|
Book One
Of the Causes of Improvement in the Productive Powers of Labour,
And of the Order according to which its Produce is Naturally
Distributed among the Different Ranks of the People.
CHAPTER X
Of Wages and Profit in the different Employments of Labour and
Stock
PART 1
Inequalities arising
from the Nature of the Employments themselves
THE five following are the principal circumstances which, so
far as I have been able to observe, make up for a small pecuniary
gain in some employments, and counterbalance a great one in
others: first, the agreeableness or disagreeableness of the
employments themselves; secondly, the easiness and cheapness, or
the difficulty and expense of learning them; thirdly, the
constancy or inconstancy of employment in them; fourthly, the
small or great trust which must be reposed in those who exercise
them; and, fifthly, the probability or improbability of success
in them.
First, the wages of labour vary with the ease or hardship,
the cleanliness or dirtiness, the honourableness or
dishonourableness of the employment. Thus in most places, take
the year round, a journeyman tailor earns less than a journeyman
weaver. His work is much easier. A journeyman weaver earns less
than a journeyman smith. His work is not always easier, but it is
much cleanlier. A journeyman blacksmith, though an artificer,
seldom earns so much in twelve hours as a collier, who is only a
labourer, does in eight. His work is not quite so dirty, is less
dangerous, and is carried on in daylight, and above ground.
Honour makes a great part of the reward of all honourable
professions. In point of pecuniary gain, all things considered,
they are generally under-recompensed, as I shall endeavour to
show by and by. Disgrace has the contrary effect. The trade of a
butcher is a brutal and an odious business; but it is in most
places more profitable than the greater part of common trades.
The most detestable of all employments, that of public
executioner, is, in proportion to the quantity of work done,
better paid than any common trade whatever.
Hunting and fishing, the most important employments of
mankind in the rude state of society, become in its advanced
state their most agreeable amusements, and they pursue for
pleasure what they once followed from necessity. In the advanced
state of society, therefore, they are all very poor people who
follow as a trade what other people pursue as a pastime.
Fishermen have been so since the time of Theocritus. A poacher is
everywhere a very poor man in Great Britain. In countries where
the rigour of the law suffers no poachers, the licensed hunter is
not in a much better condition. The natural taste for those
employments makes more people follow them than can live
comfortably by them, and the produce of their labour, in
proportion to its quantity, comes always too cheap to market to
afford anything but the most scanty subsistence to the labourers.
Disagreeableness and disgrace affect the profits of stock in
the same manner as the wages of labour. The keeper of an inn or
tavern, who is never master of his own house, and who is exposed
to the brutality of every drunkard, exercises neither a very
agreeable nor a very creditable business. But there is scarce any
common trade in which a small stock yields so great a profit.
Secondly, the wages of labour vary with the easiness and
cheapness, or the difficulty and expense of learning the
business.
When any expensive machine is erected, the extraordinary
work to be performed by it before it is worn out, it must be
expected, will replace the capital laid out upon it, with at
least the ordinary profits. A man educated at the expense of much
labour and time to any of those employments which require
extraordinary dexterity and skill, may be compared to one of
those expensive machines. The work which he learns to perform, it
must be expected, over and above the usual wages of common
labour, will replace to him the whole expense of his education,
with at least the ordinary profits of an equally valuable
capital. It must do this, too, in a reasonable time, regard being
had to the very uncertain duration of human life, in the same
manner as to the more certain duration of the machine.
The difference between the wages of skilled labour and those
of common labour is founded upon this principle.
The policy of Europe considers the labour of all mechanics,
artificers, and manufacturers, as skilled labour; and that of all
country labourers as common labour. It seems to suppose that of
the former to be of a more nice and delicate nature than that of
the latter. It is so perhaps in some cases; but in the greater
part is it quite otherwise, as I shall endeavour to show by and
by. The laws and customs of Europe, therefore, in order to
qualify any person for exercising the one species of labour,
impose the necessity of an apprenticeship, though with different
degrees of rigour in different places. They leave the other free
and open to everybody. During the continuance of the
apprenticeship, the whole labour of the apprentice belongs to his
master. In the meantime he must, in many cases, be maintained by
his parents or relations, and in almost all cases must be clothed
by them. Some money, too, is commonly given to the master for
teaching him his trade. They who cannot give money give time, or
become bound for more than the usual number of years; a
consideration which, though it is not always advantageous to the
master, on account of the usual idleness of apprentices, is
always disadvantageous to the apprentice. In country labour, on
the contrary, the labourer, while he is employed about the
easier, learns the more difficult parts of his business, and his
own labour maintains him through all the different stages of his
employment. It is reasonable, therefore, that in Europe the wages
of mechanics, artificers, and manufacturers, should be somewhat
higher than those of common labourers. They are so accordingly,
and their superior gains make them in most places be considered
as a superior rank of people. This superiority, however, is
generally very small; the daily or weekly earnings of journeymen
in the more common sorts of manufactures, such as those of plain
linen and woollen cloth, computed at an average, are, in most
places, very little more than the day wages of common labourers.
