The
Physiocrats were a group of thinkers who believed in an
economic theory which considered that the wealth of nations was derived solely from
agriculture. Their theories originated in
France and were most popular during the second half of the
18th century. Physiocracy was perhaps the first well developed theory of
economics.
Historian
David B. Danbom explains, "The Physiocrats damned cities for their artificiality and praised more natural styles of living. They celebrated farmers."''(1)''
They called themselves
économistes (
economists) but are generally referred to as Physiocrats in order to distinguish them from the many schools of economic thought that followed them.
Physiocrat is derived from the
Greek for "Government of Nature".
The principles of Physiocracy were first put forward by
Richard Cantillon, an
Irish banker living in
France, in his 1756 publication
Essai sur la nature du commerce en géneral (Essay on the general nature of commerce). The ideas were later developed by thinkers such as Francois Quesnay and
Jean Claude Marie Vincent de Gournay into a more systematic body of thought held by a united group of thinkers.
The physiocrats saw the true wealth of a nation as determined by the surplus of agricultural production over and above that needed to support agriculture (by feeding farm labourers and so forth). Other forms of economic activity, such as manufacturing, were viewed as taking this surplus agricultural production and transforming it into new products, by using the surplus agricultural production to feed the workers who produced the extra goods. While these manufacturers and other non agricultural workers may be useful, they were seen as
sterile in that their income derives ultimately not from their own work, but from the surplus production of the agricultural sector.
The Physiocrats were in strong opposition to
mercantilism, which emphasized trade of goods between countries, as they pictured the peasant society as the economic foundation of a nations wealth.
The Physiocrats enjoyed some support from the French monarchy and frequently met at Versailles.
Adam Smith, who visited France as a tutor and mentor to the Earl of Buccleigh's son's Grand Tour, was heavily influenced by the ideas of the Physiocrats, and
Karl Marx cites them as a reference in
Das Kapital; they popularized the modern version of the
Labor Theory of Value.
Known Physiocrats
References
# - Why Americans Value Rural Life by
David B. Danbom
See also
External links
Category:History of economic thought
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