登陆注册
15300600000054

第54章

2.THE INCREASE PAID TO THE PROPRIETOR BY THE OCCUPANT IS ADEAD LOSS TO THE LATTER.For if the proprietor owed, in exchange for the increase which he receives, some thing more than the permission which he grants, his right of property would not be perfect--he would not possess _jure optimo, jure perfecto;_that is, he would not be in reality a proprietor.Then, all which passes from the hands of the occupant into those of the proprietor in the name of increase, and as the price of the permission to occupy, is a permanent gain for the latter, and a dead loss and annihilation for the former; to whom none of it will return, save in the forms of gift, alms, wages paid for his services, or the price of merchandise which he has delivered.In a word, increase perishes so far as the borrower is concerned; or to use the more energetic Latin phrase,--_res perit solventi_.

3.THE RIGHT OF INCREASE OPPRESSES THE PROPRIETOR AS WELL AS THESTRANGER.The master of a thing, as its proprietor, levies a tax for the use of his property upon himself as its possessor, equal to that which he would receive from a third party; so that capital bears interest in the hands of the capitalist, as well as in those of the borrower and the commandite.If, indeed, rather than accept a rent of five hundred francs for my apartment, I prefer to occupy and enjoy it, it is clear that Ishall become my own debtor for a rent equal to that which I deny myself.This principle is universally practised in business, and is regarded as an axiom by the economists.Manufacturers, also, who have the advantage of being proprietors of their floating capital, although they owe no interest to any one, in calculating their profits subtract from them, not only their running expenses and the wages of their employees, but also the interest on their capital.For the same reason, money-lenders retain in their own possession as little money as possible; for, since all capital necessarily bears interest, if this interest is supplied by no one, it comes out of the capital, which is to that extent diminished.Thus, by the right of increase, capital eats itself up.This is, doubtless, the idea that Papinius intended to convey in the phrase, as elegant as it is forcible--_Foenus mordet solidam_.I beg pardon for using Latin so frequently in discussing this subject; it is an homage which I pay to the most usurious nation that ever existed.

FIRST PROPOSITION.

Property is impossible, because it demands Something for Nothing.

The discussion of this proposition covers the same ground as that of the origin of farm-rent, which is so much debated by the economists.When I read the writings of the greater part of these men, I cannot avoid a feeling of contempt mingled with anger, in view of this mass of nonsense, in which the detestable vies with the absurd.It would be a repetition of the story of the elephant in the moon, were it not for the atrocity of the consequences.To seek a rational and legitimate origin of that which is, and ever must be, only robbery, extortion, and plunder--that must be the height of the proprietor's folly; the last degree of bedevilment into which minds, otherwise judicious, can be thrown by the perversity of selfishness.

"A farmer," says Say, "is a wheat manufacturer who, among other tools which serve him in modifying the material from which he makes the wheat, employs one large tool, which we call a field.

If he is not the proprietor of the field, if he is only a tenant, he pays the proprietor for the productive service of this tool.

The tenant is reimbursed by the purchaser, the latter by another, until the product reaches the consumer; who redeems the first payment, PLUS all the others, by means of which the product has at last come into his hands."Let us lay aside the subsequent payments by which the product reaches the consumer, and, for the present, pay attention only to the first one of all,--the rent paid to the proprietor by the tenant.On what ground, we ask, is the proprietor entitled to this rent?

According to Ricardo, MacCulloch, and Mill, farm-rent, properly speaking, is simply the EXCESS OF THE PRODUCT OFTHE MOST FERTILE LAND OVER THAT OF LANDS OF AN INFERIOR QUALITY;so that farm-rent is not demanded for the former until the increase of population renders necessary the cultivation of the latter.

It is difficult to see any sense in this.How can a right to the land be based upon a difference in the quality of the land? How can varieties of soil engender a principle of legislation and politics? This reasoning is either so subtle, or so stupid, that the more I think of it, the more bewildered I become.Suppose two pieces of land of equal area; the one, A, capable of supporting ten thousand inhabitants; the other, B, capable of supporting nine thousand only: when, owing to an increase in their number, the inhabitants of A shall be forced to cultivate B, the landed proprietors of A will exact from their tenants in Aa rent proportional to the difference between ten and nine.So say, I think, Ricardo, MacCulloch, and Mill.But if A supports as many inhabitants as it can contain,--that is, if the inhabitants of A, by our hypothesis, have only just enough land to keep them alive,--how can they pay farm-rent?

