To introduce the theory of interest here expounded, and to facilitate
the removal of old prejudices, which are nowhere stronger than in connection
with the subject of interest, I shall begin with a story of Robinson Crusoe.
*
Robinson Crusoe, as is well known, built his house, from motives of
health, on the south side of the mountain, whereas his crops grew on the
damp but fruitful northern slopes. He was therefore obliged to carry his
harvests over the mountain. To eliminate this labour he decided to construct
a canal around the mountain. The time required for this enterprise which,
to avoid silting, would have to be continued without interruption, he estimated
at three years. He had therefore to lay in provisions for three years.
He slaughtered some pigs and cured their flesh with salt; he filled
a deep trench with wheat, covering it carefully with earth. He tanned a
dozen buckskins for suits and nailed them up in a chest, enclosing also
the stink-glands of a skunk as a precaution against moths. In short, he
provided amply and, as he thought, wisely, for the coming three years.
As he sat calculating for the last time whether his "capital" was sufficient
for the projected undertaking, he was startled by the approach of a stranger,
obviously the survivor of a shipwreck.
"Hallo, Crusoe!" shouted the stranger as he approached, "my ship has
gone down, but I like your island and intend to settle here. Will you help
me with some provisions until I have brought a field into cultivation and
harvested my first crops?"
At these words Crusoe's thoughts flew from his provisions to the possibility
of interest and the attractions of life as a gentleman of independent means.
He hastened to answer "yes."
"That's splendid ! " replied the stranger, "but I must say at once that
I shall pay no interest. I would prefer to keep myself alive by hunting
and fishing, for my religion forbids me to pay, or to receive, interest."
note:
* To save space I have not subjected the loan-contract here described
to the regulating effect of competition. If the conditions of the loan
were determined by competition in the form of several loan-givers (Crusoes)
to one loan-taker (the Stranger) the contract would be still more favourable
to the loan-taker. It is also assumed that both parties are guided by the
principles of Free-Land, for otherwise the outcome would be, not a loan
contract, but a fight.
Robinson Crusoe:
An admirable religion! But from what motive do you expect me
to advance you provisions from my stores if you pay me no interest?
Stranger:
From pure egoism, my dear fellow, from your self-interest rightly
understood. Because you gain, and gain enormously.
R.C.
That, stranger, you have yet to prove. I confess that I can see
no advantage in lending you my provisions free of interest.
S.
I shall prove it in black and white, and if you can follow my
proof, you will agree to a loan without interest, and thank me into the
bargain. I need, first of all, clothes, for, as you see, I am naked. Have
you a supply of clothes?
R.C.
That chest is packed with buckskin suits.
S.
My dear Crusoe! I had more respect for your intelligence. Just
fancy nailing up clothes for three years in a chest - buckskins, the favourite
diet of moths! And buckskins must be kept aired and rubbed with grease,
otherwise they become hard and brittle.
R C.
That is true, but I have no choice in the matter. They would
be no safer in my clothes-cupboard - less safe, indeed, for it is infested
by rats and mice as well as by moths.
S.
The rats and mice will get them in any case. Look how they have
already started to gnaw their way in!
R.C.
Confound the brutes! I am helpless against them.
S.
What! A human being helpless against mice! I will show you how
to protect yourself against rats and mice and moths, against thieves and
brittleness, dust and mildew. Lend me these clothes for one, two or three
years and I agree to make you new clothes as soon as you require them.
You will receive as many suits as you have lent me, and the new suits will
be far superior to those you would have taken from the chest. Nor will
you regret the absence of the particular perfume you have employed! Do
you agree?
R.C.
Yes, stranger, I agree to lend you the chest of clothes; I see
that in this case, the loan, even without interest, is to my advantage.
*
S.
Now show me your wheat; I need some for bread and seed.
R.C.
It is buried in this mound!
S.
Wheat buried for three years! What about mildew and beetles?
R.C.
I have thought of them and considered every other possibility
but this is the best I can do.
S.
Just bend down a moment. Observe this beetle crawling on the
surface of the mound. Note the garbage and the spreading patch of mildew.
It is high time to take out the wheat and air it.
R.C.
This capital will be my ruin! If only I could find some method
of protecting myself against the thousand destructive forces of nature!
S.
Let me tell you, Crusoe, how we manage at home. We build a dry
and airy shed and shake out the wheat on the boarded floor. Every three
weeks the whole mass is turned over with wooden shovels. We also keep a
number of cats; we set mouse-traps and insure against fire. In this way
we keep the annual depreciation down to 10%.
R.C.
But the labour and expense!
S.
Exactly! You shrink from the labour and expense. In that case
you have another course. Lend me your wheat and I shall replace it, pound
for pound, sack for sack, with fresh wheat from my harvest. You thus save
the labour of building a shed and turning over the wheat; you need feed
no cats, you avoid the loss of weight, and instead of mouldy rubbish you
will have fresh, nutritious bread.
R.C.
With all my heart I accept your proposal.
S.
That is, you will lend me your wheat free of interest?
R.C.
Certainly: without interest and with my best thanks.
S.
But I can use only part of the wheat, I do not need it all.
R.C.
Suppose I give you the whole store with the understanding that
for every ten sacks lent you give me back nine sacks?
Note
* This obvious fact has been overlooked by every writer upon interest
up to the present day, even by Proudhon.
S.
I must decline your offer, for it would mean interest - not indeed
positive, but negative interest. The receiver, not the giver of the loan,
would be a capitalist, and my religion does not permit usury; even negative
interest is forbidden. I propose therefore the following agreement. Entrust
me with the supervision of your wheat, the construction of the shed, and
whatever else is necessary. In return you can pay me, annually, from every
ten sacks two sacks as wages.
