|
Book Four
Of Systems of Political Economy.
CHAPTER I
Of the Principle of the Commercial, or Mercantile System
THAT wealth consists in money, or and silver, is a popular
notion which naturally arises from the double function of money,
as the instrument of commerce and as the measure of value. In
consequence of its being the instrument of commerce, when we have
money we can more readily obtain whatever else we have occasion
for than by means of any other commodity. The great affair, we
always find, is to get money. When that is obtained, there is no
difficulty in making any subsequent purchase. In consequence of
its being the measure of value, we estimate that of all other
commodities by the quantity of money which they will exchange
for. We say of a rich man that he is worth a great deal, and of a
poor man that he is worth very little money. A frugal man, or a
man eager to be rich, is said to love money; and a careless, a
generous, or a profuse man, is said to be indifferent about it.
To grow rich is to get money; and wealth and money, in short,
are, in common language, considered as in every respect
synonymous.
A rich country, in the same manner as a rich man, is
supposed to be a country abounding in money; and to heap up gold
and saver in any country is supposed to be the readiest way to
enrich it. For some time after the discovery of America, the
first inquiry of the Spaniards, when they arrived upon an unknown
coast, used to be, if there was any gold or silver to be found in
the neighbourhood. By the information which they received, they
judged whether it was worth while to make a settlement there, or
if the country was worth the conquering. Plano Carpino, a monk,
sent ambassador from the King of France to one of the sons of the
famous Genghis Khan, says that the Tartars used frequently to ask
him if there was plenty of sheep and oxen in the kingdom of
France. Their inquiry had the same object with that of the
Spaniards. They wanted to know if the country was rich enough to
be worth the conquering. Among the Tartars, as among all other
nations of shepherds, who are generally ignorant of the use of
money, cattle are the instruments of commerce and the measures of
value. Wealth, therefore, according to them, consisted in cattle,
as according to the Spaniards it consisted in gold and silver. Of
the two, the Tartar notion, perhaps, was the nearest to the
truth.
Mr. Locke remarks a distinction between money and other
movable goods. All other movable goods, he says, are of so
consumable a nature that the wealth which consists in them cannot
be much depended on, and a nation which abounds in them one year
may, without any exportation, but merely their own waste and
extravagance, be in great want of them the next. Money, on the
contrary, is a steady friend, which, though it may travel about
from hand to hand, yet if it can be kept from going out of the
country, is not very liable to be wasted and consumed. Gold and
silver, therefore, are, according to him, the most solid and
substantial part of the movable wealth of a nation, and to
multiply those metals ought, he thinks, upon that account, to be
the great object of its political economy.
Others admit that if a nation could be separated from all
the world, it would be of no consequence how much, or how little
money circulated in it. The consumable goods which were
circulated by means of this money would only be exchanged for a
greater or a smaller number of pieces; but the real wealth or
poverty of the country, they allow, would depend altogether upon
the abundance or scarcity of those consumable goods. But it is
otherwise, they think, with countries which have connections with
foreign nations, and which are obliged to carry on foreign wars,
and to maintain fleets and armies in distant countries. This,
they say, cannot be done but by sending abroad money to pay them
with; and a nation cannot send much money abroad unless it has a
good deal at home. Every such nation, therefore, must endeavour
in time of peace to accumulate gold and silver that, when
occasion requires, it may have wherewithal to carry on foreign
wars.
In consequence of these popular notions, all the different
nations of Europe have studied, though to little purpose, every
possible means of accumulating gold and silver in their
respective countries. Spain and Portugal, the proprietors of the
principal mines which supply Europe with those metals, have
either prohibited their exportation under the severest penalties,
or subjected it to a considerable duty. The like prohibition
seems anciently to have made a part of the policy of most other
European nations. It is even to be found, where we should least
of all expect to find it, in some old Scotch acts of Parliament,
which forbid under heavy penalties the carrying gold or silver
forth of the kingdom. The like policy anciently took place both
in France and England.
When those countries became commercial, the merchants found
this prohibition, upon many occasions, extremely inconvenient.
They could frequently buy more advantageously with gold and
silver than with any other commodity the foreign goods which they
wanted, either to import into their own, or to carry to some
other foreign country. They remonstrated, therefore, against this
prohibition as hurtful to trade.
They represented, first, that the exportation of gold and
silver in order to purchase foreign goods, did not always
diminish the quantity of those metals in the kingdom. That, on
the contrary, it might frequently increase that quantity;
because, if the consumption of foreign goods was not thereby
increased in the country, those goods might be re-exported to
foreign countries, and, being there sold for a large profit,
might bring back much more treasure than was originally sent out
to purchase them. Mr. Mun compares this operation of foreign
trade to the seed-time and harvest of agriculture. "If we only
behold," says he, "the actions of the husbandman in the
seed-time, when he casteth away much good corn into the ground,
we shall account him rather a madman than a husbandman. But when
we consider his labours in the harvest, which is the end of his
endeavours, we shall find the worth and plentiful increase of his
action."
