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Book Two
Of the Nature, Accumulation, and Employment of Stock.
CHAPTER V
Of the Different Employment of Capitals
THOUGH all capitals are destined for the maintenance of
productive labour only, yet the quantity of that labour which
equal capitals are capable of putting into motion varies
extremely according to the diversity of their employment; as does
likewise the value which that employment adds to the annual
produce of the land and labour of the country.
A capital may be employed in four different ways: either,
first, in procuring the rude produce annually required for the
use and consumption of the society; or, secondly, in
manufacturing and preparing that rude produce for immediate use
and consumption; or, thirdly, in transporting either the rude or
manufactured produce from the places where they abound to those
where they are wanted; or, lastly, in dividing particular
portions of either into such small parcels as suit the occasional
demands of those who want them. In the first way are employed the
capitals of all those who undertake the improvement or
cultivation of lands, mines, or fisheries; in the second, those
of all master manufacturers; in the third, those of all wholesale
merchants; and in the fourth, those of all retailers. It is
difficult to conceive that a capital should be employed in any
way which may not be classed under some one or other of those
four.
Each of these four methods of employing a capital is
essentially necessary either to the existence or extension of the
other three, or to the general conveniency of the society.
Unless a capital was employed in furnishing rude produce to
a certain degree of abundance, neither manufactures nor trade of
any kind could exist.
Unless a capital was employed in manufacturing that part of
the rude produce which requires a good deal of preparation before
it can be fit for use and consumption, it either would never be
produced, because there could be no demand for it; or if it was
produced spontaneously, it would be of no value in exchange, and
could add nothing to the wealth of the society.
Unless a capital was employed in transporting either the
rude or manufactured produce from the places where it abounds to
those where it is wanted, no more of either could be produced
than was necessary for the consumption of the neighbourhood. The
capital of the merchant exchanges the surplus produce of one
place for that of another, and thus encourages the industry and
increases the enjoyments of both.
Unless a capital was employed in breaking and dividing
certain portions either of the rude or manufactured produce into
such small parcels as suit the occasional demands of those who
want them, every man would be obliged to purchase a greater
quantity of the goods he wanted than his immediate occasions
required. If there was no such trade as a butcher, for example,
every man would be obliged to purchase a whole ox or a whole
sheep at a time. This would generally be inconvenient to the
rich, and much more so to the poor. If a poor workman was obliged
to purchase a month's or six months' provisions at a time, a
great part of the stock which he employs as a capital in the
instruments of his trade, or in the furniture of his shop, and
which yields him a revenue. he would be forced to place in that
part of his stock which is reserved for immediate consumption,
and which yields him no revenue. Nothing can be more convenient
for such a person than to be able to purchase his subsistence
from day to day, or even from hour to hour, as he wants it. He is
thereby enabled to employ almost his whole stock as a capital. He
is thus enabled to furnish work to a greater value, and the
profit, which he makes by it in this way, much more than
compensates the additional price which the profit of the retailer
imposes upon the goods. The prejudices of some political writers
against shopkeepers and tradesmen are altogether without
foundation. So far is it from being necessary either to tax them
or to restrict their numbers that they can never be multiplied so
as to hurt the public, though they may so as to hurt one another.
The quantity of grocery goods, for example, which can be sold in
a particular town is limited by the demand of that town and its
neighbourhood. The capital, therefore, which can be employed in
the grocery trade cannot exceed what is sufficient to purchase
that quantity. If this capital is divided between two different
grocers, their competition will tend to make both of them sell
cheaper than if it were in the hands of one only; and if it were
divided among twenty, their competition would be just so much the
greater, and the chance of their combining together, in order to
raise the price, just so much the less. Their competition might
perhaps ruin some of themselves; but to take care of this is the
business of the parties concerned, and it may safely be trusted
to their discretion. It can never hurt either the consumer or the
producer; on the contrary, it must tend to make the retailers
both sell cheaper and buy dearer than if the whole trade was
monopolized by one or two persons. Some of them, perhaps, may
sometimes decoy a weak customer to buy what he has no occasion
for. This evil, however, is of too little importance to deserve
the public attention, nor would it necessarily be prevented by
restricting their numbers. It is not the multitude of ale-houses,
to give the most suspicious example, that occasions a general
disposition to drunkenness among the common people; but that
disposition arising from other causes necessarily gives
employment to a multitude of ale-houses.
