03

On the Rent of Mines

Source: David Ricardo, On the Principles of Political Economy and Taxation, Chapter III, "On the Rent of Mines" • Course status: full course day for the Ricardo principles course

Key terms

Ricardo extends the rent theory from farms to mines. The surface changes from corn to metals, but the logic stays the same: a richer mine earns rent only because society also needs poorer mines whose output just covers ordinary wages and profits.

TermMeaning
Mine rentThe payment for using a mine whose ore is richer or easier to work than the marginal mine
Ore qualityHow much metal a given labour-and-capital advance can extract
Marginal mineThe poorest mine still worth working; it pays no rent in Ricardo's model
Differential surplusThe extra metal produced by better mines over the marginal mine
ExhaustionThe gradual movement from richer veins to poorer or deeper ones
Scarce metalA metal whose value depends on the labour and capital needed at the working margin

The farm model moved underground

Chapter II showed why superior land earns rent. Chapter III says mines follow the same pattern. If demand for gold, silver, or coal can be met from only the richest mine, there is no rent. Once demand forces production from a poorer mine, the richer mine gains a measurable surplus.

The important word is differential. Mine rent is not a mysterious premium added to metal prices. It is the difference between what better and worse mines produce when the same kind of labour and capital is advanced.

Rent follows price, not the other way around

Ricardo repeats his reversal from land rent. Metals are not dear because mine owners receive rent. Mine owners receive rent because demand has made it necessary to work mines that are less productive. The marginal mine must still pay wages and ordinary profits; richer mines then stand above that margin.

demand for metal rises
      ->
poorer or deeper mines become necessary
      ->
metal value covers the marginal mine
      ->
richer mines produce an excess
      ->
that excess becomes rent

This keeps the theory consistent with Chapter I. The value of a reproducible metal is regulated by the labour and capital needed to obtain it at the margin. Rent is an effect of that margin, not a cost that explains it.

Worked miniature

Suppose four mines require the same labour and capital advance. Mine A yields 100 ounces, Mine B yields 80, Mine C yields 60, and Mine D yields 40. As demand expands, the active margin descends.

Demand requiresMarginal mineRent on ARent on BRent on CRent on D
Only AA0not usednot usednot used
A and BB200not usednot used
A, B, and CC40200not used
A, B, C, and DD6040200

The rent is measured in surplus output. If the market needs Mine D, then Mine A produces 60 ounces more than the marginal mine with the same advance. That difference can be paid as rent while Mine D still earns ordinary profits.

Margin diagram

Read the chapter as a vertical descent from richer ore to poorer ore:

        MINE A: 100 oz    rent = A - marginal yield
        MINE B:  80 oz    rent = B - marginal yield
        MINE C:  60 oz    rent = C - marginal yield
        MINE D:  40 oz    rent = 0 when D is marginal
        --------------------------------------------
        metal value is regulated at the active margin

The diagram also explains exhaustion. A mine can move down its own ladder over time. The first seams may be easy and rich; later seams may be deeper, poorer, or more costly to drain. The rent of the mine falls when its advantage over the margin narrows.

Why mines are not exactly land

Ricardo's analogy is close, but not perfect. Land fertility can often be treated as an enduring power. Mines are more visibly exhaustible. A rich vein can be used up, and the same physical mine may become less productive as workers move deeper.

For the rent argument, the difference does not break the model. It only means the rank of mines can change. What matters at any moment is still the comparison between the productive mine and the marginal mine.

Why this chapter matters later

Chapter III prevents a narrow reading of rent. Ricardo is not only talking about landlords and corn. He is building a general margin theory for natural agents: whenever natural advantages differ and demand reaches inferior sources, superior sources can earn rent.

That prepares the reader for later tax arguments. A tax that hits all mines may raise the value of metal if it affects the marginal mine. A tax on rent alone may fall on the mine owner because the marginal mine has no rent to tax.

Key takeaways

Ricardo's mine chapter is a controlled repetition. The object changes from fields to mines, but rent is still surplus over the no-rent margin.

  • Mine rent arises from unequal ore quality, depth, drainage cost, or situation.
  • The marginal mine is the poorest mine still worth working and earns no rent.
  • Richer mines earn rent equal to their surplus over that marginal mine.
  • Metals are not dear because rent is paid; rent is paid because demand reaches poorer mines.
  • Exhaustion can reduce a mine's rent by making its remaining ore less advantageous.

Checklist

A reader is ready to continue when they can apply Ricardo's rent logic without being distracted by the change from corn to metals.

  • [ ] Can you identify the marginal mine in a four-mine example?
  • [ ] Can you calculate rent as surplus output over that mine?
  • [ ] Can you use the lab to make total rent rise by increasing demand?
  • [ ] Can you explain why exhaustion can lower mine rent?
  • [ ] Can you state why rent follows price rather than causing price?