Progress and Poverty
[01] Reducing to its
most compact form the problem we have set out to investigate, let
us examine, step by step, the explanation which political economy,
as now accepted by the best authority, gives of it.
[02] The cause which
produces poverty in the midst of advancing wealth is evidently the
cause which exhibits itself in the tendency, everywhere recognized,
of wages to a minimum. Let us, therefore, put our inquiry into this
compact form:
[03] Why, in spite
of increase in productive power, do wages tend to a minimum which
will give but a bare living?
[04] The answer of the
current political economy is, that wages are fixed by the ratio between
the number of laborers and the amount of capital devoted to the employment
of labor, and constantly tend to the lowest amount on which laborers
will consent to live and reproduce, because the increase in the number
of laborers tends naturally to follow and overtake any increase in
capital. The increase of the divisor being thus held in check only
by the possibilities of the quotient, the dividend may be increased
to infinity without greater result.
[05] In current thought
this doctrine holds all but undisputed sway. It bears the indorsement
of the very highest names among the cultivators of political economy,
and though there have been attacks upon it, they are generally more
formal than real.1
It is assumed by Buckle as the basis of his generalizations of universal
history. It is taught in all, or nearly all, the great English and
American universities, and is laid down in textbooks which aim at
leading the masses to reason correctly upon practical affairs, while
it seems to harmonize with the new philosophy, which, having in a
few years all but conquered the scientific world, is now rapidly permeating
the general mind.
[06] Thus entrenched
in the upper regions of thought, it is in cruder form even more firmly
rooted in what may be styled the lower. What gives to the fallacies
of protection such a tenacious hold, in spite of their evident inconsistencies
and absurdities, is the idea that the sum to be distributed in wages
is in each community a fixed one, which the competition of "foreign
labor" must still further subdivide. The same idea underlies most
of the theories which aim at the abolition of interest and the restriction
of competition, as the means whereby the share of the laborer in the
general wealth can be increased; and it crops out in every direction
among those who are not thoughtful enough to have any theories, as
may be seen in the columns of newspapers and the debates of legislative
bodies.
[07] And yet, widely
accepted and deeply rooted as it is, it seems to me that this theory
does not tally with obvious facts. For, if wages depend upon the
ratio between the amount of labor seeking employment and the amount
of capital devoted to its employment, the relative scarcity or abundance
of one factor must mean the relative abundance or scarcity of the
other. Thus, capital must be relatively abundant where wages are
high, and relatively scarce where wages are low. Now, as the capital
used in paying wages must largely consist of the capital constantly
seeking investment, the current rate of interest must be the measure
of its relative abundance or scarcity. So, if it be true that wages
depend upon the ratio between the amount of labor seeking employment
and the capital devoted to its employment, then high wages, the
mark of the relative scarcity of labor, must be accompanied by low
interest, the mark of the relative abundance of capital, and reversely,
low wages must be accompanied by high interest.
[08] This is not the
fact, but the contrary. Eliminating from interest the element of insurance,
and regarding only interest proper, or the return for the use of capital,
is it not a general truth that interest is high where and when wages
are high, and low where and when wages are low? Both wages and interest
have been higher in the United States than in England, in the Pacific
than in the Atlantic States. Is it not a notorious fact that where
labor flows for higher wages, capital also flows for higher interest?
Is it not true that wherever there has been a general rise or fall
in wages there has been at the same time a similar rise or fall in
interest? In California, for instance, when wages were higher than
anywhere else in the world, so also was interest higher. Wages and
interest have in California gone down together. When common wages
were $5 a day, the ordinary bank rate of interest was twenty-four
per cent. per annum. Now that common wages are $2 Or $2.50 a day,
the ordinary bank rate is from ten to twelve per cent.
