wealbk04-第23部分
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in the white…herring fishery has been given (by busses or decked
vessels from twenty to eighty tons burthen); seems not so well
adapted to the situation of Scotland as to that of Holland; from
the practice of which country it appears to have been borrowed。
Holland lies at a great distance from the seas to which herrings
are known principally to resort; and can; therefore; carry on
that fishery only in decked vessels; which can carry water and
provisions sufficient for a voyage to a distant sea。 But the
Hebrides or western islands; the islands of Shetland; and the
northern and northwestern coasts of Scotland; the countries in
whose neighbourhood the herring fishery is principally carried
on; are everywhere intersected by arms of the sea; which run up a
considerable way into the land; and which; in the language of the
country; are called sea…lochs。 It is to these sea…lochs that the
herrings principally resort during the seasons in which they
visit those seas; for the visits of this and; I am assured; of
many other sorts of fish are not quite regular and constant。 A
boat fishery; therefore; seems to be the mode of fishing best
adapted to the peculiar situation of Scotland; the fishers
carrying the herrings on shore; as fast as they are taken; to be
either cured or consumed fresh。 But the great encouragement which
a bounty of thirty shillings the ton gives to the buss fishery is
necessarily a discouragement to the boat fishery; which; having
no such bounty; cannot bring its cured fish to market upon the
same terms as the buss fishery。 The boat fishery; accordingly;
which before the establishment of the buss bounty was very
considerable; and is said have employed a number of seamen not
inferior to what the buss fishery employs at present; is now gone
almost entirely to decay。 Of the former extent; however; of this
now ruined and abandoned fishery; I must acknowledge that I
cannot pretend to speak with much precision。 As no bounty was
paid upon the outfit of the boat fishery; no account was taken of
it by the officers of the customs or salt duties。
Fourthly; in many parts of Scotland; during certain seasons
of the year; herrings make no inconsiderable part of the food of
the people。 A bounty; which tended to lower their price in the
home market; might contribute a good deal to the relief of a
great number of our fellow…subjects; whose circumstances are by
no means affluent。 But the herring buss bounty contributes to no
such good purpose。 It has ruined the boat fishery; which is; by
far; the best adapted for the supply of the home market; and the
additional bounty of 2s。 8d。 the barrel upon exportation carries
the greater part; more than two…thirds; of the produce of the
buss fishery abroad。 Between thirty and forty years ago; before
the establishment of the buss bounty; fifteen shillings the
barrel; I have been assured; was the common price of white
herrings。 Between ten and fifteen years ago; before the boat
fishery was entirely ruined; the price is said to have run from
seventeen to twenty shillings the barrel。 For these last five
years; it has; at an average; been at twenty…five shillings the
barrel。 This high price; however; may have been owing to the real
scarcity of the herrings upon the coast of Scotland。 I must
observe; too; that the cask or barrel; which is usually sold with
the herrings; and of which the price is included in all the
foregoing prices; has; since the commencement of the American
war; risen to about double its former price; or from about three
shillings to about six shillings。 I must likewise observe that
the accounts I have received of the prices of former times have
been by no means quite uniform and consistent; and an old man of
great accuracy and experience has assured me that; more than
fifty years ago; a guinea was the usual price of a barrel of good
merchantable herrings; and this; I imagine; may still be looked
upon as the average price。 All accounts; however; I think; agree
that the price has not been lowered in the home market in
consequence of the buss bounty。
When the undertakers of fisheries; after such liberal
bounties have been bestowed upon them; continue to sell their
commodity at the same; or even at a higher price than they were
accustomed to do before; it might be expected that their profits
should be very great; and it is not improbable that those of some
individuals may have been so。 In general; however; I have every
reason to believe they have been quite otherwise。 The usual
effect of such bounties is to encourage rash undertakers to
adventure in a business which they do not understand; and what
they lose by their own negligence and ignorance more than
compensates all that they can gain by the utmost liberality of
government。 In 1750; by the same act; which first gave the bounty
of thirty shillings the ton for the encouragement of the
white…herring fishery (the 23rd George II; c。 24); a joint…stock
