oats, 29,892 barley, &c.: the decrease in potatoes was 446,398 tons, although the area of their cultivation
increased in 1865.
From the movement of population and the agricultural produce of Ireland, we pass to the movement in
the purse of its landlords, larger farmers, and industrial capitalists. It is reflected in the rise and fall of
the Income-tax. It may be remembered that Schedule D. (profits with the exception of those of farmers),
includes also the so-called, "professional" profits i.e., the incomes of lawyers, doctors, &c.; and the
Schedules C. and E., in which no special details are given, include the incomes of employees, officers,
State sinecurists, State fundholders, &c.
Table C119 INCREASE OR DECREASE IN THE AREA UNDER CULTIVATION, PRODUCT PER ACRE,
AND TOTAL PRODUCT OF 1865 COMPARED WITH 1864 |
---|
Product | Acres of Cultivated Land | Product per
Acre | Total Product |
---|
1864 | 1865 | Increase or Decrease, 1865 | 1864 | 1865 | Increase or Decrease, 1865 | 1864 | 1865 | Increase or Decrease, 1865 |
---|
Wheat | 276,483 | 266,989 | | 9,494 | cwt., 13.3 | 13.0 | | 0.3 | 875,782 Qrs. | 826,783 Qrs. | | 48,999 Qrs. | Oats | 1,814,886 | 1,745,228 | | 69,658 | cwt., 12.1 | 12.3 | 0.2 | | 7,826,332 Qrs. | 7,659,727 Qrs. | | 166,605 Qrs. | Barley | 172,700 | 177,102 | 4,402 | | cwt., 15.9 | 14.9 | | 1.0 | 761,909 Qrs. | 732,017 Qrs. | | 29,892 Qrs. | Bere | 8,894 | 10,091 | 1,197 | | cwt., 16.4 | 14.8 | | 1.6 | 15,160 Qrs. | 13,989
Qrs. | | 1,171 Qrs. | Rye | cwt., 8.5 | 10.4 | 1.9 | | 12,680 Qrs. | 18,314 Qrs. | 5,684 Qrs. | | Potatoes | 1,039,724 | 1,066,260 | 26,536 | | tons, 4.1 | 3.6 | | 0.5 | 4,312,388 ts. | 3,865,990 ts. | | 446,398 ts. | Turnips | 337,355 | 334,212 | | 3,143 | tons, 10.3 | 9.9 | | 0.4 | 3,467,659 ts. | 3,301,683 ts. | | 165,976 ts. | Mangold- wurzel | 14,073 | 14,389 | 316 | | tons, 10.5 | 13.3 | 2.8 | | 147,284 ts. | 191,937 ts. | 44,653 ts. | | Cabbages | 31,821 | 33,622 | 1,801 | | tons, 9.3 | 10.4 | 1.1 | | 297,375 ts. | 350,252 ts. | 52,877 ts. | | Flax | 301,693 | 251,433 | | 50,260 | st. (14 lb.) 34.2 | 25.2 | | 9.0 | 64,506 st. | 39,561 st. | | 24,945 st. | Hay | 1,609,569 | 1,678,493 | 68,9241 | | tons, 1.6 | 1.8 | 0.2 | | 2,607,153 ts. | 3,068,707 ts. | 461,554 ts. | | Table DTHE INCOME-TAX ON THE
SUBJOINED INCOMES IN POUNDS STERLING (Tenth Report of the Commissioners of Inland Revenue,
Lond. 1866.) |
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| 1860 | 1861 | 1862 | 1863 | 1864 | 1865 |
---|
Schedule A. Rent of Land | 13,893,829 | 13,003,554 | 13,398,938 | 13,494,091 | 13,470,700 | 13,801,616 | Schedule B. Farmers' Profits. | 2,765,387 | 2,773,644 | 2,937,899 | 2,938,923 | 2,930,874 | 2,946,072 | Schedule D. Industrial, &c., Profits | 4,891,652 | 4,836,203 | 4,858,800 | 4,846,497 | 4,546,147 | 4,850,199 | Total Schedules A to E | 22,962,885 | 22,998,394 | 23,597,574 | 23,658,631 | 23,236,298 | 23,930,340 | Under Schedule D., the average annual increase of income from 1853-1864 was only 0.93; whilst, in the
same period, in Great Britain, it was 4.58. The following table shows the distribution of the profits (with
the exception of those of farmers) for the years 1864 and 1865:
Table E120 SCHEDULE D. INCOME FROM PROFITS (OVER £6O) IN IRELAND |
---|
| 1864 £ | 1865 £ |
---|
Total yearly income
of | 4,368,610 divided among 17,467 persons. | 4,669,979 divided among 18,081 persons. | Yearly income over £60 and
under £100 | 238,726 divided among 5,015 persons. | 222,575 divided among 4,703 persons. | Of the
yearly total income | 1,979,066 divided among 11,321 persons. | 2,028,571 divided among 12,184 persons. | Remainder of the total yearly income | 2,150,818 divided among 1,131 persons. | 2,418,833 divided among
1,194 persons. | Of these | 1,073,906 divided among 1,010 persons. | 1,097,927 divided among 1,044 persons. | 1,076,912 divided among 121 persons. | 1,320,906 divided among 150 persons. | 430,535 divided among
95 persons. | 584,458 divided among 2 persons. | 646,377divided among 26 | 736,448 divided among 28 | 262,819 divided among 3 | 274,528 divided among 3 | England, a country with fully developed capitalist production, and pre-eminently industrial, would have
bled to death with such a drain of population as Ireland has suffered. But Ireland is at present only an
agricultural district of England, marked off by a wide channel from the country to which it yields corn,
wool, cattle, industrial and military recruits.
The depopulation of Ireland has thrown much of the land out of cultivation, has greatly diminished the
produce of the soil,121 and, in spite of the greater area devoted to cattle breeding, has brought about,
in some of its branches, an absolute diminution, in others, an advance scarcely worthy of mention, and
constantly interrupted by retrogressions. Nevertheless, with the fall in numbers of the population, rents
and farmers' profits rose, although the latter not as steadily as the former. The reason of this is easily
|