The persons whose capitals are employed in any of those four
ways are themselves productive labourers. Their labour, when
properly directed, fixes and realizes itself in the subject or
vendible commodity upon which it is bestowed, and generally adds
to its price the value at least of their own maintenance and
consumption. The profits of the farmer, of the manufacturer, of
the merchant, and retailer, are all drawn from the price of the
goods which the two first produce, and the two last buy and sell.
Equal capitals, however, employed in each of those four different
ways, will immediately put into motion very different quantities
of productive labour, and augment, too, in very different
proportions the value of the annual produce of the land and
labour of the society to which they belong.
The capital of the retailer replaces, together with its
profits, that of the merchant of whom he purchases goods, and
thereby enables him to continue his business. The retailer
himself is the only productive labourer whom it immediately
employs. In his profits consists the whole value which its
employment adds to the annual produce of the land and labour of
the society.
The capital of the wholesale merchant replaces, together
with their profits, the capitals of the farmers and manufacturers
of whom he purchases the rude and manufactured produce which he
deals in, and thereby enables them to continue their respective
trades. It is by this service chiefly that he contributes
indirectly to support the productive labour of the society, and
to increase the value of its annual produce. His capital employs,
too, the sailors and carriers who transport his goods from one
place to another, and it augments the price of those goods by the
value, not only of his profits, but of their wages. This is all
the productive labour which it immediately puts into motion, and
all the value which it immediately adds to the annual produce.
Its operation in both these respects is a good deal superior to
that of the capital of the retailer.
Part of the capital of the master manufacturer is employed
as a fixed capital in the instruments of his trade, and replaces,
together with its profits, that of some other artificer of whom
he purchases them. Part of his circulating capital is employed in
purchasing materials, and replaces, with their profits, the
capitals of the farmers and miners of whom he purchases them. But
a great part of it is always, either annually, or in a much
shorter period, distributed among the different workmen whom he
employs. It augments the value of those materials by their wages,
and by their matters' profits upon the whole stock of wages,
materials, and instruments of trade employed in the business. It
puts immediately into motion, therefore, a much greater quantity
of productive labour, and adds a much greater value to the annual
produce of the land and labour of the society than an equal
capital in the hands of any wholesale merchant.
No equal capital puts into motion a greater quantity of
productive labour than that of the farmer. Not only his labouring
servants, but his labouring cattle, are productive labourers. In
agriculture, too, nature labours along with man; and though her
labour costs no expense, its produce has its value, as well as
that of the most expensive workmen. The most important operations
of agriculture seem intended not so much to increase, though they
do that too, as to direct the fertility of nature towards the
production of the plants most profitable to man. A field
overgrown with briars and brambles may frequently produce as
great a quantity of vegetables as the best cultivated vineyard or
corn field. Planting and tillage frequently regulate more than
they animate the active fertility of nature; and after all their
labour, a great part of the work always remains to be done by
her. The labourers and labouring cattle, therefore, employed in
agriculture, not only occasion, like the workmen in manufactures,
the reproduction of a value equal to their own consumption, or to
the capital which employs them, together with its owners'
profits; but of a much greater value. Over and above the capital
of the farmer and all its profits, they regularly occasion the
reproduction of the rent of the landlord. This rent may be
considered as the produce of those powers of nature, the use of
which the landlord lends to the farmer. It is greater or smaller
according to the supposed extent of those powers, or in other
words, according to the supposed natural or improved fertility of
the land. It is the work of nature which remains after deducting
or compensating everything which can be regarded as the work of
man. It is seldom less than a fourth, and frequently more than a
third of the whole produce. No equal quantity of productive
labour employed in manufactures can ever occasion so great a
reproduction. In them nature does nothing; man does all; and the
reproduction must always be in proportion to the strength of the
agents that occasion it. The capital employed in agriculture,
therefore, not only puts into motion a greater quantity of
productive labour than any equal capital employed in
manufactures, but in proportion, too, to the quantity of
productive labour which it employs, it adds a much greater value
to the annual produce of the land and labour of the country, to
the real wealth and revenue of its inhabitants. Of all the ways
in which a capital can be employed, it is by far the most
advantageous to the society.
