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Laissez-faire

Laissez-faire (/ˌlɛsˈfɛər/ LESS-ay-FAIR; from French: laissez faire [lɛse fɛːʁ] , lit.'let do') is a type of economic system in which transactions between private groups of people are free from any form of economic interventionism (such as subsidies or regulations). As a system of thought, laissez-faire rests on the following axioms: "the individual is the basic unit in society, i.e., the standard of measurement in social calculus; the individual has a natural right to freedom; and the physical order of nature is a harmonious and self-regulating system."[1] The original phrase was laissez faire, laissez passer, with the second part meaning "let (things) pass". It is generally attributed to Vincent de Gournay.[2]

Another basic principle of laissez-faire holds that markets should naturally be competitive, a rule that the early advocates of laissez-faire always emphasized.[1]

The Physiocrats were early advocates of laissez-faire and advocated for a impôt unique, a tax on land rent to replace the "monstrous and crippling network of taxation that had grown up in 17th century France".[3] Their view was that only land should be taxed because only land is productive.[4][clarification needed]

Proponents of laissez-faire argue for a near complete separation of government from the economic sector.[5][verification needed] The phrase laissez-faire is part of a larger French phrase and literally translates to "let [it/them] do", but in this context the phrase usually means to "let it be" and in expression "laid back".[6] Although never practiced with full consistency, laissez-faire capitalism emerged in the mid-18th century and was further popularized by Adam Smith's book The Wealth of Nations.[7][8]

Etymology and usage edit

The term laissez-faire likely originated in a meeting that took place around 1681 between powerful French Controller-General of Finances Jean-Baptiste Colbert and a group of French businessmen headed by M. Le Gendre. When the eager mercantilist minister asked how the French state could be of service to the merchants and help promote their commerce, Le Gendre replied simply: "Laissez-nous faire" ("Leave it to us" or "Let us do [it]", the French verb not requiring an object).[9]

The anecdote on the Colbert–Le Gendre meeting appeared in a 1751 article in the Journal économique, written by French minister and champion of free trade René de Voyer, Marquis d'Argenson—also the first known appearance of the term in print.[10] Argenson himself had used the phrase earlier (1736) in his own diaries in a famous outburst:

Laissez faire, telle devrait être la devise de toute puissance publique, depuis que le monde est civilisé [...]. Détestable principe que celui de ne vouloir grandir que par l'abaissement de nos voisins ! Il n'y a que la méchanceté et la malignité du cœur de satisfaites dans ce principe, et l'intérêt y est opposé. Laissez faire, morbleu ! Laissez faire !![11]

Let go, which should be the motto of all public power, since the world was civilized [...]. [It is] a detestable principle of those that want to enlarge [themselves] but by the abasement of our neighbours. There is but the wicked and the malignant heart[s] [who are] satisfied by this principle and [its] interest is opposed. Let go, for God's sake! Let go!![12]

— René Louis de Voyer de Paulmy d'Argenson

Vincent de Gournay, a French Physiocrat and intendant of commerce in the 1750s, popularized the term laissez-faire as he allegedly adopted it from François Quesnay's writings on China.[13] Quesnay coined the phrases laissez-faire and laissez-passer,[14] laissez-faire being a translation of the Chinese term wu wei (無為).[15] Gournay ardently supported the removal of restrictions on trade and the deregulation of industry in France. Delighted with the Colbert–Le Gendre anecdote,[16] he forged it into a larger maxim all his own: "Laissez faire et laissez passer" ("Let do and let pass"). His motto has also been identified as the longer "Laissez faire et laissez passer, le monde va de lui même !" ("Let do and let pass, the world goes on by itself!"). Although Gournay left no written tracts on his economic policy ideas, he had immense personal influence on his contemporaries, notably his fellow Physiocrats, who credit both the laissez-faire slogan and the doctrine to Gournay.[17]

Before d'Argenson or Gournay, P. S. de Boisguilbert had enunciated the phrase "On laisse faire la nature" ("Let nature run its course").[18] D'Argenson himself during his life was better known for the similar, but less-celebrated motto "Pas trop gouverner" ("Govern not too much").[19]

The Physiocrats proclaimed laissez-faire in 18th-century France, placing it at the very core of their economic principles and famous economists, beginning with Adam Smith, developed the idea.[20] It is with the Physiocrats and the classical political economy that the term laissez-faire is ordinarily associated.[21] The book Laissez Faire and the General-Welfare State states: "The physiocrats, reacting against the excessive mercantilist regulations of the France of their day, expressed a belief in a 'natural order' or liberty under which individuals in following their selfish interests contributed to the general good. Since, in their view, this natural order functioned successfully without the aid of government, they advised the state to restrict itself to upholding the rights of private property and individual liberty, to removing all artificial barriers to trade, and to abolishing all useless laws."[20]

The French phrase laissez-faire gained currency in English-speaking countries with the spread of Physiocratic literature in the late 18th century. George Whatley's 1774 Principles of Trade (co-authored with Benjamin Franklin) re-told the Colbert-LeGendre anecdote; this may mark the first appearance of the phrase in an English-language publication.[22]

Herbert Spencer was opposed to a slightly different application of laissez faire—to "that miserable laissez-faire" that leads to men's ruin, saying: "Along with that miserable laissez-faire which calmly looks on while men ruin themselves in trying to enforce by law their equitable claims, there goes activity in supplying them, at other men's cost, with gratis novel-reading!"[23]

As a product of the Enlightenment, laissez-faire was "conceived as the way to unleash human potential through the restoration of a natural system, a system unhindered by the restrictions of government".[1] In a similar vein, Adam Smith[when?] viewed the economy as a natural system and the market as an organic part of that system. Smith saw laissez-faire as a moral program and the market its instrument to ensure men the rights of natural law.[1] By extension, free markets become a reflection of the natural system of liberty.[1] For Smith, laissez-faire was "a program for the abolition of laws constraining the market, a program for the restoration of order and for the activation of potential growth".[1]

However, Smith[24] and notable classical economists such as Thomas Malthus and David Ricardo did not use the phrase. Jeremy Bentham used the term, but it was probably[original research?] James Mill's reference to the laissez-faire maxim (together with the "Pas trop gouverner" motto) in an 1824 entry for the Encyclopædia Britannica that really brought the term into wider English usage. With the advent of the Anti-Corn Law League (founded 1838), the term received much of its English meaning.[25][need quotation to verify]

Smith first used the metaphor of an invisible hand in his book The Theory of Moral Sentiments (1759) to describe the unintentional effects of economic self-organization from economic self-interest.[26] Although not the metaphor itself, the idea lying behind the invisible hand belongs to Bernard de Mandeville and his Fable of the Bees (1705). In political economy, that idea and the doctrine of laissez-faire have long been closely related.[27] Some have characterized the invisible-hand metaphor as one for laissez-faire,[28] although Smith never actually used the term himself.[24] In Third Millennium Capitalism (2000), Wyatt M. Rogers Jr. notes a trend whereby recently "conservative politicians and economists have chosen the term 'free-market capitalism' in lieu of laissez-faire".[29]

American individualist anarchists such as Benjamin Tucker saw themselves as economic laissez-faire socialists and political individualists while arguing that their "anarchistic socialism" or "individual anarchism" was "consistent Manchesterism".[30]

History edit

Europe edit

In Europe, the laissez-faire movement was first widely promoted by the Physiocrats, a movement that included Vincent de Gournay (1712–1759), a successful merchant turned political figure. Gournay is postulated to have adapted the Taoist concept wu wei,[31] from the writings on China by François Quesnay[15] (1694–1774). Gournay held that government should allow the laws of nature to govern economic activity, with the state only intervening to protect life, liberty and property. François Quesnay and Anne Robert Jacques Turgot, Baron de l'Aulne took up Gournay's ideas. Quesnay had the ear of the King of France, Louis XV and in 1754 persuaded him to give laissez-faire a try. On September 17, the King abolished all tolls and restraints on the sale and transport of grain. For more than a decade, the experiment appeared successful, but 1768 saw a poor harvest, and the cost of bread rose so high that there was widespread starvation while merchants exported grain in order to obtain the best profit. In 1770, the Comptroller-General of Finances Joseph Marie Terray revoked the edict allowing free trade in grain.[32]

The doctrine of laissez-faire became an integral part of 19th-century European liberalism.[20] Just as liberals supported freedom of thought in the intellectual sphere, so were they equally prepared to champion the principles of free trade and free competition in the sphere of economics, seeing the state as merely a passive policeman, protecting private property and administering justice, but not interfering with the affairs of its citizens. Businessmen, British industrialists in particular, were quick to associate these principles with their own economic interests.[20] Many of the ideas of the physiocrats spread throughout Europe and were adopted to a greater or lesser extent in Sweden, Tuscany, Spain and in the newly created United States. Adam Smith, author of The Wealth of Nations (1776), met Quesnay and acknowledged his influence.[33]

In Britain, the newspaper The Economist (founded in 1843) became an influential voice for laissez-faire capitalism.[34] Laissez-faire advocates opposed food aid for famines occurring within the British Empire. In 1847, referring to the famine then underway in Ireland, founder of The Economist James Wilson wrote: "It is no man's business to provide for another".[35] More specifically, in An Essay on the Principle of Population, Malthus argued that there was nothing that could be done to avoid famines because he felt he had mathematically proven that population growth tends to exceed growth in food production. However, The Economist campaigned against the Corn Laws that protected landlords in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland against competition from less expensive foreign imports of cereal products. The Great Famine in Ireland in 1845 led to the repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846. The tariffs on grain which kept the price of bread artificially high were repealed.[36] However, repeal of the Corn Laws came too late to stop the Irish famine, partly because it was done in stages over three years.[37]

A group that became known as the Manchester Liberals, to which Richard Cobden (1804–1865) and John Bright (1811–1889) belonged, were staunch defenders of free trade. After the death of Cobden, the Cobden Club (founded in 1866) continued their work.[38] The breakdown of laissez-faire as practised by the British Empire was partly led by British companies eager for state support of their positions abroad, in particular British oil companies.[39]

In Italy, philosopher Benedetto Croce created the term "liberism" (derived from the Italian term liberismo), a term for the economic doctrine of laissez-faire capitalism; it is synonymous with economic liberalism. Sartori imported the term from Italian in order to distinguish between social liberalism, which is generally considered a political ideology often advocating extensive government intervention in the economy, and those economic liberal theories that propose to virtually eliminate such intervention. In informal usage, liberism overlaps with other concepts such as free trade, neoliberalism, right-libertarianism, the American concept of libertarianism,[40] and the laissez-faire doctrine of the French liberal Doctrinaires. Croce claims that "Liberalism can prove only a temporary right of private propriety of land and industries."[41] It was popularized in English by Italian political scientist Giovanni Sartori.[42]

The intention of Croce and of Sartori to attack the right to private property and to free enterprise separating them from the general philosophy of liberalism, that is primarily a theory of natural rights, was always criticised openly by the quoted philosophers and by some of the main representatives of liberalism, such as Luigi Einaudi, Friedrich Hayek,[40][43][44] and Milton Friedman.[45] The Austrian School economist Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk argues that the differences between the economical concept of liberism[46] and the economical consequences of liberalism[47][48] can be summarized by saying that "A market is a law system. Without it, the only possible economy is the street robbery."[49]

United States edit

Frank Bourgin's study of the Constitutional Convention and subsequent decades argues that direct government involvement in the economy was intended by the Founding Fathers.[50] The reason for this was the economic and financial chaos the nation suffered under the Articles of Confederation. The goal was to ensure that dearly-won political independence was not lost by being economically and financially dependent on the powers and princes of Europe. The creation of a strong central government able to promote science, invention, industry and commerce was seen as an essential means of promoting the general welfare and making the economy of the United States strong enough for them to determine their own destiny. Others view Bourgin's study, written in the 1940s and not published until 1989, as an over-interpretation of the evidence, intended originally to defend the New Deal and later to counter Ronald Reagan's economic policies.[51]

Historian Kathleen G. Donohue argues that in the 19th century liberalism in the United States had distinctive characteristics and that "at the center of classical liberal theory [in Europe] was the idea of laissez-faire. To the vast majority of American classical liberals, however, laissez-faire did not mean "no government intervention" at all. On the contrary, they were more than willing to see government provide tariffs, railroad subsidies, and internal improvements, all of which benefited producers". Notable examples of government intervention in the period prior to the American Civil War include the establishment of the Patent Office in 1802; the establishment of the Office of Standard Weights and Measures in 1830; the creation of the Survey of the Coast (later renamed the United States Coast Survey and then the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey) in 1807 and other measures to improve river and harbor navigation; the various Army expeditions to the west, beginning with Lewis and Clark's Corps of Discovery in 1804 and continuing into the 1870s, almost always under the direction of an officer from the Army Corps of Topographical Engineers and which provided crucial information for the overland pioneers that followed; the assignment of Army Engineer officers to assist or direct the surveying and construction of the early railroads and canals; and the establishment of the First Bank of the United States and Second Bank of the United States as well as various protectionist measures (e.g. the tariff of 1828). Several of these proposals met with serious opposition and required a great deal of horse-trading to be enacted into law. For instance, the First National Bank would not have reached the desk of President George Washington in the absence of an agreement that was reached between Alexander Hamilton and several Southern members of Congress to locate the capitol in the District of Columbia. In contrast to Hamilton and the Federalists was Thomas Jefferson and James Madison's opposing political party, the Democratic-Republicans.

