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Book Four
Of Systems of Political Economy.
CHAPTER II
Of Restraints upon the Importation from Foreign Countries of such
Goods as can be produced at Home
BY restraining, either by high duties or by absolute
prohibitions, the importation of such goods from foreign
countries as can be produced at home, the monopoly of the home
market is more or less secured to the domestic industry employed
in producing them. Thus the prohibition of importing either live
cattle or salt provisions from foreign countries secures to the
graziers of Great Britain the monopoly of the home market for
butcher's meat. The high duties upon the importation of corn,
which in times of moderate plenty amount to a prohibition, give a
like advantage to the growers of that commodity. The prohibition
of the importation of foreign woollens is equally favourable to
the woollen manufacturers. The silk manufacture, though
altogether employed upon foreign materials, has lately obtained
the same advantage. The linen manufacture has not yet obtained
it, but is making great strides towards it. Many other sorts of
manufacturers have, in the same manner, obtained in Great
Britain, either altogether or very nearly, a monopoly against
their countrymen. The variety of goods of which the importation
into Great Britain is prohibited, either absolutely, or under
certain circumstances, greatly exceeds what can easily be
suspected by those who are not well acquainted with the laws of
the customs.
That this monopoly of the home market frequently gives great
encouragement to that particular species of industry which enjoys
it, and frequently turns towards that employment a greater share
of both the labour and stock of the society than would otherwise
have gone to it, cannot be doubted. But whether it tends either
to increase the general industry of the society, or to give it
the most advantageous direction, is not, perhaps, altogether so
evident.
The general industry of the society never can exceed what
the capital of the society can employ. As the number of workmen
that can be kept in employment by any particular person must bear
a certain proportion to his capital, so the number of those that
can be continually employed by all the members of a great society
must bear a certain proportion to the whole capital of that
society, and never can exceed that proportion. No regulation of
commerce can increase the quantity of industry in any society
beyond what its capital can maintain. It can only divert a part
of it into a direction into which it might not otherwise have
gone; and it is by no means certain that this artificial
direction is likely to be more advantageous to the society than
that into which it would have gone of its own accord.
Every individual is continually exerting himself to find out
the most advantageous employment for whatever capital he can
command. It is his own advantage, indeed, and not that of the
society, which he has in view. But the study of his own advantage
naturally, or rather necessarily, leads him to prefer that
employment which is most advantageous to the society.
First, every individual endeavours to employ his capital as
near home as he can, and consequently as much as he can in the
support of domestic industry; provided always that he can thereby
obtain the ordinary, or not a great deal less than the ordinary
profits of stock.
Thus, upon equal or nearly equal profits, every wholesale
merchant naturally prefers the home trade to the foreign trade of
consumption, and the foreign trade of consumption to the carrying
trade. In the home trade his capital is never so long out of his
sight as it frequently is in the foreign trade of consumption. He
can know better the character and situation of the persons whom
he trusts, and if he should happen to be deceived, he knows
better the laws of the country from which he must seek redress.
In the carrying trade, the capital of the merchant is, as it
were, divided between two foreign countries, and no part of it is
ever necessarily brought home, or placed under his own immediate
view and command. The capital which an Amsterdam merchant employs
in carrying corn from Konigsberg to Lisbon, and fruit and wine
from Lisbon to Konigsberg, must generally be the one half of it
at Konigsberg and the other half at Lisbon. No part of it need
ever come to Amsterdam. The natural residence of such a merchant
should either be at Konigsberg or Lisbon, and it can only be some
very particular circumstances which can make him prefer the
residence of Amsterdam. The uneasiness, however, which he feels
at being separated so far from his capital generally determines
him to bring part both of the Konigsberg goods which he destines
for the market of Lisbon, and of the Lisbon goods which he
destines for that of Konigsberg, to Amsterdam: and though this
necessarily subjects him to a double charge of loading and
unloading, as well as to the payment of some duties and customs,
yet for the sake of having some part of his capital always under
his own view and command, he willingly submits to this
extraordinary charge; and it is in this manner that every country
which has any considerable share of the carrying trade becomes
always the emporium, or general market, for the goods of all the
different countries whose trade it carries on. The merchant, in
order to save a second loading and unloading, endeavours always
to sell in the home market as much of the goods of all those
different countries as he can, and thus, so far as he can, to
convert his carrying trade into a foreign trade of consumption. A
merchant, in the same manner, who is engaged in the foreign trade
of consumption, when he collects goods for foreign markets, will
always be glad, upon equal or nearly equal profits, to sell as
great a part of them at home as he can. He saves himself the risk
and trouble of exportation, when, so far as he can, he thus
converts his foreign trade of consumption into a home trade. Home
is in this manner the centre, if I may say so, round which the
capitals of the inhabitants of every country are continually
circulating, and towards which they are always tending, though by
particular causes they may sometimes be driven off and repelled
from it towards more distant employments. But a capital employed
in the home trade, it has already been shown, necessarily puts
into motion a greater quantity of domestic industry, and gives
revenue and employment to a greater number of the inhabitants of
the country, than an equal capital employed in the foreign trade
of consumption: and one employed in the foreign trade of
consumption has the same advantage over an equal capital employed
in the carrying trade. Upon equal, or only nearly equal profits,
therefore, every individual naturally inclines to employ his
capital in the manner in which it is likely to afford the
greatest support to domestic industry, and to give revenue and
employment to the greatest number of people of his own country.
