1. The requisites of production being labour, capital, and
natural agents; the only person, besides the labourer and the
capitalist, whose consent is necessary to production, and who can
claim a share of the produce as the price of that consent, is the
person who, by the arrangements of society, possesses exclusive power
over some natural agent. The land is the principal of the natural
agents which are capable of being appropriated, and the consideration
paid for its use is called rent. Landed proprietors are the only
class, of any number or importance, who have a claim to a share in the
distribution of the produce, through their ownership of something
which neither they nor any one else have produced. If there be any
other cases of a similar nature, they will be easily understood, when
the nature and laws of rent are comprehended.
It is at once evident, that rent is the effect of a monopoly;
though the monopoly is a natural one, which may be regulated, which
may even be held as a trust for the community generally, but which
cannot be prevented from existing. The reason why landowners are able
to require rent for their land, is that it is a commodity which many
want, and which no one can obtain but from them. If all the land of
the country belonged to one person, he could fix the rent at his
pleasure. The whole people would be dependent on his will for the
necessaries of life, and he might make what conditions he chose. This
is the actual state of things in those Oriental kingdoms in which the
land is considered the property of the state. Rent is then confounded
with taxation, and the despot may exact the utmost which the
unfortunate cultivators have to give. Indeed, the exclusive possessor
of the land of a country could not well be other than despot of it.
The effect would be much the same if the land belonged to so few
people, that they could, and did, act together as one man, and fix the
rent by agreement among themselves. This case, however, is nowhere
known to exist: and the only remaining supposition is that of free
competition; the landowners being supposed to be, as in fact they are,
too numerous to combine.
2. A thing which is limited in quantity, even though its
possessors do not act in concert, is still a monopolized article. But
even when monopolized, a thing which is the gift of nature, and
requires no labour or outlay as the condition of its existence, will,
if there be competition among the holders of it, command a price, only
if it exists in less quantity than the demand. If the whole land of a
country were required for cultivation, all of it might yield a rent.
But in no country of any extent do the wants of the population require
that all the land, which is capable of cultivation, should be
cultivated. The food and other agricultural produce which the people
need, and which they are willing and able to pay for at a price which
remunerates the grower, may always be obtained without cultivating all
the land; sometimes without cultivating more than a small part of it;
the lands most easily cultivated being preferred in a very early stage
of society; the most fertile, or those in the most convenient
situations, in a more advanced state. There is always, therefore, some
land which cannot, in existing circumstances, pay any rent; and no
land ever pays rent, unless, in point of fertility or situation, it
belongs to those superior kinds which exist in less quantity than the
demand-which cannot be made to yield all the produce required for the
community, unless on terms still less advantageous than the resort to
less favoured soils.
There is land, such as the deserts of Arabia, which will yield
nothing to any amount of labour; and there is land, like some of our
hard sandy heaths, which would produce something, but, in the present
state of the soil, not enough to defray the expenses of production.
Such lands, unless by some application of chemistry to agriculture
still remaining to be invented, cannot be cultivated for profit,
unless some one actually creates a soil, by spreading new ingredients
over the surface, or mixing them with the existing materials. If
ingredients fitted for this purpose exist in the subsoil, or close at
hand, the improvement even of the most unpromising spots may answer as
a speculation: but if those ingredients are costly, and must be
brought from a distance, it will seldom answer to do this for the sake
of profit, though the "magic of property" will sometimes
effect it. Land which cannot possibly yield a profit, is sometimes
cultivated at a loss, the cultivators having their wants partially
supplied from other sources; as in the case of paupers, and some
monasteries or charitable institutions, among which may be reckoned
the Poor Colonies of Belgium. The worst land which can be cultivated
as a means of subsistence, is that which will just replace the seed,
and the food of the labourers employed on it, together with what Dr.
Chalmers calls their secondaries; that is, the labourers required for
supplying them with tools, and with the remaining necessaries of life.
