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humanities.philosophy.objectivism |
>>However, unlike some of the French,
>>Smith's pro-capitalist stands
>>were not integrated in a coherent fashion to offer a rigorous
>>defense of laissez-faire,
>You are arguing that Turgot's physiocratic theory was "integrated in a
>coherent fashion?"
Some other key ideas one can find in Cantillon and Turgot but not
Smith (or stated much better than in Smith) are:
(1) a clear statement of an Austrian-like methodology (Cantillon),
(2) market prices derived from subjective utlities (Cantillon with
some qualifications and Turgot more consistently and in great
detail),
(3) uncertainty and a division of knowledge as the basis for
entrepreneurship (Cantillon and Turgot),
(4) a sophisticated theory of spatial economics (Cantillon),
(5) a sophisticated commodity theory of money (Cantillon),
(6) specie-flow mechanism for monetary equilibrium (Cantillon and
Turgot),
(7) the law of optimum returns (Turgot), and
(8) the time-preference theory of capital (Turgot).
All in all, a pretty impressive list. The good points
about Smith (his understanding of the benefits of a division of
labor and the freedom of international trade) can be found also in
Cantillon and Turgot.
>What government monopoly of money? Smith supported the Scottish system of
>private banks issuing their own currency. Do you mean his support for a
>government monopoly over small notes?
>Where does Smith say that the post should be a monopoly? Indeed, where
>does he discuss a post office in our (rather than the 18th century) sense
>of the term?
>>agricultural export restrictions,
>Where does he support agricultural export restrictions?
>>mandates for certain
>>aspects of real estate (fire walls, mortgage registration), and
>>prohibition of wages-in-kind.
>Actually, Smith favored a slightly higher tax on wages in kind--a mistake,
>but not the mistake you attribute to him, unless you are thinking of a
>passage I don't know.
I do have a quote from the _Wealth of Nations_ regarding his
support of public education:
"An instructed and intelligent people besides are always more decent
and orderly than an ignorant and stupid one. They feel themselves,
each individuallly, more respectable, and more likely to obtain the
respect of their lawful superiors, and they are therefore more
disposed to respect those superiors. They are . . . less apt to be
misled into any wanton or unnecessary opposition to the measures of
government."
That's hardly the sort of rhetoric one would expect from a champion
of individualism. I guess we can be thankful that public education
has failed so badly that wanton opposition to the measures of
government is still alive and well.
>And Turgot and Cantillon (and Menger and ...) were in favor of having no
>taxes? News to me.
Turgot's hard-core libertarian attitudes can be discerned from this
passage from _Plan for a Paper on Taxation in General_:
"It seems that Public Finance, like a greedy monster, has been lying
in wait for the entire wealth of the people."
Contrast that to Smith's insipid canons of justice in taxation,
especially his advocacy of the unlovable income tax we have to suffer
with today:
"The subjects of every state ought to contribute towards the support
of the government, as nearly as possible, in proportion to their
respective abilities; that is, in proportion to the revenue which
they respectively enjoy under the protection of the state. The
expense of government to the individuals of a great nation, is like
the expense of a great estate, who are all obliged in proportion to
respective interests to the estate."
I think that a "greedy monster" is a more accurate description of
the state than a "great estate," don't you?
It may also be germane to the tax question that Adam Smith's
so-called laissez-faire principles didn't stop him from spending
the last twelve years of his life as a commissioner of Scottish
customs. How could it be that the foremost champion of free trade
turned into an enforcer of the mercantilist order?
In December of 1785, Smith wrote this in a letter to another customs
official, George Chalmers:
"it may, perhaps, give the Gentleman pleasure to be informed that the
net revenue arising from the Customs in Scotland is at least four
times greater than it was seven or eight years ago. It has been
increasing rapidly these four or five years past; and the revenue of
this year has overleaped by at least one half the revenue of the
greatest former year. I flatter myself it is likely to increase
still further."
Smith's early works may have had a lot going for them, but from the
_Wealth of Nations_ on it was all downhill, and judging from the
sentiments expressed here he had sunk very low indeed.
>Or, alternatively, because they found Smith (and Ricardo) to have a more
>nearly correct and consistent theory.