The capitals employed in the agriculture and in the retail
trade of any society must always reside within that society.
Their employment is confined almost to a precise spot, to the
farm and to the shop of the retailer. They must generally, too,
though there are some exceptions to this, belong to resident
members of the society.
The capital of a wholesale merchant, on the contrary, seems
to have no fixed or necessary residence anywhere, but may wander
about from place to place, according as it can either buy cheap
or sell dear.
The capital of the manufacturer must no doubt reside where
the manufacture is carried on; but where this shall be is not
always necessarily determined. It may frequently be at a great
distance both from the place where the materials grow, and from
that where the complete manufacture is consumed. Lyons is very
distant both from the places which afford the materials of its
manufactures, and from those which consume them. The people of
fashion in Sicily are clothed in silks made in other countries,
from the materials which their own produces. Part of the wool of
Spain is manufactured in Great Britain, and some part of that
cloth is afterwards sent back to Spain.
Whether the merchant whose capital exports the surplus
produce of any society be a native or a foreigner is of very
little importance. If he is a foreigner, the number of their
productive labourers is necessarily less than if he had been a
native by one man only, and the value of their annual produce by
the profits of that one man. The sailors or carriers whom he
employs may still belong indifferently either to his country or
to their country, or to some third country, in the same manner as
if he had been a native. The capital of a foreigner gives a value
to their surplus produce equally with that of a native by
exchanging it for something for which there is a demand at home.
It as effectually replaces the capital of the person who produces
that surplus, and as effectually enables him to continue his
business; the service by which the capital of a wholesale
merchant chiefly contributes to support the productive labour,
and to augment the value of the annual produce of the society to
which he belongs.
It is of more consequence that the capital of the
manufacturer should reside within the country. It necessarily
puts into motion a greater quantity of productive labour, and
adds a greater value to the annual produce of the land and labour
of the society. It may, however, be very useful to the country,
though it should not reside within it. The capitals of the
British manufacturers who work up the flax and hemp annually
imported from the coasts of the Baltic are surely very useful to
the countries which produce them. Those materials are a part of
the surplus produce of those countries which, unless it was
annually exchanged for something which is in demand there, would
be of no value, and would soon cease to be produced. The
merchants who export it replace the capitals of the people who
produce it, and thereby encourage them to continue the
production; and the British manufacturers replace the capitals of
those merchants.
A particular country, in the same manner as a particular
person, may frequently not have capital sufficient both to
improve and cultivate all its lands, to manufacture and prepare
their whole rude produce for immediate use and consumption, and
to transport the surplus part either of the rude or manufactured
produce to those distant markets where it can be exchanged for
something for which there is a demand at home. The inhabitants of
many different parts of Great Britain have not capital sufficient
to improve and cultivate all their lands. The wool of the
southern counties of Scotland is, a great part of it, after a
long land carriage through very bad roads, manufactured in
Yorkshire, for want of capital to manufacture it at home. There
are many little manufacturing towns in Great Britain, of which
the inhabitants have not capital sufficient to transport the
produce of their own industry to those distant markets where
there is demand and consumption for it. If there are any
merchants among them, they are properly only the agents of
wealthier merchants who reside in some of the greater commercial
cities.
When the capital of any country is not sufficient for all
those three purposes, in proportion as a greater share of it is
employed in agriculture, the greater will be the quantity of
productive labour which it puts into motion within the country;
as will likewise be the value which its employment adds to the
annual produce of the land and labour of the society. After
agriculture, the capital employed in manufactures puts into
motion the greatest quantity of productive labour, and adds the
greatest value to the annual produce. That which is employed in
the trade of exportation has the least effect of any of the
three.
