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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 V
Of the Real and Nominal Price of Commodities, or their Price in
Labour, and their Price in Money
EVERY man is rich or poor according to the degree in which
he can afford to enjoy the necessaries, conveniences, and
amusements of human life. But after the division of labour has
once thoroughly taken place, it is but a very small part of these
with which a man's own labour can supply him. The far greater
part of them he must derive from the labour of other people, and
he must be rich or poor according to the quantity of that labour
which he can command, or which he can afford to purchase. The
value of any commodity, therefore, to the person who possesses
it, and who means not to use or consume it himself, but to
exchange it for other commodities, is equal to the quantity of
labour which it enables him to purchase or command. Labour,
therefore, is the real measure of the exchangeable value of all
commodities.
The real price of everything, what everything really costs
to the man who wants to acquire it, is the toil and trouble of
acquiring it. What everything is really worth to the man who has
acquired it, and who wants to dispose of it or exchange it for
something else, is the toil and trouble which it can save to
himself, and which it can impose upon other people. What is
bought with money or with goods is purchased by labour as much as
what we acquire by the toil of our own body. That money or those
goods indeed save us this toil. They contain the value of a
certain quantity of labour which we exchange for what is supposed
at the time to contain the value of an equal quantity. Labour was
the first price, the original purchase-money that was paid for
all things. It was not by gold or by silver, but by labour, that
all the wealth of the world was originally purchased; and its
value, to those who possess it, and who want to exchange it for
some new productions, is precisely equal to the quantity of
labour which it can enable them to purchase or command.
Wealth, as Mr. Hobbes says, is power. But the person who
either acquires, or succeeds to a great fortune, does not
necessarily acquire or succeed to any political power, either
civil or military. His fortune may, perhaps, afford him the means
of acquiring both, but the mere possession of that fortune does
not necessarily convey to him either. The power which that
possession immediately and directly conveys to him, is the power
of purchasing; a certain command over all the labour, or over all
the produce of labour, which is then in the market. His fortune
is greater or less, precisely in proportion to the extent of this
power; or to the quantity either of other men's labour, or, what
is the same thing, of the produce of other men's labour, which it
enables him to purchase or command. The exchangeable value of
everything must always be precisely equal to the extent of this
power which it conveys to its owner.
But though labour be the real measure of the exchangeable
value of all commodities, it is not that by which their value is
commonly estimated. It is of difficult to ascertain the
proportion between two different quantities of labour. The time
spent in two different sorts of work will not always alone
determine this proportion. The different degrees of hardship
endured, and of ingenuity exercised, must likewise be taken into
account. There may be more labour in an hour's hard work than in
two hours' easy business; or in an hour's application to a trade
which it cost ten years' labour to learn, than in a month's
industry at an ordinary and obvious employment. But it is not
easy to find any accurate measure either of hardship or
ingenuity. In exchanging, indeed, the different productions of
different sorts of labour for one another, some allowance is
commonly made for both. It is adjusted, however, not by any
accurate measure, but by the higgling and bargaining of the
market, according to that sort of rough equality which, though
not exact, is sufficient for carrying on the business of common
life.
Every commodity, besides, is more frequently exchanged for,
and thereby compared with, other commodities than with labour. It
is more natural, therefore, to estimate its exchangeable value by
the quantity of some other commodity than by that of the labour
which it can purchase. The greater part of people, too,
understand better what is meant by a quantity of a particular
commodity than by a quantity of labour. The one is a plain
palpable object; the other an abstract notion, which, though it
can be made sufficiently intelligible, is not altogether so
natural and obvious.
