Free Trade: 1793-1886, 第 4 卷Lars Magnusson Taylor & Francis, 1997 - 4页 Trade is the dominant subject in nineteenth century economics. During the course of the century, Britain was transformed from a protectionist power to an open economy, a change embodied by the repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846. This is reflected in the economic literature of the period, with the qualified free trade advocacy of the early classical economists developing into more strident views of the Manchester School. However throughout the period free trade did not go unchallenged, and by the end of the century a fully developed protectionist position had emerged represented by, for example, the economic nationalism of Henry Carey in the United States and in the fair trade movement in Britain. This volume is a collection of materials relating to the major nineteenth century debates about external trade. It includes some extremely rare but representative pieces from less well-known names. The collection includes an original introduction by the editor, and each of the individual pieces has been carefully retypeset. The set includes material by: James Mill, Richard Cobden, Robert Torrens, John Ramsey McCulloch, Freidrich List, Henry Carey and M. Frederick Bastiet. |
目录
That which is seen and that which is not seen 1854 Frédéric | 3 |
Protection and Communism 1852 Frédéric Bastiat | 39 |
The Merits and Tendencies of FreeTrade and Protection | 70 |
Fair Trade v Free Trade or which System will best promote | 114 |
Free Trade Fallacies or Cobden Confuted An Exposition | 144 |
There is no God but FreeTrade and Cobden is his Prophet | 217 |
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常见术语和短语
advantage agricultural amount balance of trade benefit Board of Trade British bullion capital cause cent cheap classes coal Cobden Club Cobdenite commerce commodities Communism competition consequence consumer corn Corn Laws cost cotton cultivation decrease depression duty economic effect employment England English excess of imports expense exports extent fact Fair Trade fallacy farmers favour five shillings flour foreign and colonial foreign countries foreign trade France Frédéric Bastiat Free Trade free-trade French George Stephenson give Government home trade increase industry interest iron labour land less loaf manufactures means meat middle men millions nature obtain paid political political economy population present price of bread price of wheat principle produce profit prosperity Protection Protectionist quantity quarter question result seen sell shillings supply tariffs thing tion tons United United Kingdom wages wealth workmen