The work on which we are about to comment, seems to us unavoidably
to present great difficulties to a reviewer. The admirable qualities
of mind displayed in it, and the extensive research out of which it
has sprung, make it necessary for the critic to practise a humility,
to which he is perchance but little accustomed. Moreover the great
size of the work, the number of valuable discussions which it
contains, and, more than all, the great importance of almost the whole
of its subject-matter, exact from us a difficult selection of topics,
in order that our article may not be unpleasing to our readers or
altogether unworthy of the work under review.
The course which we shall take will be first to mark Mr. Mill's
position among economical and, so far as a few words will go, among
general thinkers: and, after this introduction to select a single
large class of considerations, viz., those bearing on the condition of
the labouring classes: and to devote our attention to these
exclusively. We choose this branch of the subject, not only because of
its own intrinsic interest, but also because it contains a large
proportion of Mr. Mill's peculiar and characteristic ideas. He is the
first among great English Economists who has ventured to maintain,
that the present division of the industrial community into labourers
and capitalists is neither destined nor adapted for a long-continued
existence: that a large production of wealth is much less important
than a good distribution of it: that a state of industry in which both
capital and population are stationary is as favourable to national
well-being as one in which they are advancing: that fixed customs are
perpetually modifying the effects which unrestrained competition would
of itself inevitably produce: that a large body of peasant proprietors
is usually a source of great national advantage: and that a system of
Emigration on a great scale would be productive of much benefit to the
English peasantry by raising their habitual standard of comfort, and
therefore putting a check on the reckless increase of a miserable
population. These propositions (which are not all that might be set
down) will be enough to prove that the subject we have selected for
discussion with Mr. Mill contains a sufficient number of his peculiar
opinions, and therefore asking our readers to acquiesce in our
selection of a special topic, we shall pass on to the general and
introductory portion of our article.
In the preface to his work Mr. Mill states that he wishes his work
to comprise both the theoretic exposition of purely economical
doctrine, and also the extraneous considerations most necessary for
its correct application to the real world in which we have to live and
act. This he says, because he habitually bears in mind that Political
Economy is founded on certain assumptions of which it is very
convenient to trace out the consequences separately, but which being
seldom accurately true, and being often very wide of the mark, will
lead logically to consequences that it may be hazardous to apply
without correction to the actual condition of mankind. Thus it is
perpetually assumed that men will always buy what they want as cheaply
as they can; whereas in matter of fact, vanity, liberality and
indolence are perpetually preventing purchasers from beating down
prices to the full extent of their ability.
The existence of such exceptional considerations distributes
economists into two classes. What we may call common-sense thinkers
have always seen that these extraneous influences were very important
matters for their attention wherever actual practice was at all
concerned. Adam Smith for example is the most striking specimen of
this class of thinkers. He is very eminent in making short inductions
from admitted facts, and in applying them with consistency and skill.
He is not eminent for precision of statement or for microscopic
accuracy of thought: but he is in general very successful in rather
vague descriptions of conspicuous phenomena, and in tracing them back
to the most influential of their proximate causes. It is evident that
a mind so habitually starting with observed fact would be unlikely to
neglect important agencies or to bind itself by purely hypothetical
assumptions. Ricardo on the other hand is the most important of what
may be called the abstract thinkers on the philosophy of wealth. He
sets out from certain primitive assumptions, and from these he
proceeds to evolve all his results by mere deduction. He but rarely
comes into contact with the actual world at all: but frames a
hypothetical one which exists nowhere out of his own imagination.
Accordingly his views of his subject must be called deep rather than
wide: explaining a little very well, but leaving much without remark:
giving a little truth which it was difficult to arrive at, rather than
a comprehensive summary of all the principles that modify the
phenomena which he is considering. In reference to these peculiarities
of their minds, it is certainly very remarkable that Adam Smith should
have been a recluse student, during his whole life almost exclusively
with abstractions, and that Ricardo, who is so eminently an abstract
thinker, should have been bred up in actual business, and should have
attained his powers of deductive reasoning without any early
philosophical discipline. It would certainly have been expected, if we
had not known how little outward circumstances avail against the
intrinsic aptitudes of a strong mind, that Adam Smith would have
looked on nature principally "through the spectacles of books,"
and that Ricardo would have taken that general, vague, but in the main
sufficient, judgment upon matters of fact which is generally called "common
sense," and which alone among the higher intellectual gifts is
habitually exercised in every-day practical life.
