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Book Five
Of the Revenue of the Sovereign or Commonwealth.
CHAPTER II
Of the Sources of the
General or Public Revenue of the Society
ARTICLE IV
Taxes which, it is
intended, should fall indifferently upon every
different Species of Revenue
Taxes upon consumable commodities may either be levied by an
administration of which the officers are appointed by government
and are immediately accountable to government, of which the
revenue must in this case vary from year to year according to the
occasional variations in the produce of the tax, or they may be
let in farm for a rent certain, the farmer being allowed to
appoint his own officers, who, though obliged to levy the tax in
the manner directed by the law, are under his immediate
inspection, and are immediately accountable to him. The best and
most frugal way of levying a tax can never be by farm. Over and
above what is necessary for paying the stipulated rent, the
salaries of the officers, and the whole expense of
administration, the farmer must always draw from the produce of
the tax a certain profit proportioned at least to the advance
which he makes, to the risk which he runs, to the trouble which
he is at, and to the knowledge and skill which it requires to
manage so very complicated a concern. Government, by establishing
an administration under their own immediate inspection of the
same kind with that which the farmer establishes, might at least
save this profit, which is almost always exorbitant. To farm any
considerable branch of the public revenue requires either a great
capital or a great credit; circumstances which would alone
restrain the competition for such an undertaking to a very small
number of people. Of the few who have this capital or credit, a
still smaller number have the necessary knowledge or experience;
another circumstance which restrains the competition still
further. The very few, who are in condition to become
competitors, find it more for their interest to combine together;
to become co-partners instead of competitors, and when the farm
is set up to auction, to offer no rent but what is much below the
real value. In countries where the public revenues are in farm,
the farmers are generally the most opulent people. Their wealth
would alone excite the public indignation, and the vanity which
almost always accompanies such upstart fortunes, the foolish
ostentation with which they commonly display that wealth, excites
that indignation still more.
The farmers of the public revenue never find the laws too
severe which punish any attempt to evade the payment of a tax.
They have no bowels for the contributors, who are not their
subjects, and whose universal bankruptcy, if it should happen the
day after their farm is expired, would not much affect their
interest. In the greatest exigencies of the state, when the
anxiety of the sovereign for the exact payment of his revenue is
necessarily the greatest, they seldom fail to complain that
without laws more rigorous than those which actually take place,
it will be impossible for them to pay even the usual rent. In
those moments of public distress their demands cannot be
disputed. The revenue laws, therefore, become gradually more and
more severe. The most sanguinary are always to be found in
countries where the greater part of the public revenue is in
farm; the mildest, in countries where it is levied under the
immediate inspection of the sovereign. Even a bad sovereign feels
more compassion for his people than can ever be expected from the
farmers of his revenue. He knows that the permanent grandeur of
his family depends upon the prosperity of his people, and he will
never knowingly ruin that prosperity for the sake of any
momentary interest of his own. It is otherwise with the farmers
of his revenue, whose grandeur may frequently be the effect of
the ruin, and not of the prosperity of his people.
A tax is sometimes not only farmed for a certain rent, but
the farmer has, besides, the monopoly of the commodity taxed. In
France, the duties upon tobacco and salt are levied in this
manner. In such cases the farmer, instead of one, levies two
exorbitant profits upon the people; the profit of the farmer, and
the still more exorbitant one of the monopolist. Tobacco being a
luxury, every man is allowed to buy or not to buy as he chooses.
But salt being a necessary, every man is obliged to buy of the
farmer a certain quantity of it; because, if he did not buy this
quantity of the farmer, he would, it is presumed, buy it of some
smuggler. The taxes upon both commodities are exorbitant. The
temptation to smuggle consequently is to many people
irresistible, while at the same time the rigour of the law, and
the vigilance of the farmer's officers, render the yielding to
that temptation almost certainly ruinous. The smuggling of salt
and tobacco sends every year several hundred people to the
galleys, besides a very considerable number whom it sends to the
gibbet. Those taxes levied in this manner yield a very
considerable revenue to government. In 1767, the farm of tobacco
was let for twenty-two millions five hundred and forty-one
thousand two hundred and seventy-eight livres a year. That of
salt, for thirty-six millions four hundred and ninety-four
thousand four hundred and four livres. The farm in both cases was
to commence in 1768, and to last for six years. Those who
consider the blood of the people as nothing in comparison with
the revenue of the prince, may perhaps approve of this method of
levying taxes. Similar taxes and monopolies of salt and tobacco
have been established in many other countries; particularly in
the Austrian and Prussian dominions, and in the greater part of
the states of Italy.
In France, the greater part of the actual revenue of the
crown is derived from eight different sources; the taille, the
capitation, the two vingtiemes, the gabelles, the aides, the
traites, the domaine, and the farm of tobacco. The five last are,
in the greater part of the provinces, under farm. The three first
are everywhere levied by an administration under the immediate
inspection and direction of government, and it is universally
acknowledged that, in proportion to what they take out of the
pockets of the people, they bring more into the treasury of the
prince than the other five, of which the administration is much
more wasteful and expensive.