Most of the early opponents of laissez-faire capitalism in the United States subscribed to the American School. This school of thought was inspired by the ideas of Hamilton, who proposed the creation of a government-sponsored bank and increased tariffs to favor Northern industrial interests. Following Hamilton's death, the more abiding protectionist influence in the antebellum period came from Henry Clay and his American System. In the early 19th century, "it is quite clear that the laissez-faire label is an inappropriate one" to apply to the relationship between the United States government and industry.[52] In the mid-19th century, the United States followed the Whig tradition of economic nationalism, which included increased state control, regulation and macroeconomic development of infrastructure.[53] Public works such as the provision and regulation transportation such as railroads took effect. The Pacific Railway Acts provided the development of the First transcontinental railroad.[53][54] In order to help pay for its war effort in the Civil War, the United States government imposed its first personal income tax on 5 August 1861 as part of the Revenue Act of 1861 (3% of all incomes over US$800; rescinded in 1872).

Following the Civil War, the movement towards a mixed economy accelerated. Protectionism increased with the McKinley Tariff of 1890 and the Dingley Tariff of 1897. Government regulation of the economy expanded with the enactment of the Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 and the Sherman Anti-trust Act. The Progressive Era saw the enactment of more controls on the economy as evidenced by the Woodrow Wilson administration's New Freedom program. Following World War I and the Great Depression, the United States turned to a mixed economy which combined free enterprise with a progressive income tax and in which from time to time the government stepped in to support and protect American industry from competition from overseas. For example, in the 1980s the government sought to protect the automobile industry by "voluntary" export restrictions from Japan.[55]

In 1986, Pietro S. Nivola wrote: "By and large, the comparative strength of the dollar against major foreign currencies has reflected high U.S. interest rates driven by huge federal budget deficits. Hence, the source of much of the current deterioration of trade is not the general state of the economy, but rather the government's mix of fiscal and monetary policies – that is, the problematic juxtaposition of bold tax reductions, relatively tight monetary targets, generous military outlays, and only modest cuts in major entitlement programs. Put simply, the roots of the trade problem and of the resurgent protectionism it has fomented are fundamentally political as well as economic".[56]

A more recent advocate of total laissez-faire has been Objectivist Ayn Rand, who described it as "the abolition of any and all forms of government intervention in production and trade, the separation of State and Economics, in the same way and for the same reasons as the separation of Church and State".[57] This viewpoint is summed up in what is known as the iron law of regulation, which is a theory stating that all government economic regulation eventually leads to a net loss in social welfare.[58] Rand's political philosophy emphasized individual rights (including property rights)[59] and she considered laissez-faire capitalism the only moral social system because in her view it was the only system based on the protection of those rights.[60] She opposed statism, which she understood to include theocracy, absolute monarchy, Nazism, fascism, communism, socialism and dictatorship.[61] Rand believed that natural rights should be enforced by a constitutionally limited government.[62] Although her political views are often classified as conservative or libertarian, she preferred the term "radical for capitalism". She worked with conservatives on political projects, but disagreed with them over issues such as religion and ethics.[63] She denounced libertarianism, which she associated with anarchism.[64] She rejected anarchism as a naïve theory based in subjectivism that could only lead to collectivism in practice.[65]

Models edit

Capitalism edit

A closely related name for laissez-faire capitalism is that of raw, pure, or unrestrained capitalism, which refers to capitalism free of any regulations,[66] with low or minimal[67] government and operating almost entirely on the profit motive. It shares a similar economic conception with anarcho-capitalism.

Advocates of laissez-faire capitalism argue that it relies on a constitutionally limited government that unconditionally bans the initiation of force and coercion, including fraud. Therefore, free market economists such as Milton Friedman and Thomas Sowell argue that, under such a system, relationships between companies and workers are purely voluntary and mistreated workers will seek better treatment elsewhere. Thus, most companies will compete for workers on the basis of pay, benefits, and work-life balance just as they compete with one another in the marketplace on the basis of the relative cost and quality of their goods.[68][non-primary source needed][69][non-primary source needed]

So-called "raw" or "hyper-capitalism" is a major motif of cyberpunk in dystopian works such as Syndicate.[70][71]

Socialism edit

Although laissez-faire has been commonly associated with capitalism, there is a similar laissez-faire economic theory and system associated with socialism called left-wing laissez-faire,[72][73] or free-market anarchism, also known as free-market anti-capitalism and free-market socialism to distinguish it from laissez-faire capitalism.[74][75][76] One first example of this is mutualism as developed by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon in the 18th century, from which emerged individualist anarchism. Benjamin Tucker is one eminent American individualist anarchist who adopted a laissez-faire system he termed anarchistic socialism in contraposition to state socialism.[77][78] This tradition has been recently associated with contemporary scholars such as Kevin Carson,[79][80] Roderick T. Long,[81][82] Charles W. Johnson,[83] Brad Spangler,[84] Sheldon Richman,[85][86][87] Chris Matthew Sciabarra[88] and Gary Chartier,[89] who stress the value of radically free markets, termed freed markets to distinguish them from the common conception which these left-libertarians believe to be riddled with capitalist and statist privileges.[90] Referred to as left-wing market anarchists[91] or market-oriented left-libertarians,[87] proponents of this approach strongly affirm the classical liberal ideas of self-ownership and free markets while maintaining that taken to their logical conclusions these ideas support anti-capitalist, anti-corporatist, anti-hierarchical and pro-labor positions in economics; anti-imperialism in foreign policy; and thoroughly radical views regarding such cultural issues as gender, sexuality and race.[92][93] Critics of laissez-faire as commonly understood argues that a truly laissez-faire system would be anti-capitalist and socialist.[94][95]

Kevin Carson describes his politics as on "the outer fringes of both free market libertarianism and socialism"[96] and has also been highly critical of intellectual property.[97] Carson has identified the work of Benjamin Tucker, Thomas Hodgskin, Ralph Borsodi, Paul Goodman, Lewis Mumford, Elinor Ostrom, Peter Kropotkin and Ivan Illich as sources of inspiration for his approach to politics and economics.[98] In addition to individualist anarchist Benjamin Tucker's big four monopolies (land, money, tariffs and patents), he argues that the state has also transferred wealth to the wealthy by subsidizing organizational centralization in the form of transportation and communication subsidies. Carson believes that Tucker overlooked this issue due to Tucker's focus on individual market transactions whereas he also focuses on organizational issues. As such, the primary focus of his most recent work has been decentralized manufacturing and the informal and household economies.[99] The theoretical sections of Carson's Studies in Mutualist Political Economy are also presented as an attempt to integrate marginalist critiques into the labor theory of value.[100]

In response to claims that he uses the term capitalism incorrectly, Carson says he is deliberately choosing to resurrect what he claims to be an old definition of the term in order to "make a point". He claims that "the term 'capitalism,' as it was originally used, did not refer to a free market, but to a type of statist class system in which capitalists controlled the state and the state intervened in the market on their behalf".[101] Carson holds that "capitalism, arising as a new class society directly from the old class society of the Middle Ages, was founded on an act of robbery as massive as the earlier feudal conquest of the land. It has been sustained to the present by continual state intervention to protect its system of privilege without which its survival is unimaginable".[102] Carson argues that in a truly laissez-faire system the ability to extract a profit from labor and capital would be negligible.[103] Carson coined the pejorative term vulgar libertarianism, a phrase that describes the use of a free market rhetoric in defense of corporate capitalism and economic inequality. According to Carson, the term is derived from the phrase vulgar political economy which Karl Marx described as an economic order that "deliberately becomes increasingly apologetic and makes strenuous attempts to talk out of existence the ideas which contain the contradictions [existing in economic life]".[104]

Gary Chartier offers an understanding of property rights as contingent yet tightly constrained social strategies, reflective of the importance of multiple, overlapping rationales for separate ownership and of natural law principles of practical reasonableness, defending robust yet non-absolute protections for these rights in a manner similar to that employed by David Hume.[105] This account is distinguished both from Lockean and neo-Lockean views which deduce property rights from the idea of self-ownership and from consequentialist accounts that might license widespread ad hoc interference with the possessions of groups and individuals.[106] Chartier uses this account to ground a clear statement of the natural law basis for the view that solidaristic wealth redistribution by individual persons is often morally required, but as a response by individuals and grass-roots networks to particular circumstances rather than as a state-driven attempt to achieve a particular distributive pattern.[107] He advances detailed arguments for workplace democracy rooted in such natural law principles as subsidiarity,[108] defending it as morally desirable and as a likely outcome of the elimination of injustice rather than as something to be mandated by the state.[109]

Chartier has discussed natural law approaches to land reform and to the occupation of factories by workers.[110] He objects on natural law grounds to intellectual property protections, drawing on his theory of property rights more generally[111] and develops a general natural law account of boycotts.[112] He has argued that proponents of genuinely freed markets should explicitly reject capitalism and identify with the global anti-capitalist movement while emphasizing that the abuses the anti-capitalist movement highlights result from state-tolerated violence and state-secured privilege rather than from voluntary cooperation and exchange. According to Chartier, "it makes sense for [freed-market advocates] to name what they oppose 'capitalism.' Doing so calls attention to the freedom movement's radical roots, emphasizes the value of understanding society as an alternative to the state, underscores the fact that proponents of freedom object to non-aggressive as well as aggressive restraints on liberty, ensures that advocates of freedom aren't confused with people who use market rhetoric to prop up an unjust status quo, and expresses solidarity between defenders of freed markets and workers — as well as ordinary people around the world who use "capitalism" as a short-hand label for the world-system that constrains their freedom and stunts their lives".[102][113]

Criticism edit

Over the years, a number of economists have offered critiques of laissez-faire economics. Adam Smith acknowledges some moral ambiguities towards the system of capitalism.[114] Smith had misgivings concerning some aspects of each of the major character-types produced by modern capitalist society, namely the landlords, the workers and the capitalists.[114] Smith claimed that "[t]he landlords' role in the economic process is passive. Their ability to reap a revenue solely from ownership of land tends to make them indolent and inept, and so they tend to be unable to even look after their own economic interests"[114] and that "[t]he increase in population should increase the demand for food, which should increase rents, which should be economically beneficial to the landlords". According to Smith, the landlords should be in favour of policies which contribute to the growth in the wealth of nations, but they often are not in favour of these pro-growth policies because of their own indolent-induced ignorance and intellectual flabbiness.[114] Smith stated clearly that he believed that without morality and laws, society would fail. From that perspective, it seems dubious that Smith supported a pure Laissez-Faire style of capitalism, and the ideas he supports in The Wealth of Nations is heavily dependent on the moral philosophy from his previous work, Theory of Moral Sentiment.[115]

Many philosophers have written on the systems society has created to manage their civilizations. Thomas Hobbes utilized the concept of a "state of nature", which is a time before any government or laws, as a starting point to consider the question. In this time, life would be "war of all against all" Further, "In such condition, there is no place for industry; because the fruit thereof is uncertain ... continual fear and danger of violent death, and the life of man solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short."[116]

Regardless of preferred political preference, all societies require shared moral values as a prerequisite on which to build laws to protect individuals from each other. Adam Smith wrote Wealth of Nations during the Enlightenment, a period of time when the prevailing attitude was, "All things can be Known." In effect, European thinkers, inspired by the likes of Isaac Newton and others, set about to "find the laws" of all things, that there existed a "natural law" underlying all aspects of life. They believed that these could be discovered and that everything in the universe could be rationally demystified and catalogued, including human interactions.[117]

Critics and market abolitionists such as David McNally argue in the Marxist tradition that the logic of the market inherently produces inequitable outcomes and leads to unequal exchanges, arguing that Smith's moral intent and moral philosophy espousing equal exchange was undermined by the practice of the free market he championed. According to McNally, the development of the market economy involved coercion, exploitation and violence that Smith's moral philosophy could not countenance.[118]

The British economist John Maynard Keynes condemned laissez-faire economic policy on several occasions.[119] In The End of Laissez-faire (1926), one of the most famous of his critiques, Keynes argues that the doctrines of laissez-faire are dependent to some extent on improper deductive reasoning and says the question of whether a market solution or state intervention is better must be determined on a case-by-case basis.[120]

The Austrian School economist Friedrich Hayek stated that a freely competitive, laissez-faire banking industry tends to be endogenously destabilizing and pro-cyclical, arguing that the need for central banking control was inescapable.[121]

Karl Polanyi's Great Transformation criticizes self-regulating markets as aberrational, unnatural phenomena which tend towards social disruption.[122][123]

In modern economics laissez-faire typically has a bad connotation, which hints towards a perceived need for restraint due to social needs and securities that can not be adequately responded to by companies with just a motive for making profit.

