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"Hateful money! Hateful money!" cried F——, the
economist, despairingly, as he came from the Committee of Finance, where a
project of paper money had just been discussed.
"What's the matter?" I said. "What is the meaning of this
sudden dislike to the most extolled of all the divinities of this
world?"
F—— Hateful money! Hateful money!
Bastiat You alarm me. I hear peace, liberty, and
life cried down, and Brutus went so far even as to say, "Virtue! Thou
art but a name!" But what can have happened?
F. Hateful money! Hateful money!
B. Come, come, exercise a little philosophy. What has happened to you? Has
Croesus been affecting you? Has Jones been playing you false? Or has Smith
been libeling you in the papers?
F. I have nothing to do with Croesus; my character, by its insignificance,
is safe from any slanders of Smith; and as to Jones —
B. Ah! Now I have it. How could I be so blind? You, too, are the inventor
of a social reorganization — of the F—— system. In fact,
your society is to be more perfect than that of Sparta, and, therefore all
money is to be strictly banished from it. And the thing that troubles you is
how to persuade your people to throw away the contents of their purses. What
would you have? This is the rock on which all reorganizers split. Anyone
could do wonders if he could contrive to overcome all resisting influences,
and if all mankind would consent to become soft wax in his fingers; but men
are resolved not to be soft wax; they listen, applaud, or reject and —
go on as before.
F. Thank heaven I am still free from this fashionable mania. Instead of
inventing social laws, I am studying those which it has pleased Providence to
invent, and I am delighted to find them admirable in their progressive
development. This is why I exclaim, "Hateful money! Hateful money!"
B. You are a disciple of Proudhon, then? Well, there is a very simple way
for you to satisfy yourself. Throw your purse into the river, only reserving
a small draft on the Bank of Exchange.
F. If I cry out against money, is it likely I should tolerate its deceitful
substitute?
B. Then I have only one more guess to make. You are a new Diogenes, and are
going to belabor me with a discourse on the contempt of riches.
F. Heaven preserve me from that! For riches, don't you see, are not a
little more or a little less money. They are bread for the hungry, clothes
for the naked, fuel to warm you, oil to lengthen the day, a career open to
your son, a certain portion for your daughter, a day of rest after fatigue, a
cordial for the faint, a little assistance slipped into the hand of a poor
man, a shelter from the storm, a diversion for a brain worn by thought, the
incomparable pleasure of making those happy who are dear to us. Riches are
education, independence, dignity, confidence, charity; they are progress and
civilization. Riches are the admirable civilizing result of two admirable
agents, more civilizing even than riches themselves — labor and
exchange.
B. Well! Now you seem to be singing the praises of riches, when, a moment
ago, you were loading them with imprecations!
"We will
make fictitious money, nothing is more easy, and then every citizen will have
his pocketbook full of it, and they will all be rich."
F. Why, don't you see that it was only the whim of an economist? I cry out
against money, just because everybody confounds it, as you did just now, with
riches, and that this confusion is the cause of errors and calamities without
number. I cry out against it because its function in society is not
understood, and very difficult to explain. I cry out against it because it
jumbles all ideas, causes the means to be taken for the end, the obstacle for
the cause, the alpha for the omega; because its presence in the world, though
in itself beneficial, has nevertheless introduced a fatal notion, a
perversion of principles, a contradictory theory which in a multitude of
forms, has impoverished mankind and deluged the earth with blood. I cry out
against it, because I feel that I am incapable of contending against the
error to which it has given birth, otherwise than by a long and fastidious
dissertation to which no one would listen. Oh! if I could only find a patient
and right-thinking listener!
B. Well, it shall not be said that for want of a victim you remain in the
state of irritation in which you now are. I am listening; speak, lecture, do
not restrain yourself in any way.
F. You promise to take an interest?
B. I promise to have patience.
F. That is not much.
B. It is all that I can give. Begin, and explain to me, at first, how a
mistake on the subject of money, if mistake there be, is to be found at the
root of all economical errors?
F. Well, now, is it possible that you can conscientiously assure me that
you have never happened to confound wealth with money?
B. I don't know; but, after all, what would be the consequence of such a
confusion?
F. Nothing very important. An error in your brain, which would have no
influence over your actions; for you see that, with respect to labor and
exchange, although there are as many opinions as there are heads, we all act
in the same way.
B. Just as we walk based on the same principle, although we are not agreed
upon the theory of equilibrium and gravitation.
F. Precisely. A person who argued himself into the opinion that during the
night our heads and feet changed places, might write very fine books upon the
subject, but still he would walk about like everybody else.
B. So I think. Nevertheless, he would soon suffer the penalty of being too
much of a logician.
F. In the same way, a man would die of hunger who, having decided that
money is real wealth, should carry out the idea to the end. That is the
reason that this theory is false, for there is no true theory but such as
results from facts themselves, as manifested at all times and in all places.
B. I can understand that practically, and under the influence of personal
interest, the injurious effects of the erroneous action would tend to correct
an error. But if that of which you speak has so little influence, why does it
disturb you so much?