The country, indeed, which has not capital sufficient for
all those three purposes has not arrived at that degree of
opulence for which it seems naturally destined. To attempt,
however, prematurely and with an insufficient capital to do all
the three is certainly not the shortest way for a society, no
more than it would be for an individual, to acquire a sufficient
one. The capital of all the individuals of a nation has its
limits in the same manner as that of a single individual, and is
capable of executing only certain purposes. The capital of all
the individuals of a nation is increased in the same manner as
that of a single individual by their continually accumulating and
adding to it whatever they save out of their revenue. It is
likely to increase the fastest, therefore, when it is employed in
the way that affords the greatest revenue to all the inhabitants
of the country, as they will thus be enabled to make the greatest
savings. But the revenue of all the inhabitants of the country is
necessarily in proportion to the value of the annual produce of
their land and labour.
It has been the principal cause of the rapid progress of our
American colonies towards wealth and greatness that almost their
whole capitals have hitherto been employed in agriculture. They
have no manufactures, those household and courser manufactures
excepted which necessarily accompany the progress of agriculture,
and which are the work of the women and children in every private
family. The greater part both of the exportation and coasting
trade of America is carried on by the capitals of merchants who
reside in Great Britain. Even the stores and warehouses from
which goods are retailed in some provinces, particularly in
Virginia and Maryland, belong many of them to merchants who
reside in the mother country, and afford one of the few instances
of the retail trade of a society being carried on by the capitals
of those who are not resident members of it. Were the Americans,
either by combination or by any other sort of violence, to stop
the importation of European manufactures, and, by thus giving a
monopoly to such of their own countrymen as could manufacture the
like goods, divert any considerable part of their capital into
this employment, they would retard instead of accelerating the
further increase in the value of their annual produce, and would
obstruct instead of promoting the progress of their country
towards real wealth and greatness. This would be still more the
case were they to attempt, in the same manner, to monopolize to
themselves their whole exportation trade.
The course of human prosperity, indeed, seems scarce ever to
have been of so long continuance as to enable any great country
to acquire capital sufficient for all those three purposes;
unless perhaps, we give credit to the wonderful accounts of the
wealth and cultivation of China, of those of ancient Egypt, and
of the ancient state of Indostan. Even those three countries, the
wealthiest, according to all accounts, that ever were in the
world, are chiefly renowned for their superiority in agriculture
and manufactures. They do not appear to have been eminent for
foreign trade. The ancient Egyptians had a superstitious
antipathy to the sea; a superstition nearly of the same kind
prevails among the Indians; and the Chinese have never excelled
in foreign commerce. The greater part of the surplus produce of
all those three countries seems to have been always exported by
foreigners, who gave in exchange for it something else for which
they found a demand there, frequently gold and silver.
It is thus that the same capital will in any country put
into motion a greater or smaller quantity of productive labour,
and add a greater or smaller value to the annual produce of its
land and labour, according to the different proportions in which
it is employed in agriculture, manufactures, and wholesale trade.
The difference, too, is very great, according to the different
sorts of wholesale trade in which any part of it is employed.
All wholesale trade, all buying in order to sell again by
wholesale, may be reduced to three different sorts. The home
trade, the foreign trade of consumption, and the carrying trade.
The home trade is employed in purchasing in one part of the same
country, and selling in another, the produce of the industry of
that country. It comprehends both the inland and the coasting
trade. The foreign trade of consumption is employed in purchasing
foreign goods for home consumption. The carrying trade is
employed in transacting the commerce of foreign countries, or in
carrying the surplus produce of one to another.
The capital which is employed in purchasing in one part of
the country in order to sell in another the produce of the
industry of that country, generally replaces by every such
operation two distinct capitals that had both been employed in
the agriculture or manufactures of that country, and thereby
enables them to continue that employment. When it sends out from
the residence of the merchant a certain value of commodities, it
generally brings back in return at least an equal value of other
commodities. When both are the produce of domestic industry, it
necessarily replaces by every such operation two distinct
capitals which had both been employed in supporting productive
labour, and thereby enables them to continue that support. The
capital which sends Scotch manufactures to London, and brings
back English corn and manufactures to Edinburgh, necessarily
replaces by every such operation, two British capitals which had
both been employed in the agriculture or manufactures of Great
Britain.