Robert Kuttner states that "for over a century, popular struggles in democracies have used the nation-state to temper raw capitalism. The power of voters has offset the power of capital. But as national barriers have come down in the name of freer commerce, so has the capacity of governments to manage capitalism in a broad public interest. So the real issue is not 'trade' but democratic governance".[124]

The main issues of raw capitalism are said to lie in its disregard for quality, durability, sustainability, respect for the environment and human beings as well as a lack of morality.[125] From this more critical angle, companies might naturally aim to maximise profits at the expense of workers' and broader social interests.[126]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Gaspard, Toufick. A Political Economy of Lebanon 1948–2002: The Limits of Laissez-faire. Boston: Brill, 2004. ISBN 978-9004132597[page needed]
  2. ^ Ellen Judy Wilson; Peter Hanns Reill (1 August 2004). Encyclopedia Of The Enlightenment. Infobase Publishing. p. 241. ISBN 978-0-8160-5335-3. from the original on 23 July 2023. Retrieved 21 July 2012.
  3. ^ Rothbard, Murray (1995). An Austrian Perspective on the History of Economic Thought. Edward Elgar Publishing. p. 371. ISBN 0-945466-48-X.
  4. ^ Gaffney, Mason. . Archived from the original on 10 May 2015. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  5. ^ Quick Reference Handbook Set, Basic Knowledge and Modern Technology (revised) by Edward H. Litchfield, Ph.D
  6. ^ "Laissez-faire" 2015-09-27 at the Wayback Machine, Business Dictionary.
  7. ^ Edward H. Litchfield. "Quick Reference Handbook Set, Basic Knowledge and Modern Technology" (revised ed.).
  8. ^ "Adam Smith". Encyclopædia Britannica. from the original on 12 April 2020. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  9. ^ "Journal Oeconomique" 2020-04-30 at the Wayback Machine. 1751 article by the French minister of finance.
  10. ^ M. d'Argenson, "Lettre au sujet de la dissertation sur le commerce du marquis de Belloni', Avril 1751, Journal Oeconomique p. 111 2022-10-26 at the Wayback Machine. See A. Oncken, Die Maxime Laissez faire et laissez passer, ihr Ursprung, ihr Werden, 1866
  11. ^ As quoted in J. M. Keynes, 1926, "The End of Laissez Faire". Argenson's Mémoirs were published only in 1858, ed. Jannet, Tome V, p. 362. See A. Oncken (Die Maxime Laissez faire et laissez passer, ihr Ursprung, ihr Werden, 1866).
  12. ^ Original somewhat literal translation using the French Wiktionary Archived 2019-06-05 at the Wayback Machine.
  13. ^ Baghdiantz McCabe, Ina (2008). Orientalism in Early Modern France: Eurasian Trade Exoticism and the Ancien Regime. Berg Publishers. pp. 271–272. ISBN 978-1845203740.
  14. ^ "Encyclopædia Britannica". Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. 31 May 2023. from the original on 22 May 2015. Retrieved 23 June 2022.
  15. ^ a b Clarke, J. J. (1997). Oriental Enlightenment: The Encounter Between Asian and Western Thought. Routledge. p. 50. ISBN 978-0415133760.
  16. ^ According to J. Turgot's "Eloge de Vincent de Gournay," Mercure, August, 1759 (repr. in Oeuvres of Turgot, vol. 1 p. 288 2022-11-12 at the Wayback Machine.
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Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Brebner, John Bartlet (1948). "Laissez Faire and State Intervention in Nineteenth-Century Britain". Journal of Economic History. 8: 59–73. doi:10.1017/S0022050700090252. S2CID 154256232.
  • Fisher, Irving (January 1907). "Why has the Doctrine of Laissez Faire been Abandoned?". Science. 25 (627): 18–27. Bibcode:1907Sci....25...18F. doi:10.1126/science.25.627.18. JSTOR 1633692. PMID 17739703. from the original on 2021-04-20. Retrieved 2020-09-02.
  • Taussig, Frank W. (1904). "The Present Position of the Doctrine of Free Trade". Publications of the American Economic Association. 6 (1): 29–65.
  • Gerlach, Cristian (2005) Wu-Wei in Europe: A Study of Eurasian Economic Thought 2021-03-22 at the Wayback Machine London School of Economics.
  • Block, Fred; Somers, Margaret R. (2014). The Power of Market Fundamentalism: Karl Polyani's Critique. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674050716. from the original on 2021-04-29. Retrieved 2014-12-31.
  • Bourgin, Frank The Great Challenge: The Myth of Laissez-Faire in the Early Republic (George Braziller Inc., 1989; Harper & Row, 1990).
  • Caplan, Bryan (2008). "Laissez-Faire Policy". In Hamowy, Ronald (ed.). Archived copy. The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage; Cato Institute. pp. 279–281. doi:10.4135/9781412965811.n167. ISBN 978-1412965804. LCCN 2008009151. OCLC 750831024. from the original on 2022-03-31. Retrieved 2022-03-18.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  • "Wu-Wei in Europe. A Study of Eurasian Economic Thought" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2020-08-03. Retrieved 2009-02-13. (773 KB) by Christian Gerlach, London School of Economics – March 2005.
  • John Maynard Keynes, The end of laissez-faire (1926) 2018-10-27 at the Wayback Machine.
  • Carter Goodrich, Government Promotion of American Canals and Railroads, 1800–1890 2012-02-24 at the Wayback Machine (Greenwood Press, 1960).
    • Goodrich, Carter. "American Development Policy: the Case of Internal Improvements," Journal of Economic History, 16 (1956), 449–460.
    • Goodrich, Carter. "National Planning of Internal Improvements," Political Science Quarterly, 63 (1948), 16–44.
  • Johnson, E.A.J., The Foundations of American Economic Freedom: Government and Enterprise in the Age of Washington (University of Minnesota Press, 1973).
  • Sidney Webb (1889), Fabian Essays in Socialism – The Basis of Socialism – The Period of Anarchy
  • Eisenach, Eldon J. "Nation & Economy." The Lost Promise of Progressivism, University Press of Kansas, 2021, pp. 138–186, doi:10.2307/j.ctv1p2gkzz.10.
  • Mittermaier, Karl, et al. "Individualism and Public Spirit." The Hand Behind the Invisible Hand: Dogmatic and Pragmatic Views on Free Markets and the State of Economic Theory, 1st ed., Bristol University Press, 2020, pp. 115–148, doi:10.2307/j.ctv186grks.17.
  • de Muijnck, Sam, et al. "Pragmatic Pluralism." Economy Studies: A Guide to Rethinking Economics Education, Amsterdam University Press, 2021, pp. 301–327, doi:10.2307/j.ctv23khmgr.26.
  • Williamson, Stephen D., and Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department. "Laissez-Faire Banking and Circulating Media of Exchange". no. 382, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, pp. 1–36, JSTOR community.28111419.
  • Schmidt, Jeremy J. "Laissez-Faire Metaphysics." Water: Abundance, Scarcity, and Security in the Age of Humanity, New York University Press, 2017, pp. 43–67, doi:10.2307/j.ctt1ggjjbf.6.
  • McGarity, Thomas O. "[Part One Introduction]." Freedom to Harm: The Lasting Legacy of the Laissez Faire Revival, Yale University Press, 2013, pp. 9–12, JSTOR j.ctt32bhht.5.
  • Viner, Jacob (1991). "Adam Smith and Laissee Faire". Essays on the Intellectual History of Economics, edited by Douglas A. Irwin, Princeton University Press, 1991, pp. 85–113, JSTOR j.ctt7ztz3w.6.
  • McGarity, Thomas O. "The Laissez Faire Benchmark." Freedom to Harm: The Lasting Legacy of the Laissez Faire Revival, Yale University Press, 2013, pp. 13–17, JSTOR j.ctt32bhht.6.
  • Colander, David and Kupers, Roland. "Laissez-Faire Activism." Complexity and the Art of Public Policy: Solving Society's Problems from the Bottom Up. Princeton University Press, 2014, pp. 214–236, doi:10.2307/j.ctt6wq04g.15.
  • Bowen, Howard R., et al. "Social Responsibilities and Laissez Faire." Social Responsibilities of the Businessman, University of Iowa Press, 2013, pp. 14–21, doi:10.2307/j.ctt20q1w8f.8.
  • Bladen, Vincent. "Laissez Faire." From Adam Smith to Maynard Keynes: The Heritage of Political Economy, University of Toronto Press, 1974, pp. 91–95, JSTOR 10.3138/j.ctt15jjdnk.16.
  • Perkins, Dwight H. "Government Intervention versus Laissez-Faire in Northeast Asia." East Asian Development, Harvard University Press, 2013, pp. 66–99, JSTOR j.ctt6wpppr.6.
  • Calvo, Christopher W. "Laisse-Faire in the American Tradition". The Emergence of Capitalism in Early America, 1st ed., University Press of Florida, 2020, pp. 27–74, doi:10.2307/j.ctvwvr323.5.
  • Stricker, Frank. "Discipline for the Unemployed; Laissez-Faire for Business (1873–1920)." American Unemployment: Past, Present, and Future, University of Illinois Press, 2020, pp. 15–38, doi:10.5406/j.ctv1220rqn.5.
  • Maggor, Noam. "Cultivating the Laissez-Faire Metropolis." Brahmin Capitalism: Frontiers of Wealth and Populism in America's First Gilded Age, Harvard University Press, 2017, pp. 53–95, JSTOR j.ctv24trd1j.6.
  • Blaser, Mario. "Laissez-Faire Progress: Invisibilzing the Yrmo." Storytelling Globalization from the Chaco and Beyond, Duke University Press, 2010, pp. 41–62, doi:10.2307/j.ctv11cw0jf.7.
  • Howell, Chris. "The Construction of the Collective Laissez-Faire System, 1890–1940." Trade Unions and the State: The Construction of Industrial Relations Institutions in Britain, 1890-2000, Princeton University Press, 2005, pp. 46–85, JSTOR j.ctt7spjh.6.
  • Leacock, Stephen. "Laissez Faire and Legislation." My Recollection of Chicago and the Doctrine of Laissez Faire, edited by Carl Spadoni, University of Toronto Press, 1998, pp. 35–40, JSTOR 10.3138/j.ctvcj2sx8.10.
  • Strum, Philippa. "From Laissez-faire Capitalism to Worker-Management." Brandeis: Beyond Progressivism, University Press of Kansas, 1993, pp. 24–48, doi:10.2307/j.ctv1p2gkvd.7.
  • Halevi, Leor. "Paper Money and Consummate Men: Capitalism and the Rise of Laissez-Faire Salafism." Modern Things on Trial: Islam's Global and Material Reformation in the Age of Rida, 1865–1935, Columbia University Press, 2019, pp. 96–130, JSTOR 10.7312/hale18866.10.
  • Kolozi, Peter. "In Search of the Warrior-statesman: The Critique of Laissez-Faire Capitalism by Brooks Adams and Theodore Roosevelt." Conservatives Against Capitalism: From the Industrial Revolution to Globalization, Columbia University Press, 2017, pp. 51–76, JSTOR 10.7312/kolo16652.6.
  • Palley, Thomas I. "Milton Friedman: The Great Laissez-Faire Partisan." Economic and Political Weekly, vol. 41, no. 49, 2006, pp. 5041–5043, JSTOR 4419000.
  • Holroyd, Carin Lee. "Governments and International Trade: An Intellectual Analysis." Government, International Trade, and Laissez-Faire Capitalism: Canada, Australia, and New Zealand's Relations with Japan, McGill-Queen's University Press, 2002, pp. 15–39, JSTOR j.ctt7zmzz.7.
  • Simons, Henry C., William Breit, Roger L. Ransom, and Robert M. Solow. "Radical Proponent of Laissez-faire." In The Academic Scribblers, 207–221. Princeton University Press, 1998. doi:10.2307/j.ctt7zvbf2.18.
  • Henry, John F. "The Ideology of the Laissez Faire Program." Journal of Economic Issues, vol. 42, no. 1, Association for Evolutionary Economics, 2008, pp. 209–224, JSTOR 25511295.
  • Adams, Walter, and James W. Brock. "The Impact of Economic Power Is Discussed; Public Policy Interests in Economic Liberty and Democratic Process Yield a Conundrum." Antitrust Economics on Trial: A Dialogue on the New Laissez-Faire, Princeton University Press, 1991, pp. 115–128, JSTOR j.ctt7zvv8c.8.
  • Lal, Deepak. "From Laissez Faire to the Dirigiste Dogma." Reviving the Invisible Hand: The Case for Classical Liberalism in the Twenty-First Century, Princeton University Press, 2006, pp. 48–61, JSTOR j.ctt7sjk9.6.
  • Fried, Barbara H. "The Empty Idea of Property Rights." The Progressive Assault on Laissez Faire: Robert Hale and the First Law and Economics Movement, Harvard University Press, 1998, pp. 71–107, doi:10.2307/j.ctvk12r43.6.
  • Rodgers, Daniel T. "Twilight of Laissez-Faire." Atlantic Crossings: Social Politics in a Progressive Age, Harvard University Press, 1998, pp. 76–111, JSTOR j.ctv1qdr01w.6.
  • Brown, D.K. (2016). Free Market Criminal Justice: How Democracy and Laissez Faire Undermine the Rule of Law. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0190457877. LCCN 2015023124.
  • Berend, I.T. (2006). An Economic History of Twentieth-Century Europe: Economic Regimes from Laissez-Faire to Globalization. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-45264-9.
  • Dukes, R. (2014). The Labour Constitution: The Enduring Idea of Labour Law. Oxford Scholarship online. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199601691. LCCN 2014943656.
  • Persky, J. (2016). The Political Economy of Progress: John Stuart Mill and Modern Radicalism. Oxford Studies in History of Economics. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0190460655. LCCN 2016008348. from the original on 2024-02-08. Retrieved 2022-03-11.
  • Tanzi, V. (2011). Government versus Markets: The Changing Economic Role of the State. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1139499736.[permanent dead link]
  • Fried, B. (2009). The Progressive Assault on Laissez Faire: Robert Hale and the First Law and Economics Movement. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674037304. from the original on 2024-02-08. Retrieved 2022-03-11.
  • Rothschild, E. (2013). Economic Sentiments: Adam Smith, Condorcet, and the Enlightenment. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674725621. from the original on 2024-02-08. Retrieved 2022-03-11.
  • Cummings, S. and Bridgman, T. and Hassard, J. and Rowlinson, M. (2017). A New History of Management. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1107138148. LCCN 2017012133. from the original on 2024-02-08. Retrieved 2022-03-11.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Leacock, S. and Spadoni, C. (1998). My Recollection of Chicago; And, The Doctrine of Laissez Faire. G – Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary Subjects Series. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0802081216. LCCN 99172372. from the original on 2024-02-08. Retrieved 2022-03-11.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Biebricher, T. (2019). The Political Theory of Neoliberalism. Currencies: New Thinking for Financial Times. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-1503607835. LCCN 2018016758. from the original on 2024-02-08. Retrieved 2022-03-11.
  • Viner, J. and Irwin, D.A. (2014). Essays on the Intellectual History of Economics. Princeton Legacy Library. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1400862054. from the original on 2022-10-25. Retrieved 2022-10-25.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Knight, F.H. and Emmett, R.B. (1999). Selected Essays by Frank H. Knight, Volume 2: Laissez Faire: Pro and Con. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226446974. LCCN 98053133. from the original on 2024-02-08. Retrieved 2022-03-11.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Friedman, M. and Savage, L.J. and Becker, G.S. (2007). Milton Friedman on Economics: Selected Papers. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226263496. LCCN 2007031094. from the original on 2024-02-08. Retrieved 2022-03-11.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