F. Because, when a man, instead of acting for himself, decides for others,
personal interest, that ever watchful and sensible sentinel, is no longer
present to cry out, "Stop! The responsibility is misplaced." It is
Peter who is deceived, and John suffers; the false system of the legislator
necessarily becomes the rule of action of whole populations. And observe the
difference. When you have money, and are very hungry, whatever your theory
about money may be, what do you do?
B. I go to a baker's and buy some bread.
F. You do not hesitate about using your money?
B. The only use of money is to buy what one wants.
F. And if the baker should happen to be thirsty, what does he do?
B. He goes to the wine merchant's, and buys wine with the money I have
given him.
F. What! Is he not afraid he shall ruin himself?
B. The real ruin would be to go without eating or drinking.
F. And everybody in the world, if he is free, acts in the same manner?
B. Without a doubt. Would you have them die of hunger for the sake of
saving up pennies?
F. So far from it, that I consider they act wisely, and I only wish that
the theory was nothing but the faithful image of this universal practice.
But, suppose now, that you were the legislator, the absolute king of a vast
empire, where there were no gold mines.
B. Sounds good to me.
F. Suppose, again, that you were perfectly convinced of this, — that
wealth consists solely and exclusively of money; to what conclusion would you
come?
B. I should conclude that there was no other means for me to enrich my
people, or for them to enrich themselves, but to draw away the money from
other nations.
F. That is to say, to impoverish them. The first conclusion, then, to which
you would arrive would be this — a nation can only gain when another
loses.
B. This axiom has the authority of Bacon and Montaigne.
F. It is not the less sorrowful for that, for it implies that progress is
impossible. Two nations, no more than two men, cannot prosper side by side.
B. It would seem that such is the result of this principle.
F. And as all men are ambitious to enrich themselves, it follows that all
are desirous, according to a law of Providence, of ruining their
fellow-creatures.
B. This is not Christianity, but it is political economy.
F. Such a doctrine is detestable. But, to continue, I have made you an
absolute king. You must not be satisfied with reasoning; you must act. There
is no limit to your power. How would you treat this doctrine — wealth
is money?
B. It would be my endeavor to increase, incessantly, among my people the
quantity of money.
F. But there are no mines in your kingdom. How would you set about it? What
would you do?
B. I should do nothing: I should merely forbid, on pain of death, that a
single dollar should leave the country.
F. And if your people should happen to be hungry as well as rich?
B. Never mind. In the system we are discussing, to allow them to export
dollars would be to allow them to impoverish themselves.
F. So that, by your own confession, you would force them to act upon a
principle equally opposite to that upon which you would yourself act under
similar circumstances. Why so?
B. Because only my own hunger touches me, and the hunger of a nation does
not touch legislators.
F. Well, I can tell you that your plan would fail, and that no
superintendence would be sufficiently vigilant, when the people were hungry,
to prevent the dollars from going out and the grain from coming in.
B. If so, this plan, whether erroneous or not, would effect
nothing; it would do neither good nor harm, and therefore requires no further
consideration.
F. You forget that you are a legislator. A legislator must not be disheartened
at trifles, when he is making experiments on others. The first measure not
having succeeded, you ought to take some other means of attaining your end.
B. What end?
F. You must have a bad memory. Why, that of increasing, in the midst of your
people, the quantity of money, which is presumed to be true wealth.
B. Ah! To be sure; I beg your pardon. But then you see, as they say of
music, a little is enough; and this may be said, I think, with still more
reason, of political economy. I must consider. But really I don't know how to
contrive —
F. Ponder it well. First, I would have you observe that your first plan
solved the problem only negatively. To prevent the dollars from going out of
the country is the way to prevent the wealth from diminishing, but it is not
the way to increase it.
B. Ah! Now I am beginning to see … the grain which is allowed to come
in … a bright idea strikes me … the contrivance is ingenious, the
means infallible; I am coming to it now.
F. Now, I, in turn, must ask you — to what?
B. Why, to a means of increasing the quantity of money.
F. How would you set about it, if you please?
B. Is it not evident that if the heap of money is to be constantly
increasing, the first condition is that none must be taken from it?
F. Certainly.
B. And the second, that additions must constantly be made to it?
F. To be sure.
B. Then the problem will be solved, either negatively or positively; if on
the one hand I prevent the foreigner from taking from it, and on the other I
oblige him to add to it.
F. Better and better.
B. And for this there must be two simple laws made, in which money will not
even be mentioned. By the one, my subjects will be forbidden to buy anything
abroad; and by the other, they will be required to sell a great deal.
F. A well-advised plan.
B. Is it new? I must take out a patent for the invention.
F. You need do no such thing; someone has beaten you to it. But you must
take care of one thing.
B. What is that?
F. I have made you an absolute king. I understand that you are going to
prevent your subjects from buying foreign productions. It will be enough if
you prevent them from entering the country. Thirty or forty thousand
custom-house officers will do the trick.
B. It would be rather expensive. But what does that signify? The money they
receive will not go out of the country.
F. True; and in this system it is the grand point. But to insure a sale
abroad, how would you proceed?
B. I should encourage it by bounties, obtained by means of some good taxes
laid upon my people.
F. In this case, the exporters, constrained by competition among
themselves, would lower their prices in proportion, and it would be like
making a present to the foreigner of the prizes or of the taxes.
