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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #62407 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/62407)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Measure of Value Stated and Illustrated, by
-Thomas Robert Malthus
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll
-have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using
-this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Measure of Value Stated and Illustrated
- With an Application of it to the Alterations in the Value
- of the English Currency since 1790
-
-Author: Thomas Robert Malthus
-
-Release Date: June 15, 2020 [EBook #62407]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MEASURE OF VALUE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Charlie Howard and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE
-
- MEASURE OF VALUE
-
- STATED AND ILLUSTRATED,
-
- WITH
-
- AN APPLICATION OF IT TO THE ALTERATIONS IN
-
- THE VALUE OF THE ENGLISH CURRENCY
-
- SINCE 1790.
-
- —♦—
-
- BY THE REV. T. R. MALTHUS, M.A. F.R.S.
-
- PROFESSOR OF HISTORY AND POLITICAL ECONOMY IN THE
- EAST INDIA COLLEGE, HERTFORDSHIRE.
-
-
- LONDON:
- JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET.
- MDCCCXXIII.
-
-
-
-
- London: Printed by C. Roworth,
- Bell-yard, Temple-bar.
-
-
-
-
-THE MEASURE OF VALUE.
-
-
-It is generally allowed that the word value, in common language,
-has two different meanings; one, value in use, the other, value in
-exchange; the first expressing merely the usefulness of an object in
-supplying the most important wants of mankind, without reference to
-its power of commanding other objects in exchange; and the second
-expressing the power of commanding other objects in exchange, without
-reference to its usefulness in supplying the most important wants of
-mankind.
-
-It is obviously value in the last sense, not the first, with which the
-science of Political Economy is mainly concerned.
-
-But the power of one object to command another in exchange, or in other
-words the power of purchasing, may obviously arise either from causes
-affecting the object itself, or the commodities against which it is
-exchanged.
-
-In the one case, the value of the object itself may properly be said
-to be affected; in the other, only the value of the commodities which
-it purchases; and if we could suppose any object always to remain of
-the same value, the comparison of other commodities with this one would
-clearly show, which had risen, which had fallen, and which had remained
-the same. The value of any commodity estimated in a measure of this
-kind might with propriety be called its absolute or natural value;
-while the value of a commodity estimated in others which were liable to
-variation, whether they were one or many, could only be considered as
-its nominal or relative value, that is, its value in relation to any
-particular commodity, or to commodities in general.
-
-That a correct measure of the power of purchasing generally, or
-of commanding such important commodities as the necessaries and
-conveniences of life, in whatever way such power might arise, would be
-very desirable, cannot for a moment be doubted, as it would at once
-enable us to form a just estimate and comparison of wages, salaries,
-and revenues, in all countries, and at all periods. But when we
-consider what such a measure implies, we must feel certain that no one
-object exists, or can be supposed to exist, with such qualities as
-would fit it to become a standard measure of this kind. It would imply
-steadiness of value, not merely in one object, but in a great number,
-which is contrary to all theory and experience.
-
-Whether there is any object, which, though it cannot measure the power
-of purchasing generally under the varying facilities of production and
-varying state of the demand and supply by which different commodities
-are affected, may be a correct measure of absolute and natural value as
-above described, is the specific object of the present inquiry.
-
-It follows directly, from the principles of Adam Smith, that the
-conditions of the supply of the great mass of commodities are, that
-the returns should be sufficient to pay the wages, profits and rents
-necessary to their production. If these payments be made in money at
-the ordinary rates of the time, they form what Adam Smith calls their
-natural prices. Money however we know is variable. But if for money we
-substitute the objects necessary to give the producer the same power
-of production and accumulation as the natural money prices would have
-commanded, such returns maybe considered as the natural conditions of
-the supply of commodities, and may with propriety be denominated their
-natural value, in contradistinction to their natural price.
-
-Of these three conditions of supply, or elements of natural value,
-the two first are obviously the most important. They are not only the
-sole conditions of supply in those early stages of society before the
-appropriation of land has taken place, but they continue to be so in
-reference to large classes of objects in the most advanced stages
-of improvement; and it is now generally acknowledged that even the
-main vegetable food of an improving country, which is the foundation
-of wages, must necessarily be of the same value as that part of the
-produce which is almost exclusively resolvable into wages and profits,
-and pays very little rent.
-
-We cannot therefore essentially err in assuming for the present that
-the natural value of objects in their more simple forms is composed of
-labour and profits,[A] and the effect of any portion of rent, or of
-other ingredients which are sometimes added to these elements, may be
-allowed for subsequently.
-
-We may also consider as a postulate which will be readily granted, that
-any given quantity of labour must be of the same value as the wages
-which command it, or for which it actually exchanges.
-
-Of the two main elements of value, labour and profits, the former,
-particularly if we include, as we ought to do, accumulated as well as
-immediate labour, is much the largest and most powerful.
-
-The great instrument of production is labour. There is no commodity nor
-implement used to assist manual exertions in which it does not enter
-as a condition of supply, and very few in which it does not enter very
-largely. If in the production of commodities and of the implements
-which assist in this production, no other ingredient were required than
-labour, and the interval between the exertion of the labour and its
-remuneration in the completed commodity were so inconsiderable that it
-might be entirely disregarded, it is certain that, as the same quantity
-of labour would have a constant tendency to produce commodities in the
-same relative proportion to each other, and to the demand for them,
-they would be found on an average to exchange with each other according
-to the quantity of labour which had been employed to obtain them.
-
-Thus if ten mackerel were, on an average, obtained by the same quantity
-of labour as two soals, it would be necessary, in order to continue
-the supply of both in the market, that the value of a soal should be
-five times as great in the power of purchasing similar commodities,
-as the value of a mackerel; because if it were less, none would apply
-themselves to the catching of soals; and though it is quite certain
-that at any given period the relative value of soals and mackerel
-would be exclusively determined by the state of the demand and
-supply of each; and that they would, in consequence, often vary very
-considerably; yet it is as certain, that on the supposition of the
-hypothesis being correct, and that they both continued to be brought
-to market, each would on an average be supplied in such a quantity,
-compared with the demand for it, that a soal would ordinarily exchange
-for five mackerel, and the different quantities of labour required to
-produce them would, in this case, be a correct measure both of their
-natural and relative value in exchange.
-
-Now supposing that the skill and power of the labourers were so to
-increase, that, in the same time and with the same personal exertions,
-they could obtain three soals and fifteen mackerel, it is obvious that
-the relative value of soals to mackerel would remain the same, but they
-would both have essentially altered their value compared with all those
-commodities which still required the same quantity of labour to produce
-the same supply of them. With regard to such commodities, soals and
-mackerel would have become of less value, and consequently they would
-have become of less value with regard to a given quantity of labour.
-The correct language in this case would be, not that labour had become
-dearer, but that soals and mackerel had become cheaper. And if the
-same increase of skill and power could be conceived to extend to all
-other commodities, and all commodities were similarly circumstanced
-as to their mode of production and bringing to market; it cannot be
-doubted, that though they might retain the same relative value compared
-with each other, they would all become more plentiful with regard to
-the wants of the society, and any given quantity of labour. And the
-correct language would still be, not that labour had become dearer, but
-that all commodities had become cheaper. This fall would be a fall in
-the absolute and natural value of commodities; and as long as labour
-alone was concerned in their production, and they were brought to
-market immediately, it would be allowed that the different quantities
-of labour employed upon them would be a correct measure both of their
-relative value compared with each other, and of their absolute and
-natural value in reference to the conditions of their supply. Their
-natural values would be exactly represented by the different quantities
-of labour worked up in them; while their natural prices would be these
-different quantities of labour estimated in money, according to the
-money price of the labour employed.
-
-But at a very early period of society a considerable interval must
-elapse between the exertion of some sorts of labour and the completion
-of the article on which they are employed. And the next simplest form
-of production, beyond the result of mere labour, is that, where, in
-addition to the labour employed directly on the commodity and on the
-simple tools necessary to its production, the condition of the supply
-requires that a certain compensation be made in the final remuneration
-for the time which has elapsed from the period of the advances of
-the labour, to the period when the labourer, or capitalist, can be
-remunerated. This compensation, which equally applies to the formation
-of the capital, as to the products to be obtained by it, is the profit
-which must be paid on the advances of the labour, and is absolutely
-necessary to the encouragement of such advances.
-
-But in this state of things commodities would cease to exchange with
-each other according to the quantity of labour employed upon them. Some
-commodities, on which the same quantity of accumulated and immediate
-labour had been employed, would be of a different exchangeable value,
-on account of the different quantity of profits which had entered into
-their composition; while others, on which different quantities of
-accumulated and immediate labour had been employed, might be of the
-same exchangeable value, on account of the greater quantity of profits
-of which they were composed being balanced by the smaller quantity of
-labour advanced to produce them.
-
-In the earliest stages of society accumulations of capital are very
-rare, and profits may be extremely high, perhaps forty or fifty per
-cent. If under these circumstances the construction of a war canoe
-were to take two years before it were fit for use, it is evident that
-its value in exchange would be prodigiously enhanced by such profits.
-Compared with a number of deer which might have cost exactly the same
-quantity of accumulated and immediate labour to bring to market, the
-canoe would be seventy or eighty per cent. of greater value; and on
-the fall of profits from forty or fifty per cent. to ten per cent. in
-the progress of society, an object of this kind might fall in value
-sixty or seventy per cent. compared with such objects as deer or fish,
-without any difference in the quantity of labour employed upon either.
-
-It is observed by Adam Smith that corn is an annual crop, butchers’
-meat a crop which requires four or five years to grow; and
-consequently, if we compare two quantities of corn and beef which are
-of equal exchangeable value, it is certain that a difference of three
-or four additional years profit at fifteen per cent. upon the capital
-employed in the production of the beef would, exclusively of any
-other considerations, make up in value for a much smaller quantity of
-labour, and thus we might have two commodities of the same exchangeable
-value, while the accumulated and immediate labour of the one was forty
-or fifty per cent. less than that of the other. This is an event of
-daily occurrence in reference to a vast mass of the most important
-commodities in the country; and if profits were to fall from fifteen
-per cent. to eight per cent. the value of beef compared with corn
-would fall above twenty per cent.
-
-When commodities are obtained by the assistance of a large proportion
-of fixed capital of a very durable nature, the advances are only
-consumed in part, and the whole produce of the accumulated and
-immediate labour employed must be considered as composed of the new
-produce obtained, together with the remainder of the fixed capital
-which is unconsumed.[B] In reference to the separate value of the new
-produce, this will be the same as if to the labour actually worked up
-in such produce were added the profits of the whole capital advanced.
-It sometimes happens that the proportion of value arising from these
-profits is very considerable; and commodities so produced will
-necessarily have much less labour worked up in them, and will be much
-more affected in their value by a rise or fall of profits, than those
-which are composed mainly of immediate labour.
-
-Thus, if a commodity were produced by the aid of accumulated labour
-in machinery worth £2,000, the annual wear and tear of which was
-one-twentieth, or £100, and the labour employed on cheap materials and
-in the working of the machinery were worth £200, while profits were
-20 per cent. then the value of the labour worked up in the commodity
-would be £100 added to £200, equal to £300; and the whole capital
-advanced being £2,300, the profits upon it would be £460, which, added
-to £300 would make the whole value of the produce £760. Compared with a
-commodity of equal value which had been produced without fixed capital,
-and had yet been brought to market in the same time and with the same
-rate of profits, it would contain less than half of the labour worked
-up in it; while, if profits were to fall from 20 per cent. to 10 per
-cent. the value of the commodity would fall in the proportion of from
-£760 to £530, or, if profits had been 10 per cent. and were to rise to
-20 per cent. the value of the commodity would rise in the proportion
-of from £530 to £760, or above 42 per cent., without any change in the
-quantity of labour employed.[C]
-
-It must be allowed, then, that whenever two elements are necessary to
-the supply, and enter into the composition of commodities, their value
-cannot depend exclusively upon one of them, except by accident, or
-when the other can be considered as a given or common quantity. But
-it is universally acknowledged, that the great mass of commodities
-in civilized and improved countries is made up at the least of two
-elements--labour and profits; consequently, the exchangeable value of
-commodities into which these two elements enter as the conditions of
-their supply, will not depend exclusively upon the quantity of labour
-employed upon them, except in the very peculiar cases when both the
-returns of the advances and the proportions of fixed and circulating
-capitals are exactly the same.
-
-It cannot, then, be said with any thing like an approximation towards
-correctness, that the labour worked up in commodities is the measure of
-their exchangeable value.
-
-But if to the accumulated and immediate labour worked up in
-commodities, we add the profits upon the whole advances for the time
-that they are advanced, we shall then make the proper allowance for
-the other element of value, and may expect to obtain a more accurate
-measure. If we had estimated the value of the labour advanced in money,
-or any other medium, we should of course estimate the profits in the
-same medium, and the natural price of the commodity estimated in such
-medium, would obviously be equal to the price of the accumulated and
-immediate labour expended on the commodity, together with the ordinary
-profits estimated upon such advances. But if, with a view to the
-natural conditions of supply, we consider only the quantity of labour
-advanced, without reference to any other medium, we must of course
-estimate the profits in quantity of labour also, which will give us an
-amount of labour in proportion to which commodities will be found to
-exchange with each other, just in the same way as they would exchange
-with each other according to the quantity of labour employed on them,
-if labour had been the sole ingredient which had entered into their
-composition.
-
-Thus, if a hundred days labour were employed upon a commodity, at two
-shillings a day, and the average interval between the advance of such
-wages and the period when the commodity could be brought to sale were
-a year, and profits were 20 per cent. the price of the commodity would
-be £12, while the price of a commodity which had cost the same quantity
-of labour of the same kind, and could be brought to market immediately,
-would be only £10. And it is equally certain, that, if putting money
-or any other medium of exchange out of the question, we had estimated
-the profits for a year upon the advances of the hundred days labour
-actually employed, we should obtain a quantity of labour which,
-compared with the labour employed on the commodity sold immediately,
-would be in the proportion of 120 to 100, and expressing the relative
-conditions of supply, would accurately measure the rate at which the
-two commodities obtained under these different circumstances would
-exchange with each other.
-
-It appears, then, that in the same country, and at the same time,
-the exchangeable value of those commodities which can be resolved
-into labour and profits alone, would be accurately measured by the
-quantity of labour which would result from adding to the accumulated
-and immediate labour actually worked up in them the varying amount
-of the profits on all the advances estimated in labour. But this
-must necessarily be the same as the quantity of labour which they
-will command, as appears from the instances above stated, and will
-be more fully shown farther on; and where the precious metals may be
-considered for short periods as of a uniform value, the conformity of
-this measure with the proportions of money prices at which commodities
-would be exchanging all around us, might daily be brought to the test
-of experience and be established beyond the possibility of doubt.
-
-It will be said, perhaps, that in the same place, and at the same
-time, almost every commodity may be considered as an accurate measure
-of the relative value of others, and that what is true of labour in
-this respect is true of cloth, cotton, iron, or any other article. Any
-two commodities which, at the same time, and in the same place, will
-purchase or command the same quantity of cloth, cotton, or iron, of a
-given quality, will have the same relative value, or will exchange with
-each other.
-
-This will be readily granted, if we take the same time and place
-exactly, and consider only relative value; but not if either any
-latitude be allowed as to time and place, or if we consider, as it
-is our object to do, not merely relative, but absolute and natural
-value. Cloth, cotton, iron, and similar commodities, are subject to
-vary most essentially in a single year, or even month, so that the
-manufacturer who could obtain for his goods the same quantity of cloth
-as he could the year before, would be very little likely to obtain the
-same quantity of other articles. But even supposing that these articles
-and the product of the capitalist were to continue of the same relative
-value to each other, he might still be quite unable to carry on his
-business. The conditions of the supply of commodities do not require
-that they should retain always the same relative values, but that each
-should retain its proper _natural_ value, or the means of obtaining
-those objects which will continue to the producer the same power of
-production and accumulation. If the advances of capitalists consisted
-specifically in cloth, then these advances would always have the effect
-required in production; and as profits are calculated upon the advances
-necessary to production, whatever they may be, the quantity of cloth
-advanced, with the addition of the ordinary profits estimated also in
-quantity of cloth, would represent both the natural and relative value
-of the commodity. But the specific advances of capitalists do not
-consist of cloth, but of labour; and as no other object whatever can
-represent a given quantity of labour, it is obvious that labour stands
-quite alone in this respect, and that it is the quantity of _labour_
-which a commodity will command, and not the quantity of any other
-commodity, which can represent the conditions of its supply, or its
-natural value.[D]
-
-It will be allowed, then,
-
-First, that when commodities are obtained by labour alone, and sold
-immediately, they will, on an average, exchange with each other
-according to the quantity of labour employed upon them.
-
-Secondly, that when profits are concerned, and differ either in rate or
-quantity, commodities can no longer exchange with each other, according
-to the quantity of labour employed upon them, except by accident.
-
-Thirdly, that the quantity of accumulated and immediate labour applied
-to their production, must, in all the less complex cases, form the
-advances on which profits may be correctly calculated.
-
-And, fourthly, that when profits are calculated upon these advances,
-a quantity of labour is obtained, according to which it is found, by
-experience, that commodities do exchange with each other in the same
-country; and, further, that this quantity of labour not only expresses
-correctly their value in exchange with each other, but their absolute
-and natural value in reference to the conditions of their supply.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In proceeding to consider what takes place in different countries where
-the value of the precious metals is very different, it will readily be
-acknowledged, that the rate at which commodities exchange with each
-other is not proportioned to the labour which has been employed upon
-them, with the addition of profits. And it is quite certain, that
-they cannot be proportioned to the quantity of labour alone of which
-they are composed. We know, from experience, that the commodities of
-different countries are actually exchanged with each other according to
-their money prices at the time. These prices must be determined partly
-by those natural elements of value which determine the rate at which
-commodities exchange with each other, and the natural conditions of
-their supply in each country, and partly by the different value of the
-precious metals in different situations, which must necessarily have
-a most powerful effect on the rate at which foreign commodities are
-exchanged.
-
-Knowing then the elements of the natural and relative value of
-commodities in the same country, if we knew also the difference in the
-value of money in different countries, we should know at once the rate
-at which the commodities of different countries would exchange with
-each other.
-
-Now there is no supposition but one, relating to the value of money in
-different countries, which, combined with the natural elements of the
-value of produce in each, would constitute the present natural prices
-of commodities in these countries, or the rates at which they actually
-exchange with each other. This is the supposition that the differences
-in the value of money in different countries are proportioned to the
-differences in the money prices of agricultural labour.[E]
-
-The conditions of the supply of an Indian commodity are the advance and
-consumption of a certain quantity of Indian labour, with the profits
-on all the advances for the time that they are employed. Thus, if for
-the production of an Indian commodity, a fixed capital consisting of
-accumulated labour and profits, equal to 300 days, were advanced for a
-year, and a quantity of accumulated and immediate labour, consisting
-of the wear and tear of the machinery, the materials to be worked up,
-and direct labour, equal to 1500 days, were consumed on the commodity
-in the same time, profits being 20 per cent., the natural value of such
-commodity in India would be equal to the 1500 days labour consumed,
-with a profit of 20 per cent. upon 1800 days labour, which would amount
-to 1860 days labour.
-
-If labour in India were fourpence a day, the fixed money capital in
-this case would equal £5, the labour advanced and consumed £25, and
-the labour consumed, together with the profits on the whole advances,
-would be equal to £31. And this would evidently be the natural price
-at which the commodity would circulate, and according to which it would
-exchange with any foreign commodity brought to India.
-
-On the same principle, if for the production of an English commodity,
-300 days labour were advanced in fixed capital for a year, and 1500
-days labour were consumed on the commodity in the same time, while
-profits were 10 per cent., the natural value of such commodity, or the
-conditions of its supply, would be 1500 days labour, with a profit
-of 10 per cent. upon 1800, which together would equal 1680: and if
-labour were two shillings a day, the natural price at which the
-commodity would circulate, and according to which it would exchange
-with any foreign commodity brought to England, would be £168. This
-prodigious difference in the natural prices of two commodities in
-England and India, the natural values of which in each country were
-nearly the same, could only arise from a difference in the value of
-money occasioned by the very superior efficiency of English labour in
-the purchase of the precious metals, owing to the energy, skill, and
-situation of English labourers and capitalists, compared with those
-of India. But in estimating this difference in the value of money in
-England and India, it is quite obvious, that if, after ascertaining
-the natural conditions of the supply of a commodity in each country,
-we were to estimate the value of money either by its general power of
-purchasing, by a mean between corn and labour,[F] or by the quantity
-of labour alone which had been actually employed in bringing the
-money from the mine to the market, or by any other measure whatever,
-except the labour which it would command, we should not account for
-the natural prices which are found actually to prevail in the two
-countries, and according to which Indian and English commodities are
-found to exchange with each other by experience.
-
-Consequently, as no other supposition will suit the actual phenomena,
-and as it has already appeared that the value of commodities in the
-same country is determined by the quantity of labour which they will
-command, we may safely conclude that the value of the precious metals
-in different countries is determined by the same measure, or by the
-different quantities of common agricultural labour, taking the average
-of summer and winter wages, which a given portion of them will command.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When we come to consider the varying value of commodities at distant
-periods in the same country, or the rise or fall of produce in the
-progress of cultivation and improvement, we are necessarily deprived
-of the test of an actual exchange. We know, however, that at different
-periods in the same country both the value of the precious metals, and
-the rate of profits and corn wages, may alter most essentially.
-
-The effect of the varying value of the precious metals, when we have
-once obtained a measure of value, will be easily estimated. The most
-important point at present is, to consider the effects which must be
-produced upon the value of commodities in the progress of society, by
-the changes which necessarily take place in the profits of stock and
-the corn wages of labour.