In that part of his preface to which we just now alluded, Mr. Mill
has substantially expressed his intention of conciliating the two
modes of dealing with his subject; that is, of combining the abstract
deduction and logical accuracy which are exemplified in Ricardo with
that largeness of view and thorough acquaintance with diversified
matters of fact for which the "Wealth of Nations" is so
eminently remarkable.
And this great undertaking he has, so far as we can judge, admirably
accomplished. The principal applications of abstract science are here
treated of with a fulness of information, an impartiality of judgment,
and a command over general principles, any one of which would have by
itself been enough to make the work take rank as one of eminent merit,
and to the union of which we have never seen anything in an economical
writer, even approximating equal. No great subject within the range of
Political Economy appears to us to have been wholly omitted, and if we
acknowledge that all the larger considerations which we could wish
for, are not on all occasions introduced, we also admit that minds
trained in different schools of thought, and seeing life generally
under a somewhat different aspect, must inevitably form conflicting
judgments as to what was, and what was not, relevant to particular
social problems. We are bound to add, that in almost all cases there
is evidence that Mr. Mill has given much and earnest attention to all
the kinds of argument which seemed to him capable of being opposed to
his opinions. Nor with the exception of the 'System of Logic' have we
read any contemporary publication in which the desire for the mere
discovery of truth was either so strong in itself or so immensely
preponderant over every other consideration. The false colours of
prejudice and passion have no place in an intellect so thoroughly
achromatic.
We feel it, therefore, to be almost presumption in us to attempt, as
we promised, a description, even in the most general way, of Mr.
Mill's position in the list of general thinkers. Yet it seems to us
incumbent on the critic of such a man to try his hand at some such
task. Mr. Mill has treated with first-rate ability of subjects which
involve a discussion of many problems which concern most intimately
the highest interests of man; and if we give a notion of the place he
appears to us to occupy among important thinkers, it will be seen why,
in some instances, we differ from him, and agree with those whom we
should place higher on the scale of worth. Mr. Mill then belongs we
think to the Aristotelic or unspiritual order of great thinkers. A
Philosopher of this sort starts always from considerations of pure
intellect. He never assumes the teachings of conscience: he never,
that is, treats as primordial facts, either the existence of a law of
duty independent of consequences, nor a moral government of the world,
nor a connection either between virtue and a reward, or between sin
and retribution. He may have a great mastery over trains of reasoning,
a great skill in applying comprehensive principles to complicated
phenomena; he may have robust sense like Locke or Adam Smith, a power
of exhausting a subject like Aristotle or Bentham, or subtlety like
the former, or definiteness in scheming like the latter: but whatever
be his merits or deficiencies, this remains as his great
characteristic, that the light of his intellect is exactly what Bacon
calls "dry light;" it is "unsteeped in the humours of
the affections:" it rests on what is observed to be: it never
grounds itself on any inward assurance of what ought to be: it
disregards what Butler calls the "presages of conscience,"
and attends only to the senses and the inductive intellect. In
Physical Science and even in Metaphysics, the views of such men may be
extensive, subtle or profound: in Politics also they may and often
will excel, in tracing the different kinds of administrative
machinery: they will in general be excellent judges of means, though
not well fitted to appreciate what a thinker of a different order
would be apt to consider, the highest ends of Government: in morals
their views will in general be vague and not seldom erroneous, for
their conscience is not luminous enough to give them vivid or
well-defined convictions on the subject of duty: and on religion it is
well if their tone be not that of Protagoras:
Such are the leading characteristics attaching to the school of
thinkers, of whom Locke and Aristotle are perhaps the most attractive
representatives, and among whom Auguste Comte is assuredly the least
valuable specimen compatible with any remarkable ability. It would
lead us too far from our subject to explain at length, that the
extreme opposite of that School of thinkers is to be found in the
School of Plato, and Butler, and Kant, who practically make the
conscience the ultimate basis of all certainty: who infer from its
inward suggestion the moral government of the world; the connection
between shame and fear, and between sin and retribution: from whose
principles it may perhaps be deduced, that the ground for trusting our
other faculties is the duty revealed by conscience, of trusting those
of them essential to the performance of the task assigned by God to
Man: thinkers, in short, whose peculiar function it is to establish in
the minds of thoughtful persons that primitive Theology which is the
necessary basis of all positive Revelation.