They represented, secondly, that this prohibition could not
hinder the exportation of gold and silver, which, on account of
the smallness of their bulk in proportion to their value, could
easily be smuggled abroad. That this exportation could only be
prevented by a proper attention to, what they called, the balance
of trade. That when the country exported to a greater value than
it imported, a balance became due to it from foreign nations,
which was necessarily paid to it in gold and silver, and thereby
increased the quantity of those metals in the kingdom. But that
when it imported to a greater value than it exported, a contrary
balance became due to foreign nations, which was necessarily paid
to them in the same manner, and thereby diminished that quantity.
That in this case to prohibit the exportation of those metals
could not prevent it, but only, by making it more dangerous,
render it more expensive. That the exchange was thereby turned
more against the country which owed the balance than it otherwise
might have been; the merchant who purchased a bill upon the
foreign country being obliged to pay the banker who sold it, not
only for the natural risk, trouble, and expense of sending the
money thither, but for the extraordinary risk arising from the
prohibition. But that the more the exchange was against any
country, the more the balance of trade became necessarily against
it; the money of that country becoming necessarily of so much
less value in comparison with that of the country to which the
balance was due. That if the exchange between England and
Holland, for example, was five per cent against England, it would
require a hundred and five ounces of silver in England to
purchase a bill for a hundred ounces of silver in Holland: that a
hundred and five ounces of silver in England, therefore, would be
worth only a hundred ounces of silver in Holland, and would
purchase only a proportionable quantity of Dutch goods; but that
a hundred ounces of silver in Holland, on the contrary, would be
worth a hundred and five ounces in England, and would purchase a
proportionable quantity of English goods: that the English goods
which were sold to Holland would be sold so much cheaper; and the
Dutch goods which were sold to England so much dearer by the
difference of the exchange; that the one would draw so much less
Dutch money to England, and the other so much more English money
to Holland, as this difference amounted to: and that the balance
of trade, therefore, would necessarily be so much more against
England, and would require a greater balance of gold and silver
to be exported to Holland.
Those arguments were partly solid and partly sophistical.
They were solid so far as they asserted that the exportation of
gold and silver in trade might frequently be advantageous to the
country. They were solid, too, in asserting that no prohibition
could prevent their exportation when private people found any
advantage in exporting them. But they were sophistical in
supposing that either to preserve or to augment the quantity of
those metals required more the attention of government than to
preserve or to augment the quantity of any other useful
commodities, which the freedom of trade, without any such
attention, never fails to supply in the proper quantity. They
were sophistical too, perhaps, in asserting that the high price
of exchange necessarily increased what they called the
unfavourable balance of trade, or occasioned the exportation of a
greater quantity of gold and silver. That high price, indeed, was
extremely disadvantageous to the merchants who had any money to
pay in foreign countries. They paid so much dearer for the bills
which their bankers granted them upon those countries. But though
the risk arising from the prohibition might occasion some
extraordinary expense to the bankers, it would not necessarily
carry any more money out of the country. This expense would
generally be all laid out in the country, in smuggling the money
out of it, and could seldom occasion the exportation of a single
sixpence beyond the precise sum drawn for. The high price of
exchange too would naturally dispose the merchants to endeavour
to make their exports nearly balance their imports, in order that
they might have this high exchange to pay upon as small a sum as
possible. The high price of exchange, besides, must necessarily
have operated as a tax, in raising the price of foreign goods,
and thereby diminishing their consumption. It would tend,
therefore, not to increase but to diminish what they called the
unfavourable balance of trade, and consequently the exportation
of gold and silver.
Such as they were, however, those arguments convinced the
people to whom they were addressed. They were addressed by
merchants to parliaments and to the councils of princes, to
nobles and to country gentlemen, by those who were supposed to
understand trade to those who were conscious to themselves that
they knew nothing about the matter. That foreign trade enriched
the country, experience demonstrated to the nobles and country
gentlemen as well as to the merchants; but how, or in what
manner, none of them well knew. The merchants knew perfectly in
what manner it enriched themselves. It was their business to know
it. But to know in what manner it enriched the country was no
part of their business. This subject never came into their
consideration but when they had occasion to apply to their
country for some change in the laws relating to foreign trade. It
then became necessary to say something about the beneficial
effects of foreign trade, and the manner in which those effects
were obstructed by the laws as they then stood. To the judges who
were to decide the business it appeared a most satisfactory
account of the matter, when they were told that foreign trade
brought money into the country, but that the laws in question
hindered it from bringing so much as it otherwise would do. Those
arguments therefore produced the wished-for effect. The
prohibition of exporting gold and silver was in France and
England confined to the coin of those respective countries. The
exportation of foreign coin and of bullion was made free. In
Holland, and in some other places, this liberty was extended even
to the coin of the country. The attention of government was
turned away from guarding against the exportation of gold and
silver to watch over the balance of trade as the only cause which
could occasion any augmentation or diminution of those metals.
From one fruitless care it was turned away to another care much
more intricate, much more embarrassing, and just equally
fruitless. The title of Mun's book, England's Treasure in Foreign
Trade, became a fundamental maxim in the political economy, not
of England only, but of all other commercial countries. The
inland or home trade, the most important of all, the trade in
which an equal capital affords the greatest revenue, and creates
the greatest employment to the people of the country, was
considered as subsidiary only to foreign trade. It neither
brought money into the country, it was said, nor carried any out
of it. The country, therefore, could never become either richer
or poorer by means of it, except so far as its prosperity or
decay might indirectly influence the state of foreign trade.
