Introduction
By the second half of the twentieth century moral and political philosophy had split liberalism into two opposing camps: a utilitarian one originating with Jeremy Bentham and a deontic, social contract tradition centered on Immanuel Kant. So, for example, in 1971, John Rawls understands his own theoretical contribution as “offer[ing] an alternative systematic account of justice that is superior, or so I argue, to the dominant utilitarianism of the tradition. The theory that results is highly Kantian in nature.”Footnote 1 This contrast is by no means unique to analytic political philosophy. For example, in a lecture of January 17, 1979, Michel Foucault distinguishes “two approaches” within liberalism: “the revolutionary approach, basically structured around traditional positions of public law, and the radical approach, basically structured around the new economy of government reason.” The former centers on Kant, while the latter centers on Bentham.Footnote 2 Drawing on Elie Halévy’s work, Rawls and Foucault explicitly insist that Bentham, in particular, owes a debt to David Hume and Adam Smith, who are seen as anticipating the significance of utility to moral and political philosophy.Footnote 3
As I acknowledge below, there has been philosophical scholarship to link Kant and Bentham to Smith in various ways, not the least work by Samuel Fleischacker that shows Kant drawing on the impartial spectator and the invisible hand, and work by Fred Rosen linking Smith to Bentham, especially by drawing on the defense of markets.Footnote 4 With Hume, and to a lesser extent with Smith, what we find in the existing literature on these debts is that Kant and Bentham grab different threads from their philosophies and run in distinct, if not wholly opposite, directions. This approach is how they are usually taught in undergraduate ethics and political philosophy courses.
In this essay, I link Bentham and Kant more closely in their politics and political theory through a shared, substantially similar debt to Smith’s An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. In particular, I argue that on some key political questions that are foundational to liberalism, they draw strikingly similar lessons from Smith and build on his ideas in a shared direction. That is, even otherwise very different strands of early liberalism find agreement on a constellation of ideas about trade, federalism, and peace. I show that these are not just preoccupations of Kant’s potentially idiosyncratic Perpetual Peace, but they help define the whole political tradition.Footnote 5
I am not the first to suggest that federalism is rather central to the origin of liberalism. Jacob T. Levy calls attention to Benjamin Constant’s articulation of a “new kind of federalism” that would prevent despotism within each federated state.Footnote 6 (The “old” federalism is agnostic on the structure of each federated state.) We know that when Constant wrote his Principles of Politics he was deeply immersed in Smith’s Wealth of Nations. Footnote 7 So, while I focus on Kant and Bentham in this essay, the argument can be extended to Constant and other early liberals. My reason for focusing on Kant and Bentham is that they both treat federalism as a means to connect and pacify previously hostile states, while Constant focuses more on the role of federalism in integrating a great state internally.
In some ways, this essay returns to the original understanding of Smith’s impact in which his political economy and commitment to a (federally grounded) perpetual peace are the same side of the anti-mercantilist coin as seen by liberalism’s greatest critics. For example, Friedrich Engels’s “Outlines of a Critique of Political Economy” is one of the originating moments of Marxism. It offers a scathing indictment of “liberal economics” after David Ricardo. While Engels is, of course, also critical of Smith, in commenting on him, Engels writes:
Thus economics took on a philanthropic character. It withdrew its favour from the producers and bestowed it on the consumers. It affected a solemn abhorrence of the bloody terror of the Mercantile System, and proclaimed trade to be a bond of friendship and union among nations as among individuals. All was pure splendour and magnificence—yet the premises reasserted themselves soon enough, and in contrast to this sham philanthropy produced the Malthusian population theory—the crudest, most barbarous theory that ever existed, a system of despair which struck down all those beautiful phrases about philanthropy and world citizenship.Footnote 8
My essay helps explain why it was natural for Engels to ascribe to Smith the idea that trade would generate a “union among nations.” For, in the latter parts of the Wealth of Nations, Smith presents a plan for a parliamentary union—a form of federalism between Great Britain, Ireland, and her colonies. As Jennifer Pitts puts it, “[f]or the American colonies, Smith favored either complete emancipation or complete political and economic integration, both of which he believed would be politically so unpopular as to be impossible to institute peacefully.”Footnote 9 Pitts does not develop, though, what “complete political and economic integration” means for Smith.
I argue that Smith proposes a new kind of imperialism, which we would describe as a species of “federalism,” and that his plan influenced Bentham and Kant in their federal projects, although they seem to have been unaware of each other’s proposals. In what follows, I outline Smith’s position. I then describe, in turn, Kant’s and Bentham’s debts to Smith. This will also allow for greater clarity about the nature of early liberalism.Footnote 10
Adam Smith
In this section I briefly review the connection between trade and empire in Wealth of Nations in order to introduce Smith’s views on federalism. I show, in particular, that Smith’s account of parliamentary union is meant to reinforce a functional understanding of the role of trade in political integration.