To what may be called the moral genius of these writers, the author
before us makes no pretension: he would, we apprehend, indeed, deny
that it was possible for any man to possess what we reckon as their
characteristic merits. On the other hand, in all the merits of the
purely intellectual class of thinkers, we must travel far back into
the past, before we can find any one whom we know to be possessed of
them in an equal measure. Our author is not indeed in our judgment
eminently qualified either to perceive or to appreciate nice and
exquisite distinctions: he does not therefore at all make pretension
to that combination of metaphysical subtlety and practical shrewdness
which so many ages have agreed to wonder at in Aristotle: but
nevertheless we hardly know of any one who has so much of that union
of sense and science so remarkable in the Aristotelic treatises on the
business of mankind. And in the firmness of grasp with which his
understanding retains whatever has once come within its range, and in
the undeviating consistency with which he applies every principle that
he esteems ascertained, to every case that fairly comes within its
scope, we know not where to find his equal.
From the shortcomings habitual to the school to which he belongs, we
cannot hold him altogether exempt; but we are bound to add that these
blemishes have rarely been presented in a form so little calculated to
offend those whose conception of life may be cast into a somewhat
different form. It is, as we have hinted, always evident that Mr. Mill
has studiously endeavoured to master the opinions of those from whom
he differs: to master them we mean, not in order to collect all
arguments that may possibly be made available in their confutation,
but what is much rarer, with a view of eliciting from them, if
possible, the latent truth which all large masses of human belief may
be charitably supposed to contain. With these few words we must
abruptly conclude a train of thought which would not stop of itself
until our limits were exhausted. It is seldom indeed that in this age
of books we come into contact with a mind worthy to be compared with
the few great authors of the past; and it is but seldom, therefore,
that we are called to begin a discussion such as the brief one which
we are in the act of ending.
We shall now go on to the more special purpose of our Article,
namely, of describing and, so far as we can, discussing, those of Mr.
Mill's speculations which most intimately concern the condition of the
labouting classes. We shall first discuss the question on the
supposition that the population which we are considering is like that
of England divided into the three classes of rent-owners, capitalists,
and labourers: each with separate interests, and each capable of
separate and, with respect to the others, antagonistic action. And
this discussion will naturally subdivide itself into two pans: first,
what settles the rates of wages in a country with any given amount of
capital and any given number of labourers; secondly, what is the law
of the growth of capital, and what the law according to which
population is augmented. We shall afterwards make some remarks on the
changes which Mr. Mill would introduce into the social framework of
Great Britain and Ireland: inasmuch as he has two plans for altering
the present threefold division of the productive classes, and one plan
for raising the wages paid to the hired labouter under the present
system or under any other at all similar to it.
The first question then before us is, what in such a community as
England settles the rate of wages when the number of labourers and the
amount of capital are both given? On this point we think Mr. Mill's
exposition much less complete than in any other equally important
portion of his work; and it will therefore be most convenient to us to
state shortly our own view, and then to show what portions of the
truth seems to us to be omitted in Mr. Mill's solution of the problem.
Among the circumstances which would first strike a philosophical
observer of a country possessing much accumulated wealth, one we think
is, that the portion of the existing accumulation which is employed in
obtaining new additional wealth naturally divides itself into two
classes: one which may be called the Co-operative, and which assists
and economizes the productive agency of Man; and another which may be
fairly called the Remunerative, the characteristic function of which
is to reward the exertion of human labour, by subsisting, for example,
the labouter and his family, or by conferring on them any enjoyments
in which their habitual circumstances enable them to find a pleasure.
The most obvious instances of co-operative capital are steam-engines,
power-looms, and machinery in general. Remunerative capital (or what
is sometimes called the wages-fund of a nation) consists of corn and
clothing, tea and sugar, and other similar commodities which the
labourer consents, for the sake of their intrinsic qualities, to
receive as a compensation for his mental or muscular exertion. It is
obvious that in considering the rate of wages, the latter kind of
capital is the one more certainly to our purpose. These two
commodities, Labour and Remunerative Capital, come into the market and
exchange one against the other, and their relative value seems to be
settled exactly as in other cases, by the supply of each and also the
demand for it; if there be an additional supply of corn or coarse
clothing, and the demand for labour be unaltered, the working classes
will be able to command more of these articles: if their supply be
less, the same classes will certainly, more or less, be straitened.
