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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people are commonly men of mean birth, but of great wealth, and
frequently of great pride. They are too proud to marry their
equals, and women of quality disdain to marry them. They
frequently resolve, therefore, to live bachelors; and having
neither any families of their own, nor much regard for those of
their relations, whom they are not always very fond of
acknowledging, they desire only to live in splendour during their
own time, and are not unwilling that their fortune should end
with themselves. The number of rich people, besides, who are
either averse to marry, or whose condition of life renders it
either improper or inconvenient for them to do so, is much
greater in France than in England. To such people, who have
little or no care for posterity, nothing can be more convenient
than to exchange their capital for a revenue, which is to last
just as long, and no longer, than they wish it to do.
The ordinary expense of the greater part of modern governments,
in time of peace, being equal, or nearly equal, to their ordinary
revenue, when war comes, they are both unwilling and unable to
increase their revenue in proportion to the increase of their
expense. They are unwilling, for fear of offending the people,
who, by so great and so sudden an increase of taxes, would soon
be disgusted with the war ; and they are unable, from not well
knowing what taxes would be sufficient to produce the revenue
wanted. The facility of borrowing delivers them from the
embarrassment which this fear and inability would otherwise
occasion. By means of borrowing, they are enabled, with a very
moderate increase of taxes, to raise, from year to year, money
sufficient for carrying on the war; and by the practice of
perpetual funding, they are enabled, with the smallest possible
increase of taxes, to raise annually the largest possible sum of
money. In great empires, the people who live in the capital, and
in the provinces remote from the scene of action, feel, many of
them, scarce any inconveniency from the war, but enjoy, at their
ease, the amusement of reading in the newspapers the exploits of
their own fleets and armies. To them this amusement compensates
the small difference between the taxes which they pay on account
of the war, and those which they had been accustomed to pay in
time of peace. They are commonly dissatisfied with the return of
peace, which puts an end to their amusement, and to a thousand
visionary hopes of conquest and national glory, from a longer
continuance of the war.
The return of peace, indeed, seldom relieves them from the
greater part of the taxes imposed during the war. These are
mortgaged for the interest of the debt contracted, in order to
carry it on. If, over and above paying the interest of this debt,
and defraying the ordinary expense of government, the old
revenue, together with the new taxes, produce some surplus
revenue, it may, perhaps, be converted into a sinking fund for
paying off the debt. But, in the first place, this sinking fund,
even supposing it should be applied to no other purpose, is
generally altogether inadequate for paying, in the course of any
period during which it can reasonably be expected that peace
should continue, the whole debt contracted during the war ; and,
in the second place, this fund is almost always applied to other
purposes.
The new taxes were imposed for the sole purpose of paying the
interest of the money borrowed upon them. If they produce more,
it is generally something which was neither intended nor
expected, and is, therefore, seldom very considerable. Sinking
funds have generally arisen, not so much from any surplus of the
taxes which was over and above what was necessary for paying the
interest or annuity originally charged upon them, as from a
subsequent reduction of that interest ; that of Holland in 1655,
and that of the ecclesiastical state in 1685, were both formed in
this manner. Hence the usual insufficiency of such funds.
During the most profound peace, various events occur, which
require an extraordinary expense ; and government finds it always
more convenient to defray this expense by misapplying the sinking
fund, than by imposing a new tax. Every new tax is immediately
felt more or less by the people. It occasions always some murmur,
and meets with some opposition. The more taxes may have been
multiplied, the higher they may have been raised upon every
different subject of taxation; the more loudly the people
complain of every new tax, the more difficult it becomes, too,
either to find out new subjects of taxation, or to raise much
higher the taxes already imposed upon the old. A momentary
suspension of the payment of debt is not immediately felt by the
people, and occasions neither murmur nor complaint. To borrow of
the sinking fund is always an obvious and easy expedient for
getting out of the present difficulty. The more the public debts
may have been accumulated, the more necessary it may have become
to study to reduce them; the more dangerous, the more ruinous it
may be to missapply any part of the sinking fund ; the less
likely is the public debt to be reduced to any considerable
degree, the more likely, the more certainly, is the sinking fund
to be misapplied towards defraying all the extraordinary expenses
which occur in time of peace. When a nation is already
overburdened with taxes, nothing but the necessities of a new
war, nothing but either the animosity of national vengeance, or
the anxiety for national security, can induce the people to
submit, with tolerable patience, to a new tax. Hence the usual
misapplication of the sinking fund.
In Great Britain, from the time that we had first recourse to the
ruinous expedient of perpetual funding, the reduction of the
public debt, in time of peace, has never borne any proportion to
its accumulation in time of war. It was in the war which began in
1668, and was concluded by the treaty of Ryswick, in 1697, that
the foundation of the present enormous debt of Great Britain was
first laid.