B. Still, the money would not go out of the country.
F. Of course. That is understood. But if your system is beneficial, the
governments of other countries will adopt it. They will make similar plans to
yours; they will have their custom-house officers, and reject your products;
so that with them, as with you, the heap of money may not be diminished.
B. I shall have an army and force down their barriers.
F. They will have an army and force down yours.
B. I shall arm vessels, make conquests, acquire colonies, and create consumers
for my people, who will be obliged to eat our corn and drink our wine.
F. The other governments will do the same. They will dispute your
conquests, your colonies, and your consumers; then on all sides there will be
war, and all will be uproar.
B. I shall raise my taxes, and increase my custom-house officers, my army,
and my navy.
F. The others will do the same.
B. I shall redouble my exertions.
F. The others will redouble theirs. In the meantime, we have no proof that
you would succeed in selling to a great extent.
B. It is but too true. It would be well if the commercial efforts would
neutralize each other.
F. And the military efforts also. And, tell me, are not these custom-house
officers, soldiers, and vessels, these oppressive taxes, this perpetual
struggle toward an impossible result, this permanent state of open or secret
war with the whole world, are they not the logical and inevitable consequence
of the legislators having adopted an idea that you admit is acted upon by no
man who is his own master, that "wealth is money; and to increase the
amount of money is to increase wealth?"
B. I grant it. Either the axiom is true, and then the legislator ought to
act as I have described, although universal war should be the consequence; or
it is false; and in this case men, in destroying each other, only ruin
themselves.
F. And, remember, that before you became a king, this same axiom had led
you by a logical process to the following maxims — That which one
gains, another loses. The profit of one is the loss of the other —
which maxims imply an intractable antagonism amongst all men.
B. It is only too certain. Whether I am a philosopher or a legislator,
whether I reason or act upon the principle that money is wealth, I always
arrive at one conclusion, or one result: universal war. It is well that you
pointed out the consequences before beginning a discussion upon it;
otherwise, I should never have had the courage to follow you to the end of
your economical dissertation, for, to tell you the truth, it is not much to
my taste.
F. What do you mean? I was just thinking of it when you heard me grumbling
against money! I was lamenting that my countrymen have not the fortitude to
study what it is so important that they should know.
B. And yet the consequences are frightful.
F. The consequences! As yet I have only mentioned one. I might have told
you of others still more fatal.
B. You make my hair stand on end! What other evils can have been caused to
mankind by this confusion between money and wealth?
F. It would take me a long time to enumerate them. This doctrine is one of
a very numerous family. The eldest, whose acquaintance we have just made, is
called the prohibitive system; the next, the colonial system; the third,
hatred of capital; the last and worst, paper money.
B. What! Does paper money proceed from the same error?
F. Yes, directly. When legislators, after having ruined men by war and
taxes, persevere in their idea, they say to themselves, "If the people
suffer, it is because there is not money enough. We must make some." And
as it is not easy to multiply the precious metals, especially when the
pretended resources of prohibition have been exhausted, they add, "We
will make fictitious money, nothing is more easy, and then every citizen will
have his pocketbook full of it, and they will all be rich."
B. In fact, this proceeding is more expeditious than the other, and then it
does not lead to foreign war.
F. No, but it leads to domestic disaster.
B. You are a grumbler. Make haste and dive to the bottom of the question. I
am quite impatient, for the first time, to know if money (or its sign) is
wealth.
F. You will grant that men do not satisfy any of their wants immediately
with coined dollars, or dollar bills. If they are hungry, they want bread; if
naked, clothing; if they are ill, they must have remedies; if they are cold,
they want shelter and fuel; if they would learn, they must have books; if
they would travel, they must have conveyances — and so on. The riches
of a country consist in the abundance and proper distribution of all these
things. Hence you may perceive and rejoice at the falseness of this gloomy
maxim of Bacon's, "What one people gains, another necessarily
loses" — a maxim expressed in a still more discouraging manner by
Montaigne, in these words: "The profit of one is the loss of
another." When Shem, Ham, and Japhet divided
amongst themselves the vast solitudes of this earth, they surely might each
of them build, drain, sow, reap, and obtain improved lodging, food and
clothing, and better education, perfect and enrich themselves — in
short, increase their enjoyments, without causing a necessary diminution in
the corresponding enjoyments of their brothers. It is the same with two
nations.
B. There is no doubt that two nations, the same as two men, unconnected
with each other, may, by working more, and working better, prosper at the
same time, without injuring each other. It is not this that is denied by the
axioms of Montaigne and Bacon. They only mean to say, that in the
transactions that take place between two nations or two men, if one gains,
the other must lose. And this is self-evident, as exchange adds nothing by
itself to the mass of those useful things of which you were speaking; for if,
after the exchange, one of the parties is found to have gained something, the
other will, of course, be found to have lost something.
F. You have formed a very incomplete, nay, a false idea of exchange. If
Shem is located upon a plain that is fertile in corn, Japhet
upon a slope adapted for growing the vine, Ham upon a rich pasturage —
the distinction of their occupations, far from hurting any of them, might
cause all three to prosper more. It must be so, in fact, for the distribution
of labor, introduced by exchange, will have the effect of increasing the mass
of corn, wine, and meat that is produced, and that is to be shared. How can
it be otherwise, if you allow liberty in these transactions? From the moment
that any one of the brothers should perceive that labor in company, as it
were, was a permanent loss, compared to solitary labor, he would cease to
exchange. Exchange brings with it its claim to our gratitude. The fact of its
being accomplished proves that it is a good thing.
