[01] Eliminating improvements
in the arts, we have seen the effects of increase of population
upon the distribution of wealth. Eliminating increase of population,
let us now see what effect improvements in the arts of production
have upon distribution.
[02] We have seen
that increase of population increases rent, rather by increasing
the productiveness of labor than by decreasing it. If it can now
be shown that, irrespective of the increase of population, the effect
of improvements in methods of production and exchange is to increase
rent, the disproof of the Malthusian theory -- and of all the doctrines
derived from or related to it -- will be final and complete, for
we shall have accounted for the tendency of material progress to
lower wages and depress the condition of the lowest class, without
recourse to the theory of increasing pressure against the means
of subsistence.
[03] That this is
the case will, I think, appear on the slightest consideration.
[04] The effect of
inventions and improvements in the productive arts is to save labor
-- that is, to enable the same result to be secured with less labor,
or a greater result with the same labor.
[05] Now, in a state
of society in which the existing power of labor served to satisfy
all material desires, and there was no possibility of new desires
being called forth by the opportunity of gratifying them, the effect
of laborsaving improvements would be simply to reduce the amount
of labor expended. But such a state of society, if it can anywhere
be found, which I do not believe, exists only where the human most
nearly approaches the animal. In the state of society called civilized,
and which in this inquiry we are concerned with, the very reverse
is the case. Demand is not a fixed quantity, that increases only
as population increases. In each individual it rises with his power
of getting the things demanded. Man is not an ox, who, when he has
eaten his fill, lies down to chew the cud; he is the daughter of
the horse leech, who constantly asks for more. "When I get some
money," said Erasmus, "I will buy me some Greek books and afterward
some clothes." The amount of wealth produced is nowhere commensurate
with the desire for wealth, and desire mounts with every additional
opportunity for gratification.
[06] This being the
case, the effect of laborsaving improvements will be to increase
the production of wealth. Now, for the production of wealth, two
things are required -- labor and land. Therefore, the effect of
laborsaving improvements will be to extend the demand for land,
and wherever the limit of the quality of land in use is reached,
to bring into cultivation lands of less natural productiveness,
or to extend cultivation on the same lands to a point of lower natural
productiveness. And thus, while the primary effect of laborsaving
improvements is to increase the power of labor, the secondary effect
is to extend cultivation, and, where this lowers the margin of cultivation,
to increase rent. Thus, where land is entirely appropriated, as
in England, or where it is either appropriated or is capable of
appropriation as rapidly as it is needed for use, as in the United
States, the ultimate effect of laborsaving machinery or improvements
is to increase rent without increasing wages or interest.
[07] It is important
that this be fully understood, for it shows that effects attributed
by current theories to increase of population are really due to
the progress of invention, and explains the otherwise perplexing
fact that laborsaving machinery everywhere falls to benefit laborers.
[08] Yet, fully to
grasp this truth, it is necessary to keep in mind what I have already
more than once adverted to -- the interchangeability of wealth.
I refer to this again, only because it is so persistently forgotten
or ignored by writers who speak of agricultural production as though
it were to be distinguished from production in general, and of food
or subsistence as though it were not included in the term wealth.
[09] Let me ask the
reader to bear in mind, what has already been sufficiently illustrated,
that the possession or production of any form of wealth is virtually
the possession or production of any other form of wealth for which
it will exchange -- in order that he may clearly see that it is
not merely improvements which effect a saving in labor directly
applied to land that tend to increase rent, but all improvements
that in any way save labor.
[10] That the labor
of any individual is applied exclusively to the production of one
form of wealth is solely the result of the division of labor. The
object of labor on the part of any individual is not the obtainment
of wealth in one particular form, but the obtainment of wealth in
all the forms that consort with his desires. And, hence, an improvement
which effects a saving in the labor required to produce one of the
things desired, is, in effect, an increase in the power of producing
all the other things. If it take half a man's labor to keep him
in food, and the other half to provide him clothing and shelter,
an improvement which would increase his power of producing food
would also increase his power of providing clothing and shelter.
