Chapter 7
On Foreign Trade
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No extension of foreign trade will immediately increase the
amount of value in a country, although it will very powerfully
contribute to increase the mass of commodities, and therefore the
sum of enjoyments. As the value of all foreign goods is measured
by the quantity of the produce of our land and labour, which is
given in exchange for them, we should have no greater value, if
by the discovery of new markets, we obtained double the quantity
of foreign goods in exchange for a given quantity of ours. If by
the purchase of English goods to the amount of £1,000, a merchant
can obtain a quantity of foreign goods, which he can sell in the
English market for £1,200, he will obtain 20 per cent profit by
such an employment of his capital; but neither his gains, nor the
value of the commodities imported, will be increased or
diminished by the greater or smaller quantity of foreign goods
obtained. Whether, for example, he imports twenty-five or fifty
pipes of wine, his interest can be no way affected, if at one
time the twenty-five pipes, and at another the fifty pipes,
equally sell for £1,200. In either case his profit will be
limited to £200, or 20 per cent on his capital; and in either
case the same value will be imported into England. If the fifty
pipes sold for more than £1,200, the profits of this individual
merchant would exceed the general rate of profits, and capital
would naturally flow into this advantageous trade, till the fall
of the price of wine had brought every thing to the former level.
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| 7.1 |
It has indeed been contended, that the great profits which
are sometimes made by particular merchants in foreign trade, will
elevate the general rate of profits in the country, and that the
abstraction of capital from other employments, to partake of the
new and beneficial foreign commerce, will raise prices generally,
and thereby increase profits. It has been said, by high
authority, that less capital being necessarily devoted to the
growth of corn, to the manufacture of cloth, hats, shoes, &c.
while the demand continues the same, the price of these
commodities will be so increased, that the farmer, hatter,
clothier, and shoemaker, will have an increase of profits, as
well as the foreign merchant.19*
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| 7.2 |
They who hold this argument agree with me, that the profits
of different employments have a tendency to conform to one
another; to advance and recede together. Our variance consists in
this: They contend, that the equality of profits will be brought
about by the general rise of profits; and I am of opinion, that
the profits of the favoured trade will speedily subside to the
general level.
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| 7.3 |
For, first, I deny that less capital will necessarily be
devoted to the growth of corn, to the manufacture of cloth, hats,
shoes, &c. unless the demand for these commodities be diminished;
and if so, their price will not rise. In the purchase of foreign
commodities, either the same, a larger, or a less portion of the
produce of the land and labour of England will be employed. If
the same portion be so employed, then will the same demand exist
for cloth, shoes, corn, and hats, as before, and the same portion
of capital will be devoted to their production. If, in
consequence of the price of foreign commodities being cheaper, a
less portion of the annual produce of the land and labour of
England is employed in the purchase of foreign commodities, more
will remain for the purchase of other things. If there be a
greater demand for hats, shoes, corn, &c. than before, which
there may be, the consumers of foreign commodities having an
additional portion of their revenue disposable, the capital is
also disposable with which the greater value of foreign
commodities was before purchased; so that with the increased
demand for corn, shoes, &c. there exists also the means of
procuring an increased supply, and therefore neither prices nor
profits can permanently rise. If more of the produce of the land
and labour of England be employed in the purchase of foreign
commodities, less can be employed in the purchase of other
things, and therefore fewer hats, shoes, &c. will be required. At
the same time that capital is liberated from the production of
shoes, hats, &c. more must be employed in manufacturing those
commodities with which foreign commodities are purchased; and
consequently in all cases the demand for foreign and home
commodities together, as far as regards value, is limited by the
revenue and capital of the country. If one increases, the other
must diminish. If the quantity of wine, imported in exchange for
the same quantity of English commodities, be doubled, the people
of England can either consume double the quantity of wine that
they did before, or the same quantity of wine and a greater
quantity of English commodities. If my revenue had been £1,000,
with which I purchased annually one pipe of wine for £100 and a
certain quantity of English commodities for £900; when wine fell
to £50 per pipe, I might lay out the £50 saved, either in the
purchase of an additional pipe of wine, or in the purchase of
more English commodities. If I bought more wine, and every
wine-drinker did the same, the foreign trade would not be in the
least disturbed; the same quantity of English commodities would
be exported in exchange for wine, and we should receive double
the quantity, though not double the value of wine. But if I, and
others, contented ourselves with the same quantity of wine as
before, fewer English commodities would be exported, and the
wine-drinkers might either consume the commodities which were
before exported, or any others for which they had an inclination.