Whether any given land is capable of doing more than this, is not a
question of political economy, but of physical fact. The supposition
leaves nothing for profits, nor anything for the labourers except
necessaries: the land, therefore, can only be cultivated by the
labourers themselves, or else at a pecuniary loss: and a fortiori,
cannot in any contingency afford a rent. The worst land which can be
cultivated as an investment for capital, is that which, after
replacing the seed, not only feeds the agricultural labourers and
their secondaries, but affords them the current rate of wages, which
may extend to much more than mere necessaries; and leaves for those
who have advanced the wages of these two classes of labourers, a
surplus equal to the profit they could have expected from any other
employment of their capital. Whether any given land can do more than
this, is not merely a physical question, but depends partly on the
market value of agricultural produce. What the land can do for the
labourers and for the capitalist, beyond feeding all whom it directly
or indirectly employs, of course depends upon what the remainder of
the produce can be sold for. The higher the market value of produce,
the lower are the soils to which cultivation can descend, consistently
with affording to the capital employed, the ordinary rate of profit.
As, however, differences of fertility slide into one another by
insensible gradations; and differences of accessibility, that is, of
distance from markets, do the same; and since there is land so barren
that it could not pay for its cultivation at any price; it is evident
that, whatever the price may be, there must in any extensive region be
some land which at that price will just pay the wages of the
cultivators, and yield to the capital employed the ordinary profit,
and no more. Until, therefore, the price rises higher, or until some
improvement raises that particular land to a higher place in the scale
of fertility, it cannot pay any rent. It is evident, however, that the
community needs the produce of this quality of land; since if the
lands more fertile or better situated than it, could have sufficed to
supply the wants of society, the price would not have risen so high as
to render its cultivation profitable. This land, therefore, will be
cultivated; and we may lay it down as a principle that so long as any
of the land of a country which is fit for cultivation, and not
withheld from it by legal or other factitious obstacles, is not
cultivated, the worst land in actual cultivation (in point of
fertility and situation together) pays no rent.
3. If, then, of the land in cultivation, the part which yields
least return to the labour and capital employed on it gives only the
ordinary profit of capital, without leaving anything for rent; a
standard is afforded for estimating the amount of rent which will be
yielded by all other land. Any land yields just as much more than the
ordinary profits of stock, as it yields more than what is returned by
the worst land in cultivation. The surplus is what the farmer can
afford to pay as rent to the landlord; and since, if he did not so pay
it, he would receive more than the ordinary rate of profit, the
competition of other capitalists, that competition which equalizes the
profits of different capitals, will enable the landlord to appropriate
it. The rent, therefore, which any land will yield, is the excess of
its produce, beyond what would be returned to the same capital if
employed on the worst land in cultivation. This is not, and never was
pretended to be, the limit of metayer rents, or of cottier rents; but
it is the limit of farmers' rents. No land rented to a capitalist
farmer will permanently yield more than this; and when it yields less,
it is because the landlord foregoes a part of what, if he chose, he
could obtain.
This is the theory of rent, first propounded at the end of the
last century by Dr. Anderson, and which, neglected at the time, was
almost simultaneously rediscovered, twenty years later, by Sir Edward
West, Mr. Malthus, and Mr. Ricardo. It is one of the cardinal
doctrines of political economy; and until it was understood, no
consistent explanation could be given of many of the more complicated
industrial phenomena. The evidence of its truth will be manifested
with a great increase of clearness, when we come to trace the laws of
the phenomena of Value and Price. Until that is done, it is not
possible to free the doctrine from every difficulty which may present
itself, nor perhaps to convey, to those previously unacquainted with
the subject, more than a general apprehension of the reasoning by
which the theorem is arrived at. Some, however, of the objections
commonly made to it, admit of a complete answer even in the present
stage of our inquiries.
It has been denied that there can be any land in cultivation
which pays no rent; because landlords (it is contended) would not
allow their land to be occupied without payment. Those who lay any
stress on this as an objection, must think that land of the quality
which can but just pay for its cultivation, lies together in large
masses, detached from any land of better quality. If an estate
consisted wholly of this land, or of this and still worse, it is
likely enough that the owner would not give the use of it for nothing;
he would probably (if a rich man) prefer keeping it for other
purposes, as for exercise, or ornament, or perhaps as a game preserve.
