Progress and Poverty
[01] Behind the theory
we have been considering lies a theory we have yet to consider. The
current doctrine as to the derivation and law of wages finds its strongest
support in a doctrine as generally accepted -- the doctrine to which
Malthus has given his name -- that population naturally tends to increase
faster than subsistence. These two doctrines, fitting in with each
other, frame the answer which the current political economy gives
to the great problem we are endeavoring to solve.
[02] In what has preceded,
the current doctrine that wages are determined by the ratio between
capital and laborers has, I think, been shown to be so utterly baseless
as to excite surprise as to how it could so generally and so long
obtain. It is not to be wondered at that such a theory should have
arisen in a state of society where the great body of laborers seem
to depend for employment and wages upon a separate class of capitalists,
nor yet that under these conditions it should have maintained itself
among the masses of men, who rarely take the trouble to separate the
real from the apparent. But it is surprising that a theory which on
examination appears to be so groundless could have been successively
accepted by so many acute thinkers as have during the present century
devoted their powers to the elucidation and development of the science
of political economy.
[03] The explanation
of this otherwise unaccountable fact is to be found in the general
acceptance of the Malthusian theory. The current theory of wages has
never been fairly put upon its trial, because, backed by the Malthusian
theory, it has seemed in the minds of political economists a self-evident
truth. These two theories mutually blend with, strengthen, and defend
each other, while they both derive additional support from a principle
brought prominently forward in the discussions of the theory of rent
-- viz., that past a certain point the application of capital and
labor to land yields a diminishing return. Together they give such
an explanation of the phenomena presented in a highly organized and
advancing society as seems to fit all the facts, and which has thus
prevented closer investigation.
[04] Which of these
two theories is entitled to historical precedence it is hard to say.
The theory of population was not formulated in such a way as to give
it the standing of a scientific dogma until after that had been done
for the theory of wages. But they naturally spring up and grow with
each other, and were both held in a form more or less crude long prior
to any attempt to construct a system of political economy. It is evident,
from several passages, that though he never fully developed it, the
Malthusian theory was in rudimentary form prescrit in the mind of
Adam Smith, and to this, it seems to me, must be largely due the misdirection
which on the subject of wages his speculations took. But, however
this may be, so closely are the two theories connected, so completely
do they complement each other, that Buckle, reviewing the history
of the development of political economy in his "Examination of the
Scotch Intellect during the Eighteenth Century," attributes mainly
to Malthus the honor of "decisively proving" the current theory of
wages by advancing the current theory of the pressure of population
upon subsistence. He says in his "History of Civilization in England,"
Vol. 3, Chap. 5:
[05] "Scarcely had
the Eighteenth Century passed away when it was decisively proved
that the reward of labor depends solely on two things; namely,
the magnitude of that national fund out of which all labor is
paid, and the number of laborers among whom the fund is to be
divided. This vast step in our knowledge is due, mainly, though
not entirely, to Malthus, whose work on population, besides marking
an epoch in the history of speculative thought, has already produced
considerable practical results, and will probably give rise to
others more considerable still. It was published in 1798; so that
Adam Smith, who died in 1790, missed what to him would have been
the intense pleasure of seeing how, in it, his own views were
expanded rather than corrected. Indeed, it is certain that without
Smith there would have been no Malthus; that is, unless Smith
had laid the foundation, Malthus could not have raised the superstructure."
[06] The famous doctrine
which ever since its enunciation has so powerfully influenced thought,
not alone in the province of political economy, but in regions of
even higher speculation, was formulated by Malthus in the proposition
that, as shown by the growth of the North American colonies, the natural
tendency of population is to double itself at least every twenty-five
years, thus increasing in a geometrical ratio, while the subsistence
that can be obtained from land "under circumstances the most favorable
to human industry could not possibly be made to increase faster than
in an arithmetical ratio, or by an addition every twenty-five years
of a quantity equal to what it at present produces." "The necessary
effects of these two different rates of increase, when brought together,"
Mr. Malthus naïvely goes on to say, "will be very striking."
And thus (Chap. I) he brings them together:
[07] "Let us call
the population of this island eleven millions; and suppose the present
produce equal to the easy support of such a number. In the first
twenty-five years the population would be twenty-two millions, and
the food being also doubled, the means of subsistence would be equal
to this increase. In the next twenty-five years the population would
be forty-four millions, and the means of subsistence only equal
to the support of thirty-three millions. In the next period the
population would be equal to eighty-eight millions, and the means
of subsistence just equal to the support of half that number. And
at the conclusion of the first century, the population would be
a hundred and seventy-six millions, and the means of subsistence
only equal to the support of fifty-five millions; leaving a population
of a hundred and twenty-one millions totally unprovided for.
