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Commerce and Manners in Edmund Burke's Political Economy [Hardback]

(Yale University, Connecticut)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 578 pages, height x width x depth: 236x162x33 mm, weight: 950 g, Worked examples or Exercises; 9 Tables, black and white; 4 Halftones, black and white; 2 Line drawings, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-May-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1108489400
  • ISBN-13: 9781108489409
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 578 pages, height x width x depth: 236x162x33 mm, weight: 950 g, Worked examples or Exercises; 9 Tables, black and white; 4 Halftones, black and white; 2 Line drawings, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-May-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1108489400
  • ISBN-13: 9781108489409
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
This book examines the economic thought of Edmund Burke. By exploring Burke's understanding of the relation between commerce and manners, it raises timely ethical questions about capitalism and its limits relevant to contemporary debates over neoliberalism and globalization.

Although many of Edmund Burke's speeches and writings contain prominent economic dimensions, his economic thought seldom receives the attention it warrants. Commerce and Manners in Edmund Burke's Political Economy stands as the most comprehensive study to date of this fascinating subject. In addition to providing rigorous textual analysis, Collins unearths previously unpublished manuscripts and employs empirical data to paint a rich historical and theoretical context for Burke's economic beliefs. Collins integrates Burke's reflections on trade, taxation, and revenue within his understanding of the limits of reason and his broader conception of empire. Such reflections demonstrate the ways that commerce, if properly managed, could be an instrument for both public prosperity and imperial prestige. More importantly, Commerce and Manners in Edmund Burke's Political Economy raises timely ethical questions about capitalism and its limits. In Burke's judgment, civilizations cannot endure on transactional exchange alone, and markets require ethical preconditions. There is a grace to life that cannot be bought.

Recenzijas

'Gregory Collins elegantly demonstrates that Edmund Burke, like his great contemporary Adam Smith, understood that commerce, properly conducted, can make individuals and communities not only better off, but better overall. Burke, like Smith, understood that political and economic thinking should intersect in a theory of moral sentiments.' George F. Will, Washington Post 'With care and rigor leavened by an engaging writing style, Gregory Collins has dramatically advanced our understanding of Burke's economic thought. This is an indispensable guide for all future Burke scholars.' Yuval Levin, National Affairs 'A thorough study of Edmund Burke's thought on economics in which every aspect is well-considered, every scholar answered, every point nicely phrased. This is a major contribution to Burke scholarship and to our understanding of the beginnings and principles of modern economics.' Harvey C. Mansfield, Harvard University and Stanford University 'The book is impressive in its thoroughness on Burke on issue after issue, focusing on his words and deeds.' Daniel B. Klein, National Review 'This very thorough and thoughtful book goes a long way toward setting the record straight.' Tyler Cowen, Marginal Revolution ' the definitive account of Burke's economic thought, one which shows how Burke's political economy displays 'an underlying coherence that incorporated elements of prudence, utility, and tradition.' Samuel Greeg, Law and Liberty 'Gregory Collins's study of the economic ideas of Burke is a comprehensive achievement. It will set the terms of discussion for a generation on Burke's political economy and its relation to his thinking about manners and morals.' David Bromwich, Yale University, author of The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke 'A revelation.' David Brooks, The New York Times 'Collins's treatment of an undervalued aspect of Burkean thought will earn the prescriptive right to stand, for a long time, as the definitive study of the Anglo-Irish statesman's political economy. Collins has done students of Burke and of political economy alike an immense service.' Greg Weiner, Assumption College 'The first serious monograph dedicated to examining [ Burke's] views on political economy An important and original study that adds significantly to our understanding of Burke.' Richard Bourke, University of Cambridge 'A brilliant book, full of insight and illumination.' The Rt Hon Jesse Norman MP, Financial Secretary to the Treasury, HM Government 'A deep study.' James Grant, Wall Street Journal 'Commerce and Manners is, undoubtedly, the most comprehensive study available on Burke's economic thought the most critical merit of the work is that it places Burke's thought in the intellectual context and resolves any prima facie contradictions, frictions, or discrepancies that may appear in his works. Overall, the book delivers what it promises: a systematic exposition of the interaction of commerce and ethics in the Anglo-Irish statesman's thought.' Ioannes P. Chountis, History of Economic Ideas 'A tremendous achievement, one that reflects a great deal of thought and inspires a good deal of reflection as well deeply researched and well-argued.' Jerry Z. Muller, The Catholic University of America 'A fine book. It makes both an important contribution to contemporary debates about conservatism and freedom and to Burke scholarship.' Peter Berkowitz, Hoover Institution, Stanford University

