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      <p>A DISCOURSE ON POLITICAL ECONOMY by Jean Jacques Rousseau1755THE word Economy, or OEconomy, is derived from oikos, a house, andnomos, law, and meant originally only the wise and legitimate governmentof the house for the common good of the whole family. The meaning of theterm was then extended to the government of that great family, theState. To distinguish these two senses of the word, the latter is calledgeneral or political economy, and the former domestic or particulareconomy. The first only is discussed in the present discourse.Even if there were as close an analogy as many authors maintain betweenthe State and the family, it would not follow that the rules of conductproper for one of these societies would be also proper for the other.They differ too much in extent to be regulated in the same manner; andthere will always be a great difference between domestic government, inwhich a father can see everything for himself, and civil government,where the chief sees hardly anything save through the eyes of others. Toput both on an equality in this respect, the talents, strength, and allthe faculties of the father would have to increase in proportion to thesize of his family, and the soul of a powerful monarch would have to be,to that of an ordinary man, as the extent of his empire is to that of aprivate person&apos;s estate.But how could the government of the State be like that of the family,when the basis on which they rest is so different? The father beingphysically stronger than his children, his paternal authority, as longas they need his protection, may be reasonably said to be established bynature. But in the great family, all the members of which are naturallyequal, the political authority, being purely arbitrary as far as itsinstitution is concerned, can be founded only on conventions, and theMagistrate can have no authority over the rest, except by virtue of thelaws. The duties of a father are dictated to him by natural feelings,and in a manner that seldom allows him to neglect them. For rulers thereis no such principle, and they are really obliged to the people only bywhat they themselves have promised to do, and the people have thereforea right to require of them. Another more important difference is thatsince the children have nothing but what they receive from their father,it is plain that all the rights of property belong to him, or emanatefrom him; but quite the opposite is the case in the great family, wherethe general administration is established only to secure individualproperty, which is antecedent to it. The principal object of the work ofthe whole house is to preserve and increase the patrimony of the father,in order that he may be able some day to distribute it among hischildren without impoverishing them; whereas the wealth of the exchequeris only a means, often ill understood, of keeping the individuals inpeace and plenty. In a word, the little family is destined to beextinguished, and to resolve itself some day into several families of asimilar nature; but the great family, being constituted to endure forever in the same condition, need not, like the small one, increase forthe purpose of multiplying, but need only maintain itself; and it caneasily be proved that any increase does it more harm than good.In the family, it is clear, for several reasons which lie in its verynature, that the father ought to command. In the first place, theauthority ought not to be equally divided between father and mother; thegovernment must be single, and in every division of opinion there mustbe one preponderant voice to decide. Secondly, however lightly we mayregard the disadvantages peculiar to women, yet, as they necessarilyoccasion intervals of inaction, this is a sufficient reason forexcluding them from this supreme authority: for when the balance isperfectly even, a straw is enough to turn the scale. Besides, thehusband ought to be able to superintend his wife&apos;s conduct, because itis of importance for him to be assured that the children, whom he isobliged to acknowledge and maintain, belong to no one but himself.Thirdly, children should be obedient to their father, at first ofnecessity, and afterwards from gratitude: after having had their wantssatisfied by him during one half of their lives, they ought toconsecrate the other half to providing for his. Fourthly, servants owehim their services in exchange for the provision he makes for them,though they may break off the bargain as soon as it ceases to suit them.I say nothing here of slavery, because it is contrary to nature, andcannot be authorised by any right or law.There is nothing of all this in political society, in which the chief isso far from having any natural interest in the happiness of theindividuals, that it is not uncommon for him to seek his own in theirmisery. If the magistracy is hereditary, a community of men is oftengoverned by a child. If it be elective, innumerable inconveniences arisefrom such election; while in both cases all the advantages of paternityare lost. If you have but a single ruler, you lie at the discretion of amaster who has no reason to love you: and if you have several, you mustbear at once their tyranny and their divisions. In a word, abuses areinevitable and their consequences fatal in every society where thepublic interest and the laws have no natural force, and are perpetuallyattacked by personal interest and the passions of the ruler and themembers.Although the functions of the father of a family and those of the chiefmagistrate ought to make for the same object, they must do so in suchdifferent ways, and their duty and rights are so essentially distinct,that we cannot confound them without forming very false ideas about thefundamental laws of society, and falling into errors which are fatal tomankind. In fact, if the voice of nature is the best counsellor to whicha father can listen in the discharge of his duty, for the Magistrate itis a false guide, which continually prevents him from performing his,and leads him on sooner or later to the ruin of himself and of theState, if he is not restrained by the most sublime virtue. The onlyprecaution necessary for the father of a family is to guard himselfagainst depravity, and prevent his natural inclinations from beingcorrupted; whereas it is these themselves which corrupt the Magistrate.In order to act aright, the first has only to consult his heart; theother becomes a traitor the moment he listens to his. Even his ownreason should be suspect to him, nor should he follow any rule otherthan the public reason, which is the law. Thus nature has made amultitude of good fathers of families; but it is doubtful whether, fromthe very beginning of the world, human wisdom has made ten men capableof governing their peers.From all that has just been said, it follows that public economy, whichis my subject, has been rightly distinguished from private economy, andthat, the State having nothing in common with the family except theobligations which their heads lie under of making both of them happy,the same rules of conduct cannot apply to both. I have considered thesefew lines enough to overthrow the detestable system which Sir RobertFilmer has endeavoured to establish in his Patriarcha; a work to whichtwo celebrated writers have done too much honour in writing books torefute it.[E1] Moreover, this error is of very long standing; forAristotle himself thought proper to combat it with arguments which maybe found in the first book of his Politics.I must here ask my readers to distinguish also between public economy,which is my subject and which I call government, and the supremeauthority, which I call Sovereignty; a distinction which consists in thefact that the latter has the right of legislation, and in certain casesbinds the body of the nation itself, while the former has only the rightof execution, and is binding only on individuals.I shall take the liberty of making use of a very common, and in somerespects inaccurate, comparison, which will serve to illustrate mymeaning.The body politic, taken individually, may be considered as an organised,living body, resembling that of man. The sovereign power represents thehead; the laws and customs are the brain, the source of the nerves andseat of the understanding, will and senses, of which the Judges andMagistrates are the organs: commerce, industry, and agriculture are themouth and stomach which prepare the common subsistence; the publicincome is the blood, which a prudent economy, in performing thefunctions of the heart, causes to distribute through the whole bodynutriment and life: the citizens are the body and the members, whichmake the machine live, move and work; and no part of this machine can bedamaged without the painful impression being at once conveyed to thebrain, if the animal is in a state of health.The life of both bodies is the self common to the whole, the reciprocalsensibility and internal correspondence of all the parts. Where thiscommunication ceases, where the formal unity disappears, and thecontiguous parts belong to one another only by juxtaposition, the man isdead, or the State is dissolved.The body politic, therefore, is also a moral being possessed of a will;and this general will, which tends always to the preservation andwelfare of the whole and of every part, and is the source of the laws,constitutes for all the members of the State, in their relations to oneanother and to it, the rule of what is just or unjust: a truth whichshows, by the way, how idly some writers have treated as theft thesubtlety prescribed to children at Sparta for obtaining their frugalrepasts, as if everything ordained by the law were not lawful.It is important to observe that this rule of justice, though certainwith regard to all citizens, may be defective with regard to foreigners.The reason is clear. The will of the State, though general in relationto its own members, is no longer so in relation to other States andtheir members, but becomes, for them, a particular and individual will,which has its rule of justice in the law of nature. This, however,enters equally into the principle here laid down; for in such a case,the great city of the world becomes the body politic, whose general willis always the law of nature, and of which the different States andpeoples are individual members. From these distinctions, applied to eachpolitical society and its members, are derived the most certain anduniversal rules, by which we can judge whether a government is good orbad, and in general of the morality of all human actions.Every political society is composed of other smaller societies ofdifferent kinds, each of which has its interests and its rules ofconduct: but those societies which everybody perceives, because theyhave an external and authorised form, are not the only ones thatactually exist in the State: all individuals who are united by a commoninterest compose as many others, either transitory or permanent, whoseinfluence