The intervention of money makes no difference here: it is the same
thing, except for convenience sake, whether the capitalist purchase
the commodities desired by the labourer, and barter them directly for
their labour, or whether he gives the labourers money-tickets, by
presenting which they will obtain from certain sellers those identical
commodities.
Also it is to be borne in mind that the quantity of such commodities
and of labour is not the only point which it is necessary to consider:
the demand for these commodities also deserves much careful attention.
If an additional number of unproductive consumers were to come into a
nation and were not to employ any of its labourers, it is apparent
that their consumption entrenches on the fund set apart for the
maintenance of the industrial classes, unless the evil be corrected by
the importation of corn from abroad, or by increased economy in the
unproductive classes previously forming part of the nation. On the
other hand, if these unproductive consumers were to bring with them a
stock of necessaries adequate to their own consumption; and if they
were to employ labourers on a large scale, and to pay them either in
money or in commodities, it is evident that the command of labourers
over wages-paying commodities would be increased, and that the
unproductive classes must expend a larger sum in order to obtain the
same quantities of the necessaries of life. Undoubtedly if in this
instance there was no importation from abroad and no decrease in the
consumption of the more opulent classes, the labouting classes would
derive no benefit from the increase in the demand for labour: the
demand for wages-paying commodities would have been also increased and
their price would have risen: but as a rule that higher price would
enforce a stricter economy in the more opulent classes, and thus the
labourers would be benefitted though not to the full extent of the
increased demand for the article in which they deal. In the first case
which we noticed, the remuneration for labour was attended by an
increased demand in other quarters for wages-paying commodities; and
in the second by an increased demand for labour itself at a time when
the supply and demand for remunerative capital received -- from other
causes -- neither increase nor diminution. The relative value of
labour and of wages-paying commodities is settled exactly as the
relative value of Cloth and Hats is ascertained. The intervention of
money complicates the phenomena in either case, but, as every one
acquainted with the elements of the subject will admit, without
introducing any new matter of fundamental principle.
Before proceeding further we shall quote Mr. Mill's observations on
this portion of the subject. The following passage does not strike us
as a complete rationale of the entire topic: but it contains a
valuable summary of our author's opinion:--
"Wages like all other things may be regulated either by
competition or by custom; but the last is not a common case. A custom
on this subject could not easily maintain itself in any other than a
stationary state of Society. An increase or a falling off in the
demand for labour, an increase or diminution of the labouring
population, could hardly fail to engender a competition which would
break down any custom respecting wages by giving either to one side or
the other a strong direct interest in infringing it. We may at all
events speak of the wages of labour as determined in ordinary
circumstances by competition.
"Wages then depend upon the demand and supply of labour, or, as
it is often expressed, on the proportion between Population and
Capital. By Population is here meant the number only of the working
class, or rather of those who work for hire, and by Capital only
circulating Capital, and not the whole of that, but the part which is
expended in the direct purchase of labour, -- to this however must be
added all the funds which without forming a part of Capital are paid
in exchange for labour, such as the wages of soldiers, domestic
servants, and other unproductive labourers. There is unfortunately no
mode of expressing by one familiar term the aggregate of what may be
called the wages-fund of a country, and as the wages of productive
labour form nearly the whole of that fund, it is usual to overlook the
smaller and less important part, and to say that wages depend on
population and capital. It will be convenient to employ this
expression, remembering however to consider it as elliptical and not
as a literal statement of the entire truth.
"With these limitations of the terms, wages not only depend
upon the relative amount of capital and population, but cannot be
affected by anything else. Wages (meaning thereby of course the
general rate) cannot rise except by an increase in the aggregate funds
employed in hiring labourers, or a diminution in the number of
competitors for rise: nor fall, except either by a diminution of the
funds devolvable on paying labour, or by an increase in the number of
labourers to be paid."