Their employment, indeed, is more steady and uniform, and the
superiority of their earnings, taking the whole year together,
may be somewhat greater. It seems evidently, however, to be no
greater than what is sufficient to compensate the superior
expense of their education.
Education in the ingenious arts and in the liberal
professions is still more tedious and expensive. The pecuniary
recompense, therefore, of painters and sculptors, of lawyers and
physicians, ought to be much more liberal; and it is so
accordingly.
The profits of stock seem to be very little affected by the
easiness or difficulty of learning the trade in which it is
employed. All the different ways in which stock is commonly
employed in great towns seem, in reality, to be almost equally
easy and equally difficult to learn. One branch either of foreign
or domestic trade cannot well be a much more intricate business
than another.
Thirdly, the wages of labour in different occupations vary
with the constancy or inconstancy of employment.
Employment is much more constant in some trades than in
others. In the greater part of manufacturers, a journeyman may be
pretty sure of employment almost every day in the year that he is
able to work. A mason or bricklayer, on the contrary, can work
neither in hard frost nor in foul weather, and his employment at
all other times depends upon the occasional calls of his
customers. He is liable, in consequence, to be frequently without
any. What he earns, therefore, while he is employed, must not
only maintain him while he is idle, but make him some
compensation for those anxious and desponding moments which the
thought of so precarious a situation must sometimes occasion.
Where the computed earnings of the greater part of manufacturers,
accordingly, are nearly upon a level with the day wages of common
labourers, those of masons and bricklayers are generally from one
half more to double those wages. Where common labourers earn four
and five shillings a week, masons and bricklayers frequently earn
seven and eight; where the former earn six, the latter often earn
nine and ten; and where the former earn nine and ten, as in
London, the latter commonly earn fifteen and eighteen. No species
of skilled labour, however, seems more easy to learn than that of
masons and bricklayers. Chairmen in London, during the summer
season, are said sometimes to be employed as bricklayers. The
high wages of those workmen, therefore, are not so much the
recompense of their skill, as the compensation for the
inconstancy of their employment.
A house carpenter seems to exercise rather a nicer and more
ingenious trade than a mason. In most places, however, for it is
not universally so, his day-wages are somewhat lower. His
employment, though it depends much, does not depend so entirely
upon the occasional calls of his customers; and it is not liable
to be interrupted by the weather.
When the trades which generally afford constant employment
happen in a particular place not to do so, the wages of the
workmen always rise a good deal above their ordinary proportion
to those of common labour. In London almost all journeymen
artificers are liable to be called upon and dismissed by their
masters from day to day, and from week to week, in the same
manner as day-labourers in other places. The lowest order of
artificers, journeymen tailors, accordingly, earn there half a
crown a-day, though eighteenpence may be reckoned the wages of
common labour. In small towns and country villages, the wages of
journeymen tailors frequently scarce equal those of common
labour; but in London they are often many weeks without
employment, particularly during the summer.
When the inconstancy of employment is combined with the
hardship, disagreeableness and dirtiness of the work, it
sometimes raises the wages of the most common labour above those
of the most skilful artificers. A collier working by the piece is
supposed, at Newcastle, to earn commonly about double, and in
many parts of Scotland about three times the wages of common
labour. His high wages arise altogether from the hardship,
disagreeableness, and dirtiness of his work. His employment may,
upon most occasions, be as constant as he pleases. The
coal-heavers in London exercise a trade which in hardship,
dirtiness, and disagreeableness, almost equals that of colliers;
and from the unavoidable irregularity in the arrivals of
coal-ships, the employment of the greater part of them is
necessarily very inconstant. If colliers, therefore, commonly
earn double and triple the wages of common labour, it ought not
to seem unreasonable that coal-heavers should sometimes earn four
and five times those wages. In the inquiry made into their
condition a few years ago, it was found that at the rate at which
they were then paid, they could earn from six to ten shillings a
day. Six shillings are about four times the wages of common
labour in London, and in every particular trade the lowest common
earnings may always be considered as those of the far greater
number. How extravagant soever those earnings may appear, if they
were more than sufficient to compensate all the disagreeable
circumstances of the business, there would soon be so great a
number of competitors as, in a trade which has no exclusive
privilege, would quickly reduce them to a lower rate.