is none the less real because it is less apparent, and theproper observation of whose various relations is the true knowledge ofpublic morals and manners. The influence of all these tacit or formalassociations causes, by the influence of their will, as many differentmodifications of the public will. The will of these particular societieshas always two relations; for the members of the association, it is ageneral will; for the great society, it is a particular will; and it isoften right with regard to the first object, and wrong as to the second.An individual may be a devout priest, a brave soldier, or a zealoussenator, and yet a bad citizen. A particular resolution may beadvantageous to the smaller community, but pernicious to the greater. Itis true that particular societies being always subordinate to thegeneral society in preference to others, the duty of a citizen takesprecedence of that of a senator, and a man&apos;s duty of that of a citizen:but unhappily personal interest is always found in inverse ratio toduty, and increases in proportion as the association grows narrower, andthe engagement less sacred; which irrefragably proves that the mostgeneral will is always the most just also, and that the voice of thepeople is in fact the voice of God.It does not follow that the public decisions are always equitable; theymay possibly, for reasons which I have given, not be so when they haveto do with foreigners. Thus it is not impossible that a Republic, thoughin itself well governed, should enter upon an unjust war. Nor is it lesspossible for the Council of a Democracy to pass unjust decrees, andcondemn the innocent; but this never happens unless the people isseduced by private interests, which the credit or eloquence of someclever persons substitutes for those of the State: in which case thegeneral will will be one thing, and the result of the publicdeliberation another. This is not contradicted by the case of theAthenian Democracy; for Athens was in fact not a Democracy, but a verytyrannical Aristocracy, governed by philosophers and orators. Carefullydetermine what happens in every public deliberation, and it will be seenthat the general will is always for the common good; but very oftenthere is a secret division, a tacit confederacy, which, for particularends, causes the natural disposition of the assembly to be set atnought. In such a case the body of society is really divided into otherbodies, the members of which acquire a general will, which is good andjust with respect to these new bodies, but unjust and bad with regard tothe whole, from which each is thus dismembered.We see then how easy it is, by the help of these principles, to explainthose apparent contradictions, which are noticed in the conduct of manypersons who are scrupulously honest in some respects, and cheats andscoundrels in others, who trample under foot the most sacred duties, andyet are faithful to the death to engagements that are oftenillegitimate. Thus the most depraved of men always pay some sort ofhomage to public faith; and even robbers, who are the enemies of virtuein the great society, pay some respect to the shadow of it in theirsecret caves.In establishing the general will as the first principle of publiceconomy, and the fundamental rule of government, I have not thought itnecessary to inquire seriously whether the Magistrates belong to thepeople, or the people to the Magistrates; or whether in public affairsthe good of the State should be taken into account, or only that of itsrulers. That question indeed has long been decided one way in theory,and another in practice; and in general it would be ridiculous to expectthat those who are in fact masters will prefer any other interest totheir own. It would not be improper, therefore, further to distinguishpublic economy as popular or tyrannical. The former is that of everyState, in which there reigns between the people and the rulers unity ofinterest and will: the latter will necessarily exist wherever thegovernment and the people have different interests, and, consequently,opposing wills. The rules of the latter are written at length in thearchives of history, and in the satires of Machiavelli. The rules of theformer are found only in the writings of those philosophers who ventureto proclaim the rights of humanity.I. The first and most important rule of legitimate or populargovernment, that is to say, of government whose object is the good ofthe people, is therefore, as I have observed, to follow in everythingthe general will. But to follow this will it is necessary to know it,and above all to distinguish it from the particular will, beginning withone&apos;s self: this distinction is always very difficult to make, and onlythe most sublime virtue can afford sufficient illumination for it. As,in order to will, it is necessary to be free, a difficulty no less greatthan the former arises  that of preserving at once the public libertyand the authority of government. Look into the motives which haveinduced men, once united by their common needs in a general society, tounite themselves still more intimately by means of civil societies: youwill find no other motive than that of assuring the property, life andliberty of each member by the protection of all. But can men be forcedto defend the liberty of any one among them, without trespassing on thatof others? And how can they provide for the public needs, withoutalienating the individual property of those who are forced to contributeto them? With whatever sophistry all this may be covered over, it iscertain that if any constraint can be laid on my will, I am no longerfree, and that I am no longer master of my own property, if any one elsecan lay a hand on it. This difficulty, which would have seemedinsurmountable, has been removed, like the first, by the most sublime ofall human institutions, or rather by a divine inspiration, which teachesmankind to imitate here below the unchangeable decrees of the Deity. Bywhat inconceivable art has a means been found of making men free bymaking them subject; of using in the service of the State theproperties, the persons and even the lives of all its members, withoutconstraining and without consulting them; of confining their will bytheir own admission; of overcoming their refusal by that consent, andforcing them to punish themselves, when they act against their own will?How can it be that all should obey, yet nobody take upon him to command,and that all should serve, and yet have no masters, but be the morefree, as, in apparent subjection, each loses no part of his liberty butwhat might be hurtful to that of another? These wonders are the work oflaw. It is to law alone that men owe justice and liberty. It is thissalutary organ of the will of all which establishes, in civil right, thenatural equality between men. It is this celestial voice which dictatesto each citizen the precepts of public reason, and teaches him to actaccording to the rules of his own judgment, and not to behaveinconsistently with himself. It is with this voice alone that politicalrulers should speak when they command; for no sooner does one man,setting aside the law, claim to subject another to his private will,than he departs from the state of civil society, and confronts him faceto face in the pure state of nature, in which obedience is prescribedsolely by necessity.The most pressing interest of the ruler, and even his most indispensableduty, therefore, is to watch over the observation of the laws of whichhe is the minister, and on which his whole authority is founded. At thesame time, if he exacts the observance of them from others, he is themore strongly bound to observe them himself, since he enjoys all theirfavour. For his example is of such force, that even if the people werewilling to permit him to release himself from the yoke of the law, heought to be cautious in availing himself of so dangerous a prerogative,which others might soon claim to usurp in their turn, and often use tohis prejudice. At bottom, as all social engagements are mutual innature, it is impossible for any one to set himself above the law,without renouncing its advantages; for nobody is bound by any obligationto one who claims that he is under no obligations to others. For thisreason no exemption from the law will ever be granted, on any groundwhatsoever, in a well-regulated government. Those citizens who havedeserved well of their country ought to be rewarded with honours, butnever with privileges: for the Republic is at the eve of its fall, whenany one can think it fine not to obey the laws. If the nobility or thesoldiery should ever adopt such a maxim, all would be lost beyondredemption.The power of the laws depends still more on their own wisdom than on theseverity of their administrators, and the public will derives itsgreatest weight from the reason which has dictated it. Hence Platolooked upon it as a very necessary precaution to place at the head ofall edicts a preamble, setting forth their justice and utility. In fact,the first of all laws is to respect the laws: the severity of penaltiesis only a vain resource, invented by little minds in order to substituteterror for that respect which they have no means of obtaining. It hasconstantly been observed that in those countries where legal punishmentsare most severe, they are also most frequent; so that the cruelty ofsuch punishments is a proof only of the multitude of criminals, and,punishing everything with equal severity, induces those who are guiltyto commit crimes, in order to escape being punished for their faults.But though the government be not master of the law, it is much to be itsguarantor, and to possess a thousand means of inspiring the love of it.In this alone the talent of reigning consists. With force in one&apos;shands, there is no art required to make the whole world tremble, norindeed much to gain men&apos;s hearts; for experience has long since taughtthe people to give its rulers great credit for all the evil they abstainfrom doing it, and to adore them if they do not absolutely hate it. Afool, if he be obeyed, may punish crimes as well as another: but thetrue statesman is he who knows how to prevent them: it is over thewills, even more than the actions, of his subjects that his honourablerule is extended. If he could secure that every one should act aright,he would no longer have anything to do; and the masterpiece of hislabours would be to be able to remain unemployed. It is certain, atleast, that the greatest talent a ruler can possess is to disguise hispower, in order to render it less odious, and to conduct the State sopeaceably as to make it seem to have no need of conductors.I conclude, therefore, that, as the first duty of the legislator is tomake the laws conformable to the general will, the first rule of publiceconomy is that the administration of justice should be conformable tothe laws. It will even be enough to prevent the State from being illgoverned, that the Legislator shall have provided, as he