<SPAN name="toc127" id="toc127"></SPAN>
<SPAN name="pdf128" id="pdf128"></SPAN>
<h2><span>Chapter II. Ultimate Analysis Of Cost Of Production.</span></h2>
<SPAN name="toc129" id="toc129"></SPAN>
<h3><span>§ 1. Of Labor, the principal Element in Cost of Production.</span></h3>
<p>
The component elements of Cost of Production have
been set forth in the First Part of this
inquiry.<SPAN id="noteref_214" name="noteref_214" href="#note_214"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">214</span></span></SPAN> The principal
of them, and so much the principal as to be nearly the
sole, was found to be Labor. What the production of a thing
costs to its producer, or its series of producers, is the labor
expended in producing it. If we consider as the producer
the capitalist who makes the advances, the word Labor may
be replaced by the word Wages: what the produce costs to
him, is the wages which he has had to pay. At the first
glance, indeed, this seems to be only a part of his outlay,
since he has not only paid wages to laborers, but has likewise
provided them with tools, materials, and perhaps buildings.
These tools, materials, and buildings, however, were produced
by labor and capital; and their value, like that of the
article to the production of which they are subservient, depends
on cost of production, which again is resolvable into
labor. The cost of production of broadcloth does not wholly
consist in the wages of weavers; which alone are directly
paid by the cloth-manufacturer. It consists also of the wages
of spinners and wool-combers, and, it may be added, of shepherds,
all of which the clothier has paid for in the price of
yarn. It consists, too, of the wages of builders and brick-makers,
which he has reimbursed in the contract price of
erecting his factory. It partly consists of the wages of machine-makers,
iron-founders, and miners. And to these must
be added the wages of the carriers who transported any of
the means and appliances of the production to the place
where they were to be used, and the product itself to the
place where it is to be sold.</p>
<span style="font-size: 90%">
Confirmation is here given, in the above words, of the
opinion that, in Mr. Mill's mind, Cost of Production was looked
at wholly from the stand-point of the capitalist, and was identical
with Cost of Labor to the capitalist.
</span>
<p>
The value of commodities, therefore, depends principally
(we shall presently see whether it depends solely) on the
quantity of labor required for their production, including
in the idea of production that of conveyance to the market.
But since the cost of production to the capitalist is not labor
but wages, and since wages may be either greater or less, the
quantity of labor being the same, it would seem that the
value of the product can not be determined solely by the
quantity of labor, but by the quantity together with the remuneration,
and that values must partly depend on wages.</p>
<p>
Now the relation of one thing to another can not be altered
by any cause which affects them both alike. A rise or fall of
general wages is a fact which affects all commodities in the
same manner, and therefore affords no reason why they should
exchange for each other in one rather than in another proportion.
Though there is no such thing as a general rise of
values, there is such a thing as a general rise of prices. As
soon as we form distinctly the idea of values, we see that
high or low wages can have nothing to do with them; but
that high wages make high prices, is a popular and widely
spread opinion. The whole amount of error involved in this
proposition can only be seen thoroughly when we come to
the theory of money; at present we need only say that if it
be true, there can be no such thing as a real rise of wages;
for if wages could not rise without a proportional rise of the
price of everything, they could not, for any substantial purpose,
rise at all. It must be remembered, too, that general
high prices, even supposing them to exist, can be of no use
to a producer or dealer, considered as such; for, if they increase
his money returns, they increase in the same degree
all his expenses. There is no mode in which capitalists can
compensate themselves for a high cost of labor, through any
action on values or prices. It can not be prevented from
taking its effect in low profits. If the laborers really get
more, that is, get the produce of more labor, a smaller percentage
must remain for profit.</p>
<SPAN name="toc130" id="toc130"></SPAN>
<SPAN name="Book_III_Chapter_II_Section_2" id="Book_III_Chapter_II_Section_2" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN>
<h3><span>§ 2. Wages affect Values, only if different in different employments; </span><span class="tei tei-q" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-size: 120%">“</span><span style="font-size: 120%">non-competing groups.</span><span style="font-size: 120%">”</span></span></h3>
<p>
Although, however, <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">general</span></em> wages, whether high or
low, do not affect values, yet if wages are higher in one employment
than another, or if they rise or fall permanently in
one employment without doing so in others, these inequalities
do really operate upon values. Things, for example,
which are made by skilled labor, exchange for the produce
of a much greater quantity of unskilled labor, for no reason
but because the labor is more highly paid. We have before
remarked that the difficulty of passing from one class of employments
to a class greatly superior has hitherto caused the
wages of all those classes of laborers who are separated from
one another by any very marked barrier to depend more
than might be supposed upon the increase of the population
of each class considered separately, and that the inequalities
in the remuneration of labor are much greater than could
exist if the competition of the laboring people generally
could be brought practically to bear on each particular employment.
