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Book Four
Of Systems of Political Economy.
CHAPTER VI
Of Treaties of Commerce
WHEN a nation binds itself by treaty either to permit the
entry of certain goods from one foreign country which it
prohibits from all others, or to exempt the goods of one country
from duties to which it subjects those of all others, the
country, or at least the merchants and manufacturers of the
country, whose commerce is so favoured, must necessarily derive
great advantage from the treaty. Those merchants and
manufacturers enjoy a sort of monopoly in the country which is so
indulgent to them. That country becomes a market both more
extensive and more advantageous for their goods: more extensive,
because the goods of other nations being either excluded or
subjected to heavier duties, it takes off a greater quantity of
theirs: more advantageous, because the merchants of the favoured
country, enjoying a sort of monopoly there, will often sell their
goods for a better price than if exposed to the free competition
of all other nations.
Such treaties, however, though they may be advantageous to
the merchants and manufacturers of the favoured, are necessarily
disadvantageous to those of the favouring country. A monopoly is
thus granted against them to a foreign nation; and they must
frequently buy the foreign goods they have occasion for dearer
than if the free competition of other nations was admitted. That
part of its own produce with which such a nation purchases
foreign goods must consequently be sold cheaper, because when two
things are exchanged for one another, the cheapness of the one is
a necessary consequence, or rather the same thing with the
dearness of the other. The exchangeable value of its annual
produce, therefore, is likely to be diminished by every such
treaty. This diminution, however, can scarce amount to any
positive loss, but only to a lessening of the gain which it might
otherwise make. Though it sells its goods cheaper than it
otherwise might do, it will not probably sell them for less than
they cost; nor, as in the case of bounties, for a price which
will not replace the capital employed in bringing them to market,
together with the ordinary profits of stock. The trade could not
go on long if it did. Even the favouring country, therefore, may
still gain by the trade, though less than if there was a free
competition.
Some treaties of commerce, however, have been supposed
advantageous upon principles very different from these; and a
commercial country has sometimes granted a monopoly of this kind
against itself to certain goods of a foreign nation, because it
expected that in the whole commerce between them, it would
annually sell more than it would buy, and that a balance in gold
and silver would be annually returned to it. It is upon this
principle that the treaty of commerce between England and
Portugal, concluded in 1703 by Mr. Methuen, has been so much
commended. The following is a literal translation of that treaty,
which consists of three articles only.
ART. I.
His sacred royal majesty of Portugal promises, both in his
own name, and that of his successors, to admit, for ever
hereafter, into Portugal, the woollen cloths, and the rest of the
woollen manufactures of the British, as was accustomed, till they
were prohibited by the law; nevertheless upon this condition:
ART. II.
That is to say, that her sacred royal majesty of Great
Britain shall, in her own name, and that of her successors, be
obliged, for ever hereafter, to admit the wines of the growth of
Portugal into Britain; so that at no time, whether there shall be
peace or war between the kingdoms of Britain and France, anything
more shall be demanded for these wines by the name of custom or
duty, or by whatsoever other title, directly or indirectly,
whether they shall be imported into Great Britain in or
hogsheads, or other casks, than what shall be demanded for the
like quantity or measure of French wine, deducting or abating a
third part of the custom or duty. But if at any time this
deduction or abatement of customs, which is to be made as
aforesaid, shall in any manner be attempted and prejudiced, it
shall be just and lawful for his sacred royal majesty of
Portugal, again to prohibit the woollen cloths, and the rest of
the British woollen manufactures.
ART. III.
The most excellent lords the plenipotentiaries promise and
take upon themselves, that their above named masters shall ratify
this treaty; and within the space of two months the ratifications
shall be exchanged.
By this treaty the crown of Portugal becomes bound to admit
the English woollens upon the same footing as before the
prohibition; that is, not to raise the duties which had been paid
before that time. But it does not become bound to admit them upon
any better terms than those of any other nation, of France or
Holland for example. The crown of Great Britain, on the contrary,
becomes bound to admit the wines of Portugal upon paying only
two-thirds of the duty which is paid for those of France, the
wines most likely to come into competition with them. So far this
treaty, therefore, is evidently advantageous to Portugal, and
disadvantageous to Great Britain.
