[01] In tracing to
its source the cause of increasing poverty amid advancing wealth,
we have discovered the remedy; but before passing to that branch
of our subject it will be well to review the tendencies or remedies
which are currently relied on or advocated. The remedy to which
our conclusions point is at once radical and simple -- so radical
that, on the one side, it will not be fairly considered so long
as any faith remains in the efficacy of less caustic measures; so
simple that, on the other side, its real efficacy and comprehensiveness
are likely to be overlooked, until the effect of more elaborate
measures is estimated.
[02] The tendencies
and measures which current literature and discussions show to be
more or less relied on or advocated as calculated to relieve poverty
and distress among the masses, may be divided into six classes.
I do not mean that there are so many distinct parties or schools
of thought, but merely that, for the purpose of our inquiry, prevailing
opinions and proposed measures may be so grouped for review. Remedies
which for the sake of greater convenience and clearness we shall
consider separately are often combined in thought.
[03] There are many
persons who still retain a comfortable belief that material progress
will ultimately extirpate poverty, and there are many who look to
prudential restraint upon the increase of population as the most
efficacious means, but the fallacy of these views has already been
sufficiently shown. Let us now consider what may be hoped for:
[04] I. From greater
economy in government.
[05] II. From the
better education of the working classes and improved habits of industry
and thrift.
[06] Ill. From combinations
of workmen for the advance of wages.
[07] IV. From the
co-operation of labor and capital.
[08] V. From governmental
direction and interference.
[09] VI. From a more
general distribution of land.
[10] Under these six
heads I think we may in essential form review all hopes and propositions
for the relief of social distress short of the simple but far-reaching
measure which I shall propose.
[11] I. -- From
Greater Economy in Government
[12] Until a very
few years ago it was an article of faith with Americans -- a belief
shared by European liberals that the poverty of the downtrodden
masses of the Old World was due to aristocratic and monarchical
institutions. This belief has rapidly passed away with the appearance
in the United States, under republican institutions, of social distress
of the same kind, if not of the same intensity, as that prevailing
in Europe. But social distress is still largely attributed to the
immense burdens which existing governments impose -- the great debts,
the military and naval establishments, the extravagance which is
characteristic as well of republican as of monarchical rulers, and
especially characteristic of the administration of great cities.
To these must be added, in the United States, the robbery involved
in the protective tariff, which for every twenty-five cents it puts
in the treasury takes a dollar and it may be four or five out of
the pocket of the consumer. Now, there seems to be an evident connection
between the immense sums thus taken from the people and the privations
of the lower classes, and it is upon a superficial view natural
to suppose that a reduction in the enormous burdens thus uselessly
imposed would make it easier for the poorest to get a living. But
a consideration of the matter in the light of the economic principles
heretofore traced out will show that this would not be the effect.
A reduction in the amount taken from the aggregate produce of a
community by taxation would be simply equivalent to an increase
in the power of net production. It would in effect add to the productive
power of labor just as do the increasing density of population and
improvement in the arts. And as the advantage in the one case goes,
and must go, to the owners of land, in increased rent, so would
the advantage in the other.
[13] From the produce
of the labor and capital of England are now supported the burden
of an immense debt, an established Church, an expensive royal family,
a large number of sinecurists, a great army and great navy. Suppose
the debt repudiated, the Church disestablished, the royal family
set adrift to make a living for themselves, the sinecurists cut
off, the army disbanded, the officers and men of the navy discharged
and the ships sold. An enormous reduction in taxation would thus
become possible. There would be a great addition to the net produce
which remains to be distributed among the parties to production.
But it would be only such an addition as improvement in the arts
has been for a long time constantly making, and not so great an
addition as steam and machinery have made within the last twenty
or thirty years. And as these additions have not alleviated pauperism,
but have only increased rent, so would this. English landowners
would reap the whole benefit. I will not dispute that if all these
things could be done suddenly, and without the destruction and expense
involved in a revolution, there might be a temporary improvement
in the condition of the lowest class; but such a sudden and peaceable
reform is manifestly impossible. And if it were, any temporary improvement
would, by the process we now see going on in the United States,
be ultimately swallowed up by increased land values.
[14] And, so, in the
United States, if we were to reduce public expenditures to the lowest
possible point, and meet them by revenue taxation, the benefit could
certainly not be greater than that which railroads have brought.
There would be more wealth left in the hands of the people as a
whole, just as the railroads have put more wealth in the hands of
the people as a whole, but the same inexorable laws would operate
as to its distribution. The condition of those who live by their
labor would not ultimately be improved.
[15] A dim consciousness
of this pervades -- or, rather, is beginning to pervade -- the masses,
and constitutes one of the grave political difficulties that are
closing in around the American republic. Those who have nothing
but their labor, and especially the proletarians of the cities --
a growing class -- care little about the prodigality of government,
and in many cases are disposed to look upon it as a good thing --
"furnishing employment," or "putting money in circulation." Tweed,
who robbed New York as a guerrilla chief might levy upon a captured
town (and who was but a type of the new banditti who are grasping
the government of all our cities), was undoubtedly popular with
a majority of the voters, though his thieving was notorious, and
his spoils were blazoned in big diamonds and lavish personal expenditure.