It follows from this that wages in different employments
do not rise or fall simultaneously, but are, for
short and sometimes even for long periods, nearly independent
of one another. All such disparities evidently alter the
<em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">relative</span></em> cost of production of different commodities, and will
therefore be completely represented in their natural or average
value.</p>
<span style="font-size: 90%">
This is again a clear recognition of the influence of Mr.
Cairnes's theory of </span><span class="tei tei-q"><span style="font-size: 90%">“</span><span style="font-size: 90%">non-competing groups.</span><span style="font-size: 90%">”</span></span><SPAN id="noteref_215" name="noteref_215" href="#note_215"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">215</span></span></SPAN>
<p>
Wages do enter into value. The relative <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">wages</span></em> of the
labor necessary for producing different commodities affect
their value just as much as the relative <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">quantities</span></em> of labor.
It is true, the absolute wages paid have no effect upon values;
but neither has the absolute quantity of labor. If that were
to vary simultaneously and equally in all commodities, values
would not be affected. If, for instance, the general efficiency
of all labor were increased, so that all things without exception
could be produced in the same quantity as before with a
smaller amount of labor, no trace of this general diminution
of cost of production would show itself in the values of commodities.</p>
<SPAN name="toc131" id="toc131"></SPAN>
<h3><span>§ 3. Profits an element in Cost of Production.</span></h3>
<p>
Thus far of labor or wages as an element in cost of
production. But in our analysis, in the First Book, of the
requisites of production, we found that there is another necessary
element in it besides labor. There is also capital; and
this being the result of abstinence, the produce, or its value,
must be sufficient to remunerate, not only all the labor required,
but the abstinence of all the persons by whom the
remuneration of the different classes of laborers was advanced.
The return from abstinence is Profit. And profit,
we have also seen, is not exclusively the surplus remaining
to the capitalist after he has been compensated for his outlay,
but forms, in most cases, no unimportant part of the outlay
itself. The flax-spinner, part of whose expenses consists of
the purchase of flax and of machinery, has had to pay, in
their price, not only the wages of the labor by which the flax
was grown and the machinery made, but the profits of the
grower, the flax-dresser, the miner, the iron-founder, and the
machine-maker. All these profits, together with those of
the spinner himself, were again advanced by the weaver, in
the price of his material—linen yarn; and along with them
the profits of a fresh set of machine-makers, and of the miners
and iron-workers who supplied them with their metallic
material. All these advances form part of the cost of production
of linen. Profits, therefore, as well as wages, enter
into the cost of production which determines the value of
the produce.</p>
<SPAN name="toc132" id="toc132"></SPAN>
<SPAN name="Book_III_Chapter_II_Section_4" id="Book_III_Chapter_II_Section_4" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN>
<h3><span>§ 4. Cost of Production properly represented by sacrifice, or cost, to the Laborer as well as to the Capitalist; the relation of this conception to the Cost of Labor.</span></h3>
<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em"><span style="font-size: 90%">
In discussing Cost of Labor (</span><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-size: 90%; font-style: italic">supra</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%">, pp.
</span><SPAN href="#Pg225" class="tei tei-ref"><span style="font-size: 90%">225</span></SPAN><span style="font-size: 90%">, </span><SPAN href="#Pg226" class="tei tei-ref"><span style="font-size: 90%">226</span></SPAN><span style="font-size: 90%">), Mr.