B. But Bacon's axiom is true in the case of gold and silver. If we admit
that at a certain moment there exists in the world a given quantity, it is
perfectly clear that one purse cannot be filled without another being
emptied.
F. And if gold is considered to be riches, the natural conclusion is that
displacements of fortune take place among men, but no general progress. It is
just what I said when I began. If, on the contrary, you look upon an
abundance of useful things, fit for satisfying our wants and our tastes, as
true riches, you will see that simultaneous prosperity is possible. Money
serves only to facilitate the transmission of these useful things from one to
another, which may be done equally well with an ounce of rare metal like
gold, with a pound of more abundant material as silver, or with a
hundredweight of still more abundant metal, as copper. According to that, if
a country like the United States had at its disposal as much again of all
these useful things, its people would be twice as rich, although the quantity
of money remained the same; but it would not be the same if there were double
the money, for in that case the amount of useful things would not increase.
B. The question to be decided is whether the presence of a greater number
of dollars has not the effect, precisely, of augmenting the sum of useful
things?
F. What connection can there be between these two terms? Food, clothing,
houses, fuel, all come from nature and from labor, from more or less skillful
labor exerted upon a more or less liberal nature.
B. You are forgetting one great force, which is exchange. If you
acknowledge that this is a force, as you have admitted that dollars
facilitate it, you must also allow that they have an indirect power of
production.
F. But I have added that a small quantity of rare metal facilitates
transactions as much as a large quantity of abundant metal; from which it
follows that a people is not enriched by being forced to give up useful
things for the sake of having more money.
B. Thus, it is your opinion that the treasures discovered in California
will not increase the wealth of the world?
F. I do not believe that, on the whole, they will add much to the
enjoyments, to the real satisfactions of mankind. If the Californian gold
merely replaces in the world that which has been lost and destroyed, it may
have its use. If it increases the amount of money, it will depreciate it. The
gold diggers will be richer than they would have been without it. But those
who possess the gold at the moment of its depreciation, will obtain a smaller
gratification for the same amount. I cannot look upon this as an increase,
but as a reallocation of true riches, as I have defined them.
B. All that is very plausible. But you will not easily convince me that I
am not richer (all other things being equal) if I have two dollars, than if I
had only one.
F. I do not deny it.
B. And what is true of me is true of my neighbor, and of the neighbor of my
neighbor, and so on, from one to another, all over the country. Therefore, if
every citizen of the United States has more dollars, the United States must
be more rich.
F. And here you fall into the common mistake of concluding that what
affects one affects all, and thus confusing the individual with the general
interest.
B. Why, what can be more conclusive? What is true of one, must be so of
all. What are all, but a collection of individuals? You might as well tell me
that every American could suddenly grow an inch taller without the average
height of all the Americans being increased.
F. Your reasoning is apparently sound, I grant you, and that is why the
illusion it conceals is so common. However, let us examine it a little. Ten
persons were gambling. For greater ease, they had adopted the plan of each
taking ten chips, and against these they each placed a 100 dollars under a
candlestick, so that each chip corresponded to ten dollars. After the game
the winnings were adjusted, and the players drew from under the candlestick
as many dollars as would represent the number of chips. Seeing this, one of
them, a great arithmetician perhaps, but an indifferent reasoner,
said: "Gentlemen, experience invariably teaches me that, at the end of
the game, I find myself a gainer in proportion to the number of my chips.
Have you not observed the same with regard to yourselves? Thus, what is true
of me must be true of each of you, and what is true of each must be true of
all. We should, therefore, all of us gain more, at the end of the game, if we
all had more chips. Now, nothing can be easier; we have only to distribute
twice the number of chips." This was done; but when the game was
finished, and they came to adjust the winnings, it was found that the money
under the candlestick had not been miraculously multiplied, according to the
general expectation. They had to be divided accordingly, and the only result
obtained (chimerical enough) was this: every one
had, it is true, his double number of chips, but every chip, instead of
corresponding to ten dollars, only represented five. Thus it was clearly
shown that what is true of each is not always true of all.
B. I see; you are supposing a general increase of chips, without a
corresponding increase of the sum placed under the candlestick.
F. And you are supposing a general increase of dollars, without a
corresponding increase of things, the exchange of which is facilitated by
these dollars.
B. Do you compare the dollars to chips?
F. In any other point of view, certainly not; but in the case you place
before me, and which I have to argue against, I do. Consider one thing. In
order that there be a general increase of dollars in a country, this country
must have mines, or its commerce must be such as to give useful things in
exchange for money. Apart from these two circumstances, a universal increase
is impossible, the dollars only changing hands; and in this case, although it
may be very true that each one, taken individually, is richer in proportion
to the number of dollars that he has, we cannot draw the inference that you
drew just now, because a dollar more in one purse implies necessarily a
dollar less in some other. It is the same as with your comparison of the
average height. If each of us grew only at the expense of others, it would be
very true of each, taken individually, that he would be a taller man if he
had the chance, but this would never be true of the whole taken collectively.