Secondly, every individual who employs his capital in the
support of domestic industry, necessarily endeavours so to direct
that industry that its produce may be of the greatest possible
value.
The produce of industry is what it adds to the subject or
materials upon which it is employed. In proportion as the value
of this produce is great or small, so will likewise be the
profits of the employer. But it is only for the sake of profit
that any man employs a capital in the support of industry; and he
will always, therefore, endeavour to employ it in the support of
that industry of which the produce is likely to be of the
greatest value, or to exchange for the greatest quantity either
of money or of other goods.
But the annual revenue of every society is always precisely
equal to the exchangeable value of the whole annual produce of
its industry, or rather is precisely the same thing with that
exchangeable value. As every individual, therefore, endeavours as
much as he can both to employ his capital in the support of
domestic industry, and so to direct that industry that its
produce may be of the greatest value; every individual
necessarily labours to render the annual revenue of the society
as great as he can. He generally, indeed, neither intends to
promote the public interest, nor knows how much he is promoting
it. By preferring the support of domestic to that of foreign
industry, he intends only his own security; and by directing that
industry in such a manner as its produce may be of the greatest
value, he intends only his own gain, and he is in this, as in
many other cases, led by an invisible hand to promote an end
which was no part of his intention. Nor is it always the worse
for the society that it was no part of it. By pursuing his own
interest he frequently promotes that of the society more
effectually than when he really intends to promote it. I have
never known much good done by those who affected to trade for the
public good. It is an affectation, indeed, not very common among
merchants, and very few words need be employed in dissuading them
from it.
What is the species of domestic industry which his capital
can employ, and of which the produce is likely to be of the
greatest value, every individual, it is evident, can, in his
local situation, judge much better than any statesman or lawgiver
can do for him. The statesman who should attempt to direct
private people in what manner they ought to employ their capitals
would not only load himself with a most unnecessary attention,
but assume an authority which could safely be trusted, not only
to no single person, but to no council or senate whatever, and
which would nowhere be so dangerous as in the hands of a man who
had folly and presumption enough to fancy himself fit to exercise
it.
To give the monopoly of the home market to the produce of
domestic industry, in any particular art or manufacture, is in
some measure to direct private people in what manner they ought
to employ their capitals, and must, in almost all cases, be
either a useless or a hurtful regulation. If the produce of
domestic can be brought there as cheap as that of foreign
industry, the regulation is evidently useless. If it cannot, it
must generally be hurtful. It is the maxim of every prudent
master of a family never to attempt to make at home what it will
cost him more to make than to buy. The tailor does not attempt to
make his own shoes, but buys them of the shoemaker. The shoemaker
does not attempt to make his own clothes, but employs a tailor.
The farmer attempts to make neither the one nor the other, but
employs those different artificers. All of them find it for their
interest to employ their whole industry in a way in which they
have some advantage over their neighbours, and to purchase with a
part of its produce, or what is the same thing, with the price of
a part of it, whatever else they have occasion for.
What is prudence in the conduct of every private family can
scarce be folly in that of a great kingdom. If a foreign country
can supply us with a commodity cheaper than we ourselves can make
it, better buy it of them with some part of the produce of our
own industry employed in a way in which we have some advantage.
The general industry of the country, being always in proportion
to the capital which employs it, will not thereby be diminished,
no more than that of the above-mentioned artificers; but only
left to find out the way in which it can be employed with the
greatest advantage. It is certainly not employed to the greatest
advantage when it is thus directed towards an object which it can
buy cheaper than it can make. The value of its annual produce is
certainly more or less diminished when it is thus turned away
from producing commodities evidently of more value than the
commodity which it is directed to produce. According to the
supposition, that commodity could be purchased from foreign
countries cheaper than it can be made at home. It could,
therefore, have been purchased with a part only of the
commodities, or, what is the same thing, with a part only of the
price of the commodities, which the industry employed by an equal
capital would have produced at home, had it been left to follow
its natural course. The industry of the country, therefore, is
thus turned away from a more to a less advantageous employment,
and the exchangeable value of its annual produce, instead of
being increased, according to the intention of the lawgiver, must
necessarily be diminished by every such regulation.
