What Is Free Trade?
man and for society-
ever been pretended, is it possible to ma
ny of the newspapers (now happily diminishing in number) say so; a large portion of th
ctures and cotton fabrics, by restraining any one from bringing them to market, but the manufacturers in New England and Pennsylvania? Do we not hear it complained every day: Our importations are too large; We a
goods offered for sale. Therefore, statesmen, editors, and the
be so blind as to maintain tha
k at price, but
et us
plain, then, that, so far as regards him at least, scarcity enriches him. Applying, in turn, this manner of reasoning to each class of laborers individually, the scarcity theory is deduced from it. To put this the
course, less. If this is the case with all produce, all producers are then poor. Abundance, then, ruins society; and as any s
us that it must be wrong; but where is it wrong? Is it fal
ent given above, considers him only under the first point of view. Let us look a
in proportion to the abundance of the articles in demand; abundance, then, enriches
heory i
restrictions we were compelled not only to make our own iron, but to grow our own coffee; in short, to obtain eve
thing else, so that we shall obtain everything with as little difficulty and outlay of labor as possible. If we then tak
en much and little, between Protection and Free Trade. You now know w
eign goods and produce, our specie, our precious produ
hat does it matter, then, whether there be more or less specie in the country, provided there be more br
selves to depend upon England for iron, what s
True; neither will there be any time when war shall occur that the country will not be already filled with all the iron we shall want until we can make it here. Did the
sum
exists between the
d to be scarce, and the supply to be
and the supply to be large,
consumer; for high against low prices; for scarcity against abundance; for protection against free trade. They act, if no