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<SPAN name="Book_I_Chapter_VIII" id="Book_I_Chapter_VIII" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN>
<h2><span>Chapter VIII. Of The Law Of The Increase Of Capital.</span></h2>
<SPAN name="toc54" id="toc54"></SPAN>
<h3><span>§ 1. Means for Saving in the Surplus above Necessaries.</span></h3>
<p>
The requisites of production being labor, capital, and
land, it has been seen from the preceding chapter that the
impediments to the increase of production do not arise from
the first of these elements. But production has other requisites,
and, of these, the one which we shall next consider is
Capital. There can not be more people in any country, or
in the world, than can be supported from the produce of
past labor until that of present labor comes in [although it
is not to be supposed that capital consists wholly of food].
We have next, therefore, to inquire into the conditions of the
increase of capital: the causes by which the rapidity of its
increase is determined, and the necessary limitations of that
increase.</p>
<p>
Since all capital is the product of saving, that is, of abstinence
from present consumption for the sake of a future
good, the increase of capital must depend upon two things—the
amount of the fund from which saving can be made,
and the strength of the dispositions which prompt to it.</p>
<p>
(1.) The fund from which saving can be made is the surplus
of the produce of labor, after supplying the necessaries
of life to all concerned in the production (including those
employed in replacing the materials, and keeping the fixed
capital in repair). More than this surplus can not be saved
under any circumstances. As much as this, though it never
is saved, always might be. This surplus is the fund from
which the enjoyments, as distinguished from the necessaries
of the producers, are provided; it is the fund from which all
are subsisted who are not themselves engaged in production,
and from which all additions are made to capital. The
capital of the employer forms the revenue of the laborers,
and, if this exceeds the necessaries of life, it gives them a
surplus which they may either expend in enjoyments or save.</p>
<span style="font-size: 90%">
It is evident that the whole unproductive consumption of the
laborer can be saved. When it is considered how enormous a
sum is spent by the working-classes in drink alone (and also
in the great reserves of the Trades-Unions collected for purposes
of strikes), it is indisputable that the laborers have the
margin from which savings can be made, and by which they
themselves may become capitalists. The great accumulations
in the savings-banks by small depositors in the United States
also show somewhat how much is actually saved. In 1882-1883
there were 2,876,438 persons who had deposited in the savings-banks
of the United States $1,024,856,787, with an average to
each depositor of $356.29. The unproductive consumption,
however, of all classes—not merely that of the working-men—is
the possible fund which may be saved. That being the
amount which </span><em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-size: 90%; font-style: italic">can</span></em><span style="font-size: 90%"> be saved, how much </span><em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-size: 90%; font-style: italic">will</span></em><span style="font-size: 90%"> be saved depends
on the strength of the desire to save.
</span>
<p>
The greater the produce of labor after supporting the
laborers, the more there is which <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">can</span></em> be saved. The same
thing also partly contributes to determine how much <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">will</span></em> be
saved. A part of the motive to saving consists in the prospect
of deriving an income from savings; in the fact that
capital, employed in production, is capable of not only reproducing
itself but yielding an increase. The greater the
profit that can be made from capital, the stronger is the motive
to its accumulation.</p>
<SPAN name="toc55" id="toc55"></SPAN>
<h3><span>§ 2. Motive for Saving in the Surplus above Necessaries.</span></h3>
<p>
But the disposition to save does not wholly depend
on the external inducement to it; on the amount of profit
to be made from savings. With the same pecuniary inducement,
the inclination is very different, in different persons,
and in different communities.</p>
<p>
(2.) All accumulation involves the sacrifice of a present,
for the sake of a future good.</p>
<span style="font-size: 90%">
This is the fundamental motive underlying the effective
desire of accumulation, and is far more important than any
other. It is, in short, the test of civilization. In order to induce
the laboring-classes to improve their condition and save
capital, it is absolutely necessary to excite in them (by education
or religion) a belief in a future gain greater than the present
sacrifice. It is, to be sure, the whole problem of creating
character, and belongs to sociology and ethics rather than to
political economy.