should, forevery need of place, climate, soil, custom, neighbourhood, and all therest of the relations peculiar to the people he had to institute. Notbut what there still remains an infinity of details of administrationand economy, which are left to the wisdom of the government: but thereare two infallible rules for its good conduct on these occasions; oneis, that the spirit of the law ought to decide in every particular casethat could not be foreseen; the other is that the general will, thesource and supplement of all laws, should be consulted wherever theyfail. But how, I shall be asked, can the general will be known in casesin which it has not expressed itself? Must the whole nation be assembledtogether at every unforeseen event? Certainly not. It ought the less tobe assembled, because it is by no means certain that its decision wouldbe the expression of the general will; besides, the method would beimpractible in a great people, and is hardly ever necessary where thegovernment is well-intentioned: for the rulers well know that thegeneral will is always on the side which is most favourable to thepublic interest, that is to say, most equitable; so that it is needfulonly to act justly, to be certain of following the general will. Whenthis is flouted too openly, it makes itself felt, in spite of theformidable restraint of the public authority. I shall cite the nearestpossible examples that may be followed in such cases.In China, it is the constant maxim of the Prince to decide against hisofficers, in every dispute that arises between them and the people. Ifbread be too dear in any province, the Intendant of that province isthrown into prison. If there be an insurrection in another, the Governoris dismissed, and every Mandarin answers with his head for all themischief that happens in his department. Not that these affairs do notsubsequently undergo a regular examination; but long experience hascaused the judgment to be thus anticipated. There is seldom anyinjustice to be repaired; in the meantime, the Emperor, being satisfiedthat public outcry does not arise without cause, always discovers,through the seditious clamours which he punishes, just grievances toredress.It is a great thing to preserve the rule of peace and order through allthe parts of the Republic; it is a great thing that the State should betranquil, and the law respected: but if nothing more is done, there willbe in all this more appearance than reality; for that government whichconfines itself to mere obedience will find difficulty in getting itselfobeyed. If it is good to know how to deal with men as they are, it ismuch better to make them what there is need that they should be. Themost absolute authority is that which penetrates into a man&apos;s inmostbeing, and concerns itself no less with his will than with his actions.It is certain that all peoples become in the long run what thegovernment makes them; warriors, citizens, men, when it so pleases: ormerely populace and rabble, when it chooses to make them so. Hence everyprince who despises his subjects, dishonours himself, in confessing thathe does not know how to make them worthy of respect. Make men,therefore, if you would command men: if you would have them obedient tothe laws, make them love the laws, and then they will need only to knowwhat is their duty to do it. This was the great art of ancientgovernments, in those distant times when philosophers gave laws to men,and made use of their authority only to render them wise and happy.Thence arose the numerous sumptuary laws, the many regulations ofmorals, and all the public rules of conduct which were admitted orrejected with the greatest care. Even tyrants did not forget thisimportant part of administration, but took as great pains to corrupt themorals of their slaves, as Magistrates took to correct those of theirfellow-citizens. But our modern governments, which imagine they havedone everything when they have raised money, conceive that it isunnecessary and even impossible to go a step further.II. The second essential rule of public economy is no less importantthan the first. If you would have the general will accomplished, bringall the particular wills into conformity with it; in other words, asvirtue is nothing more than this conformity of the particular wills withthe general will, establish the reign of virtue.If our politicians were less blinded by their ambition, they would seehow impossible it is for any establishment whatever to act in the spiritof its institution, unless it is guided in accordance with the law ofduty; they would feel that the greatest support of public authority liesin the hearts of the citizens, and that nothing can take the place ofmorality in the maintenance of government. It is not only upright menwho know how to administer the laws; but at bottom only good men knowhow to obey them. The man who once gets the better of remorse, will notshrink before punishments which are less severe, and less lasting, andfrom which there is at least the hope of escaping: whatever precautionsare taken, those who only require impunity in order to do wrong will notfail to find means of eluding the law, and avoiding its penalties. Inthis case, as all particular interests unite against the generalinterest, which is no longer that of any individual, public vices have agreater effect in enervating the laws than the laws in the repression ofsuch vices: so that the corruption of the people and of their rulerswill at length extend to the government, however wise it may be. Theworst of all abuses is to pay an apparent obedience to the laws, only inorder actually to break them with security. For in this case the bestlaws soon become the most pernicious; and it would be a hundred timesbetter that they should not exist. In such a situation, it is vain toadd edicts to edicts and regulations to regulations. Everything servesonly to introduce new abuses, without correcting the old. The more lawsare multiplied, the more they are despised, and all the new officialsappointed to supervise them are only so many more people to break them,and either to share the plunder with their predecessors, or to plunderapart on their own. The reward of virtue soon becomes that of robbery;the vilest of men rise to the greatest credit; the greater they are themore despicable they become; their infamy appears even in theirdignities, and their very honours dishonour them. If they buy theinfluence of the leaders or the protection of women, it is only thatthey may sell justice, duty, and the State in their turn: in themeantime, the people, feeling that its vices are not the first cause ofits misfortunes, murmurs and complains that all its misfortunes comesolely from those whom it pays to protect it from such things.It is under these circumstances that the voice of duty no longer speaksin men&apos;s hearts, and their rulers are obliged to substitute the cry ofterror, or the lure of an apparent interest, of which they subsequentlytrick their creatures. In this situation they are compelled to haverecourse to all the petty and despicable shifts which they call rules ofState and mysteries of the cabinet. All the vigour that is left in thegovernment is used by its members in ruining and supplanting oneanother, while the public business is neglected, or is transacted onlyas personal interest requires and directs. In short, the whole art ofthose great politicians lies in so mesmerising those they stand in needof, that each may think he is labouring for his own interest in workingfor theirs: I say theirs on the false supposition that it is the realinterest of rulers to annihilate a people in order to make it subject,and to ruin their own property in order to secure their possession ofit.But when the citizens love their duty, and the guardians of the publicauthority sincerely apply themselves to the fostering of that love bytheir own example and assiduity, every difficulty vanishes; andgovernment becomes so easy that it needs none of that art of darkness,whose blackness is its only mystery. Those enterprising spirits, sodangerous and so much admired, all those great ministers, whose glory isinseparable from the miseries of the people, are no longer regretted:public morality supplies what is wanting in the genius of the rulers;and the more virtue reigns, the less need there is for talent. Evenambition is better served by duty than by usurpation: when the people isconvinced that its rulers are labouring only for its happiness, itsdeference saves them the trouble of labouring to strengthen their power:and history shows us, in a thousand cases, that the authority of one whois beloved over those whom he loves is a hundred times more absolutethan all the tyranny of usurpers. This does not mean that the governmentought to be afraid to make use of its power, but that it ought to makeuse of it only in a lawful manner. We find in history a thousandexamples of pusillanimous or ambitious rulers, who were ruined by theirslackness or their pride; not one who suffered for having been strictlyjust. But we ought not to confound negligence with moderation, orclemency with weakness. To be just, it is necessary to be severe; topermit vice, when one has the right and the power to suppress it, is tobe oneself vicious.It is not enough to say to the citizens, be good; they must be taught tobe so; and even example, which is in this respect the first lesson, isnot the sole means to be employed; patriotism is the most efficacious:for, as I have said already, every man is virtuous when his particularwill is in all things conformable to the general will, and wevoluntarily will what is willed by those whom we love. It appears thatthe feeling of humanity evaporates and grows feeble in embracing allmankind, and that we cannot be affected by the calamities of Tartary orJapan, in the same manner as we are by those of European nations. It isnecessary in some degree to confine and limit our interest andcompassion in order to make it active. Now, as this sentiment can beuseful only to those with whom we have to live, it is proper that ourhumanity should confine itself to our fellow-citizens, and shouldreceive a new force because we are in the habit of seeing them, and byreason of the common interest which unites them. It is certain that thegreatest miracles of virtue have been produced by patriotism: this fineand lively feeling, which gives to the force of self-love all the beautyof virtue, lends it an energy which, without disfiguring it, makes itthe most heroic of all passions. This it is that produces so manyimmortal actions, the glory of which dazzles our feeble eyes; and somany great men, whose old-world virtues pass for fables now thatpatriotism is made mock of. This is not surprising; the transports ofsusceptible hearts appear altogether fanciful to any one who has neverfelt them; and the love of one&apos;s country, which is a hundred times morelively and delightful than the love of a mistress, cannot be conceivedexcept by experiencing it. But it is