But when barter ceases, and money has become the common
instrument of commerce, every particular commodity is more
frequently exchanged for money than for any other commodity. The
butcher seldom carries his beef or his mutton to the baker, or
the brewer, in order to exchange them for bread or for beer; but
he carries them to the market, where he exchanges them for money,
and afterwards exchanges that money for bread and for beer. The
quantity of money which he gets for them regulates, too, the
quantity of bread and beer which he can afterwards purchase. It
is more natural and obvious to him, therefore, to estimate their
value by the quantity of money, the commodity for which he
immediately exchanges them, than by that of bread and beer, the
commodities for which he can exchange them only by the
intervention of another commodity; and rather to say that his
butcher's meat is worth threepence or fourpence a pound, than
that it is worth three or four pounds of bread, or three or four
quarts of small beer. Hence it comes to pass that the
exchangeable value of every commodity is more frequently
estimated by the quantity of money, than by the quantity either
of labour or of any other commodity which can be had in exchange
for it.
Gold and silver, however, like every other commodity, vary
in their value, are sometimes cheaper and sometimes dearer,
sometimes of easier and sometimes of more difficult purchase. The
quantity of labour which any particular quantity of them can
purchase or command, or the quantity of other goods which it will
exchange for, depends always upon the fertility or barrenness of
the mines which happen to be known about the time when such
exchanges are made. The discovery of the abundant mines of
America reduced, in the sixteenth century, the value of gold and
silver in Europe to about a third of what it had been before. As
it costs less labour to bring those metals from the mine to the
market, so when they were brought thither they could purchase or
command less labour; and this revolution in their value, though
perhaps the greatest, is by no means the only one of which
history gives some account. But as a measure of quantity, such as
the natural foot, fathom, or handful, which is continually
varying in its own quantity, can never be an accurate measure of
the quantity of other things; so a commodity which is itself
continually varying in its own value, can never be an accurate
measure of the value of other commodities. Equal quantities of
labour, at all times and places, may be said to be of equal value
to the labourer. In his ordinary state of health, strength and
spirits; in the ordinary degree of his skill and dexterity, he
must always laydown the same portion of his ease, his liberty,
and his happiness. The price which he pays must always be the
same, whatever may be the quantity of goods which he receives in
return for it. Of these, indeed, it may sometimes purchase a
greater and sometimes a smaller quantity; but it is their value
which varies, not that of the labour which purchases them. At all
times and places that is dear which it is difficult to come at,
or which it costs much labour to acquire; and that cheap which is
to be had easily, or with very little labour. Labour alone,
therefore, never varying in its own value, is alone the ultimate
and real standard by which the value of all commodities can at
all times and places be estimated and compared. It is their real
price; money is their nominal price only.
But though equal quantities of labour are always of equal
value to the labourer, yet to the person who employs him they
appear sometimes to be of greater and sometimes of smaller value.
He purchases them sometimes with a greater and sometimes with a
smaller quantity of goods, and to him the price of labour seems
to vary like that of all other things. It appears to him dear in
the one case, and cheap in the other. In reality, however, it is
the goods which are cheap in the one case, and dear in the other.
In this popular sense, therefore, labour, like commodities,
may be said to have a real and a nominal price. Its real price
may be said to consist in the quantity of the necessaries and
conveniences of life which are given for it; its nominal price,
in the quantity of money. The labourer is rich or poor, is well
or ill rewarded, in proportion to the real, not to the nominal
price of his labour.
The distinction between the real and the nominal price of
commodities and labour is not a matter of mere speculation, but
may sometimes be of considerable use in practice. The same real
price is always of the same value; but on account of the
variations in the value of gold and silver, the same nominal
price is sometimes of very different values. When a landed
estate, therefore, is sold with a reservation of a perpetual
rent, if it is intended that this rent should always be of the
same value, it is of importance to the family in whose favour it
is reserved that it should not consist in a particular sum of
money. Its value would in this case be liable to variations of
two different kinds; first, to those which arise from the
different quantities of gold and silver which are contained at
different times in coin of the same denomination; and, secondly,
to those which arise from the different values of equal
quantities of gold and silver at different times.
