Which is best for
man and for society, abundance or scarcity? What! you exclaim, can that be a
question? Has anyone ever asserted, or is it possible to maintain, that at the
foundation of human well-being?
Yes, this has been
asserted, and is maintained every day; and I do not hesitate to affirm that the
theory of scarcity is the most popular by far. It is the life of conversation,
of the newspapers, of books, and of political oratory; and, strange as it may
seem, it is certain that political economy will have fulfilled its practical
mission when it has established beyond question, and widely disseminated, this
very simple proposition: "The wealth of men consists in the abundance of
commodities."
Do we not hear it said
every day: "The foreigner is about to inundate us with his products?"
Then we fear abundance.
Did not Mr.
Saint-Cricq exclaim: "Production is excessive"? Then he feared
abundance.
Do workmen break
machines? Then they fear an excess of production, or abundance.
Has not Mr. Bugeaud pronounced these words: "Let bread be dear, and agriculturists will get rich"? Now, bread can only be dear because it is scarce. Therefore Mr. Bugeaud extols scarcity.
Does not Mr.
d'Argout urge as an argument against sugar-growing the very productiveness of
that industry? Does he not say: "Beetroot has no future, and its culture
cannot be extended, because a few acres devoted to its culture in each
department would supply the whole consumption of France"? Then, in his
eyes, good lies in sterility, in dearth, and evil in fertility and abundance.
La Presse, Le
Commerce, and the greater part of the daily papers, have one or more articles
every morning to demonstrate to the legislative chamber and the government that
it is sound policy to raise legislatively the price of all things by means of
tariffs. And do the chamber and the government not obey the injunction? Now
tariffs can raise prices only by diminishing the supply of commodities in the
market! Then the journals, the chamber, and the minister put into practice the
theory of scarcity, and I am justified in saying that this theory is by far the
most popular.
How does it happen
that in the eyes of workmen, of publicists, and statesmen abundance should
appear a thing to be dreaded and scarcity advantageous? I propose to trace this
illusion to its source.
We remark that a
man grows richer in proportion to the return yielded by his exertions, that is
to say, in proportion as he sells his commodity at a higher price. He sells at
a higher price in proportion to the rarity, to the scarcity, of the article he
produces. We conclude from this that, as far as he is concerned at least,
scarcity enriches him. Applying successively the same reasoning to all other
producers, we construct the theory of scarcity. We next proceed to apply this
theory and, in order to favor producers generally, we raise prices
artificially, and cause a scarcity of all commodities, by prohibition, by
intervention, by the suppression of machinery, and other analogous means.
The same thing
holds of abundance. We observe that when a product is plentiful, it sells at a
lower price, and the producer gains less. If all producers are in the same
situation, they are all poor. Therefore it is abundance that ruins society. And
as theories are soon reduced to practice, we see the law struggling against the
abundance of commodities.
This fallacy in its more general form may make little impression, but applied to a particular order of facts, to a certain branch of industry, to a given class of producers, it is extremely specious; and this is easily explained. It forms a syllogism that is not false, but incomplete. Now, what is true in a syllogism is always and necessarily present to the mind. But incompleteness is a negative quality, an absent datum, which it is very possible, and indeed very easy, to leave out of account.
Man produces in
order to consume. He is at once producer and consumer. The reasoning I have
just explained considers him only in the first of these points of view. Had the
second been taken into account, it would have led to an opposite conclusion. In
effect, may it not be said:
The consumer is
richer in proportion as he purchases all things cheaper; and he purchases
things cheaper in proportion to their abundance; therefore it is abundance that
enriches him. This reasoning, extended to all consumers, leads to the theory of
plenty.
It is the notion
of exchange imperfectly understood that leads to these illusions. If we
consider our personal interest, we recognize distinctly that it is two-sided.
As sellers we have an interest in dearness, and consequently in scarcity; as
buyers, in cheapness, or what amounts to the same thing, in the abundance of
commodities. We cannot, then, found our reasoning on one or the other of these
interests before inquiring which of the two coincides and is identified with
the general and permanent interest of mankind at large.