easy to perceive in every heartthat is warmed by it, in all the actions it inspires, a glowing andsublime ardour which does not attend the purest virtue, when separatedfrom it. Contrast Socrates even with Cato; the one was the greaterphilosopher, the other more of the citizen. Athens was already ruined inthe time of Socrates, and he had no other country than the world atlarge. Cato had the cause of his country always at heart; he lived forit alone, and could not bear to outlive it. The virtue of Socrates wasthat of the wisest of men; but, compared with Caesar and Pompey, Catoseems a God among mortals. Socrates instructed a few individuals,opposed the Sophists, and died for truth: but Cato defended his country,its liberty and its laws, against the conquerors of the world, and atlength departed from the earth, when he had no longer a country toserve. A worthy pupil of Socrates would be the most virtuous of hiscontemporaries; but a worthy follower of Cato would be one of thegreatest. The virtue of the former would be his happiness; the latterwould seek his happiness in that of all. We should be taught by the one,and led by the other; and this alone is enough to determine which toprefer: for no people has ever been made into a nation of philosophers,but it is not impossible to make a people happy.Do we wish men to be virtuous? Then let us begin by making them lovetheir country: but how can they love it, if their country be nothingmore to them than to strangers, and afford them nothing but what it canrefuse nobody? It would be still worse, if they did not enjoy even theprivilege of social security, and if their lives, liberties and propertylay at the mercy of persons in power, without their being permitted, orit being possible for them, to get relief from the laws. For in thatcase, being subjected to the duties of the state of civil society,without enjoying even the common privileges of the state of nature, andwithout being able to use their strength in their own defence, theywould be in the worst condition in which freemen could possibly findthemselves, and the word country would mean for them something merelyodious and ridiculous. It must not be imagined that a man can break orlose an arm, without the pain being conveyed to his head: nor is it anymore credible that the general will should consent that any one memberof the State, whoever he might be, should wound or destroy another, thanit is that the fingers of a man in his senses should wilfully scratchhis eyes out. The security of individuals is so intimately connectedwith the public confederation that, apart from the regard that must bepaid to human weakness, that convention would in point of right bedissolved, if in the State a single citizen who might have been relievedwere allowed to perish, or if one were wrongfully confined in prison, orif in one case an obviously unjust sentence were given. For thefundamental conventions being broken, it is impossible to conceive ofany right or interest that could retain the people in the social union;unless they were restrained by force, which alone causes the dissolutionof the state of civil society.In fact, does not the undertaking entered into by the whole body of thenation bind it to provide for the security of the least of its memberswith as much care as for that of all the rest? Is the welfare of asingle citizen any less the common cause than that of the whole State?It may be said that it is good that one should perish for all. I amready to admire such a saying when it comes from the lips of a virtuousand worthy patriot, voluntarily and dutifully sacrificing himself forthe good of his country: but if we are to understand by it, that it islawful for the government to sacrifice an innocent man for the good ofthe multitude, I look upon it as one of the most execrable rules tyrannyever invented, the greatest falsehood that can be advanced, the mostdangerous admission that can be made, and a direct contradiction of thefundamental laws of society. So little is it the case that any oneperson ought to perish for all, that all have pledged their lives andproperties for the defence of each, in order that the weakness ofindividuals may always be protected by the strength of the public, andeach member by the whole State. Suppose we take from the whole peopleone individual after another, and then press the advocates of this ruleto explain more exactly what they mean by the body of the State, and weshall see that it will at length be reduced to a small number ofpersons, who are not the people, but the officers of the people, andwho, having bound themselves by personal oath to perish for the welfareof the people, would thence infer that the people is to perish for theirown.Need we look for examples of the protection which the State owes to itsmembers, and the respect it owes to their persons? It is only among themost illustrious and courageous nations that they are to be found; it isonly among free peoples that the dignity of man is realised. It is wellknown into what perplexity the whole republic of Sparta was thrown, whenthe question of punishing a guilty citizen arose.In Macedon, the life of a man was a matter of such importance, thatAlexander the Great, at the height of his glory, would not have dared toput a Macedonian criminal to death in cold blood, till the accused hadappeared to make his defence before his fellow-citizens, and had beencondemned by them. But the Romans distinguished themselves above allother peoples by the regard which their government paid to theindividual, and by its scrupulous attention to the preservation of theinviolable rights of all the members of the State. Nothing was so sacredamong them as the life of a citizen; and no less than an assembly of thewhole people was needed to condemn one. Not even the Senate, nor theConsuls, in all their majesty, possessed the right; but the crime andpunishment of a citizen were regarded as a public calamity among themost powerful people in the world. So hard indeed did it seem to shedblood for any crime whatsoever, that by the Lex Porcia, the penalty ofdeath was commuted into that of banishment for all those who werewilling to survive the loss of so great a country. Everything both atRome, and in the Roman armies, breathed that love of fellow-citizens onefor another, and that respect for the Roman name, which raised thecourage and inspired the virtue of every one who had the honour to bearit. The cap of a citizen delivered from slavery, the civic crown of himwho had saved the life of another, were looked upon with the greatestpleasure amid the pomp of their triumphs; and it is remarkable thatamong the crowns which were bestowed in honour of splendid actions inwar, the civic crown and that of the triumphant general alone were oflaurel, all the others being merely of gold. It was thus that Rome wasvirtuous and became the mistress of the world. Ambitious rulers! Aherdsman governs his dogs and cattle, and yet is only the meanest ofmankind. If it be a fine thing to command, it is when those who obey usare capable of doing us honour. Show respect, therefore, to yourfellow-citizens, and you will render yourselves worthy of respect; showrespect to liberty, and your power will increase daily. Never exceedyour rights, and they will soon become unlimited.Let our country then show itself the common mother of her citizens; letthe advantages they enjoy in their country endear it to them; let thegovernment leave them enough share in the public administration to makethem feel that they are at home; and let the laws be in their eyes onlythe guarantees of the common liberty. These rights, great as they are,belong to all men: but without seeming to attack them directly, theill-will of rulers may in fact easily reduce their effect to nothing.The law, which they thus abuse, serves the powerful at once as a weaponof offence, and as a shield against the weak; and the pretext of thepublic good is always the most dangerous scourge of the people. What ismost necessary, and perhaps most difficult, in government, is rigidintegrity in doing strict justice to all, and above all in protectingthe poor against the tyranny of the rich. The greatest evil has alreadycome about, when there are poor men to be defended, and rich men to berestrained. It is on the middle classes alone that the whole force ofthe law is exerted; they are equally powerless against the treasures ofthe rich and the penury of the poor. The first mocks them, the secondescapes them. The one breaks the meshes, the other passes through them.It is therefore one of the most important functions of government toprevent extreme inequality of fortunes; not by taking away wealth fromits possessors, but by depriving all men of means to accumulate it; notby building hospitals for the poor, but by securing the citizens frombecoming poor. The unequal distribution of inhabitants over theterritory, when men are crowded together in one place, while otherplaces are depopulated; the encouragement of the arts that minister toluxury and of purely industrial arts at the expense of useful andlaborious crafts; the sacrifice of agriculture to commerce; thenecessitation of the tax-farmer by the mal-administration of the fundsof the State; and in short, venality pushed to such an extreme that evenpublic esteem is reckoned at a cash value, and virtue rated at a marketprice: these are the most obvious causes of opulence and of poverty, ofpublic interest, of mutual hatred among citizens, of indifference to thecommon cause, of the corruption of the people, and of the weakening ofall the springs of government. Such are the evils, which are withdifficulty cured when they make themselves felt, but which a wiseadministration ought to prevent, if it is to maintain, along with goodmorals, respect for the laws, patriotism, and the influence of thegeneral will.But all these precautions will be inadequate, unless rulers go stillmore to the root of the matter. I conclude this part of public economywhere I ought to have begun it. There can be no patriotism withoutliberty, no liberty without virtue, no virtue without citizens; createcitizens, and you have everything you need; without them, you will havenothing but debased slaves, from the rulers of the State downwards. Toform citizens is not the work of a day; and in order to have men it isnecessary to educate them when they are children. It will be said,perhaps, that whoever has men to govern, ought not to seek, beyond theirnature, a perfection of which they are incapable; that he ought not todesire to destroy their passions; and that the execution of such anattempt is no more desirable than it is possible. I will agree, further,that a man without passions would certainly be a bad citizen; but itmust be agreed also that, if men are not taught not to love some things,it is impossible to teach them to love one object more than another  toprefer that which is truly beautiful to that which is deformed. If, forexample, they were early accustomed to regard their