-
-On the supposition of high profits at an early period of society, and
-a considerable fall of them subsequently, how are we to measure and
-compare the value of commodities at these different periods? With
-regard to those which had continued to cost the same quantity of
-accumulated and immediate labour, we could not say that they were of
-the same value, unless we were prepared to assert that the value of
-commodities is determined solely by the labour employed upon them,
-not only when the rate of profits is the same but when it is totally
-different;[G] a proposition which no one can venture to assert in the
-case of foreign commodities, and which there is as little reason to
-assert in comparing the commodities of distant periods.
-
-If profits were 50 per cent. five hundred years ago, and are 10 per
-cent. now, the question is, whether a piece of cloth which had cost
-the same quantity of labour at these different periods would be of the
-same value. By the supposition it was composed of a greater quantity
-of profits in the earlier period, and having cost the same quantity of
-labour, we should naturally conclude that it would be of a higher value.
-
-It is said, however, that, although it cost the same quantity of
-labour, yet that the labour in the former period was of much less
-value, which would counterbalance the greater quantity of profits, and
-leave the value obtained by the same quantity of labour the same. But
-when we are thus referred to the lower value of labour, the principle
-of compensation which had before been applied is quite forgotten. The
-corn which pays the labourer is indeed obtained by a smaller quantity
-of labour, on account of the superior fertility of the soil from which
-it is raised, but it is sold as the cloth is sold, at a profit of 50
-per cent.; and if it be said that, in the case of the cloth, the low
-value of wages which is supposed to be the result of superior fertility
-counteracts the high profits and keeps the value of cloth the same,
-surely it may be said, in the case of the corn which pays the wages,
-that the smaller quantity of labour necessary to produce it is made up
-by the greater rate of profits at which it is sold, and the value of
-wages is thus kept the same.
-
-If 100 quarters of corn be obtained in the different periods of society
-by the labour of a different number of men, such as 7, 8 and 9, each
-paid at the rate of 10 quarters a year, the value of the 100 quarters
-of corn, or the value of the wages of any one of the men employed,
-estimated in the labour advanced, with the addition of the profits
-upon such advances, must obviously always be the same.
-
-At an early period of society, when the soil was very fertile and the
-labour of 7 men only was necessary to produce 100 quarters of corn
-on land which paid little or no rent, the advances in labour being 7
-men, or in corn 70 quarters, and the return 100 quarters, the rate of
-profits would be 42-6/7 per cent., and the advances of the labour of
-7 men increased by a profit of 42-6/7 would equal the labour of 10
-men, or the quantity of labour which the whole return would command.
-At a more advanced period, when the last land taken into cultivation
-was less fertile, and the labour of 8 men was necessary to obtain the
-return of 100 quarters, the advances in labour being 8 men, or in corn
-80 quarters, the rate of profits would be 25 per cent., and the labour
-of 8 men increased by 25 per cent. would exactly equal the labour of
-10 men. On the same principle, if at a still later period 9 men were
-necessary to produce the 100 quarters, the rate of profits would be
-11-1/9 per cent., and the quantity of labour employed increased by the
-profits would still be equal to the labour of 10 men.
-
-It appears then that when the labourer continues to be paid the same
-corn wages, the value of the whole corn produce, or the value of each
-man’s wages estimated in the usual way in labour and profits, must
-obviously remain constant, and that it must be most erroneous to infer
-that labour rises in value because it requires more labour in the
-progress of cultivation to produce the wages of 10 men or one man, if
-at the same time it requires such a diminished value of profits as
-exactly to balance it.
-
-But in the progress of cultivation, the corn wages of labour do not
-continue the same, and corn must consequently be liable to great
-variation of value, both on account of temporary variations in the
-state of the supply compared with labour, and on account of the more
-permanent state of the demand and supply of corn compared with labour,
-owing to the increasing difficulty of production.
-
-It may be laid down, however, as a general proposition, liable to no
-exception, that when the value of any produce can be resolved into
-labour and profits, then as the _proportion_ of such produce which goes
-to labour increases, the proportion which goes to profits must decrease
-in the same degree, and as the _proportion_ which goes to labour
-decreases, the proportion which goes to profits must increase in the
-same degree.[H]
-
-Thus if ¾ of the produce, whatever that produce may be, go to labour, ¼
-will remain for profits; if ⅚ go to labour, ⅙ will remain for profits;
-and if ½ only go to labour, ½ will remain for profits.
-
-In reference to corn or commodities in general, compared with each
-other at different periods in the progress of cultivation, it is
-obvious that neither an increase in the quantity of labour required to
-produce them, nor an increase in the quantity of produce awarded to
-the labourer, can ever determine the proportion of the whole produce
-which goes to labour and affect profits accordingly; because if the
-quantity of labour required to produce them increases, the effect of
-this upon profits may be totally destroyed by a diminution at the same
-time of the quantity of produce awarded to the labourer; or if a larger
-quantity of produce be awarded to the labourer, it may be only in
-consequence of a smaller quantity of labour being necessary to obtain
-the same produce, in which case profits may remain undiminished, or
-even rise, at the same time that corn wages rise.
-
-But if instead of referring to commodities generally, we refer to the
-variable quantity of produce which, under different circumstances,
-forms the wages of a given number of labourers, we shall find that the
-variable quantity of labour required to obtain this produce will always
-exactly agree with the proportion of the whole produce which goes to
-labour; because, however variable may be the amount of this produce, it
-will be divided into a number of parts equal to the number of labourers
-which it will command, and as the first set of labourers who produced
-these wages may be considered as having been paid at the same rate as
-the second set, whose labour the produce commands; it is obvious that
-if to obtain the produce which commands ten labourers, 6, 7, 8, or
-9 labourers be required, the proportion of the produce which goes to
-labour, in these different cases, will be 6/10, 7/10, 8/10, or 9/10,
-leaving 4/10, 3/10, 2/10, or 1/10, for profits.
-
-It is impossible to refer what is proposed as a standard to any
-_other_ measure, because, in that case, the other measure would be the
-standard. But if it can be shown, that any object, the value of which
-is composed of two elements, is of such a nature that while the value
-of one of these elements increases, the value of the other decreases
-exactly in the same degree, such object must be of a constant value.
-If the values of two variable quantities, _X_ and _Y_, be equal to the
-constant value _A_, it follows that, in all the variations to which
-_X_ and _Y_ are subject, whatever value _X_ gains must be lost by _Y_,
-and whatever value _Y_ gains must be lost by _X_. The converse of this
-proposition must also be true, that is, if the value of any object be
-made up of the variable values of two other objects, and it can be
-shown that, from the nature of these two objects, whatever increase
-of value one of them gains, must necessarily be lost by the other,
-and vice versâ, it follows that the value of the object, to which the
-two others are equal, must be constant. Now it has appeared that the
-variable values of the labour and of the profits which compose the
-value of the variable quantity of corn awarded in wages to a given
-number of labourers, must necessarily be such, that, as the quantity
-of labour required to produce them increases, either from difficulty
-of production or from the greater quantity of produce awarded to the
-labourer, all the value thus gained by labour is lost by profits; and
-as the quantity of labour required to produce them is diminished,
-either by facility of production or the small quantity of produce
-awarded to the labourer, all the value which is gained by profits is
-lost by labour. Consequently, the value of the variable quantity of
-produce which, under different circumstances, forms the wages of a
-given number of men, being composed of the values of the two elements,
-labour and profits, varying as above described, must be constant, and
-may therefore, with propriety, be proposed as a standard measure.
-
-I have entered at some length into the details which show the necessary
-constancy of the value of labour, on account of its great importance;
-but, in reality, it follows directly from the manner in which the
-natural value of commodities and of wages is estimated, that when the
-labourer earns a greater or a smaller quantity of money or necessaries,
-it is not the value of labour which varies, but, as Adam Smith says,
-“it is the goods which are cheap in the one case and dear in the other.”
-
-If labour alone, without any capital, were employed in procuring the
-fruits of the earth, the greater facility of procuring one sort of them
-compared with another, would not, it is acknowledged, alter the value
-of labour, or the exchangeable value of the whole produce obtained by a
-given quantity of exertion. We should, without hesitation, allow that
-the difference was in the cheapness or dearness of the produce, not of
-the labour.
-
-In the same manner it will follow, that when capital and profits enter
-into the computation of value, and the demand for labour varies, the
-high or low reward of labour estimated in produce, implies a change in
-the value of the produce, not a change in the value of the labour.
-
-If the increased reward of the labourer takes place without an increase
-of produce, this cannot happen without a fall of profits, as it is
-a self-evident truth, that given the quantity of the produce to be
-divided between labour and profits, the greater the portion of it which
-goes to labour the less will be left for profits. What then will be
-the result? It will appear that the value of the produce has fallen,
-and the value of wages, or of labour, will have remained the same. To
-obtain any given portion of the produce the same quantity of labour is
-necessary as before, but profits being diminished, the value of the
-produce is decreased; while this diminution of profits in reference to
-the value of wages is just counterbalanced by the increased quantity
-of labour necessary to procure the increased produce awarded to the
-labourer, leaving the value of labour the same as before.
-
-Perhaps in the case just supposed, the result may be said to be
-occasioned by a fall in the value of the produce, without what could
-properly be called an increased demand for labour. But if we suppose
-that a considerable number of labourers were sent out of the country,
-or swept off by a plague, there could then be no doubt of a great
-demand for labour, yet the result would be similar. A larger quantity
-of produce would necessarily be awarded to the labourer, and profits
-would fall. A given quantity of produce obtained by the same quantity
-of labour as before, would fall in value on account of the fall of that
-part of its value which consisted of profits, while the fall of profits
-on the increased wages would be balanced by the increased labour
-necessary to obtain them.
-
-If instead of labourers being sent out of the country, labourers were
-imported, the result would be just opposite. A smaller quantity of
-produce would be awarded to the labourer and profits would rise. A
-given quantity of produce, which had been obtained by the same quantity
-of labour as before, would rise in value on account of the rise of
-profits, while this rise of profits, in reference to the wages of the
-labourer, would be balanced by the smaller quantity of labour necessary
-to obtain the diminished produce awarded to the labourer.
-
-In the former case of the demand for labour, it appeared that the
-greater earnings of the labourer were occasioned, not by a rise in the
-value of labour, but by a fall in the value of the produce for which
-the labour was exchanged. And in the latter case of the abundance
-of labour, it appeared that the small earnings of the labourer were
-occasioned by a rise in the value of the produce, and not by a fall in
-the value of the labour.
-
-The result would be similar, if instead of supposing the same quantity
-of produce to be obtained by the same quantity of labour, we were to
-suppose the greatest variations to take place in the fertility of
-the soil, and, consequently, in the productive power of labour. In
-all cases it would still be found that, as Adam Smith says, it is
-the produce which varies in value, not the labour for which it will
-exchange; and if money were obtained in the way in which its value
-would unquestionably be the most constant, all these variations would
-appear in the money prices of commodities, whenever the demand for
-labour varied; while the money price of a given quantify of labour
-would remain the same.[I]
-
-The following Table will further illustrate the necessary constancy
-in the value of labour, and some of its most important results, in a
-clearer manner and in a shorter compass than if each case were taken
-separately.
-
-The first column represents the varying fertility of the soil, by the
-varying quantity of corn which can be obtained by the labour of a given
-number of men.
-
-The second column represents the yearly corn wages of each labourer,
-determined by the state of the demand and supply of produce compared
-with labour.
-
-The third column represents the variable advances of produce, in the
-form of corn wages, which, according to the rate at which the labourers
-are paid, are necessary to obtain the produce of the first column.
-
-The fourth column represents the rate of profits determined in the
-common way, by the proportion which the excess of the produce in the
-first column above the produce paid to the labourers in the third,
-bears to these advances.
-
-The fifth and sixth columns represent the quantity of labour required
-to produce the varying corn wages of the given number of men, with the
-profits estimated also in quantity of labour; and the reader will see
-at once that these two columns must necessarily, from the manner in
-which profits and wages are estimated, make up the constant quantity
-and value of labour which appears in the seventh column.
-
-The eighth and ninth columns show the value of a given quantity of
-corn, and the value of the produce of a given number of men under the
-varying circumstances supposed.
-
-_Table illustrating the invariable Value of Labour and its Results._
-
- KEY:
-
- 1. Quarters of Corn produced by Ten Men, of varying Fertility of the
- Soil.
-
- 2. Yearly Corn Wages to each Labourer, determined by the Demand and
- Supply.
-
- 3. Advances in Corn Wages, or variable Produce commanding the Labour
- of Ten Men.
-
- 4. Rate of Profits under the foregoing Circumstances.
-
- 5. Quantity of Labour required to produce the Wages of Ten Men under
- the foregoing Circumstances.
-
- 6. Quantity of Profits on the Advances of Labour.
-
- 7. Invariable Value of the Wages of a given Number of Men.
-
- 8. Value of 100 Quarters of Corn under the varying Circumstances
- supposed.
-
- 9. Value of the Product of the Labour of Ten Men under the
- Circumstances supposed.
-
- +---------+--------+---------+-----------+------+------+----+------+-------+
- | 1. | 2. | 3. | 4. | 5. | 6. | 7. | 8. | 9. |
- +---------+--------+---------+-----------+------+------+----+------+-------+
- | 150 qrs.| 12 qrs.| 120 qrs.| 25 pr. Ct.| 8 | 2 | 10 | 8.33 | 12.5 |
- | 150 | 13 | 130 | 15.38 | 8.66 | 1.34 | 10 | 7.7 | 11.53 |
- | 150 | 10 | 100 | 50 | 6.6 | 3.4 | 10 | 10 | 15 |
- | 140 | 12 | 120 | 16.66 | 8.6 | 1.4 | 10 | 7.14 | 11.6 |
- | 140 | 11 | 110 | 27.2 | 7.85 | 2.15 | 10 | 9.09 | 12.7 |
- | 130 | 12 | 120 | 8.3 | 9.23 | 0.77 | 10 | 8.33 | 10.8 |
- | 130 | 10 | 100 | 30 | 7.7 | 2.3 | 10 | 10 | 13 |
- | 120 | 11 | 110 | 9 | 9.17 | 0.83 | 10 | 9.09 | 10.9 |
- | 120 | 10 | 100 | 20 | 8.33 | 1.67 | 10 | 10 | 12 |
- | 110 | 10 | 100 | 10 | 9.09 | 0.91 | 10 | 10 | 11 |
- | 110 | 9 | 90 | 22.2 | 8.18 | 1.82 | 10 | 11.1 | 12.2 |
- | 100 | 9 | 90 | 11.1 | 9 | 1 | 10 | 11.1 | 11.1 |
- | 100 | 8 | 80 | 25 | 8 | 2 | 10 | 12.5 | 12.5 |
- | 90 | 8 | 80 | 12.5 | 8.88 | 1.12 | 10 | 12.5 | 11.25 |
- +---------+--------+---------+-----------+------+------+----+------+-------+
-
-The first and most important truth illustrated in the table is, that,
-from the division of value into labour and profits, and the mode in
-which profits are always estimated, it follows necessarily, that the
-quantity of labour required to produce the wages of a given number of
-men, with the addition of the profits upon these advances estimated
-in labour, must always be exactly the same as the quantity of labour
-which the wages will command, and must together always make up the
-constant quantity which appears in the seventh column. But the quantity
-of labour required to produce the varying wages of ten men is, under
-the different circumstances supposed, very different, as appears in
-the fifth column; and it is obvious, that while the numbers in the
-fifth column vary, the numbers in the seventh column, or the quantity
-of labour and profits united, cannot be constant, unless, as the
-quantity of labour required to produce the wages of ten men increases,
-the quantity of profits estimated in labour diminishes exactly in the
-same degree. But this, from what has before been stated, must, under
-the circumstances supposed, be the case. And it follows, that if the
-natural value of a commodity may be estimated by the labour and profits
-of which it is composed, the natural value of the corn wages of a
-given number of men must always be the same. But such wages, according
-to the postulate with which we commenced, must necessarily be equal to
-the quantity of labour for which they will exchange. Consequently the
-value of a given quantity of labour must, under every variety which can
-take place in the fertility of the soil and the corn wages of labour,
-be always constant. It is, however, of the greatest importance to
-remark, that an exact balance of labour, and of profits estimated in
-labour, so as to yield always a constant quantity, cannot take place in
-the production of any one commodity or given portion of a commodity;
-because any one commodity, or given portion of a commodity, is liable
-to vary in relation to labour, and such variation will either increase
-or decrease the amount of the labour and profits united. It is only the
-varying wages of a given number of men bearing, as the terms imply, a
-constant relation to labour, which, under any changes in the quantity
-of labour required to produce them, can still continue of the same
-natural value. And it is precisely this necessary constancy in the
-natural value of the varying corn wages of labour, which renders the
-labour which a commodity will command, a standard measure both of its
-natural and exchangeable value.
-
-2dly. It appears from the Table, that given the produce obtained by ten
-men, then as corn wages rise, the value of the produce will fall, or
-command less labour; and the constant value of the advances in labour
-absorbing a larger proportion of the value of the produce, profits will
-fall in proportion. But when more is produced by the same number of
-persons, then unless the corn wages rise so high as exactly to balance
-it, the value of the whole produce is increased, and the rate of
-profits and corn wages may both rise at the same time. Thus while the
-produce is 130 quarters, as labour rises from ten to twelve quarters,
-profits fall in an opposite direction from 30 per cent. to 8.3. per
-cent.; but if we compare the wages of labour when the produce is 130
-quarters, with the wages of labour when the produce is 150, it appears
-that labour may rise from twelve to thirteen quarters, at the same time
-that profits rise from 8.3. to 15.38.
-
-A third result illustrated in the Table is, that labour being constant,
-all commodities into which profits enter, which may be said to be
-nearly the whole mass, must fall on the fall of profits, and among
-these will, of course, be found metallic money. Supposing, therefore,
-money always to require in its production the same quantity of labour
-and capital, it will regularly fall in value in the progress of
-cultivation and population; while labour being uniform in value will
-rise in money price,[J] and the demand for corn increasing, compared
-with the demand for labour, the money price of corn will probably rise
-still more. But if the labourers were paid at all times exactly the
-same quantity of corn, (which, however, cannot be the case,) the value
-of corn, like the value of wages, would be constant, and the variations
-of fertility would only show themselves in the enormous variations of
-profits.
-
-Thus, when labour is paid at ten quarters each man, the numbers in the
-eighth column, or the value of a given quantity of corn, must, it is
-obvious, always be the same, whatever be the quantity produced; and
-when the land is fertile, the small quantity of labour required to
-produce ten quarters is balanced by the great profits which appear in
-the fourth column.
-
-In the actual state of things, corn generally rises in the progress
-of cultivation, not only nominally, but really, as may be seen in the
-eighth column, while labour, it is evident, can only rise nominally.
-
-A fourth result shown in the Table is, that the value of the corn
-obtained by ten men depends mainly upon the rate of profits, which
-again depends mainly upon the demand and supply of corn compared with
-labour. If corn be in such demand, that notwithstanding the fertility
-of the soil, a small quantity of it comparatively will purchase the
-labour required, profits will be very high, and the value of the
-produce will greatly exceed the constant value of the wages of the
-labour advanced; but if the supply of corn be so great, compared with
-labour, that a large quantity of it is required to purchase the given
-quantity of labour, profits will be low, and the excess of the value of
-the produce above the constant value of the advances in wages will be
-inconsiderable.
-
-Thus, when the produce is 150 quarters, if corn be in such plenty that
-each labourer is awarded thirteen quarters, the profits of stock will
-be only 15.38 per cent.; and this rate of profit, added to the constant
-value of the advances in labour, which are represented by 10, will
-make the natural value of the produce equal to 11.53. But if corn,
-notwithstanding the fertility of the soil, be only supplied in such
-quantities, compared with labour, as to award the labourer no more than
-ten quarters, the rate of profits, instead of 15.38 per cent., will be
-50 per cent., and the value of the produce, instead of being 11.53,
-will be 15.
-
-This shows how greatly the natural value of commodities depends upon
-the average state of the demand and supply, and completely confirms
-the position in my last work, that the only difference between natural
-and market prices is, that the former are regulated by the average and
-ordinary relations of the demand to the supply, and the latter, when
-they differ from the former, upon the accidental and extraordinary
-relations of the demand to the supply.
-
-Fifthly, it follows, from the constant value of labour, that,
-
-Given the value of money in different countries, the natural prices of
-commodities, in which the same quantities of labour have been employed,
-will depend upon the rate and quantity of profits.
-
-Given the rate and quantity of profits, and the value of money, the
-natural prices of commodities in different countries will depend upon
-the quantity of labour employed upon them.
-
-And given the quantity of labour employed on them, and the rate and
-quantity of profits, the natural prices of commodities will depend upon
-the value of money.
-
-But in reality none of the ingredients of natural or money price are
-given, excepting the natural value of labour, and consequently the
-money prices of commodities which regulate the ordinary rate at which
-different countries exchange their commodities with each other, will be
-determined partly by the quantity of labour employed upon them, partly
-by the ordinary rate of profits, and partly by the value of money.
-
-The value of metallic money, it has before been stated, while it
-continues to be obtained by the same quantity of labour and capital,
-must always fall with the fall of profits, and will consequently
-have a strong tendency to fall with the progress of cultivation and
-improvement; but as few nations comparatively have mines of their own,
-the supplies which they obtain of the precious metals must be purchased
-by their exportable commodities; and these are produced and exported
-under such a variety of circumstances, in respect to cost, and the
-value of the same amount of the precious metals is further so much
-affected by the demand for corn and labour, the state of credit, paper
-currencies, taxation, and other circumstances, that no rule can safely
-be laid down on the subject.
-
-Generally the value of money is the lowest in the richest and most
-manufacturing countries; but this is not always the case; and a country
-which raises an abundance of raw produce at a small expense of labour
-and profits, while its money value is kept up by a ready sale for it
-in foreign markets, and a continued demand for labour, may have the
-value of its money very low, although it is not rich or manufacturing.
