632 Staistieal Tables for future reference. 
STATEMENT shewing the Annvat VARIATION ‘in the STATE and Conprrion of 
GREAT BRITAIN, as regards her Commerce, Manufactures, Taxation, aud Pano- 
CHIAL ASSESSMENTS, on an Average of each five Years, since the general Peace in 1783. 
COLONTAL& FOREIGN oii 
Propvucs from and to | Manufactures EXPORTED Der P tas We py 
all parts of the World } ———_—___—__——_. “ 4 his 
British Produce and 
exc pt freland.; 
oe memrenine Value or Re ; «|, Parochial 
YEARS. Imported. | Reexported. | or Saran, Vatue. TA mt : lp gah 
1782 | 9,714,000 | NoReturn | 9,919,000 > There wasno | 47,000,000 | 2,000,000 
1784— 88] 16,633,910 | 4,584,139 | 11,989,172 (authenticre- | 48 990,000 | 2,167,748 
9a 93 | 19,070,282 | 5,703,102 | 15,961,865 ( Vaiue prior | 18,000,000 2 Nv authentic 
93— 7 | 21,696,756] 8,203,209 | 16,592,222 to 1798. 19,601,738 § these periods 
8 —1803 | 29,578,490 | 11,631,550 | 23,840,865 | 40,322,381 | 33,670,195 | 5,300,000 
1804— 9] 30,100,807 | 10,340,564 | 27,231,957 | 43,594,050 | 55,888,192 | 6,500,000 
10— 15 | 32,181,483 | 15,181,555 32,867,738 44,471,855 | 67,959,000 | 8,500,000 
16— 21 | 30,501,500 | 10,925,516 | 37,818,325 | 37,865,836 | 55,400,088 | 8,545,672 | 
1822 | 29,401,807 | 9,211,928 | 43,558,490 | 36,176,897 | 54,974,243 | 7,761,441 
1823 | 34,544,246 | 8,588,966 | 43,144,466 | 34,691,124 | 52,948,542 6,898,153 
RT RRA RAE EA A AR RR RE 
*,° The above Statement exhibits a considerable diminution in the Money Amount of both Taxes and Pa- 
rochial Assessments, but, resolving itself, as ali TAXATION does, into labour, and the products of labour 
the Taxation of 1823, both State and Parochial, will, on a fair investigation be seen to be greater than that 
¥ any Year during the WAR. YP The Accounts of Parochial Assesments are made up to Easter in cach 
Year. In the above Statement the Accounts end at Easter in the Year affixed, but in the Statement below 
at Easter in the following Year. _ . 
COMPARATIVE VIEW of the Increase and Extent of Pauperism and Crime in 
ENGLAND & WALES, at different Periods since 1748; and Statement shewing the 
Total Amount of Parish Assessments, and the Proportion thereof expended for the Relief 
of PAUPERS, and the EquivaLenT of that Amount in Quarters of Wheat, according to 
the Average Price of Wheat in each Year ; The No. of Committals for CRIME in England 
& Wales; The total Amount of TAXES in GREAT BRITAIN, and of British Propucs 
and, Manuractrures Exported therefrom in each Year since 1811.» si 
Total | S/sa8dax 33%. 
mount of | Ex SRL SS $ Sf 
gy ke f Jor Retisp. Soy < 2s os 33 SS38 
years. | Assesment | ofPaupers Sse 38 sR 32 £85 
~| ——£—— |— £€—_| ses |sscss| §S | TAXES. | Beds 
1749 | 730,135} 689,971 Rl aesae|° §.  |oe osgss 
76 | 1,720,316 | 1,521,732 SSS S| 5S | 11,000,000] Sesx 
84 | 2,167,748 | 1,912.94] brace | en Neve} A ONO OOO eee 2 
1803 | 5,348,204 | 4,077,891 | s56/5d | 1,443,101 38,511,812 | 22,252,102 
12 | 8,640,842 | 6,656,105 | 125/5 | 1,061,438 | 6,576 | 64,752,025 | si248 a 
13 | 8,388,974 | 6,294,584 | 108/9 | 1,197,625 | 7,164 | 68,302,859 | 32,000,000 
14 | 7,457,676 | 5,418,845 | 73/3 | 1,484,615] 6,390 | 70,240,312 | $3,299,589 
15 | 6,937,425 | 5,724,506} 64/4 | 1,779,639 | 7,818 | 71,203,141 | 41,712,002 
16 | 8,128,418 | 6,918,217 | 75/10 | 1,824,584 | 9,091 | 62,426,506 | 34,774,520 
17 | 9,320,440 | 7,890,148 | 94/9 | 1,665,467 | 13,932 | 52,135,739 | 39,235,397 
18 | 8,932,185 | 7,531,650 | 84/1 | 1,791,472 | 13,567 | 53,937,318 | 41,963,527 
19 | 8,719,655 | 7,329,594 | 73/0 | 2,008,408 | 14,254 | 53,238,914 | 32,923,575 
1820 | 8,411,893 | 6,958,445 | 65/7 | 2,122,016 | 13,710 | 55,132,077 | 39,818,036 
1 | 7,761,444 | 6,358,703 | 56/6 | 2,250,868 | 13,115 | 55,530,072 | 40,194,893 
2 | 6,898,153 | 5,773,096 | 43/3 | 2,669,762 54,974,143 | 43,558,490 
3 52,948,542 | 43,144,466 
a Re RR EL SEE, RRS SSRIS PE I RR A ENE 
rr in Surther illustration of the fuct, of the burthen of TAXATION having increased, notwithstanding 
the diminution in the MONEY AMOUNT, and of all Taxation, however indirect and insidious its 
operation, and however remote its effect may be, ultimately resolving 
products of Labour, the DEPRECIATION in the Value of British Produce and Manufactures 
EX PORTED, will be scen to present itself in strong confirmation of the fact, it will be seen, that 
since 1803, whilst the QUANTITY annually Exported has nearly doubled, the Value is upwards of 
£ 4,000,000 ¥ Annum less, and the aggregate Depreciation in 1823, comparing the Value with the Ave- 
rage-Value of the six Years 1798 — 1803, upwards of £ 37,000,000. And in the Summary of a Report 
of a SELECT COMMITTEE of ARTIZANS, appointed in 1823 “to enquire into the causes which have | 
sed to the extensive depreciation or reduction in the remuneration for labowr, and the CALAMITOUS 
DISTRESS consegeunt thereupon,’ it is shewn, that as TAXATION progressively increased, the remu- 
neration for LABOUR as progressively decreased, and that the aggregate increase of Taxation, corres- 
ponds exactly with the aggregate decrease in theRemuneration for Labour, and proves toDEMONSTRA- 
TION, that not only direct Taxation; but that all subsistence, and all Income acquired by any other 
means than productive occupation, resolve themselves into an abstraction from the fair reward due to 
productive labour. Estimating therefore the pressure of Taxation either by its Amount in GOLD, 
which in1819, after an interval of one and Twenty Years, without any Standard at all, was again 
made the Standard of Value for all commodity, or by Commodities themsetves, the pressure of TAX 
ATION in 1823 will prove greater than that of 1815, which was the maximum of Money Amount, , 
itself into LABOUR and the | 
