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Book Four
Of Systems of Political Economy.
CHAPTER V
Of Bounties
BOUNTIES upon exportation are, in Great Britain, frequently
petitioned for, and sometimes granted to the produce of
particular branches of domestic industry. By means of them our
merchants and manufacturers, it is pretended, will be enabled to
sell their goods as cheap, or cheaper than their rivals in the
foreign market. A greater quantity, it is said, will thus be
exported, and the balance of trade consequently turned more in
favour of our own country. We cannot give our workmen a monopoly
in the foreign as we have done in the home market. We cannot
force foreigners to buy their goods as we have done our own
countrymen. The next best expedient, it has been thought,
therefore, is to pay them for buying. It is in this manner that
the mercantile system proposes to enrich the whole country, and
to put money into all our pockets by means of the balance of
trade.
Bounties, it is allowed, ought to be given to those branches
of trade only which cannot be carried on without them. But every
branch of trade in which the merchant can sell his goods for a
price which replaces to him, with the ordinary profits of stock,
the whole capital employed in preparing and sending them to
market, can be carried on without a bounty. Every such branch is
evidently upon a level with all the other branches of trade which
are carried on without bounties, and cannot therefore require one
more than they. Those trades only require bounties in which the
merchant is obliged to sell his goods for a price which does not
replace to him his capital, together with the ordinary profit; or
in which he is obliged to sell them for less than it really costs
him to send them to market. The bounty is given in order to make
up this loss, and to encourage him to continue, or perhaps to
begin, a trade of which the expense is supposed to be greater
than the returns, of which every operation eats up a part of the
capital employed in it, and which is of such a nature that, if
all other trades resembled it, there would soon be no capital
left in the country.
The trades, it is to be observed, which are carried on by
means of bounties, are the only ones which can be carried on
between two nations for any considerable time together, in such a
manner as that one of them shall always and regularly lose, or
sell its goods for less than it really costs to send them to
market. But if the bounty did not repay to the merchant what he
would otherwise lose upon the price of his goods, his own
interest would soon oblige him to employ his stock in another
way, or to find out a trade in which the price of the goods would
replace to him, with the ordinary profit, the capital employment
in sending them to market. The effect of bounties, like that of
all the other expedients of the mercantile system, can only be to
force the trade of a country into a channel much less
advantageous than that in which it would naturally run of its own
accord.
The ingenious and well-informed author of the tracts upon
the corn trade has shown very clearly that, since the bounty upon
the exportation of corn was first established, the price of the
corn exported, valued moderately enough, has exceeded that of the
corn imported, valued very high, by a much greater sum than the
amount of the whole bounties which have been paid during that
period. This, he imagines, upon the true principles of the
mercantile system, is a clear proof that this forced corn trade
is beneficial to the nation; the value of the exportation
exceeding that of the importation by a much greater sum than the
whole extraordinary expense which the public has been at in order
to get it exported. He does not consider that this extraordinary
expense, or the bounty, is the smallest part of the expense which
the exportation of corn really costs the society. The capital
which the farmer employed in raising it must likewise be taken
into the account. Unless the price of the corn when sold in the
foreign markets replaces, not only the bounty, but this capital,
together with the ordinary profits of stock, the society is a
loser by the difference, or the national stock is so much
diminished. But the very reason for which it has been thought
necessary to grant a bounty is the supposed insufficiency of the
price to do this.
The average price of corn, it has been said, has fallen
considerably since the establishment of the bounty. That the
average price of corn began to fall somewhat towards the end of
the last century, and has continued to do so during the course of
the sixty-four first years of the present, I have already
endeavoured to show. But this event, supposing it to be as real
as I believe it to be, must have happened in spite of the bounty,
and cannot possibly have happened in consequence of it. It has
happened in France, as well as in England, though in France there
was not only no bounty, but, till 1764, the exportation of corn
was subjected to a general prohibition. This gradual fall in the
average price of grain, it is probable, therefore, is ultimately
owing neither to the one regulation nor to the other. but to that
gradual and insensible rise in the real value of silver, which,
in the first book in this discourse, I have endeavoured to show
has taken place in the general market of Europe during the course
of the present century. It seems to be altogether impossible that
the bounty could ever contribute to lower the price of grain.