Mill found that the advances of the immediate producer consisted
</span><span style="font-size: 90%">
not only of wages, but also of tools, materials, etc., in the
price of which he was including the profits of an auxiliary capitalist
who advanced the capital for making these tools, etc.
But, then, if a line of division were to be passed down through
all these advances, separating wages from profits, he urged that,
if all the capitalists (auxiliary and immediate both) were one,
all the advances of the capitalist might be considered as wages.
Profits did not form a part of the outlay to the capitalists in
the former analysis. And this seems correct enough. Now,
however, he suggests that the outlay of the immediate producers
should include the profit of the auxiliary capitalist. More
than this, Mr. Mill now includes in cost to the capitalist the
profit of the immediate capitalist. For example, in his illustration
of the manufacture of linen, he includes not merely
the profit of the auxiliary capital engaged in spinning and
weaving, but the profit of the immediate and last capitalist, the
linen-manufacturer, also. This includes in the cost of producing
an article a profit not realized until after the commodity is
produced.
</span></p>
<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em"><span style="font-size: 90%">
It is now time to give a more correct idea of cost of production.
Every one admits, for example, that the </span><span class="tei tei-q"><span style="font-size: 90%">“</span><span style="font-size: 90%">cost of production</span><span style="font-size: 90%">”</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%">
of wheat is less in the United States than in England. If,
for instance, three men with a capital of one hundred dollars may
on a plot of ground, A, in the United States produce one hundred
bushels of wheat, it will happen that the same men and capital
will only produce sixty bushels on ground, B, in England.
</span></p>
<p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 0.90em"></p>
<ANTIMG src="images/cost-of-production.png" width-obs="700" height-obs="223" alt="Illustration: Cost of Production." />
<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em"><span style="font-size: 90%">
In ordinary language, then, we say that the cost of production
is greater in England than in the United States, because the
same labor and capital here produce one hundred bushels for
sixty in England; or, what amounts to the same thing, that less
labor and capital could produce sixty bushels in the United
States than sixty bushels in England. If we suppose that one
fourth of the crop is profit, and three fourths is assigned to
wages in both countries, then in the United States the one
hundred dollars of capital receives twenty-five bushels of profit,
while in England it receives only fifteen; and the three men
receive as wages in the United States twenty-five bushels each,
while in England they receive only fifteen bushels each. The
first important induction to be made is that where cost of production
</span><span style="font-size: 90%">
is low, wages and profits are high. The high productiveness
of extractive industries in the United States is the
reason why wages and profits are higher here than in older
countries.
</span></p>
<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em"><span style="font-size: 90%">
Now the second important question is, Is cost of production
made up of wages and profits, and is it true that the cost rises
with a rise of wages and profits? Certainly not. Wages and
profits are both higher in the United States than in England,
but no one is so absurd as to say that the cost of production of
wheat (as above explained) is higher here than there. It is
exactly because cost of production of wheat is lower in the
United States that wages and profits measured in wheat are
higher here than in England. Therefore, it can not be granted,
as Mr. Mill expounds the doctrine, that cost of production is
made up of wages and profits. When we speak of an increased
cost of production of a given article, we mean that its
production requires more labor and capital than before; and of
a decrease in cost of production, that it requires less labor and
capital than before; meaning by </span><span class="tei tei-q"><span style="font-size: 90%">“</span><span style="font-size: 90%">more labor</span><span style="font-size: 90%">”</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%"> that a given
quality of labor is exerted for a longer or shorter time, and by
</span><span class="tei tei-q"><span style="font-size: 90%">“</span><span style="font-size: 90%">more capital</span><span style="font-size: 90%">”</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%"> that a greater or less quantity of wealth abstained
from is employed for a longer or shorter time; or, in
other words, that laborers and capitalists undergo more or less
sacrifice in exertion and abstinence, respectively, to attain a
given result. This is the contribution to cost of production
made by Mr. Cairnes, and briefly defined as follows: </span><span class="tei tei-q"><span style="font-size: 90%">“</span><span style="font-size: 90%">In the
case of labor, the cost of producing a given commodity will be
represented by the number of average laborers employed in its
production—regard at the same time being had to the severity
of the work and the degree of risk it involves—multiplied by
the duration of their labors. In that of abstinence, the principle
is analogous; the sacrifice will be measured by the quantity of
wealth abstained from, taken in connection with the risk incurred,
and multiplied by the duration of the abstinence.</span><span style="font-size: 90%">”</span></span><SPAN id="noteref_216" name="noteref_216" href="#note_216"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">216</span></span></SPAN></p>
<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em"><span style="font-size: 90%">
This view of cost of production takes into consideration,
in the act of production, what Mr. Mill does not include, the
cost, or real sacrifice, to the laborer as well as to the capitalist.