After his indictment, he was triumphantly elected to the Senate;
and, even when a recaptured fugitive, was frequently cheered on
his way from court to prison. He had robbed the public treasury
of many millions, but the proletarians felt that he had not robbed
them. And the verdict of political economy is the same as theirs.
[16] Let me be clearly
understood. I do not say that governmental economy is not desirable;
but simply that reduction in the expenses of government can have
no direct effect in extirpating poverty and increasing wages, so
long as land is monopolized.
[17] Although this
is true, yet even with sole reference to the interests of the lowest
class, no effort should be spared to keep down useless expenditures.
The more complex and extravagant government becomes, the more it
gets to be a power distinct from and independent of the people,
and the more difficult does it become to bring questions of real
public policy to a popular decision. Look at our elections in the
United States -- upon what do they turn? The most momentous problems
are pressing upon us, yet so great is the amount of money in politics,
so large are the personal interests involved, that the most important
questions of government are but little considered. The average American
voter has prejudices, party feelings, general notions of a certain
kind, but he gives to the fundamental questions of government not
much more thought than a streetcar horse does to the profits of
the line. Were this not the case, so many hoary abuses could not
have survived and so many new ones been added. Anything that tends
to make government simple and inexpensive tends to put it under
control of the people and to bring questions of real importance
to the front. But no reduction in the expenses of government can
of itself cure or mitigate the evils that arise from a constant
tendency to the unequal distribution of wealth.
[18] II. -- From
the Diffusion of Education and Improved Habits of Industry and Thrift
[19] There is, and
always has been, a widespread belief among the more comfortable
classes that the poverty and suffering of the masses are due to
their lack of industry, frugality, and intelligence. This belief,
which at once soothes the sense of responsibility and flatters by
its suggestion of superiority, is probably even more prevalent in
countries like the United States, where all men are politically
equal, and where, owing to the newness of society, the differentiation
into classes has been of individuals rather than of families, than
it is in older countries, where the lines of separation have been
longer, and are more sharply, drawn. It is but natural for those
who can trace their own better circumstances to the superior industry
and frugality that gave them a start, and the superior intelligence
that enabled them to take advantage of every opportunity,1
to imagine that those who remain poor do so simply from lack of
these qualities.
[20] But whoever has
grasped the laws of the distribution of wealth, as in previous chapters
they have been traced out, will see the mistake in this notion.
The fallacy is similar to that which would be involved in the assertion
that every one of a number of competitors might win a race. That
any one might is true; that every one might is impossible.
[21] For, as soon
as land acquires a value, wages, as we have seen, do not depend
upon the real earnings or product of labor, but upon what is left
to labor after rent is taken out; and when land is all monopolized,
as it is everywhere except in the newest communities, rent must
drive wages down to the point at which the poorest paid class will
he just able to live and reproduce, and thus wages are forced to
a minimum fixed by what is called the standard of comfort -- that
is, the amount of necessaries and comforts which habit leads the
working classes to demand as the lowest on which they will consent
to maintain their numbers. This being the case, industry, skill,
frugality, and intelligence can avail the individual only in so
far as they are superior to the general level just as in a race
speed can avail the runner only in so far as it exceeds that of
his competitors. If one man work harder, or with superior skill
or intelligence than ordinary, he will get ahead; but if the average
of industry, skill, or intelligence be brought up to the higher
point, the increased intensity of application will secure but the
old rate of wages, and he who would get ahead must work harder still.
[22] One individual
may save money from his wages by living as Dr. Franklin did when,
during his apprenticeship and early journeyman days, he concluded
to practice vegetarianism; and many poor families might be made
more comfortable by being taught to prepare the cheap dishes to
which Franklin tried to limit the appetite of his employer Kenner,
as a condition to his acceptance of the position of confuter of
opponents to the new religion of which Keimer wished to become the
prophet,2 but
if the working classes generally came to live in that way, wages
would ultimately fall in proportion, and whoever wished to get ahead
by the practice of economy, or to mitigate poverty by teaching it,
would be compelled to devise some still cheaper mode of keeping
soul and body together. If, under existing conditions, American
mechanics would come down to the Chinese standard of living, they
would ultimately have to come down to the Chinese standard of wages;
or if English laborers would content themselves with the rice diet
and scanty clothing of the Bengalee, labor would soon be as ill
paid in England as in Bengal. The introduction of the potato into
Ireland was expected to improve the condition of the poorer classes,
by increasing the difference between the wages they received and
the cost of their living. The consequences that did ensue were a
rise of rent and a lowering of wages, and, with the potato blight,
the ravages of famine among a population that had already reduced
its standard of comfort so low that the next step was starvation.
[23] And, so, if one
individual work more hours than the average, he will increase his
wages; but the wages of all cannot be increased in this way. It
is notorious that in occupations where working hours are long, wages
are not higher than where working hours are shorter; generally the
reverse, for the longer the working day, the more helpless does
the laborer become -- the less time has he to look around him and
develop other powers than those called forth by his work; the less
becomes his ability to change his occupation or to take advantage
of circumstances. And, so, the individual workman who gets his wife
and children to assist him may thus increase his income; but in
occupations where it has become habitual for the wife and children
of the laborer to supplement his work, it is notorious that the
wages earned by the whole family do not on the average exceed those
of the head of the family in occupations where it is usual for him
only to work. Swiss family labor in watch making competes in cheapness
with American machinery. The Bohemian cigar makers of New York,
who work, men, women, and children, in their tenement-house rooms,
have reduced the prices of cigar making to less than the Chinese
in San Francisco were getting.
