
||
importation, unless more corn is either usually grown, or usually imported
|
||
into the country, than what is usually consumed in it, the supply of the
|
||
home market can never be very plentiful. But unless the surplus can, in
|
||
all ordinary cases, be exported, the growers will be careful never to grow
|
||
more, and the importers never to import more, than what the bare
|
||
consumption of the home market requires. That market will very seldom be
|
||
overstocked; but it will generally be understocked; the people, whose
|
||
business it is to supply it, being generally afraid lest their goods
|
||
should be left upon their hands. The prohibition of exportation limits the
|
||
improvement and cultivation of the country to what the supply of its own
|
||
inhabitants require. The freedom of exportation enables it to extend
|
||
cultivation for the supply of foreign nations.
|
||
|
||
By the 12th of Charles II. c.4, the exportation of corn was permitted
|
||
whenever the price of wheat did not exceed 40s. the quarter, and that of
|
||
other grain in proportion. By the 15th of the same prince, this liberty
|
||
was extended till the price of wheat exceeded 48s. the quarter; and by the
|
||
22d, to all higher prices. A poundage, indeed, was to be paid to the king
|
||
upon such exportation; but all grain was rated so low in the book of
|
||
rates, that this poundage amounted only, upon wheat to 1s., upon oats to
|
||
4d., and upon all other grain to 6d. the quarter. By the 1st of William
|
||
and Mary, the act which established this bounty, this small duty was
|
||
virtually taken off whenever the price of wheat did not exceed 48s. the
|
||
quarter; and by the 11th and 12th of William III. c. 20, it was expressly
|
||
taken off at all higher prices.
|
||
|
||
The trade of the merchant-exporter was, in this manner, not only
|
||
encouraged by a bounty, but rendered much more free than that of the
|
||
inland dealer. By the last of these statutes, corn could be engrossed at
|
||
any price for exportation; but it could not be engrossed for inland sale,
|
||
except when the price did not exceed 48s. the quarter. The interest of the
|
||
inland dealer, however, it has already been shown, can never be opposite
|
||
to that of the great body of the people. That of the merchant-exporter
|
||
may, and in fact sometimes is. If, while his own country labours under a
|
||
dearth, a neighbouring country should be afflicted with a famine, it might
|
||
be his interest to carry corn to the latter country, in such quantities as
|
||
might very much aggravate the calamities of the dearth. The plentiful
|
||
supply of the home market was not the direct object of those statutes;
|
||
but, under the pretence of encouraging agriculture, to raise the money
|
||
price of corn as high as possible, and thereby to occasion, as much as
|
||
possible, a constant dearth in the home market. By the discouragement of
|
||
importation, the supply of that market; even in times of great scarcity,
|
||
was confined to the home growth; and by the encouragement of exportation,
|
||
when the price was so high as 48s. the quarter, that market was not, even
|
||
in times of considerable scarcity, allowed to enjoy the whole of that
|
||
growth. The temporary laws, prohibiting, for a limited time, the
|
||
exportation of corn, and taking off, for a limited time, the duties upon
|
||
its importation, expedients to which Great Britain has been obliged so
|
||
frequently to have recourse, sufficiently demonstrate the impropriety of
|
||
her general system. Had that system been good, she would not so frequently
|
||
have been reduced to the necessity of departing from it.
|
||
|
||
Were all nations to follow the liberal system of free exportation and free
|
||
importation, the different states into which a great continent was
|
||
divided, would so far resemble the different provinces of a great empire.