By means of such regulations, indeed, a particular
manufacture may sometimes be acquired sooner than it could have
been otherwise, and after a certain time may be made at home as
cheap or cheaper than in the foreign country. But though the
industry of the society may be thus carried with advantage into a
particular channel sooner than it could have been otherwise, it
will by no means follow that the sum total, either of its
industry, or of its revenue, can ever be augmented by any such
regulation. The industry of the society can augment only in
proportion as its capital augments, and its capital can augment
only in proportion to what can be gradually saved out of its
revenue. But the immediate effect of every such regulation is to
diminish its revenue, and what diminishes its revenue is
certainly not very likely to augment its capital faster than it
would have augmented of its own accord had both capital and
industry been left to find out their natural employments.
Though for want of such regulations the society should never
acquire the proposed manufacture, it would not, upon that
account, necessarily be the poorer in any one period of its
duration. In every period of its duration its whole capital and
industry might still have been employed, though upon different
objects, in the manner that was most advantageous at the time. In
every period its revenue might have been the greatest which its
capital could afford, and both capital and revenue might have
been augmented with the greatest possible rapidity.
The natural advantages which one country has over another in
producing particular commodities are sometimes so great that it
is acknowledged by all the world to be in vain to struggle with
them. By means of glasses, hotbeds, and hot walls, very good
grapes can be raised in Scotland, and very good wine too can be
made of them at about thirty times the expense for which at least
equally good can be brought from foreign countries. Would it be a
reasonable law to prohibit the importation of all foreign wines
merely to encourage the making of claret and burgundy in
Scotland? But if there would be a manifest absurdity in turning
towards any employment thirty times more of the capital and
industry of the country than would be necessary to purchase from
foreign countries an equal quantity of the commodities wanted,
there must be an absurdity, though not altogether so glaring, yet
exactly of the same kind, in turning towards any such employment
a thirtieth, or even a three-hundredth part more of either.
Whether the advantages which one country has over another be
natural or acquired is in this respect of no consequence. As long
as the one country has those advantages, and the other wants
them, it will always be more advantageous for the latter rather
to buy of the former than to make. It is an acquired advantage
only, which one artificer has over his neighbour, who exercises
another trade; and yet they both find it more advantageous to buy
of one another than to make what does not belong to their
particular trades.
Merchants and manufacturers are the people who derive the
greatest advantage from this monopoly of the home market. The
prohibition of the importation of foreign cattle, and of salt
provisions, together with the high duties upon foreign corn,
which in times of moderate plenty amount to a prohibition, are
not near so advantageous to the graziers and farmers of Great
Britain as other regulations of the same kind are to its
merchants and manufacturers. Manufactures, those of the finer
kind especially, are more easily transported from one country to
another than corn or cattle. It is in the fetching and carrying
manufactures, accordingly, that foreign trade is chiefly
employed. In manufactures, a very small advantage will enable
foreigners to undersell our own workmen, even in the home market.
It will require a very great one to enable them to do so in the
rude produce of the soil. If the free importation of foreign
manufactures were permitted, several of the home manufactures
would probably suffer, and some of them, perhaps, go to ruin
altogether, and a considerable part of the stock and industry at
present employed in them would be forced to find out some other
employment. But the freest importation of the rude produce of the
soil could have no such effect upon the agriculture of the
country.
If the importation of foreign cattle, for example, were made
ever so free, so few could be imported that the grazing trade of
Great Britain could be little affected by it. Live cattle are,
perhaps, the only commodity of which the transportation is more
expensive by sea than by land. By land they carry themselves to
market. By sea, not only the cattle, but their food and their
water too, must be carried at no small expense and inconveniency.
The short sea between Ireland and Great Britain, indeed, renders
the importation of Irish cattle more easy. But though the free
importation of them, which was lately permitted only for a
limited time, were rendered perpetual, it could have no
considerable effect upon the interest of the graziers of Great
Britain. Those parts of Great Britain which border upon the Irish
Sea are all grazing countries. Irish cattle could never be
imported for their use, but must be driven through those very
extensive countries, at no small expense and inconveniency,
before they could arrive at their proper market. Fat cattle could
not be driven so far. Lean cattle, therefore, only could be
imported, and such importation could interfere, not with the
interest of the feeding or fattening countries, to which, by
reducing the price of lean cattle, it would rather be
advantageous, but with that of the breeding countries only. The
small number of Irish cattle imported since their importation was
permitted, together with the good price at which lean cattle
still continue to sell, seem to demonstrate that even the
breeding countries of Great Britain are never likely to be much
affected by the free importation of Irish cattle. The common
people of Ireland, indeed, are said to have sometimes opposed
with violence the exportation of their cattle. But if the
exporters had found any great advantage in continuing the trade,
they could easily, when the law was on their side, have conquered
this mobbish opposition.