-This is the case with the United States of America, where, owing to the
-low value of money, or high money price of labour, there are no doubt
-some commodities which, though produced by a less value of labour and
-profits, cannot be exported to England on account of the higher value
-of money in England; while we know that there are many other products
-which are obtained by so much a smaller quantity of labour and profits
-as more than to counterbalance the higher value of money in England, or
-the higher money price of labour in the United States.
-
-In the same manner there are no doubt many commodities which, though
-obtained in England by a much less quantity of labour and profits than
-in India, cannot be exported to that country on account of the very
-high value of money in India; while, on the other hand, there are a few
-commodities in England in which the saving of labour and the effects of
-capital and skill have been so great, as to allow of their exportation
-from a country where the money wages of labour are two shillings a day,
-to one where they are only fourpence; that is, from a country where
-the value of money is six times lower than in the country to which the
-commodities are sent.
-
-On the same principle, commodities may be imported from India into
-England, although the same commodities might be produced in England
-by a much less quantity of labour and profits, the low value of money
-in England more than compensating the greater quantity of labour and
-profits employed in India.
-
-It is evident, therefore, that the values which determine what
-commodities shall be exported, and what imported, depend, as before
-stated, partly upon the quantity of labour employed in their
-production, partly upon the ordinary rates of profits in each country,
-and partly upon the value of money.
-
-A sixth result illustrated in the Table is the important distinction
-between cost and value. The two last columns show the value of a given
-quantity of corn, and the value of the product of a given quantity of
-labour, under all the variations which may be supposed of fertility and
-corn wages. The difference between the numbers in the last column, and
-the uniform number expressing the value of labour, shows exactly the
-difference between the value of the labour which has been employed upon
-a production, or its cost, and the labour which that production will
-command, or its natural and exchangeable value; which, where profits
-and wages are alone concerned, must be exactly equal to the additional
-value occasioned by the amount of profits.
-
-The reader will be aware that neither the preceding Table, nor any
-thing which has been said, tends in any degree to contradict the
-acknowledged truth that different _kinds_ of labour are of very
-different natural and exchangeable value. It will be further allowed,
-that even the same kind of labour, and the kind which has been
-especially referred to, namely common agricultural labour, may, under
-particular circumstances, and in particular places, vary in value from
-a partial or temporary state of demand and supply. We well know, that,
-from a partial and temporary demand at a particular period of the year,
-summer wages are of a very different value from winter wages; but in
-reality summer wages form a very important part of the wages of the
-whole year. They are generally employed to pay the rent of the house,
-or to purchase the necessary clothing for the family. They could not be
-essentially diminished, without altering the condition of the labourer
-throughout the year, or the rate of the increase of population. And if
-the labourer earned a smaller quantity of corn throughout the year,
-with an undiminished produce, it appears from the Table that the value
-of that corn would still remain the same, owing to the increased value
-of those profits of which it was in part composed.
-
-With regard to the variations in the value of labour in different
-parts of the same country, if they are not partial, or temporary, and
-consequently exceptions to the general average, they are all resolvable
-into those differences in the value of money, which unquestionably take
-place in different parts of the same country, and arise from a want of
-demand for corn and labour, and a want of commodities to exchange with
-those parts of the country which are richer in the precious metals.
-
-Having obtained a measure of the value of commodities in their more
-simple forms, we may apply this measure to the ingredients which
-compose the most complicated productions, and estimate all the advances
-which consist of accumulated profits, rents, tithes, and taxes in
-labour. In the case of taxes on the wages of labour, or an increase in
-the prices of those other necessaries of the labourer, besides food,
-which may occasion the sale of a greater quantity of the produce, in
-order to pay the same number of labourers, as these increased advances
-will have the same effect upon profits as a simple increase of wages,
-they will in no respect interfere with the constant value of labour,
-though an increase of wages, under such circumstances, will be of no
-advantage to the labourer.
-
-Cases will of course frequently occur, in which the advances which do
-not consist of wages vary in a different degree from wages; but still
-the value of labour will remain constant. If the produce, instead of
-being obtained by the direct labour of a certain number of men, were
-obtained by the direct labour of only a part of this number, together
-with an amount of materials, or other advances consumed in the same
-time, equal to the labour of the other part, then upon a rise in the
-corn wages of labour, if the other advances were to fall, or not to
-be worth so much labour as before, it is obvious that the profits of
-stock would not fall so much as if the same rise of corn wages had
-taken place, when all the advances had been in labour; and it might be
-thought at first that profits not falling in proportion to the rise of
-labour, the value of labour would not continue the same. But it will
-be observed, that, in all cases of this kind, there will be a less
-value of labour, which is equivalent to a less quantity of it employed
-to obtain the same produce; and a less quantity of labour altogether
-being consequently necessary to produce the food of the labourer, than
-if labour alone had been employed, the higher profits, or smaller
-diminution of the former profits, will only just be such as to maintain
-labour of a constant value.
-
-Let us suppose, for instance, that 120 quarters of corn are produced by
-ten men. If each man were paid ten quarters, profits would be 20 per
-cent.; and if wages were increased to eleven quarters, profits would
-fall from 20 per cent. to 9.09 per cent. Now supposing, that, instead
-of ten men being directly employed, five only are so employed, and that
-the other advances consist of capital which will continue of the same
-value as the corn;[K] then, while each labourer earns ten quarters,
-and the other capital advanced is worth the labour of five men so
-paid, profits will be, as before, 20 per cent. But if the labourer be
-paid eleven quarters instead of ten, profits will not fall, as before,
-from 20 per cent. to 9.09 per cent., but only from 20 per cent. to
-14.28 per cent.; because the advances, instead of being 110, will only
-be 105; and the value of these advances estimated in labour paid at
-eleven quarters each man, being only 9.54, instead of 10; 9.54 may be
-considered as the number of persons employed. Then if 120 quarters
-be produced by 9.54 men, 105 quarters will be produced by 8.34. But
-8.34, increased by a profit of 14.28, will make 9.54, the quantity of
-labour employed, and show that the natural value of labour is always
-proportioned to its quantity. In the former case, when ten men were
-employed at eleven quarters, as the advances were 110 quarters,
-instead of 105, the labour required to produce the food of the labourer
-was 9.166, and consequently a profit of only 9.09 will be sufficient to
-make up ten, the number of men employed, and thus equalize the value
-with the quantity.
-
-In the case of fixed capital of considerable duration, there is always
-a probability that it will alter in value in reference to the quantity
-of labour, and of profits estimated in labour, of which it was composed
-when first produced; but after having advanced so far in establishing
-the labour which a commodity will command, as the measure of its value,
-we are entitled to consider the present value estimated in labour of
-any fixed capital which is about to be employed in production, as
-representing the quantity of accumulated labour actually so applied.
-It is further necessary, as before stated, to reckon the remaining
-value of the fixed capital as a part of the produce resulting from the
-whole of the accumulated and immediate labour employed. When, however,
-these corrections have been made, all the cases in which fixed capital
-enters, which may be said to include the great mass of commodities,
-will be found to answer to the theory as accurately as the simplest
-case that can be stated.
-
-The exceptions, therefore, to the general proposition that the labour
-which commodities will command may be considered as a standard measure
-of their value are only apparent, not real, and may all be consistently
-explained.
-
-And if the proposition be true, a standard measure of value is of so
-much importance in political economy, and the one proposed is at all
-times so very ready and easy of application,[L] that there is scarcely
-any part of the science in which it will not tend to simplify and
-facilitate our inquiries.
-
-To advert shortly to a few points on which there have been some
-differences of opinion.
-
-On the subject of rents, such a standard would determine, among other
-things, that, as the increase in the _value_ of corn is only measured
-by a decrease in the corn wages of labour, such increase of value is
-a very inconsiderable source of the increase of rents compared with
-improvements in agriculture; and on the same principle that, if tithes
-do not fall mainly on the labourer, the acknowledged diminution in the
-_corn_ rents of the landlord, occasioned by tithes, cannot be balanced
-by an increase of their value, and that, consequently, tithes must fall
-mainly on the landlord.
-
-On the subject of labour it would determine, that the increasing
-_value_ of the funds destined for the maintenance of labour can alone
-occasion an increase in the demand for it, or the will and power
-to employ a greater number of labourers; and that it is consistent
-with theory, as well as general experience, that high corn wages, in
-proportion to the quantity of work done, should frequently occur with
-a very slack demand for labour;[M] or, in other words, that when the
-_value_ of the whole produce falls from excess of supply compared with
-the demand, it cannot have the power of setting the same number of
-labourers to work.
-
-On the subject of profits, it would show, that they are determined,
-not by the varying value of a given quantity of labour compared with
-the constant value of the commodities which it produces, but, as is
-more conformable to our experience, by the variable value of the
-commodities produced by a given quantity of labour, compared with the
-constant value of such labour; and that profits never, on any occasion,
-rise or fall, unless the value of the produce of a given quantity of
-labour rises or falls, either from the temporary or ordinary state of
-the demand and supply.
-
-On the subject of the distinction between wealth and value, it would
-show, that though they are by no means the same, they are much more
-closely connected than they have of late been supposed to be; and
-that the best practical measure of the relative wealth of different
-countries would be the quantity of common labour which the value of the
-whole annual produce of each country would enable it to command at the
-actual price of the time, which in some rich countries might amount
-to above double the number of families actually employed, and in poor
-countries might not greatly exceed such number.
-
-On the subject of foreign trade, it would show that its universally
-acknowledged effect in giving a stimulus to production, generally, is
-mainly owing to its increasing the value of the produce of a country’s
-labour by the extension of demand, before the value of its labour is
-increased by the increase of its quantity; and that the effect of every
-extension of demand, whether foreign or domestic, is always, as far as
-it goes, to increase the average rate of profits[N] till this increase
-is counteracted by a further accumulation of capital.
-
-On the subject of the accumulation of capital it would show that if the
-increase of capital be measured by the increase of its materials, such
-as corn, clothing, &c., then it is obvious that the supply of these
-materials may, by saving, increase so rapidly, compared with labour and
-the wants of the effective demanders, that with a greater quantity of
-materials the capitalist will neither have the power nor the will to
-set in motion the same quantity of labour, and that consequently the
-progress of wealth will be checked; but that if the increase of capital
-be measured, as it ought to be, by the increase of its power to command
-labour, then accumulation so limited cannot possibly go on too fast.
-
-On the general subject of demand and supply, it would show that they
-must be restored to their universal empire, both in reference to the
-prices of commodities, and the dependence of the progress of wealth on
-the due proportion maintained between them. If the cost of a commodity
-be considered as composed exclusively of the actual advances of the
-capital required for its production, which seems to be the most natural
-and correct mode of viewing it,[O] then it is obvious, that as both the
-prices and values of commodities are proportioned to these advances,
-with the _addition_ of profits very variable in their amount, neither
-of them can be determined by these advances alone, or by the costs of
-production so defined. We must therefore have recourse to demand and
-supply. And on the other hand, if profits be included in the costs of
-production, then, as it follows, from the constancy of the value of
-labour, that ordinary profits are determined by the ordinary demand
-compared with the ordinary supply of the products of the same quantity
-of labour, the certain conclusion must be, that demand and supply
-enter powerfully into the costs of production according to this latter
-definition, and that therefore their dominion as to prices and value is
-absolutely universal.[P]
-
-Nor would they be less so in their effect on the general progress of
-wealth. If commodities and the materials of capital increase faster
-than the effectual demand for them, profits fall prematurely, and
-capitalists are ruined without a proportionate benefit to the labouring
-classes, because an increasing demand for labour cannot go on under
-such circumstances. If the value of commodities and the materials of
-capital increase for some time without an increase of their quantity,
-the labouring classes must soon be supported on the lowest amount of
-food on which they will consent to keep up their actual number; and
-the main part of the population would suffer severely without any
-proportionate benefit to the capitalists; because the value of their
-capitals, measured by the labour which they can command, would shortly
-be incapable of further increase. In either of these cases a decided
-check would be given to the progress of wealth, which progress must
-necessarily be the greatest, when the joint product of the capitalist
-and labourer, which the state of the land and the skill with which
-it is worked enable them to obtain, is so divided between them, that
-in the progress of cultivation and improvement any unnecessary or
-premature fall either of profits or corn wages is prevented. But this
-can only be accomplished by a proper proportion of the supply to the
-demand, that is, by an accumulation so proportioned to the actual
-consumption of produce by those who can make an effectual demand for
-it, as to occasion the greatest permanent annual increase in the value
-of the materials of capital.
-
-The reader of my last work, in which I laid down as my rule, to admit
-no principles of Political Economy as just which were inconsistent
-with general experience, will be aware that the conclusions to which
-I have here shortly adverted, as following necessarily from the
-constancy of the value of labour, are almost exactly the same as the
-conclusions of that work. And the reason is, that although at that time
-I did not think that the labour which a commodity would command could,
-with propriety, be considered as a _standard_ measure of value, yet I
-thought it the nearest approximation to a standard of any one object
-known, and consequently applied it, on almost all occasions, to correct
-the errors arising from the application of more variable measures. The
-conclusions, therefore, of my former and present reasonings were likely
-to be nearly the same, although the premises might now admit of further
-correction and illustration, and the conclusions might be pronounced
-with greater precision and certainty.
-
-It was my intention to have done this much more fully than in
-the present treatise; but having been interrupted by unforeseen
-circumstances, and being unwilling to delay any longer the publication
-of this essential part of my proposed plan, I have determined to submit
-it to the public in its present form; and will only add here a few
-observations on a question closely connected with it, which has lately
-excited much interest and discussion.
-
-Among the questions for the determination of which a standard measure
-of value is most particularly required, are those which relate to
-alterations in the value of the currency. We know perfectly well, from
-experience, that commodities are subject to great variations of price,
-and that many of these variations may arise from causes which alter
-the natural value of these commodities, and are equally applicable to
-a large mass of them, as to a very few. On the supposition of a large
-mass being altered, any article which had retained the same natural
-value, would have its power of purchasing considerably affected;
-but this would be owing to an alteration in the value of the mass
-of commodities, and not in the value of the article, which by the
-supposition remains the same. It follows, that although money may
-increase in its power of purchasing, it does not necessarily increase
-in value. But in estimating the value of money, some criterion or other
-must be referred to. If we cannot refer to the mass of commodities, we
-must refer to some one object, and this object can only be labour. Our
-present inquiry, therefore, must be into the causes which affect the
-value of the precious metals as compared with labour.
-
-These causes are of two kinds:--first, those which occasion a high
-or low rate of profits, which, as connected with the progressive
-cultivation of poorer land, and operating universally and necessarily
-on the precious metals in common with all other commodities, and
-raising or lowering them with regard to labour, may be denominated
-the primary and necessary cause of the high or low value of metallic
-money.--And secondly, those which depend on the fertility and vicinity
-of the mines; the different efficiency of labour in different
-countries; the abundance or scarcity of exportable commodities; and the
-state of the demand and supply of commodities and labour compared with
-money; which may be denominated the secondary and incidental causes of
-the high or low value of metallic money.
-
-These two different kinds of causes will sometimes act in conjunction,
-and sometimes in opposition, so that it may not always be easy to
-distinguish their separate effects; but as these effects have really a
-different origin, it is desirable to keep them as separate as we can.
-
-The marks which distinguish a fall in the value of the precious metals,
-arising from the primary cause, are,--a rise in the money price of raw
-produce and labour, without a general rise in the price of wrought
-commodities. All of them, indeed, as far as they are composed of
-raw produce, will have a tendency to rise; but, in a large class of
-commodities, this tendency to rise will be more than counterbalanced
-by the effect of the fall of profits.--Some therefore will rise, and
-some will fall, as I stated in my last work,[Q] according to the nature
-of the capitals employed upon them, compared with those which produce
-money; and while the money prices of corn and labour very decidedly
-increase, the prices of commodities, taken on the average, may possibly
-remain not far from the same.
-
-On the other hand, when the value of metallic money falls, from
-the secondary causes above noticed, there will be a tendency to a
-proportionate rise of all commodities as well as of corn and labour,
-though in some cases it may take a considerable time before it is
-completely effected. And, in general, whenever a fall in the value of
-money takes place, without a fall in the rate of profits, an event
-which is generally open to observation, it is to be attributed to
-incidental and secondary causes affecting the relations of money to
-labour, and not to that which is connected with the taking of poorer
-land into cultivation.
-
-Of these two classes of causes the second produces much the greatest
-part of those differences in the value of metallic money, which are the
-most observable in different countries, and at different periods in
-the same country. If India and England had each of them mines of equal
-natural fertility, the superior efficiency of English labour, assisted
-by machinery, would extract a much greater quantity of metal from such
-mines; and the money price of labour might be three or four times
-higher, and the value of money three or four times lower in England
-than in India.
-
-The same effect is, at present, practically produced by the skill and
-machinery employed on the manufactures with which England purchases her
-gold. If she can prepare exportable commodities which are in demand
-abroad, with much less labour than other nations, she will be able to
-buy gold at a much lower natural value, and will continue to import it
-under favourable exchanges, till its value falls in proportion.
-
-It is farther established by experience, that a brisk or slack
-demand for commodities and labour, and particularly for corn, has
-a considerable effect on the value of gold. Such a demand not only
-occasions a more rapid circulation of money, and enables the same
-quantity to perform a greater number of transactions, but calls into
-action a greater quantity of credit and private paper,[R] so that a
-general rise of bullion prices, including labour, seems to be at all
-times possible, even without any fresh importations of the precious
-metals; and the only practical limit to this rise, is the turn of the
-exchange, and the impossibility of maintaining the exchanges nearly at
-par beyond a certain elevation of labour and commodities.
-
-The secondary and incidental causes here enumerated, as affecting the
-value of gold, often completely overcome the effects arising from the
-primary cause. The state of bullion prices in most of the countries of
-the commercial world make it evident, that the efficiency of labour,
-and the abundance of exportable commodities, are much more powerful
-in lowering the value of bullion in the countries where they prevail,
-than high profits in raising it; and the same appears to be true, in
-reference to an increased demand for corn and labour.
-
-It cannot be doubted that the rate of interest and profits was
-comparatively high during the late war, and this high rate of profits
-would naturally have a tendency to lower the bullion price of labour;
-but this was more than counterbalanced by the tendency of a brisk
-demand for corn and labour to raise money prices generally, including
-labour, and the consequence was a fall, during the greatest part of the
-time, in the value of bullion.
-
-It can as little be doubted, that the rate of interest and profits has
-fallen since the war, and this low rate of profits would have a natural
-tendency to raise the bullion price of labour; but this has been more
-than counterbalanced by the tendency of a slack demand for corn and
-labour to lower prices generally, and the consequence has been a rise
-in the value of gold, and a still greater rise in the value of the
-currency.
-
-This rise, however, in the value of the currency, has been by no means
-so considerable as those are inclined to make it, who would measure it
-by the fall of agricultural produce; nor is it so inconsiderable as
-those imagine who would measure it solely by the difference between
-paper and gold. But whether this difference is the whole of what can
-be fairly attributed to the Bank Restriction and the return to cash
-payments, or not, it may by no means be the whole change which has
-taken place in the value of the currency, when compared with an object
-which has not changed.
-
-It would be very desirable to be able to form an accurate estimate of
-the rise and fall which has taken place in the bullion price of labour
-for the last thirty years; but unfortunately, during the latter part of
-the period, no general estimates of the price of labour have been made,
-at least none that have come to my knowledge; and there is reason to
-think that, under the late stagnation in the demand for agricultural
-labour, the common rate of wages in England has been more than usually
-interrupted by the operation of the poor laws. On this account, I have
-made some inquiries respecting wages in Scotland, and have obtained a
-most valuable communication; but before I refer to it particularly,
-it may be useful to consider the results of the data we possess in
-England. The rise in the bullion price of labour from 1790 to 1810 and
-11, may be established upon satisfactory grounds, although the amount
-of the fall which has since taken place may be a matter of considerable
-uncertainty.
-
-According to the communications to the Board of Agriculture, the price
-of labour, in 1790, was 8_s._ 1_d._ per week. In 1796, Sir F. M.
-Eden, in his work on the Poor, stated it at 8_s._ 11_d._ per week. In
-1803, the communications to the Board of Agriculture make it 11_s._
-5_d._, and in 1810 and 11, according to satisfactory returns obtained
-by Arthur Young, it was 14_s._ 6_d._[S] This was a steady and very
-great rise in the price of agricultural labour during the course of
-twenty years. But in 1810 and 11, paper had separated from gold to a
-considerable extent. Taking an average of the market prices of gold
-during these two years, this price was £4. 13_s._ and reducing the
-14_s._ 6_d._ currency to a bullion price, it will appear that the
-bullion wages of labour in 1810 and 11 were a little above 12_s._ The
-bullion price of labour had therefore risen 50 per cent. Now, on the
-supposition that manufacturing and mercantile labour continued to bear
-the same proportion to agricultural labour as before,[T] it is obvious
-that there would be a difference of 50 per cent. between the quantity
-of labour and profits with which an ounce of gold could be purchased
-at the former period, compared with the latter; that is, while labour
-was 8_s._ 1_d._ per week, it would require a piece of muslin, which
-would command above nine and a half weeks labour, to purchase an ounce
-of gold; but when wages were 12_s._ per week, a piece of muslin, which
-would command little more than six and a half weeks labour, would be
-sufficient for the purpose. The natural value of bullion, therefore,
-the quantity of English labour and profits of which it was composed,
-must have fallen to that extent.
-
-Mr. Tooke, in his late valuable publication, after stating very justly
-that an unusual proportion of unfavourable seasons must have had a
-considerable effect in raising the prices of corn and labour during
-the period adverted to, goes on to “ask upon what ground of fact or
-reasoning can the high prices included in such a period be ascribed, in
-fairness, to alterations in the currency, beyond the degree indicated
-by the difference between paper and gold, when, after a sufficient time
-has elapsed for the subsidence of the extraordinary effects of such an
-unusual succession of bad seasons, there is a restoration to a level
-even somewhat lower than that from which the rise is assumed to have
-taken place, and to have continued progressively.”