|
||
As among the different provinces of a great empire, the freedom of the
|
||
inland trade appears, both from reason and experience, not only the best
|
||
palliative of a dearth, but the most effectual preventive of a famine; so
|
||
would the freedom of the exportation and importation trade be among the
|
||
different states into which a great continent was divided. The larger the
|
||
continent, the easier the communication through all the different parts of
|
||
it, both by land and by water, the less would any one particular part of
|
||
it ever be exposed to either of these calamities, the scarcity of any one
|
||
country being more likely to be relieved by the plenty of some other. But
|
||
very few countries have entirely adopted this liberal system. The freedom
|
||
of the corn trade is almost everywhere more or less restrained, and in
|
||
many countries is confined by such absurd regulations, as frequently
|
||
aggravate the unavoidable misfortune of a dearth into the dreadful
|
||
calamity of a famine. The demand of such countries for corn may frequently
|
||
become so great and so urgent, that a small state in their neighbourhood,
|
||
which happened at the same time to be labouring under some degree of
|
||
dearth, could not venture to supply them without exposing itself to the
|
||
like dreadful calamity. The very bad policy of one country may thus render
|
||
it, in some measure, dangerous and imprudent to establish what would
|
||
otherwise be the best policy in another. The unlimited freedom of
|
||
exportation, however, would be much less dangerous in great states, in
|
||
which the growth being much greater, the supply could seldom be much
|
||
affected by any quantity or corn that was likely to be exported. In a
|
||
Swiss canton, or in some of the little states in Italy, it may, perhaps,
|
||
sometimes be necessary to restrain the exportation of corn. In such great
|
||
countries as France or England, it scarce ever can. To hinder, besides,
|
||
the farmer from sending his goods at all times to the best market, is
|
||
evidently to sacrifice the ordinary laws of justice to an idea of public
|
||
utility, to a sort of reasons of state; an act or legislative authority
|
||
which ought to be exercised only, which can be pardoned only, in cases of
|
||
the most urgent necessity. The price at which exportation of corn is
|
||
prohibited, if it is ever to be prohibited, ought always to be a very high
|
||
price.
|
||
|
||
The laws concerning corn may everywhere be compared to the laws concerning
|
||
religion. The people feel themselves so much interested in what relates
|
||
either to their subsistence in this life, or to their happiness in a life
|
||
to come, that government must yield to their prejudices, and, in order to
|
||
preserve the public tranquillity, establish that system which they approve
|
||
of. It is upon this account, perhaps, that we so seldom find a reasonable
|
||
system established with regard to either of those two capital objects.
|
||
|
||
IV. The trade of the merchant-carrier, or of the importer of foreign corn,
|
||
in order to export it again, contributes to the plentiful supply of the
|
||
home market. It is not, indeed, the direct purpose of his trade to sell
|
||
his corn there; but he will generally be willing to do so, and even for a
|
||
good deal less money than he might expect in a foreign market; because he
|
||
saves in this manner the expense of loading and unloading, of freight and
|
||
insurance. The inhabitants of the country which, by means of the carrying
|
||
trade, becomes the magazine and storehouse for the supply of other
|
||
countries, can very seldom be in want themselves. Though the carrying
|
||
trade must thus contribute to reduce the average money price of corn in
|
||
the home market, it would not thereby lower its real value; it would only
|
||
raise somewhat the real value of silver.
|
||
|
||
The carrying trade was in effect prohibited in Great Britain, upon all
|
||
ordinary occasions, by the high duties upon the importation of foreign
|
||
corn, of the greater part of which there was no drawback; and upon
|
||
extraordinary occasions, when a scarcity made it necessary to suspend
|
||
those duties by temporary statutes, exportation was always prohibited. By
|
||
this system of laws, therefore, the carrying trade was in effect
|
||
prohibited.
|
||
|
||
That system of laws, therefore, which is connected with the establishment
|
||
of the bounty, seems to deserve no part of the praise which has been
|
||
bestowed upon it. The improvement and prosperity of Great Britain, which
|
||
has been so often ascribed to those laws, may very easily be accounted for
|
||
by other causes. That security which the laws in Great Britain give to
|
||
every man, that he shall enjoy the fruits of his own labour, is alone
|
||
sufficient to make any country flourish, notwithstanding these and twenty
|
||
other absurd regulations of commerce; and this security was perfected by
|
||
the Revolution, much about the same time that the bounty was established.
|
||
The natural effort of every individual to better his own condition, when
|
||
suffered to exert itself with freedom and security, is so powerful a
|
||
principle, that it is alone, and without any assistance, not only capable
|
||
of carrying on the society to wealth and prosperity, but of surmounting a
|
||
hundred impertinent obstructions, with which the folly of human laws too
|
||
often encumbers its operations: though the effect of those obstructions is
|
||
always, more or less, either to encroach upon its freedom, or to diminish
|
||
its security. In Great Britain industry is perfectly secure; and though it
|
||
is far from being perfectly free, it is as free or freer than in any other
|
||
part of Europe.
|
||
|
||
Though the period of the greatest prosperity and improvement of Great
|
||
Britain has been posterior to that system of laws which is connected with
|
||
the bounty, we must not upon that account, impute it to those laws. It has
|
||
been posterior likewise to the national debt; but the national debt has
|
||
most assuredly not been the cause of it.