Feeding and fattening countries, besides, must always be
highly improved, whereas breeding countries are generally
uncultivated. The high price of lean cattle, by augmenting the
value of uncultivated land, is like a bounty against improvement.
To any country which was highly improved throughout, it would be
more advantageous to import its lean cattle than to breed them.
The province of Holland, accordingly, is said to follow this
maxim at present. The mountains of Scotland, Wales, and
Northumberland, indeed, are countries not capable of much
improvement, and seem destined by nature to be the breeding
countries of Great Britain. The freest importation of foreign
cattle could have no other effect than to hinder those breeding
countries from taking advantage of the increasing population and
improvement of the rest of the kingdom, from raising their price
to an exorbitant height, and from laying a real tax upon all the
more improved and cultivated parts of the country.
The freest importation of salt provisions, in the same
manner, could have as little effect upon the interest of the
graziers of Great Britain as that of live cattle. Salt provisions
are not only a very bulky commodity, but when compared with fresh
meat, they are a commodity both of worse quality, and as they
cost more labour and expense, of higher price. They could never,
therefore, come into competition with the fresh meat, though they
might with the salt provisions of the country. They might be used
for victualling ships for distant voyages and such like uses, but
could never make any considerable part of the food of the people.
The small quantity of salt provisions imported from Ireland since
their importation was rendered free is an experimental proof that
our graziers have nothing to apprehend from it. It does not
appear that the price of butcher's meat has ever been sensibly
affected by it.
Even the free importation of foreign corn could very little
affect the interest of the farmers of Great Britain. Corn is a
much more bulky commodity than butcher's meat. A pound of wheat
at a penny is as dear as a pound of butcher's meat at fourpence.
The small quantity of foreign corn imported even in times of the
greatest scarcity may satisfy our farmers that they can have
nothing to fear from the freest importation. The average quantity
imported, one year with another, amounts only, according to the
very well informed author of the tracts upon the corn trade, to
twenty-three thousand seven hundred and twenty-eight quarters of
all sorts of grain, and does not exceed the five hundred and
seventy-first part of the annual consumption. But as the bounty
upon corn occasions a greater exportation in years of plenty, so
it must of consequence occasion a greater importation in years of
scarcity than in the actual state of tillage would otherwise take
place. By means of it the plenty of one year does not compensate
the scarcity of another, and as the average quantity exported is
necessarily augmented by it, so must likewise, in the actual
state of tillage, the average quantity imported. If there were no
bounty, as less corn would be exported, so it is probable that,
one year with another, less would be imported than at present.
The corn-merchants, the fetchers and carriers of corn between
Great Britain and foreign countries would have much less
employment, and might suffer considerably; but the country
gentlemen and farmers could suffer very little. It is in the corn
merchants accordingly, rather than in the country gentlemen and
farmers, that I have observed the greatest anxiety for the
renewal and continuation of the bounty.
Country gentlemen and farmers are, to their great honour, of
all people, the least subject to the wretched spirit of monopoly.
The undertaker of a great manufactory is sometimes alarmed if
another work of the same kind is established within twenty miles
of him. The Dutch undertaker of the woollen manufacture at
Abbeville stipulated that no work of the same kind should be
established within thirty leagues of that city. Farmers and
country gentlemen, on the contrary, are generally disposed rather
to promote than to obstruct the cultivation and improvement of
their neighbours' farms and estates. They have no secrets such as
those of the greater part of manufacturers, but are generally
rather fond of communicating to their neighbours and of extending
as far as possible any new practice which they have found to be
advantageous. Pius Questus, says old Cato, stabilissimusque,
minimeque invidiosus; minimeque male cogitantes sunt, qui in eo
studio occupati sunt. Country gentlemen and farmers, dispersed in
different parts of the country, cannot so easily combine as
merchants and manufacturers, who, being collected into towns, and
accustomed to that exclusive corporation spirit which prevails in
them, naturally endeavour to obtain against all their countrymen
the same exclusive privilege which they generally possess against
the inhabitants of their respective towns. They accordingly seem
to have been the original inventors of those restraints upon the
importation of foreign goods which secure to them the monopoly of
the home market. It was probably in imitation of them, and to put
themselves upon a level with those who, they found, were disposed
to oppress them, that the country gentlemen and farmers of Great
Britain in so far forgot the generosity which is natural to their
station as to demand the exclusive privilege of supplying their
countrymen with corn and butcher's meat. They did not perhaps
take time to consider how much less their interest could be
affected by the freedom of trade than that of the people whose
example they followed.