No farmer could afford to offer him anything for it, for purposes of
culture; though something would probably be obtained for the use of
its natural pasture, or other spontaneous produce. Even such land,
however, would not necessarily remain uncultivated. It might be farmed
by the proprietor; no unfrequent case even in England. Portions of it
might be granted as temporary allotments to labouring families, either
from philanthropic motives, or to save the poor-rate; or occupation
might be allowed to squatters, free of rent, in the hope that their
labour might give it value at some future period. Both these cases are
of quite ordinary occurrence. So that even if an estate were wholly
composed of the worst land capable of profitable cultivation, it would
not necessarily lie uncultivated because it could pay no rent.
Inferior land, however, does not usually occupy, without interruption,
many square miles of ground; it is dispersed here and there, with
patches of better land intermixed, and the same person who rents the
better land, obtains along with it inferior soils which alternate with
it. He pays a rent, nominally for the whole farm, but calculated on
the produce of these parts alone (however small a portion of the
whole) which are capable of returning more than the common rate of
profit. It is thus scientifically true, that the remaining parts pay
no rent.
4. Let us, however, suppose that there were a validity in this
objection, which can by no means be conceded to it; that when the
demand of the community had forced up food to such a price as would
remunerate the expense of producing it from a certain quantity of
soil, it happened nevertheless that all the soil of that quality was
withheld from cultivation, by the obstinacy of the owners in demanding
a rent for it, not nominal, nor trifling, but sufficiently onerous to
be a material item in the calculations of a farmer. What would then
happen? Merely that the increase of produce, which the wants of
society required, would for the time be obtained wholly (as it always
is partially), not by an extension of cultivation, but by an increased
application of labour and capital to land already cultivated.
Now we have already seen that this increased application of
capital, other things being unaltered, is always attended with a
smaller proportional return. We are not to suppose some new
agricultural invention made precisely at this juncture; nor a sudden
extension of agricultural skill and knowledge, bringing into more
general practice, just then, inventions already in partial use. We are
to suppose no change, except a demand for more corn, and a consequent
rise of its price. The rise of price enables measures to be taken for
increasing the produce, which could not have been taken with profit at
the previous price. The farmer uses more expensive manures; or manures
land which he formerly left to nature; or procures lime or marl from a
distance, as a dressing for the soil; or pulverizes or weeds it more
thoroughly; or drains, irrigates, or subsoils portions of it, which at
former prices would not have paid the cost of the operation; and so
forth. These things, or some of them, are done, when, more food being
wanted, cultivation has no means of expanding itself upon new lands.
And when the impulse is given to extract an increased amount of
produce from the soil, the farmer or improver will only consider
whether the outlay he makes for the purpose will be returned to him
with the ordinary profit, and not whether any surplus will remain for
rent. Even, therefore, if it were the fact, that there is never any
land taken into cultivation, for which rent, and that too of an amount
worth taking into consideration, was not paid; it would be true,
nevertheless, that there is always some agricultural capital which
pays no rent, because it returns nothing beyond the ordinary rate of
profit: this capital being the portion of capital last applied-that to
which the last addition to the produce was due: or (to express the
essentials of the case in one phrase), that which is applied in the
least favourable circumstances. But the same amount of demand, and the
same price, which enable this least productive portion of capital
barely to replace itself with the ordinary profit, enable every other
portion to yield a surplus proportioned to the advantage it possesses.
And this surplus it is, which competition enables the landlord to
appropriate. The rent of all land is measured by the excess of the
return to the whole capital employed on it, above what is necessary to
replace the capital with the ordinary rate of profit, or in other
words, above what the same capital would yield if it were all employed
in as disadvantageous circumstances as the least productive portion of
it; whether that least productive portion of capital is rendered so by
being employed on the worst soil, or by being expended in extorting
more produce from land which already yielded as much as it could be
made to part with on easier terms.