The English term ‘empire’ is derived from the Latin imperium, which means “to command” or “to control.” To the best of my knowledge, Smith never gives a definition of what he means by empire. He recognizes that empires have existed in the past (often discussing the “Roman” Empire) and he allows that there were ancient empires in Mexico and Peru (both destroyed by the Spanish), though they were not as well governed or rich as the empires of “China, Indostan, Japan, as well as several others in the East Indies” (WN IV.i.33).Footnote 11
Smith recognizes that he, too, lives in an empire, as he notes in the final, gloomy sentence of the Wealth of Nations:
If any of the provinces of the British empire cannot be made to contribute towards the support of the whole empire, it is surely time that Great Britain should free herself from the expence of defending those provinces in time of war, and of supporting any part of their civil or military establishments in time of peace, and endeavour to accommodate her future views and designs to the real mediocrity of her circumstances. (WN V.iii.92)Footnote 12
The particular “provinces” Smith has in mind are the “American” colonies who (as he writes in 1776) seem tempted to go it alone, unwilling as they are to pay the taxes that would contribute to maintenance of their defense and administration by the British Empire without representation. This is not the only reason Smith thinks they are ready to leave. He also suggests that the leaders of the American colonies prefer the stature they gain from their local significance (WN IV.vii.c.68–74).Footnote 13
In fact, Smith implies that the ordinary clientelism that, according to Hume,Footnote 14 had made the British constitution function so well in the first half of the eighteenth century could not be extended to bribe colonial political leaders into supporting British imperial government:
It would be absolutely impossible to distribute among all the leading members of all the colony assemblies such a share, either of the offices or of the disposal of the offices arising from the general government of the British empire, as to dispose them to give up their popularity at home and to tax their constituents for the support of that general government, of which almost the whole emoluments were to be divided among people who were strangers to them. (WN IV.vii.c.69)
The British Empire had become too large to function in the way Robert Walpole had managed it through the earlier half of the eighteenth century.
In the Wealth of Nations, Smith proposed an alternative vision to “real mediocrity” and malfunctioning corruption: a parliamentary union or federal parliament, first housed in Westminster and then, as population keeps growing, North America (WN IV.vii.c.78–79). One of its benefits would be to allow the clientelism “to be managed” properly again (WN IV.vii.c.78).
In Smith’s terminology, this is an imperial project that would “complete” the British constitution. He makes this very point by contrasting it with the fate of the Roman Republic:
Though the Roman constitution, therefore, was necessarily ruined by the union of Rome with the allied states of Italy, there is not the least probability that the British constitution would be hurt by the union of Great Britain with her colonies. That constitution, on the contrary, would be completed by it, and seems to be imperfect without it. (WN IV.vii.c.77)
This idea of completing and perfecting the constitution (and empire) is echoed in the final paragraph in the lines just before Smith prophecies Britain’s “real mediocrity”:
This empire, however, has hitherto existed in imagination only. It has hitherto been, not an empire, but the project of an empire; not a gold mine, but the project of a gold mine; a project which has cost, which continues to cost, and which, if pursued in the same way as it has been hitherto, is likely to cost immense expence, without being likely to bring any profit; for the effects of the monopoly of the colony trade, it has been shewn, are, to the great body of the people, mere loss instead of profit. It is surely now time that our rulers should either realize this golden dream, in which they have been indulging themselves, perhaps, as well as the people; or, that they should awake from it themselves, and endeavour to awaken the people. If the project cannot be compleated, it ought to be given up. (WN V.iii.92)
Despite the low odds, Smith is proposing a new kind of imperialism, one that is federal in character in which the colonies will have, in addition to the colonial assemblies, representatives in the “States General of the British Empire” (WN V.iii.68). The point is thereby to extend “the British system of taxation … to all the different provinces of the empire” (WN V.iii.68, emphasis added). To what degree this “all” is meant to include the North American colonists only (as I used to think), or all of Britain’s global dominions (including colonized inhabitants), as Maria Pia Paganelli suggests, is an interesting question I cannot answer here.Footnote 15 Once there is an imperial system of taxation, it could pay for common defense and other common expenses, including paying off the debt (WN V.iii.88).
I use “new imperialism” here to suggest that it anticipates Constant’s idea of a “new kind of federalism” that would prevent despotism within each federated state. Unlike the mercantile empires, Smith’s new imperialism is peaceful in character and is meant to create economic and political integration.
