70. How Exchange Arises.
One of the most important ways in which we can increase
wealth consists in exchange in giving what
we do not want in return for what we do want.
Wealth, as we have seen, is anything which is actually
useful to us, because we have not enough already, and
which can be transferred to another person. But
when our want of any kind of commodity is satisfied,
we want no more of that, but we do want other kinds
of commodity. The result is that exchange constantly
produces a gain of utility. Some people have
objected that there can be no good in exchange, because
that which is given equals in value that which is
received. Others have said that, if one party
gains, it must evidently be by robbing the other party.
According to this view, trade would consist in trying
to beggar your neighbour. That which is given
does really equal in value that which is received,
but it does not equal it in utility, and to increase
utility is the purpose of all production and all commerce.
We do not pay for things in proportion to their usefulness,
or else air and water would be the most costly of all
things. A good-sized loaf may be bought for fourpence
or sixpence, although bread is the staff of life.
Before attempting to understand this apparent paradox,
we must settle exactly what we mean by value.
71. What is Value? In exchanging
some goods for other goods, there arises the question,
How much of one kind shall be given for so much of
the other? Some things are said to be valuable,
as in the case of a gold watch or a diamond ring,
because in exchange for them we can get a great quantity
of other articles. Ashes are of little or no value,
because we cannot get anything in exchange for them.
Now this word value is a very difficult one, and
is employed to mean different things. We may
say that quinine is valuable for curing fevers, that
iron is valuable for improving the blood, or that
water is valuable for putting out fires. Here
we do not mean valuable in exchange, for quinine would
cure fevers just as well if it cost a penny an ounce
instead of some ten shillings. Water, if we can
get it at the right time, puts out a fire whether
it costs much or little or nothing. It is clear,
then, that by valuable we often mean valuable in
use. The words value and valuable are in fact
ambiguous. There is value in use
and value in exchange, and many things which would
be commonly said to have little value in exchange
have much value in use. But of these meanings, “value
in use” is nothing but the utility of a thing
to us, that is, the utility of all such portions of
it as we can actually employ. Thus, the value
in use of water means the utility of the water that
we drink, or wash in, or cook with, or water the roads
with, and this utility is very great. But of
course it cannot mean the utility of water which is
not useful to us, but on the contrary hurtful, as
in the case of floods, damp houses, wet mines, and
so forth.
We may now see how true was the remark
of Genovesi, the Italian economist, that “Exchange
consists in giving the superfluous for the necessary,”
or, as I should prefer to say, the comparatively
superfluous for the comparatively necessary.
He who has more than enough of one article has already
enjoyed all the good which that article can do to
him, but he probably needs supplies of other articles.
The exchange, like an act of mercy, blesses both him
who gives and him who receives, because what each
receives in exchange is much wanted and has high utility.
In England, for instance, we possess a great deal of
coal, and France produces plenty of good wine.
We could have little or no wine in England unless
we got it from France or some foreign country, and
France also is much in want of coal. It is obvious
that there is a great gain of utility if we give some
of our comparatively superfluous coal in exchange
for some of the abundant wine of France.
It has been objected to commerce that
it is sterile and produces no new goods. There
exist neither more nor less coal and wine after they
are exchanged than before. But in political economy
we treat of utility and wealth; the question is whether
things are usefully consumed or not. Now that
which is not wealth if it were consumed by one person,
becomes wealth when handed over to another person
for consumption. Though exchange cannot create the material of wealth, it
creates wealth because it gives utility to the material.
72. Value means Proportion in
Exchange. When we speak of the value of a thing in
exchange, we mean how much of some other thing we can
get for it. This of course will depend upon the
nature of that other thing. Obviously, I can
get for a shilling much more potatoes than bread, and
bread than beef, and beef than essence of beef.
Therefore, when we speak of the value of a thing,
we ought always to say what it is to be valued by.
The word value only means that so much of one thing
is given for so much of the other, and it is the
proportion of these quantities (Latin proportio
from pro, in comparison with, and portio,
share), which measures the values of the thing.