-
-Of the subsidence here alluded to, before 1814, Mr. Tooke has certainly
-not given proofs sufficiently general; but without dwelling on this
-point, it appears to me that the question of the fall in the value of
-the currency including the gold, is exclusively a question of fact, and
-must be referred to some criterion. It is a very intelligible thing to
-say that paper has fallen, if it has fallen with regard to the gold
-which it professes to represent; but it is not intelligible to say
-that gold has not fallen, when it is acknowledged to have fallen both
-with regard to its power of purchasing generally, and its power of
-commanding labour; unless a reference can be made for the proof of it
-to some more satisfactory criterion. A season of scarcity will make
-corn dear, and a season of plenty cheap, without necessarily affecting
-labour in either case, as is shown by Adam Smith, and proved by
-repeated experience. But if seasons of scarcity occur so frequently as
-to raise generally the bullion price of labour, it must of necessity be
-accompanied by a power of purchasing bullion with a smaller quantity of
-labour and profits; otherwise the event could not occur. Whenever it
-does occur, the natural value of bullion falls.[U]
-
-The observations here made, with a view to place the controversy
-respecting the alterations in the currency on its proper ground, and to
-make the necessary distinction between facts and the causes which may
-have produced them, apply still more strongly to the publication of Mr.
-Blake, in much of the reasoning of which I entirely concur. He proposes
-to prove that it was the gold which rose, and not the paper which fell
-during the war, although he acknowledges as a matter of fact, that
-almost all prices, including labour, rose not only in paper but in
-gold. This has, no doubt, the air of a contradiction, according to all
-the common modes of estimating the value of money; and it certainly is
-not removed by showing that the main cause of these high prices was a
-great demand compared with the supply of commodities--a cause which,
-involving as it always does, more transactions on credit, and a more
-rapid circulation of currency, is one of the most legitimate causes of
-a fall in the value of money.
-
-Mr. Blake, however, is certainly right in his view of the effects of
-an unfavourable exchange on the price of gold, when it ceases to form
-a part of the circulation. It is not only possible that from this
-cause gold might for a time rise in value much beyond the expense of
-transporting it; but as a matter of fact, this did unquestionably occur
-at certain periods during the war. There is no account of the price
-of agricultural labour in England subsequently to 1811. Probably it
-did not rise any more; but if it did, judging from what took place in
-Scotland, it did not rise sufficiently to balance the subsequent rise
-in the market price of gold, which was from £4. 15_s._ in 1811, to £5.
-8_s._[V] in 1813. Consequently, in 1813, as compared with 1811, the
-value of gold must have risen considerably; and on the supposition that
-the price of labour did not rise after 1811, it would appear that the
-natural and exchangeable value of gold, as measured by the standard,
-rose above 13½ per cent.
-
-The rise of gold from the sudden fall of the exchange in consequence
-of Buonaparte’s return from Elba was still more remarkable. The price
-had been as low, in the spring of 1815, as 4_l._ 9_s._, and without
-any known change in the currency price of labour, it rose suddenly to
-5_l._ 5_s._, or 18 per cent.; and consequently, to purchase an ounce
-of gold it was necessary at that time to give commodities worth 18 per
-cent. more of agricultural labour than it might have been purchased
-for a month or two before. Whatever might have been the case with the
-paper, there could not, on any view of the subject, be the slightest
-foundation for the supposition of a sudden abundance and cheapness of
-labour just before the battle of Waterloo. In fact, agricultural labour
-had not fallen, and manufacturing labour was higher than usual; so
-that even without considering labour as a standard, it must have been
-acknowledged, that, of these two objects which had altered in relative
-value, it was the gold which had risen, not the labour which had fallen.
-
-In attempting to measure the _rise_ in the value of the currency since
-the period of the high prices, we shall be greatly assisted by the
-following very valuable document respecting the price of labour in the
-county or stewartry of Kircudbright. It is considered that the prices
-in this table represent pretty nearly (though they are rather below)
-the wages in other parts of Scotland. The labourers have no other
-allowances whatever except the daily wages specified in the table. In
-the intermediate years not quoted the wages remained stationary at the
-rates last mentioned; and when any change took place, the period of
-such change and the degree of it are regularly stated.
-
- --------+-----------+-----------
- | Rate per | Rate per
- Years. | day in | day in
- | winter. | summer.
- --------+-----------+-----------
- 1760 | 4_d._ | 6_d._
- 1765 | 6_d._ | 8_d._
- 1770 | 8_d._ | 10_d._
- 1772 | 8_d._ | 12_d._
- 1776 | 7_d._ | 9_d._
- 1780 | 8_d._ | 10_d._
- 1791 | 8_d._ | 11_d._
- 1793 | 9_d._ | 12_d._
- 1798 | 11_d._ | 14_d._
- 1799 | 12_d._ | 15_d._
- 1800 | 14_d._ | 16_d._
- 1802 | 16_d._ | 18_d._
- 1811 | 18_d._ | 22_d._
- 1812 | 20_d._ | 24_d._
- 1816 | 18_d._ | 22_d._
- 1817 | 16_d._ | 20_d._
- 1819 | 15_d._ | 18_d._
- 1822 | 12_d._ | 15_d._
-
-In 1812, farm servants boarded in the house received from 14_l._ to
-22_l._ a year; women servants from 5_l._ to 8_l._ At present, (April,
-1823,) men receive from 10_l._ to 14_l._, and women from 3_l._ 10_s._
-to 6_l._
-
-Masons’ wages per day were three shillings in 1812, and are now
-half-a-crown.
-
-All work done by the piece, such as building stone fences, cutting
-ditches either for fences or drains, making roads, &c. may be done at
-a greater reduction of price than the fall in the rate of labour by
-the day. Work is now performed more frequently by the piece; and the
-best labourers are employed by the day; while the inferior workmen, and
-those unable from age, or other causes, to perform a full day’s work,
-are turned over to work by the piece. Agricultural affairs are under
-such depression, that the work is curtailed, and the competition for
-work is thereby increased.[W]
-
-The first thing that strikes us in the table is the very remarkable
-rise of labour in Scotland from 1760--much greater than in England, and
-much greater than in proportion to the rise in the price of corn. This
-was no doubt owing in part to the comparatively unimproved state of the
-district in question, and of Scotland in general at the earliest period
-adverted to. But to go no farther back than 1790, the period with which
-we commenced in England, it appears that the rise from 1790 to 1811,
-was considerably greater than in England, and nearly in proportion
-to the rise in the price of wheat. If, indeed, we take the price of
-labour as mentioned in the table for 1812, and compare it with the
-average price of wheat for the four years from 1812 to 1815 inclusive,
-during which period the same price of labour seems to have continued,
-it will appear, that labour, taking summer and winter wages together,
-rose in the proportion of from 19_s._ to 44_s._, while wheat rose
-from 43_s._ in 1792, (according to the average of England and Wales,
-which commences with that year,) to 88_s._ and therefore labour rose
-decidedly more than wheat, except in reference to the peculiarly high
-price of wheat in 1812.
-
-Taking the currency price of labour in Scotland as having risen from
-9½_d._ to 22_d._, and reducing the 22_d._ to its value in bullion,
-the average price of bullion in that year being 5_l._ 1_s._, it will
-appear, that the bullion price of labour in Scotland rose, in the
-interval between 1790 and 1812, from 9½_d._ to 16½_d._, or nearly 73
-per cent. And consequently, the same quantity of gold for which it
-would have been necessary to give commodities worth 173 days labour in
-1790, might be purchased for 100 days labour in 1812; or the value of
-the currency estimated in gold might be considered as having fallen in
-that proportion.
-
-In 1812, the bullion price of labour as above stated was 16½_d._;
-it has since fallen to 13½_d._, or in the proportion of from 100 to
-81·8--rather more than 18 per cent. This view of it shows most clearly
-the change in the bullion value of the currency since 1812. But if we
-wish to estimate the whole fall which has taken place in the currency,
-and then subtract what is due to the difference between paper and
-gold, it will appear that the whole fall since 1812, estimated on the
-currency wages of 1812, has been rather less than 39 per cent.; of
-which, if the average difference between paper and gold in the year
-1812 was as 101 to 78, about 23 per cent. would belong to the paper,
-leaving about 16 per cent. for the fall in the currency independently
-of the excess of paper prices above gold prices. The apparent
-difference in the results of these estimates arises merely from the per
-centage in the latter case being taken on a higher number.
-
-I stated before, that I was not aware of any data on which reliance
-could be placed respecting the amount of the fall of agricultural wages
-in England since the termination of the war; but on the supposition
-that the wages, which in 1810 and 1811 were 14_s._ 6_d._ per week,
-had fallen to 10_s._ then as the bullion wages of 1810 and 1811 were
-a little above 12_s._, the fall in the bullion value of the currency
-would be nearly 17 per cent., or for the same quantity of gold which in
-1810 and 1811 might be purchased by commodities worth 83 days labour,
-it would now be necessary to give commodities the natural value of
-which would be represented by 100 days labour. This difference of
-course includes the effects which have been attributed to the purchases
-of bullion by the Bank with a view to a return to cash payments, the
-amount of which separately it is scarcely possible to calculate; but I
-am inclined to agree with Mr. Tooke in thinking that it is not above
-one or two per cent. If the price of agricultural labour in England
-has not fallen so much as is here supposed, the difference in the
-value of the currency will not be so great as above stated, but on any
-supposition which is at all probable, it must be something considerable.
-
-It is certain therefore that the currency, estimated in what appears to
-be a correct standard of value, has fallen in such a degree beyond the
-difference between paper and gold, as to add much to the pressure upon
-the landed interest, though by no means to the extent which would be
-implied by measuring the value of the currency in agricultural produce.
-This produce, from the scantiness of the supply compared with the
-demand, was at one time much above its natural and ordinary value, and
-has since, from the abundance of the supply compared with the demand,
-been as much below its natural value; while the value of the currency,
-though it has fallen and risen considerably, has been much more steady
-than the value of corn.
-
-To what extent the alterations in the value of the currency beyond
-the difference between bullion and paper are attributable to the Bank
-restriction, and the return to cash payments, it is by no means easy
-to say. That the currency would have fallen very considerably under
-the circumstances of the last war, and risen very considerably under
-the circumstances which accompanied the peace, although paper had been
-kept on a par with gold, I cannot feel the least doubt; and probably
-the only difference has been, that as the increase of paper beyond what
-would circulate at par with gold gave facilities to production, and
-to the bringing of poor land into cultivation during the war, it has
-tended to increase the glut and low prices since the peace.
-
-But whatever may have been the pressure on the owners of land since
-the peace, they cannot have the slightest plea for an attempt to
-indemnify themselves at the expense of the public creditor. In the
-turns of the wheel of fortune all parties should have fair play; no
-class of persons can be justified in endeavouring to lift themselves
-up by using unfair and dishonourable means to pull others down; and
-least of all ought such means to be thought of by the landlords of this
-country, who, whatever inconveniences they may have suffered latterly,
-have unquestionably altogether benefited much more largely from the
-alterations in the value of the currency, than the very persons who in
-their opinion should be made to relieve them from their embarrassments.
-
-
- London: Printed by C. Roworth,
- Bell-Yard, Temple-Bar.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[A] Mr. Ricardo, speaking of the commodities produced by the
-capitalist, says, “their whole value is divided into two portions only:
-one constitutes the profits of stock; the other the wages of labour.”
-(p. 107. 3d edit.) The language of Mr. Mill, in his _Elements of
-Political Economy_, is similar.
-
-[B] This is very properly stated by Colonel Torrens, in his _Production
-of Wealth_, c. 1. p. 28.
-
-[C] The effects of slow or quick returns, and of the different
-proportions of fixed and circulating capitals, are distinctly allowed
-by Mr. Ricardo; but in his last edition, (the third, p. 32.) he
-has much underrated their amount. They are both theoretically and
-practically so considerable as entirely to destroy the position that
-commodities exchange with each other according to the quantity of
-labour which has been employed upon them; but no one that I am aware
-of has ever stated that the different quantity of labour employed on
-commodities is not a much more powerful source of difference of value.
-
-[D] Colonel Torrens, by representing capital under the form of certain
-quantities of cloth and corn, instead of value in labour, has precluded
-himself from the possibility of giving a just view either of value,
-profits, or effectual demand. An increase of cloth and corn from
-the same quantity of labour is of no avail whatever in increasing
-value, profits, or effectual demand, if this increased produce will
-not command so much labour as before, an event which is continually
-occurring, from deficiency of demand.
-
-[E] Agricultural labour is taken for the obvious reasons that it is
-the commonest species of labour, that it directly produces the food of
-the labourer, and that it is the most immediately connected with the
-gradations of soil, and the necessary variations of profits. It is also
-assumed with Adam Smith, Mr. Ricardo, and other political economists,
-that, on an average, other kinds of labour continue to bear the same
-proportions to agricultural labour.
-
-[F] In my last work, I thought that a mean between corn and labour
-might be a better measure of value than labour alone; but I am now
-convinced that I was wrong, and that labour alone is the true measure.
-
-[G] Whenever it is said that the value of labour rises in the progress
-of cultivation, a comparison is made between the value of a given
-quantity of labour at two different periods; and when it is added that
-wages rise in proportion to the quantity of labour required to produce
-them, objects are measured solely by the quantity of labour employed
-upon them, although the rate of profits may be totally different.
-
-[H] This proposition is essentially the same as that which is very
-clearly and ably expressed by Mr. Ricardo in his chapter on Profits,
-(p. 128. 3d ed.) in the following terms: “in all countries and at all
-times profits depend on the quantity of labour requisite to provide
-necessaries for the labourers on that land, or with that capital which
-yields no rent;” a proposition which though incomplete in reference
-to the ultimate causes of the variations of profits, contains a most
-important truth. From this truth the legitimate deduction appears to
-me to be, the constant value of labour; but Mr. Ricardo has formed
-his system on a deduction exactly opposite to it. He has, however, in
-my opinion, amply compensated for the errors into which he may have
-fallen, by furnishing us, at the same time, not only with the means of
-their refutation, but the means of improving the science of Political
-Economy.
-
-[I] Mr. Ricardo, by supposing gold to be produced always by a certain
-quantity of labour and _capital_, is compelled to acknowledge that his
-standard “would be a perfect measure of value for all things produced
-under the same circumstances precisely as itself, but for no others.”
-p. 43. This concession appears to me quite fatal. We want to measure
-the value of commodities under _all circumstances_, and it is only gold
-obtained exclusively by labour, or labour itself, which can do this.
-See _Principles of Political Economy considered with a View to their
-Practical Application_, pp. 111 and 118.
-
-[J] It is this rise in the money price of labour, occasioned by the
-fall of profits, which Mr. Ricardo considers as that necessary rise in
-the _value_ of labour on which he makes so much depend in his system;
-but if the foregoing reasoning be well founded, it follows that this
-rise is not a rise in the _value_ of labour, but a fall in the value of
-money.
-
-[K] This applies to the seed, and the food of the working cattle in
-agriculture.
-
-[L] The labour worked up in a commodity could not, in many cases, be
-ascertained without considerable difficulty; but the labour which it
-will command is always open and palpable.
-
-[M] Practically, in all countries such as South America and Ireland,
-where there is a slack demand for labour, and the people are but half
-employed, the food wages of labour are high, compared with the work
-done.
-
-[N] If profits rise in some departments without falling proportionally
-in others, the _average_ rate of profits will have increased, although,
-from the difficulty of moving capital, the rate of profits in some
-employments may not have had time to rise before the stimulus to such
-rise comes to an end by a fresh increase of capital.
-
-[O] This is the view taken of it by Colonel Torrens in his _Production
-of Wealth_, which I think the just one; because it makes the proper
-distinction between cost and value, on which the great stimulus to
-production depends. But he has most unnecessarily and incorrectly given
-the same interpretation to _natural price_, which always includes
-profits.
-
-[P] In order to exclude demand and supply from the costs of production,
-when ordinary profits are considered as making a part of them, it
-would be necessary to assume that the corn wages of labour are always
-the same, an assumption which would be quite unwarranted, not only in
-reference to short periods, but to periods of fifty or sixty years, as
-the history of corn wages in this country alone amply testifies (see
-ch. iv. sect. 4, of my Princ. of Pol. Econ. &c.); and what but the
-state of the demand and supply of corn, compared with labour, prevents
-profits in the United States from being 100 per cent.? The quantity
-of corn divided between the labourer and capitalist would be amply
-sufficient to yield such profits, if the corn wages of labour were no
-higher than in England.
-
-[Q] Sect. IV. p. 91, et seq.
-
-[R] One of the most valuable sections in Mr. Tooke’s late work _On
-High and Low Prices_, is the seventh, in which he proves the frequent
-occurrence of this event, and explains, with great clearness and
-knowledge of the subject, the mode in which it takes place.
-
-[S] Inquiry into the Rise of Prices in Europe, p. 15.
-
-[T] Perhaps at the time specifically adverted to, this supposition will
-not be allowed. But it is always assumed as a general proposition; and
-although 1810 and 11 were years of great manufacturing distress, yet
-Mr. Tooke himself brings evidence which shows that manufacturing labour
-was particularly high in 1805 and 6.
-
-[U] In poor countries a succession of bad seasons sometimes takes place
-without any rise in the price of labour, and in that case, though there
-may be a high price of corn, there is no fall in the natural value of
-money. It will not be purchased with less labour.
-
-[V] These averages are taken from Lord Lauderdale’s _Further
-Considerations on the State of the Currency, published in 1813_.
-Appendix, p. 33.
-
-[W] For the foregoing valuable table, and the information accompanying
-it, I am indebted to Mr. Mure, of Kircudbright, through the kind
-intervention of Mr. M’Culloch, of Edinburgh.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-Simple typographical errors were corrected. Punctuation, hyphenation,
-and spelling were made consistent when a predominant preference was
-found in the original book; otherwise they were not changed.
-
-This book has no Table of Contents.
-
-
-
-
-
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-Illustrated, by Thomas Robert Malthus
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Measure of Value Stated and Illustrated, by
-Thomas Robert Malthus
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-this ebook.
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-
-
-Title: The Measure of Value Stated and Illustrated
- With an Application of it to the Alterations in the Value
- of the English Currency since 1790
-
-Author: Thomas Robert Malthus
-
-Release Date: June 15, 2020 [EBook #62407]
-
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MEASURE OF VALUE ***
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-
-
-<div class="center wspace vspace">
-
-<h1>
-<span class="small">THE</span><br />
-MEASURE OF VALUE</h1>
-
-<p class="p1 b2">STATED AND ILLUSTRATED,</p>
-
-<p class="p2 smaller">WITH</p>
-
-<p class="p2">AN APPLICATION OF IT TO THE ALTERATIONS IN<br />
-
-THE VALUE OF THE ENGLISH CURRENCY<br />
-
-SINCE 1790.</p>
-
-<p class="p1 b1 xxlarge bold">—♦—</p>
-
-<p class="p2 larger bold"><span class="smcap">By the Rev.</span> T. R. MALTHUS, M.A. F.R.S.</p>
-
-<p class="p1 small">PROFESSOR OF HISTORY AND POLITICAL ECONOMY IN THE<br />
-EAST INDIA COLLEGE, HERTFORDSHIRE.</p>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="larger">LONDON:</span><br />
-JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET.<br />
-<span class="smaller">MDCCCXXIII.</span>
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="newpage p12 in12 narrow">
-<p class="center small"><span class="bt">London: Printed by C. Roworth,</span><br />
-<span class="bb in2 l2">Bell-yard, Temple-bar.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">1</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_MEASURE_OF_VALUE">THE MEASURE OF VALUE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0 first">It is generally allowed that the word value, in
-common language, has two different meanings;
-one, value in use, the other, value in exchange;
-the first expressing merely the usefulness of an
-object in supplying the most important wants
-of mankind, without reference to its power of
-commanding other objects in exchange; and
-the second expressing the power of commanding
-other objects in exchange, without reference to
-its usefulness in supplying the most important
-wants of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>It is obviously value in the last sense, not
-the first, with which the science of Political
-Economy is mainly concerned.</p>
-
-<p>But the power of one object to command
-another in exchange, or in other words the
-power of purchasing, may obviously arise either
-from causes affecting the object itself, or the
-commodities against which it is exchanged.</p>
-
-<p>In the one case, the value of the object itself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">2</span>
-may properly be said to be affected; in the other,
-only the value of the commodities which it purchases;
-and if we could suppose any object always
-to remain of the same value, the comparison of
-other commodities with this one would clearly
-show, which had risen, which had fallen, and
-which had remained the same. The value of
-any commodity estimated in a measure of this
-kind might with propriety be called its absolute
-or natural value; while the value of a commodity
-estimated in others which were liable to
-variation, whether they were one or many,
-could only be considered as its nominal or
-relative value, that is, its value in relation to
-any particular commodity, or to commodities
-in general.</p>
-
-<p>That a correct measure of the power of purchasing
-generally, or of commanding such important
-commodities as the necessaries and conveniences
-of life, in whatever way such power might
-arise, would be very desirable, cannot for a moment
-be doubted, as it would at once enable us
-to form a just estimate and comparison of wages,
-salaries, and revenues, in all countries, and at all
-periods. But when we consider what such a
-measure implies, we must feel certain that no
-one object exists, or can be supposed to exist,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span>
-with such qualities as would fit it to become a
-standard measure of this kind. It would imply
-steadiness of value, not merely in one object,
-but in a great number, which is contrary to all
-theory and experience.</p>
-
-<p>Whether there is any object, which, though
-it cannot measure the power of purchasing generally
-under the varying facilities of production
-and varying state of the demand and supply by
-which different commodities are affected, may
-be a correct measure of absolute and natural
-value as above described, is the specific object
-of the present inquiry.</p>
-
-<p>It follows directly, from the principles of
-Adam Smith, that the conditions of the supply
-of the great mass of commodities are, that
-the returns should be sufficient to pay the
-wages, profits and rents necessary to their
-production. If these payments be made in
-money at the ordinary rates of the time, they
-form what Adam Smith calls their natural
-prices. Money however we know is variable.
