登陆注册
26241600000002

第2章 LETTER THE FIRST(1)

Sir,All those who cultivate the new and beautiful science of Political Economy desire to read the work with which you have just enriched that subject.

You are not one of those authors who address the public without having something to inform them;and when to the celebrity of the writer is joined the importance of the subject,when the subject is of no less importance to society,than to inform them what are their means of existence and enjoyment,it is to be supposed that the reader's curiosity must be doubly excited.

I shall not undertake,Sir,to join my suffrage to that of the public,by pointing out every thing that is ingenious,and at the same time just,in your work;this would be too great a task.Nor shall I undertake to enter into a discussion with you,upon some points to which you seem to me to attach an importance that they scarcely appear to merit.I shall not here tire either the public or you by dull controversies.But,I say it with sorrow,that there are some fundamental principles discoverable in your doctrine,which,were they to be admitted on so powerful an authority as yours,might cause to retrograde a science,the progress of which you are so good as to assist by your extensive knowledge and talent.

And,in the first place,what fixes my attention,because all the interest of the moment is attached to it,is,from whence comes that general overstock of all the markets of the universe,to which goods are incessantly carried which sell at a loss?--Whence comes it that in the interior of each state,with a want of action in unison with all the developments of industry,whence comes,I say,that universal difficulty that .is experienced in obtaining lucrative employ?And when the cause of this chronic malady is discovered,what are the means of cure?These are questions upon which the happiness and tranquillity of nations depend.Wherefore I cannot think a discussion tending to elucidate them will be unworthy your attention,and that of an enlightened public.

All those who,since Adam Smith,have turned their attention to Political Economy,agree that in reality we do not buy articles of consumption with money,the circulating medium with which we pay for them.We must in the first instance have bought this money itself by the sale of our produce.

To a proprietor of a mine,the silver money is a produce with which he buys what he has occasion for.To all those through whose hands this silver afterwards passes,it is only the price of the produce which they themselves have raised by means of their property in land,their capitals,or their industry.In selling them they in the first place exchange them for money,and afterwards they exchange the money for articles of consumption.

It is therefore really and absolutely with their produce that they make their purchases:therefore it is impossible for them to purchase any articles whatever,to a greater amount than those they have produced,either by themselves or through the means of their capital or their land.

From these premises I have drawn a conclusion which appears to me evident,l but the consequences of which appear to have alarmed you.I had said --As no one can purchase the produce of another except with his own produce,as the amount for which we can buy is equal to that which we can produce,the.more we can produce the more we can purchase.From whence proceeds this other conclusion,which you refuse to admit --That if certain commodities do not sell,it is because others are not produced,and that it is the raising produce alone which opens a market for the sale of produce.

I know that this proposition has a paradoxical complexion,which creates a prejudice against it.I know that one has much greater reason to expect to be supported by vulgar prejudices,when one asserts that the cause of too much produce is because all the world is employed in raising it.--That instead of continually producing,one ought to mutiply barren consumptions,and expend the old capital instead of accumulating new.This doctrine has,indeed,probability on its side;it can be supported by arguments,facts may be interpreted in its favor.But,Sir,when Copernieus and Galileo taught,for the first time,that the sun,although we see it rise every morning in the east,magnificently pass over our heads at noon,and precipitate itself towards the west in the evening,still does not move from its place,they had also universal prejudice against them,the opinions of the Ancients,and the evidence of the senses.Ought they on that account to relinquish those demonstrations which were produced by a sound judgment?I should do you an injustice to doubt your answer.

Besides,when I assert that produce opens a vent for produce;that the means of industry,whatever they may be,left to themselves,always incline themselves to those articles which are the most necessary to nations,and that these necessary articles create at the same time fresh populations,and fresh enjoyments for those populations,all probability is not against me.

Let us go back only two hundred years,and suppose that a merchant had taken a rich cargo to the sites on which the present cities of New York and Philadelphia stand --Would he have sold it?Suppose that,without failing a victim to the natives,he had succeeded in laying the foundation of an agricultural or a manufactural establishment:Would he have sold there any one of his articles?Most certainly not.He would have been obliged to consume them all himself.Why do we see it so different in our days?

Why,as soon as goods arrive,or are manufactured at Philadelphia or New York,are we sure to sell them at the course of exchange?It appears evident to me that it is because the farmers,the merchants,and at present the manufacturers,even of New York and Philadelphia,and of the surrounding provinces,produce,and import produce,by the means of which they acquire that which is offered to them by others.