individuality onlyin its relation to the body of the State, and to be aware, so to speak,of their own existence merely as a part of that of the State, they mightat length come to identify themselves in some degree with this greaterwhole, to feel themselves members of their country, and to love it withthat exquisite feeling which no isolated person has save for himself; tolift up their spirits perpetually to this great object, and thus totransform into a sublime virtue that dangerous disposition which givesrise to all our vices. Not only does philosophy demonstrate thepossibility of giving feeling these new directions; history furnishes uswith a thousand striking examples. If they are so rare among us moderns,it is because nobody troubles himself whether citizens exist or not, andstill less does anybody think of attending to the matter soon enough tomake them. It is too late to change our natural inclinations, when theyhave taken their course, and egoism is confirmed by habit: it is toolate to lead us out of ourselves when once the human Ego, concentratedin our hearts, has acquired that contemptible activity which absorbs allvirtue and constitutes the life and being of little minds. How canpatriotism germinate in the midst of so many other passions whichsmother it? And what can remain, for fellow-citizens, of a heart alreadydivided between avarice, a mistress, and vanity?From the first moment of life, men ought to begin learning to deserve tolive; and, as at the instant of birth we partake of the rights ofcitizenship, that instant ought to be the beginning of the exercise ofour duty. If there are laws for the age of maturity, there ought to belaws for infancy, teaching obedience to others: and as the reason ofeach man is not left to be the sole arbiter of his duties, governmentought the less indiscriminately to abandon to the intelligence andprejudices of fathers the education of their children, as that educationis of still greater importance to the State than to the fathers: for,according to the course of nature, the death of the father oftendeprives him of the final fruits of education; but his country sooner orlater perceives its effects. Families dissolve, but the State remains.Should the public authority, by taking the place of the father, andcharging itself with that important function, acquire his rights bydischarging his duties, he would have the less cause to complain, as hewould only be changing his title, and would have in common, under thename of citizen, the same authority over his children, as he wasexercising separately under the name of father, and would not be lessobeyed when speaking in the name of the law, than when he spoke in thatof nature. Public education, therefore, under regulations prescribed bythe government, and under magistrates established by the Sovereign, isone of the fundamental rules of popular or legitimate government. Ifchildren are brought up in common in the bosom of equality; if they areimbued with the laws of the State and the precepts of the general will;if they are taught to respect these above all things; if they aresurrounded by examples and objects which constantly remind them of thetender mother who nourishes them, of the love she bears them, of theinestimable benefits they receive from her, and of the return they oweher, we cannot doubt that they will learn to cherish one anothermutually as brothers, to will nothing contrary to the will of society,to substitute the actions of men and citizens for the futile and vainbabbling of sophists, and to become in time defenders and fathers of thecountry of which they will have been so long the children.I shall say nothing of the Magistrates destined to preside over such aneducation, which is certainly the most important business of the State.It is easy to see that if such marks of public confidence were conferredon slight grounds, if this sublime function were not, for those who haveworthily discharged all other offices, the reward of labour, thepleasant and honourable repose of old age, and the crown of all honours,the whole enterprise would be useless and the education void of success.For wherever the lesson is not supported by authority, and the preceptby example, all instruction is fruitless; and virtue itself loses itscredit in the mouth of one who does not practise it. But let illustriouswarriors, bent under the weight of their laurels, preach courage: letupright Magistrates, grown white in the purple and on the bench teachjustice. Such teachers as these would thus get themselves virtuoussuccessors, and transmit from age to age, to generations to come, theexperience and talents of rulers, the courage and virtue of citizens,and common emulation in all to live and die for their country.I know of but three peoples which once practised public education, theCretans, the Lacedemonians, and the ancient Persians: among all these itwas attended with the greatest success, and indeed it did wonders amongthe two last. Since the world has been divided into nations too great toadmit of being well governed, this method has been no longerpracticable, and the reader will readily perceive other reasons why sucha thing has never been attempted by any modern people. It is veryremarkable that the Romans were able to dispense with it; but Rome wasfor five hundred years one continued miracle which the world cannot hopeto see again. The virtue of the Romans, engendered by their horror oftyranny and the crimes of tyrants, and by an innate patriotism, made alltheir houses so many schools of citizenship; while the unlimited powerof fathers over their children made the individual authority so rigidthat the father was more feared than the Magistrate, and was in hisfamily tribunal both censor of morals and avenger of the laws.Thus a careful and well-intentioned government, vigilant incessantly tomaintain or restore patriotism and morality among the people, providesbeforehand against the evils which sooner or later result from theindifference of the citizens to the fate of the Republic, keeping withinnarrow bounds that personal interest which so isolates the individualthat the State is enfeebled by his power, and has nothing to hope fromhis good-will. Wherever men love their country, respect the laws, andlive simply, little remains to be done in order to make them happy; andin public administration, where chance has less influence than in thelot of individuals, wisdom is so nearly allied to happiness, that thetwo objects are confounded.III. It is not enough to have citizens and to protect them, it is alsonecessary to consider their subsistence. Provision for the public wantsis an obvious inference from the general will, and the third essentialduty of government. This duty is not, we should feel, to fill thegranaries of individuals and thereby to grant them a dispensation fromlabour, but to keep plenty so within their reach that labour is alwaysnecessary and never useless for its acquisition. It extends also toeverything regarding the management of the exchequer, and the expensesof public administration. Having thus treated of general economy withreference to the government of persons, we must now consider it withreference to the administration of property.This part presents no fewer difficulties to solve, and contradictions toremove, than the preceding. It is certain that the right of property isthe most sacred of all the rights of citizenship, and even moreimportant in some respects than liberty itself; either because it morenearly affects the preservation of life, or because, property being moreeasily usurped and more difficult to defend than life, the law ought topay a greater attention to what is most easily taken away; or finally,because property is the true foundation of civil society, and the realguarantee of the undertakings of citizens: for if property were notanswerable for personal actions, nothing would be easier than to evadeduties and laugh at the laws. On the other hand, it is no less certainthat the maintenance of the State and the government involves costs andoutgoings; and as every one who agrees to the end must acquiesce in themeans, it follows that the members of a society ought to contribute fromtheir property to its support. Besides, it is difficult to secure theproperty of individuals on one side, without attacking it on another;and it is impossible that all the regulations which govern the order ofsuccession, will, contracts, &amp;c. should not lay individuals under someconstraint as to the disposition of their goods, and should notconsequently restrict the right of property.But besides what I have said above of the agreement between theauthority of law and the liberty of the citizen, there remains to bemade, with respect to the disposition of goods, an important observationwhich removes many difficulties. As Puffendorf has shown, the right ofproperty, by its very nature, does not extend beyond the life of theproprietor, and the moment a man is dead his goods cease to belong tohim. Thus, to prescribe the conditions according to which he can disposeof them, is in reality less to alter his right as it appears, than toextend it in fact.In general, although the institution of the laws which regulate thepower of individuals in the disposition of their own goods belongs onlyto the Sovereign, the spirit of these laws, which the government oughtto follow in their application, is that, from father to son, and fromrelation to relation, the goods of a family should go as little out ofit and be as little alienated as possible. There is a sensible reasonfor this in favour of children, to whom the right of property would bequite useless, if the father left them nothing, and who besides, havingoften contributed by their labour to the acquisition of their father&apos;swealth, are in their own right associates with him in his right ofproperty. But another reason, more distant, though not less important,is that nothing is more fatal to morality and to the Republic than thecontinual shifting of rank and fortune among the citizens: such changesare both the proof and the source of a thousand disorders, and overturnand confound everything; for those who were brought up to one thing findthemselves destined for another; and neither those who rise nor thosewho fall are able to assume the rules of conduct, or to possessthemselves of the qualifications requisite for their new condition,still less to discharge the duties it entails. I proceed to the objectof public finance.If the people governed itself and there were no intermediary between theadministration of the State and the citizens, they would have no more todo than to assess themselves occasionally, in proportion to the publicneeds and the abilities of individuals: and as they would all keep insight the recovery and employment of such assessments, no fraud or abusecould slip into the management of them; the State would never beinvolved in debt, or the people over-burdened with taxes; or at leastthe knowledge of how the money would be used