If man were a
solitary animal, if he labored exclusively for himself, if he consumed directly
the fruit of his labor – in a word, if he did not exchange – the theory of
scarcity would never have appeared in the world. It is too evident that in that
case, abundance would be advantageous, from whatever quarter it came, whether
from the result of his industry, from ingenious tools, from powerful machinery
of his invention, or whether due to the fertility of the soil, the liberality
of nature, or even to a mysterious invasion of products brought by the waves
and left by them upon the shore. No solitary man would ever have thought that
in order to encourage his labor and render it more productive, it was necessary
to break in pieces the instruments that lessened it, to neutralize the
fertility of the soil, or give back to the sea the good things it had brought
to his door. He would perceive at once that labor is not an end, but a means;
and that it would be absurd to reject the result for fear of doing injury to
the means by which the result was accomplished. He would perceive that if he
devotes two hours a day to providing for his wants, any circumstance
(machinery, fertility, gratuitous gift, no matter what) that saves him an hour
of that labor, the result remaining the same, puts that hour at his disposal,
and that he can devote it to increasing his enjoyments; in short, he would see
that to save labor is nothing else than progress.
But exchange
disturbs our view of a truth so simple. In the social state, and with the
separation of employments to which it leads, the production and consumption of
a commodity are not mixed up and confounded in the same individual. Each man
comes to see in his labor no longer a means but an end. In relation to each
commodity, exchange creates two interests, that of the producer and that of the
consumer; and these two interests are always directly opposed to each other.
It is essential to
analyze them and examine their nature.
Take the case of
any producer whatever, what is his immediate interest? It consists of two
things; first, that the fewest possible number of persons should devote themselves
to his branch of industry; second, that the greatest possible number of persons
should be in quest of the article he produces. Political economy explains it
more succinctly in these terms: Supply very limited, demand very extended; or,
in other words still, Competition limited, demand unlimited.
What is the
immediate interest of the consumer? That the supply of the product in question
should be extended, and the demand restrained.
Seeing, then, that
these two interests are in opposition to each other, one of them must
necessarily coincide with social interests in general, and the other be
antagonistic to them.
But which of them
should legislation favor, as identical with the public good – if, indeed, it
should favor either?
To discover this,
we must inquire what would happen if the secret wishes of men were granted.
In as far as we
are producers, it must be allowed that the desire of every one of us is
antisocial. Are we vinedressers? It would give us no great regret if hail
should shower down on all the vines in the world except our own: this is the
theory of scarcity. Are we iron-masters? Our wish is that there should be no
other iron in the market but our own, however much the public may be in want of
it; and for no other reason than this want, keenly felt and imperfectly
satisfied, shall ensure us a higher price: this is still the theory of
scarcity. Are we farmers? We say with Mr. Bugeaud: Let bread be dear, that is
to say, scarce, and agriculturists will thrive: always the same theory, the
theory of scarcity.
Are we physicians?
We cannot avoid seeing that certain physical ameliorations, improving the
sanitary state of the country, the development of certain moral virtues, such
as moderation and temperance, the progress of knowledge tending to enable each
man to take better care of his own health, the discovery of certain simple
remedies of easy application, would be so many blows to our professional
success. In so far as we are physicians, then, our secret wishes would be
antisocial. I do not say that physicians form these secret wishes. On the
contrary, I believe they would hail with joy the discovery of a universal
panacea; but they would not do this as physicians, but as men and as
Christians. By a noble abnegation of self, the physician places himself in the
consumer's point of view. But as practicing a profession, from which he derives
his own and his family's subsistence, his desires, or, if you will, his
interests, are antisocial.
Are we
manufacturers of cotton goods? We desire to sell them at the price most
profitable to ourselves. We should consent willingly to an interdict being laid
on all rival manufactures; and if we could venture to give this wish public
expression, or hope to realize it with some chance of success, we should attain
our end, to some extent by indirect means; for example, by excluding foreign
fabrics in order to diminish the supply, and thus produce, forcibly and to our
profit, a scarcity of clothing.
In the same way,
we might pass in review all other branches of industry, and we should always
find that the producers, as such, have antisocial views. "The
shopkeeper," says Montaigne, "thrives only by the irregularities of
youth; the farmer by the high price of corn, the architect by the destruction
of houses, the officers of justice by lawsuits and quarrels. Ministers of
religion derive their distinction and employment from our vices and our death.
No physician rejoices in the health of his friends, nor soldiers in the peace
of their country; and so of the rest."
Hence it follows
that if the secret wishes of each producer were realized, the world would
retrograde rapidly toward barbarism. The sail would supersede steam, the oar
would supersede the sail, and general traffic would be carried on by the
carrier's wagon; the latter would be superseded by the mule, and the mule by
the peddler. Wool would exclude cotton, cotton in its turn would exclude wool,
and so on until the dearth of all things had caused man himself to disappear
from the face of the earth.
Suppose for a
moment that the legislative power and the public force were placed at the
disposal of Mineral's committee, and that each member of that association had
the privilege of bringing in and sanctioning a favorite law, is it difficult to
divine to what sort of industrial code the public would be subjected?
