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list2-第63部分
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consumption; because; otherwise; not only would the internal
productive power be weakened; but the object of raising revenue be
defeated。
Measures of protection are justifiable only for the purpose of
furthering and protecting the internal manufacturing power; and
only in the case of nations which through an extensive and compact
territory; large population; possession of natural resources; far
advanced agriculture; a high degree of civilisation and political
development; are qualified to maintain an equal rank with the
principal agricultural manufacturing commercial nations; with the
greatest naval and military powers。
Protection can be afforded; either by the prohibition of
certain manufactured articles; or by rates of duty which amount
wholly; or at least partly; to prohibition; or by moderate import
duties。 None of these kinds of protection are invariably beneficial
or invariably objectionable; and it depends on the special
circumstances of the nation and on the condition of its industry
which of these is the right one to be applied to it。
War exercises a great influence on the selection of the precise
system of protection; inasmuch as it effects a compulsory
prohibitive system。 In time of war; exchange between the
belligerent parties ceases; and every nation must endeavour;
without regard to its economical conditions; to be sufficient to
itself。 Hence; on the one hand; in the less advanced manufacturing
nations commercial industry; on the other hand; in the most
advanced manufacturing nation agricultural production; becomes
stimulated in an extraordinary manner; indeed to such a degree that
it appears advisable to the less advanced manufacturing nation
(especially if war has continued for several years) to allow the
exclusion which war has occasioned of those manufactured articles
in which it cannot yet freely compete with the most advanced
manufacturing nation; to continue for some time during peace。
France and Germany were in this condition after the general
peace。 If in 1815 France had allowed English competition; as
Germany; Russia; and North America did; she would also have
experienced the same fate; the greatest part of her manufactories
which had sprung up during the war would have come to grief; the
progress which has since been made in all branches of manufacture;
in improving the internal means of transport; in foreign commerce;
in steam river and sea navigation; in the increase in the value of
land (which; by the way; has doubled in value during this time in
France); in the augmentation of population and of the State's
revenues; could not have been hoped for。 The manufactories of
France at that time were still in their childhood; the country
possessed but few canals; the mines had been but little worked;
political convulsions and wars had not yet permitted considerable
capital to accumulate; sufficient technical cultivation to exist;
a sufficient number of really qualified workmen or an industrial
and enterprising spirit to have been called into existence; the
mind of the nation was still turned more towards war than towards
the arts of peace; the small capital which a state of war permitted
to accumulate; still flowed principally into agriculture; which had
declined very much indeed。 Then; for the first time; could France
perceive what progress England had made during the war; then; for
the first time; was it possible for France to import from England
machinery; artificers; workmen; capital; and the spirit of
enterprise; then; to secure the home market exclusively for the
benefit of home industry; demanded the exertion of her best powers;
and the utilisation of all her natural resources。 The effects of
this protective policy are very evident; nothing but blind
cosmopolitanism can ignore them; or maintain that France would
have; under a policy of free competition with other nations; made
greater progress。 Does not the experience of Germany; the United
States of America; and Russia; conclusively prove the contrary?
If we maintain that the prohibitive system has been useful to
France since 1815; we do not by that contention wish to defend
either her mistakes or her excess of protection; nor the utility or
necessity of her continued maintenance of that excessive protective
policy。 It was an error for France to restrict the importation of
raw materials and agricultural products (pig…iron; coal; wool;
corn; cattle) by import duties; it would be a further error if
France; after her manufacturing power has become sufficiently
strong and established; were not willing to revert gradually to a
moderate system of protection; and by permitting a limited amount
of competition incite her manufacturers to emulation。
In regard to protective duties it is especially important to
discriminate between the case of a nation which contemplates
passing from a policy of free competition to one of protection; and
that of a nation which proposes to exchange a policy of prohibition
for one of moderate protection; in the former case the duties
imposed at first must be low; and be gradually increased; in the
latter they must be high at first and be gradually diminished。
A nation which has been formerly insufficiently protected by
customs duties; but which feels itself called upon to make greater
progress in manufactures; must first of all endeavour to develop
those manufactures which produce articles of general consumption。
In the first place the total value of such industrial products is
incomparably greater than the total value of the much more
expensive fabrics of luxury。 The former class of manufactures;
therefore; brings into motion large masses of natural; mental; and
personal productive powers; and gives by the fact that it
requires large capital inducements for considerable saving of
capital; and for bringing over to its aid foreign capital and
powers of all kinds。 The development of these branches of
manufacture thus tends powerfully to promote the increase of
population; the prosperity of home agriculture; and also especially
the increase of the trade with foreign countries; inasmuch as less
cultivated countries chiefly require manufactured goods of common
use; and the countries of temperate climates are principally
enabled by the production of these articles to carry on direct
interchange with the countries of tropical climates。 A country e。g。
which trade has to import cotton yarns and cotton goods cannot
carry on direct with Egypt; Louisiana; or Brazil; because it cannot
supply those countr
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