It would be a mistake to see Smith’s advocacy of a new kind of globalizing imperialism as driven by concerns over tax policy only. As is well known, Smith has many reasons for defending the benefits of free trade.Footnote 16 According to Smith, free trade also generates the development of a peaceful (continental) empire. Smith presents this as a “functionalist” argument; liberal free trade itself shapes political integration: “Were all nations to follow the liberal system of free exportation and free importation, the different states into which a great continent was divided would so far resemble the different provinces of a great empire” (WN IV.v.b.39). To be sure, this literally says that (1) free trade is structurally analogous to life under empire. But because in wider context he is arguing for free trade, this can also be read as (2) if one adopts free trade, as Smith urges, the trading parties will seem transformed and politically integrated as if or structurally analogous to (“resemble”) a continent-wide empire.
Smith goes on to emphasize an important humanitarian feature of his account of empire, which links it to his argument for free trade:
As among the different provinces of a great empire the freedom of the inland trade appears, both from reason and experience, not only the best palliative of a dearth, but the most effectual preventative of a famine; so would the freedom of the exportation and importation trade be among the different states into which a great continent was divided. (WN IV.v.b.39)
For Smith, “empire” entails (intra-imperial) free trade. That is to say, the freedom of trade within empires themselves is an excellent way to manage and prevent the risk of famine. Peacefully completing the British constitution in a parliamentary union is, thus, a means to induce the hunger-fighting benefits and marshal the resources of an actual empire.
Smith’s interest in combating famine is signaled from the opening pages of the Wealth of Nations. Footnote 17 In the “Introduction and Plan of the Work,” Smith introduces us to the great risk of perishing “with hunger” in poor nations (WN Intro.4). He contrasts this with circumstances “in a well-governed society,” with an advanced division of labor that generates “that universal opulence which extends itself to the lowest ranks of the people” (WN I.i.10). The beneficial effects of widespread wealth are made possible by good government. (The implied target is mercantile rent-seeking.) Development is an act of ongoing and active state-building.Footnote 18 As noted, Smith presents his parliamentary union as an extension of “the British system of taxation … to all the different provinces of the empire” (WN V.iii.68). The benefits of such constructive governance thus bookends the Wealth of Nations. (I do not mean to suggest that Smith is the first person to offer a functionalist argument that suggests trade leads to political union and/or peace. One can locate, for example, a version of it in Robert Molesworth’s 1694 An Account of Denmark. Footnote 19)
My interest here in this argument is, thus, not just humanitarian, but also political. Given (2), lurking in Smith’s economic arguments for free trade is a functionalist argument in which free trade itself leads to a kind of pacific political integration of a new kind of empire. But because this empire is itself meant to be a free trade area (WN V.iii.89), the functional argument and parliamentary union complement and strengthen each other. For students of European Union (EU) politics, this is a familiar argument pattern.Footnote 20 What makes Smith’s argument novel is that he thinks such integration can work across enormous spatial distances. He insists on the fact that “the European colonies in America are more remote than the most distant provinces of the greatest empires which had ever been known before” (WN IV.vii.b.52).Footnote 21
To be sure, Smith realizes that in many mercantile contexts trade can also be a source of conflict and animosity, so he did not have a providential faith in its necessary good effects.Footnote 22 But this is not because Smith views trade in an apolitical fashion (WN IV.vii.c.80).
Smith calls his specific plan for a parliamentary union the “states-general of the British Empire” (WN V.iii.68) and he presents it, as we have seen, as a “completion” of the British constitution (WN IV.vii.c.77).Footnote 23 Both the teleological language of completion (and “perfection”) and the foreign terminology of “states-general” are a bit puzzling. I discuss them in turn.
Until the early days of the French Revolution in 1789, there had been no French states-general since 1614, so it would be strange if Smith meant to allude to it in 1776. However, Smith does not originate the idea of an imperial “states-general” or federal parliamentary unions.Footnote 24 The idea, with explicit mention or allusions to the Dutch example of federalism, can also be found in Hume’s 1752 “Idea of a Perfect Commonwealth”Footnote 25 and Baruch Spinoza’s posthumous 1677 Political Treatise. Footnote 26 In fact, Smith’s proposal combines features of Hume’s domestic federal plan with Spinoza’s “new” (in Constant’s sense) kind of international federalism.Footnote 27 There is thus some precedent in treating an imperial federal parliament as an estates-general.Footnote 28
Smith’s teleological language in which the imperial, parliamentary union “perfects” and “completes” the British constitution seems to have fewer anticipations. Strikingly, Hume never seems to describe constitutions in this way, although he does articulate an “Idea for a Perfect Commonwealth,” which is federal in character. Perhaps Smith was influenced by the great jurist William Blackstone, who, while criticizing John Locke (who is classified with the “wild extremes” and even among the “zealous republicans”), suggests, nevertheless, that the nontrivial changes of the events of 1688 (the Glorious Revolution) were in accord with “the spirit of our constitution.”Footnote 29 Blackstone intimates that in his own day “our constitution arrived” at “full perfection.”Footnote 30 Smith’s new imperialism explicitly denies this.