B. Be it so: but, in the two suppositions that you have made, the increase
is real, and you must allow that I am right.
F. To a certain point, gold and silver have a value. To obtain this value,
men consent to give other useful things that have a value also. When,
therefore, there are mines in a country, if that country obtains from them
sufficient gold to purchase a useful thing from abroad — a locomotive,
for instance — it enriches itself with all the enjoyments that a
locomotive can procure, exactly as if the machine had been made at home. The
question is whether it spends more efforts in the former proceeding than in
the latter? For if it did not export this gold, it would depreciate, and
something worse would happen than what did sometimes happen in California and
in Australia, for there, at least, the precious metals are used to buy useful
things made elsewhere. Nevertheless, there is still a danger that they may
starve on heaps of gold; as it would be if the law prohibited the exportation
of gold. As to the second supposition — that of the gold that we obtain
by trade — it is an advantage, or the reverse, according as the country
stands more or less in need of it, compared to its wants of the useful things
that must be given up in order to obtain it. It is not for the law to judge
of this, but for those who are concerned in it; for if the law should start
upon this principle, that gold is preferable to useful things, whatever may
be their value, and if it should act effectually in this sense, it would tend
to put every country adopting the law in the curious position of having a
great deal of cash to spend, and nothing to buy. It is the very same system
that is represented by Midas, who turned everything he touched into gold, and
was in consequence in danger of dying of starvation.
B. The gold that is imported implies that a useful thing is exported, and
in this respect there is a satisfaction withdrawn from the country. But is
there not a corresponding benefit? And will not this gold be the source of a
number of new satisfactions, by circulating from hand to hand, and
stimulating labor and industry, until at length it leaves the country in its
turn, and causes the importation of some useful thing?
F. Now you have come to the heart of the question. Is it true that a dollar
is the principal that causes the production of all the objects whose exchange
it facilitates? It is very clear that a piece of coined gold or silver
stamped as a dollar is only worth a dollar; but we are led to believe that
this value has a particular character: that it is not consumed like other
things, or that it is exhausted very gradually; that it renews itself, as it
were, in each transaction; and that, finally this particular dollar has been
worth a dollar as many times as it has accomplished transactions — that
it is of itself worth all the things for which it has been successively
exchanged; and this is believed because it is supposed that without this
dollar these things would never have been produced. It is said the shoemaker
would have sold fewer shoes, and consequently he would have bought less of
the butcher; the butcher would not have gone so often to the grocer, the
grocer to the doctor, the doctor to the lawyer, and so on.
B. No one can dispute that.
F. This is the time, then, to analyze the true function of money,
independently of mines and importations. You have a dollar. What does it
imply in your hands? It is, as it were, the witness and proof that you have,
at some time or other, performed some labor, which, instead of turning to
your advantage, you have bestowed upon society as represented by your client
(employer or debtor). This coin testifies that you have performed a service
for society, and moreover it shows the value of it. It bears witness,
besides, that you have not yet obtained from society a real equivalent
service, to which you have a right. To place you in a condition to exercise
this right, at the time and in the manner you please, society, as represented
by your client, has given you an acknowledgment, a title, a privilege from
the republic, a token, a title to a dollar's worth of property in fact, which
only differs from executive titles by bearing its value in itself; and if you
are able to read with your mind's eye the inscriptions stamped upon it you
will distinctly decipher these words: "Pay the bearer a service
equivalent to what he has rendered to society, the value received being
shown, proved, and measured by that which is represented by me." Now,
you give up your dollar to me. Either my title to it is gratuitous, or it is
a claim. If you give it to me as payment for a service, the following is the
result: your account with society for real satisfactions is enumerated,
balanced, and closed. You had rendered it a service for a dollar, you now
restore the dollar for a service; as far as you are concerned you are clear.
As for me, I am now in the position in which you were previously. It is I who
am now in advance to society for the service which I have just rendered it in
your person. I have become its creditor for the value of the labor that I
have performed for you, and that I might have devoted to myself. It is into
my hands then, that the title of this credit — the proof of this social
debt — ought to pass. You cannot say that I am any richer; if I am
entitled to receive, it is because I have given. Still less can you say that
society is a dollar richer because one of its members has a dollar more and
another has one less. For if you let me have this dollar gratis, it is
certain that I shall be so much the richer, but you will be so much the
poorer for it; and the social fortune, taken in a mass, will have undergone
no change, because as I have already said, this fortune consists in real
services, in effective satisfactions, in useful things. You were a creditor
to society; you made me a substitute to your rights, and it signifies little
to society, which owes a service, whether it pays the debt to you or to me.
This is discharged as soon as the bearer of the claim is paid.
B. But if we all had a great number of dollars we should obtain from
society many services. Would not that be very desirable?
F. You forget that in the process that I have described, and that is a
picture of the reality, we only obtain services from society because we have
bestowed some upon it. Whoever speaks of a service speaks at the same time of
a service received and returned, for these two terms imply each other, so
that the one must always be balanced by the other. It is impossible for
society to render more services than it receives, and yet a belief to the
contrary is the chimera which is being pursued by means of the multiplication
of coins, of paper money, etc.