In years of plenty, it has already been observed, the
bounty, by occasioning an extraordinary exportation, necessarily
keeps up the price of corn in the home market above what it would
naturally fall to. To do so was the avowed purpose of the
institution. In years of scarcity, though the bounty is
frequently suspended, yet the great exportation which it
occasions in years of plenty must frequently hinder more or less
the plenty of one year from relieving the scarcity of another.
Both in years of plenty and in years of scarcity, therefore, the
bounty necessarily tends to raise the money price of corn
somewhat higher than it otherwise would be in the home market.
That, in the actual state of tillage, the bounty must
necessarily have this tendency will not, I apprehend, be disputed
by any reasonable person. But it has been thought by many people
that it tends to encourage tillage, and that in two different
ways; first, by opening a more extensive foreign market to the
corn of the farmer, it tends, they imagine, to increase the
demand for, and consequently the production of that commodity;
and secondly, by securing to him a better price than he could
otherwise expect in the actual state of tillage, it tends, they
suppose, to encourage tillage. This double encouragement must,
they imagine, in a long period of years, occasion such an
increase in the production of corn as may lower its price in the
home market much more than the bounty can raise it, in the actual
state which tillage may, at the end of that period, happen to be
in.
I answer, that whatever extension of the foreign market can
be occasioned by the bounty must, in every particular year, be
altogether at the expense of the home market; as every bushel of
corn which is exported by means of the bounty, and which would
not have been exported without the bounty, would have remained in
the home market to increase the consumption and to lower the
price of that commodity. The corn bounty, it is to be observed,
as well as every other bounty upon exportation, imposes two
different taxes upon the people; first, the tax which they are
obliged to contribute in order to pay the bounty; and secondly,
the tax which arises from the advanced price of the commodity in
the home market, and which, as the whole body of the people are
purchasers of corn, must, in this particular commodity, be paid
by the whole body of the people. In this particular commodity,
therefore, this second tax is by much the heavier of the two. Let
us suppose that, taking one year with another, the bounty of five
shillings upon the exportation of the quarter of wheat raises the
price of that commodity in the home market only sixpence the
bushel, or four shillings the quarter, higher than it otherwise
would have been in the actual state of the crop. Even upon this
very moderate supposition, the great body of the people, over and
above contributing the tax which pays the bounty of five
shillings upon every quarter of wheat exported, must pay another
of four shillings upon every quarter which they themselves
consume. But, according to the very well informed author of the
tracts upon the corn trade, the average proportion of the corn
exported to that consumed at home is not more than that of one to
thirty-one. For every five shillings, therefore, which they
contribute to the payment of the first tax, they must contribute
six pounds four shillings to the payment of the second. So very
heavy a tax upon the first necessary of life must either reduce
the subsistence of the labouring poor, or it must occasion some
augmentation in their pecuniary wages proportionable to that in
the pecuniary price of their subsistence. So far as it operates
in the one way, it must reduce the ability of the labouring poor
to educate and bring up their children, and must, so far, tend to
restrain the population of the country. So far as it operates in
the other, it must reduce the ability of the employers of the
poor to employ so great a number as they otherwise might do, and
must, so far, tend to restrain the industry of the country. The
extraordinary exportation of corn, therefore, occasioned by the
bounty, not only, in every particular year, diminishes the home,
just as much as it extends the foreign, market and consumption,
but, by restraining the population and industry of the country,
its final tendency is to stunt and restrain the gradual extension
of the home market; and thereby, in the long run, rather to
diminish, than to augment, the whole market and consumption of
corn.
This enhancement of the money price of corn, however, it has
been thought, by rendering that commodity more profitable to the
farmer, must necessarily encourage its production.
I answer, that this might be the case if the effect of the
bounty was to raise the real price of corn, or to enable the
farmer, with an equal quantity of it, to maintain a greater
number of labourers in the same manner, whether liberal,
moderate, or scanty, that other labourers are commonly maintained
in his neighbourhood. But neither the bounty, it is evident, nor
any other human institution can have any such effect. It is not
the real, but the nominal price of corn, which can in any
considerable degree be affected by the bounty. And though the tax
which that institution imposes upon the whole body of the people
may be very burdensome to those who pay it, it is of very little
advantage to those who receive it.
The real effect of the bounty is not so much to raise the
real value of corn as to degrade the real value of silver, or to
make an equal quantity of it exchange for a smaller quantity, not
only of corn, but of all other homemade commodities: for the
money price of corn regulates that of all other home-made
commodities.