The constancy or inconstancy of employment cannot affect the
ordinary profits of stock in any particular trade. Whether the
stock is or is not constantly employed depends. not upon the
trade, but the trader.
Fourthly, the wages of labour vary accordingly to the small
or great trust which must be reposed in the workmen.
The wages of goldsmiths and jewellers are everywhere
superior to those of many other workmen, not only of equal, but
of much superior ingenuity, on account of the precious materials
with which they are intrusted.
We trust our health to the physician: our fortune and
sometimes our life and reputation to the lawyer and attorney.
Such confidence could not safely be reposed in people of a very
mean or low condition. Their reward must be such, therefore, as
may give them that rank in the society which so important a trust
requires. The long time and the great expense which must be laid
out in their education, when combined with this circumstance,
necessarily enhance still further the price of their labour.
When a person employs only his own stock in trade, there is
no trust; and the credit which he may get from other people
depends, not upon the nature of his trade, but upon their opinion
of his fortune, probity, and prudence. The different rates of
profit, therefore, in the different branches of trade, cannot
arise from the different degrees of trust reposed in the traders.
Fifthly, the wages of labour in different. employments vary
according to the probability or improbability of success in them.
The probability that any particular person shall ever be
qualified for the employment to which he is educated is very
different in different occupations. In the greater part of
mechanic trades, success is almost certain; but very uncertain in
the liberal professions. Put your son apprentice to a shoemaker,
there is little doubt of his learning to make a pair of shoes;
but send him to study the law, it is at least twenty to one if
ever he makes such proficiency as will enable him to live by the
business. In a perfectly fair lottery, those who draw the prizes
ought to gain all that is lost by those who draw the blanks. In a
profession where twenty fail for one that succeeds, that one
ought to gain all that should have been gained by the
unsuccessful twenty. The counsellor-at-law who, perhaps, at near
forty years of age, begins to make something by his profession,
ought to receive the retribution, not only of his own so tedious
and expensive education, but that of more than twenty others who
are never likely to make anything by it. How extravagant soever
the fees of counsellors-at-law may sometimes appear, their real
retribution is never equal to this. Compute in any particular
place what is likely to be annually gained, and what is likely to
be annually spent, by all the different workmen in any common
trade, such as that of shoemakers or weavers, and you will find
that the former sum will generally exceed the latter. But make
the same computation with regard to all the counsellors and
students of law, in all the different inns of court, and you will
find that their annual gains bear but a very small proportion to
their annual expense, even though you rate the former as high,
and the latter as low, as can well be done. The lottery of the
law, therefore, is very far from being a perfectly fair lottery;
and that, as well as many other liberal and honourable
professions, are, in point of pecuniary gain, evidently
under-recompensed.
Those professions keep their level, however, with other
occupations, and, notwithstanding these discouragements, all the
most generous and liberal spirits are eager to crowd into them.
Two different causes contribute to recommend them. First, the
desire of the reputation which attends upon superior excellence
in any of them; and, secondly, the natural confidence which every
man has more or less, not only in his own abilities, but in his
own good fortune.
To excel in any profession, in which but few arrive at
mediocrity, is the most decisive mark of what is called genius or
superior talents. The public admiration which attends upon such
distinguished abilities makes always a part of their reward; a
greater or smaller in proportion as it is higher or lower in
degree. It makes a considerable part of that reward in the
profession of physic; a still greater perhaps in that of law; in
poetry and philosophy it makes almost the whole.
There are some very agreeable and beautiful talents of which
the possession commands a certain sort of admiration; but of
which the exercise for the sake of gain is considered, whether
from reason or prejudice, as a sort of public prostitution. The
pecuniary recompense, therefore, of those who exercise them in
this manner must be sufficient, not only to pay for the time,
labour, and expense of acquiring the talents, but for the
discredit which attends the employment of them as the means of
subsistence. The exorbitant rewards of players, opera-singers,
opera-dancers, etc., are founded upon those two principles; the
rarity and beauty of the talents, and the discredit of employing
them in this manner. It seems absurd at first sight that we
should despise their persons and yet reward their talents with
the most profuse liberality. While we do the one, however, we
must of necessity do the other. Should the public opinion or
prejudice ever alter with regard to such occupations, their
pecuniary recompense would quickly diminish. More people would
apply to them, and the competition would quickly reduce the price
of their labour. Such talents, though far from being common, are
by no means so rare as is imagined. Many people possess them in
great perfection, who disdain to make this use of them; and many
more are capable of acquiring them, if anything could be made
honourably by them.