We think the simpler formula which we have ventured to lay down will
obviate the necessity of a recourse to an expression which is not
correct, and which is calculated to throw a mist over the real
relations between machinery and manual labour. Mr. Mill is also
inconsistent with himself in speaking of the wages-fund as a part of "circulating
capital," for he has defined the latter to be "the portion
of capital which is only capable of being used once:" now food is
the only wages-paying commodity of importance that is only capable of
a single use: in every sense in which machinery is capable of being
used, often clothing and cottages are so too. Ricardo it is true uses
habitually language of this sort, but then he defines circulating
capital to be all capital rapidly perishable, and the error is
therefore in him much less considerable, but nevertheless it is on
every account undesirable to pay such special attention to that
shortness of duration which is at best but an accidental quality of
remunerative capital.
From this passage, in spite of the ambiguity in its concluding
formula, it is evident that Mr. Mill must in consistency hold that an
increase of machinery may be injurious to the lower classes. In other
parts of his work he fully explains that such is his opinion, and in
this we entirely agree with him. If, for example, a shifting of
industrial relations should ever diminish the remunerative kind of
capital, and at the same time increase the cooperative, the
proportion, as it is phrased, of labour and capital has indeed
remained unaltered; but the amount of that portion of capital which is
set apart for the compensation of human industry has undergone a
diminution which may be very serious. Again, if capital has been
transferred from Agriculture to the production of Railroads, or Steam
Engines, there is no question but that caeteris paribus the working
classes will be straitened by the change: their labour was before
devoted to increasing the fund out of which labour would be
remunerated; after the alteration it is devoted to manufacturing
articles which, though perpetually productive of new wealth, do not in
the same degree contribute to the maintenance of a labouring
population.
In this case machinery has been shown to be hurtful to the lower
classes, because its creation has diverted resources which would
otherwise have been employed in remunerating labour to the essentially
different function of aiding the production of commodities which the
labourers do not consume. It is also quite possible that the
introduction of machinery may be injurious to the lower classes by
diminishing the demand for their labour. If machinery be substituted
for manual labour in any manufacturing employment, common sense, as
Mr. Mill observes, sees that the labourers are worse off in that
particular employment, and the onus probandi clearly lies upon those
who assert that the labouring classes are not worse off generally for
the change. What is usually said is, that the wages-fund or
remunerative capital of the country remains the same: the use of a
certain portion of it is rendered unnecessary in a particular
department of industry; but the same aggregate amount exists: it can
(it is said) only be shifted from one employment to another, and it is
believed that the depression of a sort of labourers will infallibly be
compensated by the extra remuneration of another. But it is in our
judgment an entire mistake to contend that remunerative capital if
released from one employment is necessarily employed in a similar
capacity in some other. It is one of the points in which this
description of capital differs from the co-operative sort, that the
latter, if not used for its own characteristic function of aiding
human labour, cannot be put to any other use. Machinery if not worked
as such in producing wealth, can never be made to produce pleasure to
any one; but remunerative capital, which consists of food, clothing,
and other commodities adapted to satisfy certain primitive wants of
man, can at once be turned in part at least to the production of
transitory enjoyment. This sort of capital, when released from one
manufacturing employment, is evidently capable of being used in
satisfying the wants of unproductive consumers. The process would be,
that less money-wages would be paid in consequence of the substitution
of machinery for manual labour; that the working classes would have
less to spend on such articles as food and clothing: that these
commodities would therefore fall in price: that the fall in price
would cause an increased consumption by the unproductive classes, and
that their extra consumption would entrench on the fund that previous
to the introduction of Machinery was set apart as a compensation for
industrial exertion. On this point we have some reason to think that
Mr. Mill would agree with us; though this is inconsistent with his
general principle which we have quoted, and with many arguments which
assume that the demand for labour is not an effective force operating
on the rate of wages. But our auth.or is continually right in detail
where his formulae would lead him wrong: and we know of no
intellectual quality more thoroughly characteristic of a first-rate
thinker.
There is we believe also another case in which the introduction of
machinery is detrimental to the labouring classes. It was pointed out
by Mr. Senior several years ago. Mr. Mill has omitted all
consideration of it, probably because its practical importance is
exceedingly slight. This case is, where the machinery consumed more
wages-paying commodities than the labourers whose exertions it has
superseded. Of this kind it is supposed that certain employments of
the lower animals may be reckoned: these creatures being for our
present purpose, simply animated machines, and it being perfectly
possible that they might consume more food than the labourers whose
work they were employed to perform. The peculiarity of this case is an
additional demand for remunerative capital consequent on the increased
use of machinery. The price of the former would consequently rise, and
a certain portion of it be put beyond the reach of those labourers who
would otherwise have consumed it.