The capital required for their production would be supplied by
the capital liberated from the foreign trade.
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| 7.4 |
There are two ways in which capital may be accumulated: it
may be saved either in consequence of increased revenue, or of
diminished consumption. If my profits are raised from £1,000 to
£1,200 while my expenditure continues the same, I accumulate
annually £200 more than I did before. If I save £200 out of my
expenditure, while my profits continue the same, the same effect
will be produced; £200 per annum will be added to my capital. The
merchant who imported wine after profits had been raised from 20
per cent to 40 per cent, instead of purchasing his English goods
for £1,000 must purchase them for £857 2s. 10d. , still selling
the wine which he imports in return for those goods for £1,200;
or, if he continued to purchase his English goods for £1,000 must
raise the price of his wine to £1,400; he would thus obtain 40
instead of 20 per cent profit on his capital; but if, in
consequence of the cheapness of all the commodities on which his
revenue was expended, he and all other consumers could save the
value of £200 out of every £1,000 they before expended, they
would more effectually add to the real wealth of the country; in
one case, the savings would be made in consequence of an increase
of revenue, in the other, in consequence of diminished
expenditure.
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| 7.5 |
If, by the introduction of machinery, the generality of the
commodities on which revenue was expended fell 20 per cent in
value, I should be enabled to save as effectually as if my
revenue had been raised 20 per cent; but in one case the rate of
profits is stationary, in the other it is raised 20 per cent.If, by the introduction of cheap foreign goods, I can save 20 per
cent from my expenditure, the effect will be precisely the same
as if machinery had lowered the expense of their production, but
profits would not be raised.
It is not, therefore, in consequence of the extension of the
market that the rate of profit is raised, although such extension
may be equally efficacious in increasing the mass of commodities,
and may thereby enable us to augment the funds destined for the
maintenance of labour, and the materials on which labour may be
employed. It is quite as important to the happiness of mankind,
that our enjoyments should be increased by the better
distribution of labour, by each country producing those
commodities for which by its situation, its climate, and its
other natural or artificial advantages, it is adapted, and by
their exchanging them for the commodities of other countries, as
that they should be augmented by a rise in the rate of profits.
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| 7.6 |
It has been my endeavour to shew throughout this work, that
the rate of profits can never be increased but by a fall in
wages, and that there can be no permanent fall of wages but in
consequence of a fall of the necessaries on which wages are
expended. If, therefore, by the extension of foreign trade, or by
improvements in machinery, the food and necessaries of the
labourer can be brought to market at a reduced price, profits
will rise. If, instead of growing our own corn, or manufacturing
the clothing and other necessaries of the labourer, we discover a
new market from which we can supply ourselves with these
commodities at a cheaper price, wages will fall and profits rise;
but if the commodities obtained at a cheaper rate, by the
extension of foreign commerce, or by the improvement of
machinery, be exclusively the commodities consumed by the rich,
no alteration will take place in the rate of profits. The rate of
wages would not be affected, although wine, velvets, silks, and
other expensive commodities should fall 50 per cent, and
consequently profits would continue unaltered.
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| 7.7 |
Foreign trade, then, though highly beneficial to a country,
as it increases the amount and variety of the objects on which
revenue may be expended, and affords, by the abundance and
cheapness of commodities, incentives to saving, and to the
accumulation of capital, has no tendency to raise the profits of
stock, unless the commodities imported be of that description on
which the wages of labour are expended.