同类推荐
  • 诸上善人咏

    诸上善人咏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Gypsy Dictionary

    Gypsy Dictionary

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 大乘百法明门论

    大乘百法明门论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 世无匹

    世无匹

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 古文约选序例

    古文约选序例

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 紫燕公主

    紫燕公主

    即将成为舞蹈演员的女大学生李雪燕,意外来到唐朝,成为和亲的紫燕公主。茫茫大草原,独特的大舞台,留下她的倩影。冷然俯视,王侯枭雄;淡然面对,荣华富贵;风雨沧桑,我心依旧。割不断的,是缕缕情丝;抛不开的,是似水柔情。*********************************************************************感谢墨者平台免费封面支持
  • 训野记

    训野记

    酸腐秀才高老抠家唯一能干重活的娘子过世了。小家碧玉高曼青不得不挑起了粪桶,一边浇菜地,一边泼向那些想占便宜的泼皮无赖们。咦,这个“野”男人也想参一脚?高家姑娘冷哼一声:放脚过来吧!
  • 异界之迷失大陆

    异界之迷失大陆

    主角陈栋因一次意外穿越到了一个陌生的世界,从此开始了叱咤风云的异界征途……那啥,等下,你说什么?这片大陆是被封印在空间裂缝中的,说不定哪天就被黑洞吞了!
  • 冷帝的换脸新娘

    冷帝的换脸新娘

    结婚前夜,他夺走了她的初夜,一场婚礼却变成了她的葬礼,六年后,她以一个崭新的容貌,练就一身的功夫,以东南亚最大财团大姐大的身份出现在她们的面前,她们欠她的,她会一一的要回来;他们给她的,她也会一一的还回去……
  • 经典阅读与语文教学:钱理群作品系列

    经典阅读与语文教学:钱理群作品系列

    钱理群先生是著名学者,亦是语文教育改革的积极参与者,身兼思想者与实践者双重身份。本书即是钱先生作为“教育的实践者”所作的具体教学试验的总结,全书由“最为用心,投入、花费精力最多”的一篇篇教学文本解读组成,是作者身体力行为语文教育改革所做的重要实事,充满了深刻的锐见与平易的交流,既为一线老师提供了具有可操作性的实际帮助,也能找到改变当下语文教育困境的突破口。作者自认为这是构成其生命轨迹的重要组成部分。
  • 凤凰重生:孽障,看我收了你

    凤凰重生:孽障,看我收了你

    只是想在现代好好的生活,却莫名其妙的穿越时空,嫡女?很好,沦落成被人人打的过街老鼠,老娘就不信这个邪。妹妹,二娘,各种千金大小姐个个要老娘死,老娘偏偏不如愿,欺负老娘定让你们10倍奉还……
  • 时空医学调查局

    时空医学调查局

    平行宇宙的时空冒险,才刚刚开始。无论是谁在安排着宇宙的一切,我们所应该做的就是了解并保持平衡。SMI(SPECEMEDICINEINVESTIGATION)时空医学调查局是虚构的,但它有存在的必要。
  • 世界上最伟大的教育课

    世界上最伟大的教育课

    本书讲述了老卡尔·威特如何将出生本是弱智的儿子教育成为天才的故事。
  • 梦中新娘

    梦中新娘

    订婚在即,背叛来袭,丢了一个未婚夫,却给自己撞了一个现成的新郎。苏墨的婚礼,他的新娘跑路了,我被他的朋友拉去替他解围,却不想被他羞辱。我准备放下一切,不计前嫌的与他好好相处,一个身怀有孕的女人打破了一切,身为正妻的我沦落小三。我只是不小心轻轻碰了她的手臂,她却险些摔倒,头晕就算了居然还叫肚子疼!面对他迫人威压的视线,我问:“如果我说我什么都没做你信吗。”他不信任我就算了,还凌厉的警告我:“叶楚楚,以后离她远一点!”一场意外,他抱起捂着肚子叫疼的她奔向医院,她的孩子保住了,我的孩子却没有了……
  • 杠上妖孽娘子,誓要掰直

    杠上妖孽娘子,誓要掰直

    当两大妖孽相互碰撞时,会发出怎样的火花?她,六岁时,父亲车祸而亡。而她用她那双稚嫩的肩膀打造了一个商业帝国,却惨遭挚爱背叛。最终落得一个戳目剖心,抛尸荒野的下场。重活一世当复仇女王归来时,又是怎样的风华绝代?乱了谁的心,迷了谁的眼?某男看着某女身后的那一群人,大手一挥,把某女挡在身后说:“娘子,这桃花太多,为夫为你挡挡!”