The overweening conceit which the greater part of men have
of their own abilities is an ancient evil remarked by the
philosophers and moralists of all ages. Their absurd presumption
in their own good fortune has been less taken notice of. It is,
however, if possible, still more universal. There is no man
living who, when in tolerable health and spirits, has not some
share of it. The chance of gain is by every man more or less
overvalued, and the chance of loss is by most men undervalued,
and by scarce any man, who is in tolerable health and spirits,
valued more than it is worth.
That the chance of gain is naturally overvalued, we may
learn from the universal success of lotteries. The world neither
ever saw, nor ever will see, a perfectly fair lottery; or one in
which the whole gain compensated the whole loss; because the
undertaker could make nothing by it. In the state lotteries the
tickets are really not worth the price which is paid by the
original subscribers, and yet commonly sell in the market for
twenty, thirty, and sometimes forty per cent advance. The vain
hope of gaining some of the great prizes is the sole cause of
this demand. The soberest people scarce look upon it as a folly
to pay a small sum for the chance of gaining ten or twenty
thousand pounds; though they know that even that small sum is
perhaps twenty or thirty per cent more than the chance is worth.
In a lottery in which no prize exceeded twenty pounds, though in
other respects it approached much nearer to a perfectly fair one
than the common state lotteries, there would not be the same
demand for tickets. In order to have a better chance for some of
the great prizes, some people purchase several tickets, and
others, small share in a still greater number. There is not,
however, a more certain proposition in mathematics than that the
more tickets you adventure upon, the more likely you are to be a
loser. Adventure upon all the tickets in the lottery, and you
lose for certain; and the greater the number of your tickets the
nearer you approach to this certainty.
That the chance of loss is frequently undervalued, and
scarce ever valued more than it is worth, we may learn from a
very moderate profit of insurers. In order to make insurance,
either from fire or sea-risk, a trade at all, the common premium
must be sufficient to compensate the common losses, to pay the
expense of management, and to afford such a profit as might have
been drawn from an equal capital employed in any common trade.
The person who pays no more than this evidently pays no more than
the real value of the risk, or the lowest price at which he can
reasonably expect to insure it. But though many people have made
a little money by insurance, very few have made a great fortune;
and from this consideration alone, it seems evident enough that
the ordinary balance of profit and loss is not more advantageous
in this than in other common trades by which so many people make
fortunes. Moderate, however, as the premium of insurance commonly
is, many people despise the risk too much to care to pay it.
Taking the whole kingdom at an average, nineteen houses in
twenty, or rather perhaps ninety-nine in a hundred, are not
insured from fire. Sea risk is more alarming to the greater part
of people, and the proportion of ships insured to those not
insured is much greater. Many fail, however, at all seasons, and
even in time of war, without any insurance. This may sometimes
perhaps be done without any imprudence. When a great company, or
even a great merchant, has twenty or thirty ships at sea, they
may, as it were, insure one another. The premium saved upon them
all may more than compensate such losses as they are likely to
meet with in the common course of chances. The neglect of
insurance upon shipping, however, in the same manner as upon
houses, is, in most cases, the effect of no such nice
calculation, but of mere thoughtless rashness and presumptuous
contempt of the risk.
The contempt of risk and the presumptuous hope of success
are in no period of life more active than at the age at which
young people choose their professions. How little the fear of
misfortune is then capable of balancing the hope of good luck
appears still more evidently in the readiness of the common
People to enlist as soldiers, or to go to sea, than in the
eagerness of those of better fashion to enter into what are
called the liberal professions.
What a common soldier may lose is obvious enough. Without
regarding the danger, however, young volunteers never enlist so
readily as at the beginning of a new war; and though they have
scarce any chance of preferment, they figure to themselves, in
their youthful fancies, a thousand occasions of acquiring honour
and distinction which never occur. These romantic hopes make the
whole price of their blood. Their pay is less than that of common
labourers, and in actual service their fatigues are much greater.