To prohibit by a perpetual law the importation of foreign
corn and cattle is in reality to enact that the population and
industry of the country shall at no time exceed what the rude
produce of its own soil can maintain.
There seem, however, to be two cases in which it will
generally be advantageous to lay some burden upon foreign for the
encouragement of domestic industry.
The first is, when some particular sort of industry is
necessary for the defence of the country. The defence of Great
Britain, for example, depends very much upon the number of its
sailors and shipping. The Act of Navigation, therefore, very
properly endeavours to give the sailors and shipping of Great
Britain the monopoly of the trade of their own country in some
cases by absolute prohibitions and in others by heavy burdens
upon the shipping of foreign countries. The following are the
principal dispositions of this Act.
First, all ships, of which the owners and three-fourths of
the mariners are not British subjects, are prohibited, upon pain
of forfeiting ship and cargo, from trading to the British
settlements and plantations, or from being employed in the
coasting trade of Great Britain.
Secondly, a great variety of the most bulky articles of
importation can be brought into Great Britain only, either in
such ships as are above described, or in ships of the country
where those goods are purchased, and of which the owners,
masters, and three-fourths of the mariners are of that particular
country; and when imported even in ships of this latter kind,
they are subject to double aliens' duty. If imported in ships of
any other country, the penalty is forfeiture of ship and goods.
When this act was made, the Dutch were, what they still are, the
great carriers of Europe, and by this regulation they were
entirely excluded from being the carriers to Great Britain, or
from importing to us the goods of any other European country.
Thirdly, a great variety of the most bulky articles of
importation are prohibited from being imported, even in British
ships, from any country but that in which they are produced,
under pains of forfeiting ship and cargo. This regulation, too,
was probably intended against the Dutch. Holland was then, as
now, the great emporium for all European goods, and by this
regulation British ships were hindered from loading in Holland
the goods of any other European country.
Fourthly, salt fish of all kinds, whale-fins, whale-bone,
oil, and blubber, not caught by and cured on board British
vessels, when imported into Great Britain, are subjected to
double aliens' duty. The Dutch, as they are they the principal,
were then the only fishers in Europe that attempted to supply
foreign nations with fish. By this regulation, a very heavy
burden was laid upon their supplying Great Britain.
When the Act of Navigation was made, though England and
Holland were not actually at war, the most violent animosity
subsisted between the two nations. It had begun during the
government of the Long Parliament, which first framed this act,
and it broke out soon after in the Dutch wars during that of the
Protector and of Charles the Second. It is not impossible,
therefore, that some of the regulations of this famous act may
have proceeded from national animosity. They are as wise,
however, as if they had all been dictated by the most deliberate
wisdom. National animosity at that particular time aimed at the
very same object which the most deliberate wisdom would have
recommended, the diminution of the naval power of Holland, the
only naval power which could endanger the security of England.
The Act of Navigation is not favourable to foreign commerce,
or to the growth of that opulence which can arise from it. The
interest of a nation in its commercial relations to foreign
nations is, like that of a merchant with regard to the different
people with whom he deals, to buy as cheap and to sell as dear as
possible. But it will be most likely to buy cheap, when by the
most perfect freedom of trade it encourages all nations to bring
to it the goods which it has occasion to purchase; and, for the
same reason, it will be most likely to sell dear, when its
markets are thus filled with the greatest number of buyers. The
Act of Navigation, it is true, lays no burden upon foreign ships
that come to export the produce of British industry. Even the
ancient aliens' duty, which used to be paid upon all goods
exported as well as imported, has, by several subsequent acts,
been taken off from the greater part of the articles of
exportation. But if foreigners, either by prohibitions or high
duties, are hindered from coming to sell, they cannot always
afford to come to buy; because coming without a cargo, they must
lose the freight from their own country to Great Britain. By
diminishing the number of sellers, therefore, we necessarily
diminish that of buyers, and are thus likely not only to buy
foreign goods dearer, but to sell our own cheaper, than if there
was a more perfect freedom of trade. As defence, however it is of
much more importance than opulence, the Act of Navigation is,
perhaps, the wisest of all the commercial regulations of England.
The second case, in which it will generally be advantageous
to lay some burden upon foreign for the encouragement of domestic
industry is, when some tax is imposed at home upon the produce of
the latter. In this case, it seems reasonable that an equal tax
should be imposed upon the like produce of the former. This would
not give the monopoly of the home market to domestic industry,
nor turn towards a particular employment a greater share of the
stock and labour of the country than what would naturally go to
it. It would only hinder any part of what would naturally go to
it from being turned away by the tax into a less natural
direction, and would leave the competition between foreign and
domestic industry, after the tax, as nearly as possible upon the
same footing as before it. In Great Britain, when any such tax is
laid upon the produce of domestic industry, it is usual at the
same time, in order to stop the clamorous complaints of our
merchants and manufacturers that they will be undersold at home,
to lay a much heavier duty upon the importation of all foreign
goods of the same kind.