Princes and sovereign states have frequently fancied that
they had a temporary interest to diminish the quantity of pure
metal contained in their coins; but they seldom have fancied that
they had any to augment it. The quantity of metal contained in
the coins, I believe of all nations, has, accordingly, been
almost continually diminishing, and hardly ever augmenting. Such
variations, therefore, tend almost always to diminish the value
of a money rent.
The discovery of the mines of America diminished the value
of gold and silver in Europe. This diminution, it is commonly
supposed, though I apprehend without any certain proof, is still
going on gradually, and is likely to continue to do so for a long
time. Upon this supposition, therefore, such variations are more
likely to diminish than to augment the value of a money rent,
even though it should be stipulated to be paid, not in such a
quantity of coined money of such a denomination (in so many
pounds sterling, for example), but in so many ounces either of
pure silver, or of silver of a certain standard.
The rents which have been reserved in corn have preserved
their value much better than those which have been reserved in
money, even where the denomination of the coin has not been
altered. By the 18th of Elizabeth it was enacted that a third of
the rent of all college leases should be reserved in corn, to be
paid, either in kind, or according to the current prices at the
nearest public market. The money arising from this corn rent,
though originally but a third of the whole, is in the present
times, according to Dr. Blackstone, commonly near double of what
arises from the other two-thirds. The old money rents of colleges
must, according to this account, have sunk almost to a fourth
part of their ancient value; or are worth little more than a
fourth part of the corn which they were formerly worth. But since
the reign of Philip and Mary the denomination of the English coin
has undergone little or no alteration, and the same number of
pounds, shillings and pence have contained very nearly the same
quantity of pure silver. This degradation, therefore, in the
value of the money rents of colleges, has arisen altogether from
the degradation in the value of silver.
When the degradation in the value of silver is combined with
the diminution of the quantity of it contained in the coin of the
same denomination, the loss is frequently still greater. In
Scotland, where the denomination of the coin has undergone much
greater alterations than it ever did in England, and in France,
where it has undergone still greater than it ever did in
Scotland, some ancient rents, originally of considerable value,
have in this manner been reduced almost to nothing.
Equal quantities of labour will at distant times be
purchased more nearly with equal quantities of corn, the
subsistence of the labourer, than with equal quantities of gold
and silver, or perhaps of any other commodity. Equal quantities
of corn, therefore, will, at distant times, be more nearly of the
same real value, or enable the possessor to purchase or command
more nearly the same quantity of the labour of other people. They
will do this, I say, more nearly than equal quantities of almost
any other commodity; for even equal quantities of corn will not
do it exactly. The subsistence of the labourer, or the real price
of labour, as I shall endeavour to show hereafter, is very
different upon different occasions; more liberal in a society
advancing to opulence than in one that is standing still; and in
one that is standing still than in one that is going backwards.
Every other commodity, however, will at any particular time
purchase a greater or smaller quantity of labour in proportion to
the quantity of subsistence which it can purchase at that time. A
rent therefore reserved in corn is liable only to the variations
in the quantity of labour which a certain quantity of corn can
purchase. But a rent reserved in any other commodity is liable
not only to the variations in the quantity of labour which any
particular quantity of corn can purchase, but to the variations
in the quantity of corn which can be purchased by any particular
quantity of that commodity.