It regulates the money price of labour, which must always be
such as to enable the labourer to purchase a quantity of corn
sufficient to maintain him and his family either in the liberal,
moderate, or scanty manner in which the advancing, stationary, or
declining circumstances of the society oblige his employers to
maintain him.
It regulates the money price of all the other parts of the
rude produce of land, which, in every period of improvement, must
bear a certain proportion to that of corn, though this proportion
is different in different periods. It regulates, for example, the
money price of grass and hay, of butcher's meat, of horses, and
the maintenance of horses, of land carriage consequently, or of
the greater part of the inland commerce of the country.
By regulating the money price of all the other parts of the
rude produce of land, it regulates that of the materials of
almost all manufactures. By regulating the money price of labour,
it regulates that of manufacturing art and industry. And by
regulating both, it regulates that of the complete manufacture.
The money price of labour, and of everything that is the produce
either of land or labour, must necessarily either rise or fall in
proportion to the money price of corn.
Though in consequence of the bounty, therefore, the farmer
should be enabled to sell his corn for four shillings a bushel
instead of three-and-sixpence, and to pay his landlord a money
rent proportionable to this rise in the money price of his
produce, yet if, in consequence of this rise in the price of
corn, four shillings will purchase no more homemade goods of any
other kind than three-and-sixpence would have done before,
neither the circumstances of the farmer nor those of the landlord
will be much mended by this change. The farmer will not be able
to cultivate much better: the landlord will not be able to live
much better. In the purchase of foreign commodities this
enhancement in the price of corn may give them some little
advantage. In that of home-made commodities it can give them none
at all. And almost the whole expense of the farmer, and the far
greater part even of that of the landlord, is in homemade
commodities.
That degradation in the value of silver which is the effect
of the fertility of the mines, and which operates equally, or
very near equally, through the greater part of the commercial
world, is a matter of very little consequence to any particular
country. The consequent rise of all money prices, though it does
not make those who receive them really richer, does make them
really poorer. A service of plate becomes really cheaper, and
everything else remains precisely of the same real value as
before.
But that degradation in the value of silver which, being the
effect either of the peculiar situation or of the political
institutions of a particular country, takes place only in that
country, is a matter of very great consequence, which, far from
tending to make anybody really richer, tends to make everybody
really poorer. The rise in the money price of all commodities,
which is in this case peculiar to that country, tends to
discourage more or less every sort of industry which is carried
on within it, and to enable foreign nations, by furnishing almost
all sorts of goods for a smaller quantity of silver than its own
workmen can afford to do, to undersell them, not only in the
foreign, but even in the home market.
It is the peculiar situation of Spain and Portugal as
proprietors of the mines to be the distributors of gold and
silver to all the other countries of Europe. Those metals ought
naturally, therefore, to be somewhat cheaper in Spain and
Portugal than in any other part of Europe. The difference,
however, should be no more than the amount of the freight and
insurance; and, on account of the great value and small bulk of
those metals, their freight is no great matter, and their
insurance is the same as that of any other goods of equal value.
Spain and Portugal, therefore, could suffer very little from
their peculiar situation, if they did not aggravate its
disadvantages by their political institutions.