[08] "Taking the whole
earth instead of this island, emigration would of course be excluded;
and supposing the present population equal to a thousand millions,
the human species would increase as the numbers 11 21 41 8, 16,
32, 64, 128, 256, and subsistence as 11 21 3, 4, 5, 6, 71 8, 9.
In two centuries the population would be to the means of subsistence
as 256 to 9; in three centuries, 4096 to 13, and in two thousand
years the difference would be almost incalculable."
[09] Such a result is
of course prevented by the physical fact that no more people can exist
than can find subsistence, and hence Malthus' conclusion is, that
this tendency of population to indefinite increase must be held back
either by moral restraint upon the reproductive faculty, or by the
various causes which increase mortality, which he resolves into vice
and misery. Such causes as prevent propagation he styles the preventive
check; such causes as increase mortality he styles the positive check.
This is the famous Malthusian doctrine, as promulgated by Malthus
himself in the "Essay on Population."
[10] It is not worth
while to dwell upon the fallacy involved in the assumption of geometrical
and arithmetical rates of increase, a play upon proportions which
hardly rises to the dignity of that in the familiar puzzle of the
hare and the tortoise, in which the hare is made to chase the tortoise
through all eternity without coming up with him. For this assumption
is not necessary to the Malthusian doctrine, or at least is expressly
repudiated by some of those who fully accept that doctrine; as, for
instance, John Stuart Mill, who speaks of it as "an unlucky attempt
to give precision to things which do not admit of it, which every
person capable of reasoning must see is wholly superfluous to the
argument."1 The
essence of the Malthusian doctrine is, that population tends to increase
faster than the power of providing food, and whether this difference
be stated as a geometrical ratio for population and an arithmetical
ratio for subsistence, as by Malthus; or as a constant ratio for population
and a diminishing ratio for subsistence, as by Mill, is only a matter
of statement. The vital point, on which both agree, is, to use the
words of Malthus, "that there is a natural tendency and constant effort
in population to increase beyond the means of subsistence."
[11] The Malthusian
doctrine, as at present held, may be thus stated in its strongest
and least objectionable form:
[12] That population,
constantly tending to increase, must, when unrestrained, ultimately
press against the limits of subsistence, not as against a fixed, but
as against an elastic barrier, which makes the procurement of subsistence
progressively more and more difficult. And thus, wherever reproduction
has had time to assert its power, and is unchecked by prudence, there
must exist that degree of want which will keep population within the
bounds of subsistence.
[13] Although in reality
not more repugnant to the sense of harmonious adaptation by creative
beneficence and wisdom than the complacent no-theory which throws
the responsibility for poverty and its concomitants upon the inscrutable
decrees of Providence, without attempting to trace them, this theory,
in avowedly making vice and suffering the necessary results of a natural
instinct with which are linked the purest and sweetest affections,
comes rudely in collision with ideas deeply rooted in the human mind,
and it was, as soon as formally promulgated, fought with a bitterness
in which zeal was often more manifest than logic. But it has triumphantly
withstood the ordeal, and in spite of the refutations of the Godwins,
the denunciations of the Cobbetts, and all the shafts that argument,
sarcasm, ridicule, and sentiment could direct against it, today it
stands in the world of thought as an accepted truth, which compels
the recognition even of those who would fain disbelieve it.
[14] The causes of its
triumph, the sources of its strength, are not obscure. Seemingly backed
by an indisputable arithmetical truth -- that a continuously increasing
population must eventually exceed the capacity of the earth to furnish
food or even standing room, the Malthusian theory is supported by
analogies in the animal and vegetable kingdoms, where life everywhere
beats wastefully against the barriers that hold its different species
in check -- analogies to which the course of modern thought, in leveling
distinctions between different forms of life, has given a greater
and greater weight; and it is apparently corroborated by many obvious
facts, such as the prevalence of poverty, vice, and misery amid dense
populations; the general effect of material progress in increasing
population without relieving pauperism; the rapid growth of numbers
in newly settled countries and the evident retardation of increase
in more densely settled countries by the mortality among the class
condemned to want.
