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On
Wages
by David Ricardo
Labor, like all other things which are purchased
and sold, and which may be increased or diminished
in quantity, has its natural and its market price.
The natural price of labor is that price which is
necessary to enable the laborers, one with another,
to subsist and to perpetuate their race, without
either increase or diminution.
The power of the laborer to support himself, and
the family which may be necessary to keep up the
number of laborers, does not depend on the quantity
of money which he may receive for wages, but on the
quantity of food, necessaries, and conveniences
become essential to him from habit which that money
will purchase. The natural price of labor,
therefore, depends on the price of the food,
necessaries, and conveniences required for the
support of the laborer and his family. With a rise
in the price of food and necessaries, the natural
price of labor will rise; with the fall in their
price, the natural price of labor will fall.
With the progress of society the natural price
of labor has always a tendency to rise, because one
of the principal commodities by which its natural
price is regulated has a tendency to become dearer
from the greater difficulty of producing it. As,
however, the improvements in agriculture, the
discovery of new markets, whence provisions may be
imported, may for a time counteract the tendency to
a rise in the price of necessaries, and may even
occasion their natural price to fall, so will the
same causes produce the correspondent effects on
the natural price of labor.
The natural price of all commodities, excepting
raw produce and labor, has a tendency to fall in
the progress of wealth and population; for though,
on one hand, they are enhanced in real value, from
the rise in the natural price of the raw material
of which they are made, this is more than
counterbalanced by the improvements in machinery,
by the better division and distribution of labor,
and by the increasing skill, both in science and
art, of the producers.
The market price of labor is the price which is
really paid for it, from the natural operation of
the proportion of the supply to the demand; labor
is dear when it is scarce and cheap when it is
plentiful. However much the market price of labor
may deviate from its natural price, it has, like
commodities, a tendency to conform to it.
It is when the market price of labor exceeds its
natural price that the condition of the laborers is
flourishing and happy, that he has it in his power
to command a greater proportion of the necessaries
and enjoyments of life, and therefore to rear a
healthy and numerous family. When, however, by the
encouragement which high wages give to the increase
of population, the number of laborers is increased,
wages again fall to their natural price, and indeed
from a reaction sometimes fall below it.
When the market price of labor is below its
natural price, the condition of the laborers is
most wretched: then poverty deprives them of those
comforts which custom renders absolute necessaries.
It is only after their privations have reduced
their number, or the demand for labor has
increased, that the market price of labor will rise
to its natural price, and that the laborer will
have the moderate comforts which the natural rate
of wages will afford.
Notwithstanding the tendency of wages to conform
to their natural rate, their market rate may, in an
improving society, for an indefinite period, be
constantly above it; for no sooner may the impulse
which an increased capital gives to a new demand
for labor be obeyed, than another increase of
capital may produce the same effect; and thus, if
the increase of capital be gradual and constant,
the demand for labor may give a continued stimulus
to an increase of people.
Capital is that part of the wealth of a country
which is employed in production, and consists of
food, clothing, tools, raw materials, machinery,
etc., necessary to give effect to labor.
Capital may increase in quantity at the same
time that its value rises. An addition may be made
to the food and clothing of a country at the same
time that more labor may be required to produce the
additional quantity than before; in that case not
only the quantity but the value of capital will
rise.
Or capital may increase without its value
increasing, and even while its value is actually
diminishing; not only may an addition be made to
the food and clothing of a country, but the
addition may be made by the aid of machinery,
without any increase, and even with an absolute
diminution in the proportional quantity of labor
required to produce them. The quantity of capital
may increase, while neither the whole together, nor
any part of it singly, will have a greater value
than before, but may actually have a less.
In the first case, the natural price of labor,
which always depends on the price of food,
clothing, and other necessaries, will rise; in the
second, it will remain stationary or fall; but in
both cases the market rate of wages will rise, for
in proportion to the increase of capital will be
the increase in the demand for labor; in proportion
to the work to be done will be the demand for those
who are to do it.
In both cases, too, the market price of labor
will rise above its natural price; and in both
cases it will have a tendency to conform to its
natural price, but in the first case this agreement
will be most speedily effected. The situation of
the laborer will be improved, but not much more
improved; for the increased price of food and
necessaries will absorb a large portion of his
increased wages; consequently a small supply of
labor, or a trifling increase in the population,
will soon reduce the market price to the then
increased natural price of labor.
In the second case, the condition of the laborer
will be very greatly improved; he will receive
increased money wages without having to pay any
increased price, and perhaps even a diminished
price for the commodities which he and his family
consume; and it will not be till after a great
addition has been made to the population that the
market price of labor will again sink to its then
low and reduced natural price.
Thus, then, with every improvement of society,
with every increase in its capital, the market
wages of labor will rise; but the permanence of
their rise will depend on the question whether the
natural price of labor has also risen; and this
again will depend on the rise in the natural price
of those necessaries on which the wages of labor
are expended.
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Principles
of Political Economy and Taxation, by David
Ricardo
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