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| 7.8 |
The remarks which have been made respecting foreign trade,
apply equally to home trade. The rate of profits is never
increased by a better distribution of labour, by the invention of
machinery, by the establishment of roads and canals, or by any
means of abridging labour either in the manufacture or in the
conveyance of goods. These are causes which operate on price, and
never fail to be highly beneficial to consumers; since they
enable them with the same labour, or with the value of the
produce of the same labour, to obtain in exchange a greater
quantity of the commodity to which the improvement is applied;
but they have no effect whatever on profit. On the other hand,
every diminution in the wages of labour raises profits, but
produces no effect on the price of commodities. One is
advantageous to all classes, for all classes are consumers; the
other is beneficial only to producers; they gain more, but every
thing remains at its former price. In the first case they get the
same as before; but every thing on which their gains are
expended, is diminished in exchangeable value.
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| 7.9 |
The same rule which regulates the relative value of
commodities in one country, does not regulate the relative value
of the commodities exchanged between two or more countries.
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| 7.10 |
Under a system of perfectly free commerce, each country
naturally devotes its capital and labour to such employments as
are most beneficial to each. This pursuit of individual advantage
is admirably connected with the universal good of the whole. By
stimulating industry, by regarding ingenuity, and by using most
efficaciously the peculiar powers bestowed by nature, it
distributes labour most effectively and most economically:
while, by increasing the general mass of productions, it diffuses
general benefit, and binds together by one common tie of interest
and intercourse, the universal society of nations throughout the
civilized world. It is this principle which determines that wine
shall be made in France and Portugal, that corn shall be grown in
America and Poland, and that hardware and other goods shall be
manufactured in England.
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| 7.11 |
In one and the same country, profits are, generally
speaking, always on the same level; or differ only as the
employment of capital may be more or less secure and agreeable.
It is not so between different countries. If the profits of
capital employed in Yorkshire, should exceed those of capital
employed in London, capital would speedily move from London to
Yorkshire, and an equality of profits would be effected; but if
in consequence of the diminished rate of production in the lands
of England, from the increase of capital and population, wages
should rise, and profits fall, it would not follow that capital
and population would necessarily move from England to Holland, or
Spain, or Russia, where profits might be higher.
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| 7.12 |
If Portugal had no commercial connexion with other
countries, instead of employing a great part of her capital and
industry in the production of wines, with which she purchases for
her own use the cloth and hardware of other countries, she would
be obliged to devote a part of that capital to the manufacture of
those commodities, which she would thus obtain probably inferior
in quality as well as quantity.
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| 7.13 |
The quantity of wine which she shall give in exchange for
the cloth of England, is not determined by the respective
quantities of labour devoted to the production of each, as it
would be, if both commodities were manufactured in England, or
both in Portugal.
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| 7.14 |
England may be so circumstanced, that to produce the cloth
may require the labour of 100 men for one year; and if she
attempted to make the wine, it might require the labour of 120
men for the same time. England would therefore find it her
interest to import wine, and to purchase it by the exportation of
cloth.
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| 7.15 |
To produce the wine in Portugal, might require only the
labour of 80 men for one year, and to produce the cloth in the
same country, might require the labour of 90 men for the same
time. It would therefore be advantageous for her to export wine
in exchange for cloth. This exchange might even take place,
notwithstanding that the commodity imported by Portugal could be
produced there with less labour than in England. Though she could
make the cloth with the labour of 90 men, she would import it
from a country where it required the labour of 100 men to produce
it, because it would be advantageous to her rather to employ her
capital in the production of wine, for which she would obtain
more cloth from England, than she could produce by diverting a
portion of her capital from the cultivation of vines to the
manufacture of cloth.
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| 7.16 |
Thus England would give the produce of the labour of 100
men, for the produce of the labour of 80. Such an exchange could
not take place between the individuals of the same country. The
labour of 100 Englishmen cannot be given for that of 80
Englishmen, but the produce of the labour of 100 Englishmen may
be given for the produce of the labour of 80 Portuguese, 60
Russians, or 120 East Indians. The difference in this respect,
between a single country and many, is easily accounted for, by
considering the difficulty with which capital moves from one
country to another, to seek a more profitable employment, and the
activity with which it invariably passes from one province to
another in the same country.20*
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| 7.17 |
It would undoubtedly be advantageous to the capitalists of
England, and to the consumers in both countries, that under such
circumstances, the wine and the cloth should both be made in
Portugal, and therefore that the capital and labour of England
employed in making cloth, should be removed to Portugal for that
purpose. In that case, the relative value of these commodities
would be regulated by the same principle, as if one were the
produce of Yorkshire, and the other of London: and in every other
case, if capital freely flowed towards those countries where it
could be most profitably employed, there could be no difference
in the rate of profit, and no other difference in the real or
labour price of commodities, than the additional quantity of
labour required to convey them to the various markets where they
were to be sold.