One may well wonder why I have treated Smith’s proposed parliamentary union as federal in character. First, Smith assumes throughout that the colonies will also be self-governed by assemblies, although he wants to shift the political primacy to Westminster (WN IV.vii.c.68–74). Second, the Dutch estates-general were, in principle, federal in character; each of its provinces (and towns) had its own governing structure. The seven provinces had their own representative “states” (s)elected by the towns and nobility, whereas cities were controlled by a magistracy and a council that could be elected or selected.Footnote 31
In 1776, Smith was offering to give the colonists and British what they wanted: the Americans would have gotten taxation with representation, and the British retention of empire.Footnote 32 Even after American independence, in subsequent editions of the Wealth of Nations, Smith left his proposal in, presumably to illustrate some of his arguments that remained significant if only because other British colonies and dependencies might, as Paganelli suggests, also make good candidates for parliamentary union.Footnote 33 As Smith puts it, “[s]uch a speculation can at worst be regarded but as a new Utopia, less amusing certainly, but not more useless and chimerical than the old one” (WN V.iii.68).
I suspect there are three reasons for this. First, federalism could undermine the tendency toward mercantilism because it would make some kinds of rent-seeking more difficult because there would be more competing interests represented in the enlarged parliament. In particular, those interested in creating free trade between Britain and her American colonies would be better represented.Footnote 34 Second, it would explicitly aim to solve the oppression of “the middling and inferior ranks of people in Scotland” from “the power of an aristocracy which had always before oppressed them” (WN V.iii.89). Third, it would combat the oppression “of all ranks in Ireland [who] would gain an equally compleat deliverance from a much more oppressive aristocracy” grounded “in the most odious of all distinctions, those of religious and political prejudices” (WN V.iii.89). That is, Smith sees parliamentary union with the colonies also as a means to resolve a number of intractable political and moral problems that were the consequence of English colonization of Ireland and English union with Scotland. Why he thinks this is not entirely clear, but presumably he expects that in a wider polity good governance demands a more homogeneous and simultaneously more tolerant rule of law.
In what follows, I focus on the afterlife of Smith’s functionalist argument for free trade and “new imperialism” (that is, federalism) in the context of arguments for federal peace projects. In particular, it can be shown that in the 1790s early Bentham and (relatively late) Kant embrace versions of it, and that they did so while engaging with the Wealth of Nations. A subtext of my argument is that such functionalism about trade and federalism is one of the slender threads that unifies an otherwise heterogeneous-seeming origin of the liberal tradition. While modern commentators have been relatively uninterested in exploring the details, Smith’s federal ideas were, in fact, debated throughout the nineteenth century in Britain.Footnote 35
Kant and Smithian federalism
The first uncontroversial and explicit reference to Smith in Kant’s writings dates from 1798. Fleischacker makes a compelling case that Kant started to engage with Smith’s Wealth of Nations from around 1784 onward.Footnote 36 Fleischacker shows there are clear allusions to Smith in Kant’s 1795 work Perpetual Peace: A Philosophical Sketch. Here, I develop Fleischacker’s argument.Footnote 37
One other important insight that one can glean from Fleischacker’s original study is that Kant treats the significance of the Wealth of Nations not exclusively as an economic, but also as a political work. Also, Kant sees the connection between financial and commercial independence and tutelage (or Unmündigkeit, that is, “without voice”), and Fleischacker makes a promising case that this is, in fact, derived from Smith who (like Hume) greatly valued the interdependent independence that modern commercial life provided.Footnote 38
In addition to Kant tracking some of Smith’s views on the relationship between state and religion in Perpetual Peace, Fleischacker notes that there are clear allusions to Smith in Perpetual Peace related to the role of debt financing of war. Because Kant was familiar with “Of Public Credit,”Footnote 39 he may have gotten some of these claims from Hume.
Even so, Kant offers six reasons for worrying about debt finance in the context of war (and war preparation), thereby undermining what he takes to be the natural pacifism of what he calls “commercial republics” (we might say “liberal democracies”):
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1. The ability to take on potentially unlimited debt prolongs war.
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2. The availability of debt as a state instrument incentivizes aggressive, mercantile elements in society, when they have access to power, to pursue unpacific foreign policy.
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3. Debt financing pushes the costs of war onto future generations, and so it undermines the incentive to seek peace.
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4. It shifts partial control over the war from politics to financial markets.Footnote 40
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5. International debt generates systemic risk through contagion. It is worth quoting the passage because it is rarely mentioned: “prohibition [of non-investment state debt] ought all the more to serve as the basis of a preliminary article of perpetual peace, since the ultimately unavoidable bankruptcy of one state would necessarily involve other states in the loss, though at no fault of their own, which would thus cause them a public injury.”