On the 31st of December 1697, the public debts of Great Britain,
funded and unfunded, amounted to �21,515,742:13:8�. A great part
of those debts had been contracted upon short anticipations, and
some part upon annuities for lives; so that, before the 31st of
December 1701, in less than four years, there had partly been
paid off; and partly reverted to the public, the sum of
�5,121,041:12:0�d; a greater reduction of the public debt than
has ever since been brought about in so short a period of time.
The remaining debt, therefore, amounted only to
�16,394,701:1:7�d.
In the war which began in 1702, and which was concluded by the
treaty of Utrecht, the public debts were still more accumulated.
On the 31st of December 1714, they amounted to �53,681,076:5:6�.
The subscription into the South-sea fund, of the short and long
annuities, increased the capital of the public debt ; so that, on
the 31st of December 1722, it amounted to �55,282,978:1:3 5/6.
The reduction of the debt began in 1723, and went on so slowly,
that, on the 31st of December 1739, during seventeen years-of
profound peace, the whole sum paid off was no more than
�8,328,554:17:11 3/12, the capital of the public debt, at that
time, amounting to �46,954,623:3:4 7/12.
The Spanish war, which began in 1739, and the French war which
soon followed it, occasioned a further increase of the debt,
which, on the 31st of December 1748, after the war had been
concluded by the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, amounted to
�78,293,313:1:10�. The most profound peace, of 17 years
continuance, had taken no more than �8,328,354, 17:11� from it. A
war, of less than nine years continuance, added �31,338,689:18: 6
1/6 to it. {See James Postlethwaite’s History of the Public
Revenue.}
During the administration of Mr. Pelham, the interest of the
public debt was reduced, or at least measures were taken for
reducing it, from four to three per cent.; the sinking fund was
increased, and some part of the publie debt was paid off. In
1755, before the breaking out of the late war, the funded debt of
Great Britain amounted to �72,289,675. On the 5th of January
1763, at the conclusion of the peace, the funded debt amounted
debt to �122,603,336:8:2�. The unfunded debt has been stated at
�13,927,589:2:2. But the expense occasioned by the war did not
end with the conclusion of the peace ; so that, though on the 5th
of January 1764, the funded debt was increased (partly by a new
loan, and partly by funding a part of the unfunded debt) to
�129,586,789:10:1�, there still remained (according to the very
well informed author of Considerations on the Trade and Finances
of Great Britain) an unfunded debt, which was brought to account
in that and the following year, of �9,975,017: 12:2 15/44d. In
1764, therefore, the public debt of Great Britain, funded and
unfunded together, amounted, according to this author, to
�139,561,807:2:4. The annuities for lives, too, which had been
granted as premiums to the subscribers to the new loans in 1757,
estimated at fourteen years purchase, were valued at �472,500 ;
and the annuities for long terms of years, granted as premiums
likewise, in 1761 and 1762, estimated at twentyseven and a-half
years purchase, were valued at �6,826,875. During a peace of
about seven years continuance, the prudent and truly patriotic
administration of Mr. Pelham was not able to pay off an old debt
of six millions. During a war of nearly the same continuance, a
new debt of more than seventy-five millions was contracted.
On the 5th of January 1775, the funded debt of Great Britain
amounted to �124,996,086, 1:6�d. The unfunded, exclusive of a
large civil-list debt, to �4,150,236:3:11 7/8. Both together, to
�129,146,322:5:6. According to this account, the whole debt paid
off, during eleven years of profound peace, amounted only to
�10,415,476:16:9 7/8. Even this small reduction of debt, however,
has not been all made from the savings out of the ordinary
revenue of the state. Several extraneous sums, altogether
independent of that ordinary revenue, have contributed towards
it. Amongst these we may reckon an additional shilling in the
pound land tax, for three years; the two millions received from
the East-India company, as indemnification for their territorial
acquisitions ; and the one hundred and ten thousand pounds
received from the bank for the renewal of their charter. To these
must be added several other sums, which, as they arose out of the
late war, ought perhaps to be considered as deductions from the
expenses of it. The principal are,
The produce of French prizes ………….. �690,449: 18: 9
Composition for French prisoners ……… 670,000: 0: 0
What has been received from the sale
of the ceded islands ……………………. 95,500: 0: 0
Total, ……………………………….�1,455,949: 18: 9
If we add to this sum the balance of the earl of Chatham’s and
Mr. Calcraft’s accounts, and other army savings of the same kind,
together with what has been received from the bank, the
East-India company, and the additional shilling in the pound land
tax, the whole must be a good deal more than five millions. The
debt, therefore, which, since the peace, has been paid out of the
savings from the ordinary revenue of the state, has not, one year
with another, amounted to half a million a-year. The sinking fund
has, no doubt, been considerably augmented since the peace, by
the debt which had been paid off, by the reduction of the
redeemable four per cents to three per cents, and by the
annuities for lives which have fallen in; and, if peace were to
continue, a million, perhaps, might now
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