Though the real value of a corn rent, it is to be observed,
however, varies much less from century to century than that of a
money rent, it varies much more from year to year. The money
price of labour, as I shall endeavour to show hereafter, does not
fluctuate from year to year with the money price of corn, but
seems to be everywhere accommodated, not to the temporary or
occasional, but to the average or ordinary price of that
necessary of life. The average or ordinary price of corn again is
regulated, as I shall likewise endeavour to show hereafter, by
the value of silver, by the richness or barrenness of the mines
which supply the market with that metal, or by the quantity of
labour which must be employed, and consequently of corn which
must be consumed, in order to bring any particular quantity of
silver from the mine to the market. But the value of silver,
though it sometimes varies greatly from century to century,
seldom varies much from year to year, but frequently continues
the same, or very nearly the same, for half a century or a
century together. The ordinary or average money price of corn,
therefore, may, during so long a period, continue the same or
very nearly the same too, and along with it the money price of
labour, provided, at least, the society continues, in other
respects, in the same or nearly in the same condition. In the
meantime the temporary and occasional price of corn may
frequently be double, one year, of what it had been the year
before, or fluctuate, for example, from five and twenty to fifty
shillings the quarter. But when corn is at the latter price, not
only the nominal, but the real value of a corn rent will be
double of what it is when at the former, or will command double
the quantity either of labour or of the greater part of other
commodities; the money price of labour, and along with it that of
most other things, continuing the same during all these
fluctuations.
Labour, therefore, it appears evidently, is the only
universal, as well as the only accurate measure of value, or the
only standard by which we can compare the values of different
commodities at all times, and at all places. We cannot estimate,
it is allowed, the real value of different commodities from
century to century by the quantities of silver which were given
for them. We cannot estimate it from year to year by the
quantities of corn. By the quantities of labour we can, with the
greatest accuracy, estimate it both from century to century and
from year to year. From century to century, corn is a better
measure than silver, because, from century to century, equal
quantities of corn will command the same quantity of labour more
nearly than equal quantities of silver. From year to year, on the
contrary, silver is a better measure than corn, because equal
quantities of it will more nearly command the same quantity of
labour.
But though in establishing perpetual rents, or even in
letting very long leases, it may be of use to distinguish between
real and nominal price; it is of none in buying and selling, the
more common and ordinary transactions of human life.
At the same time and place the real and the nominal price of
all commodities are exactly in proportion to one another. The
more or less money you get for any commodity, in the London
market for example, the more or less labour it will at that time
and place enable you to purchase or command. At the same time and
place, therefore, money is the exact measure of the real
exchangeable value of all commodities. It is so, however, at the
same time and place only.
Though at distant places, there is no regular proportion
between the real and the money price of commodities, yet the
merchant who carries goods from the one to the other has nothing
to consider but their money price, or the difference between the
quantity of silver for which he buys them, and that for which he
is likely to sell them. Half an ounce of silver at Canton in
China may command a greater quantity both of labour and of the
necessaries and conveniences of life than an ounce at London. A
commodity, therefore, which sells for half an ounce of silver at
Canton may there be really dearer, of more real importance to the
man who possesses it there, than a commodity which sells for an
ounce at London is to the man who possesses it at London. If a
London merchant, however, can buy at Canton for half an ounce of
silver, a commodity which he can afterwards sell at London for an
ounce, he gains a hundred per cent by the bargain, just as much
as if an ounce of silver was at London exactly of the same value
as at Canton. It is of no importance to him that half an ounce of
silver at Canton would have given him the command of more labour
and of a greater quantity of the necessaries and conveniences of
life than an ounce can do at London. An ounce at London will
always give him the command of double the quantity of all these
which half an ounce could have done there, and this is precisely
what he wants.
As it is the nominal or money price of goods, therefore,
which finally determines the prudence or imprudence of all
purchases and sales, and thereby regulates almost the whole
business of common life in which price is concerned, we cannot
wonder that it should have been so much more attended to than the
real price.
In such a work as this, however, it may sometimes be of use
to compare the different real values of a particular commodity at
different times and places, or the different degrees of power
over the labour of other people which it may, upon different
occasions, have given to those who possessed it. We must in this
case compare, not so much the different quantities of silver for
which it was commonly sold, as the different quantities of labour
which those different quantities of silver could have purchased.
But the current prices of labour at distant times and places can
scarce ever be known with any degree of exactness. Those of corn,
though they have in few places been regularly recorded, are in
general better known and have been more frequently taken notice
of by historians and other writers. We must generally, therefore,
content ourselves with them, not as being always exactly in the
same proportion as the current prices of labour, but as being the
nearest approximation which can commonly be had to that
proportion. I shall hereafter have occasion to make several
comparisons of this kind.
