PHYSIOCRATS

fĭzˈēəkrătsˌ, school of French thinkers in the 18th cent. who evolved the first complete system of economics. They were also referred to simply as "the economists" or "the sect." The founder and leader of physiocracy was François Quesnay. His most ardent disciple, Victor de Mirabeau, was the author of the physiocratic tax doctrine; Pierre Samuel Du Pont de Nemours and Mercier de la Rivière elaborated on Quesnay's and Mirabeau's ideas. Among the antecedents of physiocracy the single-tax schemes of the marquis de Vauban and the sieur de Boisguilbert and the free-trade ideas of Vincent de Gournay may be cited. However, Quesnay's original contribution, and the basis of the doctrine, was the axiom that all wealth originated with the land and that agriculture alone could increase and multiply wealth. Industry and commerce, according to the physiocrats, were basically sterile and could not add to the wealth created by the land. They did not advocate that industry and commerce be neglected in favor of agriculture, but they tried to prove that no economy could be healthy unless agriculture were given the fullest opportunity. Agricultural methods had to be scientifically improved, and—above all—fair prices had to be maintained for agricultural production; according to Quesnay's maxim, only abundance combined with high prices could create prosperity. This could be obtained only if the "economic law," which the physiocrats envisaged as being as immutable as the law of gravity, was allowed to act untrammeled. Absolute freedom of trade was necessary to stabilize prices at a fair level, and laissez faire was to restore the economic process to its natural course, from which all further benefits would flow. To tax anything but the land was futile because only the land produced wealth and because manufacturers and traders pass their tax burden on to the farmer; only taxation at the very source of wealth was reasonable and economical—an argument not without charm for industrialists. However, the experiments of Baron Turgot and of Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II, both somewhat influenced by the physiocrats, were failures—in part because of the unfavorable conditions in which they were carried out. Although physiocracy, because of its dogmatism, has become dead doctrine, it profoundly influenced Adam Smith (who even intended to dedicate his Wealth of Nations to Quesnay) and thus the entire classical school of economists. Henry George virtually repeated the single-tax argument of Mirabeau. The physiocrats made no contribution to purely political thought except the idea of "legal despotism," by which the king and his government were to enforce the "economic laws of nature." Their fanaticism in economic doctrine was much ridiculed by their contemporaries, notably by Voltaire and by the Abbé Galiani.

See H. Higgs, The Physiocrats (1897, repr. 1963); M. Beer, An Inquiry into Physiocracy (1939, repr. 1966); R. L. Meek, The Economics of Physiocracy (1962).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Physiocrats
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books on: Physiocrats  - 1157 results

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...12 The physiocrats: the origins of scientific political...review article, Professor Vaggi and the Physiocrats, for Research in the History of Economic...was involved, while the lecture on the Physiocrats and the single tax 1984 resulted from...
...9 A. THE PHYSIOCRATS AND SOME OF THEIR PREDECESSORS AND...part of Book I, covering mainly the Physiocrats and Adam Smith, and those parts of...suggestions. EMILE BURNS. A. THE PHYSIOCRATS AND SOME OF THEIR PREDECESSORS AND...
...days, the Roman Empire, mercantilists, physiocrats, liberals and Adam Smith and progresses...The physiocrats 11...Ages, through to the mercantilists, physiocrats, liberals and Adam Smith, the founder...
MERCANTILISM Ever since the Physiocrats and Adam Smith, mercantilism or the...Hence, it is clear that it was after the Physiocrats and Smith that mercantilism turned into...since. Using a term invented by the Physiocrats in the 18th century the discussants...
...Boisguilbert Law Cantillon The Physiocrats Quesnay Turgot Influence of the Physiocrats...Economic Evolution Smith and the Physiocrats Smith and the English Tradition Classical...
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journal articles on: Physiocrats  - 56 results

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...and especially Rousseau and then the Physiocrats, for his first effort to theorize the...reconcile two antithetical discourses: the Physiocrats absolutist version of political debate...doing, Habermas altogether misreads the Physiocrats in two fundamental respects, which in...
...Jefferson had the advantage of the Physiocrats and Adam Smith to guide him in pursuit...Jefferson was influenced by both the Physiocrats and Adam Smith who, through their systematic...organize our economic life. Both the Physiocrats and Adam Smith thereby provided the...
...freedom to pursue their own interests (the Physiocrats "laissez-faire"), how can such a society...Locke) and his contemporaries (e.g., the Physiocrats) a recognition that if a society of...despotime legal (benevolent dictator) of the Physiocrats as the ultimate glue to hold liberal...
...thinkers from Francois Quesnay and the Physiocrats to the present. (3) It maps out...value theories advocated by the Physiocrats and by classical economists such as Malthus (Bradley 1995, 4). The Physiocrats believed that only agricultural...
...venerable preoccupations among scholars. Questions respecting the role of government in the economy are found in the work of the Physiocrats and in Adam Smiths Inquiry into the Wealth of Nations, as well as in the outpourings of contemporary social commentators...
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magazine articles on: Physiocrats  - 7 results

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...energy. Huber and Mills are, in short, modern Physiocrats. The original Physiocrats thought that land was the magic input. Later...conservatives say it is energy. Suffice it to say that Physiocrats are a pretty discredited lot among economists...
...Claude Helvetius (1715-71) had advocated; this method included international treaty-making. Finally, thinkers influenced by physiocrats such as Francois Quesnay in France and British moral philosophers such as Adam Smith (1723-90) and Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832...
...older, going back through the English radicals of the nineteenth century like Cobden and Bright to eighteenth-century French physiocrats.) After World War II, American and world history were rewritten, fov American public consumption, by liberal Democrats...
...ality-as, for that matter, does the bourgeoisie on the whole. The exception here, by the way, proves the rule: in particular, the Physiocrats, those French political economists for whom English agriculture was the model. Now if you want to look for the roots of...
...the study of economics began to distinguish itself from "natural philosophy," there were two competing theories. The French physiocrats, as they were called, attributed wealth to agricultural surplus (a gift of nature) and thence to land. The English theorists...
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encyclopedia articles on: Physiocrats  - 17 results

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PHYSIOCRATS fiz e krats , school of French thinkers in the 18th...multiply wealth. Industry and commerce, according to the physiocrats, were basically sterile and could not add to the wealth...could be obtained only if the "economic law," which the physiocrats envisaged as being as immutable as the law of gravity...
...d goorna , 1712 59, French economist, precursor of the physiocrats and of Adam Smith. A wealthy merchant, he was in government...generally credited with being its originator. Unlike the physiocrats, he regarded industry and commerce as well as agriculture...
DU PONT DE NEMOURS, PIERRE SAMUEL pyer samuel du poN d n moor , 1739 1817, French economist, one of the physiocrats . Early in his career he attracted the attention of Francois Quesnay and edited the Journal de lagriculture in 1765...
...1743, French social philosopher. An advocate of natural religion and toleration, he favored the economic theories of the physiocrats . His ideas combined utilitarian and philanthropic motives; he felt that the state should institute an equitable tax system...
...of his own, and became a director of the French East India Company . As a writer, Necker opposed the then fashionable physiocrats and free traders; his eulogy on Jean Baptiste Colbert was lauded (1773) by the French Academy, and his Essai sur la...
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