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6. Punitive debt (in the service of reparations) incentivizes war.Footnote 41
Three comments are in order. First, the first four of these claims have counterparts in the Wealth of Nations. The fifth claim seems wholly original in Kant, although Smith has a lot of material on domestic financial contagion in Book II of the Wealth of Nations. The sixth claim is original to Kant, although as I show in the next section, it was also noted by Bentham while engaging with the Wealth of Nations. Footnote 42
Second, in all six of these there is an understanding that also runs through the Wealth of Nations and its polemic against mercantilism: war is profitable for some well-connected interests, while damaging to the rest of society (and other countries). Third, this pessimism about debt’s role represents a change from “Idea for a Universal History,” where Kant thought that great financial debt would prevent wars.Footnote 43 So, this does make one wonder to what degree he really agrees with Smith in the mid-1780s (as Fleischacker implies).
My suggestion, which goes beyond Fleischacker’s argument, is that Smith’s federalism as a political structure for Britain’s empire itself helped shape Kant’s proposal for perpetual peace, if we accept the argument that Kant had intimate familiarity with the Wealth of Nations when he wrote Perpetual Peace. Two arguments suggest that Smith’s federalism is important to Kant. The first strikes me as rather solid; the second is wholly speculative.
First, recall the passage that I above treated as Smith’s argument of functional integration near the end of Wealth of Nations: “Were all nations to follow the liberal system of free exportation and free importation, the different states into which a great continent was divided would so far resemble the different provinces of a great empire” (WN IV.v.b.39). Perpetual Peace adopts this functionalist argument for political integration in terms of regional blocks that grow organically and peacefully and that maintain pacific relations with others, which is why it is often trotted out in discussions of the EU.Footnote 44 Kant does not use the same terms as Smith, but they both offer functional arguments from trade on behalf of economic and political integration of continental systems.
In Perpetual Peace, the functional argument operates on two levels. The first level is as a means to escape the Hobbesian state of nature that first dispersed people throughout the globe: “It was trade that first brought them into peaceful relations with one another and thereby into relationships based on mutual consent, community, and peaceful interactions even with remote peoples.”Footnote 45 Trade thus makes a widely dispersed peaceful interaction possible.
The second level is after the establishment of states. Kant thinks that a system of well-designed commercial republics may secure perpetual peace because they have a natural pacifism: “It is the spirit of trade, which cannot coexist with war, which will, sooner or later, take hold of every people. Since, among all ordered powers subordinate to state authority, the power of money is likely the most reliable, states find themselves forced (admittedly not by motivations of morality) to promote a noble peace.”Footnote 46
Kant’s is a kind of sociological argument evoking Montesquieu’s doux commerce. In virtue of the spirit of trade being a persistent and reliable social force, it becomes the preferred means of public policy to promote political integration. On some readings of the two functional arguments, the effect (namely, pacific relations and noble peace) may well not be intended by the state actors. So, these may also be thought to instantiate unintended-consequences arguments. This sociological argument is my main reason for thinking that Kant is indebted to Smith (and perhaps both to Montesquieu).
The second, much more speculative argument for suggesting that Kant is indebted to Smith is based on a somewhat odd passage: “[N]ature guarantees perpetual peace through the mechanism of human inclinations itself. To be sure, it does this with a certainty that is not sufficient to foretell the future of this peace (theoretically), but which is adequate from a practical perspective and makes it a duty to work toward this (not simply chimerical) goal.”Footnote 47 The underlying claim is fairly straightforward. Kant reassures his reader that his normative project (federal, regional peace blocks) makes no unrealistic assumptions about human nature because it relies on mostly self-regarding dispositions and the social force of the pursuit of wealth. Because his project is possible, we have a duty to pursue it and, thereby, work with the tendency of providence.
It is notable that Kant himself adds for good measure that his goal is feasible and not a “chimera.” Smith also uses “chimera” at a key point, where he reintroduces his parliamentary union project that would make of the Northern Atlantic Ocean a giant free trade zone. After noting the obstacles derived from “the private interest of many powerful individuals,” Smith writes:
Without, however, pretending to determine whether such a union be practicable or impracticable, it may not, perhaps, be improper, in a speculative work of this kind, to consider how far the British system of taxation might be applicable to all the different provinces of the empire; what revenue might be expected from it if so applied, and in what manner a general union of this kind might be likely to affect the happiness and prosperity of the different provinces comprehended within it. Such a speculation can at worst be regarded but as a new Utopia, less amusing certainly, but not more useless and chimerical than the old one. (WN V.iii.68)
Taken by itself, the use of “chimera” and its cognates would surely be a coincidence. But in the context of Fleischacker’s argument and my own evidence about the connection between the Wealth of Nations and Perpetual Peace, it is not improbable that in Perpetual Peace it reflects a Kantian homage to Smith.
