162
POLITICAL ECONOMY
things if all foreign trade were effectively
interdicted.
In addition a country usually reaps a benefit
out of foreign commerce in that it gets
cheaper things of which it would not be en
tirely deprived were foreign trade suppressed.
Generally speaking all exchanging, whether
intra-national or international, results in
advantage. People produce what they do not
want in order to exchange it for what they
do want, when that happens to be the most
economical way of attaining gratification.
But conceivably people may now and then
be driven by competition into a course of
action, involving foreign commerce, which
eventuates in a less economical way of
satisfying their wants. They may, for
instance, be induced to divert some labour
and capital from an industry subject to
increasing returns with a view to enlarging
the output from an industry subject to de
creasing returns ; so that on the whole they
lose in the long run without knowing it,
though gains were reaped by traders at each
step of the exchange. It is theoretically
conceivable, indeed, that both national
parties to the exchange might lose. These
peculiar phenomena are of little or no im
portance practically, but from the point of