In the progress of industry, commercial nations have found
it convenient to coin several different metals into money; gold
for larger payments, silver for purchases of moderate value, and
copper, or some other coarse metal, for those of still smaller
consideration. They have always, however, considered one of those
metals as more peculiarly the measure of value than any of the
other two; and this preference seems generally to have been given
to the metal which they happened first to make use of as the
instrument of commerce. Having once begun to use it as their
standard, which they must have done when they had no other money,
they have generally continued to do so even when the necessity
was not the same.
The Romans are said to have had nothing but copper money
till within five years before the first Punic war, when they
first began to coin silver. Copper, therefore, appears to have
continued always the measure of value in that republic. At Rome
all accounts appear to have been kept, and the value of all
estates to have been computed either in asses or in sestertii.
The as was always the denomination of a copper coin. The word
sestertius signifies two asses and a half. Though the sestertius,
therefore, was originally a silver coin, its value was estimated
in copper. At Rome, one who owed a great deal of money was said
to have a great deal of other people's copper.
The northern nations who established themselves upon the
ruins of the Roman empire, seem to have had silver money from the
first beginning of their settlements, and not to have known
either gold or copper coins for several ages thereafter. There
were silver coins in England in the time of the Saxons; but there
was little gold coined till the time of Edward III nor any copper
till that of James I of Great Britain. In England, therefore, and
for the same reason, I believe, in all other modern nations of
Europe, all accounts are kept, and the value of all goods and of
all estates is generally computed in silver: and when we mean to
express the amount of a person's fortune, we seldom mention the
number of guineas, but the number of pounds sterling which we
suppose would be given for it.
Originally, in all countries, I believe, a legal tender of
payment could be made only in the coin of that metal, which was
peculiarly considered as the standard or measure of value. In
England, gold was not considered as a legal tender for a long
time after it was coined into money. The proportion between the
values of gold and silver money was not fixed by any public law
or proclamation; but was left to be settled by the market. If a
debtor offered payment in gold, the creditor might either reject
such payment altogether, or accept of it at such a valuation of
the gold as he and his debtor could agree upon. Copper is not at
present a legal tender except in the change of the smaller silver
coins. In this state of things the distinction between the metal
which was the standard, and that which was not the standard, was
something more than a nominal distinction.
In process of time, and as people became gradually more
familiar with the use of the different metals in coin, and
consequently better acquainted with the proportion between their
respective values, it has in most countries, I believe, been
found convenient to ascertain this proportion, and to declare by
a public law that a guinea, for example, of such a weight and
fineness, should exchange for one-and-twenty shillings, or be a
legal tender for a debt of that amount. In this state of things,
and during the continuance of any one regulated proportion of
this kind, the distinction between the metal which is the
standard, and that which is not the standard, becomes little more
than a nominal distinction.
In consequence of any change, however, in this regulated
proportion, this distinction becomes, or at least seems to
become, something more than nominal again. If the regulated value
of a guinea, for example, was either reduced to twenty, or raised
to two-and-twenty shillings, all accounts being kept and almost
all obligations for debt being expressed in silver money, the
greater part of payments could in either case be made with the
same quantity of silver money as before; but would require very
different quantities of gold money; a greater in the one case,
and a smaller in the other. Silver would appear to be more
invariable in its value than gold. Silver would appear to measure
the value of gold, and gold would not appear to measure the value
of silver. The value of gold would seem to depend upon the
quantity of silver which it would exchange for; and the value of
silver would not seem to depend upon the quantity of gold which
it would exchange for. This difference, however, would be
altogether owing to the custom of keeping accounts, and of
expressing the amount of all great and small sums rather in
silver than in gold money. One of Mr. Drummond's notes for
five-and-twenty or fifty guineas would, after an alteration of
this kind, be still payable with five-and-twenty or fifty guineas
in the same manner as before. It would, after such an alteration,
be payable with the same quantity of gold as before, but with
very different quantities of silver. In the payment of such a
note, gold would appear to be more invariable in its value than
silver. Gold would appear to measure the value of silver, and
silver would not appear to measure the value of gold. If the
custom of keeping accounts, and of expressing promissory notes
and other obligations for money in this manner, should ever
become general, gold, and not silver, would be considered as the
metal which was peculiarly the standard or measure of value.