The lottery of the sea is not altogether so disadvantageous
as that of the army. The son of a creditable labourer or
artificer may frequently go to sea with his father's consent; but
if he enlists as a soldier, it is always without it. Other people
see some chance of his making something by the one trade: nobody
but himself sees any of his making anything by the other. The
great admiral is less the object of public admiration than the
great general, and the highest success in the sea service
promises a less brilliant fortune and reputation than equal
success in the land. The same difference runs through all the
inferior degrees of preferment in both. By the rules of
precedency a captain in the navy ranks with a colonel in the
army; but he does not rank with him in the common estimation. As
the great prizes in the lottery are less, the smaller ones must
be more numerous. Common sailors, therefore, more frequently get
some fortune and preferment than common soldiers; and the hope of
those prizes is what principally recommends the trade. Though
their skill and dexterity are much superior to that of almost any
artificers, and though their whole life is one continual scene of
hardship and danger, yet for all this dexterity and skill, for
all those hardships and dangers, while they remain in the
condition of common sailors, they receive scarce any other
recompense but the pleasure of exercising the one and of
surmounting the other. Their wages are not greater than those of
common labourers at the port which regulates the rate of seamen's
wages. As they are continually going from port to port, the
monthly pay of those who sail from all the different ports of
Great Britain is more nearly upon a level than that of any other
workmen in those different places; and the rate of the port to
and from which the greatest number sail, that is the port of
London, regulates that of all the rest. At London the wages of
the greater part of the different classes of workmen are about
double those of the same classes at Edinburgh. But the sailors
who sail from the port of London seldom earn above three or four
shillings a month more than those who sail from the port of
Leith, and the difference is frequently not so great. In time of
peace, and in the merchant service, the London price is from a
guinea to about seven-and-twenty shillings the calendar month. A
common labourer in London, at the rate of nine or ten shillings a
week, may earn in the calendar month from forty to five-and-forty
shillings. The sailor, indeed, over and above his pay, is
supplied with provisions. Their value, however, may not perhaps
always exceed the difference between his pay and that of the
common labourer; and though it sometimes should, the excess will
not be clear gain to the sailor, because he cannot share it with
his wife and family, whom he must maintain out of his wages at
home.
The dangers and hairbreadth escapes of a life of adventures,
instead of disheartening young people, seem frequently to
recommend a trade to them. A tender mother, among the inferior
ranks of people, is of afraid to send her son to school at a
seaport town, lest the sight of the ships and the conversation
and adventures of the sailors should entice him to go to sea. The
distant prospect of hazards, from which we can hope to extricate
ourselves by courage and address, is not disagreeable to us, and
does not raise the wages of labour in any employment. It is
otherwise with those in which courage and address can be of no
avail. In trades which are known to be very unwholesome, the
wages of labour are always remarkably high. Unwholesomeness is a
species of disagreeableness, and its effects upon the wages of
labour are to be ranked under that general head.
In all the different employments of stock, the ordinary rate
of profit varies more or less with the certainty or uncertainty
of the returns. These are in general less uncertain in the inland
than in the foreign trade, and in some branches of foreign trade
than in others; in the trade to North America, for example, than
in that to Jamaica. The ordinary rate of profit always rises more
or less with the risk. It does not, however, seem to rise in
proportion to it, or so as to compensate it completely.
Bankruptcies are most frequent in the most hazardous trades. The
most hazardous of all trades, that of a smuggler, though when the
adventure succeeds it is likewise the most profitable, is the
infallible road to bankruptcy. The presumptuous hope of success
seems to act here as upon all other occasions, and to entice so
many adventurers into those hazardous trades, that their
competition reduces their profit below what is sufficient to
compensate the risk. To compensate it completely, the common
returns ought, over and above the ordinary profits of stock, not
only to make up for all occasional losses, but to afford a
surplus profit to the adventurers of the same nature with the
profit of insurers. But if the common returns were sufficient for
all this, bankruptcies would not be more frequent in these than
in other trades.
Of the five circumstances, therefore, which vary the wages
of labour, two only affect the profits of stock; the
agreeableness or disagreeableness of the business, and the risk
or security with which it is attended. In point of agreeableness,
there is little or no difference in the far greater part of the
different employments of stock; but a great deal in those of
labour; and the ordinary profit of stock, though it rises with
the risk, does not always seem to rise in proportion to it. It
should follow from all this, that, in the same society or
neighbourhood, the average and ordinary rates of profit in the
different employments of stock should be more nearly upon a level
than the pecuniary wages of the different sorts of labour. They
are so accordingly. The difference between the earnings of a
common labourer and those of a well employed lawyer or physician,
is evidently much greater than that between the ordinary profits
in any two different branches of trade. The apparent difference,
besides, in the profits of different trades, is generally a
deception arising from our not always distinguishing what ought
to be considered as wages, from what ought to be considered as
profit.