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| 7.18 |
Experience, however, shews, that the fancied or real
insecurity of capital, when not under the immediate control of
its owner, together with the natural disinclination which every
man has to quit the country of his birth and connexions, and
intrust himself with all his habits fixed, to a strange
government and new laws, check the emigration of capital. These
feelings, which I should be sorry to see weakened, induce most
men of property to be satisfied with a low rate of profits in
their own country, rather than seek a more advantageous
employment for their wealth in foreign nations.
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| 7.19 |
Gold and silver having been chosen for the general medium of
circulation, they are, by the competition of commerce,
distributed in such proportions amongst the different countries
of the world, as to accommodate themselves to the natural traffic
which would take place if no such metals existed, and the trade
between countries were purely a trade of barter.
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| 7.20 |
Thus, cloth cannot be imported into Portugal, unless it sell
there for more gold than it cost in the country from which it was
imported; and wine cannot be imported into England, unless it
will sell for more there than it cost in Portugal. If the trade
were purely a trade of barter, it could only continue whilst
England could make cloth so cheap as to obtain a greater quantity
of wine with a given quantity of labour, by manufacturing cloth
than by growing vines; and also whilst the industry of Portugal
were attended by the reverse effects. Now suppose England to
discover a process for making wine, so that it should become her
interest rather to grow it than import it; she would naturally
divert a portion of her capital from the foreign trade to the
home trade; she would cease to manufacture cloth for exportation,
and would grow wine for herself. The money price of these
commodities would be regulated accordingly; wine would fall here
while cloth continued at its former price, and in Portugal no
alteration would take place in the price of either commodity.
Cloth would continue for some time to be exported from this
country, because its price would continue to be higher in
Portugal than here; but money instead of wine would be given in
exchange for it, till the accumulation of money here, and its
diminution abroad, should so operate on the relative value of
cloth in the two countries, that it would cease to be profitable
to export it. If the improvement in making wine were of a very
important description, it might become profitable for the two
countries to exchange employments; for England to make all the
wine, and Portugal all the cloth consumed by them; but this could
be effected only by a new distribution of the precious metals,
which should raise the price of cloth in England, and lower it in
Portugal. The relative price of wine would fall in England in
consequence of the real advantage from the improvement of its
manufacture; that is to say, its natural price would fall; the
relative price of cloth would rise there from the accumulation of
money.
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| 7.21 |
Thus, suppose before the improvement in making wine in
England, the price of wine here were £50 per pipe, and the price
of a certain quantity of cloth were £45, whilst in Portugal the
price of the same quantity of wine was £45, and that of the same
quantity of cloth £50; wine would be exported from Portugal with
a profit of £5 and cloth from England with a profit of the same
amount.
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| 7.22 |
Suppose that, after the improvement, wine falls to £45 in
England, the cloth continuing at the same price. Every
transaction in commerce is an independent transaction. Whilst a
merchant can buy cloth in England for £45 and sell it with the
usual profit in Portugal, he will continue to export it from
England. His business is simply to purchase English cloth, and to
pay for it by a bill of exchange, which he purchases with
Portuguese money. It is to him of no importance what becomes of
this money: he has discharged his debt by the remittance of the
bill. His transaction is undoubtedly regulated by the terms on
which he can obtain this bill, but they are known to him at the
time; and the causes which may influence the market price of
bills, or the rate of exchange, is no consideration of his.
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| 7.23 |
If the markets be favourable for the exportation of wine
from Portugal to England, the exporter of the wine will be a
seller of a bill, which will be purchased either by the importer
of the cloth, or by the person who sold him his bill; and thus
without the necessity of money passing from either country, the
exporters in each country will be paid for their goods. Without
having any direct transaction with each other, the money paid in
Portugal by the importer of cloth will be paid to the Portuguese
exporter of wine; and in England by the negotiation of the same
bill, the exporter of the cloth will be authorized to receive its
value from the importer of wine.
