by that long train of distinguished administrators, and that imposing
phalanx of authors who dissented from his opinions; and Mr. Say was not
unaware of it. Hear what he says: It has been alleged in support of errors of
long standing that there must have been some foundation for ideas which have
been adopted by all nations. Ought we not to distrust observations and
reasonings which run counter to opinions which have been constantly
entertained down to our own time, and which have been regarded as sound by so
many men remarkable for their enlightenment and their good intentions? This
argument, I allow, is calculated to make a profound impression, and it might
have cast doubt upon points which we deem the most incontestable, if we had
not seen, by turns, opinions the most false, and now generally acknowledged
to be false, received and professed by everybody during a long series of
ages. Not very long ago all nations, from the rudest to the most enlightened,
and all men, from the street-porter to the savant, admitted the existence of
four elements. No one thought of contesting that doctrine, which, however, is
false; so much so that even the greenest assistant in a naturalist's
class-room would be ashamed to say that he regarded earth, water and fire as
elements.
On this Mr. Ferrier remarks,
If Mr. Say thinks to answer thus the very strong objection which he brings
forward he is singularly mistaken. That men, otherwise well informed, should
have been mistaken for centuries on certain points of natural history is
easily understood, and proves nothing. Water, air, earth and fire, whether
elements or not, are not the less useful to man.… Such errors are
unimportant: they lead to no popular commotions, no uneasiness in the public
mind; they run counter to no pecuniary interest; and this is the reason why
without any felt inconvenience they may endure for a thousand years. The
physical world goes on as if they did not exist. But of errors in the moral
world can the same thing be said? Can we conceive that a system of
administration, found to be absolutely false and therefore hurtful, should be
followed out among many nations for centuries, with the general approval of
all well-informed men? Can it be explained how such a system could coexist
with the constantly increasing prosperity of nations? Mr. Say admits that the
argument which he combats is fitted to make a profound impression. Yes,
indeed; and the impression remains; for Mr. Say has rather deepened than done
away with it.
Let us hear what Mr. de Saint-Chamans says on the same subject:
It was only in the middle of the last century, of that eighteenth century
which handed over all subjects and all principles without exception to free
discussion, that these speculative purveyors of ideas, applied by them to all
things without being really applicable to anything, began to write upon
political economy. There existed previously a system of political economy not
to be found in books, but which had been put in practical operation by
governments. Colbert, it is said, was the inventor of it, and it was adopted
as a rule by all the nations of Europe. The singular thing is that, in spite
of contempt and maledictions, in spite of all the discoveries of the modern
school, it still remains in practical operation. This system, which our
authors have called the mercantile system, was designed to … Impede, by
prohibitions or import duties, the entry of foreign products which might ruin
our own manufactures by their competition. Economic writers of all schools have declared this system untenable, absurd,
and calculated to impoverish any country. It has been banished from all their
books, and forced to take refuge in the practical legislation of all nations.
They cannot conceive why, in measures relating to national wealth,
governments should not follow the advice and opinions of learned authors,
rather than trust to their experience of the tried working of a system which
has been long in operation. Above all, they cannot conceive why the French government
should in economic questions obstinately set itself to resist the progress of
enlightenment, and maintain in its practice those ancient errors, which all
our economic writers have exposed. But enough of this mercantile system,
which has nothing in its favor but facts, and is not defended by any
speculative writer.
Such language as this would lead one to suppose that in demanding for
everyone the free disposal of his property, economists were propounding some
new system, some new, strange and chimerical social order, a sort of
phalanstere, coined in the mint of their own brain, and without precedent in
the annals of the human race. To me it would seem that if we have here
anything factitious or contingent, it is to be found, not in liberty, but in
protection; not in the free power of exchanging, but in customs duties
employed to overturn artificially the natural course of remuneration.
But our business at present is not to compare, or pronounce between, the
two systems — but to inquire which of the two is founded on experience.
The advocates of monopoly maintain that the facts are on their side, and
that we have on our side only theory.
They flatter themselves that this long series of public acts, this old
experience of Europe, which they invoke, has presented itself as something
very formidable to the mind of Mr. Say; and I grant that he has not refuted
it with his characteristic sagacity. For my own part, I am not disposed to
concede to the monopolists the domain of facts, for they have only in their
favor facts that are forced and exceptional; and we oppose to these, facts
that are universal, the free and voluntary acts of mankind at large.