Apothecaries' profit is become a bye-word, denoting
something uncommonly extravagant. This great apparent profit,
however, is frequently no more than the reasonable wages of
labour. The skill of an apothecary is a much nicer and more
delicate matter than that of any artificer whatever; and the
trust which is reposed in him is of much greater importance. He
is the physician of the poor in all cases, and of the rich when
the distress or danger is not very great. His reward, therefore,
ought to be suitable to his skill and his trust, and it arises
generally from the price at which he sells his drugs. But the
whole drugs which the best employed apothecary, in a large market
town, will sell in a year, may not perhaps cost him above thirty
or forty pounds. Though he should sell them, therefore, for three
or four hundred, or at a thousand per cent profit, this may
frequently be no more than the reasonable wages of his labour
charged, in the only way in which he can charge them, upon the
price of his drugs. The greater part of the apparent profit is
real wages disguised in the garb of profit.
In a small seaport town, a little grocer will make forty or
fifty per cent upon a stock of a single hundred pounds, while a
considerable wholesale merchant in the same place will scarce
make eight or ten per cent upon a stock of ten thousand. The
trade of the grocer may be necessary for the conveniency of the
inhabitants, and the narrowness of the market may not admit the
employment of a larger capital in the business. The man, however,
must not only live by his trade, but live by it suitably to the
qualifications which it requires. Besides possessing a little
capital, he must be able to read, write, and account, and must be
a tolerable judge too of, perhaps, fifty or sixty different sorts
of goods, their prices, qualities, and the markets where they are
to be had cheapest. He must have all the knowledge, in short,
that is necessary for a great merchant, which nothing hinders him
from becoming but the want of a sufficient capital. Thirty or
forty pounds a year cannot be considered as too great a
recompense for the labour of a person so Accomplished. Deduct
this from the seemingly great profits of his capital, and little
more will remain, perhaps, than the ordinary profits of stock.
The greater part of the apparent profit is, in this case too,
real wages.
The difference between the apparent profit of the retail and
that of the wholesale trade, is much less in the capital than in
small towns and country villages. Where ten thousand pounds can
be employed in the grocery trade, the wages of the grocer's
labour make but a very trifling addition to the real profits of
so great a stock. The apparent profits of the wealthy retailer,
therefore, are there more nearly upon a level with those of the
wholesale merchant. It is upon this account that goods sold by
retail are generally as cheap and frequently much cheaper in the
capital than in small towns and country villages. Grocery goods,
for example, are generally much cheaper; bread and butcher's meat
frequently as cheap. It costs no more to bring grocery goods to
the great town than to the country village; but it costs a great
deal more to bring corn and cattle, as the greater part of them
must be brought from a much greater distance. The prime cost of
grocery goods, therefore, being the same in both places, they are
cheapest where the least profit is charged upon them. The prime
cost of bread and butcher's meat is greater in the great town
than in the country village; and though the profit is less,
therefore, they are not always cheaper there, but often equally
cheap. In such articles as bread and butcher's meat, the same
cause, which diminishes apparent profit, increases prime cost.
The extent of the market, by giving employment to greater stocks,
diminishes apparent profit; but by requiring supplies from a
greater distance, it increases prime cost. This diminution of the
one and increase of the other seem, in most cases, nearly to
counterbalance one another, which is probably the reason that,
though the prices of corn and cattle are commonly very different
in different parts of the kingdom, those of bread and butcher's
meat are generally very nearly the same through the greater part
of it.
Though the profits of stock both in the wholesale and retail
trade are generally less in the capital than in small towns and
country villages, yet great fortunes are frequently acquired from
small beginnings in the former, and scarce ever in the latter. In
small towns and country villages, on account of the narrowness of
the market, trade cannot always be extended as stock extends. In
such places, therefore, though the rate of a particular person's
profits may be very high, the sum or amount of them can never be
very great, nor consequently that of his annual accumulation. In
great towns, on the contrary, trade can be extended as stock
increases, and the credit of a frugal and thriving man increases
much faster than his stock. His trade is extended in proportion
to the amount of both, and the sum or amount of his profits is in
proportion to the extent of his trade, and his annual
accumulation in proportion to the amount of his profits. It
seldom happens, however, that great fortunes are made even in
great towns by any one regular, established, and well-known
branch of business, but in consequence of a long life of
industry, frugality, and attention. Sudden fortunes, indeed, are
sometimes made in such places by what is called the trade of
speculation. The speculative merchant exercises no one regular,
established, or well-known branch of business. He is a corn
merchant this year, and a wine merchant the next, and a sugar,
tobacco, or tea merchant the year after. He enters into every
trade when he foresees that it is likely to be more than commonly
profitable, and he quits it when he foresees that its profits are
likely to return to the level of other trades. His profits and
losses, therefore, can bear no regular proportion to those of any
one established and well-known branch of business. A bold
adventurer may sometimes acquire a considerable fortune by two or
three successful speculations; but is just as likely to lose one
by two or three unsuccessful ones. This trade can be carried on
nowhere but in great towns. It is only in places of the most
extensive commerce and correspondence that the intelligence
requisite for it can be had.
