An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations - Adam Smith (ebooks children's books free .TXT) 📗
- Author: Adam Smith
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artfully three hundred and fifteen thousand pounds into the stock
of the new. By a negligence in the expression of the act of
parliament, which vested the East India trade in the subscribers
to this loan of two millions, it did not appear evident that they
were all obliged to unite into a joint stock. A few private
traders, whose subscriptions amounted only to seven thousand two
hundred pounds, insisted upon the privilege of trading separately
upon their own stocks, and at their own risks. The old East India
company had a right to a separate trade upon their own stock till
1701 ; and they had likewise, both before and after that period,
a right, like that or other private traders, to a separate trade
upon the �315,000, which they had subscribed into the stock of
the new company. The competition of the two companies with the
private traders, and with one another, is said to have well nigh
ruined both. Upon a subsequent occasion, in 1750, when a proposal
was made to parliament for putting the trade under the management
of a regulated company, and thereby laying it in some measure
open, the East India company, in opposition to this proposal,
represented, in very strong terms, what had been, at this time,
the miserable effects, as they thought them, of this competition.
In India, they said, it raised the price of goods so high, that
they were not worth the buying ; and in England, by overstocking
the market, it sunk their price so low, that no profit could be
made by them. That by a more plentiful supply, to the great
advantage and conveniency of the public, it must have reduced
very much the price of India goods in the English market, cannot
well be doubted; but that it should have raised very much their
price in the Indian market, seems not very probable, as all the
extraordinary demand which that competition could occasion must
have been but as a drop of water in the immense ocean of Indian
commerce. The increase of demand, besides, though in the
beginning it may sometimes raise the price of goods, never fails
to lower it in the long-run. It encourages production, and
thereby increases the competition of the producers, who, in order
to undersell one another, have recourse to new divisions or
labour and new improvements of art, which might never otherwise
have been thought of. The miserable effects of which the
company complained, were the cheapness of consumption, and the
encouragement given to production ; precisely the two effects
which it is the great business of political economy to promote.
The competition, however, of which they gave this doleful
account, had not been allowed to be of long continuance. In 1702,
the two companies were, in some measure, united by an indenture
tripartite, to which the queen was the third party ; and in 1708,
they were by act of parliament, perfectly consolidated into one
company, by their present name of the United Company of Merchants
trading to the East Indies. Into this act it was thought worth
while to insert a clause, allowing the separate traders to
continue their trade till Michaelmas 1711 ; but at the same time
empowering the directors, upon three years notice, to redeem
their little capital of seven thousand two hundred pounds, and
thereby to convert the whole stock of the company into a joint
stock. By the same act, the capital of the company, in
consequence of a new loan to government, was augmented from two
millions to three millions two hundred thousand pounds. In 1743,
the company advanced another million to government. But this
million being raised, not by a call upon the proprietors, but by
selling annuities and contracting bond-debts, it did not augment
the stock upon which the proprietors could claim a dividend. It
augmented, however, their trading stock, it being equally liable
with the other three millions two hundred thousand pounds, to the
losses sustained, and debts contracted by the company in
prosecution of their mercantile projects. From 1708, or at least
from 1711, this company, being delivered from all competitors,
and fully established in the monopoly of the English commerce to
the East Indies, carried on a succesful trade, and from their
profits, made annually a moderate dividend to their proprietors.
During the French war, which began in 1741, the ambition of Mr.
Dupleix, the French governor of Pondicherry, involved them in the
wars of the Carnatic, and in the politics of the Indian princes.
After many signal successes, and equally signal losses, they at
last lost Madras, at that time their principal settlement in
India. It was restored to them by the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle;
and, about this time the spirit of war and conquest seems to have
taken possession of their servants in India, and never since to
have left them. During the French war, which began in 1755,
their arms partook of the general good fortune of those of Great
Britain. They defended Madras, took Pondicherry, recovered
Calcutta, and acquired the revenues of a rich and extensive
territory, amounting, it was then said, to upwards of three
millions a-year. They remained for several years in quiet
possession of this revenue; but in 1767, administration laid
claim to their territorial acquisitions, and the revenue arising
from them, as of right belonging to the crown ; and the company,
in compensation for this claim, agreed to pay to government
�400,000 a-year. They had, before this, gradually augmented their
dividend from about six to ten per cent. ; that is, upon their
capital of three millions two hundred thousand pounds, they had
increased it by �128,000, or had raised it from one hundred and
ninety-two thousand to three hundred and twenty thousand pounds
a-year. They were attempting about this time to raise it still
further, to twelve and a-half per cent., which would have made
their annual payments to their proprietors equal to what they had
agreed to pay annually to government, or to �400,000 a-year. But
during the two years in which their agreement with government was
to take place, they were restrained from any further increase of
dividend by two successive acts of parliament, of which the
object was to enable them to make a speedier progress in the
payment of their debts, which were at this time estimated at
upwards of six or seven millions sterling. In 1769, they renewed
their agreement with government for five years more, and
stipulated, that during the course of that period, they should be
allowed gradually to increase their dividend to twelve and a-half
per cent; never increasing it, however, more than one per cent.