Another mode exists beside that just now mentioned in which the
substitution of co-operative for remunerative capital may be effected,
and in which that substitution might be detrimental to the interests
of the labouring classes. Ricardo was, it is believed, the first who
worked out this view of the subject, which is somewhat more recondite
than any consideration with which we have yet had to deal. His
instance is in principle as follows: Suppose that a manufacturer of
remunerative commodities should be in the habit of employing ú1,000
per annum in paying labourers; then if profits were ten per cent, it
is clear that he would have a revenue of ú1,100 annually; but
if instead of so doing, he choose to expend the same sum in the
purchase of a machine, which will last ten years, it is apparent that
his thousand pounds will be returned to him together with the ordinary
profit by a revenue of ú110 per annum and it is clearly
immaterial to him as a capitalist which course he decide to pursue.
But if the commodities represented by the ú110 be not so
numerous as those represented by the ú 1,100, which the
greatest produce can be most easily obtained are those nearest to the
consumer; and these will in general be the first selected for
cultivation. We may add, though it is a matter more of curiosity than
of importance, that there is a case in which this last cause will
counteract the effect of the first, -- viz., where the lands least
favourably situated have the greatest natural fertility. Here it might
happen that the additional labour required to bring food from a
greater distance was exactly counterbalanced by the additional
fertility possessed by the more distant soils, and therefore that
their cultivation would not increase the cost-price of food. But this
case of exception is too improbable to need any particular attention,
and in general it may be laid down that the first soils taken into
cultivation will yield a greater return to the same labour than those
that are left without tillage until a later period. It is also a fact
of experience, and is deducible from somewhat similar considerations,
that doubling the capital and labour on the same land will not double
the produce in an unaltered state of agricultural knowledge. It is
obvious that men will choose to use first the best means of
cultivation which they know of. Hence it appears that in the progress
of civilisation the productive arts and the general intelligence of
the country are in constant increase, but that this increase is ever
in part counteracted and sometimes more than overbalanced by the
constant necessity of resorting to the cultivation of poorer soils.
So much of the productiveness of industry, which is one cause of the
increase of capital. The propensity to save, which is the other cause,
means, in more distinct words, the disposition of the people to
postpone a present enjoyment for the future advantage of themselves
and others. This will obviously vary with the estimate which the
people in question are able to form of what is distantly future -- a
kind of intelligence in which children, savages, and all uninstructed
persons, are peculiarly deficient, and on the effects of which Mr.
Mill has accumulated various interesting testimonies. The saving habit
will also be fostered by a general security, that those who save
to-day will be able to enjoy to-morrow, or at least be able to make
over their enjoyment to whom they please; by a boldness to meet
whatever risk there is that this event will not take place; and by the
comparative desirableness of the station which is conferred by
accumulated wealth. The two first seem as a rule to augment in
strength during an advance of civilisation; the third is perhaps at
its maximum in a rather rude and boisterous condition of society; the
fourth attains its greatest efficiency in that state of purely
commercial industry through which the mercantile and manufacturing
classes of England, as well as the Northern States of the American
Union, appear at present to be passing. To these four causes must be
added the rate of the profit which can be derived from the employment
of capital. It is evident that men will be more likely to save,
cceterisparibus, when they get twenty per cent. on their capital, than
when they can get two per cent.: but the efficiency of this cause at
different times and circumstances, it will be better to consider after
examining the subject of population. Then also we shall be better able
to estimate the causes which apportion capital into the two divisions
that have been before mentioned.
We have now then examined the disposition to save and the
productiveness of industry. We have found that the great causes of
accelerating the growth of capital are the increase of foresight and
productive power consequent on the advance of civilisation: the great
retarding cause is the diminishing proportion of return with which the
soil of the earth rewards the increasing industry of the cultivator.
And this is all which can at present be said with advantage with
reference to the growth of capital.
