Rating: ****
Tags: Economics, Lang:en
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Added: May 6, 2018
Modified: November 5, 2021
Summary
First published in 1776, the year in which the American
Revolution officially began, Smith’s
Wealth of
Nations sparked a revolution of its own. In it Smith
analyzes the major elements of political economy, from market
pricing and the division of labor to monetary, tax, trade,
and other government policies that affect economic behavior.
Throughout he offers seminal arguments for free trade, free
markets, and limited government. Criticizing mercantilists
who sought to use the state to increase their nations’
supply of precious metals, Smith points out that a
nation’s wealth should be measured by the well-being of
its people. Prosperity in turn requires voluntary exchange of
goods in a peaceful, well-ordered market. How to establish
and maintain such markets? For Smith the answer lay in
man’s social instincts, which government may encourage
by upholding social standards of decency, honesty, and
virtue, but which government undermines when it unduly
interferes with the intrinsically private functions of
production and exchange. **