Progress and Poverty
[01] Let us turn now
to the law of interest, keeping in mind two things to which attention
has heretofore been called -- viz:
[02] First -- That it
is not capital which employs labor, but labor which employs capital.
[03] Second -- That
capital is not a fixed quantity, but can always be increased or decreased,
(1) by the greater or less application of labor to the production
of capital, and (2) by the conversion of wealth into capital, or capital
into wealth, for capital being but wealth applied in a certain way,
wealth is the larger and inclusive term.
[04] It is manifest
that under conditions of freedom the maximum that can be given for
the use of capital will be the increase it will bring, and the minimum
or zero will be the replacement of capital; for above the one point
the borrowing of capital would involve a loss, and below the other,
capital could not be maintained.
[05] Observe, again:
It is not, as is carelessly stated by some writers, the increased
efficiency given to labor by the adaptation of capital to any special
form or use which fixes this maximum, but the average power of increase
which belongs to capital generally. The power of applying itself in
advantageous forms is a power of labor, which capital as capital cannot
claim nor share. A bow and arrows will enable an Indian to kill, let
us say, a buffalo every day, while with sticks and stones he could
hardly kill one in a week; but the weapon maker of the tribe could
not claim from the hunter six out of every seven buffaloes killed
as a return for the use of a bow and arrows; nor will capital invested
in a woolen factory yield to the capitalist the difference between
the produce of the factory and what the same amount of labor could
have obtained with the spinning wheel and hand loom. William when
he borrows a plane from James does not in that obtain the advantage
of the increased efficiency of labor when using a plane for the smoothing
of boards over what it has when smoothing them with a shell or flint.
The progress of knowledge has made the advantage involved in the use
of planes a common property and power of labor. What he gets from
James is merely such advantage as the element of a year's time will
give to the possession of so much capital as is represented by the
plane.
[06] Now, if the vital
forces of nature which give an advantage to the element of time be
the cause of interest, it would seem to follow that this maximum rate
of interest would be determined by the strength of these forces and
the extent to which they are engaged in production. But while the
reproductive force of nature seems to vary enormously, as, for instance,
between the salmon, which spawns thousands of eggs, and the whale,
which brings forth a single calf at intervals of years; between the
rabbit and the elephant, the thistle and the gigantic redwood, it
appears from the way the natural balance is maintained that there
is an equation between the reproductive and destructive forces of
nature, which in effect brings the principle of increase to a uniform
point. This natural balance man has within narrow limits the power
to disturb, and by the modification of natural conditions may avail
himself at will of the varying strength of the reproductive force
in nature. But when he does so, there arises from the wide scope of
his desires another principle which brings about in the increase of
wealth a similar equation and balance to that which is effected in
nature between the different forms of life. This equation exhibits
itself through values. If, in a country adapted to both, I go to raising
rabbits and you to raising horses, my rabbits may, until the natural
limit is reached, increase faster than your horses. But my capital
will not increase faster, for the effect of the varying rates of increase
will be to lower the value of rabbits as compared with horses, and
to increase the value of horses as compared with rabbits.
[07] Though the varying
strength of the vital forces of nature is thus brought to uniformity,
there may be a difference in the different stages of social development
as to the proportionate extent to which, in the aggregate production
of wealth, these vital forces are enlisted. But as to this, there
are two remarks to be made. In the first place, although in such a
country as England the part taken by manufactures in the aggregate
wealth production has very much increased as compared with the part
taken by agriculture, yet it is to be noticed that to a very great
extent this is true only of the political or geographical division,
and not of the industrial community. For industrial communities are
not limited by political divisions, or bounded by seas or mountains.
They are limited only by the scope of their exchanges, and the proportion
which in the industrial economy of England agriculture and stock raising
bear to manufactures is averaged with Iowa and Illinois, with Texas
and California, with Canada and India, with Queensland and the Baltic
-- in short, with every country to which the world-wide exchanges
of England extend. In the next place, it is to be remarked that although
in the progress of civilization the tendency is to the relative increase
of manufactures, as compared with agriculture, and consequently to
a proportionately less reliance upon the reproductive forces of nature,
yet this is accompanied by a corresponding extension of exchanges,
and hence a greater calling in of the power of increase which thus
arises. So these tendencies, to a great extent, and, probably, so
far as we have yet gone, completely balance each other, and preserve
the equilibrium which fixes the average increase of capital, or the
normal rate of interest.