R.C.
It makes no difference to me whether your service comes under
the heading of usury or labour. The agreement is, then, that I give you
ten sacks and that you give me back eight sacks?
S.
But I need other articles, a plough, a cart and tools. Do you
consent to lend them, also, without interest? I promise to return everything
in perfect order, a new spade for a new spade, a new, unrusted, chain for
a new chain, and so forth.
R.C.
Of course I consent. All I have at present from my stores is
work. Lately the river overflowed and flooded the shed, covering everything
with mud. Then a storm blew off the roof and everything was damaged by
rain. Now we have drought, and the wind is blowing in sand and dust. Rust,
decay, breakage, drought, light, darkness, dry-rot, ants, keep up a never-ending
attack. We can congratulate ourselves here upon having, at least, no thieves
and incendiaries. I am delighted that, by means of a loan, I can now store
my belongings without expense, labour, loss or vexation, until I need them
later.
S.
That is, you now see the advantage you gain by lending me your provisions
free of interest? *
notes:
* Knut Wicksell, Wert, Kapital und Rente, p.83, "Böhm-Bawerk asserts
that present goods are at least equal to future goods, since, if need be,
they can simply be 'stored for use in the future.' This is certainly a
great exaggeration. Böhm-Bawerk does, indeed, mention that perishable
goods, such as ice, fruit, etc., are an exception. But this exception applies
more or less to all foodstuffs. Perhaps, indeed, all goods except precious
stones and precious metals, if kept for future consumption, require special
labour and attention to which must be added the danger of loss through
accidents such as fire."
(Banks now provide, for private use special store-rooms for gold, precious
stones and securities. For the use of these rooms, rent must be paid. The
"present goods" are here inferior to the "future goods", by at least the
amount of this rent.)
R.C.
Of course I do. But the question now occurs to me, why do similar
stores of provisions at home bring their possessors interest?
S.
The explanation lies in money which is there the medium of such transactions.
R.C.
What? The cause of interest lies in money? That is impossible, for
listen to what Marx says of money and interest:
"The change of value of money that converts it into capital cannot
be derived from the money itself, since money in its function of medium
of payment does no more than pay the price of the commodity it purchases,
and, as hard cash it is value petrified, never varying. Just as little
can the change occur in the second act of circulation, the re-sale of the
commodity. [For in both cases] equivalents are exchanged, and the commodity
is paid for at its full value. We are therefore forced to the conclusion
that the change originates in the use-value of the commodity, after its
purchase and before its sale." (Capital I. VI).
S.
How long have you been on this island?
R.C.
Thirty years.
S.
I thought so! You still appeal to the theory of value. My dear sir,
that theory is dead and buried. At the present day it has no defenders.
R.C.
What ?, Marx's theory of interest dead and buried. Even if no
one else defends it - I defend it
S.
Well then, defend it not only with words but also in practice
if you wish, in relation to me! I hereby break off the bargain we have
just made. From their nature and destination your goods are the purest
form of what is usually called capital. But I challenge you to take up
the position of a capitalist towards me. I need your stuff. No worker ever
appeared before a capitalist as naked as I stand before you. Never has
there been so clear an illustration of the relation between the owner of
capital and the individual in need of capital. And now make the attempt
to exact interest ! Shall we begin our bargaining again from the beginning?
R.C.
I surrender ! Rats, moths and rust have broken my power as a
capitalist. But tell me, what is your explanation of interest?
S.
The explanation is simple enough. If there were a monetary system on
this island and I, as a shipwrecked travelled needed a loan, I should have
to apply to a money-lender for money to buy the things which you have just
lent me without interest. But a money-lender has not to worry about rats
moths, rust and roof-repairing, so I could not have taken up the position
towards him that I have taken up towards you. The loss inseparable from
the ownership of goods (there the dog running off with one of your - or
rather my -buckskins!) is born, not by money-lenders, but by those who
have to store the goods. The money-lender is free from such cares and is
unmoved by the ingenious arguments that found the joints in your armour.
You did not nail up your chest of buckskins when I refused to pay interest;
the nature of your capital made you willing to continue the negotiations.
Not so the money-capitalist; he would bang the door of his strong room
before my face if I announced that I would pay no interest. Yet I do not
need the money itself, I need it only to buy buckskins. The buckskins you
lend me without interest but on the money to buy buckskins I must pay interest!
R.C.
Then the cause of interest is to be sought in money? And Marx
was mistaken?
S.
Of course Marx was mistaken, and as he was mistaken about money,
the nervous system of economic life, he was mistaken about everything.
He and his disciples excluded money from the scope of their enquiry; he
was fascinated by the shining 'metal disks', otherwise he could never have
written: "Gold and silver are not by nature money, but money is by nature
gold and silver, witness the coincidence of their natural properties and
its functions."
R.C.
Practice certainly doesn't confirm Marx's theory, that has been
clearly shown by our negotiations. For Marx money is simply a medium of
exchange, but money does more, it seems, than "merely pay the price of
the commodities it purchases," as Marx asserted. When the borrower refuses
to pay interest, the banker can close the door of his safe without experiencing
any of the cares wich beset the owner of goods - that is the root of the
matter.
S.
Rats, moths and rust are powerful logicians! A single hour of
economic practice has taught you more than years of study of the text books.
From Silvio Gesell's "Natural Economic Order", Mai 5th 1920