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| 7.24 |
But if the prices of wine were such that no wine could be
exported to England, the importer of cloth would equally purchase
a bill; but the price of that bill would be higher, from the
knowledge which the seller of it would possess, that there was no
counter bill in the market by which he could ultimately settle
the transactions between the two countries; he might know that
the gold or silver money which he received in exchange for his
bill, must be actually exported to his correspondent in England,
to enable him to pay the demand which he had authorized to be
made upon him, and he might therefore charge in the price of his
bill all the expenses to be incurred, together with his fair and
usual profit.
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| 7.25 |
If then this premium for a bill on England should be equal
to the profit on importing cloth, the importation would of course
cease; but if the premium on the bill were only 2 per cent, if to
be enabled to pay a debt in England of £100, £102 should be paid
in Portugal, whilst cloth which cost £45 would sell for £50,
cloth would be imported, bills would be bought, and money would
be exported, till the diminution of money in Portugal, and its
accumulation in England, had produced such a state of prices as
would make it no longer profitable to continue these
transactions.
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| 7.26 |
But the diminution of money in one country, and its increase
in another, do not operate on the price of one commodity only,
but on the prices of all, and therefore the price of wine and
cloth will be both raised in England, and both lowered in
Portugal. The price of cloth, from being £45 in one country and
£50 in the other, would probably fall to £49 or £48 in Portugal,
and rise to £46 or £47 in England, and not afford a sufficient
profit after paying a premium for a bill to induce any merchant
to import that commodity.
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| 7.27 |
It is thus that the money of each country is apportioned to
it in such quantities only as may be necessary to regulate a
profitable trade of barter. England exported cloth in exchange
for wine, because, by so doing her industry was rendered more
productive to her; she had more cloth and wine than if she had
manufactured both for herself; and Portugal imported cloth and
exported wine, because the industry of Portugal could be more
beneficially employed for both countries in producing wine. Let
there be more difficulty in England in producing cloth, or in
Portugal in producing wine, or let there be more facility in
England in producing wine, or in Portugal in producing cloth, and
the trade must immediately cease.
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| 7.28 |
No change whatever takes place in the circumstances of
Portugal; but England finds that she can employ her labour more
productively in the manufacture of wine, and instantly the trade
of barter between the two countries changes. Not only is the
exportation of wine from Portugal stopped, but a new distribution
of the precious metals takes place, and her importation of cloth
is also prevented.
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| 7.29 |
Both countries would probably find it their interest to make
their own wine and their own cloth; but this singular result
would take place: in England, though wine would be cheaper, cloth
would be elevated in price, more would be paid for it by the
consumer; while in Portugal the consumers, both of cloth and of
wine, would be able to purchase those commodities cheaper. In the
country where the improvement was made, prices would be enhanced;
in that where no change had taken place, but where they had been
deprived of a profitable branch of foreign trade, prices would
fall.
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| 7.30 |
This, however, is only a seeming advantage to Portugal, for
the quantity of cloth and wine together produced in that country
would be diminished, while the quantity produced in England would
be increased. Money would in some degree have changed its value
in the two countries, it would be lowered in England and raised
in Portugal. Estimated in money, the whole revenue of Portugal
would be diminished; estimated in the same medium, the whole
revenue of England would be increased.
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| 7.31 |
Thus then it appears, that the improvement of a manufacture
in any country tends to alter the distribution of the precious
metals amongst the nations of the world: it tends to increase the
quantity of commodities, at the same time that it raises general
prices in the country where the improvement takes place.
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| 7.32 |
To simplify the question, I have been supposing the trade
between two countries to be confined to two commoditiesto wine
and cloth; but it is well known that many and various articles
enter into the list of exports and imports. By the abstraction of
money from one country, and the accumulation of it in another,
all commodities are affected in price, and consequently
encouragement is given to the exportation of many more
commodities besides money, which will therefore prevent so great
an effect from taking place on the value of money in the two
countries as might otherwise be expected.