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laissez, faire, ɛər, less, fair, from, french, laissez, faire, lɛse, fɛːʁ, type, economic, system, which, transactions, between, private, groups, people, free, from, form, economic, interventionism, such, subsidies, regulations, system, thought, laissez, faire. Laissez faire ˌ l ɛ s eɪ ˈ f ɛer LESS ay FAIR from French laissez faire lɛse fɛːʁ lit let do is a type of economic system in which transactions between private groups of people are free from any form of economic interventionism such as subsidies or regulations As a system of thought laissez faire rests on the following axioms the individual is the basic unit in society i e the standard of measurement in social calculus the individual has a natural right to freedom and the physical order of nature is a harmonious and self regulating system 1 The original phrase was laissez faire laissez passer with the second part meaning let things pass It is generally attributed to Vincent de Gournay 2 Another basic principle of laissez faire holds that markets should naturally be competitive a rule that the early advocates of laissez faire always emphasized 1 The Physiocrats were early advocates of laissez faire and advocated for a impot unique a tax on land rent to replace the monstrous and crippling network of taxation that had grown up in 17th century France 3 Their view was that only land should be taxed because only land is productive 4 clarification needed Proponents of laissez faire argue for a near complete separation of government from the economic sector 5 verification needed The phrase laissez faire is part of a larger French phrase and literally translates to let it them do but in this context the phrase usually means to let it be and in expression laid back 6 Although never practiced with full consistency laissez faire capitalism emerged in the mid 18th century and was further popularized by Adam Smith s book The Wealth of Nations 7 8 Contents 1 Etymology and usage 2 History 2 1 Europe 2 2 United States 3 Models 3 1 Capitalism 3 2 Socialism 4 Criticism 5 See also 6 References 7 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksEtymology and usage editThe term laissez faire likely originated in a meeting that took place around 1681 between powerful French Controller General of Finances Jean Baptiste Colbert and a group of French businessmen headed by M Le Gendre When the eager mercantilist minister asked how the French state could be of service to the merchants and help promote their commerce Le Gendre replied simply Laissez nous faire Leave it to us or Let us do it the French verb not requiring an object 9 The anecdote on the Colbert Le Gendre meeting appeared in a 1751 article in the Journal economique written by French minister and champion of free trade Rene de Voyer Marquis d Argenson also the first known appearance of the term in print 10 Argenson himself had used the phrase earlier 1736 in his own diaries in a famous outburst Laissez faire telle devrait etre la devise de toute puissance publique depuis que le monde est civilise Detestable principe que celui de ne vouloir grandir que par l abaissement de nos voisins Il n y a que la mechancete et la malignite du cœur de satisfaites dans ce principe et l interet y est oppose Laissez faire morbleu Laissez faire 11 Let go which should be the motto of all public power since the world was civilized It is a detestable principle of those that want to enlarge themselves but by the abasement of our neighbours There is but the wicked and the malignant heart s who are satisfied by this principle and its interest is opposed Let go for God s sake Let go 12 Rene Louis de Voyer de Paulmy d Argenson Vincent de Gournay a French Physiocrat and intendant of commerce in the 1750s popularized the term laissez faire as he allegedly adopted it from Francois Quesnay s writings on China 13 Quesnay coined the phrases laissez faire and laissez passer 14 laissez faire being a translation of the Chinese term wu wei 無為 15 Gournay ardently supported the removal of restrictions on trade and the deregulation of industry in France Delighted with the Colbert Le Gendre anecdote 16 he forged it into a larger maxim all his own Laissez faire et laissez passer Let do and let pass His motto has also been identified as the longer Laissez faire et laissez passer le monde va de lui meme Let do and let pass the world goes on by itself Although Gournay left no written tracts on his economic policy ideas he had immense personal influence on his contemporaries notably his fellow Physiocrats who credit both the laissez faire slogan and the doctrine to Gournay 17 Before d Argenson or Gournay P S de Boisguilbert had enunciated the phrase On laisse faire la nature Let nature run its course 18 D Argenson himself during his life was better known for the similar but less celebrated motto Pas trop gouverner Govern not too much 19 The Physiocrats proclaimed laissez faire in 18th century France placing it at the very core of their economic principles and famous economists beginning with Adam Smith developed the idea 20 It is with the Physiocrats and the classical political economy that the term laissez faire is ordinarily associated 21 The book Laissez Faire and the General Welfare State states The physiocrats reacting against the excessive mercantilist regulations of the France of their day expressed a belief in a natural order or liberty under which individuals in following their selfish interests contributed to the general good Since in their view this natural order functioned successfully without the aid of government they advised the state to restrict itself to upholding the rights of private property and individual liberty to removing all artificial barriers to trade and to abolishing all useless laws 20 The French phrase laissez faire gained currency in English speaking countries with the spread of Physiocratic literature in the late 18th century George Whatley s 1774 Principles of Trade co authored with Benjamin Franklin re told the Colbert LeGendre anecdote this may mark the first appearance of the phrase in an English language publication 22 Herbert Spencer was opposed to a slightly different application of laissez faire to that miserable laissez faire that leads to men s ruin saying Along with that miserable laissez faire which calmly looks on while men ruin themselves in trying to enforce by law their equitable claims there goes activity in supplying them at other men s cost with gratis novel reading 23 As a product of the Enlightenment laissez faire was conceived as the way to unleash human potential through the restoration of a natural system a system unhindered by the restrictions of government 1 In a similar vein Adam Smith when viewed the economy as a natural system and the market as an organic part of that system Smith saw laissez faire as a moral program and the market its instrument to ensure men the rights of natural law 1 By extension free markets become a reflection of the natural system of liberty 1 For Smith laissez faire was a program for the abolition of laws constraining the market a program for the restoration of order and for the activation of potential growth 1 However Smith 24 and notable classical economists such as Thomas Malthus and David Ricardo did not use the phrase Jeremy Bentham used the term but it was probably original research James Mill s reference to the laissez faire maxim together with the Pas trop gouverner motto in an 1824 entry for the Encyclopaedia Britannica that really brought the term into wider English usage With the advent of the Anti Corn Law League founded 1838 the term received much of its English meaning 25 need quotation to verify Smith first used the metaphor of an invisible hand in his book The Theory of Moral Sentiments 1759 to describe the unintentional effects of economic self organization from economic self interest 26 Although not the metaphor itself the idea lying behind the invisible hand belongs to Bernard de Mandeville and his Fable of the Bees 1705 In political economy that idea and the doctrine of laissez faire have long been closely related 27 Some have characterized the invisible hand metaphor as one for laissez faire 28 although Smith never actually used the term himself 24 In Third Millennium Capitalism 2000 Wyatt M Rogers Jr notes a trend whereby recently conservative politicians and economists have chosen the term free market capitalism in lieu of laissez faire 29 American individualist anarchists such as Benjamin Tucker saw themselves as economic laissez faire socialists and political individualists while arguing that their anarchistic socialism or individual anarchism was consistent Manchesterism 30 History editEurope edit Main article Economic liberalism See also Classical liberalism In Europe the laissez faire movement was first widely promoted by the Physiocrats a movement that included Vincent de Gournay 1712 1759 a successful merchant turned political figure Gournay is postulated to have adapted the Taoist concept wu wei 31 from the writings on China by Francois Quesnay 15 1694 1774 Gournay held that government should allow the laws of nature to govern economic activity with the state only intervening to protect life liberty and property Francois Quesnay and Anne Robert Jacques Turgot Baron de l Aulne took up Gournay s ideas Quesnay had the ear of the King of France Louis XV and in 1754 persuaded him to give laissez faire a try On September 17 the King abolished all tolls and restraints on the sale and transport of grain For more than a decade the experiment appeared successful but 1768 saw a poor harvest and the cost of bread rose so high that there was widespread starvation while merchants exported grain in order to obtain the best profit In 1770 the Comptroller General of Finances Joseph Marie Terray revoked the edict allowing free trade in grain 32 The doctrine of laissez faire became an integral part of 19th century European liberalism 20 Just as liberals supported freedom of thought in the intellectual sphere so were they equally prepared to champion the principles of free trade and free competition in the sphere of economics seeing the state as merely a passive policeman protecting private property and administering justice but not interfering with the affairs of its citizens Businessmen British industrialists in particular were quick to associate these principles with their own economic interests 20 Many of the ideas of the physiocrats spread throughout Europe and were adopted to a greater or lesser extent in Sweden Tuscany Spain and in the newly created United States Adam Smith author of The Wealth of Nations 1776 met Quesnay and acknowledged his influence 33 In Britain the newspaper The Economist founded in 1843 became an influential voice for laissez faire capitalism 34 Laissez faire advocates opposed food aid for famines occurring within the British Empire In 1847 referring to the famine then underway in Ireland founder of The Economist James Wilson wrote It is no man s business to provide for another 35 More specifically in An Essay on the Principle of Population Malthus argued that there was nothing that could be done to avoid famines because he felt he had mathematically proven that population growth tends to exceed growth in food production However The Economist campaigned against the Corn Laws that protected landlords in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland against competition from less expensive foreign imports of cereal products The Great Famine in Ireland in 1845 led to the repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846 The tariffs on grain which kept the price of bread artificially high were repealed 36 However repeal of the Corn Laws came too late to stop the Irish famine partly because it was done in stages over three years 37 A group that became known as the Manchester Liberals to which Richard Cobden 1804 1865 and John Bright 1811 1889 belonged were staunch defenders of free trade After the death of Cobden the Cobden Club founded in 1866 continued their work 38 The breakdown of laissez faire as practised by the British Empire was partly led by British companies eager for state support of their positions abroad in particular British oil companies 39 In Italy philosopher Benedetto Croce created the term liberism derived from the Italian term liberismo a term for the economic doctrine of laissez faire capitalism it is synonymous with economic liberalism Sartori imported the term from Italian in order to distinguish between social liberalism which is generally considered a political ideology often advocating extensive government intervention in the economy and those economic liberal theories that propose to virtually eliminate such intervention In informal usage liberism overlaps with other concepts such as free trade neoliberalism right libertarianism the American concept of libertarianism 40 and the laissez faire doctrine of the French liberal Doctrinaires Croce claims that Liberalism can prove only a temporary right of private propriety of land and industries 41 It was popularized in English by Italian political scientist Giovanni Sartori 42 The intention of Croce and of Sartori