-But if for money we substitute the objects necessary
-to give the producer the same power
-of production and accumulation as the natural
-money prices would have commanded, such returns
-maybe considered as the natural conditions
-of the supply of commodities, and may with propriety<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span>
-be denominated their natural value, in
-contradistinction to their natural price.</p>
-
-<p>Of these three conditions of supply, or elements
-of natural value, the two first are obviously
-the most important. They are not only
-the sole conditions of supply in those early
-stages of society before the appropriation of
-land has taken place, but they continue to be
-so in reference to large classes of objects in the
-most advanced stages of improvement; and it
-is now generally acknowledged that even the
-main vegetable food of an improving country,
-which is the foundation of wages, must necessarily
-be of the same value as that part of the
-produce which is almost exclusively resolvable
-into wages and profits, and pays very little rent.</p>
-
-<p>We cannot therefore essentially err in assuming
-for the present that the natural value of
-objects in their more simple forms is composed
-of labour and profits,<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">A</a> and the effect of any portion
-of rent, or of other ingredients which are
-sometimes added to these elements, may be
-allowed for subsequently.</p>
-
-<p>We may also consider as a postulate which will<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span>
-be readily granted, that any given quantity of
-labour must be of the same value as the wages
-which command it, or for which it actually exchanges.</p>
-
-<p>Of the two main elements of value, labour
-and profits, the former, particularly if we include,
-as we ought to do, accumulated as well
-as immediate labour, is much the largest and
-most powerful.</p>
-
-<p>The great instrument of production is labour.
-There is no commodity nor implement used to
-assist manual exertions in which it does not
-enter as a condition of supply, and very few in
-which it does not enter very largely. If in the
-production of commodities and of the implements
-which assist in this production, no other
-ingredient were required than labour, and the
-interval between the exertion of the labour and
-its remuneration in the completed commodity
-were so inconsiderable that it might be entirely
-disregarded, it is certain that, as the same quantity
-of labour would have a constant tendency to
-produce commodities in the same relative proportion
-to each other, and to the demand for
-them, they would be found on an average to
-exchange with each other according to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span>
-quantity of labour which had been employed
-to obtain them.</p>
-
-<p>Thus if ten mackerel were, on an average,
-obtained by the same quantity of labour as two
-soals, it would be necessary, in order to continue
-the supply of both in the market, that the
-value of a soal should be five times as great in
-the power of purchasing similar commodities,
-as the value of a mackerel; because if it were
-less, none would apply themselves to the catching
-of soals; and though it is quite certain that
-at any given period the relative value of soals
-and mackerel would be exclusively determined
-by the state of the demand and supply of each;
-and that they would, in consequence, often vary
-very considerably; yet it is as certain, that on
-the supposition of the hypothesis being correct,
-and that they both continued to be brought to
-market, each would on an average be supplied
-in such a quantity, compared with the demand
-for it, that a soal would ordinarily exchange
-for five mackerel, and the different quantities of
-labour required to produce them would, in this
-case, be a correct measure both of their natural
-and relative value in exchange.</p>
-
-<p>Now supposing that the skill and power of
-the labourers were so to increase, that, in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span>
-same time and with the same personal exertions,
-they could obtain three soals and fifteen
-mackerel, it is obvious that the relative value of
-soals to mackerel would remain the same, but
-they would both have essentially altered their
-value compared with all those commodities
-which still required the same quantity of labour
-to produce the same supply of them. With
-regard to such commodities, soals and mackerel
-would have become of less value, and consequently
-they would have become of less value
-with regard to a given quantity of labour. The
-correct language in this case would be, not that
-labour had become dearer, but that soals and
-mackerel had become cheaper. And if the same
-increase of skill and power could be conceived to
-extend to all other commodities, and all commodities
-were similarly circumstanced as to their
-mode of production and bringing to market; it
-cannot be doubted, that though they might
-retain the same relative value compared with
-each other, they would all become more plentiful
-with regard to the wants of the society,
-and any given quantity of labour. And the
-correct language would still be, not that labour
-had become dearer, but that all commodities had
-become cheaper. This fall would be a fall in
-the absolute and natural value of commodities;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span>
-and as long as labour alone was concerned in
-their production, and they were brought to
-market immediately, it would be allowed that
-the different quantities of labour employed upon
-them would be a correct measure both of their
-relative value compared with each other, and of
-their absolute and natural value in reference to
-the conditions of their supply. Their natural
-values would be exactly represented by the
-different quantities of labour worked up in
-them; while their natural prices would be these
-different quantities of labour estimated in money,
-according to the money price of the labour
-employed.</p>
-
-<p>But at a very early period of society a considerable
-interval must elapse between the exertion
-of some sorts of labour and the completion
-of the article on which they are employed.
-And the next simplest form of production, beyond
-the result of mere labour, is that, where,
-in addition to the labour employed directly on
-the commodity and on the simple tools necessary
-to its production, the condition of the
-supply requires that a certain compensation be
-made in the final remuneration for the time which
-has elapsed from the period of the advances of
-the labour, to the period when the labourer, or
-capitalist, can be remunerated. This compensation,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span>
-which equally applies to the formation of
-the capital, as to the products to be obtained
-by it, is the profit which must be paid on the
-advances of the labour, and is absolutely necessary
-to the encouragement of such advances.</p>
-
-<p>But in this state of things commodities would
-cease to exchange with each other according
-to the quantity of labour employed upon them.
-Some commodities, on which the same quantity
-of accumulated and immediate labour had been
-employed, would be of a different exchangeable
-value, on account of the different quantity of
-profits which had entered into their composition;
-while others, on which different quantities
-of accumulated and immediate labour had been
-employed, might be of the same exchangeable
-value, on account of the greater quantity of
-profits of which they were composed being
-balanced by the smaller quantity of labour advanced
-to produce them.</p>
-
-<p>In the earliest stages of society accumulations
-of capital are very rare, and profits may
-be extremely high, perhaps forty or fifty per
-cent. If under these circumstances the construction
-of a war canoe were to take two years
-before it were fit for use, it is evident that its
-value in exchange would be prodigiously enhanced
-by such profits. Compared with a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span>
-number of deer which might have cost exactly
-the same quantity of accumulated and immediate
-labour to bring to market, the canoe would
-be seventy or eighty per cent. of greater value;
-and on the fall of profits from forty or fifty per
-cent. to ten per cent. in the progress of society,
-an object of this kind might fall in value sixty
-or seventy per cent. compared with such objects
-as deer or fish, without any difference in the
-quantity of labour employed upon either.</p>
-
-<p>It is observed by Adam Smith that corn is
-an annual crop, butchers’ meat a crop which
-requires four or five years to grow; and consequently,
-if we compare two quantities of corn
-and beef which are of equal exchangeable
-value, it is certain that a difference of three or
-four additional years profit at fifteen per cent.
-upon the capital employed in the production of
-the beef would, exclusively of any other considerations,
-make up in value for a much smaller
-quantity of labour, and thus we might have two
-commodities of the same exchangeable value,
-while the accumulated and immediate labour of
-the one was forty or fifty per cent. less than
-that of the other. This is an event of daily
-occurrence in reference to a vast mass of the
-most important commodities in the country;
-and if profits were to fall from fifteen per cent.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span>
-to eight per cent. the value of beef compared
-with corn would fall above twenty per cent.</p>
-
-<p>When commodities are obtained by the assistance
-of a large proportion of fixed capital of
-a very durable nature, the advances are only
-consumed in part, and the whole produce of the
-accumulated and immediate labour employed
-must be considered as composed of the new
-produce obtained, together with the remainder
-of the fixed capital which is unconsumed.<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">B</a> In
-reference to the separate value of the new
-produce, this will be the same as if to the
-labour actually worked up in such produce
-were added the profits of the whole capital
-advanced. It sometimes happens that the proportion
-of value arising from these profits is
-very considerable; and commodities so produced
-will necessarily have much less labour
-worked up in them, and will be much more
-affected in their value by a rise or fall of profits,
-than those which are composed mainly of immediate
-labour.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, if a commodity were produced by the
-aid of accumulated labour in machinery worth
-£2,000, the annual wear and tear of which was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span>
-one-twentieth, or £100, and the labour employed
-on cheap materials and in the working of the
-machinery were worth £200, while profits were
-20 per cent. then the value of the labour worked
-up in the commodity would be £100 added to
-£200, equal to £300; and the whole capital advanced
-being £2,300, the profits upon it would
-be £460, which, added to £300 would make the
-whole value of the produce £760. Compared
-with a commodity of equal value which had
-been produced without fixed capital, and had
-yet been brought to market in the same time
-and with the same rate of profits, it would contain
-less than half of the labour worked up in
-it; while, if profits were to fall from 20 per
-cent. to 10 per cent. the value of the commodity
-would fall in the proportion of from £760 to
-£530, or, if profits had been 10 per cent. and
-were to rise to 20 per cent. the value of the
-commodity would rise in the proportion of from
-£530 to £760, or above 42 per cent., without any
-change in the quantity of labour employed.<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">C</a></p>
-
-<p>It must be allowed, then, that whenever two<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span>
-elements are necessary to the supply, and
-enter into the composition of commodities, their
-value cannot depend exclusively upon one of
-them, except by accident, or when the other
-can be considered as a given or common quantity.
-But it is universally acknowledged, that
-the great mass of commodities in civilized and
-improved countries is made up at the least of
-two elements—labour and profits; consequently,
-the exchangeable value of commodities into
-which these two elements enter as the conditions
-of their supply, will not depend exclusively
-upon the quantity of labour employed
-upon them, except in the very peculiar cases
-when both the returns of the advances and the
-proportions of fixed and circulating capitals
-are exactly the same.</p>
-
-<p>It cannot, then, be said with any thing like
-an approximation towards correctness, that the
-labour worked up in commodities is the measure
-of their exchangeable value.</p>
-
-<p>But if to the accumulated and immediate labour<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span>
-worked up in commodities, we add the
-profits upon the whole advances for the time
-that they are advanced, we shall then make
-the proper allowance for the other element of
-value, and may expect to obtain a more accurate
-measure. If we had estimated the value
-of the labour advanced in money, or any other
-medium, we should of course estimate the profits
-in the same medium, and the natural price
-of the commodity estimated in such medium,
-would obviously be equal to the price of the
-accumulated and immediate labour expended
-on the commodity, together with the ordinary
-profits estimated upon such advances. But if,
-with a view to the natural conditions of supply,
-we consider only the quantity of labour advanced,
-without reference to any other medium, we
-must of course estimate the profits in quantity
-of labour also, which will give us an amount of
-labour in proportion to which commodities will
-be found to exchange with each other, just in
-the same way as they would exchange with
-each other according to the quantity of labour
-employed on them, if labour had been the sole
-ingredient which had entered into their composition.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, if a hundred days labour were employed
-upon a commodity, at two shillings a day, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span>
-the average interval between the advance of such
-wages and the period when the commodity could
-be brought to sale were a year, and profits were
-20 per cent. the price of the commodity would be
-£12, while the price of a commodity which had
-cost the same quantity of labour of the same kind,
-and could be brought to market immediately,
-would be only £10. And it is equally certain,
-that, if putting money or any other medium of
-exchange out of the question, we had estimated
-the profits for a year upon the advances of the
-hundred days labour actually employed, we
-should obtain a quantity of labour which, compared
-with the labour employed on the commodity
-sold immediately, would be in the proportion
-of 120 to 100, and expressing the relative
-conditions of supply, would accurately
-measure the rate at which the two commodities
-obtained under these different circumstances
-would exchange with each other.</p>
-
-<p>It appears, then, that in the same country,
-and at the same time, the exchangeable value of
-those commodities which can be resolved into
-labour and profits alone, would be accurately
-measured by the quantity of labour which
-would result from adding to the accumulated
-and immediate labour actually worked up in
-them the varying amount of the profits on all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span>
-the advances estimated in labour. But this
-must necessarily be the same as the quantity of
-labour which they will command, as appears
-from the instances above stated, and will be
-more fully shown farther on; and where the
-precious metals may be considered for short
-periods as of a uniform value, the conformity of
-this measure with the proportions of money
-prices at which commodities would be exchanging
-all around us, might daily be brought to the
-test of experience and be established beyond
-the possibility of doubt.</p>
-
-<p>It will be said, perhaps, that in the same
-place, and at the same time, almost every commodity
-may be considered as an accurate measure
-of the relative value of others, and that
-what is true of labour in this respect is true of
-cloth, cotton, iron, or any other article. Any
-two commodities which, at the same time, and
-in the same place, will purchase or command
-the same quantity of cloth, cotton, or iron, of
-a given quality, will have the same relative
-value, or will exchange with each other.</p>
-
-<p>This will be readily granted, if we take the
-same time and place exactly, and consider only
-relative value; but not if either any latitude be
-allowed as to time and place, or if we consider,
-as it is our object to do, not merely relative, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span>
-absolute and natural value. Cloth, cotton,
-iron, and similar commodities, are subject to
-vary most essentially in a single year, or even
-month, so that the manufacturer who could obtain
-for his goods the same quantity of cloth as
-he could the year before, would be very little
-likely to obtain the same quantity of other articles.
-But even supposing that these articles
-and the product of the capitalist were to continue
-of the same relative value to each other,
-he might still be quite unable to carry on his
-business. The conditions of the supply of
-commodities do not require that they should
-retain always the same relative values, but that
-each should retain its proper <em>natural</em> value, or
-the means of obtaining those objects which will
-continue to the producer the same power of
-production and accumulation. If the advances
-of capitalists consisted specifically in cloth, then
-these advances would always have the effect
-required in production; and as profits are calculated
-upon the advances necessary to production,
-whatever they may be, the quantity of cloth
-advanced, with the addition of the ordinary
-profits estimated also in quantity of cloth, would
-represent both the natural and relative value of
-the commodity. But the specific advances of
-capitalists do not consist of cloth, but of labour;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span>
-and as no other object whatever can represent
-a given quantity of labour, it is obvious that labour
-stands quite alone in this respect, and that
-it is the quantity of <em>labour</em> which a commodity
-will command, and not the quantity of any
-other commodity, which can represent the conditions
-of its supply, or its natural value.<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">D</a></p>
-
-<p>It will be allowed, then,</p>
-
-<p>First, that when commodities are obtained
-by labour alone, and sold immediately, they
-will, on an average, exchange with each other
-according to the quantity of labour employed
-upon them.</p>
-
-<p>Secondly, that when profits are concerned,
-and differ either in rate or quantity, commodities
-can no longer exchange with each other,
-according to the quantity of labour employed
-upon them, except by accident.</p>
-
-<p>Thirdly, that the quantity of accumulated
-and immediate labour applied to their production,
-must, in all the less complex cases, form<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span>
-the advances on which profits may be correctly
-calculated.</p>
-
-<p>And, fourthly, that when profits are calculated
-upon these advances, a quantity of labour
-is obtained, according to which it is found,
-by experience, that commodities do exchange
-with each other in the same country; and,
-further, that this quantity of labour not only
-expresses correctly their value in exchange with
-each other, but their absolute and natural value
-in reference to the conditions of their supply.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>In proceeding to consider what takes place
-in different countries where the value of the
-precious metals is very different, it will readily
-be acknowledged, that the rate at which commodities
-exchange with each other is not proportioned
-to the labour which has been employed
-upon them, with the addition of profits.
-And it is quite certain, that they cannot be
-proportioned to the quantity of labour alone
-of which they are composed. We know, from
-experience, that the commodities of different
-countries are actually exchanged with each
-other according to their money prices at the
-time. These prices must be determined partly
-by those natural elements of value which determine
-the rate at which commodities exchange<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span>
-with each other, and the natural conditions
-of their supply in each country, and
-partly by the different value of the precious
-metals in different situations, which must necessarily
-have a most powerful effect on the
-rate at which foreign commodities are exchanged.</p>
-
-<p>Knowing then the elements of the natural
-and relative value of commodities in the same
-country, if we knew also the difference in the
-value of money in different countries, we
-should know at once the rate at which the
-commodities of different countries would exchange
-with each other.</p>
-
-<p>Now there is no supposition but one, relating
-to the value of money in different countries,
-which, combined with the natural elements of
-the value of produce in each, would constitute
-the present natural prices of commodities in
-these countries, or the rates at which they
-actually exchange with each other. This is
-the supposition that the differences in the
-value of money in different countries are proportioned
-to the differences in the money
-prices of agricultural labour.<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">E</a></p>
-
-<p>The conditions of the supply of an Indian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span>
-commodity are the advance and consumption
-of a certain quantity of Indian labour, with
-the profits on all the advances for the time
-that they are employed. Thus, if for the
-production of an Indian commodity, a fixed
-capital consisting of accumulated labour and
-profits, equal to 300 days, were advanced for
-a year, and a quantity of accumulated and
-immediate labour, consisting of the wear and
-tear of the machinery, the materials to be
-worked up, and direct labour, equal to 1500
-days, were consumed on the commodity in
-the same time, profits being 20 per cent., the
-natural value of such commodity in India
-would be equal to the 1500 days labour consumed,
-with a profit of 20 per cent. upon
-1800 days labour, which would amount to 1860
-days labour.</p>
-
-<p>If labour in India were fourpence a day, the
-fixed money capital in this case would equal £5,
-the labour advanced and consumed £25, and
-the labour consumed, together with the profits
-on the whole advances, would be equal to £31.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span>
-And this would evidently be the natural price
-at which the commodity would circulate, and
-according to which it would exchange with any
-foreign commodity brought to India.</p>
-
-<p>On the same principle, if for the production
-of an English commodity, 300 days labour
-were advanced in fixed capital for a year, and
-1500 days labour were consumed on the commodity
-in the same time, while profits were 10
-per cent., the natural value of such commodity,
-or the conditions of its supply, would be 1500
-days labour, with a profit of 10 per cent. upon
-1800, which together would equal 1680: and
-if labour were two shillings a day, the natural
-price at which the commodity would circulate,
-and according to which it would exchange with
-any foreign commodity brought to England,
-would be £168. This prodigious difference in
-the natural prices of two commodities in England
-and India, the natural values of which in
-each country were nearly the same, could only
-arise from a difference in the value of money
-occasioned by the very superior efficiency of
-English labour in the purchase of the precious
-metals, owing to the energy, skill, and situation
-of English labourers and capitalists, compared
-with those of India. But in estimating this
-difference in the value of money in England and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span>
-India, it is quite obvious, that if, after ascertaining
-the natural conditions of the supply of a
-commodity in each country, we were to estimate
-the value of money either by its general
-power of purchasing, by a mean between corn
-and labour,<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">F</a> or by the quantity of labour alone
-which had been actually employed in bringing
-the money from the mine to the market, or by
-any other measure whatever, except the labour
-which it would command, we should not account
-for the natural prices which are found
-actually to prevail in the two countries, and
-according to which Indian and English commodities
-are found to exchange with each other
-by experience.</p>
-
-<p>Consequently, as no other supposition will
-suit the actual phenomena, and as it has already
-appeared that the value of commodities in the
-same country is determined by the quantity of
-labour which they will command, we may
-safely conclude that the value of the precious
-metals in different countries is determined by
-the same measure, or by the different quantities
-of common agricultural labour, taking the average<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span>
-of summer and winter wages, which a
-given portion of them will command.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>When we come to consider the varying value
-of commodities at distant periods in the same
-country, or the rise or fall of produce in the progress
-of cultivation and improvement, we are
-necessarily deprived of the test of an actual
-exchange. We know, however, that at different
-periods in the same country both the value of
-the precious metals, and the rate of profits and
-corn wages, may alter most essentially.</p>
-
-<p>The effect of the varying value of the precious
-metals, when we have once obtained a
-measure of value, will be easily estimated.
-The most important point at present is, to consider
-the effects which must be produced upon
-the value of commodities in the progress of
-society, by the changes which necessarily take
-place in the profits of stock and the corn wages
-of labour.</p>
-
-<p>On the supposition of high profits at an early
-period of society, and a considerable fall of
-them subsequently, how are we to measure and
-compare the value of commodities at these different
-periods? With regard to those which
-had continued to cost the same quantity of
-accumulated and immediate labour, we could
-not say that they were of the same value, unless<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span>
-we were prepared to assert that the value
-of commodities is determined solely by the
-labour employed upon them, not only when
-the rate of profits is the same but when it is
-totally different;<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">G</a> a proposition which no one
-can venture to assert in the case of foreign
-commodities, and which there is as little reason
-to assert in comparing the commodities of distant
-periods.</p>
-
-<p>If profits were 50 per cent. five hundred
-years ago, and are 10 per cent. now, the question
-is, whether a piece of cloth which had cost
-the same quantity of labour at these different
-periods would be of the same value. By the
-supposition it was composed of a greater quantity
-of profits in the earlier period, and having
-cost the same quantity of labour, we should
-naturally conclude that it would be of a higher
-value.</p>
-
-<p>It is said, however, that, although it cost the
-same quantity of labour, yet that the labour in
-the former period was of much less value,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
-which would counterbalance the greater quantity
-of profits, and leave the value obtained by
-the same quantity of labour the same. But
-when we are thus referred to the lower value
-of labour, the principle of compensation which
-had before been applied is quite forgotten.