In reality, during the continuance of any one regulated
proportion between the respective values of the different metals
in coin, the value of the most precious metal regulates the value
of the whole coin. Twelve copper pence contain half a pound,
avoirdupois, of copper, of not the best quality, which, before it
is coined, is seldom worth sevenpence in silver. But as by the
regulation twelve such pence are ordered to exchange for a
shilling, they are in the market considered as worth a shilling,
and a shilling can at any time be had for them. Even before the
late reformation of the gold coin of Great Britain, the gold,
that part of it at least which circulated in London and its
neighbourhood, was in general less degraded below its standard
weight than the greater part of the silver. One-and-twenty worn
and defaced shillings, however, were considered as equivalent to
a guinea, which perhaps, indeed, was worn and defaced too, but
seldom so much so. The late regulations have brought the gold
coin as near perhaps to its standard weight as it is possible to
bring the current coin of any nation; and the order, to receive
no gold at the public offices but by weight, is likely to
preserve it so, as long as that order is enforced. The silver
coin still continues in the same worn and degraded state as
before the reformation of the gold coin. In the market, however,
one-and-twenty shillings of this degraded silver coin are still
considered as worth a guinea of this excellent gold coin.
The reformation of the gold coin has evidently raised the
value of the silver coin which can be exchanged for it.
In the English mint a pound weight of gold is coined into
forty-four guineas and a half, which, at one-and-twenty shillings
the guinea, is equal to forty-six pounds fourteen shillings and
sixpence. An ounce of such gold coin, therefore, is worth L3 17s.
10 1/2d. in silver. In England no duty or seignorage is paid upon
the coinage, and he who carries a pound weight or an ounce weight
of standard gold bullion to the mint, gets back a pound weight or
an ounce weight of gold in coin, without any deduction. Three
pounds seventeen shillings and tenpence halfpenny an ounce,
therefore, is said to be the mint price of gold in England, or
the quantity of gold coin which the mint gives in return for
standard gold bullion.
Before the reformation of the gold coin, the price of
standard gold bullion in the market had for many years been
upwards of L3 18s. sometimes L3 19s. and very frequently L4 an
ounce; that sum, it is probable, in the worn and degraded gold
coin, seldom containing more than an ounce of standard gold.
Since the reformation of the gold coin, the market price of
standard gold bullion seldom exceeds L3 17s. 7d. an ounce. Before
the reformation of the gold coin, the market price was always
more or less above the mint price. Since that reformation, the
market price has been constantly below the mint price. But that
market price is the same whether it is paid in gold or in silver
coin. The late reformation of the gold coin, therefore, has
raised not only the value of the gold coin, but likewise that of
the silver coin in proportion to gold bullion, and probably, too,
in proportion to all other commodities; through the price of the
greater part of other commodities being influenced by so many
other causes, the rise in the value either of gold or silver coin
in proportion to them may not be so distinct and sensible.