[09] Now, this broad,
general fact, that wages are higher in new countries, where capital
is relatively scarce, than in old countries, where capital is relatively
abundant, is too glaring to be ignored. And although very lightly
touched upon, it is noticed by the expounders of the current political
economy. The manner in which it is noticed proves what I say, that
it is utterly inconsistent with the accepted theory of wages. For
in explaining it such writers as Mill, Fawcett, and Price virtually
give up the theory of wages upon which, in the same treatises, they
formally insist. Though they declare that wages are fixed by the ratio
between capital and laborers, they explain the higher wages and interest
of new countries by the greater relative production of wealth. I shall
hereafter show that this is not the fact, but that, on the contrary,
the production of wealth is relatively larger in old and densely populated
countries than in new and sparsely populated countries. But at present
I merely wish to point out the inconsistency. For to say that the
higher wages of new countries are due to greater proportionate production,
is clearly to make the ratio with production, and not the ratio with
capital, the determinator of wages.
[10] Though this inconsistency
does not seem to have been perceived by the class of writers to whom
I refer, it has been noticed by one of the most logical of the expounders
of the current political economy. Professor Cairnes2
endeavors in a very ingenious way to reconcile the fact with the theory,
by assuming that in new countries, where industry is generally directed
to the production of food and what in manufactures is called raw material,
a much larger proportion of the capital used in production is devoted
to the payment of wages than in older countries where a greater part
must be expended in machinery and material, and thus, in the new country,
though capital is scarcer, and interest is higher, the amount determined
to the payment of wages is really larger, and wages are also higher.
For instance, of $100,000 devoted in an old country to manufactures,
$80,000 would probably be expended for buildings, machinery and the
purchase of materials, leaving but $20,000 to be paid out in wages;
whereas in a new country, of $30,000 devoted to agriculture, etc.,
not more than $5,000 would be required for tools, etc., leaving $25,000
to be distributed in wages. In this way it is explained that the wage
fund may be comparatively large where capital is comparatively scarce,
and high wages and high interest accompany each other.
[11] In what follows
I think I shall be able to show that this explanation is based upon
a total misapprehension of the relations of labor to Capital -- a
fundamental error as to the fund from which wages are drawn; but at
present it is necessary only to point out that the connection in the
fluctuation of wages and interest in the same countries and in the
same branches of industry cannot thus be explained. In those alternations
known as "good times" and "hard times" a brisk demand for labor and
good wages is always accompanied by a brisk demand for capital and
stiff rates of interest. While, when laborers cannot find employment
and wages droop, there is always an accumulation of capital seeking
investment at low rates.3
The present depression has been no less marked by want of employment
and distress among the working classes than by the accumulation of
unemployed capital in all the great centers, and by nominal rates
of interest on undoubted security. Thus, under conditions which admit
of no explanation consistent with the current theory, do we find high
interest coinciding with high wages, and low interest with low wages
-- capital seemingly scarce when labor is scarce, and abundant when
labor is abundant.
[12] All these well
known facts, which coincide with each other, point to a relation between
wages and interest, but it is to a relation of conjunction, not of
opposition. Evidently they are utterly inconsistent with the theory
that wages are determined by the ratio between labor and capital,
or any part of capital.
[13] How, then, it will
be asked, could such a theory arise? How is it that it has been accepted
by a succession of economists, from the time of Adam Smith to the
present day?
[14] If we examine the
reasoning by which in current treatises this theory of wages is supported,
we see at once that it is not an induction from observed facts, but
a deduction from a previously assumed theory viz., that wages are
drawn from capital. It being assumed that capital is the source of
wages, it necessarily follows that the gross amount of wages must
be limited by the amount of capital devoted to the employment of labor,
and hence that the amount individual laborers can receive must be
determined by the ratio between their number and the amount of capital
existing for their recompense.4
This reasoning is valid, but the conclusion, as we have seen, does
not correspond with the facts. The fault, therefore, must be in the
premises. Let us see.