This concludes my two-fold argument about Smith’s impact on one of Kant’s most famous works. In the next section, I show with even better evidence that there is a similar connection between Smith and Bentham.
Bentham and Smithian federalism
Thanks to Pitts’s A Turn to Empire Bentham’s anti-imperial sensibility is well known. But her explicit treatment of an essay known as “A Plan for an Universal and Perpetual Peace” (hereafter “A Plan”) is brief. In what follows, I explain four key features of “A Plan,” and I also illustrate how Bentham is indebted to Smith and addresses Smith’s practical objection to decolonization by using Smith’s principles against himself.
“A Plan” is the fourth of Bentham’s essays published in 1839 under the title Principles of International Law,Footnote 48 and editor John Bowring suggests the essays were manuscripts written in 1786–1789. This timing matters. We know that Bentham was then immersed in Smith’s Wealth of Nations because he published in 1787 the first edition of his Defence of Usury, which included his famous criticism of Smith’s views of usury.Footnote 49
Unfortunately, as Pitts notes, contemporary editors strongly suspect that Bowring re-organized these manuscripts in all kinds of ways.Footnote 50 Gunhild Hoogensen suggests that “A Plan” is itself a complex (even “Frankensteinian”) compilation of three essays: “Pacification and Emancipation,” “Colonies and Navy,” and “Cabinet No Secresy.”Footnote 51 It is, thus, pretty clear that while this material can be used to understand Bentham’s reception and sources, one should be cautious in using it to understand Bentham’s intentions. In what follows I focus on sources and their implied impact. Where I seem to speak of Bentham’s implied intentions, it should be understood that I merely mean to be characterizing “A Plan.”Footnote 52
“A Plan” defends four proposals, the first two of which are mentioned at the outset: “1. The reduction and fixation of the force of the several nations that compose the European system; 2. The emancipation of the distant dependencies {possessions} of each state.”Footnote 53 When Bentham speaks of the “European system,” he is primarily and explicitly focused on France and England. (At one point, the naval and political contexts of Spain and Holland enter in, too.) He believes “that supposing Great Britain and France thoroughly agreed [to arms reduction], the principal difficulties would be removed to the establishment of a plan of general and permanent pacification for all Europe.”Footnote 54 As Bentham notes in a footnote, by proposing the former (1), he is building on an argument by Dean Tucker, and by proposing the latter (2), he is building on an argument by James Anderson.Footnote 55
Tucker’s argument was not unique, because versions of it had circulated since 1713 when the Abbé de Saint-Pierre proposed arms reduction as a means to perpetual peace; Saint-Pierre’s proposals also caught Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s and Kant’s attention.Footnote 56 Interestingly enough, in The National System of Political Economy, Smith’s great critic Friedrich List claims that “Adam Smith naturally understood under the word ‘peace’ the ‘perpetual universal peace’ of the Abbé St. Pierre.”Footnote 57
As Bentham’s way of phrasing it already indicates, Anderson was not against colonizing as such, but he thought it made more sense to do so in underdeveloped parts of Great Britain, especially the Scottish highlands. As Salim Rashid notes, this was part of a wider trend in the aftermath of American independence, and arguably built on the experience of colonizing Ireland.Footnote 58
Lurking in “A Plan” is the idea that under modern conditions, wars of conquest are costly and self-defeating, although they may be profitable for a part of the (conquering) nation. This echoes Smith’s critique of mercantilism. We encountered a similar argument in Kant.
A third important proposal in Bentham’s “A Plan” is (3) “the establishment of a common court of judicature for the decision of differences between the several nations, although such court were not to be armed with any coercive powers.”Footnote 59 This echoes Emeric Crucé’s 1623 New Cineas as well as William Penn’s 1693 “Essay toward the Present and Future Peace of Europe.”Footnote 60 Penn’s pamphlet was probably better known than Crucé’s book, but I have not seen either mentioned by Kant, Bentham, or Smith, so I will leave these aside here.Footnote 61
Arbitration of conflict and functional integration through trade becomes a mainstay of later liberals such as Richard Cobden and John Bright during the middle of the nineteenth century.Footnote 62 This culminates in the first free trade treaty, the 1860 Cobden-Chevalier treaty between France and Great Britain, including its adoption of most-favored-nation status.Footnote 63 The publication of “A Plan” is, thus, important to the development of propagating functional integration in liberalism.
Bentham also anticipates U.S. President Woodrow Wilson’s hostility to secret diplomacy: “That secresy in the operations of the foreign department ought not to be endured in England; being altogether useless and equally repugnant to the interests of liberty and to those of peace.”Footnote 64 This rejection of secret diplomacy seems original to Bentham.
