Progress and Poverty
[01] The belief that
interest is the robbery of industry is, I am persuaded, in large part
due to a failure to discriminate between what is really capital and
what is not, and between profits which are properly interest and profits
which arise from other sources than the use of capital. In the speech
and literature of the day every one is styled a capitalist who possesses
what, independent of his labor, will yield him a return, while whatever
is thus received is spoken of as the earnings or takings of capital,
and we everywhere hear of the conflict of labor and capital. Whether
there is, in reality, any conflict between labor and capital, I do
not yet ask the reader to make up his mind; but it will be well here
to clear away some misapprehensions which confuse the judgment.
[02] Attention has already
been called to the fact that land values, which constitute such an
enormous part of what is commonly called capital, are not capital
at all; and that rent, which is as commonly included in the receipts
of capital, and which takes an ever-increasing portion of the produce
of an advancing community, is not the earnings of capital, and must
be carefully separated from interest. It is not necessary now to dwell
further upon this point. Attention has likewise been called to the
fact that the stocks, bonds, etc., which constitute another great
part of what is commonly called capital, are not capital at all; but,
in some of their shapes, these evidences of indebtedness so closely
resemble capital and in some cases actually perform, or seem to perform,
the functions of capital, while they yield a return to their owners
which is not only spoken of as interest, but has every semblance of
interest, that it is worth while, before attempting to clear the idea
of interest from some other ambiguities that beset it, to speak again
of these at greater length.
[03] Nothing can be
capital, let it always be remembered, that is not wealth -- that is
to say, nothing can be capital that does not consist of actual, tangible
things, not the spontaneous offerings of nature, which have in themselves,
and not by proxy, the power of directly or indirectly ministering
to human desire.
[04] Thus, a government
bond is not capital, nor yet is it the representative of capital.
The capital that was once received for it by the government has been
consumed unproductively -- blown away from the mouths of cannon, used
up in warships, expended in keeping men marching and drilling, killing
and destroying. The bond cannot represent capital that has been destroyed.
It does not represent capital at all. It is simply a solemn declaration
that the government will, some time or other, take by taxation from
the then existing stock of the people, so much wealth, which it will
turn over to the holder of the bond; and that, in the meanwhile, it
will, from time to time, take, in the same way, enough to make up
to the holder the increase which so much capital as it some day promises
to give him would yield him were it actually in his possession. The
immense sums which are thus taken from the produce of every modern
country to pay interest on public debts are not the earnings or increase
of capital -- are not really interest in the strict sense of the term,
but are taxes levied on the produce of labor and capital, leaving
so much less for wages and so much less for real interest.
[05] But, supposing
the bonds have been issued for the deepening of a river bed, the construction
of lighthouses, or the erection of a public market; or supposing,
to embody the same idea while changing the illustration, they have
been issued by a railroad company. Here they do represent capital,
existing and applied to productive uses, and like stock in a dividend
paying company may be considered as evidences of the ownership of
capital. But they can be so considered only in so far as they actually
represent capital, and not as they have been issued in excess of the
capital used. Nearly all our railroad companies and other incorporations
are loaded down in this way. Where one dollar's worth of capital has
been really used, certificates for two, three, four, five, or even
ten, have been issued, and upon this fictitious amount interest or
dividends are paid with more or less regularity. Now, what, in excess
of the amount due as interest to the real capital invested, is thus
earned by these companies and thus paid out, as well as the large
sums absorbed by managing rings and never accounted for, is evidently
not taken from the aggregate produce of the community on account of
the services rendered by capital -- it is not interest. If we are
restricted to the terminology of economic writers who decompose profits
into interest, insurance, and wages of superintendence, it must fall
into the category of wages of superintendence.
[06] But while wages
of superintendence clearly enough include the income derived from
such personal qualities as skill, tact, enterprise, organizing ability,
inventive power, character, etc., to the profits we are speaking of
there is another contributing element, which can only arbitrarily
be classed with these -- the element of monopoly.
[07] When James I granted
to his minion the exclusive privilege of making gold and silver thread,
and prohibited, under severe penalties, every one else from making
such thread, the income which Buckingham enjoyed in consequence did
not arise from the interest upon the capital invested in the manufacture,
nor from the skill, etc., of those who really conducted the operations,
but from what he got from the king -- viz., the exclusive privilege
-- in reality the power to levy a tax for his own purposes upon all
the users of such thread. From a similar source comes a large part
of the profits which are commonly confounded with the earnings of
capital. Receipts from the patents granted for a limited term of years
for the purpose of encouraging invention are clearly attributable
to this source, as are the returns derived from monopolies created
by protective tariffs under the pretense of encouraging home industry.