The capital employed in purchasing foreign goods for home
consumption, when this purchase is made with the produce of
domestic industry, replaces too, by every such operation, two
distinct capitals; but one of them only is employed in supporting
domestic industry. The capital which sends British goods to
Portugal, and brings back Portuguese goods to Great Britain,
replaces by every such operation only one British capital. The
other is a Portuguese one. Though the returns, therefore, of the
foreign trade of consumption should be as quick as those of the
home trade, the capital employed in it will give but one half the
encouragement to the industry or productive labour of the
country.
But the returns of the foreign trade of consumption are very
seldom so quick as those of the home trade. The returns of the
home trade generally come in before the end of the year, and
sometimes three or four times in the year. The returns of the
foreign trade of consumption seldom come in before the end of the
year, and sometimes not till after two or three years. A capital,
therefore, employed in the home trade will sometimes make twelve
operations, or be sent out and returned twelve times, before a
capital employed in the foreign trade of consumption has made
one. If the capitals are equal, therefore, the one will give
four-and-twenty times more encouragement and support to the
industry of the country than the other.
The foreign goods for home consumption may sometimes be
purchased, not with the produce of domestic industry, but with
some other foreign goods. These last, however, must have been
purchased either immediately with the produce of domestic
industry, or with something else that had been purchased with it;
for, the case of war and conquest excepted, foreign goods can
ever be acquired but in exchange for something that had been
produced at home, either immediately, or after two or more
different exchanges. The effects, therefore, of a capital
employed in such a roundabout foreign trade of consumption, are,
in every respect, the same as those of one employed in the most
direct trade of the same kind, except that the final returns are
likely to be still more distant, as they must depend upon the
returns of two or three distinct foreign trades. If the flax and
hemp of Riga are purchased with the tobacco of Virginia, which
had been purchased with British manufactures, the merchant must
wait for the returns of two distinct foreign trades before he can
employ the same capital in re-purchasing a like quantity of
British manufactures. If the tobacco of Virginia had been
purchased, not with British manufactures, but with the sugar and
rum of Jamaica which had been purchased with those manufactures,
he must wait for the returns of three. If those two or three
distinct foreign trades should happen to be carried on by two or
three distinct merchants, of whom the second buys the goods
imported by the first, and the third buys those imported by the
second, in order to export them again, each merchant indeed will
in this case receive the returns of his own capital more quickly;
but the final returns of the whole capital employed in the trade
will be just as slow as ever. Whether the whole capital employed
in such a round-about trade belong to one merchant or to three
can make no difference with regard to the country, though it may
with regard to the particular merchants. Three times a greater
capital must in both cases be employed in order to exchange a
certain value of British manufactures for a certain quantity of
flax and hemp than would have been necessary had the manufactures
and the flax and hemp been directly exchanged for one another.
The whole capital employed, therefore, in such a round-about
foreign trade of consumption will generally give less
encouragement and support to the productive labour of the country
than an equal capital employed in a more direct trade of the same
kind.
Whatever be the foreign commodity with which the foreign
goods for home consumption are purchased, it can occasion no
essential difference either in the nature of the trade, or in the
encouragement and support which it can give to the productive
labour of the country from which it is carried on. If they are
purchased with the gold of Brazil, for example, or with the
silver of Peru, this gold and silver, like the tobacco of
Virginia, must have been purchased with something that either was
the produce of the industry of the country, or that had been
purchased with something else that was so. So far, therefore, as
the productive labour of the country is concerned, the foreign
trade of consumption which is carried on by means of gold and
silver has all the advantages and all the inconveniences of any
other equally round-about foreign trade of consumption, and will
replace just as fast or just as slow the capital which is
immediately employed in supporting that productive labour. It
seems even to have one advantage over any other equally
roundabout foreign trade. The transportation of those metals from
one place to another, on account of their small bulk and great
value, is less expensive than that of almost any other foreign
goods of equal value. Their freight is much less, and their
insurance not greater; and no goods, besides, are less liable to
suffer by the carriage. An equal quantity of foreign goods,
therefore, may frequently be purchased with a smaller quantity of
the produce of domestic industry, by the intervention of gold and
silver, than by that of any other foreign goods. The demand of
the country may frequently, in this manner, be supplied more
completely and at a smaller expense than in any other. Whether,
by the continual exportation of those metals, a trade of this
kind is likely to impoverish the country from which it is carried
on, in any other way, I shall have occasion to examine at great
length hereafter.
