It Has Been Common In Ireland, And In London
Has Created The Wealth Of The Pawnbrokers.
In the States at the
present time the government is very much in this condition.
The
prospective wealth of the country is almost unbounded, but there is
great difficulty in persuading any pawnbroker to advance money on
the pledge. In February last Mr. Chase was driven to obtain the
sanction of the legislature for paying the national creditors by
bills drawn at twelve months' date, and bearing 6 per cent.
interest. It is the old story of the tailor who calls with his
little account, and draws on his insolvent debtor at ninety days.
If the insolvent debtor be not utterly gone as regards solvency he
will take up the bill when due, even though he may not be able to
pay a simple debt. But, then, if he be utterly insolvent, he can do
neither the one nor the other! The Secretary of the Treasury, when
he asked for permission to accept these bills - or to issue these
certificates, as he calls them - acknowledged to pressing debts of
over five millions sterling which he could not pay; and to further
debts of eight millions which he could not pay, but which he termed
floating; debts, if I understand him, which were not as yet quite
pressing. Now I imagine that to be a lamentable condition for any
Chancellor of an Exchequer - especially as a confession is at the
same time made that no advantageous borrowing is to be done under
the existing circumstances. When a Chancellor of the Exchequer
confesses that he cannot borrow on advantageous terms, the terms
within his reach must be very bad indeed. This position is indeed a
sad one, and at any rate justifies me in stating that the immediate
want of funds is severely felt.
But the very arguments which have been used to prove that the
country will be ultimately crushed by the debt, are those which I
should use to prove that it will not be crushed. A comparison has
more than once been made between the manner in which our debt was
made and that in which the debt of the United States is now being
created; and the great point raised in our favor is, that while we
were borrowing money we were also taxing ourselves, and that we
raised as much by taxes as we did by loans. But it is too early in
the day to deny to the Americans the credit which we thus take to
ourselves. We were a tax-paying nation when we commenced those wars
which made our great loans necessary, and only went on in that
practice which was habitual to us. I do not think that the
Americans could have taxed themselves with greater alacrity than
they have shown. Let us wait, at any rate, till they shall have had
time for the operation, before we blame them for not making it. It
is then argued that we in England did not borrow nearly so fast as
they have borrowed in the States. That is true. But it must be
remembered that the dimensions and proportions of wars now are
infinitely greater than they were when we began to borrow. Does any
one imagine that we would not have borrowed faster, if by faster
borrowing we could have closed the war more speedily? Things go
faster now than they did then. Borrowing for the sake of a war may
be a bad thing to do, as also it may be a good thing; but if it be
done at all, it should be so done as to bring the war to the end
with what greatest dispatch may be possible.
The only fair comparison, as it seems to me, which can be drawn
between the two countries with reference to their debts, and the
condition of each under its debt, should be made to depend on the
amount of the debt and probable ability of the country to bear that
burden. The amount of the debt must be calculated by the interest
payable on it rather than by the figures representing the actual sum
due. If we debit the United States government with seven per cent.
on all the money borrowed by them, and presume that amount to have
reached in July, 1863, the sum named by Mr. Spaulding, they will
then have loaded themselves with an annual charge of 16,800,000
pounds sterling. It will have been an immense achievement to have
accomplished in so short a time, but it will by no means equal the
annual sum with which we are charged. And, moreover, the comparison
will have been made in a manner that is hardly fair to the
Americans. We pay our creditors three per cent. now that we have
arranged our affairs, and have settled down into the respectable
position of an old gentleman whose estates, though deeply mortgaged,
are not over mortgaged. But we did not get our money at three per
cent. while our wars were on hand and there yet existed some doubt
as to the manner in which they might be terminated.
This attempt, however, at guessing what may be the probable amount
of the debt at the close of the war is absolutely futile. No one
can as yet conjecture when the war may be over, or what collateral
expenses may attend its close. It may be the case that the
government, in fixing some boundary between the future United States
and the future Southern Confederacy, will be called on to advance a
very large sum of money as compensation for slaves who shall have
been liberated in the border States, or have been swept down South
into the cotton regions with the retreating hordes of the Southern
army. The total of the bill cannot be reckoned up while the work is
still unfinished. But, after all, that question as to the amount of
the bill is not to us the question of the greatest interest.
Whether the debt shall amount to two, or three, or even to four
hundred millions sterling; whether it remain fixed at its present
modest dimensions, or swell itself out to the magnificent
proportions of our British debt; will the resources of the country
enable it to bear such a burden?
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