A country that has no mines of its own must undoubtedly draw
its gold and silver from foreign countries in the same manner as
one that has no vineyards of its own must draw its wines. It does
not seem necessary, however, that the attention of government
should be more turned towards the one than towards the other
object. A country that has wherewithal to buy wine will always
get the wine which it has occasion for; and a country that has
wherewithal to buy gold and silver will never be in want of those
metals. They are to be bought for a certain price like all other
commodities, and as they are the price of all other commodities,
so all other commodities are the price of those metals. We trust
with perfect security that the freedom of trade, without any
attention of government, will always supply us with the wine
which we have occasion for: and we may trust with equal security
that it will always supply us with all the gold and silver which
we can afford to purchase or to employ, either in circulating our
commodities, or in other uses.
The quantity of every commodity which human industry can
either purchase or produce naturally regulates itself in every
country according to the effectual demand, or according to the
demand of those who are willing to pay the whole rent, labour,
and profits which must be paid in order to prepare and bring it
to market. But no commodities regulate themselves more easily or
more exactly according to this effectual demand than gold and
silver; because, on account of the small bulk and great value of
those metals, no commodities can be more easily transported from
one place to another, from the places where they are cheap to
those where they are dear, from the places where they exceed to
those where they fall short of this effectual demand. If there
were in England, for example, an effectual demand for an
additional quantity of gold, a packet-boat could bring from
Lisbon, or from wherever else it was to be had, fifty tons of
gold, which could be coined into more than five millions of
guineas. But if there were an effectual demand for grain to the
same value, to import it would require, at five guineas a ton, a
million of tons of shipping, or a thousand ships of a thousand
tons each. The navy of England would not be sufficient.
When the quantity of gold and silver imported into any
country exceeds the effectual demand, no vigilance of government
can prevent their exportation. All the sanguinary laws of Spain
and Portugal are not able to keep their gold and silver at home.
The continual importations from Peru and Brazil exceed the
effectual demand of those countries, and sink the price of those
metals there below that in the neighbouring countries. If, on the
contrary, in any particular country their quantity fell short of
the effectual demand, so as to raise their price above that of
the neighbouring countries, the government would have no occasion
to take any pains to import them. If it were even to take pains
to prevent their importation, it would not be able to effectuate
it. Those metals, when the Spartans had got wherewithal to
purchase them, broke through all the barriers which the laws of
Lycurgus opposed to their entrance into Lacedemon. All the
sanguinary laws of the customs are not able to prevent the
importation of the teas of the Dutch and Gottenburgh East India
Companies, because somewhat cheaper than those of the British
company. A pound of tea, however, is about a hundred times the
bulk of one of the highest prices, sixteen shillings, that is
commonly paid for it in silver, and more than two thousand times
the bulk of the same price in gold, and consequently just so many
times more difficult to smuggle.
It is partly owing to the easy transportation of gold and
silver from the places where they abound to those where they are
wanted that the price of those metals does not fluctuate
continually like that of the greater part of other commodities,
which are hindered by their bulk from shifting their situation
when the market happens to be either over or under-stocked with
them. The. price of those metals, indeed, is not altogether
exempted from variation, but the changes to which it is liable
are generally slow, gradual and uniform. In Europe, for example,
it is supposed, without much foundation, perhaps, that during the
course of the present and preceding century they have been
constantly, but gradually, sinking in their value, on account of
the continual importations from the Spanish West Indies. But to
make any sudden change in the price of gold and silver, so as to
raise or lower at once, sensibly and remarkably, the money price
of all other commodities, requires such a revolution in commerce
as that occasioned by the discovery of America.
If, notwithstanding all this, gold and silver should at any
time fall short in a country which has wherewithal to purchase
them, there are more expedients for supplying their place than
that of almost any other commodity. If the materials of
manufacture are wanted, industry must stop. If provisions are
wanted, the people must starve. But if money is wanted, barter
will supply its place, though with a good deal of inconveniency.
Buying and selling upon credit, and the different dealers
compensating their credits with one another, once a month or once
a year, will supply it with less inconveniency. A well-regulated
paper money will supply it, not only without any inconveniency,
but, in some cases, with some advantages. Upon every account,
therefore, the attention of government never was so unnecessarily
employed as when directed to watch over the preservation or
increase of the quantity of money in any country.
No complaint, however, is more common than that of a
scarcity of money. Money, like wine, must always be scarce with
those who have neither wherewithal to buy it nor credit to borrow
it. Those who have either will seldom be in want either of the
money or of the wine which they have occasion for. This
complaint, however, of the scarcity of money is not always
confined to improvident spendthrifts. It is sometimes general
through a whole mercantile town and the country in its
neighbourhood. Overtrading is the common cause of it. Sober men,
whose projects have been disproportioned to their capitals, are
as likely to have neither wherewithal to buy money nor credit to
borrow it, as prodigals whose expense has been disproportioned to
their revenue. Before their projects can be brought to bear,
their stock is gone, and their credit with it. They run about
everywhere to borrow money, and everybody tells them that they
have none to lend. Even such general complaints of the scarcity
of money do not always prove that the usual number of gold and
silver pieces are not circulating in the country, but that many
people want those pieces who have nothing to give for them. When
the profits of trade happen to be greater than ordinary,
overtrading becomes a general error both among great and small
dealers. They do not always send more money abroad than usual,
but they buy upon credit, both at home and abroad, an unusual
quantity of goods, which they send to some distant market in
hopes that the returns will come in before the demand for
payment. The demand comes before the returns, and they have
nothing at hand with which they can either purchase money, or
give solid security for borrowing. It is not any scarcity of gold
and silver, but the difficulty which such people find in
borrowing, and which their creditors find in getting payment,
that occasions the general complaint of the scarcity of money.