It is not pretended that the facts of any concrete case conform
with absolute precision to this or any other scientific principle. We
must never forget that the truths of political economy are truths only
in the rough: they have the certainty, but not the precision, of exact
science. It is not, for example, strictly true that a farmer will
cultivate no land, and apply no capital, which returns less than the
ordinary profit. He will expect the ordinary profit on the bulk of his
capital. But when he has cast in his lot with his farm, and bartered
his skill and exertions, once for all, against what the farm will
yield to him, he will probably be willing to expend capital on it (for
an immediate return) in any manner which will afford him a surplus
profit, however small, beyond the value of the risk, and the interest
which he must pay for the capital if borrowed, or can get for it
elsewhere if it is his own. But a new farmer, entering on the land,
would make his calculations differently, and would not commence unless
he could expect the full rate of ordinary profit on all the capital
which he intended embarking in the enterprise. Again, prices may range
higher or lower during the currency of a lease, than was expected when
the contract was made, and the land, therefore, may be over or
under-rented: and even when the lease expires, the landlord may be
unwilling to grant a necessary diminution of rent, and the farmer,
rather than relinquish his occupation, or seek a farm elsewhere when
all are occupied, may consent to go on paying too high a rent.
Irregularities like these we must always expect; it is impossible in
political economy to obtain general theorems embracing the
complications of circumstances which may affect the result in an
individual case. When, too, the farmer class, having but little
capital, cultivate for subsistence rather than for profit, and do not
think of quitting their farm while they are able to live by it, their
rents approximate to the character of cottier rents, and may be forced
up by competition (if the number of competitors exceeds the number of
farms) beyond the amount which will leave to the farmer the ordinary
rate of profit. The laws which we are enabled to lay down respecting
rents, profits, wages, prices, are only true in so far as the persons
concerned are free from the influence of any other motives than those
arising from the general circumstances of the case, and are guided, as
to those, by the ordinary mercantile estimate of profit and loss.
Applying this twofold supposition to the case of farmers and
landlords, it will be true that the farmer requires the ordinary rate
of profit on the whole of his capital; that whatever it returns to him
beyond this he is obliged to pay to the landlord, but will not consent
to pay more; that there is a portion of capital applied to agriculture
in such circumstances of productiveness as to yield only the ordinary
profits; and that the difference between the produce of this, and any
other capital of similar amount, is the measure of the tribute which
that other capital can and will pay, under the name of rent, to the
landlord. This constitutes a law of rent, as near the truth as such a
law can possibly be: though of course modified or disturbed in
individual cases, by pending contracts, individual miscalculations,
the influence of habit, and even the particular feelings and
dispositions of the persons concerned.
5. A remark is often made, which must not here be omitted,
though, I think, more importance has been attached to it than it
merits. Under the name of rent, many payments are commonly included,
which are not a remuneration for the original powers of the land
itself, but for capital expended on it. The additional rent which land
yields in consequence of this outlay of capital, should, in the
opinion of some writers, be regarded as profit, not rent. But before
this can be admitted, a distinction must be made. The annual payment
by a tenant almost always includes a consideration for the use of the
buildings on the farm; not only barns, stables, and other outhouses,
but a house to live in, not to speak of fences and the like. The
landlord will ask, and the tenant give, for these, whatever is
considered sufficient to yield the ordinary profit, or rather (risk
and trouble being here out of the question) the ordinary interest, on
the value of the buildings: that is, not on what it has cost to erect
them, but on what it would now cost to erect others as good: the
tenant being bound, in addition, to leave them in as good repair as he
found them, for otherwise a much larger payment than simple interest
would of course be required from him. These buildings are as distinct
a thing from the farm as the stock or the timber on it; and what is
paid for them can no more be called rent of land, than a payment for
cattle would be, if it were the custom that the landlord should stock
the farm for the tenant. The buildings, like the cattle, are not land,
but capital, regularly consumed and reproduced; and all payments made
in consideration for them are properly interest.
But with regard to capital actually sunk in improvements, and
not requiring periodical renewal, but spent once for all in giving the
land a permanent increase of productiveness, it appears to me that the
return made to such capital loses altogether the character of profits,
and is governed by the principles of rent. It is true that a landlord
will not expend capital in improving his estate, unless he expects
from the improvement an increase of income surpassing the interest of
his outlay. Prospectively, this increase of income may be regarded as
profit; but when the expense has been incurred, and the improvement
made, the rent of the improved land is governed by the same rules as
that of the unimproved. Equally fertile land commands an equal rent,
whether its fertility is natural or acquired; and I cannot think that
the incomes of those who own the Bedford Level or the Lincolnshire
Wolds ought to be called profit and not rent because those lands would
have been worth next to nothing unless capital had been expended on
them. The owners are not capitalists, but landlords; they have parted
with their capital; it is consumed, destroyed; and neither is, nor is
to be, returned to them, like the capital of a farmer or manufacturer,
from what it produces. In lieu of it they now have land of a certain
richness, which yields the same rent, and by the operation of the same
causes, as if it had possessed from the beginning the degree of
fertility which has been artificially given to it.