The five circumstances above mentioned, though they occasion
considerable inequalities in the wages of labour and profits of
stock, occasion none in the whole of the advantages and
disadvantages, real or imaginary, of the different employments of
either. The nature of those circumstances is such that they make
up for a small pecuniary gain in some, and counterbalance a great
one in others.
In order, however, that this equality may take place in the
whole of their advantages or disadvantages, three things are
requisite even where there is the most perfect freedom. First,
the employments must be well known and long established in the
neighbourhood; secondly, they must be in their ordinary, or what
may be called their natural state; and, thirdly, they must be the
sole or principal employments of those who occupy them.
First, this equality can take place only in those
employments which are well known, and have been long established
in the neighbourhood.
Where all other circumstances are equal, wages are generally
higher in new than in old trades. When a projector attempts to
establish a new manufacture, he must at first entice his workmen
from other employments by higher wages than they can either earn
in their own trades, or than the nature of his work would
otherwise require, and a considerable time must pass away before
he can venture to reduce them to the common level. Manufactures
for which the demand arises altogether from fashion and fancy are
continually changing, and seldom last long enough to be
considered as old established manufactures. Those, on the
contrary, for which the demand arises chiefly from use or
necessity, are less liable to change, and the same form or fabric
may continue in demand for whole centuries together. The wages of
labour, therefore, are likely to be higher in manufactures of the
former than in those of the latter kind. Birmingham deals chiefly
in manufactures of the former kind; Sheffield in those of the
latter; and the wages of labour in those two different places are
said to be suitable to this difference in the nature of their
manufactures.
The establishment of any new manufacture, of any new branch
of commerce, or of any new practice in agriculture, is always a
speculation, from which the projector promises himself
extraordinary profits. These profits sometimes are very great,
and sometimes, more frequently, perhaps, they are quite
otherwise; but in general they bear no regular proportion to
those of other old trades in the neighbourhood. If the project
succeeds, they are commonly at first very high. When the trade or
practice becomes thoroughly established and well known, the
competition reduces them to the level of other trades.
Secondly, this equality in the whole of the advantages and
disadvantages of the different employments of labour and stock,
can take place only in the ordinary, or what may be called the
natural state of those employments.
The demand for almost every different species of labour is
sometimes greater and sometimes less than usual. In the one case
the advantages of the employment rise above, in the other they
fall below the common level. The demand for country labour is
greater at hay-time and harvest than during the greater part of
the year; and wages rise with the demand. In time of war, when
forty or fifty thousand sailors are forced from the merchant
service into that of the king, the demand for sailors to merchant
ships necessarily rises with their scarcity, and their wages upon
such occasions commonly rise from a guinea and seven-and-twenty
shillings, to forty shillings and three pounds a month. In a
decaying manufacture, on the contrary, many workmen, rather than
quit their old trade, are contented with smaller wages than would
otherwise be suitable to the nature of their employment.
The profits of stock vary with the price of the commodities
in which it is employed. As the price of any commodity rises
above the ordinary or average rate, the profits of at least some
part of the stock that is employed in bringing it to market, rise
above their proper level, and as it falls they sink below it. All
commodities are more or less liable to variations of price, but
some are much more so than others. In all commodities which are
produced by human industry, the quantity of industry annually
employed is necessarily regulated by the annual demand, in such a
manner that the average annual produce may, as nearly as
possible, be equal to the average annual consumption. In some
employments, it has already been observed, the same quantity of
industry will always produce the same, or very nearly the same
quantity of commodities. In the linen or woollen manufactures,
for example, the same number of hands will annually work up very
nearly the same quantity of linen and woollen cloth. The
variations in the market price of such commodities, therefore,
can arise only from some accidental variation in the demand. A
public mourning raises the price of black cloth. But as the
demand for most sorts of plain linen and woollen cloth is pretty
uniform, so is likewise the price. But there are other
employments in which the same quantity of industry will not
always produce the same quantity of commodities. The same
quantity of industry, for example, will, in different years,
produce very different quantities of corn, wine, hops, sugar,
tobacco, etc. The price of such commodities, therefore, varies
not only with the variations of demand, but with the much greater
and more frequent variations of quantity, and is consequently
extremely fluctuating. But the profit of some of the dealers must
necessarily fluctuate with the price of the commodities. The
operations of the speculative merchant are principally employed
about such commodities. He endeavours to buy them up when he
foresees that their price is likely to rise, and to sell them
when it is likely to fall.