in one year. This increase of dividend, therefore, when it had
risen to its utmost height, could augment their annual payments,
to their proprietors and government together, but by �680,000 ,
beyond what they had been before their late territorial
acquisitions. What the gross revenue of those territorial
acquisitions was supposed to amount to, has already been
mentioned ; and by an account brought by the Cruttenden East
Indiaman in 1769, the neat revenue, clear of all deductions and
military charges, was stated at two millions fortyeight thousand
seven hundred and forty-seven pounds. They were said, at the same
time, to possess another revenue, arising partly from lands, but
chiefly from the customs established at their different
settlements, amounting to �439,000. The profits of their trade,
too, according to the evidence of their chairman before the house
of commons, amounted, at this time, to at least �400,000 a-year ;
according to that of their accountant, to at least �500,000;
according to the lowest account, at least equal to the highest
dividend that was to be paid to their proprietors. So great a
revenue might certainly have afforded an augmentation of
�680,000 in their annual payments ; and, at the same time, have
left a large sinking fund, sufficient for the speedy reduction of
their debt. In 1773, however, their debts, instead of being
reduced, were augmented by an arrear to the treasury in the
payment of the four hundred thousand pounds ; by another to the
custom-house for duties unpaid; by a large debt to the bank, for
money borrowed; and by a fourth, for bills drawn upon them from
India, and wantonly accepted, to the amount of upwards of twelve
hundred thousand pounds. The distress which these accumulated
claims brought upon them, obliged them not only to reduce all at
once their dividend to six per cent. but to throw themselves upon
the mercy of govermnent, and to supplicate, first, a release from
the further payment of the stipulated �400,000 a-year ; and,
secondly, a loan of fourteen hundred thousand, to save them from
immediate bankruptcy. The great increase of their fortune had, it
seems, only served to furnish their servants with a pretext for
greater profusion, and a cover for greater malversation, than in
proportion even to that increase of fortune. The conduct of their
servants in India, and the general state of their affairs both in
India and in Europe, became the subject of a parliamentary
inquiry: in consequence of which, several very important
alterations were made in the constitution of their government,
both at home and abroad. In India, their principal settlements or
Madras, Bombay, and Calcutta, which had before been altogether
independent of one another, were subjected to a governor-general,
assisted by a council of four assessors, parliament assuming to
itself the first nomination of this governor and council, who
were to reside at Calcutta ; that city having now become, what
Madras was before, the most important of the English settlements
in India. The court of the Mayor of Calcutta, originally
instituted for the trial of mercantile causes, which arose in the
city and neighbourlood, had gradually extended its jurisdiction
with the extension of the empire. It was now reduced and confined
to the original purpose of its institution. Instead of it, a new
supreme court of judicature was established, consisting of a
chief justice and three judges, to be appointed by the crown. In
Europe, the qualification necessary to entitle a proprietor to
vote at their general courts was raisted, from five hundred
pounds, the original price of a share in the stock of the
company, to a thousand pounds. In order to vote upon this
qualification, too, it was declared necessary, that he should
have possessed it, if acquired by his own purchase, and not by
inheritance, for at least one year, instead of six months, the
term requisite before. The court of twentyfour directors had
before been chosen annually; but it was now enacted, that each
director should, for the future, be chosen for four years ; six
of them, however, to go out of office by rotation every year, and
not be capable of being re-chosen at the election of the six new
directors for the ensuing year. In consequence of these
alterations, the courts, both of the proprietors and directors,
it was expected, would be likely to act with more dignity and
steadiness than they had usually done before. But it seems
impossible, by any alterations, to render those courts, in any
respect, fit to govern, or even to share in the government of a
great empire; because the greater part of their members must
always have too little interest in the prosperity of that empire,
to give any serious attention to what may promote it. Frequently
a man of great, sometimes even a man of small fortune, is willing
to purchase a thousand pounds share in India stock, merely for
the influence which he expects to aquire by a vote in the court
of proprietors. It gives him a share, though not in the plunder,
yet in the appointment of the plunderers of India; the court of
directors, though they make that appointment, being necessarily
more or less under the influence of the proprietors,
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