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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Economics: Terms And Concepts > economics
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economics, Economics: Terms And Concepts

Related Category: Economics: Terms And Concepts

In the transition to modern times (16th–18th cent.), European overseas expansion led to the growth of commerce and the economic policies of mercantilism, a system that inspired a substantial body of literature on the subject of economic nationalism. In the late 17th and the 18th cents., protest against the governmental regulation characteristic of mercantilism was voiced, especially by the physiocrats. That group advocated laissez-faire, arguing that business should follow freely the "natural laws" of economics without government interference. They regarded agriculture as the sole productive economic activity and encouraged the improvement of cultivation. Because they considered land to be the sole source of wealth, they urged the adoption of a tax on land as the only economically justifiable tax.

In the 18th cent. important work in economics was done by the Scottish philosopher David Hume. His analysis of the natural advantages that some nations enjoy in the cultivation of certain products and his observations on the flow of commerce became the basis for the theory of international trade. The most important work of the 18th cent., however, was Adam Smith's An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1776), which is considered by many to be the first complete treatise on economics. Smith identified self-interest as the basic economic force and, through his analysis of the division of labor and his comprehensive study of the development of economic institutions in the West, established economics as a major area of study. John Millar, a follower of Smith, incorporated and developed these ideas into a highly sophisticated economic interpretation of history. Smith's theories, especially his advocacy of free trade, played an important part in the Industrial Revolution then taking place in Britain.



The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.



Topics that might be of interest to you:

Gary Becker
capitalism
Henry Charles Carey
John Bates Clark
depression, in economics
distribution
division of labor
econometrics
economic planning
feudalism
free trade
Milton Friedman
games, theory of
David Hume
Industrial Revolution
William Stanley Jevons
Keynes, John Maynard, Baron Keynes of Tilton
laissez-faire
Sir Arthur Lewis
Thomas Robert Malthus
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Carl Menger
mercantilism
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John Stuart Mill
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physiocrats
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Joseph Alois Schumpeter
Adam Smith
socialism
social science
supply-side economics
value, in economics

Related Categories:

Social Sciences and the Law > Economics, Business, and Labor
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