[24] These general
facts are well known. They are fully recognized in standard politico-economic
works, where, however, they are explained upon the Malthusian theory
of the tendency of population to multiply up to the limit of subsistence.
The true explanation, as I have sufficiently shown, is in the tendency
of rent to reduce wages.
[25] As to the effects
of education, it may be worth while to say a few words specially,
for there is a prevailing disposition to attribute to it something
like a magical influence. Now, education is only education in so
far as it enables a man more effectively to use his natural powers,
and this is something that what we call education in very great
part fails to do. I remember a little girl, pretty well along in
her school geography and astronomy, who was much astonished to find
that the ground in her mother's back yard was really the surface
of the earth, and, if you talk with them, you will find that a good
deal of the knowledge of many college graduates is much like that
of the little girl. They seldom think any better, and sometimes
not so well as men who have never been to college.
[26] A gentleman who
had spent many years in Australia, and knew intimately the habits
of the aborigines (Rev. Dr. Bleesdale), after giving some instances
of their wonderful skill in the use of their weapons, in foretelling
changes in the wind and weather and in trapping the shyest birds,
once said to me: "I think it a great mistake to look on these black
fellows as ignorant. Their knowledge is different from ours, but
in it they are generally better educated. As soon as they begin
to toddle, they are taught to play with little boomerangs and other
weapons, to observe and to judge, and, when they are old enough
to take care of themselves, they are fully able to do so -- are,
in fact, in reference to the nature of their knowledge, what I should
call well-educated gentlemen; which is more than I can say for many
of our young fellows who have had what we call the best advantages,
but who enter upon manhood unable to do anything either for themselves
or for others."
[27] Be this as it
may, it is evident that intelligence, which is or should be the
aim of education, until it induces and enables the masses to discover
and remove the cause of the unequal distribution of wealth, can
operate upon wages only by increasing the effective power of labor.
It has the same effect as increased skill or industry. And it can
raise the wages of the individual only in so far as it renders him
superior to others. When to read and write were rare accomplishments,
a clerk commanded high respect and large wages, but now the ability
to read and write has become so nearly universal as to give no advantage.
Among the Chinese the ability to read and write seems absolutely
universal, but wages in China touch the lowest possible point. The
diffusion of intelligence, except as it may make men discontented
with a state of things which condemns producers to a life of toil
while nonproducers loll in luxury, cannot tend to raise wages generally,
or in any way improve the condition of the lowest class -- the "mudsills"
of society, as a southern senator once called them -- who must rest
on the soil, no matter how high the superstructure may be carried.
No increase of the effective power of labor can increase general
wages, so long as rent swallows up all the gain. This is not merely
a deduction from principles. It is the fact, proved by experience.
The growth of knowledge and the progress of invention have multiplied
the effective power of labor over and over again without increasing
wages. In England there are over a million paupers. In the United
States almshouses are increasing and wages are decreasing.
[28] It is true that
greater industry and skill, greater prudence, and a higher intelligence,
are, as a rule, found associated with a better material condition
of the working classes; but that this is effect, not cause, is shown
by the relation of the facts. Wherever the material condition of
the laboring classes has been improved, improvement in their personal
qualities has followed, and wherever their material condition has
been depressed, deterioration in these qualities has been the result;
but nowhere can improvement in material condition be shown as the
result of the increase of industry, skill, prudence, or intelligence
in a class condemned to toil for a bare living, though these qualities
when once attained (or, rather, their concomitant -- the improvement
in the standard of comfort) offer a strong, and, in many cases,
a sufficient, resistance to the lowering of material condition.
[29] The fact is,
that the qualities that raise man above the animal are superimposed
on those which he shares with the animal, and that it is only as
he is relieved from the wants of his animal nature that his intellectual
and moral nature can grow. Compel a man to drudgery for the necessities
of animal existence, and he will lose the incentive to industry
-- the progenitor of skill -- and will do only what he is forced
to do. Make his condition such that it cannot be much worse, while
there is little hope that anything he can do will make it much better,
and he will cease to look beyond the day. Deny him leisure -- and
leisure does not mean the want of employment, but the absence of
the need which forces to uncongenial employment -- and you cannot,
even by running the child through a common school and supplying
the man with a newspaper, make him intelligent.
[30] It is true that
improvement in the material condition of a people or class may not
show immediately in mental and moral improvement. Increased wages
may at first be taken out in idleness and dissipation. But they
will ultimately bring increased industry, skill, intelligence, and
thrift. Comparisons between different countries; between different
classes in the same country; between the same people at different
periods; and between the same people when their conditions are changed
by emigration, show, as an invariable result, that the personal
qualities of which we are speaking appear as material conditions
are improved, and disappear as material conditions are depressed.
Poverty is the Slough of Despond which Bunyan saw in his dream,
and into which good books may be tossed forever without result.
To make people industrious, prudent, skillful, and intelligent,
they must be relieved from want. If you would have the slave show
the virtues of the freeman, you must first make him free.
[31] III. -- From
Combinations of Workmen
[32] It is evident
from the laws of distribution, as previously traced, that combinations
of workmen can advance wages, and this not at the expense of other
workmen, as is sometimes said, nor yet at the expense of capital,
as is generally believed; but, ultimately, at the expense of rent.