-The corn which pays the labourer is indeed
-obtained by a smaller quantity of labour, on
-account of the superior fertility of the soil from
-which it is raised, but it is sold as the cloth is
-sold, at a profit of 50 per cent.; and if it be
-said that, in the case of the cloth, the low value
-of wages which is supposed to be the result of
-superior fertility counteracts the high profits
-and keeps the value of cloth the same, surely it
-may be said, in the case of the corn which pays
-the wages, that the smaller quantity of labour
-necessary to produce it is made up by the
-greater rate of profits at which it is sold, and
-the value of wages is thus kept the same.</p>
-
-<p>If 100 quarters of corn be obtained in the
-different periods of society by the labour of a
-different number of men, such as 7, 8 and 9,
-each paid at the rate of 10 quarters a year, the
-value of the 100 quarters of corn, or the value
-of the wages of any one of the men employed,
-estimated in the labour advanced, with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span>
-addition of the profits upon such advances,
-must obviously always be the same.</p>
-
-<p>At an early period of society, when the soil
-was very fertile and the labour of 7 men only
-was necessary to produce 100 quarters of corn
-on land which paid little or no rent, the advances
-in labour being 7 men, or in corn 70
-quarters, and the return 100 quarters, the rate
-of profits would be 42-6/7 per cent., and the advances
-of the labour of 7 men increased by a
-profit of 42-6/7 would equal the labour of 10 men,
-or the quantity of labour which the whole
-return would command. At a more advanced
-period, when the last land taken into cultivation
-was less fertile, and the labour of 8 men was
-necessary to obtain the return of 100 quarters,
-the advances in labour being 8 men, or in corn
-80 quarters, the rate of profits would be 25 per
-cent., and the labour of 8 men increased by 25
-per cent. would exactly equal the labour of 10
-men. On the same principle, if at a still later
-period 9 men were necessary to produce the
-100 quarters, the rate of profits would be 11-1/9
-per cent., and the quantity of labour employed
-increased by the profits would still be equal to
-the labour of 10 men.</p>
-
-<p>It appears then that when the labourer continues<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
-to be paid the same corn wages, the
-value of the whole corn produce, or the value
-of each man’s wages estimated in the usual
-way in labour and profits, must obviously remain
-constant, and that it must be most erroneous
-to infer that labour rises in value because
-it requires more labour in the progress of cultivation
-to produce the wages of 10 men or one
-man, if at the same time it requires such a
-diminished value of profits as exactly to balance
-it.</p>
-
-<p>But in the progress of cultivation, the corn
-wages of labour do not continue the same, and
-corn must consequently be liable to great variation
-of value, both on account of temporary
-variations in the state of the supply compared
-with labour, and on account of the more permanent
-state of the demand and supply of corn
-compared with labour, owing to the increasing
-difficulty of production.</p>
-
-<p>It may be laid down, however, as a general
-proposition, liable to no exception, that when
-the value of any produce can be resolved into
-labour and profits, then as the <em>proportion</em> of such
-produce which goes to labour increases, the
-proportion which goes to profits must decrease
-in the same degree, and as the <em>proportion</em> which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span>
-goes to labour decreases, the proportion which
-goes to profits must increase in the same degree.<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">H</a></p>
-
-<p>Thus if ¾ of the produce, whatever that produce
-may be, go to labour, ¼ will remain for
-profits; if ⅚ go to labour, ⅙ will remain for profits;
-and if ½ only go to labour, ½ will remain
-for profits.</p>
-
-<p>In reference to corn or commodities in general,
-compared with each other at different
-periods in the progress of cultivation, it is obvious
-that neither an increase in the quantity of
-labour required to produce them, nor an increase
-in the quantity of produce awarded to
-the labourer, can ever determine the proportion<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span>
-of the whole produce which goes to labour and
-affect profits accordingly; because if the quantity
-of labour required to produce them increases,
-the effect of this upon profits may be
-totally destroyed by a diminution at the same
-time of the quantity of produce awarded to the
-labourer; or if a larger quantity of produce be
-awarded to the labourer, it may be only in consequence
-of a smaller quantity of labour being
-necessary to obtain the same produce, in which
-case profits may remain undiminished, or even
-rise, at the same time that corn wages rise.</p>
-
-<p>But if instead of referring to commodities
-generally, we refer to the variable quantity of
-produce which, under different circumstances,
-forms the wages of a given number of labourers,
-we shall find that the variable quantity of
-labour required to obtain this produce will
-always exactly agree with the proportion of the
-whole produce which goes to labour; because,
-however variable may be the amount of this
-produce, it will be divided into a number of
-parts equal to the number of labourers which it
-will command, and as the first set of labourers
-who produced these wages may be considered
-as having been paid at the same rate as the
-second set, whose labour the produce commands;
-it is obvious that if to obtain the produce<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
-which commands ten labourers, 6, 7, 8,
-or 9 labourers be required, the proportion of
-the produce which goes to labour, in these different
-cases, will be 6/10, 7/10, 8/10, or 9/10, leaving
-4/10, 3/10, 2/10, or 1/10, for profits.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible to refer what is proposed as
-a standard to any <em>other</em> measure, because, in
-that case, the other measure would be the standard.
-But if it can be shown, that any object,
-the value of which is composed of two elements,
-is of such a nature that while the value of one
-of these elements increases, the value of the
-other decreases exactly in the same degree,
-such object must be of a constant value. If
-the values of two variable quantities, <i>X</i> and <i>Y</i>,
-be equal to the constant value <i>A</i>, it follows
-that, in all the variations to which <i>X</i> and <i>Y</i> are
-subject, whatever value <i>X</i> gains must be lost
-by <i>Y</i>, and whatever value <i>Y</i> gains must be lost
-by <i>X</i>. The converse of this proposition must
-also be true, that is, if the value of any object
-be made up of the variable values of two other
-objects, and it can be shown that, from the
-nature of these two objects, whatever increase
-of value one of them gains, must necessarily be
-lost by the other, and vice versâ, it follows that
-the value of the object, to which the two others
-are equal, must be constant. Now it has appeared<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span>
-that the variable values of the labour
-and of the profits which compose the value of
-the variable quantity of corn awarded in wages
-to a given number of labourers, must necessarily
-be such, that, as the quantity of labour
-required to produce them increases, either from
-difficulty of production or from the greater
-quantity of produce awarded to the labourer,
-all the value thus gained by labour is lost by
-profits; and as the quantity of labour required
-to produce them is diminished, either by facility
-of production or the small quantity of
-produce awarded to the labourer, all the value
-which is gained by profits is lost by labour.
-Consequently, the value of the variable quantity
-of produce which, under different circumstances,
-forms the wages of a given number of
-men, being composed of the values of the two
-elements, labour and profits, varying as above
-described, must be constant, and may therefore,
-with propriety, be proposed as a standard
-measure.</p>
-
-<p>I have entered at some length into the details
-which show the necessary constancy of the
-value of labour, on account of its great importance;
-but, in reality, it follows directly
-from the manner in which the natural value of
-commodities and of wages is estimated, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span>
-when the labourer earns a greater or a smaller
-quantity of money or necessaries, it is not the
-value of labour which varies, but, as Adam
-Smith says, “it is the goods which are cheap
-in the one case and dear in the other.”</p>
-
-<p>If labour alone, without any capital, were
-employed in procuring the fruits of the earth,
-the greater facility of procuring one sort of
-them compared with another, would not, it is
-acknowledged, alter the value of labour, or the
-exchangeable value of the whole produce obtained
-by a given quantity of exertion. We
-should, without hesitation, allow that the difference
-was in the cheapness or dearness of the
-produce, not of the labour.</p>
-
-<p>In the same manner it will follow, that when
-capital and profits enter into the computation
-of value, and the demand for labour varies, the
-high or low reward of labour estimated in produce,
-implies a change in the value of the produce,
-not a change in the value of the labour.</p>
-
-<p>If the increased reward of the labourer takes
-place without an increase of produce, this cannot
-happen without a fall of profits, as it is a
-self-evident truth, that given the quantity of the
-produce to be divided between labour and
-profits, the greater the portion of it which
-goes to labour the less will be left for profits.
-What then will be the result? It will appear<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span>
-that the value of the produce has fallen, and the
-value of wages, or of labour, will have remained
-the same. To obtain any given portion of the
-produce the same quantity of labour is necessary
-as before, but profits being diminished,
-the value of the produce is decreased; while
-this diminution of profits in reference to the
-value of wages is just counterbalanced by the
-increased quantity of labour necessary to procure
-the increased produce awarded to the labourer,
-leaving the value of labour the same as before.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps in the case just supposed, the result
-may be said to be occasioned by a fall in the
-value of the produce, without what could properly
-be called an increased demand for labour.
-But if we suppose that a considerable number
-of labourers were sent out of the country, or
-swept off by a plague, there could then be no
-doubt of a great demand for labour, yet the result
-would be similar. A larger quantity of
-produce would necessarily be awarded to the
-labourer, and profits would fall. A given quantity
-of produce obtained by the same quantity
-of labour as before, would fall in value on account
-of the fall of that part of its value which
-consisted of profits, while the fall of profits on
-the increased wages would be balanced by the
-increased labour necessary to obtain them.</p>
-
-<p>If instead of labourers being sent out of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span>
-country, labourers were imported, the result
-would be just opposite. A smaller quantity of
-produce would be awarded to the labourer and
-profits would rise. A given quantity of produce,
-which had been obtained by the same
-quantity of labour as before, would rise in value
-on account of the rise of profits, while this rise
-of profits, in reference to the wages of the
-labourer, would be balanced by the smaller
-quantity of labour necessary to obtain the diminished
-produce awarded to the labourer.</p>
-
-<p>In the former case of the demand for labour,
-it appeared that the greater earnings of the
-labourer were occasioned, not by a rise in the
-value of labour, but by a fall in the value of
-the produce for which the labour was exchanged.
-And in the latter case of the abundance
-of labour, it appeared that the small
-earnings of the labourer were occasioned by a
-rise in the value of the produce, and not by a
-fall in the value of the labour.</p>
-
-<p>The result would be similar, if instead of
-supposing the same quantity of produce to be
-obtained by the same quantity of labour, we
-were to suppose the greatest variations to take
-place in the fertility of the soil, and, consequently,
-in the productive power of labour.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span>
-In all cases it would still be found that, as
-Adam Smith says, it is the produce which varies
-in value, not the labour for which it will exchange;
-and if money were obtained in the
-way in which its value would unquestionably
-be the most constant, all these variations would
-appear in the money prices of commodities,
-whenever the demand for labour varied; while
-the money price of a given quantify of labour
-would remain the same.<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">I</a></p>
-
-<p>The following Table will further illustrate
-the necessary constancy in the value of labour,
-and some of its most important results, in a
-clearer manner and in a shorter compass than
-if each case were taken separately.</p>
-
-<p>The first column represents the varying fertility
-of the soil, by the varying quantity of
-corn which can be obtained by the labour of a
-given number of men.</p>
-
-<p>The second column represents the yearly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span>
-corn wages of each labourer, determined by
-the state of the demand and supply of produce
-compared with labour.</p>
-
-<p>The third column represents the variable
-advances of produce, in the form of corn wages,
-which, according to the rate at which the labourers
-are paid, are necessary to obtain the
-produce of the first column.</p>
-
-<p>The fourth column represents the rate of
-profits determined in the common way, by the
-proportion which the excess of the produce in
-the first column above the produce paid to the
-labourers in the third, bears to these advances.</p>
-
-<p>The fifth and sixth columns represent the
-quantity of labour required to produce the
-varying corn wages of the given number of
-men, with the profits estimated also in quantity
-of labour; and the reader will see at once that
-these two columns must necessarily, from the
-manner in which profits and wages are estimated,
-make up the constant quantity and
-value of labour which appears in the seventh
-column.</p>
-
-<p>The eighth and ninth columns show the value
-of a given quantity of corn, and the value of the
-produce of a given number of men under the
-varying circumstances supposed.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center"><i>Table illustrating the invariable Value of Labour and its Results.</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot hang">
-
-<p>KEY:</p>
-
-<p>1.  Quarters of Corn produced by Ten Men, of varying Fertility of the Soil.</p>
-
-<p>2.  Yearly Corn Wages to each Labourer, determined by the Demand and Supply.</p>
-
-<p>3.  Advances in Corn Wages, or variable Produce commanding the Labour of Ten Men.</p>
-
-<p>4.  Rate of Profits under the foregoing Circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>5.  Quantity of Labour required to produce the Wages of Ten Men under the foregoing Circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>6.  Quantity of Profits on the Advances of Labour.</p>
-
-<p>7.  Invariable Value of the Wages of a given Number of Men.</p>
-
-<p>8.  Value of 100 Quarters of Corn under the varying Circumstances supposed.</p>
-
-<p>9.  Value of the Product of the Labour of Ten Men under the Circumstances supposed.</p></div>
-
-<table class="wide" summary="Value of Labor">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc bx">1.</td>
- <td class="tdc bx">2.</td>
- <td class="tdc bx">3.</td>
- <td class="tdc bx">4.</td>
- <td class="tdc bx">5.</td>
- <td class="tdc bx">6.</td>
- <td class="tdc bx">7.</td>
- <td class="tdc bx">8.</td>
- <td class="tdc bx">9.</td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl bl">150 qrs.</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">12 qrs.</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">120 qrs.</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">25 pr. Ct.</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">8</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">2</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">  8.33</td>
- <td class="tdl bl br">12.5</td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl bl">150</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">13</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">130</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">15.38</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">8.66</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">1.34</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">  7.7</td>
- <td class="tdl bl br">11.53</td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl bl">150</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">100</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">50</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">6.6</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">3.4</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl br">15</td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl bl">140</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">12</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">120</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">16.66</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">8.6</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">1.4</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">  7.14</td>
- <td class="tdl bl br">11.6</td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl bl">140</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">11</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">110</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">27.2</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">7.85</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">2.15</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">  9.09</td>
- <td class="tdl bl br">12.7</td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl bl">130</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">12</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">120</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">  8.3</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">9.23</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">0.77</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">  8.33</td>
- <td class="tdl bl br">10.8</td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl bl">130</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">100</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">30</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">7.7</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">2.3</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl br">13</td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl bl">120</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">11</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">110</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">  9</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">9.17</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">0.83</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">  9.09</td>
- <td class="tdl bl br">10.9</td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl bl">120</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">100</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">20</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">8.33</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">1.67</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl br">12</td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl bl">110</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">100</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">9.09</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">0.91</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl br">11</td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl bl">110</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">  9</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">  90</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">22.2</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">8.18</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">1.82</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">11.1</td>
- <td class="tdl bl br">12.2</td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl bl">100</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">  9</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">  90</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">11.1</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">9</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">1</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">11.1</td>
- <td class="tdl bl br">11.1</td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl bl">100</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">  8</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">  80</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">25</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">8</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">2</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl">12.5</td>
- <td class="tdl bl br">12.5</td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl bl bb">  90</td>
- <td class="tdl bl bb">  8</td>
- <td class="tdl bl bb">  80</td>
- <td class="tdl bl bb">12.5</td>
- <td class="tdl bl bb">8.88</td>
- <td class="tdl bl bb">1.12</td>
- <td class="tdl bl bb">10</td>
- <td class="tdl bl bb">12.5</td>
- <td class="tdl bl bb br">11.25</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>The first and most important truth illustrated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span>
-in the table is, that, from the division of value into
-labour and profits, and the mode in which profits
-are always estimated, it follows necessarily, that
-the quantity of labour required to produce the
-wages of a given number of men, with the addition
-of the profits upon these advances estimated
-in labour, must always be exactly the same
-as the quantity of labour which the wages will
-command, and must together always make up
-the constant quantity which appears in the
-seventh column. But the quantity of labour
-required to produce the varying wages of ten
-men is, under the different circumstances supposed,
-very different, as appears in the fifth
-column; and it is obvious, that while the numbers
-in the fifth column vary, the numbers in
-the seventh column, or the quantity of labour
-and profits united, cannot be constant, unless,
-as the quantity of labour required to produce
-the wages of ten men increases, the quantity of
-profits estimated in labour diminishes exactly
-in the same degree. But this, from what has
-before been stated, must, under the circumstances
-supposed, be the case. And it follows,
-that if the natural value of a commodity may
-be estimated by the labour and profits of which
-it is composed, the natural value of the corn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span>
-wages of a given number of men must always
-be the same. But such wages, according to
-the postulate with which we commenced, must
-necessarily be equal to the quantity of labour
-for which they will exchange. Consequently
-the value of a given quantity of labour
-must, under every variety which can take
-place in the fertility of the soil and the corn
-wages of labour, be always constant. It is,
-however, of the greatest importance to remark,
-that an exact balance of labour, and of profits
-estimated in labour, so as to yield always a
-constant quantity, cannot take place in the production
-of any one commodity or given portion
-of a commodity; because any one commodity,
-or given portion of a commodity, is liable to
-vary in relation to labour, and such variation
-will either increase or decrease the amount
-of the labour and profits united. It is only
-the varying wages of a given number of men
-bearing, as the terms imply, a constant relation
-to labour, which, under any changes in
-the quantity of labour required to produce
-them, can still continue of the same natural
-value. And it is precisely this necessary constancy
-in the natural value of the varying corn
-wages of labour, which renders the labour
-which a commodity will command, a standard<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span>
-measure both of its natural and exchangeable
-value.</p>
-
-<p>2dly. It appears from the Table, that given
-the produce obtained by ten men, then as corn
-wages rise, the value of the produce will fall,
-or command less labour; and the constant
-value of the advances in labour absorbing a
-larger proportion of the value of the produce,
-profits will fall in proportion. But when more
-is produced by the same number of persons,
-then unless the corn wages rise so high as exactly
-to balance it, the value of the whole produce
-is increased, and the rate of profits and
-corn wages may both rise at the same time.
-Thus while the produce is 130 quarters, as
-labour rises from ten to twelve quarters, profits
-fall in an opposite direction from 30 per
-cent. to 8.3. per cent.; but if we compare the
-wages of labour when the produce is 130 quarters,
-with the wages of labour when the produce
-is 150, it appears that labour may rise from
-twelve to thirteen quarters, at the same time
-that profits rise from 8.3. to 15.38.</p>
-
-<p>A third result illustrated in the Table is, that
-labour being constant, all commodities into
-which profits enter, which may be said to be
-nearly the whole mass, must fall on the fall of
-profits, and among these will, of course, be found<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span>
-metallic money. Supposing, therefore, money
-always to require in its production the same
-quantity of labour and capital, it will regularly
-fall in value in the progress of cultivation and
-population; while labour being uniform in value
-will rise in money price,<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">J</a> and the demand for
-corn increasing, compared with the demand for
-labour, the money price of corn will probably
-rise still more. But if the labourers were paid
-at all times exactly the same quantity of corn,
-(which, however, cannot be the case,) the value
-of corn, like the value of wages, would be constant,
-and the variations of fertility would only
-show themselves in the enormous variations of
-profits.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, when labour is paid at ten quarters
-each man, the numbers in the eighth column,
-or the value of a given quantity of corn, must,
-it is obvious, always be the same, whatever be
-the quantity produced; and when the land is
-fertile, the small quantity of labour required to
-produce ten quarters is balanced by the great
-profits which appear in the fourth column.</p>
-
-<p>In the actual state of things, corn generally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span>
-rises in the progress of cultivation, not only
-nominally, but really, as may be seen in the
-eighth column, while labour, it is evident, can
-only rise nominally.</p>
-
-<p>A fourth result shown in the Table is, that the
-value of the corn obtained by ten men depends
-mainly upon the rate of profits, which again depends
-mainly upon the demand and supply of
-corn compared with labour. If corn be in such
-demand, that notwithstanding the fertility of
-the soil, a small quantity of it comparatively
-will purchase the labour required, profits will
-be very high, and the value of the produce will
-greatly exceed the constant value of the wages
-of the labour advanced; but if the supply of
-corn be so great, compared with labour, that a
-large quantity of it is required to purchase the
-given quantity of labour, profits will be low,
-and the excess of the value of the produce
-above the constant value of the advances in
-wages will be inconsiderable.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, when the produce is 150 quarters, if
-corn be in such plenty that each labourer is
-awarded thirteen quarters, the profits of stock
-will be only 15.38 per cent.; and this rate of
-profit, added to the constant value of the advances
-in labour, which are represented by 10,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span>
-will make the natural value of the produce
-equal to 11.53. But if corn, notwithstanding
-the fertility of the soil, be only supplied in such
-quantities, compared with labour, as to award
-the labourer no more than ten quarters, the rate
-of profits, instead of 15.38 per cent., will be 50
-per cent., and the value of the produce, instead
-of being 11.53, will be 15.</p>
-
-<p>This shows how greatly the natural value of
-commodities depends upon the average state
-of the demand and supply, and completely
-confirms the position in my last work, that the
-only difference between natural and market
-prices is, that the former are regulated by the
-average and ordinary relations of the demand to
-the supply, and the latter, when they differ
-from the former, upon the accidental and extraordinary
-relations of the demand to the supply.</p>
-
-<p>Fifthly, it follows, from the constant value of
-labour, that,</p>
-
-<p>Given the value of money in different countries,
-the natural prices of commodities, in
-which the same quantities of labour have been
-employed, will depend upon the rate and quantity
-of profits.</p>
-
-<p>Given the rate and quantity of profits, and
-the value of money, the natural prices of commodities
-in different countries will depend<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span>
-upon the quantity of labour employed upon
-them.</p>
-
-<p>And given the quantity of labour employed
-on them, and the rate and quantity of profits,
-the natural prices of commodities will depend
-upon the value of money.</p>
-
-<p>But in reality none of the ingredients of natural
-or money price are given, excepting the
-natural value of labour, and consequently the
-money prices of commodities which regulate
-the ordinary rate at which different countries
-exchange their commodities with each other,
-will be determined partly by the quantity of
-labour employed upon them, partly by the ordinary
-rate of profits, and partly by the value
-of money.</p>
-
-<p>The value of metallic money, it has before been
-stated, while it continues to be obtained by the
-same quantity of labour and capital, must always
-fall with the fall of profits, and will consequently
-have a strong tendency to fall with the progress
-of cultivation and improvement; but as few nations
-comparatively have mines of their own,
-the supplies which they obtain of the precious
-metals must be purchased by their exportable
-commodities; and these are produced and exported
-under such a variety of circumstances,
-in respect to cost, and the value of the same<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span>
-amount of the precious metals is further so
-much affected by the demand for corn and labour,
-the state of credit, paper currencies,
-taxation, and other circumstances, that no rule
-can safely be laid down on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>Generally the value of money is the lowest
-in the richest and most manufacturing countries;
-but this is not always the case; and a country
-which raises an abundance of raw produce at a
-small expense of labour and profits, while its
-money value is kept up by a ready sale for it
-in foreign markets, and a continued demand
-for labour, may have the value of its money
-very low, although it is not rich or manufacturing.