It may, then, be well to state the relations of cost of production,
taken in this better sense, to value.
</span></p>
<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em"><span style="font-size: 90%">
Within competing groups, where there is free choice for
labor and capital to select the most remunerative occupations,
the hardest and most disagreeable employments will be
best paid, and the wages and profits will be in proportion to
the sacrifice involved in each case. If so, the amount paid
in wages and profits represents the sacrifices in each case.
</span><span style="font-size: 90%">
Now, the aggregate product of an industry is the source from
which is drawn its wages and profits: the aggregate wages
and profits, therefore, must vary with the value of the total
product. If the total value depart from the sum hitherto sufficient
to pay the given wages and profits, then some will be
paid proportionally less than their sacrifice. The value of a
commodity, therefore, within the competing group, must conform
to the costs of production. If, for example (</span><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-size: 90%; font-style: italic">a</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%">), the value
at any time were such as not to give the laborer the usual
equivalent for his sacrifice, he would change his employment
to another within the group where he could get it; if (</span><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-size: 90%; font-style: italic">b</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%">) the
share of the capitalist were at any time insufficient to give him
the usual reward for his abstinence, he would change the investment
of his capital. Therefore, within such limits as allow a
free competition of labor and capital, value must conform itself
to cost of production.
</span></p>
<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em"><span style="font-size: 90%">
Not so, however, with the products of non-competing industrial
groups. As shown by Mr. Mill, labor does not pass freely
from one employment to another; and it must be said that
capital does not either, although vastly more ready to move
than labor. In a large and thinly settled country capital does
not move freely over the whole area of industry; if it did, different
rates of profit would not prevail, as we all know they
do, in the United States. Now, as before stated, the total
value of the commodities resulting from the exertions of each
group of producers is the source from which wages and profits
are drawn. The aggregate wages and profits in each industry
will vary with the value of the aggregate products. But this
total value depends upon what it will exchange for of the
products of other groups; that is, this value depends on the
reciprocal demand of one group for the commodities of the
other groups, as compared with the demand of the other groups
for its products. For example, although cost of production is
low in group A, if the demand from outside groups were to be
strong, the exchange value of A's products would rise, and A
would get more of other goods in exchange; that is, the total
produce is large, but a second increment, arising from a higher
exchange value, is to be shared among A's laborers and capitalists.
A few years ago, about 1878-1879, the value of wheat in
the United States rose because of the increased demand from
Europe, where the harvests had been unusually deficient.
There had been no falling off in the productiveness of the
farming industry of the United States to cause the increased
price; but the relative demand of other industrial groups for
wheat, the product of the farming industry, raised the exchange
value of wheat, and so increased the industrial rewards
of those engaged as laborers and capitalists in farming. So
</span><span style="font-size: 90%">
it is to be concluded that since there is no free movement of
labor and capital between non-competing groups, wages and
profits may constantly remain at rates which are not in correspondence
with the actual sacrifice, or cost, to labor and capital
in different groups; hence, their products do not exchange for
each other in proportion to their costs of production. Reciprocal
demand is the law of their value.