A ton of pig-iron can usually be got for a quarter
of corn; here the proportion is one to one. To
get a ton of copper, we should probably have to give
thirty quarters of corn; here the proportion is that
of one to thirty. There cannot be such a thing
as value in exchange, unless there be proportion so
much of one commodity for so much of another.
Usually, indeed, we measure the values
of things by their prices. The price is the
quantity of money which we give for a thing; in this
case the proportion is between the quantity of money
and the quantity of goods we get for it, as when we
give sixty shillings for ten yards of carpet.
We shall learn later on that money is a kind of commodity,
which has utility and value like other commodities.
But there is great convenience in always thinking
and speaking of values in money, because we can then
readily compare the value of one thing with that of
any other. If a pound of potatoes costs one penny,
a pound of bread threepence, and a pound of beef ninepence,
we can see at once that a pound of beef is of the
same value as three pounds of bread and nine pounds
of potatoes, and we can judge how much of each to use.
73. Laws of Supply and Demand. In
the next place, we must try to understand how the
values of things are governed, and made to change
from time to time. The principal laws which govern
values are called the laws of supply and demand,
and they are very important indeed. Supply means
the quantity of any goods which people are willing
to give in exchange at a certain value, and demand
means similarly the quantity of goods which people
are willing to take in exchange; but, before a person
can judge how much he wishes to buy of a particular
kind of goods, he must know its price, that is, its
proportion in exchange for money. If bread, instead
of being threepence per pound, becomes fourpence,
a poor person would perhaps decide to take less bread,
and to buy more potatoes. If beef, instead of
being ninepence, should rise to a shilling, or fourteenpence
a pound, some people would refuse to buy it altogether,
and others would buy less than before. The supply
of things varies similarly; if the price of meat rises
high, farmers who own cattle bring them to market,
in order to get a good profit by selling them; if
the price falls low, they keep their cattle to sell
at another time.
The Laws of Supply and Demand may
be thus stated: a rise of price tends to produce
a greater supply and a less demand; a fall of price
tends to produce a less supply and a greater demand.
Conversely, an increase of supply or a decrease of
demand tends to lower price, and a decrease of supply
or an increase of demand to raise price.
These laws are so important that I
will state them over again, in the form of a table:
|-----------|------------|-------------|
| Price. | Supply. | Demand. |
|-----------|------------|-------------|
| Higher. | Greater. | Less. |
|-----------|------------|-------------|
| Lower. | Less. | Greater. |
|-----------|------------|-------------|
We can now understand how the price
of any kind of goods is decided. The price must
be such that the quantity demanded at any time is equal
to the quantity supplied. If those who want goods
at a certain price, cannot get them, they will have
to offer a higher price, so that they may induce other
people to sell. The higher the price the greater
the supply, as we have seen; moreover, if some people
in a market are offering a higher price, it soon becomes
known to other dealers. When a farmer’s
wife carries a basket of butter to sell at the Butter
Cross in the neighbouring market town, she soon learns
whether the supply is greater or less than usual.
If the purchasers are few and slow in buying, she
begins to fear that she may have to carry her butter
back unsold, and go without the crockery and calico
and other things which she intended to buy with the
money. Then she begins to ask a penny or twopence a pound less, and the other
sellers of butter are obliged to lower their prices also, since no one would buy
butter from one woman at 1d., if he could get it as good from the next
person at 1d. But, if few people bring butter to market, or if there are
many purchasers with money in their pockets, the scene is quite changed. Those
who have brought butter, find that they will have no difficulty in selling all
they have; it is the purchasers who now become anxious to buy before all is
gone, and their eagerness soon shows the sellers that they may ask higher
prices. It is by this higgling of the market, by sellers
asking the highest price they think they can get,
and buyers trying to buy at the lowest price which
they think will be taken that the market
price of any commodity is settled.
The market price will be such that
the demand at that price will equal the supply at
that price. The quantity of butter or any other commodity
that is sold must equal what is bought, because it
is not sold until it is bought; but the price will
settle itself accordingly.