Some writers, in particular Mr. H.C. Carey, take away, still
more completely than I have attempted to do, the distinction between
these two sources of rent, by rejecting one of them altogether, and
considering all rent as the effect of capital expended. In proof of
this, Mr. Carey contends that the whole pecuniary value of all the
land in any country, in England for instance, or in the United States,
does not amount to anything approaching to the sum which has been laid
out, or which it would even now be necessary to lay out, in order to
bring the country to its present condition from a state of primaeval
forest. This startling statement has been seized on by M. Bastiat and
others, as a means of making out a stronger case than could otherwise
be made in defence of property in land. Mr. Carey's proposition, in
its most obvious meaning, is equivalent to saying, that if there were
suddenly added to the lands of England an unreclaimed territory of
equal natural fertility, it would not be worth the while of the
inhabitants of England to reclaim it: because the profits of the
operation would not be equal to the ordinary interest on the capital
expended. To which assertion if any answer could be supposed to be
required, it would suffice to remark, that land not of equal but of
greatly inferior quality to that previously cultivated, is continually
reclaimed in England, at an expense which the subsequently accruing
rent is sufficient to replace completely in a small number of years.
The doctrine, moreover, is totally opposed to Mr. Carey's own
economical opinions. No one maintains more strenuously than Mr. Carey
the undoubted truth, that as society advances in population, wealth,
and combination of labour, land constantly rises in value and price.
This, however, could not possibly be true, if the present value of
land were less than the expense of clearing it and making it fit for
cultivation; for it must have been worth this immediately after it was
cleared; and according to Mr. Carey it has been rising in value ever
since.
When, however, Mr. Carey asserts that the whole land of any
country is not now worth the capital which has been expended on it, he
does not mean that each particular estate is worth less than what has
been laid out in improving it, and that, to the proprietors, the
improvement of the land has been, in the final result, a
miscalculation. He means, not that the land of Great Britain would not
now sell for what has been laid out upon it, but that it would not
sell for that amount plus the expense of making all the roads, canals,
and railways. This is probably true, but is no more to the purpose,
and no more important in political economy, than if the statement had
been, that it would not sell for the sums laid out on it plus the
national debt, or plus the cost of the French Revolutionary war, or
any other expense incurred for a real or imaginary public advantage.
The roads, railways, and canals were not constructed to give value to
land: on the contrary, their natural effect was to lower its value, by
rendering other and rival lands accessible: and the landholders of the
southern counties actually petitioned Parliament against the turnpike
roads on this very account.
The tendency of improved communications is to lower existing
rents, by trenching on the monopoly of the land nearest to the places
where large numbers of consumers are assembled. Roads and canals are
not intended to raise the value of the land which already supplies the
markets, but (among other purposes) to cheapen the supply, by letting
in the produce of other and more distant lands; and the more
effectually this purpose is attained, the lower rent will be. If we
could imagine that the railways and canals of the United States,
instead of only cheapening communication, did their business so
effectually as to annihilate cost of carriage altogether, and enable
the produce of Michigan to reach the market of New York as quickly and
as cheaply as the produce of Long Island-the whole value of all the
land of the United States (except such as lies convenient for
building) would be annihilated; or rather, the best would only sell
for the expense of clearing, and the government tax of a dollar and a
quarter per acre; since land in Michigan, equal to the best in the
United States, may be had in unlimited abundance by that amount of
outlay. But it is strange that Mr. Carey should think this fact
inconsistent with the Ricardo theory of rent. Admitting all that he
asserts, it is still true that as long as there is land which yields
no rent, the land which does yield rent, does so in consequence of
some advantage which it enjoys, in fertility or vicinity to markets,
over the other; and the measure of its advantage is also the measure
of its rent. And the cause of its yielding rent, is that it possesses
a natural monopoly; the quantity of land, as favourably circumstanced
as itself, not being sufficient to supply the market. These
propositions constitute the theory of rent, laid down by Ricardo; and
if they are true, I cannot see that it signifies much whether the rent
which the land yields at the present time, is greater or less than the
interest of the capital which has been laid out to raise its value,
together with the interest of the capital which has been laid out to
lower its value.