Spain by taxing, and Portugal by prohibiting the exportation
of gold and silver, load that exportation with the expense of
smuggling, and raise the value of those metals in other countries
so much more above what it is in their own by the whole amount of
this expense. When you dam up a stream of water, as soon as the
dam is full as much water must run over the dam-head as if there
was no dam at all. The prohibition of exportation cannot detain a
greater quantity of gold and silver in Spain and Portugal than
what they can afford to employ, than what the annual produce of
their land and labour will allow them to employ, in coin, plate,
gilding, and other ornaments of gold and silver. When they have
got this quantity the dam is full, and the whole stream which
flows in afterwards must run over. The annual exportation of gold
and silver from Spain and Portugal accordingly is, by all
accounts, notwithstanding these restraints, very near equal to
the whole annual importation. As the water, however, must always
be deeper behind the dam-head than before it, so the quantity of
gold and silver which these restraints detain in Spain and
Portugal must, in proportion to the annual produce of their land
and labour, be greater than what is to be found in other
countries. The higher and stronger the dam-head, the greater must
be the difference in the depth of water behind and before it. The
higher the tax, the higher the penalties with which the
prohibition is guarded, the more vigilant and severe the police
which looks after the execution of the law, the greater must be
the difference in the proportion of gold and silver to the annual
produce of the land and labour of Spain and Portugal, and to that
of other countries. It is said accordingly to be very
considerable, and that you frequently find there a profusion of
plate in houses where there is nothing else which would, in other
countries, be thought suitable or correspondent to this sort of
magnificence. The cheapness of gold and silver, or what is the
same thing, the dearness of all commodities, which is the
necessary effect of this redundancy of the precious metals,
discourages both the agriculture and manufactures of Spain and
Portugal, and enables foreign nations to supply them with many
sorts of rude, and with almost all sorts of manufactured produce,
for a smaller quantity of gold and silver than what they
themselves can either raise or make them for at home. The tax and
prohibition operate in two different ways. They not only lower
very much the value of the precious metals in Spain and Portugal,
but by detaining there a certain quantity of those metals which
would otherwise flow over other countries, they keep up their
value in those other countries somewhat above what it otherwise
would be, and thereby give those countries a double advantage in
their commerce with Spain and Portugal. Open the flood-gates, and
there will presently be less water above, and more below, the
dam-head, and it will soon come to a level in both places. Remove
the tax and the prohibition, and as the quantity of gold and
silver will diminish considerably in Spain and Portugal, so it
will increase somewhat in other countries, and the value of those
metals, their proportion to the annual produce of land and
labour, will soon come to a level, or very near to a level, in
all. The loss which Spain and Portugal could sustain by this
exportation of their gold and silver would be altogether nominal
and imaginary. The nominal value of their goods, and of the
annual produce of their land and labour, would fall, and would be
expressed or represented by a smaller quantity of silver than
before; but their real value would be the same as before, and
would be sufficient to maintain, command, and employ, the same
quantity of labour. As the nominal value of their goods would
fall, the real value of what remained of their gold and silver
would rise, and a smaller quantity of those metals would answer
all the same purposes of commerce and circulation which had
employed a greater quantity before. The gold and silver which
would go abroad would not go abroad for nothing, but would bring
back an equal value of goods of some kind or another. Those
goods, too, would not be all matters of mere luxury and expense,
to be consumed by idle people who produce nothing in return for
their consumption. As the real wealth and revenue of idle people
would not be augmented by this extraordinary exportation of gold
and silver, so neither would their consumption be much augmented
by it. Those goods would, probably, the greater part of them, and
certainly some part of them, consist in materials, tools, and
provisions, for the employment and maintenance of industrious
people, who would reproduce, with a profit, the full value of
their consumption. A part of the dead stock of the society would
thus be turned into active stock, and would put into motion a
greater quantity of industry than had been employed before. The
annual produce of their land and labour would immediately be
augmented a little, and in a few years would, probably, be
augmented a great deal; their industry being thus relieved from
one of the most oppressive burdens which it at present labours
under.
The bounty upon the exportation of corn necessarily operates
exactly in the same way as this absurd policy of Spain and
Portugal. Whatever be the actual state of tillage, it renders our
corn somewhat dearer in the home market than it otherwise would
be in that state, and somewhat cheaper in the foreign; and as the
average money price of corn regulates more or less that of all
other commodities, it lowers the value of silver considerably in
the one, and tends to raise it a little in the other. It enables
foreigners, the Dutch in particular, not only to eat our corn
cheaper than they otherwise could do, but sometimes to eat it
cheaper than even our own people can do upon the same occasions,
as we are assured by an excellent authority, that of Sir Matthew
Decker. It hinders our own workmen from furnishing their goods
for so small a quantity of silver as they otherwise might do; and
enables the Dutch to furnish theirs for a smaller. It tends to
render our manufactures somewhat dearer in every market, and
theirs somewhat cheaper than they otherwise would be, and
consequently to give their industry a double advantage over our
own.
The bounty, as it raises in the home market not so much the
real as the nominal price of our corn, as it augments, not the
quantity of labour which a certain quantity of corn can maintain
and employ but only the quantity of silver which it will exchange
for, it discourages our manufactures, without rendering any
considerable service either to our farmers or country gentlemen.
It puts, indeed, a little more money into the pockets of both,
and it will perhaps be somewhat difficult to persuade the greater
part of them that this is not rendering them a very considerable
service. But if this money sinks in its value, in the quantity of
labour, provisions, and homemade commodities of all different
kinds which it is capable of purchasing as much as it rises in
its quantity, the service will be little more than nominal and
imaginary.
