list2-第48章
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or how little precious metals circulate in a nation; that the fear
of possessing too little of the precious metals is a frivolous one;
that we ought rather to further their exportation than favour their
importation; &c。 &c。 This manner of reasoning would only be correct
in case we could consider all nations and countries as united under
one and the same system of law; if no commercial restrictions of
any kind against the exportation of our products existed in those
nations for whose manufactured goods we can only repay with the
productions of our agriculture; if the changes wrought by war and
peace caused no fluctuations in production and consumption; in
prices; and on the money market; if the great credit institutions
do not seek to extend their influence over other nations for the
special interest of the nation to which they belong。 But as long as
separate national interests exist; a wise State policy will advise
every great nation to guard itself by its commercial system against
extraordinary money fluctuations and revolutions in prices which
overturn its whole internal economy; and it will attain this
purpose only by placing its internal manufacturing production in a
position of proper equality with its internal agricultural
production and its imports with its exports。
The prevailing theory has evidently not sufficiently
discriminated between the mere possession of the precious metals
and the power of disposition of the precious metals in
international interchange。 Even in private exchange; the necessity
of this distinction is clearly evident。 No one wishes to keep money
by him; everyone tries to remove it from the house as soon as
possible; but everybody at the same time seeks to be able to
dispose at any time of the sums which he requires。 The indifference
in regard to the actual possession of ready money is manifested
everywhere in proportion to wealth。 The richer the individual is;
the less he cares about the actual possession of ready money if
only he is able at any hour to dispose of the ready cash lying in
the safes of other individuals; the poorer; however; the individual
is; and the smaller his power of disposing of the ready money lying
in other people's hands; the more anxiously must he take care to
have in readiness what is required。 The same is the case with
nations which are rich in industry or poor in industry。 If England
cares but little as a rule about how great or how small a quantity
of gold or silver bars are exported out of the country; she is
perfectly well aware that an extraordinary export of precious
metals occasions on the one hand a rise in the value of money and
in discount rates; on the other hand a fall in the prices of
fabrics; and that she can regain through larger exportation of
fabrics or through realisation of foreign stocks and State paper
speedy possession of the ready money required for her trade。
England resembles the rich banker who; without having a thaler in
his pocket; can draw for any sum he pleases on neighbouring or more
distant business connections。 If; however; in the case of merely
agricultural nations extraordinary exports of coin take place; they
are not in the same favourable position; because their means of
procuring the ready money they require are very limited; not merely
on account of the small value in exchange of their products and
agricultural values; but also on account of the hindrances which
foreign laws put in the way of their exportation。 They resemble the
poor man who can draw no bills on his business friends; but who is
drawn upon if the rich man gets into any difficulty; who can;
therefore; not even call what is actually in his hands; his own。
A nation obtains the power of disposition of the amount of
ready money which is always required for its internal trade; mainly
through the possession or the production of those goods and values
whose facility of exchange approaches most nearly to that of the
precious metals。
The diversity of this property of the facility of exchange in
respect to the various articles of commerce and of property; has
been as little taken into consideration by the popular school of
economists in judging of international commerce; as the power of
disposition of the precious metals。 If we consider in this respect
the various articles of value existing in private interchange; we
perceive that many of them are fixed in such a way that their value
is exchangeable only on the spot where they are; and that even
there their exchange is attended with great costs and difficulties。
To that class belong more than three…fourths of all national
property…namely; immovable properties and fixed plant and
instruments。 However large the landed property of an individual may
be; he cannot send his fields and meadows to town in order to
obtain money or goods for them。 He can; indeed; raise mortgages on
such property; but he must first find a lender on them; and the
further from his estate that such an individual resides; the
smaller will be the probability of the borrower's requirements
being satisfied。
Next after property thus fixed to the locality; the greatest
part of agricultural products (excepting colonial produce and a few
less valuable articles) have in regard to international intercourse
the least facility for exchange。 The greatest part of these values;
as e。g。 building materials and wood for fuel; bread stuffs; &c。;
fruit; and cattle; can only be sold within a reasonable distance of
the place where they are produced; and if a great surplus of them
exists they have to be warehoused in order to become realisable。 So
far as such products can be exported to foreign countries their
sale again is limited to certain manufacturing and commercial
nations; and in these also their sale is generally limited by
duties on importation and is affected by the larger or smaller
produce of the purchasing nation's own harvests。 The inland
territories of North America might be completely overstocked with
cattle and products; but it would not be possible for them to
procure through exportation of this excess considerable amounts of
the precious metals from South America; from England; or from the
European continent。 The valuable manufactured goods of common use;
on the other hand; possess incomparably greater facilities for
exchange。 They find at ordinary times a sale in all open markets of
the world; and at extraordinary crises they also find a sale (at
lower prices) in those markets whose protective tariffs are
calculated to operate adversely merely in ordinary times。 The power
of exchange of these articles clearly approaches most nearly to
that of the precious metals; and the experience of England shows
that if in consequence of deficient harvests money crises occur;
the increased exportation of fabrics; and of foreign stocks and
State paper; quickly rectifies the balance。 The latter; the foreign
stocks and State paper; which are evidently the results of former
favourable balances of exchange caused by exportations of fabrics;
constitute in the hands of the nation which is rich in
manufacturing industry so many bills which can be drawn on the
agricultural nation; which at the time of an extraordinary demand
for the precious metals are indeed drawn with loss to the
individual owner of them (like the manufactured goods at the time
of money crises); but; nevertheless; with immense advantage to the
maintenance of the economical conditions of that nation which