This second limitation of the freedom of trade according to
some people should, upon some occasions, be extended much farther
than to the precise foreign commodities which could come into
competition with those which had been taxed at home. When the
necessaries of life have been taxed any country, it becomes
proper, they pretend, to tax not only the like necessaries of
life imported from other countries, but all sorts of foreign
goods which can come into competition with anything that is the
produce of domestic industry. Subsistence, they say, becomes
necessarily dearer in consequence of such taxes; and the price of
labour must always rise with the price of the labourers'
subsistence. Every commodity, therefore, which is the produce of
domestic industry, though not immediately taxed itself, becomes
dearer in consequence of such taxes, because the labour which
produces it becomes so. Such taxes, therefore, are really
equivalent, they say, to a tax upon every particular commodity
produced at home. In order to put domestic upon the same footing
with foreign industry, therefore, it becomes necessary, they
think, to lay some duty upon every foreign commodity equal to
this enhancement of the price of the home commodities with which
it can come into competition.
Whether taxes upon the necessaries of life, such as those in
Great Britain upon soap, salt, leather, candles, etc.,
necessarily raise the price of labour, and consequently that of
all other commodities, I shall consider hereafter when I come to
treat of taxes. Supposing, however, in the meantime, that they
have this effect, and they have it undoubtedly, this general
enhancement of the price of all commodities, in consequence of
that of labour, is a case which differs in the two following
respects from that of a particular commodity of which the price
was enhanced by a particular tax immediately imposed upon it.
First, it might always be known with great exactness how far
the price of such a commodity could be enhanced by such a tax:
but how far the general enhancement of the price of labour might
affect that of every different commodity about which labour was
employed could never be known with any tolerable exactness. It
would be impossible, therefore, to proportion with any tolerable
exactness the tax upon every foreign to this enhancement of the
price of every home commodity.
Secondly, taxes upon the necessaries of life have nearly the
same effect upon the circumstances of the people as a poor soil
and a bad climate. Provisions are thereby rendered dearer in the
same manner as if it required extraordinary labour and expense to
raise them. As in the natural scarcity arising from soil and
climate it would be absurd to direct the people in what manner
they ought to employ their capitals and industry, so is it
likewise in the artificial scarcity arising from such taxes. To
be left to accommodate, as well as they could, their industry to
their situation, and to find out those employments in which,
notwithstanding their unfavourable circumstances, they might have
some advantage either in the home or in the foreign market, is
what in both cases would evidently be most for their advantage.
To lay a new tax upon them, because they are already overburdened
with taxes, and because they already pay too dear for the
necessaries of life, to make them likewise pay too dear for the
greater part of other commodities, is certainly a most absurd way
of making amends.
Such taxes, when they have grown up to a certain height, are
a curse equal to the barrenness of the earth and the inclemency
of the heavens; and yet it is in the richest and most industrious
countries that they have been most generally imposed. No other
countries could support so great a disorder. As the strongest
bodies only can live and enjoy health under an unwholesome
regimen, so the nations only that in every sort of industry have
the greatest natural and acquired advantages can subsist and
prosper under such taxes. Holland is the country in Europe in
which they abound most, and which from peculiar circumstances
continues to prosper, not by means of them, as has been most
absurdly supposed, but in spite of them.
As there are two cases in which it will generally be
advantageous to lay some burden upon foreign for the
encouragement of domestic industry, so there are two others in
which it may sometimes be a matter of deliberation; in the one,
how far it is proper to continue the free importation of certain
foreign goods; and in the other, how far, or in what manner, it
may be proper to restore that free importation after it has been
for some time interrupted.
The case in which it may sometimes be a matter of
deliberation how far it is proper to continue the free
importation of certain foreign goods is, when some foreign nation
restrains by high duties or prohibitions the importation of some
of our manufactures into their country. Revenge in this case
naturally dictates retaliation, and that we should impose the
like duties and prohibitions upon the importation of some or all
of their manufactures into ours. Nations, accordingly, seldom
fail to retaliate in this manner. The French have been
particularly forward to favour their own manufactures by
restraining the importation of such foreign goods as could come
into competition with them. In this consisted a great part of the
policy of Mr. Colbert, who, notwithstanding his great abilities,
seems in this case to have been imposed upon by the sophistry of
merchants and manufacturers, who are always demanding a monopoly
against their countrymen. It is at present the opinion of the
most intelligent men in France that his operations of this kind
have not been beneficial to his country. That minister, by the
tariff of 1667, imposed very high duties upon a great number of
foreign manufactures. Upon his refusing to moderate them in
favour of the Dutch, they in 1671 prohibited the importation of
the wines, brandies, and manufactures of France. The war of 1672
seems to have been in part occasioned by this commercial dispute.