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| 7.33 |
Besides the improvements in arts and machinery, there are
various other causes which are constantly operating on the
natural course of trade, and which interfere with the
equilibrium, and the relative value of money. Bounties on
exportation or importation, new taxes on commodities, sometimes
by their direct, and at other times, by their indirect operation,
disturb the natural trade of barter, and produce a consequent
necessity of importing or exporting money, in order that prices
may be accommodated to the natural course of commerce; and this
effect is produced not only in the country where the disturbing
cause takes place, but, in a greater or less degree, in every
country of the commercial world.
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| 7.34 |
This will in some measure account for the different value of
money in different countries; it will explain to us why the
prices of home commodities, and those of great bulk, though of
comparatively small value, are, independently of other causes,
higher in those countries where manufactures flourish. Of two
countries having precisely the same population, and the same
quantity of land of equal fertility in cultivation, with the same
knowledge too of agriculture, the prices of raw produce will be
highest in that where the greater skill, and the better machinery
is used in the manufacture of exportable commodities. The rate of
profits will probably differ but little; for wages, or the real
reward of the labourer, may be the same in both; but those wages,
as well as raw produce, will be rated higher in money in that
country, into which, from the advantages attending their skill
and machinery, an abundance of money is imported in exchange for
their goods.
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| 7.35 |
Of these two countries, if one had the advantage in the
manufacture of goods of one quality, and the other in the
manufacture of goods of another quality, there would be no
decided influx of the precious metals into either; but if the
advantage very heavily preponderated in favour of either, that
effect would be inevitable.
|
| 7.36 |
In the former part of this work, we have assumed, for the
purpose of argument, that money always continued of the same
value; we are now endeavouring to shew that besides the ordinary
variations in the value of money, and those which are common to
the whole commercial world, there are also partial variations to
which money is subject in particular countries; and in fact, that
the value of money is never the same in any two countries,
depending as it does on relative taxation, on manufacturing
skill, on the advantages of climate, natural productions, and
many other causes.
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| 7.37 |
Although, however, money is subject to such perpetual
variations, and consequently the prices of the commodities which
are common to most countries, are also subject to considerable
difference, yet no effect will be produced on the rate of
profits, either from the influx or efflux of money. Capital will
not be increased, because the circulating medium is augmented. If
the rent paid by the farmer to his landlord, and the wages to his
labourers, be 20 per cent higher in one country than another, and
if at the same time the nominal value of the farmer's capital be
20 per cent more, he will receive precisely the same rate of
profits, although he should sell his raw produce 20 per cent
higher.
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| 7.38 |
Profits, it cannot be too often repeated, depend on wages;
not on nominal, but real wages; not on the number of pounds that
may be annually paid to the labourer, but on the number of days'
work, necessary to obtain those pounds. Wages may therefore be
precisely the same in two countries; they may bear too the same
proportion to rent, and to the whole produce obtained from the
land, although in one of those countries the labourer should
receive ten shillings per week, and in the other twelve.
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| 7.39 |
In the early states of society, when manufactures have made
little progress, and the produce of all countries is nearly
similar, consisting of the bulky and most useful commodities, the
value of money in different countries will be chiefly regulated
by their distance from the mines which supply the precious
metals; but as the arts and improvements of society advance, and
different nations excel in particular manufactures, although
distance will still enter into the calculation, the value of the
precious metals will be chiefly regulated by the superiority of
those manufactures.
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| 7.40 |
Suppose all nations to produce corn, cattle, and coarse
clothing only, and that it was by the exportation of such
commodities that gold could be obtained from the countries which
produced them, or from those who held them in subjection; gold
would naturally be of greater exchangeable value in Poland than
in England, on account of the greater expense of sending such a
bulky commodity as corn the more distant voyage, and also the
greater expense attending the conveying of gold to Poland.
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| 7.41 |
This difference in the value of gold, or which is the same
thing, this difference in the price of corn in the two countries,
would exist, although the facilities of producing corn in England
should far exceed those of Poland, from the greater fertility of
the land, and the superiority in the skill and implements of the
labourer.