It has been celebrated, however, as a masterpiece of the
commercial policy of England. Portugal receives annually from the
Brazils a greater quantity of gold than can be employed in its
domestic commerce, whether in the shape of coin or of plate. The
surplus is too valuable to be allowed to lie idle and locked up
in coffers, and as it can find no advantageous market at home, it
must, notwithstanding any prohibition, be sent abroad, and
exchanged for something for which there is a more advantageous
market at home. A large share of it comes annually to England, in
return either for English goods, or for those of other European
nations that receive their returns through England. Mr. Baretti
was informed that the weekly packet-boat from Lisbon brings, one
week with another, more than fifty thousand pounds in gold to
England. The sum had probably been exaggerated. It would amount
to more than two millions six hundred thousand pounds a year,
which is more than the Brazils are supposed to afford.
Our merchants were some years ago out of humour with the
crown of Portugal. Some privileges which had been granted them,
not by treaty, but by the free grace of that crown, at the
solicitation indeed, it is probable, and in return for much
greater favours, defence and protection, from the crown of Great
Britain had been either infringed or revoked. The people,
therefore, usually most interested in celebrating the Portugal
trade were then rather disposed to represent it as less
advantageous than it had commonly been imagined. The far greater
part, almost the whole, they pretended, of this annual
importation of gold, was not on account of Great Britain, but of
other European nations; the fruits and wines of Portugal annually
imported into Great Britain nearly compensating the value of the
British goods sent thither.
Let us suppose, however, that the whole was on account of
Great Britain, and that it amounted to a still greater sum than
Mr. Baretti seems to imagine; this trade would not, upon that
account, be more advantageous than any other in which, for the
same value sent out, we received an equal value of consumable
goods in return.
It is but a very small part of this importation which, it
can be supposed, is employed as an annual addition either to the
plate or to the coin of the kingdom. The rest must all be sent
abroad and exchanged for consumable goods of some kind or other.
But if those consumable goods were purchased directly with the
produce of English industry, it would be more for the advantage
of England than first to purchase with that produce the gold of
Portugal, and afterwards to purchase with that gold those
consumable goods. A direct foreign trade of consumption is always
more advantageous than a round-about one; and to bring the same
value of foreign goods to the home market, requires a much
smaller capital in the one way than in the other. If a smaller
share of its industry, therefore, had been employed in producing
goods fit for the Portugal market, and a greater in producing
those fit for the other markets, where those consumable goods for
which there is a demand in Great Britain are to be had, it would
have been more for the advantage of England. To procure both the
gold, which it wants for its own use, and the consumable goods,
would, in this way, employ a much smaller capital than at
present. There would be a spare capital, therefore, to be
employed for other purposes, in exciting an additional quantity
of industry, and in raising a greater annual produce.
Though Britain were entirely excluded from the Portugal
trade, it could find very little difficulty in procuring all the
annual supplies of gold which it wants, either for the purposes
of plate, or of coin, or of foreign trade. Gold, like every other
commodity, is always somewhere or another to be got for its value
by those who have that value to give for it. The annual surplus
of gold in Portugal, besides, would still be sent abroad, and
though not carried away by Great Britain, would be carried away
by some other nation, which would be glad to sell it again for
its price, in the same manner as Great Britain does at present.
In buying gold of Portugal, indeed, we buy it at the first hand;
whereas, in buying it of any other nation, except Spain, we
should buy it at the second, and might pay somewhat dearer. This
difference, however, would surely be too insignificant to deserve
the public attention.
Almost all our gold, it is said, comes from Portugal. With
other nations the balance of trade is either against us, or not
much in our favour. But we should remember that the more gold we
import from one country, the less we must necessarily import from
all others. The effectual demand for gold, like that for every
other commodity, is in every country limited to a certain
quantity. If nine-tenths of this quantity are imported from one
country, there remains a tenth only to be imported from all
others. The more gold besides that is annually imported from some
particular countries, over and above what is requisite for plate
and for coin, the more must necessarily be exported to some
others; and the more that most insignificant object of modern
policy, the balance of trade, appears to be in our favour with
some particular countries, the more it must necessarily appear to
be against us with many others.
It was upon this silly notion, however, that England could
not subsist without the Portugal trade, that, towards the end of
the late war, France and Spain, without pretending either offence
or provocation, required the King of Portugal to exclude all
British ships from his ports, and for the security of this
exclusion, to receive into them French or Spanish garrisons. Had
the king of Portugal submitted to those ignominious terms which
his brother-in-law the king of Spain proposed to him, Britain
would have been freed from a much greater inconveniency than the
loss of the Portugal trade, the burden of supporting a very weak
ally, so unprovided of everything for his own defence that the
whole power of England, had it been directed to that single
purpose, could scarce perhaps have defended him for another
campaign. The loss of the Portugal trade would, no doubt, have
occasioned a considerable embarrassment to the merchants at that
time engaged in it, who might not, perhaps, have found out, for a
year or two, any other equally advantageous method of employing
their capitals; and in this would probably have consisted all the
inconveniency which England could have suffered from this notable
piece of commercial policy.