That part of the capital of any country which is employed in
the carrying trade is altogether withdrawn from supporting the
productive labour of that particular country, to support that of
some foreign countries. Though it may replace by every operation
two distinct capitals, yet neither of them belongs to that
particular country. The capital of the Dutch merchant, which
carries the corn of Poland to Portugal, and brings back the
fruits and wines of Portugal to Poland, replaces by every such
operation two capitals, neither of which had been employed in
supporting the productive labour of Holland; but one of them in
supporting that of Poland, and the other that of Portugal. The
profits only return regularly to Holland, and constitute the
whole addition which this trade necessarily makes to the annual
produce of the land and labour of that country. When, indeed, the
carrying trade of any particular country is carried on with the
ships and sailors of that country, that part of the capital
employed in it which pays the freight is distributed among, and
puts into motion, a certain number of productive labourers of
that country. Almost all nations that have had any considerable
share of the carrying trade have, in fact, carried it on in this
manner. The trade itself has probably derived its name from it,
the people of such countries being the carriers to other
countries. It does not, however, seem essential to the nature of
the trade that it should be so. A Dutch merchant may, for
example, employ his capital in transacting the commerce of Poland
and Portugal, by carrying part of the surplus produce of the one
to the other, not in Dutch, but in British bottoms. It may be
presumed that he actually does so upon some particular occasions.
It is upon this account, however, that the carrying trade has
been supposed peculiarly advantageous to such a country as Great
Britain, of which the defence and security depend upon the number
of its sailors and shipping. But the same capital may employ as
many sailors and shipping, either in the foreign trade of
consumption, or even in the home trade, when carried on by
coasting vessels, as it could in the carrying trade. The number
of sailors and shipping which any particular capital can employ
does not depend upon the nature of the trade, but partly upon the
bulk of the goods in proportion to their value, and partly upon
the distance of the ports between which they are to be carried;
chiefly upon the former of those two circumstances. The coal
trade from Newcastle to London, for example, employs more
shipping than all the carrying trade of England, though the ports
are at no great distance. To force, therefore, by extraordinary
encouragements, a larger share of the capital of any country into
the carrying trade than what would naturally go to it will not
always necessarily increase the shipping of that country.
The capital, therefore, employed in the home trade of any
country will generally give encouragement and support to a
greater quantity of productive labour in that country, and
increase the value of its annual produce more than an equal
capital employed in the foreign trade of consumption: and the
capital employed in this latter trade has in both these respects
a still greater advantage over an equal capital employed in the
carrying trade. The riches, and so far as power depends upon
riches, the power of every country must always be in proportion
to the value of its annual produce, the fund from which all taxes
must ultimately be paid. But the great object of the political
economy of every country is to increase the riches and power of
that country. It ought, therefore, to give no preference nor
superior encouragement to the foreign trade of consumption above
the home trade, nor to the carrying trade above either of the
other two. It ought neither to force nor to allure into either of
those two channels a greater share of the capital of the country
than what would naturally flow into them of its own accord.
When the produce of any particular branch of industry
exceeds what the demand of the country requires, the surplus must
be sent abroad and exchanged for something for which there is a
demand at home. Without such exportation a part of the productive
labour of the country must cease, and the value of its annual
produce diminish. The land and labour of Great Britain produce
generally more corn, woollens, and hardware than the demand of
the home market requires. The surplus part of them, therefore,
must be sent abroad, and exchanged for something for which there
is a demand at home. It is only by means of such exportation that
this surplus can acquire a value sufficient to compensate the
labour and expense of producing it. The neighbourhood of the
sea-coast, and the banks of all navigable rivers, are
advantageous situations for industry, only because they
facilitate the exportation and exchange of such surplus produce
for something else which is more in demand there.