But there is another far more insidious and far more general form
of monopoly. In the aggregation of large masses of capital under a
common control there is developed a new and essentially different
power from that power of increase which is a general characteristic
of capital and which gives rise to interest. While the latter is,
so to speak, constructive in its nature, the power which, as aggregation
proceeds, rises upon it is destructive. It is a power of the same
kind as that which James granted to Buckingham, and it is often exercised
with as reckless a disregard, not only of the industrial, but of the
personal rights of individuals. A railroad company approaches a small
town as a highwayman approaches his victim. The threat, "If you do
not accede to our terms we will leave your town two or three miles
to one side!" is as efficacious as the "Stand and deliver," when backed
by a cocked pistol. For the threat of the railroad company is not
merely to deprive the town of the benefits which the railroad might
give; it is to put it in a far worse position than if no railroad
had been built. Or if, where there is water communication, an opposition
boat is put on; rates are reduced until she is forced off, and then
the public are compelled to pay the cost of the operation, just as
the Rohillas were obliged to pay the forty lacs with which Surajah
Dowlah hired of Warren Hastings an English force to assist him in
desolating their country and decimating their people. And just as
robbers unite to plunder in concert and divide the spoil, so do the
trunk lines of railroads unite to raise rates and pool their earnings,
or the Pacific roads form a combination with the Pacific Mail Steamship
Company by which toll gates are virtually established on land and
ocean. And just as Buckingham's creatures, under authority of the
gold thread patent, searched private houses, and seized papers and
persons for purposes of lust and extortion, so does the great telegraph
company which, by the power of associated capital, deprives the people
of the United States of the full benefits of a beneficent invention,
tamper with correspondence and crush out newspapers which offend it.
[08] It is necessary
only to allude to these things, not to dwell on them. Every one knows
the tyranny and rapacity with which capital when concentrated in large
amounts is frequently wielded to corrupt, to rob, and to destroy.
What I wish to call the reader's attention to is that profits thus
derived are not to be confounded with the legitimate returns of capital
as an agent of production. They are for the most part to be attributed
to a maladjustment of forces in the legislative department of government
and to a blind adherence to ancient barbarisms and the superstitious
reverence for the technicalities of a narrow profession in the administration
of law; while the general cause which in advancing communities tends,
with the concentration of wealth, to the concentration of power, is
the solution of the great problem we are seeking for, but have not
yet found.
[09] Any analysis will
show that much of the profits which are, in common thought, confounded
with interest are in reality due, not to the power of capital, but
to the power of concentrated capital, or of concentrated capital acting
upon bad social adjustments. And it will also show that what are clearly
and properly wages of superintendence are very frequently confounded
with the earnings of capital.
[10] And, so, profits
properly due to the elements of risk are frequently confounded with
interest. Some people acquire wealth by taking chances which to the
majority of people must necessarily bring loss. Such are many forms
of speculation, and especially that mode of gambling known as stock
dealing. Nerve, judgment, the possession of capital, skill in what
in lower forms of gambling are known as the arts of the confidence
man and blackleg, give advantage to the individual; but, just as at
a gaming table, whatever one gains some one else must lose.
[11] Now, taking the
great fortunes that are so often referred to as exemplifying the accumulative
power of capital -- the Dukes of Westminster and Marquises of Bute,
the Rothschilds, Astors, Stewarts, Vanderbilts, Goulds, Stanfords,
and Floods -- it is upon examination readily seen that they have been
built up, in greater or less part, not by interest, but by elements
such as we have been reviewing.
[12] How necessary it
is to note the distinctions to which I have been calling attention
is shown in current discussions, where the shield seems alternately
white or black as the standpoint is shifted from one side to the other.
On the one hand we are called upon to see, in the existence of deep
poverty side by side with vast accumulations of wealth, the aggressions
of capital on labor, and in reply it is pointed out that capital aids
labor, and hence we are asked to conclude that there is nothing unjust
or unnatural in the wide gulf between rich and poor; that wealth is
but the reward of industry, intelligence, and thrift; and poverty
but the punishment of indolence, ignorance, and imprudence.
|