| BOOK I |
| THE DIVISIBLE WEALTH OF THE UNITED KINGDOM |
| CHAP. | | PAGE |
| I. | The Welfare of the Home, as the Logical End of Government— | |
| |
| | A Ground of Agreement for all Parties | [3] |
| | Facts and Principles which are the same for everybody | [6] |
| | The Income of the Individual as the Aim and Test of Government | [8] |
| | Private Income and the Empire | [10] |
| | Patriotism and the Home | [11] |
| | Cupidity as a motive in Politics | [12] |
| | The right Education of Cupidity | [13] |
| II. | The Conditions involved in the idea of a Legislative Redistribution of Wealth; and the Necessary Limitations of the Results— | |
| |
| | Cupidity and the Poorer Classes | [14] |
| | The Limits of Sane Cupidity as fixed by the Total Production | [16] |
| | Unforeseen Results of an Equal Division of Wealth | [18] |
| | Contemporary Agitator on Slavery | [20] |
| | Workmen as their own Masters | [21] |
| | Ownership of the Means of Labour impossible for Modern Workman | [22] |
| | Equality possible only under a Universal Wage-System | [24] |
| | Equality and Universal Labour | [26] |
| III. | The Pecuniary Results to the Individual of an Equal Division, first of the National Income, and secondly of certain parts of it— | |
| |
| | The Income of Great Britain | [27] |
| | Division of the National Income | [29] |
| | How to divide the Income equally | [30] |
| | Shares of Men, Women, and Children | [31] |
| | The Maximum Income of a Bachelor | [32] |
| | Smallness of the result | [33] |
| | Maximum Income of a Married Couple | [34] |
| | Practical absurdity of an Equal Division of Income | [36] |
| | A complete Redivision of Property advocated by nobody | [38] |
| | The attack on Landed Property | [40] |
| | Popular ignorance as to the Real Rental of the Landlords | [42] |
| | The Landed Aristocracy | [44] |
| | Multitude of Small Landowners | [45] |
| | Owners of Railway Shares and Consols | [46] |
| | Inappreciable cost of the Monarchy | [47] |
| | Forcible Redistribution impossible | [48] |
| IV. | The Nature of the National Wealth: first, of the National Capital; second, of the National Income. Neither of these is susceptible of Arbitrary Division— | |
| |
| | Difference between Wealth and Money | [49] |
| | Wealth as a whole not divisible like Money | [52] |
| | More luxurious forms of Wealth incapable of division | [54] |
| | The Wealth of Great Britain considered as Capital | [56] |
| | The elements which compose the National Capital | [58] |
| | Ludicrous results of an Equal Division of Capital | [60] |
| | Division of Income, not of Capital, alone worth considering | [62] |
| | Elements which compose the National Income | [64] |
| | Material Goods and Services | [66] |
| | Home-made Goods and Imports | [67] |
| | Two-thirds of the Population dependent on Imported Food | [68] |
| | Variation of the National Income relatively to the Population | [70] |
| | Incomes of other countries compared with that of our own | [72] |
| | Productivity of Industry not determined by Time | [74] |
| | Unperceived increase of the Income of the United Kingdom | [76] |
| | Immense Possible Shrinkage in our National Income | [78] |
| | The Great Problem | [80] |
| BOOK II |
| THE CHIEF FACTOR IN THE PRODUCTION OF THE NATIONAL INCOME |
| I. | Of the various Factors in Production, and how to distinguish the Amount produced by each— | |
| |
| | The Cause of Production generally | [84] |
| | The Production of Given Quantities | [85] |
| | Production a Century Ago | [86] |
| | Amount of Capital employed in it | [87] |
| | Land, Capital, and Human Exertion | [88] |
| | How much produced by each | [89] |
| | The chief Practical Problem in Contemporary Economics | [90] |
| II. | How the Product of Land is to be distinguished from the Product of Human Exertion— | |
| |
| | Rent the Product of Land | [93] |
| | The Accepted Theory of Rent illustrated by an Example | [94] |
| | The Product of Agricultural Labour | [96] |
| | The Product of Land | [97] |
| | Maximum Produce of Labour | [98] |
| | Surplus produced by Land | [99] |
| | Land a Producing Agent as distinct from Labour | [100] |
| | The Existence of Rent not affected by Socialism | [102] |
| | Rent necessarily the Property of whoever owns the Land | [104] |
| | The Argument of this Volume embodied in the case of Rent | [106] |
| III. | Of the Products of Machinery or Fixed Capital, as distinguished from the Products of Human Exertion— | |
| |
| | Capital of Two Kinds | [108] |
| | The part of the Product produced by Machinery or Fixed Capital | [110] |
| | Example of Product of Machinery as distinct from that of Labour | [112] |