would be a consolation forthe severity of the tax. But things cannot be carried on in this manner:on the contrary, however small any State may be, civil societies arealways too populous to be under the immediate government of all theirmembers. It is necessary that the public money should go through thehands of the rulers, all of whom have, besides the interests of theState, their own individual interests, which are not the last to belistened to. The people, on its side, perceiving rather the cupidity andridiculous expenditure of its rulers than the public needs, murmurs atseeing itself stripped of necessaries to furnish others withsuperfluities; and when once these complaints have reached a certaindegree of bitterness, the most upright administration will find itimpossible to restore confidence. In such a case, voluntarycontributions bring in nothing, and forced contributions areillegitimate. This cruel alternative of letting the State perish, or ofviolating the sacred right of property, which is its support,constitutes the great difficulty of just and prudent economy.The first step which the founder of a republic ought to take after theestablishment of laws, is to settle a sufficient fund for themaintenance of the Magistrates and other Officials, and for other publicexpenses. This fund, if it consist of money, is called ararium or fisc,and public demesne if it consist of lands. This, for obvious reasons, ismuch to be preferred. Whoever has reflected on this matter must be ofthe opinion of Bodin, who looks upon the public demesne as the mostreputable and certain means of providing for the needs of the State. Itis remarkable also that Romulus, in his division of lands, made it hisfirst care to set apart a third for the use of the State. I confess itis not impossible for the produce of the demesne, if it be badlymanaged, to be reduced to nothing; but it is not of the essence ofpublic demesnes to be badly administered.Before any use is made of this fund, it should be assigned or acceptedby an assembly of the people, or of the estates of the country, whichshould determine its future use. After this solemnity, which makes suchfunds inalienable, their very nature is, in a manner, changed, and therevenues become so sacred, that it is not only the most infamous theft,but actual treason, to misapply them or pervert them from the purposefor which they were destined. It reflects great dishonour on Rome thatthe integrity of Cato the censor was something so very remarkable, andthat an Emperor, on rewarding the talents of a singer with a few crowns,thought it necessary to observe that the money came from his own privatepurse, and not from that of the State. But if we find few Galbas, whereare we to look for a Cato? For when vice is no longer dishonourable,what chiefs will be so scrupulous as to abstain from touching the publicrevenues that are left to their discretion, and even not in time toimpose on themselves, by pretending to confound their own expensive andscandalous dissipations with the glory of the State, and the means ofextending their own authority with the means of augmenting its power? Itis particularly in this delicate part of the administration that virtueis the only effective instrument, and that the integrity of theMagistrate is the only real check upon his avarice. Books and auditingof accounts, instead of exposing frauds, only conceal them; for prudenceis never so ready to conceive new precautions as knavery is to eludethem. Never mind, then, about account books and papers; place themanagement of finance in honest hands: that is the only way to get itfaithfully conducted.When public funds are once established, the rulers of the State becomeof right the administrators of them: for this administration constitutesa part of government which is always essential, though not alwaysequally so. Its influence increases in proportion as that of otherresources is diminished; and it may justly be said that a government hasreached the last stage of corruption, when it has ceased to have sinewsother than money. Now as every government constantly tends to becomelax, this is enough to show why no State can subsist unless its revenuesconstantly increase.The first sense of the necessity of this increase is also the first signof the internal disorder of the State; and the prudent administrator, inhis endeavours to find means to provide for the present necessity, willneglect nothing to find out the distance cause of the new need; just asa mariner when he finds the water gaining on his vessel, does notneglect, while he is working the pumps, to discover and stop the leak.From this rule is deduced the most important rule in the administrationof finance, which is, to take more pains to guard against needs than toincrease revenues. For, whatever diligence be employed, the relief whichonly comes after, and more slowly than, the evil, always leaves someinjury behind. While a remedy is being found for one evil, another isbeginning to make itself felt, and even the remedies themselves producenew difficulties: so that at length the nation is involved in debt andthe people oppressed, while the government loses its influence and cando very little with a great deal of money. I imagine it was owing to therecognition of this rule that such wonders were done by ancientgovernments, which did more with their parsimony than ours do with alltheir treasures; and perhaps from this comes the common use of the wordeconomy, which means rather the prudent management of what one has thanways of getting what one has not.But apart from the public demesne, which is of service to the State inproportion to the uprightness of those who govern, any one sufficientlyacquainted with the whole force of the general administration,especially when it confines itself to legitimate methods, would beastonished at the resources the rulers can make use of for guardingagainst public needs, without trespassing on the goods of individuals.As they are masters of the whole commerce of the State, nothing iseasier for them than to direct it into such channels as to provide forevery need, without appearing to interfere. The distribution ofprovisions, money, and merchandise in just proportions, according totimes and places, is the true secret of finance and the source ofwealth, provided those who administer it have foresight enough to suffera present apparent loss, in order really to obtain immense profits inthe future. When we see a government paying bounties, instead ofreceiving duties, on the exportation of corn in time of plenty, and onits importation in time of scarcity, we must have such facts before oureyes if we are to be persuaded of their reality. We should hold suchfacts to be idle tales, if they had happened in ancient times. Let ussuppose that, in order to prevent a scarcity in bad years, a proposalwere made to establish public granaries; would not the maintenance of souseful an institution serve in most countries as an excuse for newtaxes? At Geneva, such granaries, established and kept up by a prudentadministration, are a public resource in bad years, and the principalrevenue of the State at all times. Alit et ditat is the inscriptionwhich stands, rightly and properly, on the front of the building. To setforth in this place the economic system of a good government, I haveoften turned my eyes to that of this Republic, rejoicing to find in myown country an example of that wisdom and happiness which I should beglad to see prevail in every other.If we ask how the needs of a State grow, we shall find they generallyarise, like the wants of individuals, less from any real necessity thanfrom the increase of useless desires, and that expenses are oftenaugmented only to give a pretext for raising receipts: so that the Statewould sometimes gain by not being rich, and apparent wealth is inreality more burdensome than poverty itself would be. Rulers may indeedhope to keep the peoples in stricter dependence, by thus giving themwith one hand what they take from them with the other; and this was infact the policy of Joseph towards the Egyptians: but this politicalsophistry is the more fatal to the State, as the money never returnsinto the hands it went out of. Such principles only enrich the idle atthe expense of the industrious.A desire for conquest is one of the most evident and dangerous causes ofthis increase. This desire, occasioned often by a different species ofambition from that which it seems to proclaim, is not always what itappears to be, and has not so much, for its real motive, the apparentdesire to aggrandise the Nation as a secret desire to increase theauthority of the rulers at home, by increasing the number of troops, andby the diversion which the objects of war occasion in the minds of thecitizens.It is at least certain, that no peoples are so oppressed and wretched asconquering nations, and that their successes only increase their misery.Did not history inform us of the fact, reason would suffice to tell usthat, the greater a State grows, the heavier and more burdensome inproportion its expenses become: for every province has to furnish itsshare to the general expense of government, and besides has to be at theexpense of its own administration, which is as great as if it werereally independent. Add to this that great fortunes are always acquiredin one place and spent in another. Production therefore soon ceases tobalance consumption, and a whole country is impoverished merely toenrich a single town.Another source of the increase of public wants, which depends on theforegoing, is this. There may come a time when the citizens, no longerlooking upon themselves as interested in the common cause, will cease tobe the defenders of their country, and the Magistrates will prefer thecommand of mercenaries to that of free-men; if for no other reason thanthat, when the time comes, they may use them to reduce free-men tosubmission. Such was the state of Rome towards the end of the Republicand under the Emperors: for all the victories of the early Romans, likethose of Alexander, had been won by brave citizens, who were ready, atneed, to give their blood in the service of their country, but wouldnever sell it. Only at the siege of Veii did the practice of paying theRoman infantry begin. Marius, in the Jugurthine war, dishonoured thelegions by introducing freedmen, vagabonds and other mercenaries.Tyrants, the enemies of the very people it was their duty to make happy,maintained regular troops, apparently to withstand the foreigner, butreally to enslave their countrymen. To form such troops, it wasnecessary to take men from the land; the lack of their labour thendiminished the amount of provisions, and their maintenance introducedthose taxes which increased prices. This first disorder gave rise tomurmurs among the people; in order to suppress them, the number oftroops had to be increased, and consequently the misery of the peoplealso got worse; and the growing despair led to still further increasesin the cause in order to