TAXES PAID BY THE PRODUCER.
M. Say greatly magnifies the inconveniences
which result if a tax on a manufactured commodity
is levied at an early, rather than at a late period
of its manufacture. The manufacturers, he observes,
through whose hands the commodity may successively
pass, must employ greater funds in consequence of
having to advance the tax, which is often attended
with considerable difficulty to a manufacturer of
very limited capital and credit. To this observation
no objection can be made.
Another inconvenience on which he
dwells is, that in consequence of the advance of the
tax, the profits on the advance also must be charged
to the consumer, and that this additional tax is one
from which the treasury derives no advantage.
In this latter objection I cannot
agree with M. Say. The state, we will suppose,
wants to raise immediately 1000l. and levies
it on a manufacturer, who will not, for a twelve-month,
be able to charge it to the consumer on his finished
commodity. In consequence of such delay, he is
obliged to charge for his commodity an additional price,
not only of 1000l. the amount of the tax, but probably
of 1100l., 100l. being for interest on the 1000l.
advanced. But in return for this additional 100l.
paid by the consumer, he has a real benefit, inasmuch
as his payment of the tax which Government required
immediately, and which he must finally pay, has been
postponed for a year; an opportunity, therefore, has
been afforded to him of lending to the manufacturer,
who had occasion for it, the 1000l. at 10 per cent.,
or at any other rate of interest which might be agreed
upon. Eleven hundred pounds payable at the end
of one year, when money is at 10 per cent. interest,
is of no more value than 1000l. to be paid immediately.
If Government delayed receiving the tax for one year
till the manufacture of the commodity was completed,
it would, perhaps, be obliged to issue an Exchequer
bill bearing interest, and it would pay as much for
interest as the consumer would save in price, excepting,
indeed, that portion of the price which the manufacturer
might be enabled, in consequence of the tax, to add
to his own real gains. If, for the interest of
the Exchequer bill, Government would have paid 5 per
cent., a tax of 50l. is saved by not issuing it.
If the manufacturer borrowed the additional capital
at 5 per cent., and charged the consumer 10 per cent.,
he also will have gained 5 per cent. on his advance
over and above his usual profits, so that the manufacturer
and Government together gain, or save, precisely the
sum which the consumer pays.
M. Simonde, in his excellent work,
De la Richesse Commerciale, following the same
line of argument as M. Say, has calculated that a tax
of 4000 francs, paid originally by a manufacturer,
whose profits were at the moderate rate of 10 per
cent., would, if the commodity manufactured only passed
through the hands of five different persons, be raised
to the consumer to the sum of 6734 francs. This
calculation proceeds on the supposition, that he who
first advanced the tax, would receive from the next
manufacturer 4400 francs, and he again from the next,
4840 francs; so that at each step 10 per cent. on
its value would be added to it. This is to suppose
that the value of the tax would be accumulating at
compound interest, not at the rate of 10 per cent.
per annum, but at an absolute rate of 10 per cent.,
at every step of its progress. This opinion of
M. de Simonde would be correct if five years elapsed
between the first advance of the tax, and the sale
of the taxed commodity to the consumer; but if one
year only elapsed, a remuneration of 400 francs, instead
of 2734, would give a profit at the rate of 10 per
cent. per annum, to all who had contributed to the
advance of the tax, whether the commodity had passed
through the hands of five manufacturers or fifty.