to attack the right to private property and to free enterprise separating them from the general philosophy of liberalism that is primarily a theory of natural rights was always criticised openly by the quoted philosophers and by some of the main representatives of liberalism such as Luigi Einaudi Friedrich Hayek 40 43 44 and Milton Friedman 45 The Austrian School economist Eugen von Bohm Bawerk argues that the differences between the economical concept of liberism 46 and the economical consequences of liberalism 47 48 can be summarized by saying that A market is a law system Without it the only possible economy is the street robbery 49 United States edit Main article Liberalism in the United States Frank Bourgin s study of the Constitutional Convention and subsequent decades argues that direct government involvement in the economy was intended by the Founding Fathers 50 The reason for this was the economic and financial chaos the nation suffered under the Articles of Confederation The goal was to ensure that dearly won political independence was not lost by being economically and financially dependent on the powers and princes of Europe The creation of a strong central government able to promote science invention industry and commerce was seen as an essential means of promoting the general welfare and making the economy of the United States strong enough for them to determine their own destiny Others view Bourgin s study written in the 1940s and not published until 1989 as an over interpretation of the evidence intended originally to defend the New Deal and later to counter Ronald Reagan s economic policies 51 Historian Kathleen G Donohue argues that in the 19th century liberalism in the United States had distinctive characteristics and that at the center of classical liberal theory in Europe was the idea of laissez faire To the vast majority of American classical liberals however laissez faire did not mean no government intervention at all On the contrary they were more than willing to see government provide tariffs railroad subsidies and internal improvements all of which benefited producers Notable examples of government intervention in the period prior to the American Civil War include the establishment of the Patent Office in 1802 the establishment of the Office of Standard Weights and Measures in 1830 the creation of the Survey of the Coast later renamed the United States Coast Survey and then the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey in 1807 and other measures to improve river and harbor navigation the various Army expeditions to the west beginning with Lewis and Clark s Corps of Discovery in 1804 and continuing into the 1870s almost always under the direction of an officer from the Army Corps of Topographical Engineers and which provided crucial information for the overland pioneers that followed the assignment of Army Engineer officers to assist or direct the surveying and construction of the early railroads and canals and the establishment of the First Bank of the United States and Second Bank of the United States as well as various protectionist measures e g the tariff of 1828 Several of these proposals met with serious opposition and required a great deal of horse trading to be enacted into law For instance the First National Bank would not have reached the desk of President George Washington in the absence of an agreement that was reached between Alexander Hamilton and several Southern members of Congress to locate the capitol in the District of Columbia In contrast to Hamilton and the Federalists was Thomas Jefferson and James Madison s opposing political party the Democratic Republicans Most of the early opponents of laissez faire capitalism in the United States subscribed to the American School This school of thought was inspired by the ideas of Hamilton who proposed the creation of a government sponsored bank and increased tariffs to favor Northern industrial interests Following Hamilton s death the more abiding protectionist influence in the antebellum period came from Henry Clay and his American System In the early 19th century it is quite clear that the laissez faire label is an inappropriate one to apply to the relationship between the United States government and industry 52 In the mid 19th century the United States followed the Whig tradition of economic nationalism which included increased state control regulation and macroeconomic development of infrastructure 53 Public works such as the provision and regulation transportation such as railroads took effect The Pacific Railway Acts provided the development of the First transcontinental railroad 53 54 In order to help pay for its war effort in the Civil War the United States government imposed its first personal income tax on 5 August 1861 as part of the Revenue Act of 1861 3 of all incomes over US 800 rescinded in 1872 Following the Civil War the movement towards a mixed economy accelerated Protectionism increased with the McKinley Tariff of 1890 and the Dingley Tariff of 1897 Government regulation of the economy expanded with the enactment of the Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 and the Sherman Anti trust Act The Progressive Era saw the enactment of more controls on the economy as evidenced by the Woodrow Wilson administration s New Freedom program Following World War I and the Great Depression the United States turned to a mixed economy which combined free enterprise with a progressive income tax and in which from time to time the government stepped in to support and protect American industry from competition from overseas For example in the 1980s the government sought to protect the automobile industry by voluntary export restrictions from Japan 55 In 1986 Pietro S Nivola wrote By and large the comparative strength of the dollar against major foreign currencies has reflected high U S interest rates driven by huge federal budget deficits Hence the source of much of the current deterioration of trade is not the general state of the economy but rather the government s mix of fiscal and monetary policies that is the problematic juxtaposition of bold tax reductions relatively tight monetary targets generous military outlays and only modest cuts in major entitlement programs Put simply the roots of the trade problem and of the resurgent protectionism it has fomented are fundamentally political as well as economic 56 A more recent advocate of total laissez faire has been Objectivist Ayn Rand who described it as the abolition of any and all forms of government intervention in production and trade the separation of State and Economics in the same way and for the same reasons as the separation of Church and State 57 This viewpoint is summed up in what is known as the iron law of regulation which is a theory stating that all government economic regulation eventually leads to a net loss in social welfare 58 Rand s political philosophy emphasized individual rights including property rights 59 and she considered laissez faire capitalism the only moral social system because in her view it was the only system based on the protection of those rights 60 She opposed statism which she understood to include theocracy absolute monarchy Nazism fascism communism socialism and dictatorship 61 Rand believed that natural rights should be enforced by a constitutionally limited government 62 Although her political views are often classified as conservative or libertarian she preferred the term radical for capitalism She worked with conservatives on political projects but disagreed with them over issues such as religion and ethics 63 She denounced libertarianism which she associated with anarchism 64 She rejected anarchism as a naive theory based in subjectivism that could only lead to collectivism in practice 65 Models editCapitalism edit Main article Capitalism See also Neoliberalism A closely related name for laissez faire capitalism is that of raw pure or unrestrained capitalism which refers to capitalism free of any regulations 66 with low or minimal 67 government and operating almost entirely on the profit motive It shares a similar economic conception with anarcho capitalism Advocates of laissez faire capitalism argue that it relies on a constitutionally limited government that unconditionally bans the initiation of force and coercion including fraud Therefore free market economists such as Milton Friedman and Thomas Sowell argue that under such a system relationships between companies and workers are purely voluntary and mistreated workers will seek better treatment elsewhere Thus most companies will compete for workers on the basis of pay benefits and work life balance just as they compete with one another in the marketplace on the basis of the relative cost and quality of their goods 68 non primary source needed 69 non primary source needed So called raw or hyper capitalism is a major motif of cyberpunk in dystopian works such as Syndicate 70 71 Socialism edit Main article Socialism See also Free market anarchism Market socialism and Socialist economics Although laissez faire has been commonly associated with capitalism there is a similar laissez faire economic theory and system associated with socialism called left wing laissez faire 72 73 or free market anarchism also known as free market anti capitalism and free market socialism to distinguish it from laissez faire capitalism 74 75 76 One first example of this is mutualism as developed by Pierre Joseph Proudhon in the 18th century from which emerged individualist anarchism Benjamin Tucker is one eminent American individualist anarchist who adopted a laissez faire system he termed anarchistic socialism in contraposition to state socialism 77 78 This tradition has been recently associated with contemporary scholars such as Kevin Carson 79 80 Roderick T Long 81 82 Charles W Johnson 83 Brad Spangler 84 Sheldon Richman 85 86 87 Chris Matthew Sciabarra 88 and Gary Chartier 89 who stress the value of radically free markets termed freed markets to distinguish them from the common conception which these left libertarians believe to be riddled with capitalist and statist privileges 90 Referred to as left wing market anarchists 91 or market oriented left libertarians 87 proponents of this approach strongly affirm the classical liberal ideas of self ownership and free markets while maintaining that taken to their logical conclusions these ideas support anti capitalist anti corporatist anti hierarchical and pro labor positions in economics anti imperialism in foreign policy and thoroughly radical views regarding such cultural issues as gender sexuality and race 92 93 Critics of laissez faire as commonly understood argues that a truly laissez faire system would be anti capitalist and socialist 94 95 Kevin Carson describes his politics as on the outer fringes of both free market libertarianism and socialism 96 and has also been highly critical of intellectual property 97 Carson has identified the work of Benjamin Tucker Thomas Hodgskin Ralph Borsodi Paul Goodman Lewis Mumford Elinor Ostrom Peter Kropotkin and Ivan Illich as sources of inspiration for his approach to politics and economics 98 In addition to individualist anarchist Benjamin Tucker s big four monopolies land money tariffs and patents he argues that the state has also transferred wealth to the wealthy by subsidizing organizational centralization in the form of transportation and communication subsidies Carson believes that Tucker overlooked this issue due to Tucker s focus on individual market transactions whereas he also focuses on organizational issues As such the primary focus of his most recent work has been decentralized manufacturing and the informal and household economies 99 The theoretical sections of Carson s Studies in Mutualist Political Economy are also presented as an attempt to integrate marginalist critiques into the labor theory of value 100 In response to claims that he uses the term capitalism incorrectly Carson says he is deliberately choosing to resurrect what he claims to be an old definition of the term in order to make a point He claims that the term capitalism as it was originally used did not refer to a free market but to a type of statist class system in which capitalists controlled the state and the state intervened in the market on their behalf 101 Carson holds that capitalism arising as a new class society directly from the old class society of the Middle Ages was founded on an act of robbery as massive as the earlier feudal conquest of the land It has been sustained to the present by continual state intervention to protect its system of privilege without which its survival is unimaginable 102 Carson argues that in a truly laissez faire system the ability to extract a profit from labor and capital would be negligible 103 Carson coined the pejorative term vulgar libertarianism a phrase that describes the use of a free market rhetoric in defense of corporate capitalism and economic inequality According to Carson the term is derived from the phrase vulgar political economy which Karl Marx described as an economic order that deliberately becomes increasingly apologetic and makes strenuous attempts to talk