guard against its effects. On the other hand,the mercenaries, whose merit we may judge of by the price at which theysold themselves, proud of their own meanness, and despising the lawsthat protected them, as well as their fellows whose bread they ate,imagined themselves more honoured in being Caesar&apos;s satellites than inbeing defenders of Rome. As they were given over to blind obedience,their swords were always at the throats of their fellow-citizens, andthey were prepared for general butchery at the first sign. It would notbe difficult to show that this was one of the principal causes of theruin of the Roman Empire.The invention of artillery and fortifications has forced the princes ofEurope, in modern times, to return to the use of regular troops, inorder to garrison their towns; but, however lawful their motives, it isto be feared the effect may be no less fatal. There is no better reasonnow than formerly for depopulating the country to form armies andgarrisons, nor should the people be oppressed to support them; in aword, these dangerous establishments have increased of late years withsuch rapidity in this part of the world, that they evidently threaten todepopulate Europe, and sooner or later to ruin its inhabitants.Be this as it may, it ought to be seen that such institutionsnecessarily subvert the true economic system, which draws the principalrevenue of the State from the public demesne, and leave only thetroublesome resource of subsidies and imposts; with which it remains todeal.It should be remembered that the foundation of the social compact isproperty; and its first condition, that every one should be maintainedin the peaceful possession of what belongs to him. It is true that, bythe same treaty, every one binds himself, at least tacitly, to beassessed toward the public wants: but as this undertaking cannotprejudice the fundamental law, and presupposes that the need is clearlyrecognised by all who contribute to it, it is plain that suchassessment, in order to be lawful, must be voluntary; it must depend,not indeed on a particular will, as if it were necessary to have theconsent of each individual, and that he should give no more than justwhat he pleased, but on a general will, decided by vote of a majority,and on the basis of a proportional rating which leaves nothing arbitraryin the imposition of the tax.That taxes cannot be legitimately established except by the consent ofthe people or its representatives, is a truth generally admitted by allphilosophers and jurists of any repute on questions of public right, noteven excepting Bodin. If any of them have laid down rules which seem tocontradict this, their particular motives for doing so may easily beseen; and they introduce so many conditions and restrictions that theargument comes at bottom to the same thing: for whether the people hasit in its power to refuse, or the Sovereign ought not to exact, is amatter of indifference with regard to right; and if the point inquestion concerns only power, it is useless to inquire whether it islegitimate or not. Contributions levied on the people are two kinds;real, levied on commodities, and personal, paid by the head. Both arecalled taxes or subsidies: when the people fixes the sum to be paid, itis called subsidy; but when it grants the product of an imposition, itis called a tax. We are told in The Spirit of the Laws that a capitationtax is most suited to slavery, and a real tax most in accordance withliberty. This would be incontestable, if the circumstances of everyperson were equal; for otherwise nothing can be more disproportionatethan such a tax; and it is in the observations of exact proportions thatthe spirit of liberty consists. But if a tax by heads were exactlyproportioned to the circumstances of individuals, as what is called thecapitation tax in France might be, it would be the most equitable andconsequently the most proper for freemen.These proportions appear at first very easy to note, because, beingrelative to each man&apos;s position in the world, their incidence is alwayspublic: but proper regard is seldom paid to all the elements that shouldenter into such a calculation, even apart from deception arising fromavarice, fraud and self-interest. In the first place, we have toconsider the relation of quantities, according to which, ceterisparibus, the person who has ten times the property of another man oughtto pay ten times as much to the State. Secondly, the relation of the usemade, that is to say, the distinction between necessaries andsuperfluities. He who possesses only the common necessaries of lifeshould pay nothing at all, while the tax on him who is in possession ofsuperfluities may justly be extended to everything he has over and abovemere necessaries. To this he will possibly object that, when his rank istaken into account, what may be superfluous to a man of inferior stationis necessary for him. But this is false: for a grandee has two legs justlike a cow-herd, and, like him again, but one belly. Besides, thesepretended necessaries are really so little necessary to his rank, thatif he should renounce them on any worthy occasion, he would only be themore honoured. The populace would be ready to adore a Minister who wentto Council on foot, because he had sold off his carriages to supply apressing need of the State. Lastly, to no man does the law prescribemagnificence; and propriety is no argument against right.A third relation, which is never taken into account, though it ought tobe the chief consideration, is the advantage that every person derivesfrom the social confederacy; for this provides a powerful protection forthe immense possessions of the rich, and hardly leaves the poor man inquiet possession of the cottage he builds with his own hands. Are notall the advantages of society for the rich and powerful? Are not alllucrative posts in their hands? Are not all privileges and exemptionsreserved for them alone? Is not the public authority always on theirside? If man of eminence robs his creditors, or is guilty of otherknaveries, is he not always assured of impunity? Are not the assaults,acts of violence, assassinations, and even murders committed by thegreat, matters that are hushed up in a few months, and of which nothingmore is thought? But if a great man himself is robbed or insulted, thewhole police force is immediately in motion, and woe even to innocentpersons who chance to be suspected. If he has to pass through anydangerous road, the country is up in arms to escort him. If theaxle-tree of his chaise breaks, everybody flies to his assistance. Ifthere is a noise at his door, he speaks but a word, and all is silent.If he is incommoded by the crowd, he waves his hand and every one makesway. If his coach is met on the road by a wagon, his servants are readyto beat the driver&apos;s brains out, and fifty honest pedestrians goingquietly about their business had better be knocked on the head than anidle jackanapes be delayed in his coach. Yet all this respect costs himnot a farthing: it is the rich man&apos;s right, and not what he buys withhis wealth. How different is the case of the poor man! the more humanityowes him, the more society denies him. Every door is shut against him,even when he has a right to its being opened: and if ever he obtainsjustice, it is with much greater difficulty than others obtain favours.If the militia is to be raised or the highway to be mended, he is alwaysgiven the preference; he always bears the burden which his richerneighbour has influence enough to get exempted from. On the leastaccident that happens to him, everybody avoids him: if his cart beoverturned in the road, so far is he from receiving any assistance, thathe is lucky if he does not get horse-whipped by the impudent lackeys ofsome young Duke; in a word, all gratuitous assistance is denied to thepoor when they need it, just because they cannot pay for it. I look uponany poor man as totally undone, if he has the misfortune to have anhonest heart, a fine daughter, and a powerful neighbour.Another no less important fact is that the losses of the poor are muchharder to repair than those of the rich, and that the difficulty ofacquisition is always greater in proportion as there is more need forit. &quot;Nothing comes out of nothing,&quot; is as true of life as in physics:money is the seed of money, and the first guinea is sometimes moredifficult to acquire than the second million. Add to this that what thepoor pay is lost to them for ever, and remains in, or returns to, thehands of the rich: and as, to those who share in the government or totheir dependents, the whole produce of the taxes must sooner or laterpass, although they pay their share, these persons have always asensible interest in increasing them.The terms of the social compact between these two estates of men may besummed up in a few words. &quot;You have need of me, because I am rich andyou are poor. We will therefore come to an agreement. I will permit youto have the honour of serving me, on condition that you bestow on me thelittle you have left, in return for the pains I shall take to commandyou.&quot;Putting all these considerations carefully together, we shall find that,in order to levy taxes in a truly equitable and proportionate manner,the imposition ought not to be in simple ratio to the property of thecontributors, but in compound ratio to the difference of theirconditions and the superfluity of their possessions. This very importantand difficult operation is daily made by numbers of honest clerks, whoknow their arithmetic; but a Plato or a Montesquieu would not venture toundertake it without the greatest diffidence, or without praying toHeaven for understanding and integrity.Another disadvantage of personal taxes is that they may be too much feltor raised with too great severity. This, however, does not prevent themfrom being frequently evaded; for it is much easier for persons toescape a tax than for their possessions.Of all impositions, that on land, or real taxation, has always beenregarded as most advantageous in countries where more attention is paidto what the tax will produce, and to the certainty of recovering theproduct, than to securing the least discomfort for the people. It hasbeen even maintained that it is necessary to burden the peasant in orderto rouse him from indolence, and that he would never work if he had notaxes to pay. But in all countries experience confutes this ridiculousnotion. In England and Holland the farmer pays very little, and in Chinanothing: yet these are the countries in which the land is bestcultivated. On the other hand, in those countries where the husbandmanis taxed in proportion to the produce of his lands, he leaves themuncultivated, or reaps just as much from them as suffices for baresubsistence. For to him who loses the fruit of his labour, it is somegain to do nothing. To lay a tax on industry is a very singularexpedient for banishing idleness.Taxes on land or corn, especially when they are excessive, lead to