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Book Five
Of the Revenue of the Sovereign or Commonwealth.
CHAPTER I
Of the Expenses of the Sovereign or Commonwealth
PART 4
Of the Expense of Supporting the Dignity of the Sovereign
Over and above the expenses necessary for enabling the
sovereign to perform his several duties, a certain expense is
requisite for the support of his dignity. This expense varies
both with the different periods of improvement, and with the
different forms of government.
In an opulent and improved society, where all the different
orders of people are growing every day more expensive in their
houses, in their furniture, in their tables, in their dress, and
in their equipage, it cannot well be expected that the sovereign
should alone hold out against the fashion. He naturally,
therefore, or rather necessarily, becomes more expensive in all
those different articles too. His dignity even seems to require
that he should become so.
As in point of dignity a monarch is more raised above his
subjects than the chief magistrate of any republic is ever
supposed to be above his fellow-citizens, so a greater expense is
necessary for supporting that higher dignity. We naturally expect
more splendour in the court of a king than in the mansion-house
of a doge or burgomaster.
CONCLUSION
The expense of defending the society, and that of supporting
the dignity of the chief magistrate, are both laid out for the
general benefit of the whole society. It is reasonable,
therefore, that they should be defrayed by the general
contribution of the whole society, all the different members
contributing, as nearly as possible, in proportion to their
respective abilities.
The expense of the administration of justice, too, may, no
doubt, be considered as laid out for the benefit of the whole
society. There is no impropriety, therefore, in its being
defrayed by the general contribution of the whole society. The
persons, however, who gave occasion to this expense are those
who, by their injustice in one way or another, make it necessary
to seek redress or protection from the courts of justice. The
persons again most immediately benefited by this expense are
those whom the courts of justice either restore to their rights
or maintain in their rights. The expense of the administration of
justice, therefore, may very properly be defrayed by the
particular contribution of one or other, or both, of those two
different sets of persons, according as different occasions may
require, that is, by the fees of court. It cannot be necessary to
have recourse to the general contribution of the whole society,
except for the conviction of those criminals who have not
themselves any estate or fund sufficient for paying those fees.
Those local or provincial expenses of which the benefit is
local or provincial (what is laid out, for example, upon the
police of a particular town or district) ought to be defrayed by
a local or provincial revenue, and ought to be no burden upon the
general revenue of the society. It is unjust that the whole
society should contribute towards an expense of which the benefit
is confined to a part of the society.
The expense of maintaining good roads and communications is,
no doubt, beneficial to the whole society, and may, therefore,
without any injustice. be defrayed by the general contribution of
the whole society. This expense, however, is most immediately and
directly beneficial to those who travel or carry goods from one
place to another, and to those who consume such goods. The
turnpike tolls in England, and the duties called peages in other
countries, lay it altogether upon those two different sets of
people, and thereby discharge the general revenue of the society
from a very considerable burden.
The expense of the institutions for education and religious
instruction is likewise, no doubt, beneficial to the whole
society, and may, therefore, without injustice, be defrayed by
the general contribution of the whole society. This expense,
however, might perhaps with equal propriety, and even with some
advantage, be defrayed altogether by those who receive the
immediate benefit of such education and instruction, or by the
voluntary contribution of those who think they have occasion for
either the one or the other.
When the institutions or public works which are beneficial
to the whole society either cannot be maintained altogether, or
are not maintained altogether by the contribution of such
particular members of the society as are most immediately
benefited by them, the deficiency must in most cases be made up
by the general contribution of the whole society. The general
revenue of the society, over and above defraying the expense of
defending the society, and of supporting the dignity of the chief
magistrate, must make up for the deficiency of many particular
branches of revenue. The sources of this general or public
revenue I shall endeavour to explain in the following chapter.
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