[15] I am aware that
the theorem that wages are drawn from capital is one of the most fundamental
and apparently best settled of current political economy, and that
it has been accepted as axiomatic by all the great thinkers who have
devoted their powers to the elucidation of the science. Nevertheless,
I think it can be demonstrated to be a fundamental error -- the fruitful
parent of a long series of errors, which vitiate most important practical
conclusions. This demonstration I am about to attempt. It is necessary
that it should be clear and conclusive, for a doctrine upon which
so much important reasoning is based, which is supported by such a
weight of authority, which is so plausible in itself, and is so liable
to recur in different forms, cannot be safely brushed aside in a paragraph.
[16] The proposition
I shall endeavor to prove, is:
[17] That wages,
instead of being drawn from capital, are in reality drawn from the
product of the labor for which they are paid.5
[18] Now, inasmuch as
the current theory that wages are drawn from capital also holds that
capital is reimbursed from production, this at first glance may seem
a distinction without a difference -- a mere change in terminology,
to discuss which would be but to add to those unprofitable disputes
that render so much that has been written upon politico-economic subjects
as barren and worthless as the controversies of the various learned
societies about the true reading of the inscription on the stone that
Mr. Pickwick found. But that it is much more than a formal distinction
will be apparent when it is considered that upon the difference between
the two propositions arc built up all the current theories as to the
relations of capital and labor; that from it are deduced doctrines
that, themselves regarded as axiomatic, bound, direct, and govern
the ablest minds in the discussion of the most momentous questions.
For, upon the assumption that wages are drawn directly from capital,
and not from the product of the labor, is based, not only the doctrine
that wages depend upon the ratio between capital and labor, but the
doctrine that industry is limited by capital -- that capital must
be accumulated before labor is employed, and labor cannot be employed
except as capital is accumulated; the doctrine that every increase
of capital gives or is capable of giving additional employment to
industry; the doctrine that the conversion of circulating capital
into fixed capital lessens the fund applicable to the maintenance
of labor; the doctrine that more laborers can be employed at low than
at high wages; the doctrine that capital applied to agriculture will
maintain more laborers than if applied to manufactures; the doctrine
that profits are high or low as wages are low or high, or that they
depend upon the cost of the subsistence of laborers; together with
such paradoxes as that a demand for commodities is not a demand for
labor, or that certain commodities may be increased in cost by a reduction
in wages or diminished in cost by an increase in wages.
[19] In short, all the
teachings of the current political economy, in the widest and most
important part of its domain are based more or less directly upon
the assumption that labor is maintained and paid out of existing capital
before the product which constitutes the ultimate object is secured.
If it be shown that this is an error, and that on the contrary the
maintenance and payment of labor do not even temporarily trench on
capital, but are directly drawn from the product of the labor, then
all this vast superstructure is left without support and must fall.
And so likewise must fall the vulgar theories which also have their
base in the belief that the sum to be distributed in wages is a fixed
one, the individual shares in which must necessarily be decreased
by an increase In the number of laborers.
[20] The difference
between the current theory and the one I advance is, in fact, similar
to that between the mercantile theory of international exchanges and
that with which Adam Smith supplanted it. Between the theory that
commerce is the exchange of commodities for money, and the theory
that it is the exchange of commodities for commodities, there may
seem no real difference when it is remembered that the adherents of
the mercantile theory did not assume that money had any other use
than as it could be exchanged for commodities. Yet, in the practical
application of these two theories, there arises all the difference
between rigid governmental protection and free trade.
[21] If I have said
enough to show the reader the ultimate importance of the reasoning
through which I am about to ask him to follow me, it will not be necessary
to apologize in advance either for simplicity, or prolixity. In arraigning
a doctrine of such importance -- a doctrine supported by such a weight
of authority, it is necessary to be both clear and thorough.
[22] Were it not for
this I should be tempted to dismiss with a sentence the assumption
that wages are drawn from capital. For all the vast superstructure
which the current political economy builds upon this doctrine is in
truth based upon a foundation which has been merely taken for granted,
without the slightest attempt to distinguish the apparent from the
real. Because wages are generally paid in money, and in many of the
operations of production are paid before the product is fully completed,
or can be utilized, it is inferred that wages are drawn from pre-existing
capital, and, therefore, that industry is limited by capital that
is to say that labor cannot be employed until capital has been accumulated,
and can only be employed to the extent that capital has been accumulated.