B. All that appears very reasonable in theory, but in practice I cannot
help thinking, when I see how things go, that if by some fortunate
circumstance the number of dollars could be multiplied in such a way that
each of us could see his little property doubled, we should all be more at
our ease; we should all make more purchases, and trade would receive a
powerful stimulus.
F. More purchases! And what should we buy? Doubtless, useful articles
— things likely to procure for us substantial gratification —
such as food, clothing, houses, books, pictures. You should begin, then, by
proving that all these things create themselves; you must suppose the Mint
melting ingots of gold that have fallen from the moon; or that the printing
presses be put in action at the Treasury Department; for you cannot
reasonably think that if the quantity of corn, cloth, ships, hats, and shoes
remains the same, the share of each of us can be greater because we each go
to market with a greater amount of real or fictitious money. Remember the
players. In the social order the useful things are what the players place
under the candlestick, and the dollars that circulate from hand to hand are
the chips. If you multiply the dollars without multiplying the useful things,
the only result will be that more dollars will be required for each exchange,
just as the players required more chips for each deposit. You have the proof
of this in what passes for gold, silver, and copper. Why does the same
exchange require more copper than silver, more silver than gold? Is it not
because these metals are distributed in the world in different proportions?
What reason have you to suppose that if gold were suddenly to become as
abundant as silver, it would not require as much of one as of the other to
buy a house?
B. You may be right, but I should prefer your being wrong. In the midst of
the sufferings that surround us, so distressing in themselves, and so
dangerous in their consequences, I have found some consolation in thinking
that there was an easy method of making all the members of the community
happy.
F. Even if gold and silver were true riches, it would be no easy matter to
increase the amount of them in a country where there are no mines.
B. No, but it is easy to substitute something else. I agree with you that
gold and silver can do but little service, except as a mere means of
exchange. It is the same with paper money, bank notes, etc. Then, if we had
all of us plenty of the latter, which it is so easy to create, we might all
buy a great deal, and should lack nothing. Your cruel theory dissipates
hopes, illusions, if you will, whose principle is assuredly very
philanthropic.
F. Yes, like all other barren dreams formed to promote universal felicity.
The extreme facility of the means that you recommend is quite sufficient to expose
its hollowness. Do you believe that if it were merely needful to print bank
notes in order to satisfy all our wants, our tastes, and desires, that
mankind would have been contented to go on till now without having recourse
to this plan? I agree with you that the discovery is tempting. It would
immediately banish from the world not only plunder, in its diverse and
deplorable forms, but even labor itself, except in the National Printing
Bureau. But we have yet to learn how greenbacks are to purchase houses, that
no one would have built; corn, that no one would have raised; textiles that
no one would have taken the trouble to weave.
B. One thing strikes me in your argument. You say yourself that if there is
no gain, at any rate there is no loss in multiplying the instrument of
exchange, as is seen by the instance of the players, who were entirely
unaffected by a very mild deception. Why, then, refuse the philosopher's
stone, which would teach us the secret of changing base material into gold,
or what is the same thing, converting paper into money? Are you so blindly
wedded to logic that you would refuse to try an experiment where there can be
no risk? If you are mistaken, you are depriving the nation, as your numerous
adversaries believe, of an immense advantage. If the error is on their side,
no harm can result, as you yourself say, beyond the failure of a hope. The
measure, excellent in their opinion, in yours is merely negative. Let it be
tried, then, since the worst that can happen is not the realization of an
evil, but the nonrealization of a benefit.
F. In the first place, the failure of a hope is a very great misfortune to
any people. It is also very undesirable that the government should announce
the abolition of several taxes on the faith of a resource that must
infallibly fail. Nevertheless, your remark would deserve some consideration,
if after the issue of paper money and its depreciation, the equilibrium of
values should instantly and simultaneously take place in all things and in
every part of the country. The measure would tend, as in my example of the
players, to a universal mystification, in respect to which the best thing we
could do would be to look at one another and laugh. But this is not in the
course of events. The experiment has been made, and every time a government
— be it king or congress — has altered the money —
B. Who says anything about altering the money?
F. Why, to force people to take in payment scraps of paper that have been
officially baptized dollars, or to force them to receive, as weighing an
ounce, a piece of silver that weighs only half an ounce but that has been
officially named a dollar, is the same thing, if not worse; and all the
reasoning that can be made in favor of paper money has been made in favor of
legal false-coined money. Certainly, looking at it as you did just now, and
as you appear to be doing still, if it is believed that to multiply the
instruments of exchange is to multiply the exchanges themselves as well as
the things exchanged, it might very reasonably be thought that the most
simple means was to mechanically divide the coined dollar, and to cause the
law to give to the half the name and value of the whole. Well, in both cases,
depreciation is inevitable. I think I have told you the cause. I must also
inform you that this depreciation which, with paper might go on till it came
to nothing, is effected by continually making dupes; and of these, poor
people, simple persons, workmen and farmers are the chief.
B. I see; but stop a little. This dose of political economy is rather too
strong for once.
F. Be it so. We are agreed, then, upon this point — that wealth is
the mass of useful things we produce by labor; or, still better, the result
of all the efforts we make for the satisfaction of our wants and tastes.
