Mercantilism: Difference between revisions

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==Mercantilism in Britain==
==Mercantilism in Britain==


Mercantilism was most developed in Britain. Pamphleteers such as [[Dudley North]], [[Edward Misselden]], and [[Thomas Mun]] wrote sophisticated tracts evincing the [[quantity theory of money]], theories of [[interest]] and [[investment]], and solutions to the problem of [[labor mobility|labor immobility]] and unemployment caused by the [[Enclosure Acts]].
Mercantilism was most developed in Britain. Pamphleteers such as [[Dudley North]], [[Edward Misselden]], and [[Thomas Mun]] wrote sophisticated tracts evincing the [[quantity theory of money]], theories of [[interest]] and [[investment]], and solutions to the problem of [[labor mobility|labor immobility]] and [[unemployment]] caused by the [[Enclosure Acts]].

Revision as of 19:15, 27 March 2007

Introduction

Mercantilism is a term broadly describing Western European economic theory from the Early Modern period to the 1750s. The term was coined by the Marquis de Mirabeau in 1763, and was popularized by Adam Smith in The Wealth of Nations. Although Classical economists used it largely as a pejorative, it is now commonly used without bias by historians. Mercantilism is also often used to refer to the economic policy of the period, a confusion which is particularly destructive given its dissimilarity with the bulk of Mercantilist theory.

Mercantilism is not usually considered a unified theory of economics in the sense that Smith and Marshall's works would come to embody, but instead a grouping of highly disparate writers bound by a concern for employment and economic growth. It arose independently in Spain, France, Italy, Austria and Britain for widely differing reasons, with each strain of Mercantilism displaying concerns and assumptions unique to its country of origin.

Mercantilism in Spain

Spanish Mercantilism arose as a reaction to the failure of the Spanish economy in spite of gains from its colonial trade. It was expected, at the time, that Spain's importation of large amounts of gold specie from its American colonies would necessarily lead to wealth, a theory known as Bullionism or the Midas fallacy. Spain instead entered a period of sharp economic decline and rapidly increasing unemployment. Mercantilist writers in Spain and elsewhere would come to attribute this to Spain's powerful monopolies, reliance on raw materials, and deindustrialization. Although economic theorists in Spain correctly diagnosed many of the problems facing the nation, government and church suppression resulted in little policy change.

Mercantilism in France

Mercantilism in France is tied into the theories and policies of Jean-Baptiste Colbert, the Minister of Finance under King Louis XIV. Colbert was known for rapidly improving the state of French manufacturing, shipping and colonial trade despite wars nearly bankrupting France.

Mercantilism in Britain

Mercantilism was most developed in Britain. Pamphleteers such as Dudley North, Edward Misselden, and Thomas Mun wrote sophisticated tracts evincing the quantity theory of money, theories of interest and investment, and solutions to the problem of labor immobility and unemployment caused by the Enclosure Acts.