What do we say; and what do they say?
We say, "You should buy from others what you cannot make for yourself
but at a greater expense."
And they say, "It is better to make things for yourself, although
they cost you more than the price at which you could buy them from
others."
Now, gentlemen, throwing aside theory, argument, demonstration — all which
seem to affect you with nausea — which of these two assertions has on its
side the sanction of universal practice?
Visit your fields, your workshops, your forges, your warehouses; look
above, below, and around you; look at what takes place in your own houses;
note your own everyday acts; and say what is the principle that guides these
laborers, artisans, and merchants; say what is your own personal practice.
Does the farmer make his own clothes? Does the tailor produce the corn he
consumes? Does your housekeeper continue to have your bread made at home,
after she finds she can buy it cheaper from the baker? Do you resign the pen
for the brush to save your paying tribute to the shoeblack? Does the entire
economy of society not rest upon the separation of employments, the division
of labor — in a word, upon exchange? And what is exchange but a calculation
which we make with a view to discontinuing direct production in every case in
which we find that possible, and in which indirect acquisition enables us to
effect a saving in time and in effort?
It is not you, therefore, who are the men of practice, since you cannot
point to a single human being who acts upon your principle.
But you will say, we never intended to make our principle a rule for
individual relations. We perfectly understand that this would be to break up
the bond of society, and would force men to live like snails, each in his own
shell. All that we contend is that our principle regulates de facto the
relations that obtain between the different agglomerations of the human
family.
Well, I affirm that this principle is still erroneous. The family, the
commune, the canton, the department, the province, are so many
agglomerations, which all, without any exception, reject practically your
principle, and have never dreamt of acting on it. All procure themselves, by
means of exchange, those things that it would cost them dearer to procure by
means of production. And nations would do the same, did you not hinder them
by force.
We, then, are the men of practice and of experience; for we oppose to the
restriction you have placed exceptionally on certain international exchanges the
practice and experience of all individuals and of all agglomerations of
individuals, whose acts are voluntary and can consequently be adduced as
evidence. But you begin by constraining, by hindering, and then you lay hold
of acts that are forced or prohibited, as warranting you to exclaim, "We
have practice and experience on our side!"
You inveigh against our theory, and even against theories in general. But
when you lay down a principle in opposition to ours you perhaps imagine you
are not proceeding on theory. Clear your heads of that idea. You, in fact,
form a theory as we do; but between your theory and ours there is this
difference:
Our theory consists merely in observing universal facts, universal
opinions, calculations, and ways of proceeding that universally prevail; and
in classifying these and rendering them coordinate, with a view to their
being more easily understood.
Our theory is so little opposed to practice that it is nothing else but
practice explained. We observe men acting as they are moved by the instinct
of self-preservation and a desire for progress, and what they thus do freely
and voluntarily we denominate political or social economy. We can never help
repeating that each individual man is practically an excellent economist,
producing or exchanging according as he finds it more to his interest to
produce or to exchange. Each, by experience, educates himself in this
science; or, rather, the science itself is only this same experience
accurately observed and methodically explained.
But on your side you construct a theory in the worst sense of the word.
You imagine, you invent, a course of proceeding that is not sanctioned by the
practice of any living man under the canopy of heaven; and then you invoke
the aid of constraint and prohibition. It is quite necessary that you should
have recourse to force, for you desire that men should be made to produce
those things that they find it more advantageous to buy; you desire that they
should renounce this advantage, and act upon a doctrine that implies a
contradiction in terms.
I defy you to take the doctrine, which you acknowledge would be absurd in
the relations of individuals, and extend it, even in speculation, to
transactions between families, communities, or provinces. By your own
admission it is only applicable to international relations.
This is the reason why you are forced to keep repeating, "There are
no absolute principles, no inflexible rules. What is good for an individual,
a family, a province, is bad for a nation. What is good in detail — namely,
to purchase rather than produce, when purchasing is more advantageous than
producing — that same is bad in the gross. The political economy of
individuals is not that of nations" — and other nonsense of the same
kind.
And to what does all this tend? Look at it a little closer. The intention
is to prove that we, the consumers, are your property! — that we are yours
body and soul! — that you have an exclusive right over our stomachs and our
limbs! — that it belongs to you to feed and clothe us on your own terms,
whatever be your ignorance, incapacity or rapacity!
No, you are not men of practice; you are men of abstraction — and of
extortion.