The Smithian elements in “A Plan” have been underplayed in the literature. For example, the argument against foreign colonies rests on the Smithian claim that they increase the chance of wars. But the connection with Smith’s writings is integral to the argument of “A Plan,” without wishing to deny its distinctiveness; it is not derivative of Smith, but wholly Benthamite in character. In what follows, I emphasize two features. First, Bentham is indebted to Smith’s actual political economy. Second, what ties many elements of “A Plan” together is an attempt to remedy the rent-seeking problem that some ruling parts of a state benefit from war and monopoly, which would have been Smith’s key objection to the feasibility of Bentham’s proposals.
First, Bentham builds on Smith’s critique of the mercantile system. Smith argues that while monopolistic trade with foreign colonies is highly profitable for some, it comes at the expense of consumers, undermines domestic investment, and involves the taxpayers in open-ended costly wars to defend often strategically vulnerable dependencies: “Britain derives nothing but loss from the dominion which she assumes over her colonies” (WN IV.vii.c.65). Bentham accepts this argument, but unlike Smith, who had made an exception to his free trade principles on this very point, Bentham also attacks the navigation act in “A Plan.”
In fact, “A Plan” argues from normative and theoretical Smithian premises to an anti-Smithian prescriptive conclusion. Right after Smith points to how unprofitable mercantilism is, he says:
To propose that Great Britain should voluntarily give up all authority over her colonies, and leave them to elect their own magistrates, to enact their own laws, and to make peace and war as they might think proper, would be to propose such a measure as never was, and never will be adopted, by any nation in the world. No nation ever voluntarily gave up the dominion of any province, how troublesome soever it might be to govern it, and how small soever the revenue which it afforded might be in proportion to the expence which it occasioned. (WN IV.vii.66)
That is, Smith thinks, on economic grounds, that Britain ought to give up her colonies if they wish for independence, but he thinks it is unrealistic to accept voluntary dismembering from the center of any polity.Footnote 65 Smith states that it is pride and, more important, the “private interests” of governing parts of the state that prevent that from happening. In what follows, I show how Bentham engages with this objection, which is why I emphasize his use of Smith’s principles to do so, even where Bentham may also draw on other sources.
The stated aim of “A Plan” is:
The objection, and the only objection to it [i.e., Britain giving up its colonies], is the apparent impracticability of it—that it is not only hopeless, but that to such a degree that any {every} proposal to that effect deserves the name of visionary and ridiculous. This objection I shall endeavour in the first place to remove; for the removal {overcoming} of this prejudice may be necessary to procure for the plan a hearing.Footnote 66
Bentham is offering a kind of immanent development of Smith’s ideal position in order to undermine Smith’s feasibility objections to it.
Donald Winch claims that Bentham’s fundamental axiom “that the increase of growing wealth every nation in a given period [sic], is necessarily limited by the quantity of capital it possesses at that period”Footnote 67 is a subtle deviation from Smith because, according to Winch, trade for Smith is limited by “new markets.”Footnote 68 Winch undoubtedly gets the spirit of Smith’s position right: the division of labor is limited by the size of a market. But he understates how Smithian Bentham’s position really is. Here is a key passage from Smith:
The extent of the home-trade and of the capital which can be employed in it, is necessarily limited by the value of the surplus produce of all those distant places within the country which have occasion to exchange their respective productions with one another. That of the foreign trade of consumption, by the value of the surplus produce of the whole country and of what can be purchased with it. That of the carrying trade, by the value of the surplus produce of all the different countries in the world. Its possible extent, therefore, is in a manner infinite in comparison of that of the other two, and is capable of absorbing the greatest capitals. (WN II.v.36)
I agree with Winch that this states that effective demand limits trade. However, as Smith also indicates in the first sentence quoted above, capital is needed for distant trade. It is a necessary condition for trade, and its stock grows only by savings, greater productivity, or income from rents. Because Bentham only emphasizes capital as a constraint, Winch is right to suggest that it is “a simplified and more dogmatic version of Smith’s economic ideas.”Footnote 69
But this is not the only economic idea that Bentham deploys from Smith. For example, after agreeing with Smith (and against mercantile and physiocratic systems) that of all branches of the economy, “no one is to such a degree more beneficial to the public than the rest, as that it should be worth its while to call forth the powers of law to give it an advantage. But if there were any, it would unquestionably be the improvement and cultivation of land.”Footnote 70 This is exactly Smith’s position (especially for small-landholding) because, as Smith notes, it is least risky: “The capital of the landlord, on the contrary, which is fixed in the improvement of his land, seems to be as well secured as the nature of human affairs can admit of” (WN III.i.3).