</span></p>
<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em"><span style="font-size: 90%">
It will be said, at once, that the foregoing conception of
cost of production is entirely opposed to the language of practical
men of affairs. They constantly speak of higher or lower
wages as increasing their cost of production, or as affecting
their ability to compete with foreigners. So universal a usage
implies a foundation of truth which demands attention. Wages
do represent cost to the capitalist, that is, the chief part of the
outlay he makes in order to get a given return; but we have
already seen this, and, in the language of Political Economy,
termed it </span><span class="tei tei-q"><span style="font-size: 90%">“</span><span style="font-size: 90%">cost of labor</span><span style="font-size: 90%">”</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%"> to the capitalist. When the business
world use the phrase cost of production, they use it in the
sense of cost of labor, as hitherto explained. When they are
obliged by strikers to pay more wages, they say that it increases
their </span><span class="tei tei-q"><span style="font-size: 90%">“</span><span style="font-size: 90%">cost of production,</span><span style="font-size: 90%">”</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%"> meaning the cost to them of getting
their product, and that it affects their profits. This, then,
will show that there is no objection to be urged, in its true
sense, against the phrase cost of production, arising from its
misuse in the common language of business.
</span></p>
<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em"><span style="font-size: 90%">
The real connection between the proper conception of cost
of production and cost of labor is, however, worth attention.
It touches cost of labor through that one of its elements called
</span><span class="tei tei-q"><span style="font-size: 90%">“</span><span style="font-size: 90%">efficiency of labor.</span><span style="font-size: 90%">”</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%"> The more productive an industry is, the
higher its wages and profits may be, and it is exactly at this
point that more attention should be given to the relations of
labor and capital. If productiveness can be increased, higher
wages as well as higher profits are possible. The proper understanding
of the idea that where cost of production is low
wages and profits are high, throws a flood of light on many
industrial questions in the United States. In the connection
in which it stands, as I have shown, to cost of labor, it means
that if commodities can be produced at a less sacrifice to labor
and capital by the use of machinery and new processes, higher
wages are consistent with a lower price of the given product.
It explains the fact that, owing to skill or natural resources,
labor, although paid much higher rates, can produce articles
cheaper than laborers who are less highly paid. Mr. Brassey</span><SPAN id="noteref_217" name="noteref_217" href="#note_217"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">217</span></span></SPAN><span style="font-size: 90%">
has pointed out that English wages are higher than on the
Continent; and yet England, through low cost of production,
</span><span style="font-size: 90%">
owing to skill, natural resources, etc., can produce so much
more of commodities for a given outlay that (while keeping
her usual rate of profit) she can generally undersell her competitors
who employ cheaper labor. The same observations
apply to the United States; but the question of foreign competition
will be further discussed (</span><SPAN href="#Book_III_Chapter_XX" class="tei tei-ref"><span style="font-size: 90%">Book III, Chap. XX</span></SPAN><span style="font-size: 90%">)
after we have studied international trade and values.
</span></p>
<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em">
<span class="tei tei-q"><span style="font-size: 90%">“</span><span style="font-size: 90%">And here it may be well to state precisely what is to be
understood by a </span><span class="tei tei-q"><span style="font-size: 90%">‘</span><span style="font-size: 90%">fluctuation of the market,</span><span style="font-size: 90%">’</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%"> as distinguished
from those changes of normal price which we have been considering.
Normal price, as we have seen, is governed, according
to the circumstances of the case [as to whether there is
free industrial competition or not], by one or other of two
causes—cost of production and reciprocal demand. A change
in normal price, therefore, is a change which is the consequence
of an alteration in one or other of these conditions. So long
as the determining condition—be it cost of production or reciprocal
demand—remains constant, the normal price must be considered
as remaining constant; but, the normal price remaining
constant, the market price (which, as we have seen, depends
on the opinion of dealers respecting the state of supply and
demand in relation to the particular article) may undergo a
change—may deviate, that is to say, either upward or downward
from the normal level. Such changes of price, occurring
while the permanent conditions of production remain unaffected,
can only be temporary, calling into action, as they do,
forces which at once tend to restore the normal state of things:
they may therefore be properly described as </span><span class="tei tei-q"><span style="font-size: 90%">‘</span><span style="font-size: 90%">fluctuations of
the market.</span><span style="font-size: 90%">’</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%"> ”</span></span><SPAN id="noteref_218" name="noteref_218" href="#note_218"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">218</span></span></SPAN></p>
<SPAN name="toc133" id="toc133"></SPAN>
<h3><span>§ 5. When profits vary from Employment to Employment, or are spread over unequal lengths of Time, they affect Values accordingly.</span></h3>
<p>
Value, however, being purely relative, can not depend
upon absolute profits, no more than upon absolute
wages, but upon relative profits only. High general profits
can not, any more than high general wages, be a cause of
high values, because high general values are an absurdity and
a contradiction. In so far as profits enter into the cost of
production of all things, they can not affect the value of any.