out of existence the ideas which contain the contradictions existing in economic life 104 Gary Chartier offers an understanding of property rights as contingent yet tightly constrained social strategies reflective of the importance of multiple overlapping rationales for separate ownership and of natural law principles of practical reasonableness defending robust yet non absolute protections for these rights in a manner similar to that employed by David Hume 105 This account is distinguished both from Lockean and neo Lockean views which deduce property rights from the idea of self ownership and from consequentialist accounts that might license widespread ad hoc interference with the possessions of groups and individuals 106 Chartier uses this account to ground a clear statement of the natural law basis for the view that solidaristic wealth redistribution by individual persons is often morally required but as a response by individuals and grass roots networks to particular circumstances rather than as a state driven attempt to achieve a particular distributive pattern 107 He advances detailed arguments for workplace democracy rooted in such natural law principles as subsidiarity 108 defending it as morally desirable and as a likely outcome of the elimination of injustice rather than as something to be mandated by the state 109 Chartier has discussed natural law approaches to land reform and to the occupation of factories by workers 110 He objects on natural law grounds to intellectual property protections drawing on his theory of property rights more generally 111 and develops a general natural law account of boycotts 112 He has argued that proponents of genuinely freed markets should explicitly reject capitalism and identify with the global anti capitalist movement while emphasizing that the abuses the anti capitalist movement highlights result from state tolerated violence and state secured privilege rather than from voluntary cooperation and exchange According to Chartier it makes sense for freed market advocates to name what they oppose capitalism Doing so calls attention to the freedom movement s radical roots emphasizes the value of understanding society as an alternative to the state underscores the fact that proponents of freedom object to non aggressive as well as aggressive restraints on liberty ensures that advocates of freedom aren t confused with people who use market rhetoric to prop up an unjust status quo and expresses solidarity between defenders of freed markets and workers as well as ordinary people around the world who use capitalism as a short hand label for the world system that constrains their freedom and stunts their lives 102 113 Criticism editFurther information Criticism of capitalism Over the years a number of economists have offered critiques of laissez faire economics Adam Smith acknowledges some moral ambiguities towards the system of capitalism 114 Smith had misgivings concerning some aspects of each of the major character types produced by modern capitalist society namely the landlords the workers and the capitalists 114 Smith claimed that t he landlords role in the economic process is passive Their ability to reap a revenue solely from ownership of land tends to make them indolent and inept and so they tend to be unable to even look after their own economic interests 114 and that t he increase in population should increase the demand for food which should increase rents which should be economically beneficial to the landlords According to Smith the landlords should be in favour of policies which contribute to the growth in the wealth of nations but they often are not in favour of these pro growth policies because of their own indolent induced ignorance and intellectual flabbiness 114 Smith stated clearly that he believed that without morality and laws society would fail From that perspective it seems dubious that Smith supported a pure Laissez Faire style of capitalism and the ideas he supports in The Wealth of Nations is heavily dependent on the moral philosophy from his previous work Theory of Moral Sentiment 115 Many philosophers have written on the systems society has created to manage their civilizations Thomas Hobbes utilized the concept of a state of nature which is a time before any government or laws as a starting point to consider the question In this time life would be war of all against all Further In such condition there is no place for industry because the fruit thereof is uncertain continual fear and danger of violent death and the life of man solitary poor nasty brutish and short 116 Regardless of preferred political preference all societies require shared moral values as a prerequisite on which to build laws to protect individuals from each other Adam Smith wrote Wealth of Nations during the Enlightenment a period of time when the prevailing attitude was All things can be Known In effect European thinkers inspired by the likes of Isaac Newton and others set about to find the laws of all things that there existed a natural law underlying all aspects of life They believed that these could be discovered and that everything in the universe could be rationally demystified and catalogued including human interactions 117 Critics and market abolitionists such as David McNally argue in the Marxist tradition that the logic of the market inherently produces inequitable outcomes and leads to unequal exchanges arguing that Smith s moral intent and moral philosophy espousing equal exchange was undermined by the practice of the free market he championed According to McNally the development of the market economy involved coercion exploitation and violence that Smith s moral philosophy could not countenance 118 The British economist John Maynard Keynes condemned laissez faire economic policy on several occasions 119 In The End of Laissez faire 1926 one of the most famous of his critiques Keynes argues that the doctrines of laissez faire are dependent to some extent on improper deductive reasoning and says the question of whether a market solution or state intervention is better must be determined on a case by case basis 120 The Austrian School economist Friedrich Hayek stated that a freely competitive laissez faire banking industry tends to be endogenously destabilizing and pro cyclical arguing that the need for central banking control was inescapable 121 Karl Polanyi s Great Transformation criticizes self regulating markets as aberrational unnatural phenomena which tend towards social disruption 122 123 In modern economics laissez faire typically has a bad connotation which hints towards a perceived need for restraint due to social needs and securities that can not be adequately responded to by companies with just a motive for making profit Robert Kuttner states that for over a century popular struggles in democracies have used the nation state to temper raw capitalism The power of voters has offset the power of capital But as national barriers have come down in the name of freer commerce so has the capacity of governments to manage capitalism in a broad public interest So the real issue is not trade but democratic governance 124 The main issues of raw capitalism are said to lie in its disregard for quality durability sustainability respect for the environment and human beings as well as a lack of morality 125 From this more critical angle companies might naturally aim to maximise profits at the expense of workers and broader social interests 126 See also edit nbsp Capitalism portal nbsp Economics portal nbsp Law portal nbsp Libertarianism portalAnarcho capitalism Authoritarian liberalism a term by Hermann Heller Corporatocracy Deregulation Economic liberalism Free market Free market anarchism Free trade History of economic thought Liberism Libertarianism Market fundamentalism Market socialism Neoliberalism Objectivism Physiocracy Privatization Wu weiReferences edit a b c d e f Gaspard Toufick A Political Economy of Lebanon 1948 2002 The Limits of Laissez faire Boston Brill 2004 ISBN 978 9004132597 page needed Ellen Judy Wilson Peter Hanns Reill 1 August 2004 Encyclopedia Of The Enlightenment Infobase Publishing p 241 ISBN 978 0 8160 5335 3 Archived from the original on 23 July 2023 Retrieved 21 July 2012 Rothbard Murray 1995 An Austrian Perspective on the History of Economic Thought Edward Elgar Publishing p 371 ISBN 0 945466 48 X Gaffney Mason The Taxable Surplus of Land Measuring Guarding and Gathering It Archived from the original on 10 May 2015 Retrieved 9 December 2014 Quick Reference Handbook Set Basic Knowledge and Modern Technology revised by Edward H Litchfield Ph D Laissez faire Archived 2015 09 27 at the Wayback Machine Business Dictionary Edward H Litchfield Quick Reference Handbook Set Basic Knowledge and Modern Technology revised ed Adam Smith Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 12 April 2020 Retrieved 12 April 2020 Journal Oeconomique Archived 2020 04 30 at the Wayback Machine 1751 article by the French minister of finance M d Argenson Lettre au sujet de la dissertation sur le commerce du marquis de Belloni Avril 1751 Journal Oeconomique p 111 Archived 2022 10 26 at the Wayback Machine See A Oncken Die Maxime Laissez faire et laissez passer ihr Ursprung ihr Werden 1866 As quoted in J M Keynes 1926 The End of Laissez Faire Argenson s Memoirs were published only in 1858 ed Jannet Tome V p 362 See A Oncken Die Maxime Laissez faire et laissez passer ihr Ursprung ihr Werden 1866 Original somewhat literal translation using the French Wiktionary Archived 2019 06 05 at the Wayback Machine Baghdiantz McCabe Ina 2008 Orientalism in Early Modern France Eurasian Trade Exoticism and the Ancien Regime Berg Publishers pp 271 272 ISBN 978 1845203740 Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 31 May 2023 Archived from the original on 22 May 2015 Retrieved 23 June 2022 a b Clarke J J 1997 Oriental Enlightenment The Encounter Between Asian and Western Thought Routledge p 50 ISBN 978 0415133760 According to J Turgot s Eloge de Vincent de Gournay Mercure August 1759 repr in Oeuvres of Turgot vol 1 p 288 Archived 2022 11 12 at the Wayback Machine Gournay was credited with the phrase by Jacques Turgot Eloge a Gournay Mercure 1759 the Marquis de Mirabeau Philosophie rurale 1763 and Ephemerides du Citoyen 1767 the Comte d Albon Eloge Historique de M Quesnay Nouvelles Ephemerides Economiques May 1775 pp 136 137 and DuPont de Nemours Introduction to Oeuvres de Jacques Turgot 1808 11 Vol I pp 257 259 Daire ed among others Tant encore une fois qu on laisse faire la nature on ne doit rien craindre de pareil P S de Boisguilbert 1707 Dissertation de la nature des richesses de l argent et des tributs DuPont de Nemours op cit p 258 Oncken op cit and Keynes op cit also credit the Marquis d Argenson with the phrase Pour gouverner mieux il faudrait gouverner moins To govern best one needs to govern less possibly the source of the famous That government is best which governs least motto popular in American circles attributed variously to Thomas Paine Thomas Jefferson and Henry Thoreau a b c d Fine Sidney Laissez Faire and the General Welfare State United States The University of Michigan Press 1964 Print Macgregor Economic Thought and Policy London 1949 pp 54 67 Whatley s Principles of Trade are reprinted in Works of Benjamin Franklin Vol 2 p 401 Archived 2022 11 12 at the Wayback Machine Justice Part IV of Ethics 1892 p 44 a b Roy C Smith Adam Smith and the Origins of American Enterprise How the Founding Fathers Turned to a Great Economist s Writings and Created the American Economy Macmillan 2004 ISBN 0312325762 pp 13 14 Abbott P Usher et al 1931 Economic History The Decline of Laissez Faire American Economic Review 22 1 supplement 3 10 Andres Marroquin Invisible Hand The Wealth of Adam Smith The Minerva Group Inc 2002 ISBN 1410202887 p 123 John Eatwell The Invisible Hand W W Norton amp Company 1989 pp Preface x1 The mathematical century the 30 greatest problems of the last 100 years 2006 Piergiorgio Odifreddi Arturo Sangalli Freeman J Dyson p 122 Princeton University Press 22 October 2006 ISBN 978 0691128054 Retrieved 30 July 2013 Rogers Wyatt M 2000 1 Economic Forces in Modern Capitalism Third Millennium Capitalism Convergence of Economic Energy and Environmental Forces ABC Clio ebook Westport Connecticut Greenwood Publishing Group p 38 ISBN 978 1567203608 Retrieved 30 December 2016 Tucker Benjamin 1926 Individual Liberty Selections from the Writings of Benjamin R Tucker New York Vanguard Press pp 1 19 ISBN missing Christian Gerlach Wu Wei in Europe A Study of Eurasian Economic Thought Archived 2020 08 03 at the Wayback Machine London School of Economics March 2005 p 3 the diffusion of wu wei co evolved with the inner European laissez faire principle the Libaniusian model p 8 Thus wu wei has to be recognized as a laissez faire instrument of Chinese political economy p 10 Practising wu wei erzhi Consequently it is this variant of the laissez faire maxim in which the basis of Physiocracy s moral philosophy is to be located Priddat s work made clear that the wu wei of the complete economie has to be considered central to Physiocracy p 11 that wu wei translates into French as laissez faire