74. How Value depends upon Labour.
We now come to the great question whether value is
produced by labour, or how it is connected with labour.
Some economists, observing that, when a thing like
gold is very valuable, men spend a great deal of labour
in getting it, have said that the labour spent upon
it is the cause of the high value. This is quite
wrong; for if it were true, anything, upon which great labour has been spent, ought to be very valuable;
everybody knows that such is not the case. Great labour may be expended in writing, printing, and binding
a book; but, if nobody wants the book, it is valueless,
except as waste paper. A vast amount of labour
was spent on building the Thames Tunnel, but, as few
people wished to go through it, the tunnel was of small
value, until it was required for a railway. Thus
it is quite certain that we cannot make a thing valuable
by simply labouring at it; we must labour in such
a way as to make the thing useful.
On the other hand, substances may
be very valuable which have cost little or no labour.
When a shepherd in Australia happens to pick up a
nugget of gold on the mountain side, it takes no labour
worth mentioning to pick it up, yet the gold is just
as valuable in proportion to its weight as any other
gold. Some gold mines produce a great quantity
of gold: others which have cost quite as much
to sink, produce little; nevertheless the gold out
of the one mine is sold at the same price in proportion
to its weight and fineness as that out of the other
mine. Thus it is quite certain that labour is not
the cause of value. Gold is valuable because a great
many people want more gold than they have already
got, and whenever a thing is valuable it is because
somebody wants it.
But we may look at this matter in
another way. If it were possible to get a valuable
thing like gold with little labour, many people would
become gold miners. Much gold would then be produced;
if this were wanted as much as what was already in
use, it would be as valuable. But no one wants
an unlimited quantity of any substance. Wealth,
as we saw, must be limited in supply; if gold became
as plentiful as lead or iron, it could not possibly
remain as valuable as it is now. People would
have far more than they could employ for ornaments,
watches, gilding and so forth; there would be a large
surplus to be used in making pots and pans, for which
it is less needed. Now we can see through the
whole subject of value. When much of a substance
can usually be produced with little labour, the substance
becomes so plentiful that people are satisfied with
the supplies of it which they have; they do not want
more, or at least do not want it so urgently.
It follows that they are unwilling to give much wealth
for it. Thus the labour spent upon producing
a commodity does not affect the value of that commodity,
unless it alters the quantity of it which people can
get, and thus makes a further supply of the commodity
more or less useful than before.
75. Why Pearls are valuable.
To make this still more plain, let us endeavour to
answer this difficult question, “Do men dive
for pearls because pearls fetch a high price, or do
pearls fetch a high price because men must dive in
order to get them?” Pearl-diving is a very dangerous
and laborious kind of work. The divers have to
jump into the deep sea with heavy weights to carry
them down, and they must hold their breath a long
time while they are engaged in collecting the oyster
shells at the bottom. The number of good pearls
which they generally get is small compared with the
great toil of getting them. It follows that,
on the average, they must receive a high price for
what they do find, otherwise they would not have adequate
wages for such work. But this alone is not a
sufficient reason for the pearls being so valuable,
otherwise the mother of pearl shells, in which the
pearls are found, and brought up, would be as valuable
as the pearls. But mother of pearl is a very
cheap substance. Again, if it were merely a question
of labour, a diver might go down anywhere, and, bringing
up the first stone or shell he found, insist on selling
it for a high price, because he had dived for it.
The truth is, that pearls are valuable because there
are many ladies who have not got pearl necklaces,
and who would like to have them; and those who have
some pearls would like to get more and finer ones.
In short, then, pearls are valuable because they are
useful to ladies who want more pearl ornaments:
they are thus useful because the ladies have not hitherto
been able to get as many as they would like; and they
have not been able to get many, because it is so difficult
to fish them up from the bottom of the sea. Here
we have the whole theory of value and labour. The labour which is required to
get more of a commodity governs the supply of it; the supply determines whether
people do or do not want more of it eagerly; and this eagerness of want or
demand governs value.