tworesults so fatal in their effect that they cannot but depopulate andruin, in the long run, all countries in which they are established.The first of these arises from the defective circulation of specie; forindustry and commerce draw all the money from the country into thecapitals: and as the tax destroys the proportion there might otherwisebe between the needs of the husbandman and the price of his corn, moneyis always leaving and never returning. Thus the richer the city thepoorer the country. The product of the taxes passes from the hands ofthe Prince or his financial officers into those of artists and traders;and the husbandman, who receives only the smallest part of it, is atlength exhausted by paying always the same, and receiving constantlyless. How could a human body subsist if it had veins and no arteries, orif its arteries conveyed the blood only within four inches of the heart?Chardin tells us that in Persia the royal dues on commodities are paidin kind: this custom, which, Herodotus informs us, prevailed long ago inthe same country down to the time of Darius, might prevent the evil ofwhich I have been speaking. But unless intendants, directors,commissioners, and warehousemen in Persia are a different kind of peoplefrom what they are elsewhere, I can hardly believe that the smallestpart of this produce ever reaches the king, or that the corn is notspoilt in every granary, and the greater part of the warehouses notconsumed by fire.The second evil effect arises from an apparent advantage, whichaggravates the evil before it can be perceived. That is that corn is acommodity whose price is not enhanced by taxes in the country producingit, and which, in spite of its absolute necessity, may be diminished inquantity without the price being increased. Hence, many people die ofhunger, although corn remains cheap, and the husbandman bears the wholecharge of a tax, for which he cannot indemnify himself by the price ofhis corn. It must be observed that we ought not to reason about aland-tax in the same manner as about duties laid on various kinds ofmerchandise; for the effect of such duties is to raise the price, andthey are paid by the buyers rather than the sellers. For these duties,however heavy, are still voluntary, and are paid by the merchant only inproportion to the quantity he buys; and as he buys only in proportion tohis sale, he himself gives the law its particular application; but thefarmer who is obliged to pay his rent at stated times, whether he sellsor not, cannot wait till he can get his own price for his commodity:even if he is not forced to sell for mere subsistence, he must sell topay the taxes; so that it is frequently the heaviness of the tax thatkeeps the price of corn low.It is further to be noticed that the resources of commerce and industryare so far from rendering the tax more supportable through abundance ofmoney, that they only render it more burdensome. I shall not insist onwhat is very evident; i.e., that, although a greater or less quantity ofmoney in a State may give it the greater or less credit in the eye ofthe foreigner, it makes not the least difference to the real fortune ofthe citizens, and does not make their condition any more or lesscomfortable. But I must make these two important remarks: first, unlessa State possesses superfluous commodities, and abundance of moneyresults from foreign trade, only trading cities are sensible of theabundance; while the peasant only becomes relatively poorer. Secondly,as the price of everything is enhanced by the increase of money, taxesalso must be proportionately increased; so that the farmer will findhimself still more burdened without having more resources.It ought to be observed that the tax on land is a real duty on theproduce. It is universally agreed, however, that nothing is so dangerousas a tax on corn paid by the purchaser: but how comes it we do not seethat it is a hundred times worse when the duty is paid by the cultivatorhimself? Is not this an attack on the substance of the State at its verysource? Is it not the directest possible method of depopulating acountry, and therefore in the end ruining it? For the worst kind ofscarcity a nation can suffer from is lack of inhabitants.Only the real statesman can rise, in imposing taxes, above the merefinancial object: he alone can transform heavy burdens into usefulregulations, and make the people even doubtful whether suchestablishments were not calculated rather for the good of the nation ingeneral, than merely for the raising of money.Duties on the importation of foreign commodities, of which the nativesare fond, without the country standing in need of them; on theexportation of those of the growth of the country which are not tooplentiful, and which foreigners cannot do without: on the productions offrivolous and all too lucrative arts; on the importation of all pureluxuries; and in general on all objects of luxury; will answer thetwo-fold end in view. It is by such taxes, indeed, by which the poor areeased, and the burdens thrown on the rich, that it is possible toprevent the continual increase of inequality of fortune; the subjectionof such a multitude of artisans and useless servants to the rich, themultiplication of idle persons in our cities, and the depopulation ofthe country-side.It is important that the value of any commodity and the duties laid onit should be so proportioned that the avarice of individuals may not betoo strongly tempted to fraud by the greatness of the possible profit.To make smuggling difficult, those commodities should be singled outwhich are hardest to conceal. All duties should be rather paid by theconsumer of the commodity taxed than by him who sells it: as thequantity of duty he would be obliged to pay would lay him open togreater temptations, and afford him more opportunities for fraud.This is the constant custom in China, a country where the taxes aregreater and yet better paid than in any other part of the world. Therethe merchant himself pays no duty; the buyer alone, without murmuring orsedition, meets the whole charge; for as the necessaries of life, suchas rice and corn, are absolutely exempt from taxation, the common peopleis not oppressed, and the duty falls only on those who are well-to-do.Precautions against smuggling ought not to be dictated so much by thefear of it occurring, as by the attention which the government shouldpay to securing individuals from being seduced by illegitimate profits,which first make them bad citizens, and afterwards soon turn them intodishonest men.Heavy taxes should be laid on servants in livery, on equipages, richfurniture, fine clothes, on spacious courts and gardens, on publicentertainments of all kinds, on useless professions, such as dancers,singers, players, and in a word, on all that multiplicity of objects ofluxury, amusement and idleness, which strike the eyes of all, and canthe less be hidden, as their whole purpose is to be seen, without whichthey would be useless. We need be under no apprehension of the produceof these taxes being arbitrary, because they are laid on things notabsolutely necessary. They must know but little of mankind who imaginethat, after they have been once seduced by luxury, they can everrenounce it: they would a hundred times sooner renounce commonnecessaries, and had much rather die of hunger than of shame. Theincrease in their expense is only an additional reason for supportingthem, when the vanity of appearing wealthy reaps its profit from theprice of the thing and the charge of the tax. As long as there are richpeople in the world, they will be desirous of distinguishing themselvesfrom the poor, nor can the State devise a revenue less burdensome ormore certain than what arises from this distinction.For the same reason, industry would have nothing to suffer from aneconomic system which increased the revenue, encouraged agriculture byrelieving the husbandman, and insensibly tended to bring all fortunesnearer to that middle condition which constitutes the genuine strengthof the State. These taxes might, I admit, bring certain fashionablearticles of dress and amusement to an untimely end; but it would be onlyto substitute others, by which the artificer would gain, and theexchequer suffer no loss. In a word, suppose the spirit of governmentwas constantly to tax only the superfluities of the rich, one of twothings must happen: either the rich would convert their superfluousexpenses into useful ones, which would redound to the profit of theState, and thus the imposition of taxes would have the effect of thebest sumptuary laws, the expenses of the State would necessarilydiminish with those of individuals, and the treasury would not receiveso much less as it would gain by having less to pay; or, if the rich didnot become less extravagant, the exchequer would have such resources inthe product of taxes on their expenditure as would provide for the needsof the State. In the first case the treasury would be the richer by whatit would save, from having the less to do with its money; and in thesecond, it would be enriched by the useless expenses of individuals.We may add to all this a very important distinction in matters ofpolitical right, to which governments, constantly tenacious of doingeverything for themselves, ought to pay great attention. It has beenobserved that personal taxes and duties on the necessaries of life, asthey directly trespass on the right of property, and consequently on thetrue foundation of political society, are always liable to havedangerous results, if they are not established with the express consentof the people or its representatives. It is not the same with articlesthe use of which we can deny ourselves; for as the individual is underno absolute necessity to pay, his contribution may count as voluntary.The particular consent of each contributor then takes the place of thegeneral consent of the whole people: for why should a people oppose theimposition of a tax which falls only on those who desire to pay it? Itappears to me certain that everything, which is not proscribed by law,or contrary to morality, and yet may be prohibited by the government,may also be permitted on payment of a certain duty. Thus, for example,if the government may prohibit the use of coaches, it may certainlyimpose a tax on them; and this is a prudent and useful method ofcensuring their use without absolutely forbidding it. In this case, thetax may be regarded as a sort of fine, the product of which compensatesfor the abuse it punishes.It may perhaps be objected that those, whom Bodin calls impostors, i.e.,those who impose or contrive the taxes, being in the class of the rich,will be far from sparing themselves to relieve the poor. But this isquite beside the point. If, in every nation, those to whom the Sovereigncommits the government of the people, were, from their position, itsenemies, it would not be worth while to inquire what they ought to do tomake the people happy.</p>
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