There is, perhaps, but one set of men in the whole
commonwealth to whom the bounty either was or could be
essentially serviceable. These were the corn merchants, the
exporters and importers of corn. In years of plenty the bounty
necessarily occasioned a greater exportation than would otherwise
have taken place; and by hindering the plenty of one year from
relieving the scarcity of another, it occasioned in years of
scarcity a greater importation than would otherwise have been
necessary. It increased the business of the corn merchant in
both; and in years of scarcity, it not only enabled him to import
a greater quantity, but to sell it for a better price, and
consequently with a greater profit than he could otherwise have
made, if the plenty of one year had not been more or less
hindered from relieving the scarcity of another. It is in this
set of men, accordingly, that I have observed the greatest zeal
for the continuance or renewal of the bounty.
Our country gentlemen, when they imposed the high duties
upon the importation of foreign corn, which in times of moderate
plenty amount to a prohibition, and when they established the
bounty, seem to have imitated the conduct of our manufacturers.
By the one institution, they secured to themselves the monopoly
of the home market, and by the other they endeavoured to prevent
that market from ever being overstocked with their commodity. By
both they endeavoured to raise its real value, in the same manner
as our manufacturers had, by the like institutions, raised the
real value of many different sorts of manufactured goods. They
did not perhaps attend to the great and essential difference
which nature has established between corn and almost every other
sort of goods. When, either by the monopoly of the home market,
or by a bounty upon exportation, you enable our woollen or linen
manufacturers to sell their goods for somewhat a better price
than they otherwise could get for them, you raise, not only the
nominal, but the real price of those goods. You render them
equivalent to a greater quantity of labour and subsistence, you
increase not only the nominal, but the real profit, the real
wealth and revenue of those manufacturers, and you enable them
either to live better themselves, or to employ a greater quantity
of labour in those particular manufactures. You really encourage
those manufactures, and direct towards them a greater quantity of
the industry of the country than what would probably go to them
of its own accord. But when by the like institutions you raise
the nominal or money-price of corn, you do not raise its real
value. You do not increase the real wealth, the real revenue
either of our farmers or country gentlemen. You do not encourage
the growth of corn because you do not enable them to maintain and
employ more labourers in raising it. The nature of things has
stamped upon corn a real value which cannot be altered by merely
altering its money price. No bounty upon exportation, no monopoly
of the home market, can raise that value. The freest competition
cannot lower it. Through the world in general that value is equal
to the quantity of labour which it can maintain, and in every
particular place it is equal to the quantity of labour which it
can maintain in the way, whether liberal, moderate, or scanty, in
which labour is commonly maintained in that place. Woollen or
linen cloth are not the regulating commodities by which the real
value of all other commodities must be finally measured and
determined; corn is. The real value of every other commodity is
finally measured and determined by the proportion which its
average money price bears to the average money price of corn. The
real value of corn does not vary with those variations in its
average money price, which sometimes occur from one century to
another. It is the real value of silver which varies with them.
Bounties upon the exportation of any homemade commodity are
liable, first to that general objection which may be made to all
the different expedients of the mercantile system; the objection
of forcing some part of the industry of the country into a
channel less advantageous than that in which it would run of its
own accord: and, secondly, to the particular objection of forcing
it, not only into a channel that is less advantageous, but into
one that is actually disadvantageous; the trade which cannot be
carried on but by means of a bounty being necessarily a losing
trade. The bounty upon the exportation of corn is liable to this
further objection, that it can in no respect promote the raising
of that particular commodity of which it was meant to encourage
the production. When our country gentlemen, therefore, demanded
the establishment of the bounty, though they acted in imitation
of our merchants and manufacturers, they did not act with that
complete comprehension of their own interest which commonly
directs the conduct of those two other orders of people. They
loaded the public revenue with a very considerable expense; they
imposed a very heavy tax upon the whole body of the people; but
they did not, in any sensible degree, increase the real value of
their own commodity; and by lowering somewhat the real value of
silver, they discouraged in some degree, the general industry of
the country, and, instead of advancing, retarded more or less the
improvement of their own lands, which necessarily depends upon
the general industry of the country.