We now go to the subject of Population -- a topic which is of
obvious importance in reference to our peculiar subject, and about
which there has been, and still is, a considerable amount of
controversy. We are not, however, able to afford to it a portion of
our space proportionable either to its interest or its difficulty. It
may be broadly stated at the outset that Mr. Mill does not believe the
doctrine of Malthus and Ricardo, that an increase of the comforts or a
decrease in the misery of the labouting classes is invariably followed
by an accelerated increase of population; or, on the other hand, that
a diminution of their comforts or an increase in their misery will
invariably retard the increase of their numbers.(1*) Our author is
habitually aware that extreme misery is a great stimulant to
population, by begetring recklessness and improvidence: since it may
be safely affirmed that an Irishman who is as badly off as he can be,
and who has no hope and scarcely an opportunity of becoming better,
will, as a general rule, practise no prudential restraint whatever.
Mr. Mill also holds what is less obvious, that a very great increase
in the comforts of the population, though it may be an immediate
stimulus to population, will nevertheless in all likelihood, on the
whole, retard its increase. This proposition was admirably brought
into view by Mr. Thornton, in his essay on Over-Population. It is
still, however, opposed by many reasoners; there is in the minds of
some Economists an inveterate idea, almost, if not quite, amounting to
a prejudice, to the effect that the most comfortable classes will
always increase the most rapidly. If this proposition were not a
frequent assumption, silently or expressly taken for granted in many
influential arguments, it would have no intrinsic merit requiring a
particular notice. Few ideas on this or on any other subject can be
more clearly opposed to very obvious facts. It might be urged that in
Norway, where the population is nearly stationary, the mass of the
population enjoy a degree of comfort certainly unsurpassed, and most
probably unequalled, in any other portion of Europe. But far more
obvious facts are in every country at hand to correct this very
erroneous idea. Is it by the increase of the Noblesse that the
population of any country is particularly augmented? Do the middle,
the opulent, or the commercial portions of any nation increase too
rapidly? It is clear that, as we ascend in the social scale, we pass
through classes which have at each step of ascent a diminishing rate
of mcrease; the fact being that comfort, the habitual sense of having
something valuable to lose, and the desire of parents that their
children shall not be below, but, if possible, above the position in
which they themselves live, are all motives which operate most as a
check on population among the opulent and comfortable classes.
This being so, it is clear that it is the habit of the several
classes of mankind to have a rate of increase of their own, fairly
determined by the consumer of those commodities will obviously be
worse off than before. In the case we are supposing the subjects of
manufacture are wages-paying commodities, and the consumers we are
speaking of are the labouring classes. It is clear, therefore, that
they are straitened by whatever diminishes the aggregate annual
proceeds of agriculture and of what may be called for shortness
wages-making manufactures; but that the capitalist is benefitted only
by the profit which is left after deducting the expense. In mercantile
language this is expressed by saying that the consumer is dependent on
the gross and the capitalist on the net return: in more popular
phraseology it may be said that the consumer has only to heed the
amount of commodities produced, whereas the capitalist is exclusively
concerned with the pecuniary excess of income over outlay. It is
evident that the operating cause is, as we said, the substitution of
co-operative for remunerative capital: there was a certain amount
produced to support the labourers during the ensuing year: there is in
lieu of them a machine of equal pecuniary value: the national capital
is the same in amount and the capitalist obtains as before his
accustomed profit: but nevertheless the condition of the labourer and
the consumer is deteriorated because they have a diminished supply of
articles adapted to satisfy their wants.
To sum up then, the three cases in which the increase of machinery
is detrimental to the labouring population are first when its
introduction diminishes the supply of remunerative capital; secondly,
when the introduction increases the demand for such capital; thirdly,
when the demand for labour is diminished by the change. We are very
far from thinking that any one of these cases is of frequent
occurrence, or that any part of the present depressed state of the
lower orders is in any considerable degree owing to an extension of
machinery. In our judgment Mr. Mill has ample grounds for contending
that by far the greater part of new machinery is merely an investment
for the annual savings of the country; and being on that account a new
creation of wealth does not diminish the existing amount of
remunerative capital: nor do wages-paying commodities, except in the
not very important instance of coal, appear to be consumed to any
considerable extent by existing machinery. We should also hold,
contrary to the opinion of Mr. Mill, that the increased demand for
labour sometimes eventually caused by the introduction of machinery is
decidedly beneficial to the lower orders. The cotton trade is an
obvious instance of this: there is no reason however for wearying our
readers with an examination of our differences on this point from Mr.
Mill, because our reasons are only the reverse side of those which we
have already exhibited in behalf of our opinion that any decrease in
the demand for labour from a similar cause is detrimental to the real
interests of the labouring classes.