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| 7.42 |
If however Poland should be the first to improve her
manufactures, if she should succeed in making a commodity which
was generally desirable, including great value in little bulk, or
if she should be exclusively blessed with some natural
production, generally desirable, and not possessed by other
countries, she would obtain an additional quantity of gold in
exchange for this commodity, which would operate on the price of
her corn, cattle, and coarse clothing. The disadvantage of
distance would probably be more than compensated by the advantage
of having an exportable commodity of great value, and money would
be permanently of lower value in Poland than in England. If, on
the contrary, the advantage of skill and machinery were possessed
by England, another reason would be added to that which before
existed, why gold should be less valuable in England than in
Poland, and why corn, cattle, and clothing, should be at a higher
price in the former country.
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| 7.43 |
These I believe to be the only two causes which regulate the
comparative value of money in the different countries of the
world; for although taxation occasions a disturbance of the
equilibrium of money, it does so by depriving the country in
which it is imposed of some of the advantages attending skill,
industry, and climate.
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| 7.44 |
It has been my endeavour carefully to distinguish between a
low value of money, and a high value of corn, or any other
commodity with which money may be compared. These have been
generally considered as meaning the same thing; but it is
evident, that when corn rises from five to ten shillings a
bushel, it may be owing either to a fall in the value of money,
or to a rise in the value of corn. Thus we have seen, that from
the necessity of having recourse successively to land of a worse
and worse quality, in order to feed an increasing population,
corn must rise in relative value to other things. If therefore
money continue permanently of the same value, corn will exchange
for more of such money, that is to say, it will rise in price.
The same rise in the price of corn will be produced by such
improvement of machinery in manufactures, as shall enable us to
manufacture commodities with peculiar advantages: for the influx
of money will be the consequence; it will fall in value, and
therefore exchange for less corn. But the effects resulting from
a high price of corn when produced by the rise in the value of
corn, and when caused by a fall in the value of money, are
totally different. In both cases the money price of wages will
rise, but if it be in consequence of the fall in the value of
money, not only wages and corn, but all other commodities will
rise. If the manufacturer has more to pay for wages, he will
receive more for his manufactured goods, and the rate of profits
will remain unaffected. But when the rise in the price of corn is
the effect of the difficulty of production, profits will fall;
for the manufacturer will be obliged to pay more wages, and will
not be enabled to remunerate himself by raising the price of his
manufactured commodity.
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| 7.45 |
Any improvement in the facility of working the mines, by
which the precious metals may be produced with a less quantity of
labour, will sink the value of money generally. It will then
exchange for fewer commodities in all countries; but when any
particular country excels in manufactures, so as to occasion an
influx of money towards it, the value of money will be lower, and
the prices of corn and labour will be relatively higher in that
country, than in any other.
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| 7.46 |
This higher value of money will not be indicated by the
exchange; bills may continue to be negotiated at par, although
the prices of corn and labour should be 10, 20, or 30 per cent
higher in one country than another. Under the circumstances
supposed, such a difference of prices is the natural order of
things, and the exchange can only be at par, when a sufficient
quantity of money is introduced into the country excelling in
manufactures, so as to raise the price of its corn and labour. If
foreign countries should prohibit the exportation of money, and
could successfully enforce obedience to such a law, they might
indeed prevent the rise in the prices of the corn and labour of
the manufacturing country; for such rise can only take place
after the influx of the precious metals, supposing paper money
not to be used; but they could not prevent the exchange from
being very unfavourable to them. If England were the
manufacturing country, and it were possible to prevent the
importation of money, the exchange with France, Holland, and
Spain, might be 5, 10, or 20 per cent against those countries.
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| 7.47 |
Whenever the current of money is forcibly stopped, and when
money is prevented from settling at its just level, there are no
limits to the possible variations of the exchange. The effects
are similar to those which follow, when a paper money, not
exchangeable for specie at the will of the holder, is forced into
circulation. Such a currency is necessarily confined to the
country where it is issued: it cannot, when too abundant, diffuse
itself generally amongst other countries. The level of
circulation is destroyed, and the exchange will inevitably be
unfavourable to the country where it is excessive in quantity:
just so would be the effects of a metallic circulation, if by
forcible means, by laws which could not be evaded, money should
be detained in a country, when the stream of trade gave it an
impetus towards other countries.