When the foreign goods which are thus purchased with the
surplus produce of domestic industry exceed the demand of the
home market, the surplus part of them must be sent abroad again
and exchanged for something more in demand at home. About
ninety-six thousand hogsheads of tobacco are annually purchased
in Virginia and Maryland with a part of the surplus produce of
British industry. But the demand of Great Britain does not
require, perhaps, more than fourteen thousand. If the remaining
eighty-two thousand, therefore, could not be sent abroad and
exchanged for something more in demand at home, the importation
of them must cease immediately, and with it the productive labour
of all those inhabitants of Great Britain, who are at present
employed in preparing the goods with which these eighty-two
thousand hogsheads are annually purchased. Those goods, which are
part of the produce of the land and labour of Great Britain,
having no market at home, and being deprived of that which they
had abroad, must cease to be produced. The most round-about
foreign trade of consumption, therefore may, upon some occasions,
be as necessary for supporting the productive labour of the
country, and the value of its annual produce, as the most direct.
When the capital stock of any country is increased to such a
degree that it cannot be all employed in supplying the
consumption and supporting the productive labour of that
particular country, the surplus part of it naturally disgorges
itself into the carrying trade, and is employed in performing the
same offices to other countries. The carrying trade is the
natural effect and symptom of great national wealth; but it does
not seem to be the natural cause of it. Those statesmen who have
been disposed to favour it with particular encouragements seem to
have mistaken the effect and symptom for the cause. Holland, in
proportion to the extent of the land and the number of its
inhabitants, by far the richest country in Europe, has,
accordingly, the greatest share of the carrying trade of Europe.
England, perhaps the second richest country of Europe, is
likewise supposed to have a considerable share of it; though what
commonly passes for the carrying trade of England will
frequently, perhaps, be found to be no more than a round-about
foreign trade of consumption. Such are, in a great measure, the
trades which carry the goods of the East and West Indies, and of
America, to different European markets. Those goods are generally
purchased either immediately with the produce of British
industry, or with something else which had been purchased with
that produce, and the final returns of those trades are generally
used or consumed in Great Britain. The trade which is carried on
in British bottoms between the different ports of the
Mediterranean, and some trade of the same kind carried on by
British merchants between the different ports of India, make,
perhaps, the principal branches of what is properly the carrying
trade of Great Britain.
The extent of the home trade and of the capital which can be
employed in it, is necessarily limited by the value of the
surplus produce of all those distant places within the country
which have occasion to exchange their respective productions with
another: that of the foreign trade of consumption, by the value
of the surplus produce of the whole country and of what can be
purchased with it: that of the carrying trade by the value of the
surplus produce of all the different countries in the world. Its
possible extent, therefore, is in a manner infinite in comparison
of that of the other two, and is capable of absorbing the
greatest capitals.
The consideration of his own private profit is the sole
motive which determines the owner of any capital to employ it
either in agriculture, in manufactures, or in some particular
branch of the wholesale or retail trade. The different quantities
of productive labour which it may put into motion, and the
different values which it may add to the annual, produce of the
land and labour of the society, according as it is employed in
one or other of those different ways, never enter into his
thoughts. In countries, therefore, where agriculture is the most
profitable of all employments, and farming and improving the most
direct roads to a splendid fortune, the capitals of individuals
will naturally be employed in the manner most advantageous to the
whole society. The profits of agriculture, however, seem to have
no superiority over those of other employments in any part of
Europe. Projectors, indeed, in every corner of it, have within
these few years amused the public with most magnificent accounts
of the profits to be made by the cultivation and improvement of
land. Without entering into any particular discussion of their
calculations, a very simple observation may satisfy us that the
result of them must be false. We see every day the most splendid
fortunes that have been acquired in the course of a single life
by trade and manufacturers, frequently from a very small capital,
sometimes from no capital. A single instance of such a fortune
acquired by agriculture in the same time, and from such a
capital, has not, perhaps, occurred in Europe during the course
of the present century. In all the great countries of Europe,
however, much good land still remains uncultivated, and the
greater part of what is cultivated is far from being improved to
the degree of which it is capable. Agriculture, therefore, is
almost everywhere capable of absorbing a much greater capital
than has ever yet been employed in it. What circumstances in the
policy of Europe have given the trades which are carried on in
towns so great an advantage over that which is carried on in the
country that private persons frequently find it more for their
advantage to employ their capitals in the most distant carrying
trades of Asia and America than in the improvement and
cultivation of the most fertile fields in their own
neighbourhood, I shall endeavour to explain at full length in the
two following books.
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