The peace of Nimeguen put an end to it in 1678 by moderating some
of those duties in favour of the Dutch, who in consequence took
off their prohibition. It was about the same time that the French
and English began mutually to oppress each other's industry by
the like duties and prohibitions, of which the French, however,
seem to have set the first example. The spirit of hostility which
has subsisted between the two nations ever since has hitherto
hindered them from being moderated on either side. In 1697 the
English prohibited the importation of bonelace, the manufacture
of Flanders. The government of that country, at that time under
the dominion of Spain, prohibited in return the importation of
English woollens. In 1700, the prohibition of importing bonelace
into England was taken off upon condition that the importance of
English woollens into Flanders should be put on the same footing
as before.
There may be good policy in retaliations of this kind, when
there is a probability that they will procure the repeal of the
high duties or prohibitions complained of. The recovery of a
great foreign market will generally more than compensate the
transitory inconveniency of paying dearer during a short time for
some sorts of goods. To judge whether such retaliations are
likely to produce such an effect does not, perhaps, belong so
much to the science of a legislator, whose deliberations ought to
be governed by general principles which are always the same, as
to the skill of that insidious and crafty animal, vulgarly called
a statesman or politician, whose councils are directed by the
momentary fluctuations of affairs. When there is no probability
that any such repeal can be procured, it seems a bad method of
compensating the injury done to certain classes of our people to
do another injury ourselves, not only to those classes, but to
almost all the other classes of them. When our neighbours
prohibit some manufacture of ours, we generally prohibit, not
only the same, for that alone would seldom affect them
considerably, but some other manufacture of theirs. This may no
doubt give encouragement to some particular class of workmen
among ourselves, and by excluding some of their rivals, may
enable them to raise their price in the home market. Those
workmen, however, who suffered by our neighbours' prohibition
will not be benefited by ours. On the contrary, they and almost
all the other classes of our citizens will thereby be obliged to
pay dearer than before for certain goods. Every such law,
therefore, imposes a real tax upon the whole country, not in
favour of that particular class of workmen who were injured by
our neighbours' prohibition, but of some other class.
The case in which it may sometimes be a matter of
deliberation, how far, or in what manner, it is proper to restore
the free importation of foreign goods, after it has been for some
time interrupted, is, when particular manufactures, by means of
high duties or prohibitions upon all foreign goods which can come
into competition with them, have been so far extended as to
employ a great multitude of hands. Humanity may in this case
require that the freedom of trade should be restored only by slow
gradations, and with a good deal of reserve and circumspection.
Were those high duties and prohibitions taken away all at once,
cheaper foreign goods of the same kind might be poured so fast
into the home market as to deprive all at once many thousands of
our people of their ordinary employment and means of subsistence.
The disorder which this would occasion might no doubt be very
considerable. It would in all probability, however, be much less
than is commonly imagined, for the two following reasons:-
First, all those manufactures, of which any part is commonly
exported to other European countries without a bounty, could be
very little affected by the freest importation of foreign goods.
Such manufactures must be sold as cheap abroad as any other
foreign goods of the same quality and kind, and consequently must
be sold cheaper at home. They would still, therefore, keep
possession of the home market, and though a capricious man of
fashion might sometimes prefer foreign wares, merely because they
were foreign, to cheaper and better goods of the same kind that
were made at home, this folly could, from the nature of things,
extend to so few that it could make no sensible impression upon
the general employment of the people. But a great part of all the
different branches of our woollen manufacture, of our tanned
leather, and of our hardware, are annually exported to other
European countries without any bounty, and these are the
manufactures which employ the greatest number of hands. The silk,
perhaps, is the manufacture which would suffer the most by this
freedom of trade, and after it the linen, though the latter much
less than the former.
Secondly, though a great number of people should, by thus
restoring the freedom of trade, be thrown all at once out of
their ordinary employment and common method of subsistence, it
would by no means follow that they would thereby be deprived
either of employment or subsistence. By the reduction of the army
and navy at the end of the late war, more than a hundred thousand
soldiers and seamen, a number equal to what is employed in the
greatest manufactures, were all at once thrown out of their
ordinary employment; but, though they no doubt suffered some
inconveniency, they were not thereby deprived of all employment
and subsistence. The greater part of the seamen, it is probable,
gradually betook themselves to the merchant-service as they could
find occasion, and in the meantime both they and the soldiers
were absorbed in the great mass of the people, and employed in a
great variety of occupations. Not only no great convulsion, but
no sensible disorder arose from so great a change in the
situation of more than a hundred thousand men, all accustomed to
the use of arms, and many of them to rapine and plunder. The
number of vagrants was scarce anywhere sensibly increased by it,
even the wages of labour were not reduced by it in any
occupation, so far as I have been able to learn, except in that
of seamen in the merchant service. But if we compare together the
habits of a soldier and of any sort of manufacturer, we shall
find that those of the latter do not tend so much to disqualify
him from being employed in a new trade, as those of the former
from being employed in any. The manufacturer has always been
accustomed to look for his subsistence from his labour only: the
soldier to expect it from his pay. Application and industry have
been familiar to the one; idleness and dissipation to the other.