That no general advance in wages can be secured by combination;
that any advance in particular wages thus secured must reduce other
wages or the profits of capital, or both -- are ideas that spring
from the erroneous notion that wages are drawn from capital. The
fallacy of these ideas is demonstrated, not alone by the laws of
distribution as we have worked them out, but by experience, so far
as it has gone. The advance of wages in particular trades by combinations
of workmen, of which there are many examples, has nowhere shown
any effect in lowering wages in other trades, or in reducing the
rate of profits. Except as it may affect his fixed capital or current
engagements, a diminution of wages can benefit, and an increase
of wages injure an employer only in so far as it gives him an advantage
or puts him at a disadvantage as compared with other employers.
The employer who first succeeds in reducing the wages of his hands,
or is first compelled to pay an advance, gains an advantage, or
is put at a disadvantage in regard to his competitors, which ceases
when the movement includes them also. So far, however, as the change
in wages affects his contracts or stock on band, by changing the
relative cost of production, it may be to him a real gain or loss,
though this gain or loss, being purely relative, disappears when
the whole community is considered. And, if the change in wages works
a change in relative demand, it may render capital fixed in machinery,
buildings, or otherwise, more or less profitable. But, in this,
a new equilibrium is soon reached; for, especially in a progressive
country, fixed capital is only somewhat less mobile than circulating
capital. If there is too little in a certain form, the tendency
of capital to assume that form soon brings it up to the required
amount; if there is too much, the cessation of increment soon restores
the level.
[33] But, while a
change in the rate of wages in any particular occupation may induce
a change in the relative demand for labor, it can produce no change
in the aggregate demand. For instance, let us suppose that a combination
of the workmen engaged in any particular manufacture raise wages
in one country, while a combination of employers reduce wages in
the same manufacture in another country. If the change be great
enough, the demand, or part of the demand, in the first country
will now be supplied by importation of such manufactures from the
second. But, evidently, this increase in importations of a particular
kind must necessitate either a corresponding decrease in importations
of other kinds, or a corresponding increase in exportations. For,
it is only with the produce of its labor and capital that one country
can demand, or can obtain, in exchange, the produce of the labor
and capital of another. The idea that the lowering of wages can
increase, or the increase of wages can diminish, the trade of a
country, is as baseless as the idea that the prosperity of a country
can be increased by taxes on imports, or diminished by the removal
of restrictions on trade. If all wages in any particular country
were to be doubled, that country would continue to export and import
the same things, and in the same proportions; for exchange is determined
not by absolute, but by relative, cost of production. But, if wages
in some branches of production were doubled, and in others not increased,
or not increased so much, there would be a change in the proportion
of the various things imported, but no change in the proportion
between exports and imports.
[34] While most of
the objections made to the combination of workmen for the advance
of wages are thus baseless, while the success of such combinations
cannot reduce other wages, or decrease the profits of capital, or
injuriously affect national prosperity, yet so great are the difficulties
in the way of the effective combinations of laborers, that the good
that can be accomplished by them is extremely limited, while there
are inherent disadvantages in the process.
[35] To raise wages
in a particular occupation or occupations, which is all that any
combination of workmen yet made has been equal to attempting, is
manifestly a task the difficulty of which progressively increases.
For the higher are wages of any particular kind raised above their
normal level with other wages, the stronger are the tendencies to
bring them back. Thus, if a printers' union, by a successful or
threatened strike, raise the wages of typesetting ten per cent.
above the normal rate as compared with other wages, relative demand
and supply are at once affected. On the one hand, there is a tendency
to a diminution of the amount of typesetting called for; and, on
the other, the higher rate of wages tends to increase the number
of compositors in ways the strongest combination cannot altogether
prevent. If the increase be twenty per cent., these tendencies are
much stronger; if it is fifty per cent., they become stronger still,
and so on. So that practically-even in countries like England, where
the lines between different trades are much more distinct and difficult
to pass than in countries like the United States -- that which trades'
unions, even when supporting each other, can do in the way of raising
wages is comparatively little, and this little, moreover, is confined
to their own sphere, and does not affect the lower stratum of unorganized
laborers, whose condition most needs alleviation and ultimately
determines that of all above them. The only way by which wages could
be raised to any extent and with any permanence by this method would
be by a general combination, such as was aimed at by the Internationals,
which should include laborers of all kinds. But such a combination
may be set down as practically impossible, for the difficulties
of combination, great enough in the most highly paid and smallest
trades, become greater and greater as we descend in the industrial
scale.
[36] Nor, in the struggle
of endurance, which is the only method which combinations not to
work for less than a certain minimum have of effecting the increase
of wages, must it be forgotten who are the real parties pitted against
each other. It is not labor and capital. It is laborers on the one
side and the owners of land on the other. If the contest were between
labor and capital, it would be on much more equal terms. For the
power of capital to stand out is only some little greater than that
of labor. Capital not only ceases to earn anything when not used,
but it goes to waste -- for in nearly all its forms it can be maintained
only by constant reproduction. But land will not starve like laborers
or go to waste like capital -- its owners can wait. They may be
inconvenienced, it is true, but what is inconvenience to them, is
destruction to capital and starvation to labor.