It would be too ridiculous to go about seriously to prove
that wealth does not consist in money, or in gold and silver; but
in what money purchases, and is valuable only for purchasing.
Money, no doubt, makes always a part of the national capital; but
it has already been shown that it generally makes but a small
part, and always the most unprofitable part of it.
It is not because wealth consists more essentially in money
than in goods that the merchant find it generally more easy to
buy goods with money than to buy money with goods; but because
money is the known and established instrument of commerce, for
which everything is readily given in exchange, but which is not
always with equal readiness to be got in exchange for everything.
The greater part of goods, besides, are more perishable than
money, and he may frequently sustain a much greater loss by
keeping them. When his goods are upon hand, too, he is more
liable to such demands for money as he may not be able to answer
than when he has got their price in his coffers. Over and above
all this, his profit arises more directly from selling than from
buying, and he is upon all these accounts generally much more
anxious to exchange his goods for money than his money for goods.
But though a particular merchant, with abundance of goods in his
warehouse, may sometimes be ruined by not being able to sell them
in time, a nation or country is not liable to the same accident.
The whole capital of a merchant frequently consists in perish,
able goods destined for purchasing money. But it is but a very
small part of the annual produce of the land and labour of a
country which can ever be destined for purchasing gold and silver
from their neighbours. The far greater part is circulated and
consumed among themselves; and even of the surplus which is sent
abroad, the greater part is generally destined for the purchase
of other foreign goods. Though gold and silver, therefore, could
not be had in exchange for the goods destined to purchase them,
the nation would not be ruined. It might, indeed, suffer some
loss and inconveniency, and be forced upon some of those
expedients which are necessary for supplying the place of money.
The annual produce of its land and labour, however, would be the
same, or very nearly the same, as usual, because the same, or
very nearly the same, consumable capital would be employed in
maintaining it. And though goods do not always draw money so
readily as money draws goods, in the long run they draw it more
necessarily than even it draws them. Goods can serve many other
purposes besides purchasing money, but money can serve no other
purpose besides purchasing goods. Money, therefore, necessarily
runs after goods, but goods do not always or necessarily run
after money. The man who buys does not always mean to sell again,
but frequently to use or to consume; whereas he who sells always
means to buy again. The one may frequently have done the whole,
but the other can never have done more than the one-half of his
business. It is not for its own sake that men desire money, but
for the sake of what they can purchase with it.
Consumable commodities, it is said, are soon destroyed;
whereas gold and silver are of a more durable nature, and, were
it not for this continual exportation, might be accumulated for
ages together, to the incredible augmentation of the real wealth
of the country. Nothing, therefore, it is pretended, can be more
disadvantageous to any country than the trade which consists in
the exchange of such lasting for such perishable commodities. We
do not, however, reckon that trade disadvantageous which consists
in the exchange of the hardware of England for the wines of
France; and yet hardware is a very durable commodity, and were it
not for this continual exportation might, too, be accumulated for
ages together, to the incredible augmentation of the pots and
pans of the country. But it readily occurs that the number of
such utensils is in every country necessarily limited by the use
which there is for them; that it would be absurd to have more
pots and pans than were necessary for cooking the victuals
usually consumed there; and that if the quantity of victuals were
to increase, the number of pots and pans would readily increase
along with it, a part of the increased quantity of victuals being
employed in purchasing them, or in maintaining an additional
number of workmen whose business it was to make them. It should
as readily occur that the quantity of gold and silver is in every
country limited by the use which there is for those metals; that
their use consists in circulating commodities as coin, and in
affording a species of household furniture as plate; that the
quantity of coin in every country is regulated by the value of
the commodities which are to be circulated by it: increase that
value, and immediately a part of it will be sent abroad to
purchase, wherever it is to be had, the additional quantity of
coin requisite for circulating them: that the quantity of plate
is regulated by the number and wealth of those private families
who choose to indulge themselves in that sort of magnificence:
increase the number and wealth of such families, and a part of
this increased wealth will most probably be employed in
purchasing, wherever it is to be found, an additional quantity of
plate: that to attempt to increase the wealth of any country,
either by introducing or by detaining in it an unnecessary
quantity of gold and silver, is as absurd as it would be to
attempt to increase the good cheer of private families by
obliging them to keep an unnecessary number of kitchen utensils.
As the expense of purchasing those unnecessary utensils would
diminish instead of increasing either the quantity of goodness of
the family provisions, so the expense of purchasing an
unnecessary quantity of gold and silver must, in every country,
as necessarily diminish the wealth which feeds, clothes, and
lodges, which maintains and employs the people. Gold and silver,
whether in the shape of coin or of plate, are utensils, it must
be remembered, as much as the furniture of the kitchen. Increase
the use for them, increase the consumable commodities which are
to be circulated, managed, and prepared by means of them, and you
will infallibly increase the quantity; but if you attempt, by
extraordinary means, to increase the quantity, you will as
infallibly diminish the use and even the quantity too, which in
those metals can never be greater than what the use requires.