[23] Yet in the very
treatises in which the limitation of industry by capital is laid down
without reservation and made the basis for the most important reasonings
and elaborate theories, we are told that capital is stored up or accumulated
labor -- "that part of wealth which is saved to assist future production."
If we substitute for the word "capital" this definition of the word,
the proposition carries its own refutation, for that labor cannot
be employed until the results of labor are saved becomes too absurd
for discussion.
[24] Should we, however,
with this reductio ad absurdum, attempt to close the argument,
we should probably be met with the explanation, not that the first
laborers were supplied by Providence with the capital necessary to
set them to work, but that the proposition merely refers to a state
of society in which production has become a complex operation.
[25] But the fundamental
truth, that in all economic reasoning must be firmly grasped, and
never let go, is that society in its most highly developed form is
but an elaboration of society in its rudest beginnings, and that principles
obvious in the simpler relations of men are merely disguised and not
abrogated or reversed by the more intricate relations that result
from the division of labor and the use of complex tools and methods.
The steam grist mill, with its complicated machinery exhibiting every
diversity of motion, is simply what the rude stone mortar dug up from
an ancient river bed was in its day -- an instrument for grinding
corn. And every man engaged in it, whether tossing wood into the furnace,
running the engine, dressing stones, printing sacks or keeping books,
is really devoting his labor to the same purpose that the prehistoric
savage did when be used his mortar -- the preparation of grain for
human food.
[26] And so, if we reduce
to their lowest terms all the complex operations of modern production,
we see that each individual who takes part in this infinitely subdivided
and intricate network of production and exchange is really doing what
the primeval man did when he climbed the trees for fruit or followed
the receding tide for shellfish -- endeavoring to obtain from nature
by the exertion of his powers the satisfaction of his desires. If
we keep this firmly in mind, if we look upon production as a whole
-- as the co-operation of all embraced in any of its great groups
to satisfy the various desires of each, we plainly see that the reward
each obtains for his exertions comes as truly and as directly from
nature as the result of that exertion, as did that of the first man.
[27] To illustrate:
in the simplest state of which we can conceive, each man digs his
own bait and catches his own fish. The advantages of the division
of labor soon become apparent, and one digs bait while the others
fish. Yet evidently the one who digs bait is in reality doing as much
toward the catching of fish as any of those who actually take the
fish. So when the advantages of canoes are discovered, and instead
of all going a-fishing, one stays behind and makes and repairs canoes,
the canoe-maker is in reality devoting his labor to the taking of
fish as much as the actual fishermen, and the fish which he eats at
night when the fishermen come home are as truly the product of his
labor as of theirs. And thus when the division of labor is fairly
inaugurated, and instead of each attempting to satisfy all of his
wants by direct resort to nature, one fishes, another hunts, a third
picks berries, a fourth gathers fruit, a fifth makes tools, a sixth
builds huts, and a seventh prepares clothing -- each one is to the
extent he exchanges the direct product of his own labor for the direct
product of the labor of others really applying his own labor to the
production of the things he uses -- is in effect satisfying his particular
desires by the exertion of his particular powers; that is to say,
what he receives he in reality produces. If he digs roots and exchanges
them for venison, he is in effect as truly the procurer of the venison
as though he had gone in chase of the deer and left the huntsman to
dig his own roots. The common expression, "I made so and so," signifying
"I earned so and so," or "I earned money with which I purchased so
and so," is, economically speaking, not metaphorically but literally
true. Earning is making.