-This is the case with the United States
-of America, where, owing to the low value of
-money, or high money price of labour, there
-are no doubt some commodities which, though
-produced by a less value of labour and profits,
-cannot be exported to England on account of
-the higher value of money in England; while
-we know that there are many other products
-which are obtained by so much a smaller quantity
-of labour and profits as more than to
-counterbalance the higher value of money in
-England, or the higher money price of labour
-in the United States.</p>
-
-<p>In the same manner there are no doubt many<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
-commodities which, though obtained in England
-by a much less quantity of labour and
-profits than in India, cannot be exported to
-that country on account of the very high value
-of money in India; while, on the other hand,
-there are a few commodities in England in
-which the saving of labour and the effects of
-capital and skill have been so great, as to
-allow of their exportation from a country
-where the money wages of labour are two
-shillings a day, to one where they are only fourpence;
-that is, from a country where the value
-of money is six times lower than in the country
-to which the commodities are sent.</p>
-
-<p>On the same principle, commodities may be
-imported from India into England, although the
-same commodities might be produced in England
-by a much less quantity of labour and
-profits, the low value of money in England
-more than compensating the greater quantity
-of labour and profits employed in India.</p>
-
-<p>It is evident, therefore, that the values which
-determine what commodities shall be exported,
-and what imported, depend, as before stated,
-partly upon the quantity of labour employed
-in their production, partly upon the ordinary
-rates of profits in each country, and partly
-upon the value of money.</p>
-
-<p>A sixth result illustrated in the Table is the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span>
-important distinction between cost and value.
-The two last columns show the value of a given
-quantity of corn, and the value of the product
-of a given quantity of labour, under all the variations
-which may be supposed of fertility and
-corn wages. The difference between the numbers
-in the last column, and the uniform number
-expressing the value of labour, shows exactly
-the difference between the value of the
-labour which has been employed upon a production,
-or its cost, and the labour which that
-production will command, or its natural and
-exchangeable value; which, where profits and
-wages are alone concerned, must be exactly
-equal to the additional value occasioned by
-the amount of profits.</p>
-
-<p>The reader will be aware that neither the
-preceding Table, nor any thing which has been
-said, tends in any degree to contradict the
-acknowledged truth that different <em>kinds</em> of labour
-are of very different natural and exchangeable
-value. It will be further allowed, that
-even the same kind of labour, and the kind
-which has been especially referred to, namely
-common agricultural labour, may, under particular
-circumstances, and in particular places,
-vary in value from a partial or temporary state<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span>
-of demand and supply. We well know,
-that, from a partial and temporary demand
-at a particular period of the year, summer
-wages are of a very different value from winter
-wages; but in reality summer wages form a
-very important part of the wages of the whole
-year. They are generally employed to pay the
-rent of the house, or to purchase the necessary
-clothing for the family. They could not be
-essentially diminished, without altering the
-condition of the labourer throughout the year,
-or the rate of the increase of population. And
-if the labourer earned a smaller quantity of corn
-throughout the year, with an undiminished produce,
-it appears from the Table that the value
-of that corn would still remain the same, owing
-to the increased value of those profits of which
-it was in part composed.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to the variations in the value of
-labour in different parts of the same country,
-if they are not partial, or temporary, and consequently
-exceptions to the general average,
-they are all resolvable into those differences in
-the value of money, which unquestionably take
-place in different parts of the same country,
-and arise from a want of demand for corn and
-labour, and a want of commodities to exchange<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span>
-with those parts of the country which are richer
-in the precious metals.</p>
-
-<p>Having obtained a measure of the value of
-commodities in their more simple forms, we
-may apply this measure to the ingredients
-which compose the most complicated productions,
-and estimate all the advances which consist
-of accumulated profits, rents, tithes, and
-taxes in labour. In the case of taxes on the
-wages of labour, or an increase in the prices of
-those other necessaries of the labourer, besides
-food, which may occasion the sale of a greater
-quantity of the produce, in order to pay the
-same number of labourers, as these increased
-advances will have the same effect upon profits
-as a simple increase of wages, they will in no
-respect interfere with the constant value of
-labour, though an increase of wages, under
-such circumstances, will be of no advantage to
-the labourer.</p>
-
-<p>Cases will of course frequently occur, in
-which the advances which do not consist of
-wages vary in a different degree from wages;
-but still the value of labour will remain constant.
-If the produce, instead of being obtained
-by the direct labour of a certain number
-of men, were obtained by the direct labour of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
-only a part of this number, together with an
-amount of materials, or other advances consumed
-in the same time, equal to the labour
-of the other part, then upon a rise in the
-corn wages of labour, if the other advances
-were to fall, or not to be worth so much labour
-as before, it is obvious that the profits of stock
-would not fall so much as if the same rise of
-corn wages had taken place, when all the advances
-had been in labour; and it might be
-thought at first that profits not falling in proportion
-to the rise of labour, the value of labour
-would not continue the same. But it will be
-observed, that, in all cases of this kind, there
-will be a less value of labour, which is equivalent
-to a less quantity of it employed to obtain
-the same produce; and a less quantity of
-labour altogether being consequently necessary
-to produce the food of the labourer, than if
-labour alone had been employed, the higher
-profits, or smaller diminution of the former
-profits, will only just be such as to maintain
-labour of a constant value.</p>
-
-<p>Let us suppose, for instance, that 120 quarters
-of corn are produced by ten men. If each
-man were paid ten quarters, profits would be
-20 per cent.; and if wages were increased to
-eleven quarters, profits would fall from 20 per<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span>
-cent. to 9.09 per cent. Now supposing, that,
-instead of ten men being directly employed,
-five only are so employed, and that the other
-advances consist of capital which will continue
-of the same value as the corn;<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">K</a> then, while
-each labourer earns ten quarters, and the other
-capital advanced is worth the labour of five
-men so paid, profits will be, as before, 20 per
-cent. But if the labourer be paid eleven
-quarters instead of ten, profits will not fall, as
-before, from 20 per cent. to 9.09 per cent., but
-only from 20 per cent. to 14.28 per cent.; because
-the advances, instead of being 110, will
-only be 105; and the value of these advances
-estimated in labour paid at eleven quarters
-each man, being only 9.54, instead of 10; 9.54
-may be considered as the number of persons
-employed. Then if 120 quarters be produced
-by 9.54 men, 105 quarters will be produced by
-8.34. But 8.34, increased by a profit of 14.28,
-will make 9.54, the quantity of labour employed,
-and show that the natural value of
-labour is always proportioned to its quantity.
-In the former case, when ten men were employed
-at eleven quarters, as the advances<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span>
-were 110 quarters, instead of 105, the labour
-required to produce the food of the labourer
-was 9.166, and consequently a profit of only
-9.09 will be sufficient to make up ten, the
-number of men employed, and thus equalize
-the value with the quantity.</p>
-
-<p>In the case of fixed capital of considerable
-duration, there is always a probability that it
-will alter in value in reference to the quantity
-of labour, and of profits estimated in labour, of
-which it was composed when first produced;
-but after having advanced so far in establishing
-the labour which a commodity will command,
-as the measure of its value, we are entitled to
-consider the present value estimated in labour
-of any fixed capital which is about to be employed
-in production, as representing the quantity
-of accumulated labour actually so applied.
-It is further necessary, as before stated, to
-reckon the remaining value of the fixed capital
-as a part of the produce resulting from the
-whole of the accumulated and immediate labour
-employed. When, however, these corrections
-have been made, all the cases in which fixed
-capital enters, which may be said to include
-the great mass of commodities, will be found to
-answer to the theory as accurately as the simplest
-case that can be stated.</p>
-
-<p>The exceptions, therefore, to the general proposition<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
-that the labour which commodities will
-command may be considered as a standard
-measure of their value are only apparent, not
-real, and may all be consistently explained.</p>
-
-<p>And if the proposition be true, a standard
-measure of value is of so much importance in
-political economy, and the one proposed is at
-all times so very ready and easy of application,<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">L</a>
-that there is scarcely any part of the science in
-which it will not tend to simplify and facilitate
-our inquiries.</p>
-
-<p>To advert shortly to a few points on which
-there have been some differences of opinion.</p>
-
-<p>On the subject of rents, such a standard
-would determine, among other things, that, as
-the increase in the <em>value</em> of corn is only measured
-by a decrease in the corn wages of
-labour, such increase of value is a very inconsiderable
-source of the increase of rents compared
-with improvements in agriculture; and
-on the same principle that, if tithes do not fall
-mainly on the labourer, the acknowledged diminution
-in the <em>corn</em> rents of the landlord,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span>
-occasioned by tithes, cannot be balanced by
-an increase of their value, and that, consequently,
-tithes must fall mainly on the landlord.</p>
-
-<p>On the subject of labour it would determine,
-that the increasing <em>value</em> of the funds
-destined for the maintenance of labour can
-alone occasion an increase in the demand for
-it, or the will and power to employ a greater
-number of labourers; and that it is consistent
-with theory, as well as general experience,
-that high corn wages, in proportion to the
-quantity of work done, should frequently occur
-with a very slack demand for labour;<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">M</a> or, in
-other words, that when the <em>value</em> of the whole
-produce falls from excess of supply compared
-with the demand, it cannot have the power of
-setting the same number of labourers to work.</p>
-
-<p>On the subject of profits, it would show, that
-they are determined, not by the varying value
-of a given quantity of labour compared with
-the constant value of the commodities which
-it produces, but, as is more conformable to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span>
-our experience, by the variable value of the
-commodities produced by a given quantity of
-labour, compared with the constant value of
-such labour; and that profits never, on any
-occasion, rise or fall, unless the value of the produce
-of a given quantity of labour rises or falls,
-either from the temporary or ordinary state of
-the demand and supply.</p>
-
-<p>On the subject of the distinction between
-wealth and value, it would show, that though
-they are by no means the same, they are much
-more closely connected than they have of late
-been supposed to be; and that the best practical
-measure of the relative wealth of different
-countries would be the quantity of common
-labour which the value of the whole annual
-produce of each country would enable it to
-command at the actual price of the time, which
-in some rich countries might amount to above
-double the number of families actually employed,
-and in poor countries might not greatly
-exceed such number.</p>
-
-<p>On the subject of foreign trade, it would
-show that its universally acknowledged effect
-in giving a stimulus to production, generally,
-is mainly owing to its increasing the value of
-the produce of a country’s labour by the extension
-of demand, before the value of its labour<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span>
-is increased by the increase of its quantity;
-and that the effect of every extension of demand,
-whether foreign or domestic, is always,
-as far as it goes, to increase the average rate of
-profits<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">N</a> till this increase is counteracted by a
-further accumulation of capital.</p>
-
-<p>On the subject of the accumulation of capital
-it would show that if the increase of capital be
-measured by the increase of its materials, such
-as corn, clothing, &amp;c., then it is obvious that
-the supply of these materials may, by saving,
-increase so rapidly, compared with labour and
-the wants of the effective demanders, that with
-a greater quantity of materials the capitalist
-will neither have the power nor the will to set
-in motion the same quantity of labour, and that
-consequently the progress of wealth will be
-checked; but that if the increase of capital be
-measured, as it ought to be, by the increase of
-its power to command labour, then accumulation
-so limited cannot possibly go on too fast.</p>
-
-<p>On the general subject of demand and supply,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span>
-it would show that they must be restored
-to their universal empire, both in reference to
-the prices of commodities, and the dependence
-of the progress of wealth on the due proportion
-maintained between them. If the cost of a
-commodity be considered as composed exclusively
-of the actual advances of the capital
-required for its production, which seems to be
-the most natural and correct mode of viewing
-it,<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">O</a> then it is obvious, that as both the prices and
-values of commodities are proportioned to these
-advances, with the <em>addition</em> of profits very variable
-in their amount, neither of them can be
-determined by these advances alone, or by the
-costs of production so defined. We must therefore
-have recourse to demand and supply.
-And on the other hand, if profits be included in
-the costs of production, then, as it follows, from
-the constancy of the value of labour, that ordinary
-profits are determined by the ordinary
-demand compared with the ordinary supply
-of the products of the same quantity of
-labour, the certain conclusion must be, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span>
-demand and supply enter powerfully into the
-costs of production according to this latter definition,
-and that therefore their dominion as to
-prices and value is absolutely universal.<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">P</a></p>
-
-<p>Nor would they be less so in their effect on
-the general progress of wealth. If commodities
-and the materials of capital increase faster than
-the effectual demand for them, profits fall prematurely,
-and capitalists are ruined without a
-proportionate benefit to the labouring classes,
-because an increasing demand for labour cannot
-go on under such circumstances. If the value
-of commodities and the materials of capital
-increase for some time without an increase of
-their quantity, the labouring classes must soon
-be supported on the lowest amount of food on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span>
-which they will consent to keep up their actual
-number; and the main part of the population
-would suffer severely without any proportionate
-benefit to the capitalists; because the value of
-their capitals, measured by the labour which
-they can command, would shortly be incapable
-of further increase. In either of these cases a
-decided check would be given to the progress
-of wealth, which progress must necessarily be
-the greatest, when the joint product of the
-capitalist and labourer, which the state of the
-land and the skill with which it is worked
-enable them to obtain, is so divided between
-them, that in the progress of cultivation and
-improvement any unnecessary or premature fall
-either of profits or corn wages is prevented.
-But this can only be accomplished by a proper
-proportion of the supply to the demand, that
-is, by an accumulation so proportioned to the
-actual consumption of produce by those who
-can make an effectual demand for it, as to occasion
-the greatest permanent annual increase
-in the value of the materials of capital.</p>
-
-<p>The reader of my last work, in which I laid
-down as my rule, to admit no principles of Political
-Economy as just which were inconsistent
-with general experience, will be aware that the
-conclusions to which I have here shortly adverted,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span>
-as following necessarily from the constancy
-of the value of labour, are almost exactly
-the same as the conclusions of that work.
-And the reason is, that although at that time I
-did not think that the labour which a commodity
-would command could, with propriety, be
-considered as a <em>standard</em> measure of value,
-yet I thought it the nearest approximation to
-a standard of any one object known, and consequently
-applied it, on almost all occasions, to
-correct the errors arising from the application
-of more variable measures. The conclusions,
-therefore, of my former and present reasonings
-were likely to be nearly the same, although the
-premises might now admit of further correction
-and illustration, and the conclusions might be
-pronounced with greater precision and certainty.</p>
-
-<p>It was my intention to have done this much
-more fully than in the present treatise; but
-having been interrupted by unforeseen circumstances,
-and being unwilling to delay any longer
-the publication of this essential part of my
-proposed plan, I have determined to submit it
-to the public in its present form; and will only
-add here a few observations on a question
-closely connected with it, which has lately
-excited much interest and discussion.</p>
-
-<p>Among the questions for the determination<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span>
-of which a standard measure of value is most
-particularly required, are those which relate to
-alterations in the value of the currency. We
-know perfectly well, from experience, that
-commodities are subject to great variations of
-price, and that many of these variations may
-arise from causes which alter the natural value
-of these commodities, and are equally applicable
-to a large mass of them, as to a very few.
-On the supposition of a large mass being altered,
-any article which had retained the same natural
-value, would have its power of purchasing considerably
-affected; but this would be owing to
-an alteration in the value of the mass of commodities,
-and not in the value of the article, which
-by the supposition remains the same. It follows,
-that although money may increase in its
-power of purchasing, it does not necessarily
-increase in value. But in estimating the value
-of money, some criterion or other must be referred
-to. If we cannot refer to the mass of
-commodities, we must refer to some one object,
-and this object can only be labour. Our present
-inquiry, therefore, must be into the causes
-which affect the value of the precious metals as
-compared with labour.</p>
-
-<p>These causes are of two kinds:—first, those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span>
-which occasion a high or low rate of profits,
-which, as connected with the progressive cultivation
-of poorer land, and operating universally
-and necessarily on the precious metals in common
-with all other commodities, and raising or
-lowering them with regard to labour, may be
-denominated the primary and necessary cause
-of the high or low value of metallic money.—And
-secondly, those which depend on the fertility
-and vicinity of the mines; the different
-efficiency of labour in different countries; the
-abundance or scarcity of exportable commodities;
-and the state of the demand and supply
-of commodities and labour compared with money;
-which may be denominated the secondary
-and incidental causes of the high or low value
-of metallic money.</p>
-
-<p>These two different kinds of causes will sometimes
-act in conjunction, and sometimes in
-opposition, so that it may not always be easy
-to distinguish their separate effects; but as
-these effects have really a different origin, it is
-desirable to keep them as separate as we can.</p>
-
-<p>The marks which distinguish a fall in the
-value of the precious metals, arising from the
-primary cause, are,—a rise in the money price
-of raw produce and labour, without a general
-rise in the price of wrought commodities.
-All of them, indeed, as far as they are composed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span>
-of raw produce, will have a tendency to
-rise; but, in a large class of commodities, this
-tendency to rise will be more than counterbalanced
-by the effect of the fall of profits.—Some
-therefore will rise, and some will fall, as
-I stated in my last work,<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">Q</a> according to the nature
-of the capitals employed upon them, compared
-with those which produce money; and
-while the money prices of corn and labour very
-decidedly increase, the prices of commodities,
-taken on the average, may possibly remain not
-far from the same.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, when the value of metallic
-money falls, from the secondary causes
-above noticed, there will be a tendency to a
-proportionate rise of all commodities as well as
-of corn and labour, though in some cases it
-may take a considerable time before it is completely
-effected. And, in general, whenever a
-fall in the value of money takes place, without
-a fall in the rate of profits, an event which is
-generally open to observation, it is to be attributed
-to incidental and secondary causes affecting
-the relations of money to labour, and
-not to that which is connected with the taking
-of poorer land into cultivation.</p>
-
-<p>Of these two classes of causes the second<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span>
-produces much the greatest part of those differences
-in the value of metallic money, which
-are the most observable in different countries,
-and at different periods in the same country.
-If India and England had each of them mines
-of equal natural fertility, the superior efficiency
-of English labour, assisted by machinery, would
-extract a much greater quantity of metal from
-such mines; and the money price of labour
-might be three or four times higher, and the
-value of money three or four times lower in
-England than in India.</p>
-
-<p>The same effect is, at present, practically
-produced by the skill and machinery employed
-on the manufactures with which England purchases
-her gold. If she can prepare exportable
-commodities which are in demand abroad,
-with much less labour than other nations, she
-will be able to buy gold at a much lower
-natural value, and will continue to import it
-under favourable exchanges, till its value falls in
-proportion.</p>
-
-<p>It is farther established by experience, that
-a brisk or slack demand for commodities and
-labour, and particularly for corn, has a considerable
-effect on the value of gold. Such a demand
-not only occasions a more rapid circulation
-of money, and enables the same quantity<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span>
-to perform a greater number of transactions,
-but calls into action a greater quantity of credit
-and private paper,<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">R</a> so that a general rise
-of bullion prices, including labour, seems to be
-at all times possible, even without any fresh
-importations of the precious metals; and the
-only practical limit to this rise, is the turn of
-the exchange, and the impossibility of maintaining
-the exchanges nearly at par beyond a
-certain elevation of labour and commodities.</p>
-
-<p>The secondary and incidental causes here
-enumerated, as affecting the value of gold, often
-completely overcome the effects arising from
-the primary cause. The state of bullion prices
-in most of the countries of the commercial
-world make it evident, that the efficiency of
-labour, and the abundance of exportable commodities,
-are much more powerful in lowering
-the value of bullion in the countries where they
-prevail, than high profits in raising it; and the
-same appears to be true, in reference to an increased
-demand for corn and labour.</p>
-
-<p>It cannot be doubted that the rate of interest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span>
-and profits was comparatively high during the late
-war, and this high rate of profits would naturally
-have a tendency to lower the bullion price of
-labour; but this was more than counterbalanced
-by the tendency of a brisk demand for corn
-and labour to raise money prices generally, including
-labour, and the consequence was a fall,
-during the greatest part of the time, in the value
-of bullion.</p>
-
-<p>It can as little be doubted, that the rate of
-interest and profits has fallen since the war,
-and this low rate of profits would have a natural
-tendency to raise the bullion price of
-labour; but this has been more than counterbalanced
-by the tendency of a slack demand
-for corn and labour to lower prices generally,
-and the consequence has been a rise in the
-value of gold, and a still greater rise in the
-value of the currency.</p>
-
-<p>This rise, however, in the value of the currency,
-has been by no means so considerable
-as those are inclined to make it, who would
-measure it by the fall of agricultural produce;
-nor is it so inconsiderable as those imagine who
-would measure it solely by the difference between
-paper and gold. But whether this difference
-is the whole of what can be fairly
-attributed to the Bank Restriction and the return<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span>
-to cash payments, or not, it may by no
-means be the whole change which has taken
-place in the value of the currency, when compared
-with an object which has not changed.</p>
-
-<p>It would be very desirable to be able to form
-an accurate estimate of the rise and fall which
-has taken place in the bullion price of labour
-for the last thirty years; but unfortunately,
-during the latter part of the period, no general
-estimates of the price of labour have been
-made, at least none that have come to my knowledge;
-and there is reason to think that, under
-the late stagnation in the demand for agricultural
-labour, the common rate of wages in
-England has been more than usually interrupted
-by the operation of the poor laws. On this
-account, I have made some inquiries respecting
-wages in Scotland, and have obtained a most
-valuable communication; but before I refer to
-it particularly, it may be useful to consider the
-results of the data we possess in England. The
-rise in the bullion price of labour from 1790 to
-1810 and 11, may be established upon satisfactory
-grounds, although the amount of the
-fall which has since taken place may be a
-matter of considerable uncertainty.</p>
-
-<p>According to the communications to the
-Board of Agriculture, the price of labour, in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span>
-1790, was 8<i>s.</i> 1<i>d.</i> per week. In 1796, Sir F.