Were they ever to be accumulated beyond this quantity, their
transportation is so easy, and the loss which attends their lying
idle and unemployed so great, that no law could prevent their
being immediately sent out of the country.
It is not always necessary to accumulate gold and silver in
order to enable a country to carry on foreign wars, and to
maintain fleets and armies in distant countries. Fleets and
armies are maintained, not with gold and silver, but with
consumable goods. The nation which, from the annual produce of
its domestic industry, from the annual revenue arising out of its
lands, labour, and consumable stock, has wherewithal to purchase
those consumable goods in distant countries, can maintain foreign
wars there.
A nation may purchase the pay and provisions of an army in a
distant country three different ways: by sending abroad either,
first, some part of its accumulated gold and silver, or,
secondly, some part of the annual produce of its manufactures;
or, last of all, some part of its annual rude produce.
The gold and silver which can properly be considered as
accumulated or stored up in any country may be distinguished into
three parts: first, the circulating money; secondly, the plate of
private families; and, last of all, the money which may have been
collected by many years' parsimony, and laid up in the treasury
of the prince.
It can seldom happen that much can be spared from the
circulating money of the country; because in that there can
seldom be much redundancy. The value of goods annually bought and
sold in any country requires a certain quantity of money to
circulate and distribute them to their proper consumers, and can
give employment to no more. The channel of circulation
necessarily draws to itself a sum sufficient to fill it, and
never admits any more. Something, however, is generally withdrawn
from this channel in the case of foreign war. By the great number
of people who are maintained abroad, fewer are maintained at
home. Fewer goods are circulated there, and less money becomes
necessary to circulate them. An extraordinary quantity of paper
money, of some sort or other, such as exchequer notes, navy
bills, and bank bills in England, is generally issued upon such
occasions, and by supplying the place of circulating gold and
silver, gives an opportunity of sending a greater quantity of it
abroad. All this, however, could afford but a poor resource for
maintaining a foreign war of great expense and several years
duration.
The melting down the plate of private families has upon
every occasion been found a still more insignificant one. The
French, in the beginning of the last war, did not derive so much
advantage from this expedient as to compensate the loss of the
fashion.
The accumulated treasures of the prince have, in former
times, afforded a much greater and more lasting resource. In the
present times, if you except the king of Prussia, to accumulate
treasure seems to be no part of the policy of European princes.
The funds which maintained the foreign wars of the present
century, the most expensive perhaps which history records, seem
to have had little dependency upon the exportation either of the
circulating money, or of the plate of private families, or of the
treasure of the prince. The last French war cost Great Britain
upwards of ninety millions, including not only the seventy-five
millions of new debt that was contracted, but the additional two
shillings in the pound land-tax, and what was annually borrowed
of the sinking fund. More than two-thirds of this expense were
laid out in distant countries; in Germany, Portugal, America, in
the ports of the Mediterranean, in the East and West Indies. The
kings of England had no accumulated treasure. We never heard of
any extraordinary quantity of plate being melted down. The
circulating gold and silver of the country had not been supposed
to exceed eighteen millions. Since the late recoinage of the
gold, however, it is believed to have been a good deal
under-rated. Let us suppose, therefore, according to the most
exaggerated computation which I remember to have either seen or
heard of, that, gold and silver together, it amounted to thirty
millions. Had the war been carried on by means of our money, the
whole of it must, even according to this computation, have been
sent out and returned again at least twice in a period of between
six and seven years. Should this be supposed, it would afford the
most decisive argument to demonstrate how unnecessary it is for
government to watch over the preservation of money, since upon
this supposition the whole money of the country must have gone
from it and returned to it again, two different times in so short
a period, without anybody's knowing anything of the matter. The
channel of circulation, however, never appeared more empty than
usual during any part of this period. Few people wanted money who
had wherewithal to pay for it. The profits of foreign trade,
indeed, were greater than usual during the whole war; but
especially towards the end of it. This occasioned, what it always
occasions, a general overtrading in all the parts of Great
Britain; and this again occasioned the usual complaint of the
scarcity of money, which always follows overtrading. Many people
wanted it, who had neither wherewithal to buy it, nor credit to
borrow it; and because the debtors found it difficult to borrow,
the creditors found it difficult to get payment. Gold and silver,
however, were generally to be had for their value, by those who
had that value to give for them.
The enormous expense of the late war, therefore, must have
been chiefly defrayed, not by the exportation of gold and silver,
but by that of British commodities of some kind or other. When
the government, or those who acted under them, contracted with a
merchant for a remittance to some foreign country, he would
naturally endeavour to pay his foreign correspondent, upon whom
he had granted a bill, by sending abroad rather commodities than
gold and silver. If the commodities of Great Britain were not in
demand in that country, he would endeavour to send them to some
other country, in which he could purchase a bill upon that
country. The transportation of commodities, when properly suited
to the market, is always attended with a considerable profit;
whereas that of gold and silver is scarce ever attended with any.