In fact, Bentham claims that “[i]t is impossible that while there is ground untilled, or ground that might be better tilled than it is, that any detriment should ensue to the community from the withholding or withdrawing capital from any other branch of industry, and employing it in agriculture.”Footnote 71 This echoes Smith’s arguments against entails and primogeniture: “Compare the present condition of those [great] estates with the possessions of the small proprietors in their neighbourhood, and you will require no other argument to convince you how unfavourable such extensive property is to improvement” (WN III.ii.7).
Another key argument of “A Plan” is:
[R]easons against distant dominions may be found in a consideration of the good of the government.Footnote 72 Distant mischiefs make little impression on those on whom the remedying of them depends. A single murder committed in London makes more impression than if thousands of murders and other cruelties committed in the East Indies. The situation of Hastings, only because he was present, excited compassion in those who heard the detail of the cruelties {enormities} committed by him with indifference.Footnote 73
Here, “A Plan” uses Smith’s moral psychology—namely, that distance affects our motivation to act—to argue for Smith’s claim that principal-agent problems beset colonial government. Smith thinks the East India charter should be revoked precisely because it is tyrannical and principal-agent problems could not be overcome.Footnote 74 Compassion, a Latinate synonym for Greek-inspired sympathy, plays a much bigger role in Smith’s moral philosophy than it does in Bentham’s. I doubt Smith applies it to the Hastings impeachment, so that is especially remarkable.Footnote 75 Other Smithian principles articulated in “A Plan” are that the government should not promote export subsidies (bounties), nor use duties or promote taxes on imports of other countries’ manufacturers.
So much for the indebtedness of Bentham to Smith’s political economy. I now move to Smith’s second, key implied objection to the feasibility of Bentham’s proposals. For so far, it looks like “A Plan” does not address the issue of honor or pride, and so seems to ignore Smith’s concern that voluntary, peaceful decolonization is never to be expected. “A Plan” tackles this, though, in an ingenious way. Bentham points out that if a (peace) treaty is used to set favorable conditions for oneself and de facto is felt as humiliating by the other side, then that treaty must be thought unstable, and even an invitation to further war. Bentham uses Rome’s first peace treaty with Carthage as an example (we could invoke the treaty of Versailles).Footnote 76 That is, “A Plan” proposes that all states should address each other’s sense of honor and fears when they make treaties with each other. Lurking in Bentham is the idea that government rests on public opinion. This is a view more ordinarily associated with Hume, but as Paul Sagar rightly emphasizes, it is also in Smith.Footnote 77
As noted, one of Bentham’s main proposals in “A Plan” is a court of arbitrage that eventually may get enforcement powers and require “a clause guaranteeing the liberty of the press in each state.”Footnote 78 This plank of his proposal is introduced in “A Plan” when Bentham confronts the objection that his plan is visionary: “Can the arrangement proposed be justly styled visionary, when it has been proved of it—that 1. It is in the interest of the parties concerned. 2. They are already sensible of that interest. 3. The situation it would place them in is no new one, nor any other than the original situation they set out from.”Footnote 79 At this point, “A Plan” argues that a court of arbitrage is not a new invention but exists in several (federal) contexts: the American confederation, the German diet, the Swiss league.Footnote 80 Such a court would, thus, be the building block for (4) federalism. “A Plan” proposes that such a court be instituted alongside a disarmament treaty in which the arms savings are publicly announced, such that the benefits of peace are made clear to public opinion.
What ties many elements of “A Plan” together is an attempt to overcome the politically salient fact that some ruling parts of a Mercantile state benefit from war and monopoly. On my reconstruction, Bentham’s response centers on the interlocking effects of publicity, no secrecy in diplomacy, a free press, public opinion, and the avoidance of humiliating treaties. Once federal and arbitration mechanisms are in place, these, in turn, can introduce further mechanisms to reduce the possibility and attractiveness of mutual war.
Conclusion
In this essay I have recovered a feature of the Benthamite and Kantian readings of Smith’s Wealth of Nations. The reception by Bentham and Kant suggests that Smith’s Wealth of Nations galvanized a political argument for economic and political integration through federal institutions that may bring about peaceful relations against the spirit of war promoted by European mercantile projects. But Smith also leaves key objections to this argument in place. Kant and Bentham both offer related institutional and political mechanisms to tackle these objections, and they thereby develop political institutions that become characteristic of liberalism. By bringing to the foreground the shared Smithian roots of their perpetual peace plans, we come to appreciate Bentham and Kant as belonging to a shared movement, one that, for all their individual flaws, was originally dedicated to peace and the progressive, political unification of humankind.
Acknowledgments
I thank audiences at University of Arizona and Waseda University, David Schmidtz, Maria Pia Paganelli, an anonymous referee, and the readers of my blog for helpful suggestions on an earlier draft of this essay. This research was made possible by Dutch Research Council (NWO) Grant, 406.18.FT.014.
Competing interests
The author declares none.