The great annual importation of gold and silver is neither
for the purpose of plate nor of coin, but of foreign trade. A
round-about foreign trade of consumption can be carried on more
advantageously by means of these metals than of almost any other
goods. As they are the universal instruments of commerce, they
are more readily received in return for all commodities than any
other goods; and on account of their small bulk and great value,
it costs less to transport them backward and forward from one
place to another than almost any other sort of merchandise, and
they lose less of their value by being so transported. Of all the
commodities, therefore, which are bought in one foreign country,
for no other purpose but to be sold or exchanged again for some
other goods in another, there are none so convenient as gold and
silver. In facilitating all the different round-about foreign
trades of consumption which are carried on in Great Britain
consists the principal advantage of the Portugal trade; and
though it is not a capital advantage, it is no doubt a
considerable one.
That any annual addition which, it can reasonably be
supposed, is made either to the plate or to the coin of the
kingdom, could require but a very small annual importation of
gold and silver, seems evident enough; and though we had no
direct trade with Portugal, this small quantity could always,
somewhere or another, be very easily got.
Though the goldsmith's trade be very considerable in Great
Britain, the far. greater part of the new plate which they
annually sell is made from other old plate melted down; so that
the addition annually made to the whole plate of the kingdom
cannot be very great, and could require but a very small annual
importation.
It is the same case with the coin. Nobody imagines, I
believe, that even the greater part of the annual coinage,
amounting, for ten years together, before the late reformation of
the gold coin, to upwards of eight hundred thousand pounds a year
in gold, was an annual addition to the money before current in
the kingdom. In a country where the expense of the coinage is
defrayed by the government, the value of the coin, even when it
contains its full standard weight of gold and silver, can never
be much greater than that of an equal quantity of those metals
uncoined; because it requires only the trouble of going to the
mint, and the delay perhaps of a few weeks, to procure for any
quantity of uncoined gold and silver an equal quantity of those
metals in coin. But, in every country, the greater part of the
current coin is almost always more or less worn, or otherwise
degenerated from its standard. In Great Britain it was, before
the late reformation, a good deal so, the gold being more than
two per cent and the silver more than eight per cent below its
standard weight. But if forty-four guineas and a half, containing
their full standard weight, a pound weight of gold, could
purchase very little more than a pound weight could of uncoined
gold, forty-four guineas and a half wanting a part of their
weight could not purchase a pound weight, and something was to be
added in order to make up the deficiency. The current price of
gold bullion at market, therefore, instead of being the same with
the mint price, or L46 14s. 6d., was then about L47 14s. and
sometimes about L48. When the greater part of the coin, however,
was in this degenerate condition, forty-four guineas and a half,
fresh from the mint, would purchase no more goods in the market
than any other ordinary guineas, because when they came into the
coffers of the merchant, being confounded with other money, they
could not afterwards be distinguished without more trouble than
the difference was worth. Like other guineas they were worth no
more than L46 14s. 6d. If thrown into the melting pot, however,
they produced, without any sensible loss, a pound weight of
standard gold, which could be sold at any time for between L47
14s. and L48 either of gold or silver, as fit for all the
purposes of coin as that which had been melted down. There was an
evident profit, therefore, in melting down new coined money, and
it was done so instantaneously, that no precaution of government
could prevent it. The operations of the mint were, upon this
account, somewhat like the web of Penelope; the work that was
done in the day was undone in the night. The mint was employed,
not so much in making daily additions to the coin, as in
replacing the very best part of it which was daily melted down.
Were the private people, who carry their gold and silver to
the mint, to pay themselves for the coinage, it would add to the
value of those metals in the same manner as the fashion does to
that of plate. Coined gold and silver would be more valuable than
uncoined. The seignorage, if it was not exorbitant, would add to
the bullion the whole value of the duty; because, the government
having everywhere the exclusive privilege of coining, no coin can
come to market cheaper than they think proper to afford it. If
the duty was exorbitant indeed, that is, if it was very much
above the real value of the labour and expense requisite for
coinage, false coiners, both at home and abroad, might be
encouraged, by the great difference between the value of bullion
and that of coin, to pour in so great a quantity of counterfeit
money as might reduce the value of the government money. In
France, however, though the seignorage is eight per cent, no
sensible inconveniency of this kind is found to arise from it.