When those metals are sent abroad in order to purchase foreign
commodities, the merchant's profit arises, not from the purchase,
but from the sale of the returns. But when they are sent abroad
merely to pay a debt, he gets no returns, and consequently no
profit. He naturally, therefore, exerts his invention to find out
a way of paying his foreign debts rather by the exportation of
commodities than by that of gold and silver. The great quantity
of British goods exported during the course of the late war,
without bringing back any returns, is accordingly remarked by the
author of The Present State of the Nation.
Besides the three sorts of gold and silver above mentioned,
there is in all great commercial countries a good deal of bullion
alternately imported and exported for the purposes of foreign
trade. This bullion, as it circulates among different commercial
countries in the same manner as the national coin circulates in
every particular country, may be considered as the money of the
great mercantile republic. The national coin receives its
movement and direction from the commodities circulated within the
precincts of each particular country: the money of the mercantile
republic, from those circulated between different countries. Both
are employed in facilitating exchanges, the one between different
individuals of the same, the other between those of different
nations. Part of this money of the great mercantile republic may
have been, and probably was, employed in carrying on the late
war. In time of a general war, it is natural to suppose that a
movement and direction should be impressed upon it, different
from what it usually follows in profound peace; that it should
circulate more about the seat of the war, and be more employed in
purchasing there, and in the neighbouring countries, the pay and
provisions of the different armies. But whatever part of this
money of the mercantile republic Great Britain may have annually
employed in this manner, it must have been annually purchased,
either with British commodities, or with something else that had
been purchased with them; which still brings us back to
commodities, to the annual produce of the land and labour of the
country, as the ultimate resources which enabled us to carry on
the war. It is natural indeed to suppose that so great an annual
expense must have been defrayed from a great annual produce. The
expense of 1761, for example, amounted to more than nineteen
millions. No accumulation could have supported so great an annual
profusion. There is no annual produce even of gold and silver
which could have supported it. The whole gold and silver annually
imported into both Spain and Portugal, according to the best
accounts, does not commonly much exceed six millions sterling,
which, in some years, would scarce have paid four month's expense
of the late war.
The commodities most proper for being transported to distant
countries, in order to purchase there either the pay and
provisions of an army, or some part of the money of the
mercantile republic to be employed in purchasing them, seem to be
the finer and more improved manufactures; such as contain a great
value in a small bulk, and can, therefore, be exported to a great
distance at little expense. A country whose industry produces a
great annual surplus of such manufactures, which are usually
exported to foreign countries, may carry on for many years a very
expensive foreign war without either exporting any considerable
quantity of gold and silver, or even having any such quantity to
export. A considerable part of the annual surplus of its
manufactures must, indeed, in this case be exported without
bringing back any returns to the country, though it does to the
merchant; the government purchasing of the merchant his bills
upon foreign countries, in order to purchase there the pay and
provisions of an army. Some part of this surplus, however, may
still continue to bring back a return. The manufacturers, during
the war, will have a double demand upon them, and be called upon,
first, to work up goods to be sent abroad, for paying the bills
drawn upon foreign countries for the pay and provisions of the
army; and, secondly, to work up such as are necessary for
purchasing the common returns that had usually been consumed in
the country. In the midst of the most destructive foreign war,
therefore, the greater part of manufactures may frequently
flourish greatly; and, on the contrary, they may decline on the
return of the peace. They may flourish amidst the ruin of their
country, and begin to decay upon the return of its prosperity.
The different state of many different branches of the British
manufactures during the late war, and for some time after the
peace, may serve as an illustration of what has been just now
said.
No foreign war of great expense or duration could
conveniently be carried on by the exportation of the rude produce
of the soil. The expense of sending such a quantity of it to a
foreign country as might purchase the pay and provisions of an
army would be too great. Few countries produce much more rude
produce than what is sufficient for the subsistence of their own
inhabitants. To send abroad any great quantity of it, therefore,
would be to send abroad a part of the necessary subsistence of
the people. It is otherwise with the exportation of manufactures.