[08] Now, this normal
point of interest, which lies between the necessary maximum and the
necessary minimum of the return to capital, must, wherever it rests,
be such that all things (such as the feeling of security, desire for
accumulation, etc.) considered, the reward of capital and the reward
of labor will be equal -- that is to say, will give an equally attractive
result for the exertion or sacrifice involved. It is impossible, perhaps,
to formulate this point, as wages are habitually estimated in quantity,
and interest in a ratio; but if we suppose a given quantity of wealth
to be the produce of a given amount of labor, co-operating for a stated
time with a certain amount of capital, the proportion in which the
produce would be divided between the labor and the capital would afford
a comparison. There must be such a point at, or rather, about, which
the rate of interest must tend to settle; since, unless such an equilibrium
were effected, labor would not accept the use of capital, or capital
would not be placed at the disposal of labor. For labor and capital
are but different forms of the same thing -- human exertion. Capital
is produced by labor; it is, in fact, but labor impressed upon matter
-- labor stored up in matter, to be released again as needed, as the
beat of the sun stored up in coal is released in the furnace. The
use of capital in production is, therefore, but a mode of labor. As
capital can be used only by being consumed, its use is the expenditure
of labor, and for the maintenance of capital, its production by labor
must be commensurate with its consumption in aid of labor. Hence the
principle that, under circumstances which permit free competition,
operates to bring wages to a common standard and profits to a substantial
equality -- the principle that men will seek to gratify their desires
with the least exertion operates to establish and maintain this equilibrium
between wages and interest.
[09] This natural relation
between interest and wages -- this equilibrium at which both will
represent equal returns to equal exertions -- may be stated in a form
which suggests a relation of opposition; but this opposition is only
apparent. In a partnership between Dick and Harry, the statement that
Dick receives a certain proportion of the profits implies that the
portion of Harry is less or greater as Dick's is greater or less;
but where, as in this case, each gets only what he adds to the common
fund, the increase of the portion of the one does not decrease what
the other receives.
[10] And this relation
fixed, it is evident that interest and wages must rise and fall together,
and that interest cannot be increased without increasing wages; nor
wages lowered without depressing interest. For If wages fall, interest
must also fall in proportion, else it becomes more profitable to turn
labor into capital than to apply it directly; while, if interest falls,
wages must likewise proportionately fall, or else the increment of
capital would be checked.
[11] We are, of course,
not speaking of particular wages and particular interest, but of the
general rate of wages and the general rate of interest, meaning always
by interest the return which capital can secure, less insurance and
wages of superintendence. In a particular case, or a particular employment,
the tendency of wages and interest to an equilibrium may be impeded;
but between the general rate of wages and the general rate of interest,
this tendency must be prompt to act. For though in a particular branch
of production the line may be clearly drawn between those who furnish
labor and those who furnish capital, yet even in communities where
there is the sharpest distinction between the general class laborers
and the general class capitalists, these two classes shade off into
each other by imperceptible gradations, and on the extremes where
the two classes meet in the same persons, the interaction which restores
equilibrium, or rather prevents its disturbance, can go on without
obstruction, whatever obstacles may exist where the separation is
complete. And, furthermore, it must be remembered, as has before been
stated, that capital is but a portion of wealth, distinguished from
wealth generally only by the purpose to which it is applied, and,
hence, the whole body of wealth has upon the relations of capital
and labor the same equalizing effect that a flywheel has upon the
motion of machinery, taking up capital when it is in excess and giving
it out again when there is a deficiency, just as a jeweler may give
his wife diamonds to wear when he has a superabundant stock, and put
them in his showcase again when his stock becomes reduced. Thus any
tendency on the part of interest to rise above the equilibrium with
wages must immediately beget not only a tendency to direct labor to
the production of capital, but also the application of wealth to the
uses of capital; while any tendency of wages to rise above the equilibrium
with interest must in like manner beget not only a tendency to turn
labor from the production of capital, but also to lessen the proportion
of capital by diverting from a productive to a nonproductive use some
of the articles of wealth of which capital is composed.