</span>
<p>
In weighing the future against the present, the uncertainty
of all things future is a leading element; and that uncertainty
is of very different degrees. <span class="tei tei-q">“All circumstances,”</span>
therefore, <span class="tei tei-q">“increasing the probability of the provision
we make for futurity being enjoyed by ourselves or others,
tend”</span> justly and reasonably <span class="tei tei-q">“to give strength to the effective
desire of accumulation. Thus a healthy climate or occupation,
by increasing the probability of life, has a tendency
to add to this desire. When engaged in safe occupations
and living in healthy countries, men are much more
apt to be frugal, than in unhealthy or hazardous occupations
and in climates pernicious to human life. Sailors and soldiers
are prodigals. In the West Indies, New Orleans, the
East Indies, the expenditure of the inhabitants is profuse.
The same people, coming to reside in the healthy parts of
Europe, and not getting into the vortex of extravagant fashion,
live economically. War and pestilence have always
waste and luxury among the other evils that follow in their
train. For similar reasons, whatever gives security to the
affairs of the community is favorable to the strength of this
principle. In this respect the general prevalence of law and
order and the prospect of the continuance of peace and tranquillity
have considerable influence.”</span><SPAN id="noteref_128" name="noteref_128" href="#note_128"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">128</span></span></SPAN></p>
<span style="font-size: 90%">
It is asserted that the prevalence of homicide in certain
parts of the United States has had a vital influence in retarding
the material growth of those sections. The Southern States
have received but a very small fraction (from ten to thirteen
per cent) of foreign immigration. </span><span class="tei tei-q"><span style="font-size: 90%">“</span><span style="font-size: 90%">A country where law and
order prevail to perfection may find its material prosperity
checked by a deadly and fatal climate; or, on the other
hand, a people may destroy all the advantages accruing from
matchless natural resources and climate by persistent disregard
of life and property. A rather startling confirmation of this
economic truth is afforded by the fact that homicide has been
as destructive of life in the South as yellow fever. Although
there have been forty thousand deaths from yellow fever since
the war, the deaths from homicide, for the same period, have
been even greater.</span><span style="font-size: 90%">”</span></span><SPAN id="noteref_129" name="noteref_129" href="#note_129"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">129</span></span></SPAN><span style="font-size: 90%">
The influence of the old slave </span><span class="tei tei-foreign"><span style="font-size: 90%; font-style: italic">régime</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%">,
and its still existing influences, in checking foreign immigration
into the South can be seen by the colored chart, No. VIII,
showing the relative density of foreign-born inhabitants in the
several parts of the United States. The deeper color shows
the greater foreign-born population.
</span>
<p>
The more perfect the security, the greater will be the
effective strength of the desire of accumulation. Where
property is less safe, or the vicissitudes ruinous to fortunes
are more frequent and severe, fewer persons will save at all,
and, of those who do, many will require the inducement of a
higher rate of profit on capital to make them prefer a doubtful
future to the temptation of present enjoyment.</p>
<p>
In the circumstances, for example, of a hunting tribe,
<span class="tei tei-q">“man may be said to be necessarily improvident, and regardless
of futurity, because, in this state, the future presents
nothing which can be with certainty either foreseen or
governed.... Besides a want of the motives exciting to
provide for the needs of futurity through means of the abilities
of the present, there is a want of the habits of perception
and action, leading to a constant connection in the mind of
those distant points, and of the series of events serving to
unite them. Even, therefore, if motives be awakened capable
of producing the exertion necessary to effect this connection,
there remains the task of training the mind to think and
act so as to establish it.”</span></p>
<SPAN name="toc56" id="toc56"></SPAN>
<h3><span>§ 3. Examples of Deficiency in the Strength of this Desire.</span></h3>
<p>
For instance: <span class="tei tei-q">“Upon the banks of the St. Lawrence
there are several little Indian villages. The cleared
land is rarely, I may almost say never, cultivated, nor are any
inroads made in the forest for such a purpose. The soil is,
nevertheless, fertile, and, were it not, manure lies in heaps
by their houses. Were every family to inclose half an acre
of ground, till it, and plant it in potatoes and maize, it would
yield a sufficiency to support them one half the year. They
suffer, too, every now and then, extreme want, insomuch
that, joined to occasional intemperance, it is rapidly reducing
their numbers. This, to us, so strange apathy proceeds not,
in any great degree, from repugnance to labor; on the contrary,
they apply very diligently to it when its reward is
immediate. It is evidently not the necessary labor that is
the obstacle to more extended culture, but the distant return
from that labor. I am assured, indeed, that among some of
the more remote tribes, the labor thus expended much exceeds
that given by the whites. On the Indian, succeeding
years are too distant to make sufficient impression; though,
to obtain what labor may bring about in the course of a few
months, he toils even more assiduously than the white man.”</span></p>
<p>
This view of things is confirmed by the experience of
the Jesuits, in their interesting efforts to civilize the Indians
of Paraguay. The real difficulty was the improvidence of
the people; their inability to think for the future; and the
necessity accordingly of the most unremitting and minute
superintendence on the part of their instructors. <span class="tei tei-q">“Thus at
first, if these gave up to them the care of the oxen with
which they plowed, their indolent thoughtlessness would
probably leave them at evening still yoked to the implement.