The maintenance of the people employed in them is kept at home,
and only the surplus part of their work is exported. Mr. Hume
frequently takes notice of the inability of the ancient kings of
England to carry on, without interruption, any foreign war of
long duration. The English, in those days, had nothing
wherewithal to purchase the pay and provisions of their armies in
foreign countries, but either the rude produce of the soil, of
which no considerable part could be spared from the home
consumption, or a few manufactures of the coarsest kind, of
which, as well as of the rude produce, the transportation was too
expensive. This inability did not arise from the want of money,
but of the finer and more improved manufactures. Buying and
selling was transacted by means of money in England then as well
as now. The quantity of circulating money must have borne the
same proportion to the number and value of purchases and sales
usually transacted at that time, which it does to those
transacted at present; or rather it must have borne a greater
proportion, because there was then no paper, which now occupies a
great part of the employment of gold and silver. Among nations to
whom commerce and manufactures are little known, the sovereign,
upon extraordinary occasions, can seldom draw any considerable
aid from his subjects, for reasons which shall be explained
hereafter. It is in such countries, therefore, that he generally
endeavours to accumulate a treasure, as the only resource against
such emergencies. Independent of this necessity, he is in such a
situation naturally disposed to the parsimony requisite for
accumulation. In that simple state, the expense even of a
sovereign is not directed by the vanity which delights in the
gaudy finery of a court, but is employed in bounty to his
tenants, and hospitality to his retainers. But bounty and
hospitality very seldom lead to extravagance; though vanity
almost always does. Every Tartar chief, accordingly, has a
treasure. The treasures of Mazepa, chief of the Cossacs in the
Ukraine, the famous ally of Charles the XII, are said to have
been very great. The French kings of the Merovingian race all had
treasures. When they divided their kingdom among their different
children, they divided their treasure too. The Saxon princes, and
the first kings after the Conquest, seem likewise to have
accumulated treasures. The first exploit of every new reign was
commonly to seize the treasure of the preceding king, as the most
essential measure for securing the succession. The sovereigns of
improved and commercial countries are not under the same
necessity of accumulating treasures, because they can generally
draw from their subjects extraordinary aids upon extraordinary
occasions. They are likewise less disposed to do so. They
naturally, perhaps necessarily, follow the mode of the times, and
their expense comes to be regulated by the same extravagant
vanity which directs that of all the other great proprietors in
their dominions. The insignificant pageantry of their court
becomes every day more brilliant, and the expense of it not only
prevents accumulation, but frequently encroaches upon the funds
destined for more necessary expenses. What Dercyllidas said of
the court of Persia may be applied to that of several European
princes, that he saw there much splendour but little strength,
and many servants but few soldiers.
The importation of gold and silver is not the principal,
much less the sole benefit which a nation derives from its
foreign trade. Between whatever places foreign trade is carried
on, they all of them derive two distinct benefits from it. It
carries out that surplus part of the produce of their land and
labour for which there is no demand among them, and brings back
in return for it something else for which there is a demand. It
gives a value to their superfluities, by exchanging them for
something else, which may satisfy a part of their wants, and
increase their enjoyments. By means of it the narrowness of the
home market does not hinder the division of labour in any
particular branch of art or manufacture from being carried to the
highest perfection. By opening a more extensive market for
whatever part of the produce of their labour may exceed the home
consumption, it encourages them to improve its productive powers,
and to augment its annual produce to the utmost, and thereby to
increase the real revenue and wealth of the society. These great
and important services foreign trade is continually occupied in
performing to all the different countries between which it is
carried on. They all derive great benefit from it, though that in
which the merchant resides generally derives the greatest, as he
is generally more employed in supplying the wants, and carrying
out the superfluities of his own, than of any other particular
country. To import the gold and silver which may be wanted into
the countries which have no mines is, no doubt, a part of the
business of foreign commerce. It is, however, a most
insignificant part of it. A country which carried on foreign
trade merely upon this account could scarce have occasion to
freight a ship in a century.
It is not by the importation of gold and silver that the
discovery of America has enriched Europe. By the abundance of the
American mines, those metals have become cheaper. A service of
plate can now be purchased for about a third part of the corn, or
a third part of the labour, which it would have cost in the
fifteenth century. With the same annual expense of labour and
commodities, Europe can annually purchase about three times the
quantity of plate which it could have purchased at that time. But
when a commodity comes to be sold for a third part of what had
been its usual price, not only those who purchased it before can
purchase three times their former quantity, but it is brought
down to the level of a much greater number of purchasers, perhaps
to more than ten, perhaps to more than twenty times the former
number. So that there may be in Europe at present not only more
than three times, but more than twenty or thirty times the
quantity of plate which would have been in it, even in its
present state of improvement, had the discovery of the American
mines never been made. So far Europe has, no doubt, gained a real
conveniency, though surely a very trifling one. The cheapness of
gold and silver renders those metals rather less fit for the
purposes of money than they were before. In order to make the
same purchases, we must load ourselves with a greater quantity of
them, and carry about a shilling in our pocket where a groat
would have done before. It is difficult to say which is most
trifling, this inconveniency or the opposite conveniency. Neither
the one nor the other could have made any very essential change
in the state of Europe. The discovery of America, however,
certainly made a most essential one. By opening a new and
inexhaustible market to all the commodities of Europe, it gave
occasion to new divisions of labour and improvements of art,
which in the narrow circle of the ancient commerce, could never
have taken place for want of a market to take off the greater
part of their produce. The productive powers of labour were
improved, and its produce increased in all the different
countries of Europe, and together with it the real revenue and
wealth of the inhabitants. The commodities of Europe were almost
all new to America, and many of those of America were new to
Europe. A new set of exchanges, therefore, began to take place
which had never been thought of before, and which should
naturally have proved as advantageous to the new, as it certainly
did to the old continent. The savage injustice of the Europeans
rendered an event, which ought to have been beneficial to all,
ruinous and destructive to several of those unfortunate
countries.
The discovery of a passage to the East Indies by the Cape of
Good Hope, which happened much about the same time, opened
perhaps a still more extensive range to foreign commerce than
even that of America, notwithstanding the greater distance. There
were but two nations in America in any respect superior to
savages, and these were destroyed almost as soon as discovered.