[37] The agricultural
laborers in certain parts of England are now endeavoring to combine
for the purpose of securing an increase in their miserably low wages.
If it was capital that was receiving the enormous difference between
the real produce of their labor and the pittance they get out of
it, they would have but to make an effective combination to secure
success; for the farmers, who are their direct employers, can afford
to go without labor but little, if any, better than the laborers
can afford to go without wages. But the farmers cannot yield much
without a reduction of rent; and thus it is between the landowners
and the laborers that the real struggle must come. Suppose the combination
to be so thorough as to include all agricultural laborers, and to
prevent from doing so all who might be tempted to take their places.
The laborers refuse to work except at a considerable advance of
wages; the farmers can give it only by securing a considerable reduction
of rent, and have no way to back their demands except as the laborers
back theirs, by refusing to go on with production. If cultivation
thus come to a deadlock, the landowners would lose only their rent,
while the land improved by lying fallow. But the laborers would
starve. And if English laborers of all kinds were united in one
grand league for a general increase of wages, the real contest would
be the same, and under the same conditions. For wages could not
be increased except to the decrease of rent; and in a general deadlock,
landowners could live, while laborers of all sorts must starve or
emigrate. The owners of the land of England are by virtue of their
ownership the masters of England. So true is it that "to whomsoever
the soil at any time belongs, to him belong the fruits of it." The
white parasols and the elephants mad with pride passed with the
grant of English land, and the people at large can never regain
their power until that grant is resumed. What is true of England,
is universally true.
[38] It may be said
that such a deadlock in production could never occur. This is true;
but true only because no such thorough combination of labor as might
produce it is possible. But the fixed and definite nature of land
enables landowners to combine much more easily and efficiently than
either laborers or capitalists. How easy and efficient their combination
is, there are many historical examples. And the absolute necessity
for the use of land, and the certainty in all progressive countries
that it must increase in value, produce among landowners, without
any formal combination, all the effects that could be produced by
the most rigorous combination among laborers or capitalists. Deprive
a laborer of opportunity of employment, and he will soon be anxious
to get work on any terms, but when the receding wave of speculation
leaves nominal land values clearly above real values, whoever has
lived in a growing country knows with what tenacity landowners hold
on.
[39] And, besides
these practical difficulties in the plan of forcing by endurance
an increase of wages, there are in such methods inherent disadvantages
which workingmen should not blink. I speak without prejudice, for
I am still an honorary member of the union which, while working
at my trade, I always loyally supported. But, see: The methods by
which a trade union can alone act are necessarily destructive; its
organization is necessarily tyrannical. A strike, which is the only
recourse by which a trade union can enforce its demands, is a destructive
contest -- just such a contest as that to which an eccentric, called
"The Money King," once, in the early days of San Francisco, challenged
a man who had taunted him with meanness, that they should go down
to the wharf and alternately toss twenty-dollar pieces into the
bay until one gave in. The struggle of endurance involved in a strike
is, really, what it has often been compared to -- a war; and, like
all war, it lessens wealth. And the organization for it must, like
the organization for war, be tyrannical. As even the man who would
fight for freedom, must, when he enters an army, give up his personal
freedom and become a mere part in a great machine, so must it be
with workmen who organize for a strike. These combinations are,
therefore, necessarily destructive of the very things which workmen
seek to gain through them -- wealth and freedom.
[40] There is an ancient
Hindoo mode of compelling the payment of a just debt, traces of
something akin to which Sir Henry Maine has found in the laws of
the Irish Brehons. It is called, sitting dharna -- the
creditor seeking enforcement of his debt by sitting down at the
door of the debtor, and refusing to eat or drink until he is paid.
[41] Like this is
the method of labor combinations. In their strikes, trades' unions
sit dharna. But, unlike the Hindoo, they have not the power
of superstition to back them.
[42] IV. -- From
Co-operation
[43] It is now, and
has been for some time, the fashion to preach co-operation as the
sovereign remedy for the grievances of the working classes. But,
unfortunately for the efficacy of co-operation as a remedy for social
evils, these evils, as we have seen, do not arise from any conflict
between labor and capital; and if co-operation were universal, it
could not raise wages or relieve poverty. This is readily seen.
[44] Co-operation
is of two kinds -- co-operation in supply and co-operation in production.
Now, co-operation in supply, let it go as far as it may in excluding
middlemen, only reduces the cost of exchanges. It is simply a device
to save labor and eliminate risk, and its effect upon distribution
can be only that of the improvements and inventions which have in
modern times so wonderfully cheapened and facilitated exchanges
-- viz., to increase rent. And co-operation in production is simply
a reversion to that form of wages which still prevails in the whaling
service, and is there termed a "lay." It is the substitution of
proportionate wages for fixed wages -- a substitution of which there
are occasional instances in almost all employments; or, if the management
is left to the workmen, and the capitalist but takes his proportion
of the net produce, it is simply the system that has prevailed to
a large extent in European agriculture since the days of the Roman
Empire -- the colonial or metayer system. All that is claimed for
co-operation in production is, that it makes the workman more active
and industrious -- in other words, that it increases the efficiency
of labor. Thus its effect is in the same direction as the steam
engine, the cotton gin, the reaping machine -- in short, all the
things in which material progress consists, and it can produce only
the same result -- viz., the increase of rent.