But it is surely much easier to change the direction of industry
from one sort of labour to another than to turn idleness and
dissipation to any. To the greater part of manufactures besides,
it has already been observed, there are other collateral
manufactures of so similar a nature that a workman can easily
transfer his industry from one of them to another. The greater
part of such workmen too are occasionally employed in country
labour. The stock which employed them in a particular manufacture
before will still remain in the country to employ an equal number
of people in some other way. The capital of the country remaining
the same, the demand for labour will likewise be the same, or
very nearly the same, though it may be exerted in different
places and for different occupations. Soldiers and seamen,
indeed, when discharged from the king's service, are at liberty
to exercise any trade, within any town or place of Great Britain
or Ireland. Let the same natural liberty of exercising what
species of industry they please, be restored to all his Majesty's
subjects, in the same manner as to soldiers and seamen; that is,
break down the exclusive privileges of corporations, and repeal
the Statute of Apprenticeship, both which are real encroachments
upon natural liberty, and add to these the repeal of the Law of
Settlements, so that a poor workman, when thrown out of
employment either in one trade or in one place, may seek for it
in another trade or in another place without the fear either of a
prosecution or of a removal, and neither the public nor the
individuals will suffer much more from the occasional disbanding
some particular classes of manufacturers than from that of
soldiers. Our manufacturers have no doubt great merit with their
country, but they cannot have more than those who defend it with
their blood, nor deserve to be treated with more delicacy.
To expect, indeed, that the freedom of trade should ever be
entirely restored in Great Britain is as absurd as to expect that
an Oceana or Utopia should ever be established in it. Not only
the prejudices of the public, but what is much more
unconquerable, the private interests of many individuals,
irresistibly oppose it. Were the officers of the army to oppose
with the same zeal and unanimity any reduction in the numbers of
forces with which master manufacturers set themselves against
every law that is likely to increase the number of their rivals
in the home market; were the former to animate their soldiers in
the same manner as the latter enflame their workmen to attack
with violence and outrage the proposers of any such regulation,
to attempt to reduce the army would be as dangerous as it has now
become to attempt to diminish in any respect the monopoly which
our manufacturers have obtained against us. This monopoly has so
much increased the number of some particular tribes of them that,
like an overgrown standing army, they have become formidable to
the government, and upon many occasions intimidate the
legislature. The Member of Parliament who supports every proposal
for strengthening this monopoly is sure to acquire not only the
reputation of understanding trade, but great popularity and
influence with an order of men whose numbers and wealth render
them of great importance. If he opposes them, on the contrary,
and still more if he has authority enough to be able to thwart
them, neither the most acknowledged probity, nor the highest
rank, nor the greatest public services can protect him from the
most infamous abuse and detraction, from personal insults, nor
sometimes from real danger, arising from the insolent outrage of
furious and disappointed monopolists.
The undertaker of a great manufacture, who, by the home
markets being suddenly laid open to the competition of
foreigners, should be obliged to abandon his trade, would no
doubt suffer very considerably. That part of his capital which
had usually been employed in purchasing materials and in paying
his workmen might, without much difficulty, perhaps, find another
employment. But that part of it which was fixed in workhouses,
and in the instruments of trade, could scarce be disposed of
without considerable loss. The equitable regard, therefore, to
his interest requires that changes of this kind should never be
introduced suddenly, but slowly, gradually, and after a very long
warning. The legislature, were it possible that its deliberations
could be always directed, not by the clamorous importunity of
partial interests, but by an extensive view of the general good,
ought upon this very account, perhaps, to be particularly careful
neither to establish any new monopolies of this kind, nor to
extend further those which are already established. Every such
regulation introduces some degree of real disorder into the
constitution of the state, which it will be difficult afterwards
to cure without occasioning another disorder.
How far it may be proper to impose taxes upon the
importation of foreign goods, in order not to prevent their
importation but to raise a revenue for government, I shall
consider hereafter when I come to treat of taxes. Taxes imposed
with a view to prevent, or even to diminish importation, are
evidently as destructive of the revenue of the customs as of the
freedom of trade.
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