[28] Now, if we follow
these principles, obvious enough in a simpler state of society, through
the complexities of the state we call civilized, we shall see clearly
that in every case in which labor is exchanged for commodities, production
really precedes enjoyment; that wages are the earnings -- that is
to say, the makings of labor -- not the advances of capital, and that
the laborer who receives his wages in money (coined or printed, it
may be, before his labor commenced) really receives in return for
the addition his labor has made to the general stock of wealth, a
draft upon that general stock, which he may utilize in any particular
form of wealth that will best satisfy his desires; and that neither
the money, which is but the draft, nor the particular form of wealth
which he uses it to call for, represents advances of capital for his
maintenance, but on the contrary represents the wealth, or a portion
of the wealth, his labor has already added to the general stock.
[29] Keeping these principles
in view we see that the draughtsman, who, shut up in some dingy office
on the banks of the Thames, is drawing the plans for a great marine
engine, is in reality devoting his labor to the production of bread
and meat as truly as though he were garnering the grain in California
or swinging a lariat on a La Plata pampa; that he is as truly making
his own clothing as though he were shearing sheep in Australia or
weaving cloth in Paisley, and just as effectually producing the claret
he drinks at dinner as though he gathered the grapes on the banks
of the Garonne. The miner who, two thousand feet under ground in the
heart of the Comstock, is digging out silver ore, is, in effect, by
virtue of a thousand exchanges, harvesting crops in valleys five thousand
feet nearer the earth's center; chasing the whale through Arctic icefields;
plucking tobacco leaves in Virginia; picking coffee berries in Honduras;
cutting sugar cane on the Hawaiian Islands; gathering cotton in Georgia
or weaving it in Manchester or Lowell; making quaint wooden toys for
his children in the Hartz Mountains; or plucking amid the green and
gold of Los Angeles orchards the oranges which, when his shift is
relieved, he will take home to his sick wife. The wages which he receives
on Saturday night at the mouth of the shaft, what are they but the
certificate to all the world that he has done these things -- the
primary exchange in the long series which transmutes his labor into
the things he has really been laboring for?
[30] All this is clear
when looked at in this way; but to meet this fallacy in all its strongholds
and lurking places we must change our investigation from the deductive
to the inductive form. Let us now see, if, beginning with facts and
tracing their relations, we arrive at the same conclusions as are
thus obvious when, beginning with first principles, we trace their
exemplification in complex facts.
Footnotes:
1 This seems
to me true of Mr. Thornton's objections, for while he denies the
existence of a predetermined wage fund, consisting of a portion
of capital set apart for the purchase of labor, he yet holds (which
is the essential thing) that wages are drawn from capital, and that
increase or decrease of capital is increase or decrease of the fund
available for the payment of wages. The most vital attack upon the
wage fund doctrine of which I know is that of Professor Francis
A. Walker ("The Wages Question", New York, 1876), yet he admits
that wages are in large part advanced from capital -- which, so
far as it goes, is all that the stanchest supporter of the wage
fund theory could claim while he fully accepts the Malthusian theory.
Thus his practical conclusions in nowise differ from those reached
by expounders of the current theory.
2"Some Leading
Principles of Political Economy Newly Expounded," Chap. 1, Part
2.
3 Times Of
commercial panic are marked by high rates of discount, but this
is evidently not a high rate of interest, properly so called, but
a but rate of insurance against risk.
4 For instance
McCulloch (Note VI to "Wealth of Nations") says: "That portion of
the capital or wealth of a country which the employers of labor
intend to or are willing to pay out in the purchase of labor, may
be much larger at one time than another. But whatever may be its
absolute magnitude, it obviously forms the only source from which
any portion of the wages of labor can be derived. No other fund
is in existence from which the laborer, as such, can draw a single
shilling. And hence it follows that the average rate of wages, or
the share of the national capital appropriated to the employment
of labor falling, at an average, to each laborer, must entirely
depend on its amount as compared with the number of those amongst
whom it has to be divided." Similar citations might be made from
all the standard economists.
5 We are speaking
of labor expended in production, to which it is best for the sake
of simplicity to confine the inquiry. Any question which may arise
in the reader's mind as to wages for unproductive services had best
therefore be deferred.
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