company was erected; with a capital of five hundred thousand
pounds; to which the subscribers (over and above all other
encouragements; the tonnage bounty just now mentioned; the
exportation bounty of two shillings and eightpence the barrel;
the delivery of both British and foreign salt duty free) were;
during the space of fourteen years; for every hundred pounds
which they subscribed and paid in to the stock of the society;
entitled to three pounds a year; to be paid by the
receiver…general of the customs in equal half…yearly payments。
Besides this great company; the residence of whose governor and
directors was to be in London; it was declared lawful to erect
different fishing…chambers in all the different outports of the
kingdom; provided a sum not less than ten thousand pounds was
subscribed into the capital of each; to be managed at its own
risk; and for its own profit and loss。 The same annuity; and the
same encouragements of all kinds; were given to the trade of
those inferior chambers as to that of the great company。 The
subscription of the great company was soon filled up; and several
different fishing…chambers were erected in the different outports
of the kingdom。 In spite of all these encouragements; almost all
those different companies; both great and small; lost either the
whole; or the greater part of their capitals; scarce a vestige
now remains of any of them; and the white…herring fishery is now
entirely; or almost entirely; carried on by private adventurers。
If any particular manufacture was necessary; indeed; for the
defence of the society; it might not always be prudent to depend
upon our neighbours for the supply; and if such manufacture could
not otherwise be supported at home; it might not be unreasonable
that all the other branches of industry should be taxed in order
to support it。 The bounties upon the exportation of British…made
sailcloth and British…made gunpowder may; perhaps; both be
vindicated upon this principle。
But though it can very seldom be reasonable to tax the
industry of the great body of the people in order to support that
of some particular class of manufacturers; yet in the wantonness
of great prosperity; when the public enjoys a greater revenue
than it knows well what to do with; to give such bounties to
favourite manufactures may; perhaps; be as natural as to incur
any other idle expense。 In public as well as in private expenses;
great wealth may; perhaps; frequently be admitted as an apology
for great folly。 But there must surely be something more than
ordinary absurdity in continuing such profusion in times of
general difficulty and distress。
What is called a bounty is sometimes no more than a
drawback; and consequently is not liable to the same objections
as what is properly a bounty。 The bounty; for example; upon
refined sugar exported may be considered as a drawback of the
duties upon the brown and muscovado sugars from which it is made。
The bounty upon wrought silk exported; a drawback of the duties
upon raw and thrown silk imported。 The bounty upon gunpowder
exported; a drawback of the duties upon brimstone and saltpetre
imported。 In the language of the customs those allowances only
are called drawbacks which are given upon goods exported in the
same form in which they are imported。 When that form has been so
altered by manufacture of any kind as to come under a new
denomination; they are called bounties。
Premiums given by the public to artists and manufacturers
who excel in their particular occupations are not liable to the
same objections as bounties。 By encouraging extraordinary
dexterity and ingenuity; they serve to keep up the emulation of
the workmen actually employed in those respective occupations;
and are not considerable enough to turn towards any one of them a
greater share of the capital of the country than what would go to
it of its own accord。 Their tendency is not to overturn the
natural balance of employments; but to render the work which is
done in each as perfect and complete as possible。 The expense of
premiums; besides; is very trifling; that of bounties very great。
The bounty upon corn alone has sometimes cost the public in one
year more than three hundred thousand pounds。
DIGRESSION CONCERNING THE CORN TRADE AND CORN LAWS
I cannot conclude this chapter concerning bounties without
observing that the praises which have been bestowed upon the law
which establishes the bounty upon the exportation of corn; and
upon that system of regulations which is connected with it; are
altogether unmerited。 A particular examination of the nature of
the corn trade; and of the principal British laws which relate to
it。 will sufficiently demonstrate the truth of this assertion。
The great importance of this subject must justify the length of
the digression。
The trade of the corn merchant is composed of four different
branches; which; though they may sometimes be all carried on by
the same person; are in their own nature four separate and
distinct trades。 These are; first; the trade of the inlan