Worse than this, instances occurred where they cut them up
for supper, thinking, when reprehended, that they sufficiently
excused themselves by saying they were hungry.”</span></p>
<p>
As an example intermediate, in the strength of the effective
desire of accumulation, between the state of things thus
depicted and that of modern Europe, the case of the Chinese
deserves attention. <span class="tei tei-q">“Durability is one of the chief qualities,
marking a high degree of the effective desire of accumulation.
The testimony of travelers ascribes to the instruments
formed by the Chinese a very inferior durability to
similar instruments constructed by Europeans. The houses,
we are told, unless of the higher ranks, are in general of
unburnt bricks, of clay, or of hurdles plastered with earth;
the roofs, of reeds fastened to laths. A greater degree of
strength in the effective desire of accumulation would cause
them to be constructed of materials requiring a greater present
expenditure, but being far more durable. From the same
cause, much land, that in other countries would be cultivated,
lies waste. All travelers take notice of large tracts of lands,
chiefly swamps, which continue in a state of nature. To
bring a swamp into tillage is generally a process to complete
which requires several years. It must be previously
drained, the surface long exposed to the sun, and many
operations performed, before it can be made capable of bearing
a crop. Though yielding, probably, a very considerable
return for the labor bestowed on it, that return is not made
until a long time has elapsed. The cultivation of such land
implies a greater strength of the effective desire of accumulation
than exists in the empire. The amount of self-denial
would seem to be small. It is their great deficiency in forethought
and frugality in this respect which is the cause of
the scarcities and famines that frequently occur.”</span></p>
<p>
That it is defect of providence, not defect of industry,
that limits production among the Chinese, is still more
obvious than in the case of the semi-agriculturized Indians.
<span class="tei tei-q">“Where the returns are quick, where the instruments formed
require but little time to bring the events for which they
were formed to an issue,”</span> it is well known that <span class="tei tei-q">“the great
progress which has been made in the knowledge of the arts
suited to the nature of the country and the wants of its inhabitants”</span>
makes industry energetic and effective. <span class="tei tei-q">“What
marks the readiness with which labor is forced to form the
most difficult materials into instruments, where these instruments
soon bring to an issue the events for which they are
formed, is the frequent occurrence, on many of their lakes
and rivers, of structures resembling the floating gardens of
the Peruvians, rafts covered with vegetable soil and cultivated.
Labor in this way draws from the materials on which
it acts very speedy returns. Nothing can exceed the luxuriance
of vegetation when the quickening powers of a
genial sun are ministered to by a rich soil and abundant
moisture. It is otherwise, as we have seen, in cases where
the return, though copious, is distant. European travelers are
surprised at meeting these little floating farms by the side of
swamps which only require draining to render them tillable.”</span></p>
<p>
When a country has carried production as far as in the
existing state of knowledge it can be carried with an amount
of return corresponding to the average strength of the effective
desire of accumulation in that country, it has reached
what is called the stationary state; the state in which no
further addition will be made to capital, unless there takes
place either some improvement in the arts of production, or
an increase in the strength of the desire to accumulate. In
the stationary state, though capital does not on the whole
increase, some persons grow richer and others poorer. Those
whose degree of providence is below the usual standard
become impoverished, their capital perishes, and makes room
for the savings of those whose effective desire of accumulation
exceeds the average. These become the natural purchasers
of the lands, manufactories, and other instruments of
production owned by their less provident countrymen.</p>
<p>
In China, if that country has really attained, as it is supposed
to have done, the stationary state, accumulation has
stopped when the returns to capital are still as high as is indicated
by a rate of interest legally twelve per cent, and practically
varying (it is said) between eighteen and thirty-six.