If they had gone no farther than to say that the difference in land has OCCASIONED farm-rent, instead of CAUSED it, this observation would have taught us a valuable lesson; namely, that farm-rent grew out of a desire for equality.Indeed, if all men have an equal right to the possession of good land, no one can be forced to cultivate bad land without indemnification.Farm-rent--according to Ricardo, MacCulloch, and Mill--would then have been a compensation for loss and hardship.This system of practical equality is a bad one, no doubt; but it sprang from good intentions.What argument can Ricardo, MacCulloch, and Mill develop therefrom in favor of property? Their theory turns against themselves, and strangles them.

同类推荐
  • 成唯识宝生论

    成唯识宝生论

    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。
  • 续词余丛话

    续词余丛话

    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。
  • 奇效简便良方

    奇效简便良方

    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。
  • 黄帝阴符经注夹颂解注

    黄帝阴符经注夹颂解注

    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。
  • 西河记

    西河记

    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
  • 繁华尽落相思引

    繁华尽落相思引

    一场穿越,是梦?还是幻?天才T博士之女塔雅意外发现T博士研究的时光穿梭机,她带着想要谈一场轰轰烈烈的恋爱的想法踏上了时光之旅。机器把她带到了一个架空的朝代——天朝,魂穿到了前将军现右丞相的只有十岁的女儿蓝若琪身上。一入古代的她对温文尔雅的四皇子龙城洛一见钟情,并对他展开了疯狂的追夫计划。蓝家是天朝的权臣,也是想要夺位的皇子必拉拢的对象。蓝若琪能否摆脱作为上位棋子的命运,又能否最终抱得俊男归呢?
  • 佛说阿弥陀经疏

    佛说阿弥陀经疏

    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。
  • 轮回之往生天谴

    轮回之往生天谴

    当冰雪般的女子踏入青阳学院,莫南的一生因此改变。——天谴轮回,往生之始。
  • 恶魔少爷:专宠小娇妻

    恶魔少爷:专宠小娇妻

    我不会逃避。我要把我失去的一点一点拿回来。该是我的就是我的别想溜。喂!我的男宠你要去哪呢!新书《左眼之九世轮回》
  • tfboys亦无悔

    tfboys亦无悔

    “不要让我继续抉择,因为我选择不了”充满玄幻的梦,在沫婷儿脑子里回荡,直到伴她醒来时,自己早已不是自己。
  • 萌妃嫁到:腹黑王爷宠妻无限

    萌妃嫁到:腹黑王爷宠妻无限

    她本是金牌影后,结果因一场陷害穿越了。这就算了,怎么还有渣爹,渣姐渣妹一个轮一个的想欺负她,靠吧,姐不发威就当我是个受欺负的主吗。想欺负姐,来吧,姐陪你们玩到底,看看最后谁是赢家。咦,什么时候身边有了只妖孽,还如此闷骚,喂!你搞错了没有啊!“浅浅,我不爱你和我爱你其中我不爱你死了还剩下谁啊"某个腹黑的问,“我爱你啊”某女回答到,"恩,浅浅,本王也爱你"某男不要脸的靠近某女说道,“喂,你到底是不是这个时代的人啊,去死啊”某女终于发飙了。
  • 起缘之地

    起缘之地

    缘起缘灭、一切由缘起,却也因它而灭。起缘之地一切的故事的开始、一切故事的结束、而有一个故事即将在这里开始,但是却不在这里结束。
  • 至尊影后宠翻天

    至尊影后宠翻天

    什么?小助理还想成影后?首先硬件演技要强悍,金主大腿更不能少!流言蜚语?阴谋陷害?金主手一挥,分分钟情节逆转,名声洗白!主角,电影和通告?有大腿,这都不是事儿!不好!有危险!金主求庇佑!金主勾勾手:女人,以身相许吧!
  • 辰皇至尊

    辰皇至尊

    我的新书推荐《霸世仙君》www.*****.coml世上本有无数条路,但当所有的路都被敌人堵住时,唯有不断的杀人,才能踏出一条血路。万载苍龙,一朝苏醒,千年回眸,自缘身在血路中!希望大家多多支持..谢谢
  • 月亮的灵魂

    月亮的灵魂

    艺术学院的雪醇,虽然极具天分,但却并不真正明白人生的真正意义。在遭遇到了一场奇怪的“病”之后,她逐渐远离了从小熟悉的那个世界,进入到一个她觉得陌生和不可理喻的“世界”。在各种奇怪的遭遇和经历中,她像是“浴火重生”,在慢慢的康复中,她终于实现了人生的升华??????