Will amp Ariel Durant Rousseau and the Revolution pp 71 77 Simon and Schuster 1967 ISBN 067163058X Will amp Ariel Durant Rousseau and the Revolution p 76 Simon and Schuster 1967 ISBN 067163058X Scott Gordon 1955 The London Economist and the High Tide of Laissez Faire Journal of Political Economy 63 6 461 488 doi 10 1086 257722 S2CID 154921783 Cormac o Grada 1995 section Ideology and relief in Chpt 2 The Great Irish Famine Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521557870 George Miller On Fairness and Efficiency The Policy Press 2000 ISBN 978 1861342218 p 344 Christine Kinealy A Death Dealing Famine The Great Hunger in Ireland Pluto Press 1997 ISBN 978 0745310749 p 59 Antonia Taddei 1999 London Clubs in the Late Nineteenth Century PDF Archived PDF from the original on 17 December 2008 Retrieved 30 December 2008 Jones G Gareth 1977 The British Government and the Oil Companies 1912 1924 The Search for an Oil Policy The Historical Journal 2 3 647 672 doi 10 1017 s0018246x00011286 JSTOR 2638433 S2CID 161977401 a b Pietro Moroni 25 April 2015 Le due facce della medaglia neoliberale Pandora Rivista Pandora Rivista Archived from the original on 22 June 2018 Retrieved 22 October 2018 Croce Einaudi 1988 p 139 Giovanni Sartori The Theory of Democracy Revisited 1987 Chatham New Jersey Chatham House ISBN 0934540497 Croce ed Einaudi un confronto su liberalismo e liberismo entry in Italian in the Enciclopedia italiana Dario Antiseri Liberalismo politico e liberalismo economico Rubettino F Hayek 1997 Liberalismo Ideazione p 62 Cio comporta anche il rifiuto della distinzione tra liberalismo politico e liberalismo economico elaborata in particolare da Croce come distinzione tra liberismo e liberalismo Per la tradizione inglese i due concetti sono inseparabili Infatti il principio fondamentale per cui l intervento coercitivo dell autorita statale deve limitarsi ad imporre il rispetto delle norme generali di mera condotta priva il governo del potere di dirigere e controllare le attivita economiche degli individui I sostenitori dell esistenza di una dottrina liberista la attribuiscono ad Adam Smith e al suo saggio La Ricchezza delle Nazioni laddove questi utilizzo il termine liberal policy un paio di volte per indicare il commercio privo di dazi Smith non vedeva di buon occhio l assenza di regolamentazione statale infatti dichiaro Raramente la gente dello stesso mestiere si ritrova insieme anche se per motivi di svago e di divertimento senza che la conversazione risulti in una cospirazione contro i profani o in un qualche espediente per far alzare i prezzi La lingua francese parla di liberalisme politique e liberalisme economique quest ultimo chiamato anche laissez faire lett lasciate fare lo spagnolo di liberalismo social e liberalismo economico La lingua inglese parla di free trade libero commercio ma usa il termine liberalism anche per riferirsi al liberismo economico Carlo Scogniamiglio Pasini Liberismo e liberalismo nella polemica fra Croce ed Einaudi PDF Archived from the original PDF on 28 December 2016 Retrieved 22 October 2018 Boehm Bawerk 1999 Potere o legge economica Rubbettino p 67 Bourgin Frank 1989 The Great Challenge The Myth of Laissez Faire in the Early Republic New York George Braziller Inc ISBN 978 0060972967 page needed Bourgin Frank 1 June 1989 The Great Challenge The Myth of Laissez faire in the Early Republic Kirkusreviews com Archived from the original on 21 September 2013 Retrieved 30 July 2013 Prince Carl E Taylor Seth 1982 Daniel Webster the Boston Associates and the U S Government s Role in the Industrializing Process 1815 1830 Journal of the Early Republic 2 3 283 299 doi 10 2307 3122975 JSTOR 3122975 a b Guelzo Allen C 1999 Abraham Lincoln Redeemer President Grand Rapids W B Eerdmans Pub Co ISBN 978 0802838728 page needed From Sea to Shining Sea The Heroes and Villains of the First Transcontinental Railroad The Objective Standard 2019 05 10 Archived from the original on 2021 04 29 Retrieved 2021 04 29 Robert W Crandall 1987 The Effects of U S Trade Protection for Autos and Steel PDF Brookings Papers on Economic Activity 1987 1 271 288 doi 10 2307 2534518 JSTOR 2534518 Archived PDF from the original on 2019 10 01 Retrieved 2019 09 24 Pietro S Nivola 1986 The New Protectionism U S Trade Policy in Historical Perspective Political Science Quarterly 101 4 577 600 doi 10 2307 2150795 JSTOR 2150795 Rand Ayn Capitalism The Unknown Ideal Ch 7 New American Library Signet 1967 Armstrong J Scott Green Kesten C 2013 10 01 Effects of corporate social responsibility and irresponsibility policies Journal of Business Research Strategic Thinking in Marketing 66 10 1922 1927 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 663 508 doi 10 1016 j jbusres 2013 02 014 S2CID 145059055 Peikoff 1991 pp 350 352 Gotthelf 2000 pp 91 92 Peikoff 1991 pp 379 380 Peikoff 1991 pp 369 Peikoff 1991 p 367 Burns 2009 pp 174 177 209 230 231 Den Uyl amp Rasmussen 1986 pp 225 226 Doherty 2007 pp 189 190 Branden 1986 p 252 Sciabarra 1995 pp 266 267 Burns 2009 pp 268 269 Sciabarra 1995 pp 280 281 Peikoff 1991 pp 371 372 Merrill 1991 p 139 Nolan Peter 2008 Capitalism and Freedom The Contradictory Character of Globalisation Anthem Press ISBN 978 1843312826 Retrieved 9 February 2017 Orchard Lionel Stretton Hugh 2016 Public Goods Public Enterprise Public Choice Theoretical Foundations of the Contemporary Attack on Government Springer ISBN 978 1349235056 Retrieved 9 February 2017 Milton Friedman on Labor Unions Free To Choose archived from the original on 2021 12 11 retrieved 2021 04 29 Economics vs Need by Dr Thomas Sowell www creators com 2013 06 11 Archived from the original on 2021 04 29 Retrieved 2021 04 29 Paris Jeffrey 1 July 2005 Rethinking the End of Modernity Social Philosophy Today 21 173 189 doi 10 5840 socphiltoday20052120 Kilgore Christopher D 2017 Bad Networks From Virus to Cancer in Post Cyberpunk Narrative Journal of Modern Literature 40 2 165 183 doi 10 2979 jmodelite 40 2 10 JSTOR 10 2979 jmodelite 40 2 10 S2CID 157670471 Nick Manley Brief Introduction To Left Wing Laissez Faire Economic Theory Part One Archived 2021 08 18 at the Wayback Machine Nick Maley Brief Introduction To Left Wing Laissez Faire Economic Theory Part Two Archived 2021 05 16 at the Wayback Machine Chartier Gary Johnson Charles W 2011 Markets Not Capitalism Individualist Anarchism Against Bosses Inequality Corporate Power and Structural Poverty Brooklyn NY Minor Compositions Autonomedia It introduces an eye opening approach to radical social thought rooted equally in libertarian socialism and market anarchism Chartier Gary Johnson Charles W 2011 Markets Not Capitalism Individualist Anarchism Against Bosses Inequality Corporate Power and Structural Poverty Brooklyn NY Minor Compositions Autonomedia p back cover But there has always been a market oriented strand of libertarian socialism that emphasizes voluntary cooperation between producers And markets properly understood have always been about cooperation As a commenter at Reason magazine s Hit amp Run blog remarking on Jesse Walker s link to the Kelly article put it every trade is a cooperative act In fact it s a fairly common observation among market anarchists that genuinely free markets have the most legitimate claim to the label socialism Socialism A Perfectly Good Word Rehabilitated Archived 2016 03 10 at the Wayback Machine by Kevin Carson at website of Center for a Stateless Society Tucker Benjamin State Socialism and Anarchism Archived 2019 03 11 at the Wayback Machine Brown Susan Love 1997 The Free Market as Salvation from Government In Meanings of the Market The Free Market in Western Culture Berg Publishers p 107 Carson Kevin A 2008 Organization Theory A Libertarian Perspective Charleston SC BookSurge Carson Kevin A 2010 The Homebrew Industrial Revolution A Low Overhead Manifesto Charleston SC BookSurge Long Roderick T 2000 Reason and Value Aristotle versus Rand Washington DC Objectivist Center Long Roderick T 2008 An Interview With Roderick Long Archived 2020 03 27 at the Wayback Machine Johnson Charles W 2008 Liberty Equality Solidarity Toward a Dialectical Anarchism Archived 2022 06 26 at the Wayback Machine Anarchism Minarchism Is a Government Part of a Free Country In Long Roderick T and Machan Tibor Aldershot Ashgate pp 155 188 Spangler Brad 15 September 2006 Market Anarchism as Stigmergic Socialism Archived 10 May 2011 at archive today Richman Sheldon 23 June 2010 Why Left Libertarian Archived 2020 01 03 at the Wayback Machine The Freeman Foundation for Economic Education Richman Sheldon 18 December 2009 Workers of the World Unite for a Free Market Archived 22 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine Foundation for Economic Education a b Sheldon Richman 3 February 2011 Libertarian Left Free market anti capitalism the unknown ideal Archived 9 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine The American Conservative Retrieved 5 March 2012 Sciabarra Chris Matthew 2000 Total Freedom Toward a Dialectical Libertarianism University Park PA Pennsylvania State University Press Chartier Gary 2009 Economic Justice and Natural Law Cambridge Cambridge University Press Gillis William 2011 The Freed Market In Chartier Gary and Johnson Charles Markets Not Capitalism Brooklyn NY Minor Compositions Autonomedia pp 19 20 Chartier Gary Johnson Charles W 2011 Markets Not Capitalism Individualist Anarchism Against Bosses Inequality Corporate Power and Structural Poverty Brooklyn NY Minor Compositions Autonomedia pp 1 16 Gary Chartier and Charles W Johnson eds Markets Not Capitalism Individualist Anarchism Against Bosses Inequality Corporate Power and Structural Poverty Minor Compositions 1st edition November 5 2011 Gary Chartier has joined Kevin Carson Charles W Johnson and others echoing the language of Benjamin Tucker Lysander Spooner and Thomas Hodgskin in maintaining that because of its heritage emancipatory goals and potential radical market anarchism should be seen by its proponents and by others as part of the socialist tradition and that market anarchists can and should call themselves socialists See Gary Chartier Advocates of Freed Markets Should Oppose Capitalism Free Market Anti Capitalism session annual conference Association of Private Enterprise Education Caesar s Palace Las Vegas NV April 13 2010 Gary Chartier Advocates of Freed Markets Should Embrace Anti Capitalism Archived 2019 09 29 at the Wayback Machine Gary Chartier Socialist Ends Market Means Five Essays Archived 2019 03 28 at the Wayback Machine Cp Tucker Socialism Nick Manley Brief Introduction To Left Wing Laissez Faire Economic Theory Part One Archived 2021 08 18 at the Wayback Machine Nick Manley Brief Introduction To Left Wing Laissez Faire Economic Theory Part Two Archived 2021 05 16 at the Wayback Machine Introductions Kevin Carson Archived 2019 03 29 at the Wayback Machine Carson Kevin Intellectual Property A Libertarian Critique c4ss org Archived from the original on September 11 2012 Retrieved May 23 2009 Kevin A Carson Introduction Archived 2012 10 16 at the Wayback Machine The Art of the Possible Carson Kevin Industrial Policy New Wine in Old Bottles c4ss org Archived from the original on September 11 2012 Retrieved May 26 2009 Kevin Carson Studies in Mutualist Political Economy Archived 15 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine chs 1 3 Carson Kevin A Carson s Rejoinders Archived 2014 08 17 at the Wayback Machine Journal of Libertarian Studies Volume 20 No 1 Winter 2006 97 136 116 117 a b Richman Sheldon Libertarian Left Archived 14 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine The American Conservative March 2011 Dean Brian Winter 2002 Bluffer s Guide to Revolutionary Economics The Idler Archived from the original on 27 April 2009 Retrieved 24 May 2009 Marx Theories of Surplus Value III p 501 See Gary Chartier Anarchy and Legal Order Law and Politics for a Stateless Society New York Cambridge UP 2013 44 156 See Gary Chartier Natural Law and Non Aggression Acta Juridica Hungarica 51 2 June 2010 79 96 and for an earlier version Justice 32 46 See Justice 47 68 Justice 89 120 See Gary Chartier Pirate Constitutions and Workplace Democracy Jahrbuch fur Recht und Ethik 18 2010 449 467 Justice 123 154 See Gary Chartier Intellectual Property and Natural Law Australian Journal of Legal Philosophy 36 2011 58 88 See Justice 176 182 Advocates of Freed Markets Should Embrace Anti Capitalism Archived 2021 10 23 at the Wayback Machine a b c d Spencer J Pack Capitalism as a Moral System Adam Smith s Critique of the Free Market Economy Great Britain Edward Elgar 2010 Print Macfie A L 1959 Adam Smith s Moral Sentiments as Foundation for His Wealth of Nations Oxford Economic Papers 11 3 209 228 doi 10 1093 oxfordjournals oep a040824 Hobbes Thomas 1909 14 Of Man Being the First Part of Leviathan Collier amp Son Enlightenment History com 2009 Archived from the original on 2021 02 07 Retrieved 2021 04 29 McNally David 1993 Against the Market Political Economy Market Socialism and the Marxist Critique Verso ISBN 978 0860916062 Dostaler Gilles Keynes and His Battles Edward Elgar Publishing 2007 p 91 Dostaler 2007 p 91 Barnett Vincent John Maynard Keynes Routledge 2013 p 143 White Lawrence H 1999 Why