These useful things are exchanged for each other according to the convenience
of those to whom they belong. There are two forms in these transactions; one
is called barter: in this case a service is rendered for the sake of
receiving an equivalent service immediately. In this form transactions would
be exceedingly limited. In order that they may be multiplied, and
accomplished independently of time and space amongst persons unknown to each
other, and by infinite fractions, an intermediate agent has been necessary
— this is money. It gives occasion for exchange, which is nothing else
but a complicated bargain. This is what has to be noted and understood.
Exchange decomposes itself into two bargains, into two departments, sale and
purchase — the reunion of which is needed to complete it. You sell a
service, and receive a dollar — then, with this dollar you buy a
service. Then only is the bargain complete; it is not till then that your
effort has been followed by a real satisfaction. Evidently you only work to
satisfy the wants of others, that others may work to satisfy yours. So long
as you have only the dollar that has been given you for your work, you are
only entitled to claim the work of another person. When you have done so, the
economical evolution will be accomplished as far as you are concerned, since
you will only then have obtained, by a real satisfaction, the true reward for
your trouble. The idea of a bargain implies a service rendered, and a service
received. Why should it not be the same with exchange, which is merely a
bargain in two parts? And here there are two observations to be made. First:
It is a very unimportant circumstance whether there be much or little money
in the world. If there is much, much is required; if there is little, little
is wanted, for each transaction: that is all. The second observation is this:
because it is seen that money always reappears in every exchange, it has come
to be regarded as the sign and the measure of the things exchanged.
B. Will you still deny that money is the sign of the useful things of which
you speak?
F. A gold eagle is no more the sign of a barrel of flour, than a barrel of
flour is the sign of a gold eagle.
B. What harm is there in looking at money as the sign of wealth?
F. The inconvenience is this: it leads to the idea that we have only to
increase the sign, in order to increase the things signified; and we are in
danger of adopting all the false measures that you took when I made you an
absolute king. We should go still further. Just as in money we see the sign
of wealth, we see also in paper money the sign of money; and thence conclude
that there is a very easy and simple method of procuring for everybody the
pleasures of fortune.
B. But you will not go so far as to dispute that money is the measure of
values?
F. Yes, certainly, I do go as far as that, for that is precisely where the
illusion lies. It has become customary to refer the value of everything to
that of money. It is said, this is worth 5, 10, or 20 dollars, as we say this
weighs 5, 10, or 20 grains; this measures 5, 10, or 20 yards; this ground
contains 5, 10, or 20 acres; and hence it has been concluded that money is
the measure of values.
B. Well, it appears as if it was so.
F. Yes, it appears so, and it is this appearance I complain of, and not of
the reality. A measure of length, size, surface, is a quantity agreed upon,
and unchangeable. It is not so with the value of gold and silver. This varies
as much as that of corn, wine, cloth, or labor, and from the same causes, for
it has the same source and obeys the same laws. Gold is brought within our
reach, just like iron, by the labor of miners, the investments of
capitalists, and the combination of merchants and seamen. It costs more or less,
according to the expense of its production, according to whether there is
much or little in the market, and whether it is much or little in request; in
a word, it undergoes the fluctuations of all other human productions. But one
circumstance is singular, and gives rise to many mistakes. When the value of
money varies, the variation is attributed by language to the other products
for which it is exchanged. Thus, let us suppose that all the circumstances
relative to gold remain the same, and that the wheat harvest has failed. The
price of wheat will rise. It will be said, "The barrel of flour that was
worth five dollars is now worth eight;" and this will be correct, for it
is the value of the flour that has varied, and language agrees with the fact.
But let us reverse the supposition: let us suppose that all the circumstances
relative to flour remain the same, and that half of all the gold in existence
is swallowed up; this time it is the price of gold that will rise. It would
seem that we ought to say, "This gold eagle that was worth 10 dollars is
now worth 20." Now, do you know how this is expressed? Just as if it was
the other objects of comparison which had fallen in price, it is said:
"Flour that was worth ten dollars is now only worth five."
B. It all comes to the same thing in the end.
F. No doubt; but only think what disturbances, what cheatings are produced
in exchanges when the value of the medium varies without our becoming aware
of it by a change in the name. Coins or notes are issued bearing the name of
five dollars, and which will bear that name through every subsequent
depreciation. The value will be reduced a quarter, a half, but they will
still be called coins or notes of five dollars. Clever persons will take care
not to part with their goods unless for a larger number of notes — in
other words, they will ask ten dollars for what they would formerly have sold
for five; but simple persons will be taken in. Many years must pass before
all the values will find their proper level. Under the influence of ignorance
and custom, the day's pay of a country laborer will remain for a long time at
a dollar while the salable price of all the articles of consumption around
him will be rising. He will sink into destitution without being able to
discover the cause. In short, since you wish me to finish, I must beg you,
before we separate, to fix your whole attention upon this essential point:
Once false money (under whatever form it may take) is put into circulation,
depreciation will ensue, and manifest itself by the universal rise of
everything that is capable of being sold. But this rise in prices is not
instantaneous and equal for all things. Sharp men, brokers, and men of
business, will not suffer by it; for it is their trade to watch the
fluctuations of prices, to observe the cause, and even to speculate upon it.
