ON FOREIGN TRADE.
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 1000l. a merchant
can obtain a quantity of foreign goods, which he can
sell in the English market for 1,200l., 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 1,200l. In either
case his profit will be limited to 200l., 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 1,200l., 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.
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.
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.
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 importation of wine, given 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 1000l., with which I purchased
annually one pipe of wine for 100l. and a certain
quantity of English commodities for 900l.; when
wine fell to 50l. per pipe, I might lay out the 50l.
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.
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 1000l.
to 1200l. while my expenditure continues the same,
I accumulate annually 200l. more than I did before.
If I save 200l. out of my expenditure while my profits
continue the same, the same effect will be produced;
200l. 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 1000l., must purchase
them for 857d., still selling the wine
which he imports in return for those goods for 1200l.;
or, if he continued to purchase his English goods
for 1000l., must raise the price of his wine to
1400l.; 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 200l. out of every 1000l. 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.
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 profits
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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 rewarding 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
To produce the wine in Portugal, might
require only the labour of eighty men for one year,
and to produce the cloth in the same country, might
require the labour of ninety 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 ninety 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Thus, suppose before the improvement
in making wine in England, the price of wine here
were 50l. per pipe, and the price of a certain quantity
of cloth were 45l., whilst in Portugal the price
of the same quantity of wine was 45l., and that
of the same quantity of cloth 50l.; wine would be
exported from Portugal with a profit of 5l., and
cloth from England with a profit of the same amount.
Suppose that, after the improvement,
wine falls to 45l. 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 45l., 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.
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 négociation of the
same bill, the exporter of the cloth will be authorized
to receive its value from the importer of wine.
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.
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 100l.,
102l. should be paid in Portugal, whilst cloth which
cost 45l. would sell for 50l., 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.
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 45l.
in one country, and 50l. in the other, would probably
fall to 49l. or 48l. in Portugal, and rise to
46l. or 47l. in England, and not afford a sufficient
profit after paying a premium for a bill, to induce
any merchant to import that commodity.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
To simplify the question, I have been
supposing the trade between two countries to be confined
to two commodities, to 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.
Beside 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.
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, 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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 100l., will purchase a bill of 100l., or
an equal quantity of silver in France, Spain, or Holland.
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.
It may also be ascertained by comparing
it with some standard common to both countries.
If a bill on England for 100l. 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 130l., will purchase no more than
a bill on Hamburgh for 100l., the exchange is 30
per cent. against England.
In England 100l. may purchase a
bill, or the right of receiving 101l. in Holland,
102l. in France, and 105l. 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.
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 130l. could
not be detained in England, when it was of no more
value, estimated in the money of Hamburgh, or of Holland,
than 100l.
By sending 130l. good English pounds
sterling to Hamburgh, even at an expense of 5l.,
I should be possessed there of 125l.; what then
could make me consent to give 130l. for a bill which
would give me 100l. 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 5l., would sell only for
100l. With metallic pounds sterling, it is not denied
that my 130l. would procure me 125l. in Hamburgh,
but with paper pounds sterling I can only obtain 100l.;
and yet it is maintained that 130l. in paper, is
of equal value with 130l. in silver or gold.
Some indeed more reasonably maintained,
that 130l. in paper was not of equal value with
130l. 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 100l. of Hamburgh money: in any other
country a bill of 100l. on England, or on Hamburgh,
could purchase precisely the same quantity of commodities.
To obtain the same things, I was lately obliged to
give 130l. English money, when Hamburgh could obtain
them for 100l. 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 we might unerringly refer, and therefore chose
a medium, which, on the whole appeared to them less
variable than any other commodity.
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.