In the English mint a pound weight of standard silver
bullion is coined into sixty-two shillings, containing, in the
same manner, a pound weight of standard silver. Five shillings
and twopence an ounce, therefore, is said to be the mint price of
silver in England, or the quantity of silver coin which the mint
gives in return for standard silver bullion. Before the
reformation of the gold coin, the market price of standard silver
bullion was, upon different occasions, five shillings and
fourpence, five shillings and fivepence, five shillings and
sixpence, five shillings and sevenpence, and very often five
shillings and eightpence an ounce. Five shillings and sevenpence,
however, seems to have been the most common price. Since the
reformation of the gold coin, the market price of standard silver
bullion has fallen occasionally to five shillings and threepence,
five shillings and fourpence, and five shillings and fivepence an
ounce, which last price it has scarce ever exceeded. Though the
market price of silver bullion has fallen considerably since the
reformation of the gold coin, it has not fallen so low as the
mint price.
In the proportion between the different metals in the
English coin, as copper is rated very much above its real value,
so silver is rated somewhat below it. In the market of Europe, in
the French coin and in the Dutch coin, an ounce of fine gold
exchanges for about fourteen ounces of fine silver. In the
English coin, it exchanges for about fifteen ounces, that is, for
more silver than it is worth according to the common estimation
of Europe. But as the price of copper in bars is not, even in
England, raised by the high price of copper in English coin, so
the price of silver in bullion is not sunk by the low rate of
silver in English coin. Silver in bullion still preserves its
proper proportion to gold; for the same reason that copper in
bars preserves its proper proportion to silver.
Upon the reformation of the silver coin in the reign of
William III the price of silver bullion still continued to be
somewhat above the mint price. Mr. Locke imputed this high price
to the permission of exporting silver bullion, and to the
prohibition of exporting silver coin. This permission of
exporting, he said, rendered the demand for silver bullion
greater than the demand for silver coin. But the number of people
who want silver coin for the common uses of buying and selling at
home, is surely much greater than that of those who want silver
bullion either for the use of exportation or for any other use.
There subsists at present a like permission of exporting gold
bullion, and a like prohibition of exporting gold coin: and yet
the price of gold bullion has fallen below the mint price. But in
the English coin silver was then, in the same manner as now,
under-rated in proportion to gold, and the gold coin (which at
that time too was not supposed to require any reformation)
regulated then, as well as now, the real value of the whole coin.
As the reformation of the silver coin did not then reduce the
price of silver bullion to the mint price, it is not very
probable that a like reformation will do so now.
Were the silver coin brought back as near to its standard
weight as the gold, a guinea, it is probable, would, according to
the present proportion, exchange for more silver in coin than it
would purchase in bullion. The silver coin containing its full
standard weight, there would in this case be a profit in melting
it down, in order, first, to sell the bullion for gold coin, and
afterwards to exchange this gold coin for silver coin to be
melted down in the same manner. Some alteration in the present
proportion seems to be the only method of preventing this
inconveniency.
The inconveniency perhaps would be less if silver was rated
in the coin as much above its proper proportion to gold as it is
at present rated below it; provided it was at the same time
enacted that silver should not be a legal tender for more than
the change of a guinea, in the same manner as copper is not a
legal tender for more than the change of a shilling. No creditor
could in this case be cheated in consequence of the high
valuation of silver in coin; as no creditor can at present be
cheated in consequence of the high valuation of copper. The
bankers only would suffer by this regulation. When a run comes
upon them they sometimes endeavour to gain time by paying in
sixpences, and they would be precluded by this regulation from
this discreditable method of evading immediate payment. They
would be obliged in consequence to keep at all times in their
coffers a greater quantity of cash than at present; and though
this might no doubt be a considerable inconveniency to them, it
would at the same time be a considerable security to their
creditors.
Three pounds seventeen shillings and tenpence halfpenny (the
mint price of gold) certainly does not contain, even in our
present excellent gold coin, more than an ounce of standard gold,
and it may be thought, therefore, should not purchase more
standard bullion. But gold in coin is more convenient than gold
in bullion, and though, in England, the coinage is free, yet the
gold which is carried in bullion to the mint can seldom be
returned in coin to the owner till after a delay of several
weeks. In the present hurry of the mint, it could not be returned
till after a delay of several months. This delay is equivalent to
a small duty, and renders gold in coin somewhat more valuable
than an equal quantity of gold in bullion. If in the English coin
silver was rated according to it proper proportion to gold, the
price of silver bullion would probably fall below the mint price
even without any reformation of the silver coin; the value even
of the present worn and defaced silver coin being regulated by
the value of the excellent gold coin for which it can be changed.