If his desires for more or better food, and for more or better clothing
and shelter, were equal, an improvement in one department of labor
would be precisely equivalent to a like improvement in the other.
If the improvement consisted in a doubling of the power of his labor
in producing food, he would give one-third less labor to the production
of food, and one-third more to the providing of clothing and shelter.
If the improvement doubled his power to provide clothing and shelter,
he would give one-third less labor to the production of these things,
and one-third more to the production of food. In either case, the
result would be the same -- he would be enabled with the same labor
to get one-third more in quantity or quality of all the things he
desired.
[11] And, so, where
production is carried on by the division of labor between individuals,
an increase in the power of producing one of the things sought by
production in the aggregate adds to the power of obtaining others,
and will increase the production of the others, to an extent determined
by the proportion which the saving of labor bears to the total amount
of labor expended, and by the relative strength of desires. I am
unable to think of any form of wealth, the demand for which would
not be increased by a saving in the labor required to produce the
others. Hearses and coffins have been selected as examples of things
for which the demand is little likely to increase; but this is true
only as to quantity. That increased power of supply would lead to
a demand for more expensive hearses and coffins, no one can doubt
who has noticed how strong is the desire to show regard for the
dead by costly funerals.
[12] Nor is the demand
for food limited, as in economic reasoning is frequently, but erroneously,
assumed. Subsistence is often spoken of as though it were a fixed
quantity; but it is fixed only as having a definite minimum. Less
than a certain amount will not keep a human being alive, and less
than a somewhat larger amount will not keep a human being in good
health. But, above this minimum, the subsistence which a human being
can use may be increased almost indefinitely. Adam Smith says, and
Ricardo indorses the statement, that the desire for food is limited
in every man by the narrow capacity of the human stomach; but this,
manifestly, is true only in the sense that when a man's belly is
filled, hunger is satisfied. His demands for food have no such limit.
The stomach of a Louis XIV, a Louis XV, or a Louis XVI, could not
hold or digest more than the stomach of a French peasant of equal
stature, yet, while a few rods of ground would supply the black
bread and herbs which constituted the subsistence of the peasant,
it took hundreds of thousands of acres to supply the demands of
the king, who, besides his own wasteful use of the finest qualities
of food, required immense supplies for his servants, horses and
dogs. And in the common facts of daily life, in the unsatisfied,
though perhaps latent, desires which each one has, we may see how
every increase in the power of producing any form of wealth must
result in an increased demand for land and the direct products of
land. The man who now uses coarse food, and lives in a small house,
will, as a rule, if his income be increased, use more costly food,
and move to a larger house. If he grows richer and richer be will
procure horses, servants, gardens and lawns, his demand for the
use of land constantly increasing with his wealth. In the city where
I write, is a man -- but the type of men everywhere to be found
-- who used to boil his own beans and fry his own bacon, but who,
now that he has got rich, maintains a town house that takes up a
whole block and would answer for a first-class hotel, two or three
country houses with extensive grounds, a large stud of racers, a
breeding farm, private track, etc. It certainly takes at least a
thousand times, it may be several thousand times, as much land to
supply the demands of this man now as it did when he was poor.
[13] And, so, every
improvement or invention, no matter what it be, which gives to labor
the power of producing more wealth, causes an increased demand for
land and its direct products, and thus tends to force down the margin
of cultivation, just as would the demand caused by an increased
population. This being the case, every laborsaving invention, whether
it be a steam plow, a telegraph, an improved process of smelting
ores, a perfecting printing press, or a sewing machine, has a tendency
to increase rent.
[14] Or, to state
this truth concisely:
[15] Wealth in all
its forms being the product of labor applied to land or the products
of land, any increase in the power of labor, the demand for wealth
being unsatisfied, will be utilized in procuring more wealth, and
thus increase the demand for land.