Didn t Hayek Favor Laissez Faire in Banking PDF History of Political Economy 31 4 753 769 doi 10 1215 00182702 31 4 753 Archived PDF from the original on 1 April 2013 Retrieved 11 April 2013 Polanyi Karl 1944 The Great Transformation Farrar amp Rinehart McCloskey Deirdre 1997 Polanyi Was Right and Wrong PDF Eastern Economic Journal Archived PDF from the original on 2021 08 07 Retrieved 2021 07 26 Kuttner Robert 19 December 2001 Globalization and Its Critics The American Prospect Archived from the original on 13 September 2018 Retrieved 17 March 2019 Kerckhove Gilbert Van 2012 Toxic Capitalism The Orgy of Consumerism and Waste Are We the Last Generation on Earth AuthorHouse ISBN 978 1477219065 Retrieved 9 February 2017 Muntefering s criticism of raw capitalism strikes a chord Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 10 Retrieved 9 February 2017 permanent dead link Sources editBranden Barbara 1986 The Passion of Ayn Rand Garden City New York Doubleday amp Company ISBN 0 385 19171 5 OCLC 12614728 Burns Jennifer 2009 Goddess of the Market Ayn Rand and the American Right New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 532487 7 OCLC 313665028 Den Uyl Douglas amp Rasmussen Douglas eds 1986 1984 The Philosophic Thought of Ayn Rand paperback ed Chicago University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 01407 9 Doherty Brian 2007 Radicals for Capitalism A Freewheeling History of the Modern American Libertarian Movement New York Public Affairs Press ISBN 978 1 58648 350 0 Gotthelf Allan 2000 On Ayn Rand Wadsworth Publishing ISBN 978 0 534 57625 7 Peikoff Leonard 1991 Objectivism The Philosophy of Ayn Rand New York Dutton ISBN 978 0 452 01101 4 Merrill Ronald E 1991 The Ideas of Ayn Rand La Salle Illinois Open Court Publishing ISBN 0 8126 9157 1 Sciabarra Chris Matthew 1995 Ayn Rand The Russian Radical University Park Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 978 0 271 01440 1 OCLC 31133644 Further reading editBrebner John Bartlet 1948 Laissez Faire and State Intervention in Nineteenth Century Britain Journal of Economic History 8 59 73 doi 10 1017 S0022050700090252 S2CID 154256232 Fisher Irving January 1907 Why has the Doctrine of Laissez Faire been Abandoned Science 25 627 18 27 Bibcode 1907Sci 25 18F doi 10 1126 science 25 627 18 JSTOR 1633692 PMID 17739703 Archived from the original on 2021 04 20 Retrieved 2020 09 02 Taussig Frank W 1904 The Present Position of the Doctrine of Free Trade Publications of the American Economic Association 6 1 29 65 Gerlach Cristian 2005 Wu Wei in Europe A Study of Eurasian Economic Thought Archived 2021 03 22 at the Wayback Machine London School of Economics Block Fred Somers Margaret R 2014 The Power of Market Fundamentalism Karl Polyani s Critique Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674050716 Archived from the original on 2021 04 29 Retrieved 2014 12 31 Bourgin Frank The Great Challenge The Myth of Laissez Faire in the Early Republic George Braziller Inc 1989 Harper amp Row 1990 Caplan Bryan 2008 Laissez Faire Policy In Hamowy Ronald ed Archived copy The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism Thousand Oaks CA Sage Cato Institute pp 279 281 doi 10 4135 9781412965811 n167 ISBN 978 1412965804 LCCN 2008009151 OCLC 750831024 Archived from the original on 2022 03 31 Retrieved 2022 03 18 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Wu Wei in Europe A Study of Eurasian Economic Thought PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2020 08 03 Retrieved 2009 02 13 773 KB by Christian Gerlach London School of Economics March 2005 John Maynard Keynes The end of laissez faire 1926 Archived 2018 10 27 at the Wayback Machine Carter Goodrich Government Promotion of American Canals and Railroads 1800 1890 Archived 2012 02 24 at the Wayback Machine Greenwood Press 1960 Goodrich Carter American Development Policy the Case of Internal Improvements Journal of Economic History 16 1956 449 460 Goodrich Carter National Planning of Internal Improvements Political Science Quarterly 63 1948 16 44 Johnson E A J The Foundations of American Economic Freedom Government and Enterprise in the Age of Washington University of Minnesota Press 1973 Sidney Webb 1889 Fabian Essays in Socialism The Basis of Socialism The Period of Anarchy Eisenach Eldon J Nation amp Economy The Lost Promise of Progressivism University Press of Kansas 2021 pp 138 186 doi 10 2307 j ctv1p2gkzz 10 Mittermaier Karl et al Individualism and Public Spirit The Hand Behind the Invisible Hand Dogmatic and Pragmatic Views on Free Markets and the State of Economic Theory 1st ed Bristol University Press 2020 pp 115 148 doi 10 2307 j ctv186grks 17 de Muijnck Sam et al Pragmatic Pluralism Economy Studies A Guide to Rethinking Economics Education Amsterdam University Press 2021 pp 301 327 doi 10 2307 j ctv23khmgr 26 Williamson Stephen D and Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Research Department Laissez Faire Banking and Circulating Media of Exchange no 382 Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis pp 1 36 JSTOR community 28111419 Schmidt Jeremy J Laissez Faire Metaphysics Water Abundance Scarcity and Security in the Age of Humanity New York University Press 2017 pp 43 67 doi 10 2307 j ctt1ggjjbf 6 McGarity Thomas O Part One Introduction Freedom to Harm The Lasting Legacy of the Laissez Faire Revival Yale University Press 2013 pp 9 12 JSTOR j ctt32bhht 5 Viner Jacob 1991 Adam Smith and Laissee Faire Essays on the Intellectual History of Economics edited by Douglas A Irwin Princeton University Press 1991 pp 85 113 JSTOR j ctt7ztz3w 6 McGarity Thomas O The Laissez Faire Benchmark Freedom to Harm The Lasting Legacy of the Laissez Faire Revival Yale University Press 2013 pp 13 17 JSTOR j ctt32bhht 6 Colander David and Kupers Roland Laissez Faire Activism Complexity and the Art of Public Policy Solving Society s Problems from the Bottom Up Princeton University Press 2014 pp 214 236 doi 10 2307 j ctt6wq04g 15 Bowen Howard R et al Social Responsibilities and Laissez Faire Social Responsibilities of the Businessman University of Iowa Press 2013 pp 14 21 doi 10 2307 j ctt20q1w8f 8 Bladen Vincent Laissez Faire From Adam Smith to Maynard Keynes The Heritage of Political Economy University of Toronto Press 1974 pp 91 95 JSTOR 10 3138 j ctt15jjdnk 16 Perkins Dwight H Government Intervention versus Laissez Faire in Northeast Asia East Asian Development Harvard University Press 2013 pp 66 99 JSTOR j ctt6wpppr 6 Calvo Christopher W Laisse Faire in the American Tradition The Emergence of Capitalism in Early America 1st ed University Press of Florida 2020 pp 27 74 doi 10 2307 j ctvwvr323 5 Stricker Frank Discipline for the Unemployed Laissez Faire for Business 1873 1920 American Unemployment Past Present and Future University of Illinois Press 2020 pp 15 38 doi 10 5406 j ctv1220rqn 5 Maggor Noam Cultivating the Laissez Faire Metropolis Brahmin Capitalism Frontiers of Wealth and Populism in America s First Gilded Age Harvard University Press 2017 pp 53 95 JSTOR j ctv24trd1j 6 Blaser Mario Laissez Faire Progress Invisibilzing the Yrmo Storytelling Globalization from the Chaco and Beyond Duke University Press 2010 pp 41 62 doi 10 2307 j ctv11cw0jf 7 Howell Chris The Construction of the Collective Laissez Faire System 1890 1940 Trade Unions and the State The Construction of Industrial Relations Institutions in Britain 1890 2000 Princeton University Press 2005 pp 46 85 JSTOR j ctt7spjh 6 Leacock Stephen Laissez Faire and Legislation My Recollection of Chicago and the Doctrine of Laissez Faire edited by Carl Spadoni University of Toronto Press 1998 pp 35 40 JSTOR 10 3138 j ctvcj2sx8 10 Strum Philippa From Laissez faire Capitalism to Worker Management Brandeis Beyond Progressivism University Press of Kansas 1993 pp 24 48 doi 10 2307 j ctv1p2gkvd 7 Halevi Leor Paper Money and Consummate Men Capitalism and the Rise of Laissez Faire Salafism Modern Things on Trial Islam s Global and Material Reformation in the Age of Rida 1865 1935 Columbia University Press 2019 pp 96 130 JSTOR 10 7312 hale18866 10 Kolozi Peter In Search of the Warrior statesman The Critique of Laissez Faire Capitalism by Brooks Adams and Theodore Roosevelt Conservatives Against Capitalism From the Industrial Revolution to Globalization Columbia University Press 2017 pp 51 76 JSTOR 10 7312 kolo16652 6 Palley Thomas I Milton Friedman The Great Laissez Faire Partisan Economic and Political Weekly vol 41 no 49 2006 pp 5041 5043 JSTOR 4419000 Holroyd Carin Lee Governments and International Trade An Intellectual Analysis Government International Trade and Laissez Faire Capitalism Canada Australia and New Zealand s Relations with Japan McGill Queen s University Press 2002 pp 15 39 JSTOR j ctt7zmzz 7 Simons Henry C William Breit Roger L Ransom and Robert M Solow Radical Proponent of Laissez faire In The Academic Scribblers 207 221 Princeton University Press 1998 doi 10 2307 j ctt7zvbf2 18 Henry John F The Ideology of the Laissez Faire Program Journal of Economic Issues vol 42 no 1 Association for Evolutionary Economics 2008 pp 209 224 JSTOR 25511295 Adams Walter and James W Brock The Impact of Economic Power Is Discussed Public Policy Interests in Economic Liberty and Democratic Process Yield a Conundrum Antitrust Economics on Trial A Dialogue on the New Laissez Faire Princeton University Press 1991 pp 115 128 JSTOR j ctt7zvv8c 8 Lal Deepak From Laissez Faire to the Dirigiste Dogma Reviving the Invisible Hand The Case for Classical Liberalism in the Twenty First Century Princeton University Press 2006 pp 48 61 JSTOR j ctt7sjk9 6 Fried Barbara H The Empty Idea of Property Rights The Progressive Assault on Laissez Faire Robert Hale and the First Law and Economics Movement Harvard University Press 1998 pp 71 107 doi 10 2307 j ctvk12r43 6 Rodgers Daniel T Twilight of Laissez Faire Atlantic Crossings Social Politics in a Progressive Age Harvard University Press 1998 pp 76 111 JSTOR j ctv1qdr01w 6 Brown D K 2016 Free Market Criminal Justice How Democracy and Laissez Faire Undermine the Rule of Law Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0190457877 LCCN 2015023124 Berend I T 2006 An Economic History of Twentieth Century Europe Economic Regimes from Laissez Faire to Globalization Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 45264 9 Dukes R 2014 The Labour Constitution The Enduring Idea of Labour Law Oxford Scholarship online Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199601691 LCCN 2014943656 Persky J 2016 The Political Economy of Progress John Stuart Mill and Modern Radicalism Oxford Studies in History of Economics Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0190460655 LCCN 2016008348 Archived from the original on 2024 02 08 Retrieved 2022 03 11 Tanzi V 2011 Government versus Markets The Changing Economic Role of the State Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1139499736 permanent dead link Fried B 2009 The Progressive Assault on Laissez Faire Robert Hale and the First Law and Economics Movement Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674037304 Archived from the original on 2024 02 08 Retrieved 2022 03 11 Rothschild E 2013 Economic Sentiments Adam Smith Condorcet and the Enlightenment Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674725621 Archived from the original on 2024 02 08 Retrieved 2022 03 11 Cummings S and Bridgman T and Hassard J and Rowlinson M 2017 A New History of Management Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107138148 LCCN 2017012133 Archived from the original on 2024 02 08 Retrieved 2022 03 11 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Leacock S and Spadoni C 1998 My Recollection of Chicago And The Doctrine of Laissez Faire G Reference Information and Interdisciplinary Subjects Series University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0802081216 LCCN 99172372 Archived from the original on 2024 02 08 Retrieved 2022 03 11 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Biebricher T 2019 The Political Theory of Neoliberalism Currencies New Thinking for Financial Times Stanford University Press ISBN 978 1503607835 LCCN 2018016758 Archived from the original on 2024 02 08 Retrieved 2022 03 11 Viner J and Irwin D A 2014 Essays on the Intellectual History of Economics Princeton Legacy Library Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1400862054 Archived from the original on 2022 10 25 Retrieved 2022 10 25 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Knight F H and Emmett R B 1999 Selected Essays by Frank H Knight Volume 2 Laissez Faire Pro and Con University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226446974 LCCN 98053133 Archived from the original on 2024 02 08 Retrieved 2022 03 11 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Friedman M and Savage L J and Becker G S 2007 Milton Friedman on Economics Selected Papers University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226263496 LCCN 2007031094 Archived from the original on 2024 02 08 Retrieved 2022 03 11 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link External links edit nbsp Look up laissez faire in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp 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