But little tradesmen, farm workers, and workmen will bear the whole weight of
it. The rich man is not any the richer for it, but the poor man becomes
poorer by it. Therefore, expedients of this kind have the effect of
increasing the distance that separates wealth from poverty, of paralyzing the
social tendencies that are incessantly bringing men to the same level, and it
will require centuries for the suffering classes to regain the ground they have
lost in their advance toward equality of condition.
B. Well, I've got to go. I will meditate on the lecture you have been
giving me.
F. Have you finished your own dissertation? As for me, I have scarcely begun
mine. I have not yet spoken of the popular hatred of capital, of gratuitous
credit (loans without interest) — a most unfortunate notion, a
deplorable mistake, which takes its rise from the same source.
B. What! Does this frightful commotion of the populace against capitalists
arise from money being confounded with wealth?
F. It is the result of different causes. Unfortunately, certain capitalists
have arrogated to themselves monopolies and privileges that are quite
sufficient to account for this feeling. But when the theorists of democracy
have wished to justify it, to systematize it, to give it the appearance of a
reasonable opinion, and to turn it against the very nature of capital, they
have had recourse to that false political economy at whose root the same
confusion is always to be found. They have said to the people: "Take a
dollar; put it under a glass; forget it for a year; then go and look at it,
and you will be convinced that it has not produced ten cents, nor five cents,
nor any fraction of a cent. Therefore, money produces no interest."
Then, substituting for the word money, its pretended sign, capital, they have
made it by their logic undergo this modification: "Then capital produces
no interest." Then follows this series of consequences: "Therefore
he who lends capital ought to obtain nothing from it; therefore he who lends
you capital, if he gains something by it, is robbing you; therefore all
capitalists are robbers; therefore wealth, which ought to serve gratuitously
those who borrow it, belongs in reality to those to whom it does not belong;
therefore there is no such thing as property, therefore everything belongs to
everybody; therefore … "
B. This is very serious; the more so from the syllogism being so admirably
formed. I should very much like to be enlightened on the subject. But, alas!
I can no longer command my attention. There is such a confusion in my head of
the words coin, money, services, capital, interest, that really I hardly know
where I am. We will, if you please, resume the conversation another day.
F. In the meantime here is a little work entitled Capital and Rent.
It may perhaps remove some of your doubts. Just look at it when you are in
want of a little amusement.
B. To amuse me?
F. Who knows? One nail drives in another; one wearisome thing drives away
another.
B. I have not yet made up my mind that your views on money and political
economy in general are correct. But, from your conversation, this is what I
have gathered: That these questions are of the highest importance; for peace
or war, order or anarchy, the union or the antagonism of citizens, are at the
root of the answer to them. How is it that in France and most other countries
that regard themselves as highly civilized, a science that concerns us all so
nearly, and the diffusion of which would have so decisive an influence upon
the fate of mankind, is so little known? Is it that the state does not teach
it sufficiently?
F. Not exactly. For, without knowing it, the state applies itself to
loading everybody's brain with prejudices, and everybody's heart with
sentiments favorable to the spirit of disorder, war, and hatred; so that,
when a doctrine of order, peace, and comity presents itself, it is in vain
that it has clearness and truth on its side; it cannot gain admittance.
B. Decidedly you are a frightful grumbler. What interest can the state have
in mystifying people's intellects in favor of revolutions, and civil and
foreign wars? There must certainly be a great deal of exaggeration in what
you say.
F. Consider. At the period when our intellectual faculties begin to develop
themselves, at the age when impressions are liveliest, when habits of mind
are formed with the greatest ease — when we might look at society and
understand it — in a word, as soon as we are seven or eight years old,
what does the state do? It puts a blindfold over our eyes, takes us gently
from the midst of the social circle that surrounds us, to plunge us, with our
susceptible faculties, our impressible hearts, into the midst of Roman
society. It keeps us there for ten years at least, long enough to make an
indelible impression on the brain. Now observe, that Roman society is
directly opposed to what our society ought to be. There they lived upon war;
here we ought to hate war; there they hated labor; here we ought to live upon
labor. There the means of subsistence were founded upon slavery and plunder;
here they should be drawn from free industry. Roman society was organized in
consequence of its principle. It necessarily admired what made it prosper.
There they considered as virtue what we look upon as vice. Its poets and
historians had to exalt what we ought to despise. The very words liberty,
order, justice, people, honor, influence, etc., could not have the same
signification at Rome as they have, or ought to have, at Paris. How can you
expect that all these youths who have been at university or conventual schools with Livy and Quintus Curtius for their catechism, will not understand liberty
like the Gracchi, virtue like Cato, patriotism like Caesar? How can you
expect them not to be factious and warlike? How can you expect them to take
the slightest interest in the mechanism of our social order? Do you think
that their minds have been prepared to understand it? Do you not see that in
order to do so they must get rid of their present impressions, and receive
others entirely opposed to them?
B. What do you conclude from that?
F. I will tell you. The most urgent necessity is not that the state should teach,
but that it should allow education. All monopolies are detestable, but the
worst of all is the monopoly of education.
Frédéric Bastiat
Essay published in 1849
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