| | The Products of a Machine necessarily the Property of Owner | [114] |
| | The Cotton Industry in the Last Century | [116] |
| | Arkwright’s Machinery | [118] |
| | The Iron Industry of Great Britain | [119] |
| | Machinery and Production of Iron | [120] |
| | Machinery and Wage Capital | [121] |
| IV. | Of the Products of Circulating Capital, or Wage Capital, as distinguished from the Products of Human Exertion— | |
| |
| | Simplest Function of Wage Capital | [122] |
| | Distinguishing Function of Modern Wage Capital | [124] |
| | Wage Capital mainly productive as a means of directing Labour | [126] |
| | Slaves and Free Labourers | [128] |
| | Wage Capital and Progress | [129] |
| | Wage Capital as related to the production of New Inventions | [130] |
| | Capital the Tool of Knowledge | [132] |
| | Wage Capital and Arkwright | [133] |
| | Wage Capital as Potential Machinery | [134] |
| | How to discriminate the amount produced by Wage Capital | [136] |
| V. | That the Chief Productive Agent in the modern world is not Labour, but Ability, or the Faculty which directs Labour— | |
| |
| | The best Labour sometimes useless | [138] |
| | Labour not the same faculty as the faculty which directs Labour | [140] |
| | Extraordinary confusion in current Economic Language | [142] |
| | Labour a Lesser Productive Agent | [144] |
| | Ability a Greater Productive Agent | [145] |
| | The Vital Distinction between Ability and Labour | [146] |
| | Ability not a form of Skilled Labour | [148] |
| | Capital applied successfully the same thing as Ability | [150] |
| | Obvious Exceptions | [152] |
| | Ability the Brain of Capital | [153] |
| | Ability as the Force behind Capital the Cause of all Progress | [154] |
| VI. | Of the Addition made during the last Hundred Years by Ability to the Product of the National Labour. This Increment the Product of Ability— | |
| |
| | Production in the Last Century | [156] |
| | Growth of Agricultural Products | [158] |
| | Growth of Production of Iron | [159] |
| | Ability and Agriculture in the Last Century | [160] |
| | The Maximum Product that can be due to Labour alone | [162] |
| | Present Annual Product of Ability in the United Kingdom | [164] |
| | The Product of Capital virtually Product of the Ability of the Few | [166] |
| BOOK III |
| AN EXPOSURE OF THE CONFUSIONS IMPLIED IN SOCIALISTIC THOUGHT AS TO THE MAIN AGENT IN MODERN PRODUCTION. |
| I. | The Confusion of Thought involved in the Socialistic Conception of Labour— | |
| |
| | A confusing Socialistic Formula | [171] |
| | A Plausible Argument | [173] |
| | A Plausible Argument analysed | [174] |
| | Its implied meaning considered | [175] |
| | The real Taskmaster of Labour not an Employing Class, but Nature | [176] |
| | Different position of Ability | [178] |
| | The Organist and Bellows-blower | [179] |
| | The Picture and the Canvas | [180] |
| | The Qualifying Factor | [181] |
| | Do all men possess Ability | [182] |
| | Labour itself non-progressive | [183] |
| | Ancient Labour equal to Modern | [184] |
| | A Remarkable Illustration | [185] |
| | Labour as trained by Watt | [186] |
| | Labour as assisted by Maudslay | [187] |
| II. | That the Ability which at any given period is a Producing Agent, is a Faculty residing in and belonging to living Men— | |
| |
| | A Socialistic Criticism | [188] |
| | Primæval Progress and Labour | [190] |
| | Rudimentary Ability | [191] |
| | Primæval and Modern Inventions | [192] |
| | A more Important Point | [193] |
| | The necessity for Managing Ability increased by Inventive Ability | [194] |
| | The main results of Past Ability inherited by Living Ability | [196] |
| | Productive Ability the Ability of Living Men | [198] |
| | Fresh demonstration of the Productivity of Ability | [200] |
| III. | That Ability is a natural Monopoly, due to the congenital Peculiarities of a Minority. The Fallacies of other Views exposed— | |
| |
| | An Error of Mr. Herbert Spencer’s | [202] |
| | A Philosophic Truth, but an Economic Falsehood | [204] |
| | Whole body of Successful Inventors a very small Minority | [206] |
| | Ability and Opportunity | [208] |
| | Ability not produced by Opportunity | [209] |
| | Ability the Maker of its own Opportunities | [210] |
| | Ability as a matter of Character | [212] |
| | Function of such Ability | [213] |
| | Characters not equalised by Education or Opportunity | [214] |
| | Progress due solely to the Few | [216] |
| | Progress in the Iron Industry | [217] |
| | Early Applications of Ability to British Iron Production | [218] |
| | Ability opposed by the Age instead of representing it | [220] |