The dangers to which a false coiner is everywhere exposed, if he
lives in the country of which he counterfeits the coin, and to
which his agents or correspondents are exposed if he lives in a
foreign country, are by far too great to be incurred for the sake
of a profit of six or seven per cent.
The seignorage in France raises the value of the coin higher
than in proportion to the quantity of pure gold which it
contains. Thus by the edict of January 1726, the mint price of
fine gold of twenty-four carats was fixed at seven hundred and
forty livres nine sous and one denier one-eleventh, the mark of
eight Paris ounces. The gold coin of France, making an allowance
for the remedy of the mint, contains twenty-one carats and
three-fourths of fine gold, and two carats one fourth of alloy.
The mark of standard gold, therefore, is worth no more than about
six hundred and seventy-one livres ten deniers. But in France
this mark of standard gold is coined into thirty Louis d'ors of
twenty-four livres each, or into seven hundred and twenty livres.
The coinage, therefore, increases the value of a mark of standard
gold bullion, by the difference between six hundred and
seventy-one livres ten deniers, and seven hundred and twenty
livres; or by forty-eight livres nineteen sous and two deniers.
A seignorage will, in many cases, take away altogether, and
will, in all cases, diminish the profit of melting down the new
coin. This profit always arises from the difference between the
quantity of bullion which the common currency ought to contain,
and that which it actually does contain. If this difference is
less than the seignorage, there will be loss instead of profit.
If it is equal to the seignorage, there will neither be profit
nor loss. If it is greater than the seignorage, there will indeed
be some profit, but less than if there was no seignorage. If,
before the late reformation of the gold coin, for example, there
had been a seignorage of five per cent upon the coinage, there
would have been a loss of three per cent upon the melting down of
the gold coin. If the seignorage had been two per cent there
would have been neither profit nor loss. If the seignorage had
been one per cent there would have been a profit, but of one per
cent only instead of two per cent. Wherever money is received by
tale, therefore, and not by weight, a seignorage is the most
effectual preventative of the melting down of the coin, and, for
the same reason, of its exportation. It is the best and heaviest
pieces that are commonly either melted down or exported; because
it is upon such that the largest profits are made.
The law for encouragement of the coinage, by rendering it
duty-free, was first enacted during the reign of Charles II for a
limited time; and afterwards continued, by different
prolongations, till 1769, when it was rendered perpetual. The
Bank of England, in order to replenish their coffers with money,
are frequently obliged to carry bullion to the mint; and it was
more for their interest, they probably imagined, that the coinage
should be at the expense of the government than at their own. It
was probably out of complaisance to this great company that the
government agreed to render this law perpetual. Should the custom
of weighing gold, however, come to be disused, as it is very
likely to be on account of its inconveniency; should the gold
coin of England come to be received by tale, as it was before the
late recoinage, this great company may, perhaps, find that they
have upon this, as upon some other occasions, mistaken their own
interest not a little.
Before the late recoinage, when the gold currency of England
was two per cent below its standard weight, as there was no
seignorage, it was two per cent below the value of that quantity
of standard gold bullion which it ought to have contained. When
this great company, therefore, bought gold bullion in order to
have it coined, they were obliged to pay for it two per cent more
than it was worth after coinage. But if there had been a
seignorage of two per cent upon the coinage, the common gold
currency, though two per cent below its standard weight, would
notwithstanding have been equal in value to the quantity of
standard gold which it ought to have contained; the value of the
fashion compensating in this case the diminution of the weight.
They would indeed have had the seignorage to pay, which being two
per cent, their loss upon the whole transaction would have been
two per cent exactly the same, but no greater than it actually
was.
If the seignorage had been five per cent, and the gold
currency only two per cent below its standard weight, the bank
would in this case have gained three per cent upon the price of
the bullion; but as they would have had a seignorage of five per
cent to pay upon the coinage, their loss upon the whole
transaction would, in the same manner, have been exactly two per
cent.
If the seignorage had been only one per cent and the gold
currency two per cent below its standard weight, the bank would
in this case have lost only one per cent upon the price of the
bullion; but as they would likewise have had a seignorage of one
per cent to pay, their loss upon the whole transaction would have
been exactly two per cent in the same manner as in all other
cases.