To encourage the production of any commodity, a bounty upon
production, one should imagine, would have a more direct
operation than one upon exportation. It would, besides, impose
only one tax upon the people, that which they must contribute in
order to pay the bounty. Instead of raising, it would tend to
lower the price of the commodity in the home market; and thereby,
instead of imposing a second tax upon the people, it might, at
least, in part, repay them for what they had contributed to the
first. Bounties upon production, however, have been very rarely
granted. The prejudices established by the commercial system have
taught us to believe that national wealth arises more immediately
from exportation than from production. It has been more favoured
accordingly, as the more immediate means of bringing money into
the country. Bounties upon production, it has been said too, have
been found by experience more liable to frauds than those upon
exportation. How far this is true, I know not. That bounties upon
exportation have been abused to many fraudulent purposes is very
well known. But it is not the interest of merchants and
manufacturers, the great inventors of all these expedients, that
the home market should be overstocked with their goods, an event
which a bounty upon production might sometimes occasion. A bounty
upon exportation, by enabling them to send abroad the surplus
part, and to keep up the price of what remains in the home
market, effectually prevents this. Of all the expedients of the
mercantile system, accordingly, it is the one of which they are
the fondest. I have known the different undertakers of some
particular works agree privately among themselves to give a
bounty out of their own pockets upon the exportation of a certain
proportion of the goods which they dealt in. This expedient
succeeded so well that it more than doubled the price of their
goods in the home market, notwithstanding a very considerable
increase in the produce. The operation of the bounty upon corn
must have been wonderfully different if it has lowered the money
price of that commodity.
Something like a bounty upon production, however, has been
granted upon some particular occasions. The tonnage bounties
given to the white-herring and whale fisheries may, perhaps, be
considered as somewhat of this nature. They tend directly, it may
be supposed, to render the goods cheaper in the home market than
they otherwise would be. In other respects their effects, it must
be acknowledged, are the same as those of bounties upon
exportation. By means of them a part of the capital of the
country is employed in bringing goods to market, of which the
price does not repay the cost together with the ordinary profits
of stock.
But though the tonnage bounties of those fisheries do not
contribute to the opulence of the nation, it may perhaps be
thought that they contribute to its defence by augmenting the
number of its sailors and shipping. This, it may be alleged, may
sometimes be done by means of such bounties at a much smaller
expense than by keeping up a great standing navy, if I may use
such an expression, in the same way as a standing army.
Notwithstanding these favourable allegations, however, the
following considerations dispose me to believe that, in granting
at least one of these bounties, the legislature has been very
grossly imposed upon.
First, the herring buss bounty seems too large.
From the commencement of the winter fishing, 1771, to the
end of the winter fishing, 1781, the tonnage bounty upon the
herring buss fishery has been at thirty shillings the ton. During
these eleven years the whole number of barrels caught by the
herring buss fishery of Scotland amounted to 378,347. The
herrings caught and cured at sea are called sea-sticks. In order
to render them what are called merchantable herrings, it is
necessary to repack them with an additional quantity of salt; and
in this case, it is reckoned that three barrels of sea-sticks are
usually repacked into two barrels of merchantable herrings. The
number of barrels of merchantable herrings, therefore, caught
during these eleven years will amount only, according to this
account, to 252,231 1/3. During these eleven years the tonnage
bounties paid amounted to L155,463 11s. or to 8s. 2 1/4d. upon
every barrel of seasticks, and to 12s. 3 3/4d. upon every barrel
of merchantable herrings.
The salt with which these herrings are cured is sometimes
Scotch and sometimes foreign salt, both which are delivered free
of all excise duty to the fish-curers. The excise duty upon
Scotch salt is at present 1s. 6d., that upon foreign salt 10s.
the bushel. A barrel of herrings is supposed to require about one
bushel and one-fourth of a bushel foreign salt. Two bushels are
the supposed average of Scotch salt. If the herrings are entered
for exportation, no part of this duty is paid up; if entered for
home consumption, whether the herrings were cured with foreign or
with Scotch salt, only one shilling the barrel is paid up. It was
the old Scotch duty upon a bushel of salt, the quantity which, at
a low estimation, had been supposed necessary for curing a barrel
of herrings. In Scotland, foreign salt is very little used for
any other purpose but the curing of fish. But from the 5th April
1771 to the 5th April 1782, the quantity of foreign salt imported
amounted to 936,974 bushels, at eighty-four pounds the bushel:
the quantity of Scotch salt, delivered from the works to the
fish-curers, to no more than 168,226, at fifty-six pounds the
bushel only. It would appear, therefore, that it is principally
foreign salt that is used in the fisheries. Upon every barrel of
herrings exported there is, besides, a bounty of 2s. 8d., and
more than two-thirds of the buss caught herrings are exported.