Papildus informācija

This book explores Edmund Burke's economic thought through his understanding of commerce in wider social, imperial, and ethical contexts.
List of Figures
xi
List of Tables
xii
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 1(1)
The Problem: Markets and Social Order 1(7)
Interpretations of Burke's Political Economy 8(4)
Terminology of Political Economy and Burke's Use of Empirical Information 12(2)
Conclusion 14(5)
PART I BIOGRAPHY
1 Biography And Burke's Authority As A Political Economist
19(18)
1.1 The Roots of Burke's Interest in the Science of Political Economy
19(8)
1.2 Burke as a Political Economist
27(4)
1.3 Conclusion
31(6)
PART II MARKET ECONOMIES
2 Thoughts And Details On Scarcity, Supply And Demand, And Middlemen
37(41)
2.1 Introduction
37(1)
2.2 The Stresses of England's Agricultural Economy in the 1790s and the Drafting of Thoughts and Details
38(6)
2.3 The Laws of Supply and Demand, Wages, and Price Theory
44(13)
2.4 Middlemen
57(13)
2.5 The 1772 Repeal of Statutes Banning Forestalling, Regrating, and Engrossing
70(6)
2.6 Conclusion
76(2)
3 Agricultural Policy, Labor, And Wealth Redistribution
78(39)
3.1 Introduction
78(1)
3.2 The Corn Laws and Export Bounties
78(10)
3.3 Enclosure
88(4)
3.4 Labor, the Laboring Poor, and the Rich as Trustees
92(17)
3.5 Wealth Redistribution and Equality in Thoughts and Details
109(5)
3.6 Conclusion
114(3)
4 Markets, Rationalism, And The Hayek Connection
117(34)
4.1 Introduction
117(1)
4.2 England's Grain Trade and National Policy
118(1)
4.3 Voluntary Contracts and Market Exchange
119(4)
4.4 Incentive, Reciprocity, and Commercial Virtues
123(4)
4.5 Laissez-Faire and the Role of State Regulation
127(4)
4.6 Rationalism in Thoughts and Details
131(5)
4.7 Rationalism and the Hayek Connection
136(3)
4.8 Burke and Adam Smith
139(4)
4.9 Conclusion
143(8)
PART III THE BRITISH CONSTITUTION AND ECONOMICAL REFORM
5 The British Constitution: Burke's Program Of Economical Reform And The Role Of The State
151(58)
5.1 Introduction
151(2)
5.2 Wyvill's Movement and the Spirit of Constitutional Reform
153(6)
5.3 Speech on Economical Reform I: Private Land, Contracts, and the Board of Trade
159(10)
5.4 Speech on Economical Reform II: Pensions, Costly Offices, and the Civil List
169(20)
5.5 Aftermath and Influence
189(2)
5.6 Burke's Trustee Theory of Representation and His Conception of Reform
191(8)
5.7 Conclusion
199(10)
PART IV FOREIGN TRADE
6 Account Of The European Settlements In America, The British West Indies, And The Free Port Act Of 1766
209(39)
6.1 Introduction
209(4)
6.2 British Commercial Policy and the Navigation Acts
213(4)
6.3 An Account of the European Settlements in America
217(18)
6.4 The British West Indies and the Free Port Act of 1766
235(10)
6.5 Conclusion
245(3)
7 Observations On A Late State Of The Nation And The Political Economy Of Anglo-American Imperial Relations
248(51)
7.1 British Imperial Policy and the American Colonies
248(3)
7.2 Observations on a Late State of the Nation
251(24)
7.3 The American War and the Navigation Acts: Speech on American Taxation and Speech on Conciliation with America
275(22)
7.4 Conclusion
297(2)
8 Anglo-Irish Commercial Relations, Two Letters On The Trade Of Ireland, And The Politics Of Free Trade
299(48)
8.1 Introduction
299(1)
8.2 The Commercial Tensions between England and Ireland
300(6)
8.3 The Irish Trade Bills and Two Letters on the Trade of Ireland
306(16)
8.4 Irish Trade, Nature, Principle, and Prudence
322(12)
8.5 Pitt's Commercial Propositions
334(3)
8.6 The Anglo-French Commercial Treaty of 1786
337(2)
8.7 The Question of Mercantilism Revisited
339(3)
8.8 Conclusion
342(5)
PART V INDIA
9 Britain's East India Company, Indian Markets, And Monopoly
347(24)
9.1 Introduction
347(3)
9.2 The Politics of the East India Company
350(6)
9.3 Burke's General Principles of Trading Monopolies
356(2)
9.4 Ninth Report of Select Committee I: Markets and the Corruption of Supply and Demand Laws
358(8)
9.5 Ninth' Report of Select Committee II: Monopoly
366(3)
9.6 Conclusion
369(2)
10 Speech On Fox's India Bill, Six Mercantile Principles, And The Danger Of Political Commerce
371(34)
10.1 The East India Company, Eleventh Report of Select Committee, and Speech on Fox's India Bill
371(13)
10.2 Speech on Fox's India Bill and the Destruction of the Local Economy and Culture
384(6)
10.3 Political Commerce, Avarice, and Arbitrary Rule
390(7)
10.4 Conclusion
397(8)
PART VI THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
11 Reflections On The Revolution In France: Property, The Monied Interest, And The Assignats
405(55)
11.1 Introduction
405(2)
11.2 The Political Economy of the Ancien Regime
407(4)
11.3 Property as a Constitutional Bulwark
411(8)
11.4 The French Revolution's Attack on Church Property
419(8)
11.5 The Monied Interest and the Assignats
427(20)
11.6 The Relation between the Monied Interest and the Landed Interest
447(13)
12 The Real Rights Of Men, Manners, And The Limits Of Transactional Exchange
460(66)
12.1 The Real Rights of Men and the Menace of French Revolutionary Equality
460(18)
12.2 The Impact of Abstract Theory on Political Economy and the General Bank and Capital of Nations
478(9)
12.3 Manners and Ethics as a Preconditions for Commerce and the Scottish Enlightenment
487(16)
12.4 The Limits of Voluntary Contracts and Transactional Exchange
503(6)
12.5 Third Letter on a Regicide Peace and the Political Economy of England
509(7)
12.6 Conclusion
516(10)
Conclusion 526(11)
Burke's Economic Thought
526(3)
The Relationship between Burke's Economic Thought and Political Theory and the Question of Burke's Conservativism
529(4)
Applications for Today
533(4)
Bibliography 537(20)
Index 557
Gregory M. Collins is Postdoctoral Associate and Lecturer in the Program on Ethics, Politics, and Economics at Yale University, Connecticut.