The rest were mere savages. But the empires of China, Indostan,
Japan, as well as several others in the East Indies, without
having richer mines of gold or silver, were in every other
respect much richer, better cultivated, and more advanced in all
arts and manufactures than either Mexico or Peru, even though we
should credit, what plainly deserves no credit, the exaggerated
accounts of the Spanish writers concerning the ancient state of
those empires. But rich and civilised nations can always exchange
to a much greater value with one another than with savages and
barbarians. Europe, however, has hitherto derived much less
advantage from its commerce with the East Indies than from that
with America. The Portuguese monopolized the East India trade to
themselves for about a century, and it was only indirectly and
through them that the other nations of Europe could either send
out or receive any goods from that country. When the Dutch, in
the beginning of the last century, began to encroach upon them,
they vested their whole East India commerce in an exclusive
company. The English, French, Swedes, and Danes have all followed
their example, so that no great nation in Europe has ever yet had
the benefit of a free commerce to the East Indies. No other
reason need be assigned why it has never been so advantageous as
the trade to America, which, between almost every nation of
Europe and its own colonies, is free to all its subjects. The
exclusive privileges of those East India companies, their great
riches, the great favour and protection which these have procured
them from their respective governments, have excited much envy
against them. This envy has frequently represented their trade as
altogether pernicious, on account of the great quantities of
silver which it every year exports from the countries from which
it is carried on. The parties concerned have replied that their
trade, by this continual exportation of silver, might indeed tend
to impoverish Europe in general, but not the particular country
from which it was carried on; because, by the exportation of a
part of the returns to other European countries, it annually
brought home a much greater quantity of that metal than it
carried out. Both the objection and the reply are founded in the
popular notion which I have been just now examining. It is
therefore unnecessary to say anything further about either. By
the annual exportation of silver to the East Indies, plate is
probably somewhat dearer in Europe than it otherwise might have
been; and coined silver probably purchases a larger quantity both
of labour and commodities. The former of these two effects is a
very small loss, the latter a very small advantage; both too
insignificant to deserve any part of the public attention. The
trade to the East Indies, by opening a market to the commodities
of Europe, or, what comes nearly to the same thing, to the gold
and silver which is purchased with those commodities, must
necessarily tend to increase the annual production of European
commodities, and consequently the real wealth and revenue of
Europe. That it has hitherto increased them so little is probably
owing to the restraints which it everywhere labours under.
I thought it necessary, though at the hazard of being
tedious, to examine at full length this popular notion that
wealth consists in money, or in gold and silver. Money in common
language, as I have already observed, frequently signifies
wealth, and this ambiguity of expression has rendered this
popular notion so familiar to us that even they who are convinced
of its absurdity are very apt to forget their own principles, and
in the course of their reasonings to take it for granted as a
certain and undeniable truth. Some of the best English writers
upon commerce set out with observing that the wealth of a country
consists, not in its gold and silver only, but in its lands,
houses, and consumable goods of all different kinds. In the
course of their reasonings, however, the lands, houses, and
consumable goods seem to slip out of their memory, and the strain
of their argument frequently supposes that all wealth consists in
gold and silver, and that to multiply those metals is the great
object of national industry and commerce.
The two principles being established, however, that wealth
consisted in gold and silver, and that those metals could be
brought into a country which had no mines only by the balance of
trade, or by exporting to a greater value than it imported, it
necessarily became the great object of political economy to
diminish as much as possible the importation of foreign goods for
home consumption, and to increase as much as possible the
exportation of the produce of domestic industry. Its two great
engines for enriching the country, therefore, were restraints
upon importation, and encouragements to exportation.
The restraints upon importation were of two kinds.
First, restraints upon the importation of such foreign goods
for home consumption as could be produced at home, from whatever
country they were imported.
Secondly, restraints upon the importation of goods of almost
all kinds from those particular countries with which the balance
of trade was supposed to be disadvantageous.
Those different restraints consisted sometimes in high
duties, and sometimes in absolute prohibitions.
Exportation was encouraged sometimes by drawbacks, sometimes
by bounties, sometimes by advantageous treaties of commerce with
foreign states, and sometimes by the establishment of colonies in
distant countries.
Drawbacks were given upon two different occasions. When the
home manufactures were subject to any duty or excise, either the
whole or a part of it was frequently drawn back upon their
exportation; and when foreign goods liable to a duty were
imported in order to be exported again, either the whole or a
part of this duty was sometimes given back upon such exportation.
Bounties were given for the encouragement either of some
beginning manufactures, or of such sorts of industry of other
kinds as supposed to deserve particular favour.
By advantageous treaties of commerce, particular privileges
were procured in some foreign state for the goods and merchants
of the country, beyond what were granted to those other
countries.
By established establishment of colonies in distant
countries, not only particular privileges, but a monopoly was
frequently procured for the goods and merchants of the country
which established them.
The two sorts of restraints upon importation
above-mentioned, together with these four encouragements to
exportation, constitute the six principal means by which the
commercial system proposes to increase the quantity of gold and
silver in any country by turning the balance of trade in its
favour. I shall consider each of them in a particular chapter,
and without taking much further notice of their supposed tendency
to bring money into the country, I shall examine chiefly what are
likely to be the effects of each of them upon the annual produce
of its industry. According as they tend either to increase or
diminish the value of this annual produce, they must evidently
tend either to increase or diminish the real wealth and revenue
of the country.
|