Put all these things together and you will find that, during
these eleven years, every barrel of buss caught herrings, cured
with Scotch salt when exported, has cost government L1 7s. 5
3/4d.; and when entered for home consumption 14s. 3 3/4d.; and
that every barrel cured with foreign salt, when exported, has
cost government L1 7s. 5 3/4d.; and when entered for home
consumption L1. 3s. 9 3/4d. The price of a barrel of good
merchantable herrings runs from seventeen and eighteen to four
and five and twenty shillings, about a guinea at an average.
Secondly, the bounty to the white-herring fishery is a
tonnage bounty; and is proportioned to the burden of the ship,
not to her diligence or success in the fishery; and it has, I am
afraid, been too common for vessels to fit out for the sole
purpose of catching, not the fish, but the bounty. In the year
1759, when the bounty was at fifty shillings the ton, the whole
buss fishery of Scotland brought in only four barrels of
sea-sticks. In that year each barrel of sea-sticks cost
government in bounties alone L113 15s.; each barrel of
merchantable herrings L159 7s. 6d.
Thirdly, the mode of fishing for which this tonnage bounty
in the white-herring fishery has been given (by busses or decked
vessels from twenty to eighty tons burthen), seems not so well
adapted to the situation of Scotland as to that of Holland, from
the practice of which country it appears to have been borrowed.
Holland lies at a great distance from the seas to which herrings
are known principally to resort, and can, therefore, carry on
that fishery only in decked vessels, which can carry water and
provisions sufficient for a voyage to a distant sea. But the
Hebrides or western islands, the islands of Shetland, and the
northern and northwestern coasts of Scotland, the countries in
whose neighbourhood the herring fishery is principally carried
on, are everywhere intersected by arms of the sea, which run up a
considerable way into the land, and which, in the language of the
country, are called sea-lochs. It is to these sea-lochs that the
herrings principally resort during the seasons in which they
visit those seas; for the visits of this and, I am assured, of
many other sorts of fish are not quite regular and constant. A
boat fishery, therefore, seems to be the mode of fishing best
adapted to the peculiar situation of Scotland, the fishers
carrying the herrings on shore, as fast as they are taken, to be
either cured or consumed fresh. But the great encouragement which
a bounty of thirty shillings the ton gives to the buss fishery is
necessarily a discouragement to the boat fishery, which, having
no such bounty, cannot bring its cured fish to market upon the
same terms as the buss fishery. The boat fishery, accordingly,
which before the establishment of the buss bounty was very
considerable, and is said have employed a number of seamen not
inferior to what the buss fishery employs at present, is now gone
almost entirely to decay. Of the former extent, however, of this
now ruined and abandoned fishery, I must acknowledge that I
cannot pretend to speak with much precision. As no bounty was
paid upon the outfit of the boat fishery, no account was taken of
it by the officers of the customs or salt duties.
Fourthly, in many parts of Scotland, during certain seasons
of the year, herrings make no inconsiderable part of the food of
the people. A bounty, which tended to lower their price in the
home market, might contribute a good deal to the relief of a
great number of our fellow-subjects, whose circumstances are by
no means affluent. But the herring buss bounty contributes to no
such good purpose. It has ruined the boat fishery, which is, by
far, the best adapted for the supply of the home market, and the
additional bounty of 2s. 8d. the barrel upon exportation carries
the greater part, more than two-thirds, of the produce of the
buss fishery abroad. Between thirty and forty years ago, before
the establishment of the buss bounty, fifteen shillings the
barrel, I have been assured, was the common price of white
herrings. Between ten and fifteen years ago, before the boat
fishery was entirely ruined, the price is said to have run from
seventeen to twenty shillings the barrel. For these last five
years, it has, at an average, been at twenty-five shillings the
barrel. This high price, however, may have been owing to the real
scarcity of the herrings upon the coast of Scotland. I must
observe, too, that the cask or barrel, which is usually sold with
the herrings, and of which the price is included in all the
foregoing prices, has, since the commencement of the American
war, risen to about double its former price, or from about three
shillings to about six shillings. I must likewise observe that
the accounts I have received of the prices of former times have
been by no means quite uniform and consistent; and an old man of
great accuracy and experience has assured me that, more than
fifty years ago, a guinea was the usual price of a barrel of good
merchantable herrings; and this, I imagine, may still be looked
upon as the average price. All accounts, however, I think, agree
that the price has not been lowered in the home market in
consequence of the buss bounty.