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| 7.48 |
When each country has precisely the quantity of money which
it ought to have, money will not indeed be of the same value in
each, for with respect to many commodities it may differ, 5, 10,
or even 20 per cent, but the exchange will be at par. One hundred
pounds in England, or the silver which is in £100, will purchase
a bill of £100, or an equal quantity of silver in France, Spain,
or Holland.
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| 7.49 |
In speaking of the exchange and the comparative value of
money in different countries, we must not in the least refer to
the value of money estimated in commodities, in either country.
The exchange is never ascertained by estimating the comparative
value of money in corn, cloth, or any commodity whatever, but by
estimating the value of the currency of one country, in the
currency of another.
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| 7.50 |
It may also be ascertained by comparing it with some
standard common to both countries. If a bill on England for £100
will purchase the same quantity of goods in France or Spain, that
a bill on Hamburgh for the same sum will do, the exchange between
Hamburgh and England is at par, but if a bill on England for
£130, will purchase no more than a bill on Hamburgh for £100, the
exchange is 30 per cent against England.
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| 7.51 |
In England £100 may purchase a bill, or the right of
receiving £101 in Holland, £102 in France, and £105 in Spain. The
exchange with England is, in that case, said to be 1 per cent
against Holland, 2 per cent against France, and 5 per cent
against Spain. It indicates that the level of currency is higher
than it should be in those countries, and the comparative value
of their currencies, and that of England, would be immediately
restored to par, by abstracting from theirs, or by adding to that
of England.
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| 7.52 |
Those who maintained that our currency was depreciated
during the last ten years, when the exchange varied from 20 to 30
per cent against this country, have never contended, as they have
been accused of doing, that money could not be more valuable in
one country than another, as compared with various commodities;
but they did contend, that £130 could not be detained in England,
unless it was depreciated, when it was of no more value,
estimated in the money of Hamburgh, or of Holland, than the
bullion in £100.
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| 7.53 |
By sending £130 good English pounds sterling to Hamburgh,
even at an expense of £5, I should be possessed there of £125;
what then could make me consent to give £130 for a bill which would give me £100 in Hamburgh, but that my pounds were not good
pounds sterling?they were deteriorated, were degraded in
intrinsic value below the pounds sterling of Hamburgh, and if
actually sent there, at an expense of £5, would sell only for
£100. With metallic pounds sterling, it is not denied that my
£130 would procure me £125 in Hamburgh, but with paper pounds
sterling I can only obtain £100; and yet it was maintained that
£130 in paper, was of equal value with £130 in silver or gold.
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| 7.54 |
Some indeed more reasonably maintained, that £130 in paper
was not of equal value with £130 in metallic money; but they said
that it was the metallic money which had changed its value, and
not the paper money. They wished to confine the meaning of the
word depreciation to an actual fall of value, and not to a
comparative difference between the value of money, and the
standard by which by law it is regulated. One hundred pounds of
English money was formerly of equal value with, and could
purchase £100 of Hamburgh money: in any other country a bill of
£100 on England, or on Hamburgh, could purchase precisely the
same quantity of commodities. To obtain the same things, I was
lately obliged to give £130 English money, when Hamburgh could
obtain them for £100 Hamburgh money. If English money was of the
same value then as before, Hamburgh money must have risen in
value. But where is the proof of this? How is it to be
ascertained whether English money has fallen, or Hamburgh money
has risen? there is no standard by which this can be determined.
It is a plea which admits of no proof, and can neither be
positively affirmed, nor positively contradicted. The nations of
the world must have been early convinced, that there was no
standard of value in nature, to which they might unerringly
refer, and therefore chose a medium, which on the whole appeared
to them less variable than any other commodity.
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| 7.55 |
To this standard we must conform till the law is changed,
and till some other commodity is discovered, by the use of which
we shall obtain a more perfect standard, than that which we have
established. While gold is exclusively the standard in this
country, money will be depreciated, when a pound sterling is not
of equal value with 5 dwts. and 3 grs. of standard gold, and
that, whether gold rises or falls in general value.
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| 7.56
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