Thirdly, this equality in the whole of the advantages and
disadvantages of the different employments of labour and stock
can take only in such as are the sole or principal employments of
those who occupy them.
When a person derives his subsistence from one employment,
which does not occupy the greater part of his time, in the
intervals of his leisure he is often willing to work as another
for less wages than would otherwise suit the nature of the
employment.
There still subsists in many parts of Scotland a set of
people called Cotters or Cottagers, though they were more
frequent some years ago than they are now. They are a sort of
outservants of the landlords and farmers. The usual reward which
they receive from their masters is a house, a small garden for
pot-herbs, as much grass as will feed a cow, and, perhaps, an
acre or two of bad arable land. When their master has occasion
for their labour, he gives them, besides, two pecks of oatmeal a
week, worth about sixteenpence sterling. During a great part of
the year he has little or no occasion for their labour, and the
cultivation of their own little possession is not sufficient to
occupy the time which is left at their own disposal. When such
occupiers were more numerous than they are at present, they are
said to have been willing to give their spare time for a very
small recompense to anybody, and to have wrought for less wages
than other labourers. In ancient times they seem to have been
common all over Europe. In countries ill cultivated and worse
inhabited, the greater part of landlords and farmers could not
otherwise provide themselves with the extraordinary number of
hands which country labour requires at certain season. The daily
or weekly recompense which such labourers occasionally received
from their masters was evidently not the whole price of their
labour. Their small tenement made a considerable part of it. This
daily or weekly recompense, however, seems to have been
considered as the whole of it, by many writers who have collected
the prices of labour and provisions in ancient times, and who
have taken pleasures in representing both as wonderfully low.
The produce of such labour comes frequently cheaper to
market than would otherwise suitable to its nature. Stockings in
many parts of Scotland are knit much cheaper than they can
anywhere be wrought upon the loom. They are the work of servants
and labourers, who derive the principal part of their subsistence
from some other employment. More than a thousand pair of Shetland
stockings are annually imported into Leith, of which the price is
from fivepence to sevenpence a pair. At Lerwick, the small
capital of the Shetland Islands, tenpence a day, I have been
assured, is a common price of common labour. In the same islands
they knit worsted stockings to the value of a guinea a pair and
upwards.
The spinning of linen yarn is carried on in Scotland nearly
in the same way as the knitting of stockings by servants, who are
chiefly hired for other purposes. They earn but a very scanty
subsistence, who endeavour to get their whole livelihood by
either of those trades. In most parts of Scotland she is a good
spinner who can earn twentypence a week.
In opulent countries the market is generally so extensive
that any one trade is sufficient to employ the whole labour and
stock of those who occupy it. Instances of people's living by one
employment, and at the same time deriving some little advantage
from another, occur chiefly in poor countries. The following
instance, however, of something of the same kind is to be found
in the capital of a very rich one. There is no city in Europe, I
believe, in which house-rent is dearer than in London, and yet I
know no capital in which a furnished apartment can be hired as
cheap. Lodging is not only much cheaper in London than in Paris;
it is much cheaper than in Edinburgh of the same degree of
goodness; and what may seem extraordinary, the dearness of
house-rent is the cause of the cheapness of lodging. The dearness
of house-rent in London arises not only from those causes which
render it dear in all great capitals, the dearness of labour, the
dearness of all the materials of building, which must generally
be brought from a great distance, and above all the dearness of
ground-rent, every landlord acting the part the part of a
monopolist, and frequently exacting a higher rent for a single
acre of bad land in a town than can be had for a hundred of the
best in the country; but it arises in part from the peculiar
manners and customs of the people, which oblige every master of a
family to hire a whole house from top to bottom. A dwelling-house
in England means everything that is contained under the same
roof. In France, Scotland, and many other parts of Europe, it
frequently means no more than a single story. A tradesman in
London is obliged to hire a whole house in that part of the town
where his customers live. His shop is upon the ground-floor, and
he and his family sleep in the garret; and he endeavours to pay a
part of his house-rent by letting the two middle stories to
lodgers. He expects to maintain his family by his trade, and not
by his lodgers. Whereas, at Paris and Edinburgh, the people who
let lodgings have commonly no other means of subsistence and the
price of the lodging must pay, not only the rent of the house,
but the whole expense of the family.
|