The finances of France seem, in their present state, to
admit of three very obvious reformations. First, by abolishing
the taille and the capitation, and by increasing the number of
vingtiemes, so as to produce an additional revenue equal to the
amount of those other taxes, the revenue of the crown might be
preserved; the expense of collection might be much diminished;
the vexation of the inferior ranks of people, which the taille
and capitation occasion, might be entirely prevented; and the
superior ranks might not be more burdened than the greater part
of them are at present. The vingtieme, I have already observed,
is a tax very nearly of the same kind with what is called the
land-tax of England. The burden of the taille, it is
acknowledged, falls finally upon the proprietors of land; and as
the greater part of the capitation is assessed upon those who are
subject to the taille at so much a pound of that other tax, the
final payment of the greater part of it must likewise fall upon
the same order of people. Though the number of the vingtiemes,
therefore, was increased so as to produce an additional revenue
equal to the amount of both those taxes, the superior ranks of
people might not be more burdened than they are at present. Many
individuals no doubt would, on account of the great inequalities
with which the taille is commonly assessed upon the estates and
tenants of different individuals. The interest and opposition of
such favoured subjects are the obstacles most likely to prevent
this or any other reformation of the same kind. Secondly, by
rendering the gabelle, the aides, the traites, the taxes upon
tobacco, all the different customs and excises, uniform in all
the different parts of the kingdom, those taxes might be levied
at much less expense, and the interior commerce of the kingdom
might be rendered as free as that of England. Thirdly, and
lastly, by subjecting all those taxes to an administration under
the immediate inspection and direction of government, the
exorbitant profits of the farmers-general might be added to the
revenue of the state. The opposition arising from the private
interest of individuals is likely to be as effectual for
preventing the two last as the first-mentioned scheme of
reformation.
The French system of taxation seems, in every respect,
inferior to the British. In Great Britain ten millions sterling
are annually levied upon less than eight millions of people
without its being possible to say that any particular order is
oppressed. From the collections of the Abbe Expilly, and the
observations of the author of the Essay upon legislation and
commerce of corn, it appears probable that France, including the
provinces of Lorraine and Bar, contains about twenty-three or
twenty-four millions of people three times the number perhaps
contained in Great Britain. The soil and climate of France are
better than those of Great Britain. The country has been much
longer in a state of improvement and cultivation, and is, upon
that account, better stocked with all those things which it
requires a long time to raise up and accumulate, such as great
towns, and convenient and well-built houses, both in town and
country. With these advantages it might be expected that in
France a revenue of thirty millions might be levied for the
support of the state with as little inconveniency as a revenue of
ten millions is in Great Britain. In 1765 and 1766, the whole
revenue paid into the treasury of France, according to the best,
though, I acknowledge, very imperfect, accounts which I could get
of it, usually run between 308 and 325 millions of livres; that
is, it did not amount to fifteen millions sterling; not the half
of what might have been expected had the people contributed in
the same proportion to their numbers as the people of Great
Britain. The people of France, however, it is generally
acknowledged, are much more oppressed by taxes than the people of
Great Britain. France, however, is certainly the great empire in
Europe which, after that of Great Britain, enjoys the mildest and
most indulgent government.
In Holland the heavy taxes upon the necessaries of life have
ruined, it is said, their principal manufactures, and are likely
to discourage gradually even their fisheries and their trade in
shipbuilding. The taxes upon the necessaries of life are
inconsiderable in Great Britain, and no manufacture has hitherto
been ruined by them. The British taxes which bear hardest on
manufactures are some duties upon the importation of raw
materials, particularly upon that of raw silk. The revenue of the
states-general and of the different cities, however, is said to
amount to more than five millions two hundred and fifty thousand
pounds sterling; and as the inhabitants of the United Provinces
cannot well be supposed to amount to more than a third part of
those of Great Britain, they must, in proportion to their number,
be much more heavily taxed.
After all the proper subjects of taxation have been
exhausted, if the exigencies of the state still continue to
require new taxes, they must be imposed upon improper ones. The
taxes upon the necessaries of life, therefore, the wisdom of that
republic which, in order to acquire and to maintain its
independency, has, in spite of its great frugality, been involved
in such expensive wars as have obliged it to contract great
debts. The singular countries of Holland and Zeeland, besides,
require a considerable expense even to preserve their existence,
or to prevent their being swallowed up by the sea, which must
have contributed to increase considerably the load of taxes in
those two provinces. The republican form of government seems to
be the principal support of the present grandeur of Holland. The
owners of great capitals, the great mercantile families, have
generally either some direct share or some indirect influence in
the administration of that government. For the sake of the
respect and authority which they derive from this situation, they
are willing to live in a country where their capital, if they
employ it themselves, will bring them less profit, and if they
lend it to another, less interest; and where the very moderate
revenue which they can draw from it will purchase less of the
necessaries and conveniences of life than in any other part of
Europe. The residence of such wealthy people necessarily keeps
alive, in spite of all disadvantages, a certain degree of
industry in the country. Any public calamity which should destroy
the republican form of government, which should throw the whole
administration into the hands of nobles and of soldiers, which
should annihilate altogether the importance of those wealthy
merchants, would soon render it disagreeable to them to live in a
country where they were no longer likely to be much respected.
They would remove both their residences and their capitals to
some other country, and the industry and commerce of Holland
would soon follow the capitals which supported them.
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