[45] It is a striking
proof of how first principles are ignored in dealing with social
problems, that in current economic and semi-economic literature
so much importance is attached to co-operation as a means for increasing
wages and relieving poverty. That it can have no such general tendency
is apparent.
[46] Waiving all the
difficulties that under present conditions beset co-operation either
of supply or of production, and supposing it so extended as to supplant
present methods -- that co-operative stores made the connection
between producer and consumer with the minimum of expense, and co-operative
workshops, factories, farms, and mines, abolished the employing
capitalist who pays fixed wages, and greatly increased the efficiency
of labor -- what then? Why, simply that it would become possible
to produce the same amount of wealth with less labor, and consequently
that the owners of land, the source of all wealth, could command
a greater amount of wealth for the use of their land. This is not
a matter of mere theory; it is proved by experience and by existing
facts. Improved methods and improved machinery have the same effect
that co-operation aims at -- of reducing the cost of bringing commodities
to the consumer and increasing the efficiency of labor, and it is
in these respects that the older countries have the advantage of
new settlements. But, as experience has amply shown, improvements
in the methods and machinery of production and exchange have no
tendency to improve the condition of the lowest class, and wages
are lower and poverty deeper where exchange goes on at the minimum
of cost and production has the benefit of the best machinery. The
advantage but adds to rent.
[47] But suppose co-operation
between producers and landowners? That would simply amount to the
payment of rent in kind -- the same system under which much land
is rented in California and the Southern States where the landowner
gets a share of the crop. Save as a matter of computation it in
no wise differs from the system which prevails in England of a fixed
money rent. Call it co-operation, if you choose, the terms of the
cooperation would still be fixed by the laws which determine rent,
and wherever land was monopolized, increase in productive power
would simply give the owners of the land the power to demand a larger
share.
[48] That co-operation
is by so many believed to be the solution of the "labor question"
arises from the fact that, where it has been tried, it has in many
instances improved perceptibly the condition of those immediately
engaged in it. But this is due simply to the fact that these cases
are isolated. Just as industry, economy, or skill may improve the
condition of the workmen who possess them in superior degree, but
cease to have this effect when improvement in these respects becomes
general, so a special advantage in procuring supplies, or a special
efficiency given to some labor, may secure advantages which would
be lost as soon as these improvements became so general as to affect
the general relations of distribution. And the truth is, that, save
possibly in educational effects, co-operation can produce no general
results that competition will not produce. just as the cheap-for-cash
stores have a similar effect upon prices as the co-operative supply
associations, so does competition in production lead to a similar
adjustment of forces and division of proceeds as would co-operative
production. That increasing productive power does not add to the
reward of labor, is not because of competition, but because competition
is one-sided. Land, without which there can be no production, is
monopolized, and the competition of producers for its use forces
wages to a minimum and gives all the advantage of increasing productive
power to landowners, in higher rents and increased land values.
Destroy this monopoly, and competition could exist only to accomplish
the end which co-operation aims at -- to give to each what be fairly
earns. Destroy this monopoly, and industry must become the co-operation
of equals.
[49] V. -- From
Governmental Direction and Interference
[50] The limits within
which I wish to keep this book will not permit an examination in
detail of the methods in which it is proposed to mitigate or extirpate
poverty by governmental regulation of industry and accumulation,
and which in their most thoroughgoing form are called socialistic.
Nor is it necessary, for the same defects attach to them all. These
are the substitution of governmental direction for the play of individual
action, and the attempt to secure by restriction what can better
be secured by freedom. As to the truths that are involved in socialistic
ideas I shall have something to say hereafter; but it is evident
that whatever savors of regulation and restriction is in itself
bad, and should not be resorted to if any other mode of accomplishing
the same end presents itself. For instance, to take one of the simplest
and mildest of the class of measures I refer to -- a graduated tax
on incomes. The object at which it aims, the reduction or prevention
of immense concentrations of wealth, is good; but this means involves
the employment of a large number of officials clothed with inquisitorial
powers; temptations to bribery, and perjury, and all other means
of evasion, which beget a demoralization of opinion, and put a premium
upon unscrupulousness and a tax upon conscience; and, finally, just
in proportion as the tax accomplishes its effect, a lessening in
the incentive to the accumulation of wealth, which is one of the
strong forces of industrial progress. While, if the elaborate schemes
for regulating everything and finding a place for everybody could
be carried out, we should have a state of society resembling that
of ancient Peru, or that which, to their eternal honor, the Jesuits
instituted and so long maintained in Paraguay.
[51] I will not say
that such a state as this is not a better social state than that
to which we now seem to be tending, for in ancient Peru, though
production went on under the greatest disadvantages, from the want
of iron and the domestic animals, yet there was no such thing as
want, and the people went to their work with songs. But this it
is unnecessary to discuss. Socialism in anything approaching such
a form, modern society cannot successfully attempt. The only force
that has ever proved competent for it -- a strong and definite religious
faith -- is wanting and is daily growing less. We have passed out
of the socialism of the tribal state, and cannot enter it again
except by a retrogression that would involve anarchy and perhaps
barbarism. Our governments, as is already plainly evident, would
break down in the attempt. Instead of an intelligent award of duties
and earnings, we should have a Roman distribution of Sicilian corn,
and the demagogue would soon become the Imperator.