[16] To illustrate
this effect of laborsaving machinery and improvements, let us suppose
a country where, as in all the countries of the civilized world,
the land is in the possession of but a portion of the people. Let
us suppose a permanent barrier fixed to further increase of population,
either by the enactment and strict enforcement of an Herodian law,
or from such a change in manners and morals as might result from
an extensive circulation of Annie Besant's pamphlets. Let the margin
of cultivation, or production, be represented by 20. Thus land or
other natural opportunities which, from the application of labor
and capital, will yield a return of 20, will just give the ordinary
rate of wages and interest, without yielding any rent; while all
lands yielding to equal applications of labor and capital more than
20 will yield the excess as rent. Population remaining fixed, let
there be made inventions and improvements which will reduce by one-tenth
the expenditure of labor and capital necessary to produce the same
amount of wealth. Now, either one-tenth of the labor and capital
may be freed, and production remain the same as before; or the same
amount of labor and capital may be employed, and production be correspondingly
increased. But the industrial organization, as in all civilized
countries, is such that labor and capital, and especially labor,
must press for employment on any terms -- the industrial organization
is such that mere laborers are not in a position to demand their
fair share in the new adjustment, and that any reduction in the
application of labor to production will, at first, at least, take
the form, not of giving each laborer the same amount of produce
for less work, but of throwing some of the laborers out of work
and giving them none of the produce. Now, owing to the increased
efficiency of labor secured by the new improvements, as great a
return can be secured at the point of natural productiveness represented
by 18, as before at 20. Thus, the unsatisfied desire for wealth,
the competition of labor and capital for employment, would insure
the extension of the margin of production, we will say to 18, and
thus rent would be increased by the difference between 18 and 20,
while wages and interest, in quantity, would be no more than before,
and, in proportion to the whole produce, would be less. There would
be a greater production of wealth, but landowners would get the
whole benefit, subject to temporary deductions, which will be hereafter
stated.
[17] If invention
and improvement still go on, the efficiency of labor will be still
further increased, and the amount of labor and capital necessary
to produce a given result further diminished. The same causes will
lead to the utilization of this new gain in productive power for
the production of more wealth; the margin of cultivation will be
again extended, and rent will increase, both in proportion and amount,
without any increase in wages and interest. And, so, as invention
and improvement go on, constantly adding to the efficiency of labor,
the margin of production will be pushed lower and lower, and rent
constantly increased, though population should remain stationary.
[18] I do not mean
to say that the lowering of the margin of production would always
exactly correspond with the increase in productive power, any more
than I mean to say that the process would be one of clearly defined
steps. Whether, in any particular case, the lowering of the margin
of production lags behind or exceeds the increase in productive
power, will depend, I conceive, upon what may be called the area
of productiveness that can be utilized before cultivation is forced
to the next lowest point. For instance, if the margin of cultivation
be at 20, improvements which enable the same produce to be obtained
with one-tenth less capital and labor will not carry the margin
to 18, if the area having a productiveness of 19 is sufficient to
employ all the labor and capital displaced from the cultivation
of the superior lands. In this case, the margin of cultivation would
rest at 19, and rents would be increased by the difference between
19 and 20, and wages and interest by the difference between 18 and
19. But if, with the same increase in productive power the area
of productiveness between 20 and 18 should not be sufficient to
employ all the displaced labor and capital, the margin of cultivation
must, if the same amount of labor and capital press for employment,
be carried lower than 18. In this case, rent would gain more than
the increase in the product, and wages and interest would be less
than before the improvements which increased productive power.
[19] Nor is it precisely
true that the labor set free by each improvement will all be driven
to seek employment in the production of more wealth. The increased
power of satisfaction, which each fresh improvement gives to a certain
portion of the community, will be utilized in demanding leisure
or services, as well as in demanding wealth. Some laborers will,
therefore, become idlers and some will pass from the ranks of productive
to those of unproductive laborers -- the proportion of which, as
observation shows, tends to increase with the progress of society.
