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and a scanty one quickens their industry。 That a little more

plenty than ordinary may render some workmen idle; cannot well be

doubted; but that it should have this effect upon the greater

part; or that men in general should work better when they are ill

fed than when they are well fed; when they are disheartened than

when they are in good spirits; when they are frequently sick than

when they are generally in good health; seems not very probable。

Years of dearth; it is to be observed; are generally among the

common people years of sickness and mortality; which cannot fail

to diminish the produce of their industry。

     In years of plenty; servants frequently leave their masters;

and trust their subsistence to what they can make by their own

industry。 But the same cheapness of provisions; by increasing the

fund which is destined for the maintenance of servants;

encourages masters; farmers especially; to employ a greater

number。 Farmers upon such occasions expect more profit from their

corn by maintaining a few more labouring servants than by selling

it at a low price in the market。 The demand for servants

increases; while the number of those who offer to supply that

demand diminishes。 The price of labour; therefore; frequently

rises in cheap years。

     In years of scarcity; the difficulty and uncertainty of

subsistence make all such people eager to return to service。 But

the high price of provisions; by diminishing the funds destined

for the maintenance of servants; disposes masters rather to

diminish than to increase the number of those they have。 In dear

years; too; poor independent workmen frequently consume the

little stocks with which they had used to supply themselves with

the materials of their work; and are obliged to become journeymen

for subsistence。 More people want employment than can easily get

it; many are willing to take it upon lower terms than ordinary;

and the wages of both servants and journeymen frequently sink in

dear years。

     Masters of all sorts; therefore; frequently make better

bargains with their servants in dear than in cheap years; and

find them more humble and dependent in the former than in the

latter。 They naturally; therefore; commend the former as more

favourable to industry。 Landlords and farmers; besides; two of

the largest classes of masters; have another reason for being

pleased with dear years。 The rents of the one and the profits of

the other depend very much upon the price of provisions。 Nothing

can be more absurd; however; than to imagine that men in general

should work less when they work for themselves; than when they

work for other people。 A poor independent workman will generally

be more industrious than even a journeyman who works by the

piece。 The one enjoys the whole produce of his own industry; the

other shares it with his master。 The one; in his separate

independent state; is less liable to the temptations of bad

company; which in large manufactories so frequently ruin the

morals of the other。 The superiority of the independent workman

over those servants who are hired by the month or by the year;

and whose wages and maintenance are the same whether they do much

or do little; is likely to be still greater。 Cheap years tend to

increase the proportion of independent workmen to journeymen and

servants of all kinds; and dear years to diminish it。

     A French author of great knowledge and ingenuity; Mr。

Messance; receiver of the taillies in the election of St。

Etienne; endeavours to show that the poor do more work in cheap

than in dear years; by comparing the quantity and value of the

goods made upon those different occasions in three different

manufactures; one of coarse woollens carried on at Elbeuf; one of

linen; and another of silk; both which extend through the whole

generality of Rouen。 It appears from his account; which is copied

from the registers of the public offices; that the quantity and

value of the goods made in all those three manufactures has

generally been greater in cheap than in dear years; and that it

has always been greatest in the cheapest; and least in the

dearest years。 All the three seem to be stationary manufactures;

or which; though their produce may vary somewhat from year to

year; are upon the whole neither going backwards nor forwards。

     The manufacture of linen in Scotland; and that of coarse

woollens in the West Riding of Yorkshire; are growing

manufactures; of which the produce is generally; though with some

variations; increasing both in quantity and value。 Upon

examining; however; the accounts which have been published of

their annual produce; I have not been able to observe that its

variations have had any sensible connection with the dearness or

cheapness of the seasons。 In 1740; a year of great scarcity; both

manufactures; indeed; appear to have declined very considerably。

But in 1756; another year of great scarcity; the Scotch

manufacture made more than ordinary advances。 The Yorkshire

manufacture; indeed; declined; and its produce did not rise to

what it had been in 1755 till 1766; after the repeal of the

American Stamp Act。 In that and the following year it greatly

exceeded what it had ever been before; and it has continued to

advance ever since。

     The produce of all great manufactures for distant sale must

necessarily depend; not so much upon the dearness or cheapness of

the seasons in the countries where they are carried on as upon

the circumstances which affect the demand in the countries where

they are consumed; upon peace or war; upon the prosperity or

declension of other rival manufactures; and upon the good or bad

humour of their principal customers。 A great part of the

extraordinary work; besides; which is probably done in cheap

years; never enters the public registers of manufactures。 The men

servants who leave their masters become independent labourers。

The women return to their parents; and commonly spin in order to

make clothes for themselves and their families。 Even the

independent workmen do not always work for public sale; but are

employed by some of their neighbours in manufactures for family

use。 The produce of their labour; therefore; frequently makes no

figure in those public registers of which the records are

sometimes published with so much parade; and from which our

merchants and manufacturers would often vainly pretend to

announce the prosperity or declension of the greatest empires。

     Though the variations in the price of labour not only do not

always correspond with those in the price of provisions; but are

frequently quite opposite; we must not; upon this account;

imagine that the price of provisions has no influence upon that

of labour。 The money price of labour is necessarily regulated by

two circumstances; the demand for labour; and the price of the

necessaries and conveniences of life。 The demand for labour;

according as it happens to be increasing; stationary; or

declining; or to require an increasing; stationary; or declining

population; determines the quantity of the necessaries and

conveniencies of life which must be given to the labourer; and

the money price of labour is determined by what is requisite for

purchasing this quantity。 Though the money price of labour;

therefore; is sometimes high where the price of provisions is

low; it would be still higher; the demand continuing the same; if

the price of provisions was high。

     It is because the demand for labour increases in years of

sudden and extraordinary plenty; and diminishes in those of

sudden and extraordinary scarcity; that the money price of labour

sometimes rises in the one and sinks in the other。

     In a year of sudden and extraordinary plenty; there are

funds in the hands of many of the employers of industry

sufficient to maintain and employ a greater number of industrious

people than had been employed the year before; and this

extraordinary number cannot always be had。 Those masters;

therefore; who want more workmen bid against one another; in

order to get them; which sometimes raises both the real and the

money price of their labour。

     The contrary of this happens in a year of sudden and

extraordinary scarcity。 The funds destined for employing industry

are less than they had been the year before。 A considerable

number of people are thrown out of employment; who bid against

one another; in order to get it; which sometimes lowers both the

real and the money price of labour。 In 1740; a year of

extraordinary scarcity; many people were willing to work for bare

subsistence。 In the succeeding years of plenty; it was more

difficult to get labourers and servants。

     The scarcity of a dear year; by diminishing the demand for

labour; tends to lower its price; as the high price of provisions

tends to raise it。 The plenty of a cheap year; on the contrary;

by increasing the demand; tends to raise the price of labour; as

the cheapness of provisions tends to lower it。 In the ordinary

variations of the price of provisions those two opposite causes

seem to counterbalance one another; which is probably in part the

reason why the wages of labour are everywhere so much more steady

and permanent than the price of provisions。

     The increase in the wages of labour necessarily increases

the price of many commodities; by increasing that part of it

which resolves itself into wages; and so far tends to diminish

their consumption both at home and abroad。 The same cause;

however; which raises the wages of labour; the increase of stock;

tends to increase its productive powers; and to make a smaller

quantity of labour produce a greater quantity of work。 The owner

of the stock which employs a great number of labourers;

necessarily endeavours; for his own advantage; to make such a

proper division and distribution of employment that they may be

enabled to produce the greatest quantity of work 

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