If there was a reasonable seignorage, while at the same time
the coin contained its full standard weight, as it has done very
nearly since the last recoinage, whatever the bank might lose by
the seignorage, they would gain upon the price of the bullion;
and whatever they might gain upon the price of the bullion, they
would lose by the seignorage. They would neither lose nor gain,
therefore, upon the whole transaction, and they would in this, as
in all the foregoing cases, be exactly in the same situation as
if there was no seignorage.
When the tax upon a commodity is so moderate as not to
encourage smuggling, the merchant who deals in it, though he
advances, does not properly pay the tax, as he gets it back in
the price of the commodity. The tax is finally paid by the last
purchaser or consumer. But money is a commodity with regard to
which every man is a merchant. Nobody buys it but in order to
sell it again; and with regard to it there is in ordinary cases
no last purchaser or consumer. When the tax upon coinage,
therefore, is so moderate as not to encourage false coining,
though everybody advances the tax, nobody finally pays it;
because everybody gets it back in the advanced value of the coin.
A moderate seignorage, therefore, would not in any case
augment the expense of the bank, or of any other private persons
who carry their bullion to the mint in order to be coined, and
the want of a moderate seignorage does not in any case diminish
it. Whether there is or is not a seignorage, if the currency
contains its full standard weight, the coinage costs nothing to
anybody, and if it is short of that weight, the coinage must
always cost the difference between the quantity of bullion which
ought to be contained in it, and that which actually is contained
in it.
The government, therefore, when it defrays the expense of
coinage, not only incurs some small expense, but loses some small
revenue which it might get by a proper duty; and neither the bank
nor any other private persons are in the smallest degree
benefited by this useless piece of public generosity.
The directors of the bank, however, would probably be
unwilling to agree to the imposition of a seignorage upon the
authority of a speculation which promises them no gain, but only
pretends to insure them from any loss. In the present state of
the gold coin, and as long as it continues to be received by
weight, they certainly would gain nothing by such a change. But
if the custom of weighing the gold coin should ever go into
misuse, as it is very likely to do, and if the gold coin should
ever fall into the same state of degradation in which it was
before the late recoinage, the gain, or more properly the savings
of the bank, in consequence of the imposition of a seignorage,
would probably be very considerable. The Bank of England is the
only company which sends any considerable quantity of bullion to
the mint, and the burden of the annual coinage falls entirely, or
almost entirely, upon it. If this annual coinage had nothing to
do but to repair the unavoidable losses and necessary wear and
tear of the coin, it could seldom exceed fifty thousand or at
most a hundred thousand pounds. But when the coin is degraded
below its standard weight, the annual coinage must, besides this,
fill up the large vacuities which exportation and the melting pot
are continually making in the current coin. It was upon this
account that during the ten or twelve years immediately preceding
the late reformation of the gold coin, the annual coinage
amounted at an average to more than eight hundred and fifty
thousand pounds. But if there had been a seignorage of four or
five per cent upon the gold coin, it would probably, even in the
state in which things then were, have put an effectual stop to
the business both of exportation and of the melting pot. The
bank, instead of losing every year about two and a half per cent
upon the bullion which was to be coined into more than eight
hundred and fifty thousand pounds, or incurring an annual loss of
more than twenty-one thousand two hundred and fifty pounds, would
not probably have incurred the tenth part of that loss.
The revenue allotted by Parliament for defraying the expense
of the coinage is but fourteen thousand pounds a year, and the
real expense which it costs the government, or the fees of the
officers of the mint, do not upon ordinary occasions, I am
assured, exceed the half of that sum. The saving of so very small
a sum, or even the gaining of another which could not well be
much larger, are objects too inconsiderable, it may be thought,
to deserve the serious attention of government. But the saving of
eighteen or twenty thousand pounds a year in case of an event
which is not improbable, which has frequently happened before,
and which is very likely to happen again, is surely an object
which well deserves the serious attention even of so great a
company as the Bank of England.
Some of the foregoing reasonings and observations might
perhaps have been more properly placed in those chapters of the
first book which treat of the origin and use of money, and of the
difference between the real and the nominal price of commodities.
But as the law for the encouragement of coinage derives its
origin from those vulgar prejudices which have been introduced by
the mercantile system, I judged it more proper to reserve them
for this chapter. Nothing could be more agreeable to the spirit
of that system than a sort of bounty upon the production of
money, the very thing which, it supposes, constitutes the wealth
of every nation. It is one of its many admirable expedients for
enriching the country.
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