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§ Precursors of the classical political economy

 

= authors who developed some classical 

   theoretical concepts but  mercantilist views

   usually prevailed in their writings

  (they mostly accepted mercantilist regulatory

  economic policies)

 

Political arithmetick – birth of social sciences (a combination of demography, national accounts, statistics and economic theorising)

 

 

William PETTY (1632-1687)

A Treatise on Taxes and Contributions 1622

Political Arithmetic written in 1671-76, published in 1690

 

Advocacy of using statistical techniques to measure social phenomena

 

Induction from statistical data

 

Theory of value and price

-  natural value determined by costs of production = utilization of land and labor, later by “embodied” labor

 

-      search for a unit of measure – a daily amount of food necessary to sustain a worker

 

-      wages on the subsistence level

 

(motivational explanation typical for mercantilist literature)

 

 

§ Followers of Petty –  “the political arithmetick school”

 

John Graunt (1620-74), Charles D’Avenant  (1656-1714), William Fleetwood (1656-1723),

Gregory King (1648-1712)

 

King’s Law

 

= the percentage changes in the price of corn are a decreasing function of the percentage changes in the size of harvests

 

-      an empirical finding leading to the concept of price elasticity of demand

 

 

 

John LOCKE (1632-1704)

Two Treatises of Government  1690

Some Considerations of the Consequences of the Lowering of Interest and Raising the Value of Money 1691

 

-      natural law philosopher

 

- justification of private property 

  based on the labor theory of value

(right to own the product of one’s  

  own labor)

 

-      unequal distribution of wealth due to ability of money to preserve value (indefinite accumulation of wealth possible)

 

-      value of money based on a social convention

 

-      quantity theory of money

Dudley NORTH (1641-91)

Discourse upon Trade 1691

 

-      stress on deductive method with 

  reference to Cartesian philosophy

 

ð       economics should be founded on 

     self-evident truths

 

ð       clear and self-evident conclusions 

     deduced by rigorous use of logic

 

-      methodological individualism – harmony of interests on the basis of free individuals following their own interests

                 [forerunner of A. Smith

                  and his “invisible hand”]

 

ð       free trade conclusions

 

 

 

Bernard de MANDEVILLE (1670-1733)

The Fable of the Bees, or Private Vices, Public Benefits 1714

 

-      men and women should be accepted as they are, it is the role of government to channel activities of imperfect humankind, full of vice, by rules and regulations toward the social good

 

-      ostentatious spending created more jobs than parsimony (saving less useful than spending)

               [ idea appreciated by J.M. 

                Keynes]

 

 

French pre-coursers of Classical economy did not feel any need of providing an ethical justification of private property

 

Laissez-faire was based on an ability of individuals to pursue their own interests

 

Pierre le Pesant de BOISGUILLEBERT (1646-1714)

Dissertation sur la nature des richesses, de l’argent, et des tributs 1712

 

-      arguments against colberism

(stress on agriculture)

 

-      all incomes originated, directly or

   indirectly from agriculture

 

-      free trade (agriculture should receive sufficient earnings => prices should conform to the ‘natural law’)

 

- natural tendency of the economy

   towards equilibrium

                  [anticipation of Quesnay’s

                  tableau économique and of  

                  the Say’s law]

 

 

Richard CANTILLON (?1680-1734)

Essai sur la nature du commerce en général 1755

 

-       synthesis of English and French economic 

theories of his time

 

-       cost theory of value

1) more specific than Petty - intrinsic value depends on production conditions, market price = intrinsic value modified by forces of supply and demand

2) market price fixed by the seller and was dynamically modified on the of his estimate of the demand

 

3) cost of production reduced to the inputs of labor and land

 

-       real wages tend to the subsistence level (relation of supply and demand for labor and overpopulation)

           [anticipation of Ricardo or Malthus]

 

-       wage differentials explained on the bases

   of  costs of training workers, differences  

   in risk in different types of work, and 

   different levels of loyalty and 

   responsibility required by jobs

                           [anticipation of A. Smith]

 

-       theory of circular flow

three social classes (landowners, tenant-farmers, workers) and three  corresponding incomes (rent, profit, farmer’s expenditure)         

                  [anticipation of Quesnay]

LAISSEZ-FAIRE REVOLUTION

(1751-1776)

 

Preconditions of the Industrial Revolution

 

-       spread of capitalism in the countryside (Northern France – fermier,

    England – enclosure movement)

 

-       technical innovations in cultivation methods => increase in agricultural productivity => outflow of labor force from the countryside to cities and towns,

increase of population

 

-       large number of technical innovations in new industries

  (Hargreave’s spinning-jenny in 1764,    

  Watt’s steam-engine 1765, Arkwright’s

   water-frame in 1768)

 

-       cultural preconditions brought about by the Enlightenment (Bacon, Locke, Newton, Descartes, Vico)

 

 

ð          new schools of economic thought arose

      united by the struggle against  

      mercantilism and a trial to provide a  

      scientific foundation to the laissez-faire    

      doctrine, theoretically quite

      heterogeneous

 

     (physiocrats in France, schools of Naples

     and Milan in Italy)

 

 

W PHYSIOCRATS

 

The first true school of economic thought

with a master, F. Quesnay and a fervent group of followers, a doctrine to defend and propagate

 

François QUESNAY (1694-1774)

entries Fermiers (1756), Grains (1757), Hommes (1757) for the Encyclopédie;

Tableau économique 1758;

Maximes générales du gouvernement économique d’un royaume agricole 1758

-       an integrated theoretical system

 

- natural order doctrine

 

-       scientific contribution

 

1)           revolutionary concepts of productive and unproductive labor, and a new concept of wealth

 

2)           the idea of mutual interdependence among productive processes, and the idea of equilibrium

 

3)           representation of  exchanges as circular flow of money and goods among economic sectors

 

-       productive labor able to create surplus  

   (rent) = labor used in agriculture

 

- unproductive labor used in manufacturing

   industry and trade unable to create any

   surplus

 

 

ð          three social classes: productive 

     (farmers), sterile (entrepreneurs,

      workers,  merchants) and class of

      landlords (distributive class)

 

-       economic role of landlords was to 

   consume  the surplus created by the

   productive class

 

-       tableau économique model

 

                = simple model of circular flow

                   representing economy as natural  

                   organism

 

                = ability to reach equilibrium 

                   considered as a manifestation of

                   the natural order

 

basic assumptions:

 

              1)  simple reproduction

 

              2)  agriculture the only sector 

                   capable of producing surplus 

                   over replacement costs

 

              3) equivalent exchange (implicit

                  cost theory of value)

 

              4) investments in fixed and circular

                  capital only in agriculture

 

-       doctrine of impôt unique (single tax)

              only rent (surplus) can be taxed

 

-       policy of laissez-faire, laissez passer les 

marchandises ‘scientifically proved’

 

 

Anne Robert Jacques TURGOT (1727-81)

 

-       critical to the doctrine of productive

   labor in agriculture

 

-       idea of decreasing returns generated in 

   agriculture by the intensification of

   investments

 

-       estimative theory of value based on utility  

   and scarcity

 

-       abstinence theory of capital creation

 

 

David HUME (1711-76)

Political Discourses 1752

 

- laid foundations for English free-trade

  economic theory

 

-       theory of the adjustment of the balance of

payments based ...

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