[20] But, as I shall
presently refer to a cause, as yet unconsidered, which constantly
tends to lower the margin of cultivation, to steady the advance
of rent, and even carry it beyond the proportion that would be fixed
by the actual margin of cultivation, it is not worth while to take
into account these perturbations in the downward movement of the
margin of cultivation and the upward movement of rent. All I wish
to make clear is that, without any increase in population, the progress
of invention constantly tends to give a larger proportion of the
produce to the owners of land, and a smaller and smaller proportion
to labor and capital.
[21] And, as we can
assign no limits to the progress of invention, neither can we assign
any limits to the increase of rent, short of the whole produce.
For, if laborsaving inventions went on until perfection was attained,
and the necessity of labor in the production of wealth was entirely
done away with, then everything that the earth could yield could
be obtained without labor, and the margin of cultivation would be
extended to zero. Wages would be nothing, and interest would be
nothing, while rent would take everything. For the owners of the
land, being enabled without labor to obtain all the wealth that
could be procured from nature, there would be no use for either
labor or capital, and no possible way in which either could compel
any share of the wealth produced. And no matter how small population
might be, if anybody but the landowners continued to exist, it would
be at the whim or by the mercy of the landowners -- they would be
maintained either for the amusement of the landowners, or, as paupers,
by their bounty.
[22] This point, of
the absolute perfection of laborsaving inventions, may seem very
remote, if not impossible of attainment; but it is a point toward
which the march of invention is every day more strongly tending.
And in the thinning out of population in the agricultural districts
of Great Britain, where small farms are being converted into larger
ones, and in the great machine-worked wheat fields of California
and Dakota, where one may ride for miles and miles through waving
grain without seeing a human habitation, there are already suggestions
of the final goal toward which the whole civilized world is hastening.
The steam plow and the reaping machine are creating in the modern
world latifundia of the same kind that the influx of slaves from
foreign wars created in ancient Italy. And to many a poor fellow
as he is shoved out of his accustomed place and forced to move on
-- as the Roman farmers were forced to join the proletariat of the
great city, or sell their blood for bread in the ranks of the legions
-- it seems as though these laborsaving inventions were in themselves
a curse, and we hear men talking of work, as though the wearying
strain of the muscles were, in itself, a thing to be desired.
[23] In what has preceded,
I have, of course, spoken of inventions and improvements when generally
diffused. It is hardly necessary to say that as long as an invention
or an improvement is used by so few that they derive a special advantage
from it, it does not, to the extent of this special advantage, affect
the general distribution of wealth. So, in regard to the limited
monopolies created by patent laws, or by the causes which give the
same character to railroad and telegraph lines, etc. Although generally
mistaken for profits of capital, the special profits thus arising
are really the returns of monopoly, as has been explained in a previous
chapter, and, to the extent that they subtract from the benefits
of an improvement, do not primarily affect general distribution.
For instance, the benefits of a railroad or similar improvement
in cheapening transportation are diffused or monopolized, as its
charges are reduced to a rate which will yield ordinary interest
on the capital invested, or kept up to a point which will yield
an extraordinary return, or cover the stealing of the constructors
or directors. And, as is well known, the rise in rent or land values
corresponds with the reduction in the charges.
[24] As has before
been said, in the improvements which advance rent are not only to
be included the improvements which directly increase productive
power, but also such improvements in government, manners, and morals
as indirectly increase it. Considered as material forces, the effect
of all these is to increase productive power, and, like improvements
in the productive arts, their benefit is ultimately monopolized
by the possessors of the land. A notable instance of this is to
be found in the abolition of protection by England. Free trade has
enormously increased the wealth of Great Britain, without lessening
pauperism. It has simply increased rent. And if the corrupt governments
of our great American cities were to be made models of purity and
economy, the effect would simply be to increase the value of land,
not to raise either wages or interest.