[15] The Malthusian
theory furnishes a general principle which accounts for these and
similar facts, and accounts for them in a way which harmonizes with
the doctrine that wages are drawn from capital, and with all the principles
that are deduced from it. According to the current doctrine of wages,
wages fall as increase in the number of laborers necessitates a more
minute division of capital; according to the Malthusian theory, poverty
appears as increase in population necessitates the more minute division
of subsistence. It requires but the identification of capital with
subsistence, and number of laborers with population, an identification
made in the current treatises on political economy, where the terms
are often converted, to make the two propositions as identical formally
as they are substantially.2
And thus it is, as stated by Buckle in the passage previously quoted,
that the theory of population advanced by Malthus has appeared to
prove decisively the theory of wages advanced by Smith.
[16] Ricardo, who a
few years subsequent to the publication of the "Essay on Population"
corrected the mistake into which Smith had fallen as to the nature
and cause of rent, furnished the Malthusian theory an additional support
by calling attention to the fact that rent would increase as the necessities
of increasing population forced cultivation to less and less productive
lands, or to less and less productive points on the same lands, thus
explaining the rise of rent. In this way was formed a triple combination,
by which the Malthusian theory has been buttressed on both sides --
the previously received doctrine of wages and the subsequently received
doctrine of rent exhibiting in this view but special examples of the
operation of the general principle to which the name of Malthus has
been attached -- the fall in wages and the rise in rents which come
with increasing population being but modes in which the pressure of
population upon subsistence shows itself.
[17] Thus taking its
place in the very framework of political economy (for the science
as currently accepted has undergone no material change or improvement
since the time of Ricardo, though in some minor points it has been
cleared and illustrated), the Malthusian theory, though repugnant
to sentiments before alluded to, is not repugnant to other ideas which,
in older countries at least, generally prevail among the working classes;
but, on the contrary, like the theory of wages by which it is supported
and in turn supports, it harmonizes with them. To the mechanic or
operative the cause of low wages and of the inability to get employment
is obviously the competition caused by the pressure of numbers, and
in the squalid abodes of poverty what seems clearer than that there
are too many people?
[18] But the great cause
of the triumph of this theory is, that, instead of menacing any vested
right or antagonizing any powerful interest, it is eminently soothing
and reassuring to the classes who, wielding the power of wealth, largely
dominate thought. At a time when old supports were falling away, it
came to the rescue of the special privileges by which a few monopolize
so much of the good things of this world, proclaiming a natural cause
for the want and misery which, if attributed to political institutions,
must condemn every government under which they exist. The "Essay on
Population" was avowedly a reply to William Godwin's "Inquiry concerning
Political justice," a work asserting the principle of human equality;
and its purpose was to justify existing inequality by shifting the
responsibility for it from human institutions to the laws of the Creator.
There was nothing new in this, for Wallace, nearly forty years before,
had brought forward the danger of excessive multiplication as the
answer to the demands of justice for an equal distribution of wealth;
but the circumstances of the times were such as to make the same idea,
when brought forward by Malthus, peculiarly grateful to a powerful
class, in whom an intense fear of any questioning of the existing
state of things had been generated by the outburst of the French Revolution.
[19] Now, as then, the
Malthusian doctrine parries the demand for reform, and shelters selfishness
from question and from conscience by the interposition of an inevitable
necessity. It furnishes a philosophy by which Dives as he feasts can
shut out the image of Lazarus who faints with hunger at his door;
by which wealth may complacently button up its pocket when poverty
asks an alms, and the rich Christian bend on Sundays in a nicely upholstered
pew to implore the good gifts of the All Father without any feeling
of responsibility for the squalid misery that is festering but a square
away. For poverty, want, and starvation are by this theory not chargeable
either to individual greed or to social maladjustments; they are the
inevitable results of universal laws, with which, if it were not impious,
it were as hopeless to quarrel as with the law of gravitation. In
this view, he who in the midst of want has accumulated wealth, has
but fenced in a little oasis from the driving sand which else would
have overwhelmed it. He has gained for himself, but has hurt nobody.
And even if the rich were literally to obey the injunctions of Christ
and divide their wealth among the poor, nothing would be gained. Population
would be increased, only to press again upon the limits of subsistence
or capital, and the equality that would be produced would be but the
equality of common misery. And thus reforms which would interfere
with the interests of any powerful class are discouraged as hopeless.
As the moral law forbids any forestalling of the methods by which
the natural law gets rid of surplus population and thus holds in check
a tendency to increase potent enough to pack the surface of the globe
with human beings as sardines are packed in a box, nothing can really
be done, either by individual or by combined effort, to extirpate
poverty, save to trust to the efficacy of education and preach the
necessity of prudence.
[20] A theory that,
falling in with the habits of thought of the poorer classes, thus
justifies the greed of the rich and the selfishness of the powerful,
will spread quickly and strike its roots deep. This has been the case
with the theory advanced by Malthus.