[52] The ideal of
socialism is grand and noble; and it is, I am convinced, possible
of realization; but such a state of society cannot be manufactured
-- it must grow. Society is an organism, not a machine. It can live
only by the individual life of its parts. And in the free and natural
development of all the parts will be secured the harmony of the
whole. All that is necessary to social regeneration is included
in the motto of those Russian patriots sometimes called Nihilists
-- "Land and Liberty!"
[53] VI. -- From
a More General Distribution of Land
[54] There is a rapidly
growing feeling that the tenure of land is in some manner connected
with the social distress which manifests itself in the most progressive
countries; but this feeling as yet mostly shows itself in propositions
which look to the more general division of landed property -- in
England, free trade in land, tenant right, or the equal partition
of landed estates among heirs; in the United States, restrictions
upon the size of individual holdings. It has been also proposed
in England that the state should buy out the landlords, and in the
United States that grants of money should be made to enable the
settlements of colonies upon public lands. The former proposition
let us pass for the present; the latter, so far as its distinctive
feature is concerned, falls into the category of the measures considered
in the last section. It needs no argument to show to what abuses
and demoralization grants of public money or credit would lead.
[55] How what the
English writers call "free trade in land" -- the removal of duties
and restrictions upon conveyances -- could facilitate the division
of ownership in agricultural land, I cannot see, though it might
to some extent have that effect as regards town property. The removal
of restrictions upon buying and selling would merely permit the
ownership of land to assume more quickly the form to which it tends.
Now, that the tendency in Great Britain is to concentration is shown
by the fact that, in spite of the difficulties interposed by the
cost of transfer, landownership has been and is steadily concentrating
there, and that this tendency is a general one is shown by the fact
that the same process of concentration is observable in the United
States. I say this unhesitatingly in regard to the United States,
although statistical tables are sometimes quoted to show a different
tendency. But how, in such a country as the United States, the ownership
of land may be really concentrating, while census tables show rather
a diminution in the average size of holdings, is readily seen. As
land is brought into use, and, with the growth of population, passes
from a lower to a higher or intenser use, the size of holdings tends
to diminish. A small stock range would be a large farm, a small
farm would be a large orchard, vineyard, nursery, or vegetable garden,
and a patch of land which would be small even for these purposes
would make a very large city property. Thus, the growth of population,
which puts lands to higher or intenser uses, tends naturally to
reduce the size of holdings, by a process very marked in new countries;
but with this may go on a tendency to the concentration of landownership,
which, though not revealed by tables which show the average size
of holdings, is just as clearly seen. Average holdings of one acre
in a city may show a much greater concentration of landownership
than average holdings of 640 acres in a newly settled township.
I refer to this to show the fallacy in the deductions drawn from
the tables which are frequently paraded in the United States to
show that land monopoly is an evil that will cure itself. On the
contrary, it is obvious that the proportion of landowners to the
whole population is constantly decreasing.
[56] And that there
is in the United States, as there is in Great Britain, a strong
tendency to the concentration of landownership in agriculture is
clearly seen. As, in England and Ireland, small farms are being
thrown into larger ones, so in New England, according to the reports
of the Massachusetts Bureau of Labor Statistics, is the size of
farms increasing. This tendency is even more clearly noticeable
in the newer states and territories. Only a few years ago a farm
Of 320 acres would, under the system of agriculture prevailing in
the northern parts of the Union, have anywhere been a large one,
probably as much as one man could cultivate to advantage. In California
now there are farms (not cattle ranges) of five, ten, twenty, forty
and sixty thousand acres, while the model farm of Dakota embraces
100,000 acres. The reason is obvious. It is the application of machinery
to agriculture and the general tendency to production on a large
scale. The same tendency which substitutes the factory, with its
army of operatives, for many independent hand-loom weavers, is beginning
to exhibit itself in agriculture.
[57] Now, the existence
of this tendency shows two things: first, that any measures which
merely permit or facilitate the greater subdivision of land would
be inoperative; and, second, that any measures which would compel
it would have a tendency to check production. If land in large bodies
can be cultivated more cheaply than land in small bodies, to restrict
ownership to small bodies will reduce the aggregate production of
wealth, and, in so far as such restrictions are imposed and take
effect, will they tend to diminish the general productiveness of
labor and capital.
[58] The effort, therefore,
to secure a fairer division of wealth by such restrictions is liable
to the drawback of lessening the amount to be divided. The device
is like that of the monkey, who, dividing the cheese between the
cats, equalized matters by taking a bite off the biggest piece.
[59] But there is
not merely this objection, which weighs against every proposition
to restrict the ownership of land, with a force that increases with
the efficiency of the proposed measure. There is the further and
fatal objection that restriction will not secure the end which is
alone worth aiming at -- a fair division of the produce. It will
not reduce rent, and therefore cannot increase wages. It may make
the comfortable classes larger, but will not improve the condition
of those in the lowest class.
[60] If what is known
as the Ulster tenant right were extended to the whole of Great Britain,
it would be but to carve out of the estate of the landlord an estate
for the tenant. The condition of the laborer would not be a whit
improved. If landlords were prohibited from asking an increase of
rent from their tenants and from ejecting a tenant so long as the
fixed rent was paid, the body of the producers would gain nothing.
Economic rent would still increase, and would still steadily lessen
the proportion of the produce going to labor and capital. The only
difference would be that the tenants of the first landlords, who
would become landlords in their turn, would profit by the increase.