|
||
|
||
Though the system of laws which is connected with the bounty, has exactly
|
||
the same tendency with the practice of Spain and Portugal, to lower
|
||
somewhat the value of the precious metals in the country where it takes
|
||
place; yet Great Britain is certainly one of the richest countries in
|
||
Europe, while Spain and Portugal are perhaps amongst the most beggarly.
|
||
This difference of situation, however, may easily be accounted for from
|
||
two different causes. First, the tax in Spain, the prohibition in Portugal
|
||
of exporting gold and silver, and the vigilant police which watches over
|
||
the execution of those laws, must, in two very poor countries, which
|
||
between them import annually upwards of six millions sterling, operate not
|
||
only more directly, but much more forcibly, in reducing the value of those
|
||
metals there, than the corn laws can do in Great Britain. And, secondly,
|
||
this bad policy is not in those countries counterbalanced by the general
|
||
liberty and security of the people. Industry is there neither free nor
|
||
secure; and the civil and ecclesiastical governments of both Spain and
|
||
Portugal are such as would alone be sufficient to perpetuate their present
|
||
state of poverty, even though their regulations of commerce were as wise
|
||
as the greatest part of them are absurd and foolish.
|
||
|
||
The 13th of the present king, c. 43, seems to have established a new
|
||
system with regard to the corn laws, in many respects better than the
|
||
ancient one, but in one or two respects perhaps not quite so good.
|
||
|
||
By this statute, the high duties upon importation for home consumption are
|
||
taken off, so soon as the price of middling wheat rises to 48s. the
|
||
quarter; that of middling rye, pease, or beans, to 32s.; that of barley to
|
||
24s.; and that of oats to 16s.; and instead of them, a small duty is
|
||
imposed of only 6d upon the quarter of wheat, and upon that or other grain
|
||
in proportion. With regard to all those different sorts of grain, but
|
||
particularly with regard to wheat, the home market is thus opened to
|
||
foreign supplies, at prices considerably lower than before.
|
||
|
||
By the same statute, the old bounty of 5s. upon the exportation of wheat,
|
||
ceases so soon as the price rises to 44s. the quarter, instead of 48s. the
|
||
price at which it ceased before; that of 2s:6d. upon the exportation of
|
||
barley, ceases so soon as the price rises to 22s. instead of 24s. the
|
||
price at which it ceased before; that of 2s:6d. upon the exportation of
|
||
oatmeal, ceases so soon as the price rises to 14s. instead of 15s. the
|
||
price at which it ceased before. The bounty upon rye is reduced from
|
||
3s:6d. to 3s. and it ceases so soon as the price rises to 28s. instead of
|
||
32s. the price at which it ceased before. If bounties are as improper as I
|
||
have endeavoured to prove them to be, the sooner they cease, and the lower
|
||
they are, so much the better.
|
||
|
||
The same statute permits, at the lowest prices, the importation of corn in
|
||
order to be exported again, duty free, provided it is in the mean time
|
||
lodged in a warehouse under the joint locks of the king and the importer.
|
||
This liberty, indeed, extends to no more than twenty-five of the different
|
||
ports of Great Britain. They are, however, the principal ones; and there
|
||
may not, perhaps, be warehouses proper for this purpose in the greater
|
||
part of the others.
|
||
|
||
So far this law seems evidently an improvement upon the ancient system.
|
||
|
||
But by the same law, a bounty of 2s. the quarter is given for the
|
||
exportation of oats, whenever the price does not exceed fourteen
|
||
shillings. No bounty had ever been given before for the exportation of
|
||
this grain, no more than for that of pease or beans.
|
||
|
||
By the same law, too, the exportation of wheat is prohibited so soon as
|
||
the price rises to forty-four shillings the quarter; that of rye so soon
|
||
as it rises to twenty-eight shillings; that of barley so soon as it rises
|
||
to twenty-two shillings; and that of oats so soon as they rise to fourteen
|
||
shillings. Those several prices seem all of them a good deal too low; and
|
||
there seems to be an impropriety, besides, in prohibiting exportation
|
||
altogether at those precise prices at which that bounty, which was given
|
||
in order to force it, is withdrawn. The bounty ought certainly either to
|
||
have been withdrawn at a much lower price, or exportation ought to have
|
||
been allowed at a much higher.
|
||
|
||
So far, therefore, this law seems to be inferior to the ancient system.
|
||
With all its imperfections, however, we may perhaps say of it what was
|
||
said of the laws of Solon, that though not the best in itself, it is the
|
||
best which the interest, prejudices, and temper of the times, would admit
|
||
of. It may perhaps in due time prepare the way for a better.
|