It is to be presumed, therefore, that no greater amount of capital
than the country already possesses can find employment
at this high rate of profit, and that any lower rate does not
hold out to a Chinese sufficient temptation to induce him to
abstain from present enjoyment. What a contrast with
Holland, where, during the most flourishing period of its
history, the government was able habitually to borrow at two
per cent, and private individuals, on good security, at three!</p>
<SPAN name="toc57" id="toc57"></SPAN>
<h3><span>§ 4. Examples of Excess of this Desire.</span></h3>
<p>
In [the United States and] the more prosperous
countries of Europe, there are to be found abundance of
prodigals: still, in a very numerous portion of the community,
the professional, manufacturing, and trading classes, being
those who, generally speaking, unite more of the means with
more of the motives for saving than any other class, the spirit
of accumulation is so strong that the signs of rapidly increasing
wealth meet every eye: and the great amount of capital
seeking investment excites astonishment, whenever peculiar
circumstances turning much of it into some one channel, such
as railway construction or foreign speculative adventure, bring
the largeness of the total amount into evidence.</p>
<p>
There are many circumstances which, in England, give
a peculiar force to the accumulating propensity. The long
exemption of the country from the ravages of war and the
far earlier period than elsewhere at which property was
secure from military violence or arbitrary spoliation have
produced a long-standing and hereditary confidence in the
safety of funds when trusted out of the owner's hands, which
in most other countries is of much more recent origin, and
less firmly established.</p>
<span style="font-size: 90%">
The growth of deposit-banking in Great Britain, therefore,
advances with enormous strides, while in Continental countries
it makes very little headway. The disturbed condition of the
country in France, owing to wars, leads the thrifty to hoard
instead of depositing their savings. But in the United States
the same growth is seen as among the English. The net deposits
of the national banks of the United States in 1871 were
$636,000,000, but in 1883 they had increased more than 83
</span><span style="font-size: 90%">
per cent to $1,168,000,000. Deposit accounts are the rule even
with small tradesmen; and the savings-banks of Massachusetts
alone show deposits in 1882-1883 of $241,311,362, and those
of New York of $412,147,213. The United States also escapes
from the heavy taxation which in Europe is imposed to maintain
an extravagant army and navy chest. The effect of institutions,
moreover, in stimulating the growth of material
prosperity is far more true of the United States than of England,
for the barriers raised against the movement from lower
to higher social classes in the latter country are non-existent
here, and consequently there is more stimulus toward acquiring
the means of bettering a man's social condition.
</span>
<p>
The geographical causes which have made industry rather
than war the natural source of power and importance to
Great Britain [and the United States] have turned an unusual
proportion of the most enterprising and energetic characters
into the direction of manufactures and commerce;
into supplying their wants and gratifying their ambition by
producing and saving, rather than by appropriating what
has been produced and saved. Much also depended on the
better political institutions of this country, which, by the
scope they have allowed to individual freedom of action,
have encouraged personal activity and self-reliance, while,
by the liberty they confer of association and combination,
they facilitate industrial enterprise on a large scale. The
same institutions, in another of their aspects, give a most
direct and potent stimulus to the desire of acquiring wealth.
The earlier decline of feudalism [in England] having removed
or much weakened invidious distinctions between the
originally trading classes and those who had been accustomed
to despise them, and a polity having grown up which made
wealth the real source of political influence, its acquisition
was invested with a factitious value independent of its intrinsic
utility. And, inasmuch as to be rich without industry
has always hitherto constituted a step in the social scale
above those who are rich by means of industry, it becomes
the object of ambition to save not merely as much as will
afford a large income while in business, but enough to retire
from business and live in affluence on realized gains.</p>
<p>
In [the United States,] England, and Holland, then, for a
long time past, and now in most other countries in Europe,
the second requisite of increased production, increase of capital,
shows no tendency to become deficient. So far as that
element is concerned, production is susceptible of an increase
without any assignable bounds. The limitation to production,
not consisting in any necessary limit to the increase of the
other two elements, labor and capital, must turn upon the
properties of the only element which is inherently, and in
itself, limited in quantity. It must depend on the properties
of land.</p>
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