[61] If by a restriction
upon the amount of land any one individual might hold, by the regulation
of devises and successions, or by cumulative taxation, the few thousand
landholders of Great Britain should be increased by two or three
million, these two or three million people would be gainers. But
the rest of the population would gain nothing. They would have no
more share in the advantages of landownership than before. And if,
what is manifestly impossible, a fair distribution of the land were
made among the whole population, giving to each his equal share,
and laws enacted which would interpose a barrier to the tendency
to concentration by forbidding the holding by any one of more than
the fixed amount, what would become of the increase of population?
[62] Just what may
be accomplished by the greater division of land may be seen in those
districts of France and Belgium where minute division prevails.
That such a division of land is on the whole much better, and that
it gives a far more stable basis to the state than that which prevails
in England, there can be no doubt. But that it does not make wages
any higher or improve the condition of the class who have only their
labor, is equally clear. These French and Belgian peasants practice
a rigid economy unknown to any of the English-speaking peoples.
And if such striking symptoms of the poverty and distress of the
lowest class are not apparent as on the other side of the channel,
it must, I think, be attributed, not only to this fact, but to another
fact, which accounts for the continuance of the minute division
of the land -- that material progress has not been so rapid.
[63] Neither has population
increased with the same rapidity (on the contrary it has been nearly
stationary), nor have improvements in the modes of production been
so great. Nevertheless, M. de Laveleye, all of whose prepossessions
are in favor of small holdings, and whose testimony will therefore
carry more weight than that of English observers, who may be supposed
to harbor a prejudice for the system of their own country, states
in his paper on the Land Systems of Belgium and Holland, printed
by the Cobden Club, that the condition of the laborer is worse under
this system of the minute division of land than it is in England;
while the tenant farmers -- for tenancy largely prevails even where
the morcellement is greatest -- are rack-rented with a mercilessness
unknown in England, and even in Ireland, and the franchise "so far
from raising them in the social scale, is but a source of mortification
and humiliation to them, for they are forced to vote according to
the dictates of the landlord instead of following the dictates of
their own inclination and convictions."
[64] But while the
subdivision of land can thus do nothing to cure the evils of land
monopoly, while it can have no effect in raising wages or in improving
the condition of the lowest classes, its tendency is to prevent
the adoption or even advocacy of more thoroughgoing measures, and
to strengthen the existing unjust system by interesting a larger
number in its maintenance. M. de Laveleye, in concluding the paper
from which I have quoted, urges the greater division of land as
the surest means of securing the great landowners of England from
something far more radical. Although in the districts where land
is so minutely divided, the condition of the laborer is, he states,
the worst in Europe and the renting farmer is much more ground down
by his landlord than the Irish tenant, yet "feelings hostile to
social order," M. de Laveleye goes on to say, "do not manifest themselves,"
because
[65] The
tenant, although ground down by the constant rise of rents,
lives among his equals, peasants like himself who have tenants
whom they use just as the large landholder does his. His father,
his brother, perhaps the man himself, possesses something like
an acre of land, which he lets at as high a rent as he can get.
In the public house peasant proprietors will boast of the high
rents they get for their lands, just as they might boast of
having sold their pigs or potatoes very dear. Letting at as
high a rent as possible comes thus to seem to him to be quite
a matter of course, and he never dreams of finding fault with
either the landowners as a class or with property in land. His
mind is not likely to dwell on the notion of a caste of domineering
landlords, of 'lsquo;bloodthirsty tyrants,' fattening on the
sweat of impoverished tenants and doing no work themselves;
for those who drive the hardest bargains are not the great landowners
but his own fellows. Thus, the distribution of a number of small
properties among the peasantry forms a kind of rampart and safeguard
for the holders of large estates, and peasant property may without
exaggeration be called the lightning conductor that averts from
society dangers which might otherwise lead to violent catastrophes.
[66] The
concentration of land in large estates among a small number
of families is a sort of provocation of leveling legislation.
The position of England, so enviable in many respects, seems
to me to be in this respect full of danger for the future.
[67] To me, for the
very same reason that M. de Laveleye expresses, the position of
England seems full of hope.
[68] Let us abandon
all attempt to get rid of the evils of land monopoly by restricting
landownership. An equal distribution of land is impossible, and
anything short of that would be only a mitigation, not a cure, and
a mitigation that would prevent the adoption of a cure. Nor is any
remedy worth considering that does not fall in with the natural
direction of social development, and swim, so to speak, with the
current of the times. That concentration is the order of development
there can be no mistaking -- the concentration of people in large
cities, the concentration of handicrafts in large factories, the
concentration of transportation by railroad and steamship lines,
and of agricultural operations in large fields. The most trivial
businesses are being concentrated in the same way -- errands are
run and carpet sacks are carried by corporations. All the currents
of the time run to concentration. To resist it successfully we must
throttle steam and discharge electricity from human service.
Footnotes:
1 To say
nothing of superior want of conscience, which is often the determining
quality which makes a millionaire out of one who otherwise might
have been a poor man.
2 Franklin,
in his inimitable way, realates how Keimer finally broke his resolution
and ordering a roast pig invited two lady friends to dine with
him, but the pig being brought in before the company arrived,
Keimer could not resist the temptation and ate it all himself.