When the undertakers of fisheries, after such liberal
bounties have been bestowed upon them, continue to sell their
commodity at the same, or even at a higher price than they were
accustomed to do before, it might be expected that their profits
should be very great; and it is not improbable that those of some
individuals may have been so. In general, however, I have every
reason to believe they have been quite otherwise. The usual
effect of such bounties is to encourage rash undertakers to
adventure in a business which they do not understand, and what
they lose by their own negligence and ignorance more than
compensates all that they can gain by the utmost liberality of
government. In 1750, by the same act, which first gave the bounty
of thirty shillings the ton for the encouragement of the
white-herring fishery (the 23rd George II, c. 24), a joint-stock
company was erected, with a capital of five hundred thousand
pounds, to which the subscribers (over and above all other
encouragements, the tonnage bounty just now mentioned, the
exportation bounty of two shillings and eightpence the barrel,
the delivery of both British and foreign salt duty free) were,
during the space of fourteen years, for every hundred pounds
which they subscribed and paid in to the stock of the society,
entitled to three pounds a year, to be paid by the
receiver-general of the customs in equal half-yearly payments.
Besides this great company, the residence of whose governor and
directors was to be in London, it was declared lawful to erect
different fishing-chambers in all the different outports of the
kingdom, provided a sum not less than ten thousand pounds was
subscribed into the capital of each, to be managed at its own
risk, and for its own profit and loss. The same annuity, and the
same encouragements of all kinds, were given to the trade of
those inferior chambers as to that of the great company. The
subscription of the great company was soon filled up, and several
different fishing-chambers were erected in the different outports
of the kingdom. In spite of all these encouragements, almost all
those different companies, both great and small, lost either the
whole, or the greater part of their capitals; scarce a vestige
now remains of any of them, and the white-herring fishery is now
entirely, or almost entirely, carried on by private adventurers.
If any particular manufacture was necessary, indeed, for the
defence of the society, it might not always be prudent to depend
upon our neighbours for the supply; and if such manufacture could
not otherwise be supported at home, it might not be unreasonable
that all the other branches of industry should be taxed in order
to support it. The bounties upon the exportation of British-made
sailcloth and British-made gunpowder may, perhaps, both be
vindicated upon this principle.
But though it can very seldom be reasonable to tax the
industry of the great body of the people in order to support that
of some particular class of manufacturers, yet in the wantonness
of great prosperity, when the public enjoys a greater revenue
than it knows well what to do with, to give such bounties to
favourite manufactures may, perhaps, be as natural as to incur
any other idle expense. In public as well as in private expenses,
great wealth may, perhaps, frequently be admitted as an apology
for great folly. But there must surely be something more than
ordinary absurdity in continuing such profusion in times of
general difficulty and distress.
What is called a bounty is sometimes no more than a
drawback, and consequently is not liable to the same objections
as what is properly a bounty. The bounty, for example, upon
refined sugar exported may be considered as a drawback of the
duties upon the brown and muscovado sugars from which it is made.
The bounty upon wrought silk exported, a drawback of the duties
upon raw and thrown silk imported. The bounty upon gunpowder
exported, a drawback of the duties upon brimstone and saltpetre
imported. In the language of the customs those allowances only
are called drawbacks which are given upon goods exported in the
same form in which they are imported. When that form has been so
altered by manufacture of any kind as to come under a new
denomination, they are called bounties.
Premiums given by the public to artists and manufacturers
who excel in their particular occupations are not liable to the
same objections as bounties. By encouraging extraordinary
dexterity and ingenuity, they serve to keep up the emulation of
the workmen actually employed in those respective occupations,
and are not considerable enough to turn towards any one of them a
greater share of the capital of the country than what would go to
it of its own accord. Their tendency is not to overturn the
natural balance of employments, but to render the work which is
done in each as perfect and complete as possible. The expense of
premiums, besides, is very trifling; that of bounties very great.
The bounty upon corn alone has sometimes cost the public in one
year more than three hundred thousand pounds.
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