It is only by entering in a greater degree into the cost of
production of some things than of others, that they can have
any influence on value.</p>
<p>
Profits, however, may enter more largely into the conditions
of production of one commodity than of another, even
though there be no difference in the <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">rate</span></em> of profit between
the two employments. The one commodity may be called
upon to yield a profit during a longer period of time than
the other. The example by which this case is usually illustrated
is that of wine. Suppose a quantity of wine and a
quantity of cloth, made by equal amounts of labor, and that
labor paid at the same rate. The cloth does not improve by
keeping; the wine does. Suppose that, to attain the desired
quality, the wine requires to be kept five years. The producer
or dealer will not keep it, unless at the end of five
years he can sell it for as much more than the cloth as
amounts to five years' profit, accumulated at compound interest.
The wine and the cloth were made by the same original
outlay. Here, then, is a case in which the natural values,
relatively to one another, of two commodities, do not conform
to their cost of production alone, but to their cost of production
<em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">plus</span></em> something else—unless, indeed, for the sake of
generality in the expression, we include the profit which the
wine-merchant foregoes during the five years, in the cost of
production of the wine, looking upon it as a kind of additional
outlay, over and above his other advances, for which
outlay he must be indemnified at last.</p>
<span style="font-size: 90%">
Regarding cost of production as the amounts of labor and
abstinence required in production, and not as Mr. Mill regards
it, as the amounts of wages and profits, the above is simply a
case where, in the production of wine, there is a longer </span><em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-size: 90%; font-style: italic">duration
of the abstinence</span></em><span style="font-size: 90%"> than in the production of cloth. If there
is a free movement of labor and capital between the two industries,
they will exchange for each other in proportion to the
sacrifices involved; so that the wine would exchange for more
of cloth, because there was more sacrifice undergone. The
same explanation also holds good in the following illustration:
</span>
<p>
All commodities made by machinery are assimilated, at
least approximately, to the wine in the preceding example.
In comparison with things made wholly by immediate labor,
profits enter more largely into their cost of production.
Suppose two commodities, A and B, each requiring a year
for its production, by means of a capital which we will on
this occasion denote by money, and suppose it to be £1,000.
A is made wholly by immediate labor, the whole £1,000
being expended directly in wages. B is made by means
of labor which cost £500 and a machine which cost £500,
and the machine is worn out by one year's use. The two
commodities will be of exactly the same value, which, if
computed in money, and if profits are 20 per cent per annum,
will be £1,200. But of this £1,200, in the case of A,
only £200, or one sixth, is profit; while in the case of B
there is not only the £200, but as much of £500 (the price
of the machine) as consisted of the profits of the machine-maker;
which, if we suppose the machine also to have taken
a year for its production, is again one sixth. So that in the
case of A only one sixth of the entire return is profit, while
in B the element of profit comprises not only a sixth of the
whole, but an additional sixth of a large part.</p>
<p>
From the unequal proportion in which, in different employments,
profits enter into the advances of the capitalist,
and therefore into the returns required by him, two consequences
follow in regard to value. (1). One is, that commodities
do not exchange in the ratio simply of the quantities of
labor required to produce them; not even if we allow for
the unequal rates at which different kinds of labor are permanently
remunerated.</p>
<p>
(2.) A second consequence is, that every rise or fall of general
profits will have an effect on values. Not, indeed, by
raising or lowering them generally (which, as we have so often
said, is a contradiction and an impossibility), but by altering
the proportion in which the values of things are affected by
the unequal lengths of time for which profit is due. When
two things, though made by equal labor, are of unequal value
because the one is called upon to yield profit for a greater
number of years or months than the other, this difference of
value will be greater when profits are greater, and less when
they are less. The wine which has to yield five years' profit
more than the cloth will surpass it in value much more if
profits are forty per cent than if they are only twenty.</p>
<p>
It follows from this that even a general rise of wages,
when it involves a real increase in the cost of labor, does in
some degree influence values. It does not affect them in the
manner vulgarly supposed, by raising them universally; but
an increase in the cost of labor lowers profits, and therefore
lowers in natural values the things into which profits enter
in a greater proportion than the average, and raises those
into which they enter in a less proportion than the average.