[12] To recapitulate:
There is a certain relation or ratio between wages and interest, fixed
by causes, which, if not absolutely permanent, slowly change, at which
enough labor will be turned into capital to supply the capital which,
in the degree of knowledge, state of the arts, density of population,
character of occupations, variety, extent and rapidity of exchanges,
will be demanded for production, and this relation or ratio the interaction
of labor and capital constantly maintains; hence interest must rise
and fall with the rise and fall of wages.
[13] To illustrate:
The price of flour is determined by the price of wheat and cost of
milling. The cost of milling varies slowly and but little, the difference
being, even at long intervals, hardly perceptible; while the price
of wheat varies frequently and largely. Hence we correctly say that
the price of flour is governed by the price of wheat. Or, to put the
proposition in the same form as the preceding: There is a certain
relation or ratio between the value of wheat and the value of flour,
fixed by the cost of milling, which relation or ratio the interaction
between the demand for flour and the supply of wheat constantly maintains;
hence the price of flour must rise and fall with the rise and fall
of the price of wheat.
[14] Or, as, leaving
the connecting link, the price of wheat, to inference, we say that
the price of flour depends upon the character of the seasons, wars,
etc., so may we put the law of interest in a form which directly connects
it with the law of rent, by saying that the general rate of interest
will be determined by the return to capital upon the poorest land
to which capital is freely applied -- that is to say, upon the best
land open to it without the payment of rent. Thus we bring the law
of interest into a form which shows it to be a corollary of the law
of rent.
[15] We may prove this
conclusion in another way: For that interest must decrease as rent
increases, we can plainly see if we eliminate wages. To do this, we
must, to be sure, imagine a universe organized on totally different
principles. Nevertheless, we may imagine what Carlyle would call a
fool's paradise, where the production of wealth went on without the
aid of labor, and solely by the reproductive force of capital -- where
sheep bore ready-made clothing on their backs, cows presented butter
and cheese, and oxen, when they got to the proper point of fatness,
carved themselves into beefsteaks and roasting ribs; where houses
grew from the seed, and a jackknife thrown upon the ground would take
root and in due time bear a crop of assorted cutlery. Imagine certain
capitalists transported, with their capital in appropriate forms,
to such a place. Manifestly, they would get, as the return for their
capital, the whole amount of wealth it produced only so long as none
of its produce was demanded as rent. When rent arose, it would come
out of the produce of capital, and as it increased, the return to
the owners of capital must necessarily diminish. If we imagine the
place where capital possessed this power of producing wealth without
the aid of labor to be of limited extent, say an island, we shall
see that as soon as capital had increased to the limit of the island
to support it, the return to capital must fall to a trifle above its
minimum of mere replacement, and the landowners would receive nearly
the whole produce as rent, for the only alternative capitalists would
have would be to throw their capital into the sea. Or, if we imagine
such an island to be in communication with the rest of the world,
the return to capital would settle at the rate of return in other
places. Interest there would be neither higher nor lower than anywhere
else. Rent would obtain the whole of the superior advantage, and the
land of such an island would have a great value.
[16] To sum up, the
law of interest is this:
[17] The relation between
wages and interest is determined by the average power of increase
which attaches to capital from its use in reproductive modes. As rent
arises, interest will fall as wages fall, or will be determined by
the margin of cultivation.
[18] I have endeavored
at this length to trace out and illustrate the law of interest more
in deference to the existing terminology and modes of thought than
from the real necessities of our inquiry, were it unembarrassed by
befogging discussions. In truth, the primary division of wealth in
distribution is dual, not tripartite. Capital is but a form of labor,
and its distinction from labor is in reality but a subdivision, just
as the division of labor into skilled and unskilled would be. In our
examination we have reached the same point as would have been attained
had we simply treated capital as a form of labor, and sought the law
which divides the produce between rent and wages; that is to say,
between the possessors of the two factors, natural substances and
powers, and human exertion -- which two factors by their union produce
all wealth.
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