Mr. Carey's objection, however, has somewhat more of ingenuity
than the arguments commonly met with against the theory of rent; a
theorem which may he called the pons asinorum of political economy,
for there are, I am inclined to think, few persons who have refused
their assent to it except from not having thoroughly understood it.
The loose and inaccurate way in which it is often apprehended by those
who affect to refute it, is very remarkable. Many, for instance, have
imputed absurdity to Mr. Ricardo's theory, because it is absurd to say
that the cultivation of inferior land is the cause of rent on the
superior. Mr. Ricardo does not say that it is the cultivation of
inferior land, but the necessity of cultivating it, from the
insufficiency of the superior land to feed a growing population:
between which and the proposition imputed to him there is no less a
difference than that between demand and supply. Others again allege as
an objection against Ricardo, that if all land were of equal
fertility, it might still yield a rent. But Ricardo says precisely the
same. He says that if all lands were equally fertile, those which are
nearer to their market than others, and are therefore less burthened
with cost of carriage, would yield a rent equivalent to the advantage;
and that the land yielding no rent would then be, not the least
fertile, but the least advantageously situated, which the wants of the
community required to be brought into cultivation. It is also
distinctly a portion of Ricardo's doctrine, that even apart from
differences of situation, the land of a country supposed to be of
uniform fertility would, all of it, on a certain supposition, pay
rent: namely, if the demand of the community required that it should
all be cultivated, and cultivated beyond the point at which a further
application of capital begins to be attended with a smaller
proportional return. It would be impossible to show that, except by
forcible exaction, the whole land of a country can yield a rent on any
other supposition.
6. After this view of the nature and causes of rent, let us
turn back to the subject of profits, and bring up for reconsideration
one of the propositions laid down in the last chapter. We there
stated, that the advances of the capitalist, or in other words, the
expenses of production, consist solely in wages of labour; that
whatever portion of the outlay is not wages, is previous profit, and
whatever is not previous profit, is wages. Rent, however, being an
element which it is impossible to resolve into either profits or
wages, we were obliged, for the moment, to assume that the capitalist
is not required to pay rent-to give an equivalent for the use of an
appropriated natural agent: and I undertook to show in the proper
place, that this is an allowable supposition, and that rent does not
really form any part of the expenses of production, or of the advances
of the capitalist. The grounds on which this assertion was made are
now apparent. It is true that all tenant farmers, and many other
classes of producers, pay rent. But we have now seen, that whoever
cultivates land, paying a rent for it, gets in return for his rent an
instrument of superior power to other instruments of the same kind for
which no rent is paid. The superiority of the instrument is in exact
proportion to the rent paid for it. If a few persons had steam-engines
of superior power to all others in existence, but limited by physical
laws to a number short of the demand, the rent which a manufacturer
would be willing to pay for one of these steam-engines could not he
looked upon as an addition to his outlay, because by the use of it he
would save in his other expenses the equivalent of what it cost him:
without it he could not do the same quantity of work, unless at an
additional expense equal to the rent. The same thing is true of land.
The real expenses of production are those incurred on the worst land,
or by the capital employed in the least favourable circumstances. This
land or capital pays, as we have seen, no rent; but the expenses to
which it is subject, cause all other land or agricultural capital to
be subjected to an equivalent expense in the form of rent. Whoever
does pay rent gets back its full value in extra advantages, and the
rent which he pays does not place him in a worse position than, but
only in the same position as, his fellow-producer who pays no rent,
but whose instrument is one of inferior efficiency.
We have now completed the exposition of the laws which regulate
the distribution of the produce of land, labour, and capital, as far
as it is possible to discuss those laws independently of the
instrumentality by which in a civilized society the distribution is
effected; the machinery of Exchange and Price. The more complete
elucidation and final confirmation of the laws which we have laid
down, and the deduction of their most important consequences, must be
preceded by an explanation of the nature and working of that
machinery-a subject so extensive and complicated as to require a
separate Book.