All commodities in the production of which machinery bears
a large part, especially if the machinery is very durable, are
lowered in their relative value when profits fall; or, what
is equivalent, other things are raised in value relatively to
them. This truth is sometimes expressed in a phraseology
more plausible than sound, by saying that a rise of wages
raises the value of things made by labor in comparison with
those made by machinery. But things made by machinery,
just as much as any other things, are made by labor—namely,
the labor which made the machinery itself—the only difference
being that profits enter somewhat more largely into the
production of things for which machinery is used, though
the principal item of the outlay is still labor.</p>
<SPAN name="toc134" id="toc134"></SPAN>
<h3><span>§ 6. Occasional Elements in Cost of Production; taxes and ground-rent.</span></h3>
<p>
Cost of Production consists of several elements, some
of which are constant and universal, others occasional. The
universal elements of cost of production are the wages of
the labor, and the profits of the capital. The occasional elements
are taxes, and any extra cost occasioned by a scarcity
value of some of the requisites. Besides the natural and
necessary elements in cost of production—labor and profits—there
are others which are artificial and casual, as, for instance,
a tax. The taxes on hops and malt are as much a
part of the cost of production of those articles as the wages
of the laborers. The expenses which the law imposes, as
well as those which the nature of things imposes, must be
reimbursed with the ordinary profit from the value of the
produce, or the things will not continue to be produced.
But the influence of taxation on value is subject to the same
conditions as the influence of wages and of profits. It is not
general taxation, but differential taxation, that produces the
effect. If all productions were taxed so as to take an equal
percentage from all profits, relative values would be in no
way disturbed. If only a few commodities were taxed, their
value would rise; and if only a few were left untaxed, their
value would fall.</p>
<p>
But the case in which scarcity value chiefly operates in
adding to cost of production is the case of natural agents.
These, when unappropriated, and to be had for the taking,
do not enter into the cost of production, save to the extent
of the labor which may be necessary to fit them for use.
Even when appropriated, they do not (as we have already
seen) bear a value from the mere fact of the appropriation,
but only from scarcity—that is, from limitation of supply.
But it is equally certain that they often do bear a scarcity
value.</p>
<p>
No one can deny that rent sometimes enters into cost of
production [of other than agricultural products]. If I buy
or rent a piece of ground, and build a cloth-manufactory on
it, the ground-rent forms legitimately a part of my expenses
of production, which must be repaid by the product. And
since all factories are built on ground, and most of them in
places where ground is peculiarly valuable, the rent paid for
it must, on the average, be compensated in the values of all
things made in factories. In what sense it is true that rent
does not enter into the cost of production or affect the value
of <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">agricultural</span></em> produce will be shown in the succeeding
chapter.</p>
<span style="font-size: 90%">
These occasional elements in cost of production, such as
taxes, insurance, ground-rent, etc., are to be considered as just
so much of an increase in the quantity of capital required for
the operation involved in the particular production, and, consequently,
result in an increased cost of production, because
there is either more abstinence, or abstinence for a longer time,
to be rewarded. These elements, therefore, if they are not universal
(or common to all articles), will affect the exchange value
of commodities, wherever there is a free competition.
</span>
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