-M. Eden, in his work on the Poor, stated it at
-8<i>s.</i> 11<i>d.</i> per week. In 1803, the communications
-to the Board of Agriculture make it 11<i>s.</i> 5<i>d.</i>,
-and in 1810 and 11, according to satisfactory
-returns obtained by Arthur Young, it was
-14<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i><a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">S</a> This was a steady and very great rise
-in the price of agricultural labour during the
-course of twenty years. But in 1810 and 11,
-paper had separated from gold to a considerable
-extent. Taking an average of the market prices
-of gold during these two years, this price
-was £4. 13<i>s.</i> and reducing the 14<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> currency
-to a bullion price, it will appear that the
-bullion wages of labour in 1810 and 11 were a
-little above 12<i>s.</i> The bullion price of labour
-had therefore risen 50 per cent. Now, on the
-supposition that manufacturing and mercantile
-labour continued to bear the same proportion
-to agricultural labour as before,<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">T</a> it is obvious
-that there would be a difference of 50 per cent.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span>
-between the quantity of labour and profits with
-which an ounce of gold could be purchased
-at the former period, compared with the latter;
-that is, while labour was 8<i>s.</i> 1<i>d.</i> per week, it
-would require a piece of muslin, which would
-command above nine and a half weeks labour,
-to purchase an ounce of gold; but when wages
-were 12<i>s.</i> per week, a piece of muslin, which
-would command little more than six and a
-half weeks labour, would be sufficient for the
-purpose. The natural value of bullion, therefore,
-the quantity of English labour and profits
-of which it was composed, must have fallen to
-that extent.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Tooke, in his late valuable publication,
-after stating very justly that an unusual proportion
-of unfavourable seasons must have had
-a considerable effect in raising the prices of
-corn and labour during the period adverted to,
-goes on to “ask upon what ground of fact or
-reasoning can the high prices included in such a
-period be ascribed, in fairness, to alterations in
-the currency, beyond the degree indicated by the
-difference between paper and gold, when, after
-a sufficient time has elapsed for the subsidence
-of the extraordinary effects of such an unusual
-succession of bad seasons, there is a restoration
-to a level even somewhat lower than that from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span>
-which the rise is assumed to have taken place,
-and to have continued progressively.”</p>
-
-<p>Of the subsidence here alluded to, before
-1814, Mr. Tooke has certainly not given proofs
-sufficiently general; but without dwelling on
-this point, it appears to me that the question of
-the fall in the value of the currency including
-the gold, is exclusively a question of fact, and
-must be referred to some criterion. It is a
-very intelligible thing to say that paper has
-fallen, if it has fallen with regard to the gold
-which it professes to represent; but it is not
-intelligible to say that gold has not fallen, when
-it is acknowledged to have fallen both with regard
-to its power of purchasing generally, and its
-power of commanding labour; unless a reference
-can be made for the proof of it to some more
-satisfactory criterion. A season of scarcity will
-make corn dear, and a season of plenty cheap,
-without necessarily affecting labour in either
-case, as is shown by Adam Smith, and proved
-by repeated experience. But if seasons of
-scarcity occur so frequently as to raise generally
-the bullion price of labour, it must of necessity
-be accompanied by a power of purchasing
-bullion with a smaller quantity of labour
-and profits; otherwise the event could not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span>
-occur. Whenever it does occur, the natural
-value of bullion falls.<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">U</a></p>
-
-<p>The observations here made, with a view to
-place the controversy respecting the alterations
-in the currency on its proper ground, and to
-make the necessary distinction between facts
-and the causes which may have produced them,
-apply still more strongly to the publication
-of Mr. Blake, in much of the reasoning of which
-I entirely concur. He proposes to prove that
-it was the gold which rose, and not the paper
-which fell during the war, although he acknowledges
-as a matter of fact, that almost all prices,
-including labour, rose not only in paper but in
-gold. This has, no doubt, the air of a contradiction,
-according to all the common modes of estimating
-the value of money; and it certainly
-is not removed by showing that the main cause
-of these high prices was a great demand compared
-with the supply of commodities—a cause
-which, involving as it always does, more transactions
-on credit, and a more rapid circulation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span>
-of currency, is one of the most legitimate
-causes of a fall in the value of money.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Blake, however, is certainly right in
-his view of the effects of an unfavourable exchange
-on the price of gold, when it ceases to
-form a part of the circulation. It is not only
-possible that from this cause gold might for a
-time rise in value much beyond the expense of
-transporting it; but as a matter of fact, this
-did unquestionably occur at certain periods
-during the war. There is no account of the
-price of agricultural labour in England subsequently
-to 1811. Probably it did not rise any
-more; but if it did, judging from what took place
-in Scotland, it did not rise sufficiently to balance
-the subsequent rise in the market price of
-gold, which was from £4. 15<i>s.</i> in 1811, to
-£5. 8<i>s.</i><a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">V</a> in 1813. Consequently, in 1813, as
-compared with 1811, the value of gold must
-have risen considerably; and on the supposition
-that the price of labour did not rise after 1811,
-it would appear that the natural and exchangeable
-value of gold, as measured by the standard,
-rose above 13½ per cent.</p>
-
-<p>The rise of gold from the sudden fall of the
-exchange in consequence of Buonaparte’s return<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span>
-from Elba was still more remarkable. The
-price had been as low, in the spring of 1815, as
-4<i>l.</i> 9<i>s.</i>, and without any known change in the
-currency price of labour, it rose suddenly to
-5<i>l.</i> 5<i>s.</i>, or 18 per cent.; and consequently, to
-purchase an ounce of gold it was necessary at
-that time to give commodities worth 18 per
-cent. more of agricultural labour than it might
-have been purchased for a month or two before.
-Whatever might have been the case with
-the paper, there could not, on any view of the
-subject, be the slightest foundation for the supposition
-of a sudden abundance and cheapness
-of labour just before the battle of Waterloo. In
-fact, agricultural labour had not fallen, and manufacturing
-labour was higher than usual; so
-that even without considering labour as a
-standard, it must have been acknowledged, that,
-of these two objects which had altered in relative
-value, it was the gold which had risen,
-not the labour which had fallen.</p>
-
-<p>In attempting to measure the <em>rise</em> in the
-value of the currency since the period of the
-high prices, we shall be greatly assisted by the
-following very valuable document respecting
-the price of labour in the county or stewartry
-of Kircudbright. It is considered that the
-prices in this table represent pretty nearly
-(though they are rather below) the wages in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span>
-other parts of Scotland. The labourers have
-no other allowances whatever except the daily
-wages specified in the table. In the intermediate
-years not quoted the wages remained
-stationary at the rates last mentioned; and
-when any change took place, the period of such
-change and the degree of it are regularly
-stated.</p>
-
-<table class="narrow" summary="Labour rates">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc bt bb br">Years.</td>
- <td class="tdc bt bb bl br">Rate per day<br />in winter.</td>
- <td class="tdc bt bb bl">Rate per day<br />in summer.</td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc br">1760</td>
- <td class="tdc br">  4<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">  6<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc br">1765</td>
- <td class="tdc br">  6<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">  8<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc br">1770</td>
- <td class="tdc br">  8<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">10<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc br">1772</td>
- <td class="tdc br">  8<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">12<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc br">1776</td>
- <td class="tdc br">  7<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">  9<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc br">1780</td>
- <td class="tdc br">  8<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">10<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc br">1791</td>
- <td class="tdc br">  8<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">11<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc br">1793</td>
- <td class="tdc br">  9<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">12<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc br">1798</td>
- <td class="tdc br">11<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">14<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc br">1799</td>
- <td class="tdc br">12<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">15<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc br">1800</td>
- <td class="tdc br">14<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">16<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc br">1802</td>
- <td class="tdc br">16<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">18<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc br">1811</td>
- <td class="tdc br">18<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">22<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc br">1812</td>
- <td class="tdc br">20<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">24<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc br">1816</td>
- <td class="tdc br">18<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">22<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc br">1817</td>
- <td class="tdc br">16<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">20<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc br">1819</td>
- <td class="tdc br">15<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">18<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc br">1822</td>
- <td class="tdc br">12<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">15<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>In 1812, farm servants boarded in the house
-received from 14<i>l.</i> to 22<i>l.</i> a year; women servants
-from 5<i>l.</i> to 8<i>l.</i> At present, (April, 1823,)
-men receive from 10<i>l.</i> to 14<i>l.</i>, and women from
-3<i>l.</i> 10<i>s.</i> to 6<i>l.</i></p>
-
-<p>Masons’ wages per day were three shillings
-in 1812, and are now half-a-crown.</p>
-
-<p>All work done by the piece, such as building
-stone fences, cutting ditches either for
-fences or drains, making roads, &amp;c. may be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span>
-done at a greater reduction of price than the
-fall in the rate of labour by the day. Work
-is now performed more frequently by the
-piece; and the best labourers are employed
-by the day; while the inferior workmen, and
-those unable from age, or other causes, to perform
-a full day’s work, are turned over to work
-by the piece. Agricultural affairs are under
-such depression, that the work is curtailed,
-and the competition for work is thereby increased.<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">W</a></p>
-
-<p>The first thing that strikes us in the table is
-the very remarkable rise of labour in Scotland
-from 1760—much greater than in England, and
-much greater than in proportion to the rise in
-the price of corn. This was no doubt owing in
-part to the comparatively unimproved state of
-the district in question, and of Scotland in
-general at the earliest period adverted to. But
-to go no farther back than 1790, the period
-with which we commenced in England, it appears
-that the rise from 1790 to 1811, was considerably
-greater than in England, and nearly
-in proportion to the rise in the price of wheat.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span>
-If, indeed, we take the price of labour as mentioned
-in the table for 1812, and compare it
-with the average price of wheat for the four
-years from 1812 to 1815 inclusive, during
-which period the same price of labour seems
-to have continued, it will appear, that labour,
-taking summer and winter wages together, rose
-in the proportion of from 19<i>s.</i> to 44<i>s.</i>, while
-wheat rose from 43<i>s.</i> in 1792, (according to the
-average of England and Wales, which commences
-with that year,) to 88<i>s.</i> and therefore
-labour rose decidedly more than wheat, except
-in reference to the peculiarly high price of
-wheat in 1812.</p>
-
-<p>Taking the currency price of labour in Scotland
-as having risen from 9½<i>d.</i> to 22<i>d.</i>, and reducing
-the 22<i>d.</i> to its value in bullion, the
-average price of bullion in that year being 5<i>l.</i> 1<i>s.</i>,
-it will appear, that the bullion price of labour
-in Scotland rose, in the interval between 1790
-and 1812, from 9½<i>d.</i> to 16½<i>d.</i>, or nearly 73 per
-cent. And consequently, the same quantity of
-gold for which it would have been necessary to
-give commodities worth 173 days labour in
-1790, might be purchased for 100 days labour
-in 1812; or the value of the currency estimated
-in gold might be considered as having fallen in
-that proportion.</p>
-
-<p>In 1812, the bullion price of labour as above<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
-stated was 16½<i>d.</i>; it has since fallen to 13½<i>d.</i>,
-or in the proportion of from 100 to 81·8—rather
-more than 18 per cent. This view of it shows most
-clearly the change in the bullion value of the
-currency since 1812. But if we wish to estimate
-the whole fall which has taken place in the
-currency, and then subtract what is due to the
-difference between paper and gold, it will appear
-that the whole fall since 1812, estimated on the
-currency wages of 1812, has been rather less
-than 39 per cent.; of which, if the average difference
-between paper and gold in the year 1812
-was as 101 to 78, about 23 per cent. would
-belong to the paper, leaving about 16 per cent.
-for the fall in the currency independently of the
-excess of paper prices above gold prices. The
-apparent difference in the results of these estimates
-arises merely from the per centage in the
-latter case being taken on a higher number.</p>
-
-<p>I stated before, that I was not aware of any
-data on which reliance could be placed respecting
-the amount of the fall of agricultural wages
-in England since the termination of the war;
-but on the supposition that the wages, which
-in 1810 and 1811 were 14<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> per week,
-had fallen to 10<i>s.</i> then as the bullion wages of
-1810 and 1811 were a little above 12<i>s.</i>, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span>
-fall in the bullion value of the currency
-would be nearly 17 per cent., or for the same
-quantity of gold which in 1810 and 1811 might
-be purchased by commodities worth 83 days
-labour, it would now be necessary to give commodities
-the natural value of which would be
-represented by 100 days labour. This difference
-of course includes the effects which have
-been attributed to the purchases of bullion by
-the Bank with a view to a return to cash payments,
-the amount of which separately it is
-scarcely possible to calculate; but I am inclined
-to agree with Mr. Tooke in thinking that it is
-not above one or two per cent. If the price of
-agricultural labour in England has not fallen so
-much as is here supposed, the difference in the
-value of the currency will not be so great as
-above stated, but on any supposition which is
-at all probable, it must be something considerable.</p>
-
-<p>It is certain therefore that the currency, estimated
-in what appears to be a correct standard
-of value, has fallen in such a degree beyond the
-difference between paper and gold, as to add
-much to the pressure upon the landed interest,
-though by no means to the extent which would
-be implied by measuring the value of the
-currency in agricultural produce. This produce,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span>
-from the scantiness of the supply compared
-with the demand, was at one time much above
-its natural and ordinary value, and has since,
-from the abundance of the supply compared
-with the demand, been as much below its
-natural value; while the value of the currency,
-though it has fallen and risen considerably, has
-been much more steady than the value of
-corn.</p>
-
-<p>To what extent the alterations in the value of
-the currency beyond the difference between
-bullion and paper are attributable to the Bank
-restriction, and the return to cash payments,
-it is by no means easy to say. That the currency
-would have fallen very considerably under the
-circumstances of the last war, and risen very
-considerably under the circumstances which
-accompanied the peace, although paper had
-been kept on a par with gold, I cannot feel the
-least doubt; and probably the only difference
-has been, that as the increase of paper beyond
-what would circulate at par with gold gave
-facilities to production, and to the bringing of
-poor land into cultivation during the war, it has
-tended to increase the glut and low prices since
-the peace.</p>
-
-<p>But whatever may have been the pressure on
-the owners of land since the peace, they cannot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span>
-have the slightest plea for an attempt to indemnify
-themselves at the expense of the public
-creditor. In the turns of the wheel of fortune
-all parties should have fair play; no class of
-persons can be justified in endeavouring to lift
-themselves up by using unfair and dishonourable
-means to pull others down; and least of all ought
-such means to be thought of by the landlords of
-this country, who, whatever inconveniences they
-may have suffered latterly, have unquestionably
-altogether benefited much more largely from
-the alterations in the value of the currency, than
-the very persons who in their opinion should
-be made to relieve them from their embarrassments.</p>
-
-<p class="p4 center small"><span class="bt">London: Printed by C. Roworth,</span><br />
-<span class="bb in2 l2">Bell-Yard, Temple-Bar.</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter"><div class="footnotes">
-<h2 class="nobreak p1" id="FOOTNOTES">FOOTNOTES</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">A</a> Mr. Ricardo, speaking of the commodities produced by the
-capitalist, says, “their whole value is divided into two portions
-only: one constitutes the profits of stock; the other the wages
-of labour.” (p. 107. 3d edit.) The language of Mr. Mill, in his
-<cite>Elements of Political Economy</cite>, is similar.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">B</a> This is very properly stated by Colonel Torrens, in his
-<cite>Production of Wealth</cite>, c. 1. p. 28.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">C</a> The effects of slow or quick returns, and of the different
-proportions of fixed and circulating capitals, are distinctly allowed
-by Mr. Ricardo; but in his last edition, (the third, p. 32.) he
-has much underrated their amount. They are both theoretically
-and practically so considerable as entirely to destroy the position
-that commodities exchange with each other according to
-the quantity of labour which has been employed upon them;
-but no one that I am aware of has ever stated that the different
-quantity of labour employed on commodities is not a much
-more powerful source of difference of value.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">D</a> Colonel Torrens, by representing capital under the form of
-certain quantities of cloth and corn, instead of value in labour,
-has precluded himself from the possibility of giving a just view
-either of value, profits, or effectual demand. An increase of cloth
-and corn from the same quantity of labour is of no avail whatever
-in increasing value, profits, or effectual demand, if this increased
-produce will not command so much labour as before, an
-event which is continually occurring, from deficiency of demand.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">E</a> Agricultural labour is taken for the obvious reasons that it
-is the commonest species of labour, that it directly produces the
-food of the labourer, and that it is the most immediately connected
-with the gradations of soil, and the necessary variations
-of profits. It is also assumed with Adam Smith, Mr. Ricardo,
-and other political economists, that, on an average, other kinds
-of labour continue to bear the same proportions to agricultural
-labour.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">F</a> In my last work, I thought that a mean between corn and
-labour might be a better measure of value than labour alone;
-but I am now convinced that I was wrong, and that labour
-alone is the true measure.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">G</a> Whenever it is said that the value of labour rises in the progress
-of cultivation, a comparison is made between the value of
-a given quantity of labour at two different periods; and when it
-is added that wages rise in proportion to the quantity of labour
-required to produce them, objects are measured solely by the
-quantity of labour employed upon them, although the rate of
-profits may be totally different.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">H</a> This proposition is essentially the same as that which is
-very clearly and ably expressed by Mr. Ricardo in his chapter on
-Profits, (p. 128. 3d ed.) in the following terms: “in all countries
-and at all times profits depend on the quantity of labour requisite
-to provide necessaries for the labourers on that land, or
-with that capital which yields no rent;” a proposition which
-though incomplete in reference to the ultimate causes of the
-variations of profits, contains a most important truth. From
-this truth the legitimate deduction appears to me to be, the
-constant value of labour; but Mr. Ricardo has formed his system
-on a deduction exactly opposite to it. He has, however,
-in my opinion, amply compensated for the errors into which he
-may have fallen, by furnishing us, at the same time, not only
-with the means of their refutation, but the means of improving
-the science of Political Economy.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">I</a> Mr. Ricardo, by supposing gold to be produced always by
-a certain quantity of labour and <em>capital</em>, is compelled to acknowledge
-that his standard “would be a perfect measure of value
-for all things produced under the same circumstances precisely
-as itself, but for no others.” p. 43. This concession appears to
-me quite fatal. We want to measure the value of commodities
-under <em>all circumstances</em>, and it is only gold obtained exclusively
-by labour, or labour itself, which can do this. See <cite>Principles
-of Political Economy considered with a View to their Practical
-Application</cite>, pp. 111 and 118.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">J</a> It is this rise in the money price of labour, occasioned by
-the fall of profits, which Mr. Ricardo considers as that necessary
-rise in the <em>value</em> of labour on which he makes so much
-depend in his system; but if the foregoing reasoning be well
-founded, it follows that this rise is not a rise in the <em>value</em> of
-labour, but a fall in the value of money.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">K</a> This applies to the seed, and the food of the working cattle
-in agriculture.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">L</a> The labour worked up in a commodity could not, in many
-cases, be ascertained without considerable difficulty; but the
-labour which it will command is always open and palpable.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">M</a> Practically, in all countries such as South America and
-Ireland, where there is a slack demand for labour, and the
-people are but half employed, the food wages of labour are
-high, compared with the work done.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">N</a> If profits rise in some departments without falling proportionally
-in others, the <em>average</em> rate of profits will have increased,
-although, from the difficulty of moving capital, the rate of profits
-in some employments may not have had time to rise before
-the stimulus to such rise comes to an end by a fresh increase of
-capital.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">O</a> This is the view taken of it by Colonel Torrens in his
-<cite>Production of Wealth</cite>, which I think the just one; because it
-makes the proper distinction between cost and value, on which
-the great stimulus to production depends. But he has most
-unnecessarily and incorrectly given the same interpretation to
-<em>natural price</em>, which always includes profits.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">P</a> In order to exclude demand and supply from the costs of
-production, when ordinary profits are considered as making a
-part of them, it would be necessary to assume that the corn
-wages of labour are always the same, an assumption which
-would be quite unwarranted, not only in reference to short periods,
-but to periods of fifty or sixty years, as the history of corn
-wages in this country alone amply testifies (see ch. iv. sect. 4, of
-my Princ. of Pol. Econ. &amp;c.); and what but the state of the demand
-and supply of corn, compared with labour, prevents profits
-in the United States from being 100 per cent.? The quantity
-of corn divided between the labourer and capitalist would
-be amply sufficient to yield such profits, if the corn wages of
-labour were no higher than in England.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">Q</a> Sect. IV. p. 91, et seq.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">R</a> One of the most valuable sections in Mr. Tooke’s late work
-<cite>On High and Low Prices</cite>, is the seventh, in which he proves the
-frequent occurrence of this event, and explains, with great clearness
-and knowledge of the subject, the mode in which it takes
-place.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">S</a> Inquiry into the Rise of Prices in Europe, p. 15.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">T</a> Perhaps at the time specifically adverted to, this supposition
-will not be allowed. But it is always assumed as a general
-proposition; and although 1810 and 11 were years of great
-manufacturing distress, yet Mr. Tooke himself brings evidence
-which shows that manufacturing labour was particularly high
-in 1805 and 6.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">U</a> In poor countries a succession of bad seasons sometimes
-takes place without any rise in the price of labour, and in that
-case, though there may be a high price of corn, there is no fall
-in the natural value of money. It will not be purchased with
-less labour.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">V</a> These averages are taken from Lord Lauderdale’s <cite>Further
-Considerations on the State of the Currency, published in 1813</cite>.
-Appendix, p. 33.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">W</a> For the foregoing valuable table, and the information accompanying
-it, I am indebted to Mr. Mure, of Kircudbright,
-through the kind intervention of Mr. M’Culloch, of Edinburgh.</p></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"><div class="transnote">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Transcribers_Notes">Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
-
-<p>Simple typographical errors were corrected.
-Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made
-consistent when a predominant preference was found
-in the original book; otherwise they were not changed.</p>
-
-<p>This book has no Table of Contents.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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