If we now proceed
to consider the immediate interest of the consumer, we shall find that it is in
perfect harmony with the general interest, with all that the welfare of society
calls for. When the purchaser goes to market he desires to find it well
stocked. Let the seasons be propitious for all harvests; let inventions, more
and more marvellous, bring within reach a greater and greater number of
products and enjoyments; let time and labor be saved; let distances be effaced
by the perfection and rapidity of transit; let the spirit of justice and of
peace allow of a diminished weight of taxation; let barriers of every kind be
removed – in all this the interest of the consumer runs parallel with the
public interest. The consumer may push his secret wishes to a chimerical and
absurd length, without these wishes becoming antagonistic to the public
welfare. He may desire that food and shelter, the hearth and the roof,
instruction and morality, security and peace, power and health, should be
obtained without exertion and without measure, like the dust of the highways,
the water of the brook, the air that we breathe; and yet the realization of his
desires would not be at variance with the good of society.
It might be said
that, if these wishes were granted, the work of the producer would become more
and more limited, and would end with being stopped for want of sustenance. But
why? Because on this extreme supposition, all imaginable wants and desires
would be fully satisfied. Man, like Omnipotence, would create all things by a
simple act of volition. Well, on this hypothesis, what reason should we have to
regret the stoppage of industrial production?
I made the
supposition not long ago of the existence of an assembly composed of workmen,
each member of which, in his capacity of producer, should have the power of
passing a law embodying his secret wish, and I said that the code that would
emanate from that assembly would be monopoly systematized, the theory of
scarcity reduced to practice.
In the same way, a
chamber in which each should consult exclusively his own immediate interest as
a consumer, would tend to systematize liberty, to suppress all restrictive
measures, to overthrow all artificial barriers – in a word, to realize the theory
of plenty.
Hence it follows:
That to consult
exclusively the immediate interest of the producer is to consult an interest
that is antisocial;
That to take for
basis exclusively the immediate interest of the consumer would be to take for
basis the general interest.
Let me enlarge on
this view of the subject a little, at the risk of being prolix.
A radical
antagonism exists between seller and buyer.
The former desires
that the subject of the bargain should be scarce, its supply limited, and its
price high.
The latter desires
that it should be abundant, its supply large, and its price low.
The laws, which
should be at least neutral, take the part of the seller against the buyer, of
the producer against the consumer, of dearness against cheapness, of scarcity
against abundance.
They proceed, if
not intentionally, at least logically, on this datum: a nation is rich when it
is in want of everything.
For they say, it
is the producer that we must favor by securing him a good market for his
product. For this purpose it is necessary to raise the price, and in order to
raise the price we must restrict the supply; and to restrict the supply is to
create scarcity.
Just let us
suppose that at the present moment, when all these laws are in full force, we
make a complete inventory, not in value but in weight, measure, volume,
quantity, of all the commodities existing in the country, that are fitted to
satisfy the wants and tastes of its inhabitants – corn, meat, cloth, fuel,
colonial products, etc.
Suppose, again,
that next day all the barriers that oppose the introduction of foreign products
are removed.
Lastly, suppose
that in order to test the result of this reform they proceed three months
afterwards to make a new inventory.
Is it not true
that there will be found in France more corn, cattle, cloth, linen, iron, coal,
sugar, etc., at the date of the second than at the date of the first inventory?
So true is this
that our protective tariffs have no other purpose than to hinder all these
things from reaching us, to restrict the supply, and prevent low prices and
abundance.
Now I would ask,
Are the people who live under our laws better fed because there is less bread,
meat, and sugar in the country? Are they better clothed because there is less
cloth and linen? Better warmed because there is less coal? Better assisted in
their labor because there are fewer tools and less iron, copper, and machinery?
But it may be
said, If the foreigner inundates us with his products he will carry away our
money.
And what does it
matter? Men are not fed on money. They do not clothe themselves with gold, or
warm themselves with silver. What does it matter whether there is more or less
money in the country if there is more bread on our sideboards, more meat in our
larders, more linen in our wardrobes, more firewood in our cellars.
Restrictive laws
always land us in this dilemma: Either you admit that they produce scarcity, or
you do not. If you admit it, you avow by the admission that you inflict on the
people all the injury in your power. If you do not admit it, you deny having
restricted the supply and raised prices, and consequently you deny having
favored the producer.
What you do is
either hurtful or profitless, injurious or ineffectual. It never can bring any useful result.
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