[21] And of late years
the Malthusian theory has received new support in the rapid change
of ideas as to the origin of man and the genesis of species. That
Buckle was right in saying that the promulgation of the Malthusian
theory marked an epoch in the history of speculative thought could,
it seems to me, be easily shown; yet to trace its influence in the
higher domains of philosophy, of which Buckle's own work is an example,
would, though extremely interesting, carry us beyond the scope of
this investigation. But how much be reflex and how much original,
the support which is given to the Malthusian theory by the new philosophy
of development, now rapidly spreading in every direction, must be
noted in any estimate of the sources from which this theory derives
its present strength. As in political economy, the support received
from the doctrine of wages and the doctrine of rent combined to raise
the Malthusian theory to the rank of a central truth, so the extension
of similar ideas to the development of life in all its forms has the
effect of giving it a still higher and more impregnable position.
Agassiz, who, to the day of his death, was a strenuous opponent of
the new philosophy, spoke of Darwinism as "Malthus all over,"3
and Darwin himself says the struggle for existence "is the doctrine
of Malthus applied with manifold force to the whole animal and vegetable
kingdoms."4
[22] It does not, however,
seem to me exactly correct to say that the theory of development by
natural selection or survival of the fittest is extended Malthusianism,
for the doctrine of Malthus did not originally and does not necessarily
involve the idea of progression. But this was soon added to it. McCulloch5
attributes to the "principle of increase" social improvement and the
progress of the arts, and declares that the poverty that it engenders
acts as a powerful stimulus to the development of industry, the extension
of science and the accumulation of wealth by the upper and middle
classes, without which stimulus society would quickly sink into apathy
and decay. What is this but the recognition in regard to human society
of the developing effects of the "struggle for existence" and "survival
of the fittest," which we are now told on the authority of natural
science have been the means which Nature has employed to bring forth
all the infinitely diversified and wonderfully adapted forms which
the teeming life of the globe assumes? What is it but the recognition
of the force, which, seemingly cruel and remorseless, has yet in the
course of unnumbered ages developed the higher from the lower type,
differentiated the man and the monkey, and made the Nineteenth Century
succeed the age of stone?
[23] Thus commended
and seemingly proved, thus linked and buttressed, the Malthusian theory
-- the doctrine that poverty is due to the pressure of population
against subsistence, or, to put it in its other form, the doctrine
that the tendency to increase in the number of laborers must always
tend to reduce wages to the minimum on which laborers can reproduce
-- is now generally accepted as an unquestionable truth, in the light
of which social phenomena are to be explained, just as for ages the
phenomena of the sidereal heavens were explained upon the supposition
of the fixity of the earth, or the facts of geology upon that of the
literal inspiration of the Mosaic record. If authority were alone
to be considered, formally to deny this doctrine would require almost
as much audacity as that of the colored preacher who recently started
out on a crusade against the opinion that the earth moves around the
sun, for in one form or another, the Malthusian doctrine has received
in the intellectual world an almost universal indorsement, and in
the best as in the most common literature of the day may be seen cropping
out in every direction. It is indorsed by economists and by statesmen,
by historians and by natural investigators; by social science congresses
and by trade unions; by churchmen and by materialists; by conservatives
of the strictest sect and by the most radical of radicals. It is held
and habitually reasoned from by many who never heard of Malthus and
who have not the slightest idea of what his theory is.
[24] Nevertheless, as
the grounds of the current theory of wages have vanished when subjected
to a candid examination, so, do I believe, will vanish the grounds
of this, its twin. In proving that wages are not drawn from capital
we have raised this Antæus from the earth.
Footnotes:
1 "Principles
of Political Economy," Book II, Chap. IX, Sec. VI. -- Yet notwithstanding
what Mill says, it is clear that Malthus himself lays great stress
upon his geometrical and arithmetical ratios, and it is also probable
that it is to these ratios that Malthus is largely indebted for
his fame, as they supplied one of those high-sounding formulas that
with many people carry far more weight than the clearest reasoning.
2 The effect
of the Malthusian doctrine upon the definitions of capital may,
I think, be seen by comparing (see PP. 33, 34, 35) the definition
of Smith, who wrote prior to Malthus, with the definitions of Ricardo,
McCulloch and Mill, who wrote subsequently.
3 Address before
Massachusetts State Board of Agriculture, 1872., "Report U. S. Department
of Agriculture, 1873-"
4 "Origin of
Species," Chap. III.
5 Note IV to
"Wealth of Nations."
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