A small seignorage or duty upon the coinage of both gold and
silver would probably increase still more the superiority of
those metals in coin above an equal quantity of either of them in
bullion. The coinage would in this case increase the value of the
metal coined in proportion to the extent of this small duty; for
the same reason that the fashion increases the value of plate in
proportion to the price of that fashion. The superiority of coin
above bullion would prevent the melting down of the coin, and
would discourage its exportation. If upon any public exigency it
should become necessary to export the coin, the greater part of
it would soon return again of its own accord. Abroad it could
sell only for its weight in bullion. At home it would buy more
than that weight. There would be a profit, therefore, in bringing
it home again. In France a seignorage of about eight per cent is
imposed upon the coinage, and the French coin, when exported, is
said to return home again of its own accord.
The occasional fluctuations in the market price of gold and
silver bullion arise from the same causes as the like
fluctuations in that of all other commodities. The frequent loss
of those metals from various accidents by sea and by land, the
continual waste of them in gilding and plating, in lace and
embroidery, in the wear and tear of coin, and in that of plate;
require, in all countries which possess no mines of their own, a
continual importation, in order to repair this loss and this
waste. The merchant importers, like all other merchants, we may
believe, endeavour, as well as they can, to suit their occasional
importations to what, they judge, is likely to be the immediate
demand. With all their attention, however, they sometimes overdo
the business, and sometimes underdo it. When they import more
bullion than is wanted, rather than incur the risk and trouble of
exporting it again, they are sometimes willing to sell a part of
it for something less than the ordinary or average price. When,
on the other hand, they import less than is wanted, they get
something more than this price. But when, under all those
occasional fluctuations, the market price either of gold or
silver bullion continues for several years together steadily and
constantly, either more or less above, or more or less below the
mint price, we may be assured that this steady and constant,
either superiority or inferiority of price, is the effect of
something in the state of the coin, which, at that time, renders
a certain quantity of coin either of more value or of less value
than the precise quantity of bullion which it ought to contain.
The constancy and steadiness of the effect supposes a
proportionable constancy and steadiness in the cause.
The money of any particular country is, at any particular
time and place, more or less an accurate measure of value
according as the current coin is more or less exactly agreeable
to its standard, or contains more or less exactly the precise
quantity of pure gold or pure silver which it ought to contain.
If in England, for example, forty-four guineas and a half
contained exactly a pound weight of standard gold, or eleven
ounces of fine gold and one ounce of alloy, the gold coin of
England would be as accurate a measure of the actual value of
goods at any particular time and place as the nature of the thing
would admit. But if, by rubbing and wearing, forty-four guineas
and a half generally contain less than a pound weight of standard
gold; the diminution, however, being greater in some pieces than
in others; the measure of value comes to be liable to the same
sort of uncertainty to which all other weights and measures are
commonly exposed. As it rarely happens that these are exactly
agreeable to their standard, the merchant adjusts the price of
his goods, as well as he can, not to what those weights and
measures ought to be, but to what, upon an average, he finds by
experience they actually are. In consequence of a like disorder
in the coin, the price of goods comes, in the same manner, to be
adjusted, not to the quantity of pure gold or silver which the
corn ought to contain, but to that which, upon an average, it is
found by experience, it actually does contain.
By the money-price of goods, it is to be observed, I
understand always the quantity of pure gold or silver for which
they are sold, without any regard to the denomination of the
coin. Six shillings and eightpence, for example, in the time of
Edward I, I consider as the same money-price with a pound
sterling in the present times; because it contained, as nearly as
we can judge, the same quantity of pure silver.
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