Second Shetland Truck System Report - LightNovelsOnl.com
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7975. Are the men bound to sell the small fish they get in the winter to any particular merchant?-They sell these fish to any one they like. There is no restriction upon them for that. Messrs.
Pole, Hoseason, & Co. never say anything about it.
7976. Do you run any accounts in your shop?-Scarcely any.
There may be 1s. or an ounce of tobacco or any small thing of that kind, marked down.
7977. Are you often asked to give credit for a short time?-Very often.
7978. The men are not always in possession of ready money?- No; they are very often out of money.
7979. At what period of the year are they best off for money?- About our place in the winter time if it is good, and if they are catching a few cod, that is just about as good a time for them as any.
7980. Do they not also have a good deal of cash after settling time?-After settling time they have always a little.
7981. Is your trade better at that time than at other periods of the year?-When it is good weather, and anything doing at the fis.h.i.+ng, or when the men have come from Feideland with the money which they had got at settlement, they trade more at my shop, as a rule, than at other times.
7982. Is June and July a good time for your shop?-Not very good; because most of the men are away at the fis.h.i.+ng. There may be two or three boats manned by old men at home; but, with the exception of what they bring in from the Sound, I have nothing else to depend upon.
7983. Are not the men's wives and families at home, and requiring provisions?-Yes; and I may have the chance of a few dozen eggs, or any produce of that sort.
7984. That is for buying, but I mean for selling: is June and July a good season for the selling of your goods?-No; it is the worst time of the year for me.
7985. Why is that?-Because the men are all away at the fis.h.i.+ng.
7986. But their wives are left, and they require something to keep them alive?-They are always working in what is called the kelp, and they go to Mr. Pole with that, so that I have no chance of buying it. I might have a chance of it, but I don't think it would pay me, as I don't know anything about it.
7987. Don't you think that if you had the chance of buying as much kelp as you liked in the summer time you might drive a better trade at your shop?-I might do a little better; but Messrs.
Pole, Hoseason, & Co. have the sh.o.r.es contracted for, so that they must get the kelp. They pay so much to Mr. Gifford for the sh.o.r.es, and in return for that they are ent.i.tled to the kelp, and they must have it.
7988. Do they pay in ready money for the kelp?-They make no scruple to give ready money for it, if a somewhat lower price is taken.
7989. But the people generally take goods for it?-Yes; they generally take the price in goods, or if they ask money, they will receive 6d. less per cwt., which I think is not unfair.
7990. If it was paid in ready money, I suppose you would have a chance of getting some of the custom of these kelp-gatherers?- Yes; if every man had his freedom to go where he liked, I would have a chance.
7991. Then I suppose the reason why sales are larger in winter and less in summer is, that the people have not ready money to go to your shop for the goods they want?-No; the men are all at the ling fis.h.i.+ng in the summer time and all the chance I have is in the winter time, when they are at home fis.h.i.+ng in the small boats.
7992. But even although they were at home in summer, they would not have ready money with which to come to you?-No. A man might not have ready money continually, unless he was paid every day for his catch.
7993. Would it not be better for your business if the men were paid every day or every week for their fish?-I don't think it would be any better for me unless I was out at the fis.h.i.+ng station.
7994. But their families would have the money, and they might come to you with it?-They might.
7995. The men don't take their wives and children to the fis.h.i.+ng station?-No.
7996. But I suppose the wives and children have very little money when the men are away at the stations?-Very little.
7997. Is that the reason why they get their supplies from the merchant's shop?-Yes.
7998. Only if they had the money they might go with it to another dealer, from whom they might get their articles cheaper?-They might.
7999. Do you sell your meal any cheaper than it is sold at the Mossbank shop?-No. I don't see that I can sell it any cheaper than Mr. Pole can.
8000. What is the price of your meal just now?-I deal very little in that. I only sell a few groceries-such as tea, tobacco, sugar, soap, soda, spice, pepper, and things of that kind. I might also have a sack or two of meal about the beginning of August, when it is most required.
8001. Where do you buy your meal?-For the most part in Lerwick, but I send south for a little of it.
8002. Do you think it would be better for the people in the country if a ready money system were introduced?-I think so.
I think it would be better for the big merchants also to pay in money. I have had that idea all along, that it would be better both for the merchants and the people to pay in cash.
8003. Why would it be better for the people?-Because they would have the cash to please themselves with, and to go where they liked.
8004. If they could please themselves, do you think they might be able to buy cheaper?-Yes.
8005. If you were getting a large ready-money business, do you think you could sell cheaper than you do now?-I cannot say.
8006. But if a ready-money system were introduced you would try to do that?-Yes, I would and I think I would be able to do so, because the money is in hands and out of hands and there are no bad debts.
Brae, January 13, 1872, Rev. JAMES FRASER, examined.
8007. You have been a clergyman at Sullem for twenty-four years?-I have.
8008. You have an intimate acquaintance with the people who live about you, and, among others, with the fishermen?-Yes.
8009. You also know the system of payment and of credit purchases which exists in the district?-I do.
8010. Are you prepared to give any opinion as to the effect of that system upon the circ.u.mstances and character of the people?- Yes, I think the effect of it, to some extent, is not very good.
It is rather an extensive subject to embrace within one answer, because there are a considerable number of people who are free and independent; they can make their own terms; but there are a great number of people who act on the credit system. That system has gone on, I daresay, from time immemorial, and it has become a great evil in the community, fraught with consequences of different descriptions that are evil.
8011. Are there many of the people whom you would describe as not being free to make their own bargains?-Of course there is hardly any person free to make his own bargain who has no ready money, and who is always in debt; and however well they may be dealt with by the fish-curers,-and I don't know of any case of wrong dealing in that respect-still the people are placed at a disadvantage. I believe the whole community are placed at a disadvantage in consequence of that, because, from the great amount of bad debts, the merchant must charge a higher percentage of profit upon his goods.
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8012. In saying that there is a great amount of bad debts, do you mean that there is a large proportion of debts in the merchants books which are never paid?-That is what I mean.
8013. Do you not mean that some of them are only very long delayed, and are liquidated only when a good fis.h.i.+ng season comes?-Both statements are true. There are some of them which are very long delayed, and others which are delayed for ever, and never paid at all.
8014. You think that both these causes oblige the merchants to charge a higher price for goods than they otherwise would do?- Decidedly; but there is a greater evil than that still. Sometime in the course of Providence, an accident occurs, and families are left dest.i.tute, and the merchant has the disagreeable alternative of either losing his own debt, or putting the law in force and driving the families to extremity. That, however, is never done; but in such a case there might be an appeal to public benevolence in order to save human life, and that appeal is always responded to.
8015. What is the peculiarity in that case which you wish to point out?-The peculiarity in that case is, that I should wish the people to be placed in such circ.u.mstances that an appeal of that kind would not need to be made.
8016. Do you think such an appeal would be unnecessary if the credit system did not exist?-It would be unnecessary to a certain extent; but, at the same time, I can hardly see how to get rid of the credit system. I believe the merchants themselves feel it to be a much more trying thing, or at least fully as trying a thing, as I do.
I look at it from one point of view, and they suffer from it from another.
8017. Is it within your own knowledge that a large portion of the people here are in a state of permanent indebtedness to the merchants?-I don't know to what extent they may be in a state of permanent indebtedness. I believe that a great number of them are very seldom clear, but of course there is a large proportion of the community who are clear from year to year.
8018. Do you mean that there is a large proportion of the men who are clear once in a year?-There are a great number who are always clear. There are number of the people who have never been in debt, and I believe never will be.