| | Isolated Action of Ability | [222] |
| | Arkwright and his associates | [223] |
| | The Value of Watt’s Patent as estimated by his Contemporaries | [224] |
| | Industrial Progress the work of the Few only | [226] |
| IV. | The Conclusion arrived at in the preceding Book restated. The Annual Amount produced by Ability in the United Kingdom— | |
| |
| | Grades of Ability | [228] |
| | Proportion of Able Men to Labourers | [230] |
| | A Rough Calculation | [231] |
| | More than half our National Income produced by a Small Minority | [232] |
| BOOK IV |
| THE REASONABLE HOPES OF LABOUR—THEIR MAGNITUDE, AND THEIR BASIS |
| I. | How the Future and Hopes of the Labouring Classes are bound up with the Prosperity of the Classes who exercise Ability— | |
| |
| | Short Summary of the preceding Arguments | [237] |
| | The preceding Arguments from the Labourer’s Point of View | [240] |
| | The Share of Labour in the growing Products of Ability | [242] |
| | The amount produced by Labour | [244] |
| | The amount taken by Labour | [245] |
| | Continuous Recent Growth of the Receipts of Labour | [246] |
| | Growth of the Receipts of Labour during Queen Victoria’s Reign | [248] |
| | Actual Gains of Labour beyond the Dreams of Socialism | [250] |
| | Two Points to be considered | [252] |
| II. | Of the Ownership of Capital, as distinct from its Employment by Ability— | |
| |
| | Land and its Owners | [253] |
| | Passive Ownership of Capital | [255] |
| | The Class that Lives on Interest | [256] |
| | The Hope of Interest as a Motive | [257] |
| | Capital created and saved mainly for the sake of Interest | [258] |
| | Family Feeling | [260] |
| | The Bequest of Capital | [261] |
| | Interest a Necessary Incident as the Price of the Use of Capital | [262] |
| | A Part of the Interest of Capital constantly appropriated by Labour | [264] |
| | Interest not to be confused with Large Profits | [266] |
| | Interest not to be confused with the Profits of Sagacity | [268] |
| | Enormous gains of Labour at the expense of Ability | [270] |
| | Labour and the Existing System | [272] |
| III. | Of the Causes owing to which, and the Means by which Labour participates in the Growing Products of Ability— | |
| |
| | A Miserable Class co-existing with General Progress | [273] |
| | Relative Decrease of Poverty | [276] |
| | Two Causes of Popular Progress | [277] |
| | The Riches of a Minority | [278] |
| | How they are produced | [279] |
| | The Rich Man’s Progress | [280] |
| | The Rivalry of the Rich | [282] |
| | The Gain of Labour | [283] |
| | Popular Progress and Growth of Population | [284] |
| | The Gain of Labour limited by the Power of Ability | [286] |
| | The Natural Gain of Labour | [288] |
| | Its relation to Politics | [289] |
| | Self-Help and State Help | [290] |
| IV. | Of Socialism and Trade Unionism—the Extent and Limitation of their Power in increasing the Income of Labour— | |
| |
| | So-called Socialism in England different from Formal Socialism | [291] |
| | An Element of Socialism necessary to every State | [294] |
| | The Socialistic question entirely a question of degree | [296] |
| | Socialism not directly operative in increasing the Income of Labour | [298] |
| | Trade Unionism | [300] |
| | How it strengthens Labour | [301] |
| | How the power of striking grows with the growth of Wages | [302] |
| | Natural Limits of the Powers of Trade Unionism | [304] |
| | Labour and Ability | [306] |
| | Higgling on Equal Terms | [307] |
| | The Power represented by Strikes not Labour, but Labouring Men | [308] |
| | Leaders of Labouring Men rarely Leaders of Labour | [310] |
| | The Power of Trade Unionism important, though limited | [312] |
| | Certain remaining points | [314] |
| V. | Of the enormous Encouragement to be derived by Labour from a true View of the Situation; and of the Connection between the Interests of the Labourer and Imperial Politics— | |
| |
| | A Recapitulation | [315] |
| | The Practical Moral | [317] |
| | The True Functions of Trade Unionism and Socialism | [318] |
| | The Natural Progress of Labour a Stimulus to Effort | [320] |
| | The Future of Labour judged from its Past Progress | [322] |
| | The one thing on which the Hopes of Labour depend | [324] |
| | The Real Bargain of Labour not with Capital but Ability | [326] |
| | Subordination to Ability no Indignity to Labour | [328] |
| | The Moral Debt of Ability to Labour | [330] |
| | Labour, Nature, and Ability | [332] |
| | The Home and Foreign Food | [333] |
| | Imperial Politics and the National Income | [334] |
| | The Labourer’s home | [336] |