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- From: au329@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Ronda Hauben)
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Subject: Inauguration Eve Economic Address: Thoughts on Political Economy
- Message-ID: <1993Jan20.222953.11594@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Date: 20 Jan 93 22:29:53 GMT
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Organization: Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH (USA)
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- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
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-
- This is being crossposted from
- alt.amateur-comp,sci.econ,soc.culture.usa,
- and talk.politics.theory
-
- Basic Questions of Political Economy or The Rabble's Response to
- the Coronation of the New King (USA): Inauguration Eve Economic Address
-
- While the Party parties in Washington,the rabble in the Hinterlands
- have life ever harder. The promise that new technology like
- computers and telecommunications will improve the social well being
- of the people is in sharp contrast with the glitter and gold for the
- wealthy and the ever worsening economic conditions for the rest
- of the populace. If the present problems are to be solved, the
- solutions can only be found by those who need the change.
-
- Following are some thoughts on the need to return to the tradition
- of the past when Everyman (and woman) knew the need to be an Economist
-
- Aristotle points to the importance of looking at the earliest
- explanation of a phenomena, to its origin and development, if one
- is interested in a clear understanding of it.
-
- He wrote in Politics:
- "He who thus considers things in their first growth and origin,
- whether a state or anything else, will obtain the clearest view of
- them."
- from Jowett trans. vol 1, p. 179
-
- Jean Jacques Rousseau in his article "A Discourse on Political
- Economy" which was written for Diderot's encyclopedia, goes back to
- the greek origins of the terms "political economy."
-
- He explains:
- "The word Economy or Oeconomy, is derived from oikos, a house,
- and vouos, law, and meant originally only the wise and legitimate
- government of the house for the common good of the whole family.~
- from "A Discourse on Political Economy, edition published by
- Henry Regency Co. for the Great Books Foundation, Chicago, Ill,
- 1949 p. 110 (I have left off the accents on the greek letters
- as I had no way to indicate them - r) )
-
- So Rousseau is showing the origin of the term oeconomy or economy as
- the "law of the house for the common good of the whole family."
-
- He distinguishes between two senses of the word economy,
- the economy that is concerned with ones family, which
- Rousseau terms "domestic" or "particular" economy, and the economics
- that is concerned with the "government of the great family" which
- has to do with civil government. He terms this "political economy".
-
- He points out that the father and his family have common
- interests, whereas that same assumption cannot be made
- with government officials and the public or poltiical economy of
- a nation. The father, Rousseau points out, "can see everything for
- himself," while the civil government depends on the eyes of others
- for all its information.
-
- Thus Rousseau shows that government has to be watched over to
- see that it is serving the social good, while the father in a family
- can be relied on to serve the family good without the same kind of
- oversight.
-
- But both the father and the government, Rousseau maintains, are
- charged with providing for the "peace and plenty" of the citizens
- living under that government.
-
- Sir James Stewart, writing in the period before Adam Smith's
- "Wealth of Nations" appeared, maintains that "What oeconomy is
- in a family, political economy is in a state." (An Inquiry into
- the Principles of Political Economy, p. 16).
-
- Writing in the 17th and 18th centuries, during the days of
- the transition from feudalism to capitalism, there were a number
- of people putting out economic articles, books and tracts, trying
- to define the essential categories that would make it possible to
- examine economic questions from a scientific point of view.
-
- One of these writers was Cantillion. He claimed the essential
- questions that had to be considered in regard to politcial
- economy were:
- 1)What is wealth? (meaning social wealth, not private wealth)
- 2)How does it originate?
- 3)What are the causes which regulate its distribution among
- the different classes of society, and determine its circulation not
- only within the country but between one country and another.
-
- Many writers during this period were interested in countering
- the notion that a nation's wealth was determined by the amount of
- gold or silver it had. In place of this view, a number of writers
- explained that the Wealth of a Nation consisted in the application
- of labor to natural resources - i.e. in production. Adam Smith`s
- book "Wealth of Nations" takes up to examine where social
- wealth comes from and how it develops. The actual title of his
- book is "An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth
- of Nations." (i.e. he is taking a broad question, not a narrow
- question of the wealth of any single nation).
- >
- The 1600's and 1700's provide many writers who give insight into
- how to examine economic questions so that the process will be helpful
- in providing for the necessities and conveniences of life for the
- population of a society.
- >
- Several writers like Sir William Petty (in the 1600's in England)
- and the economists in France in the 1700's in the days before the
- French Revolution, took up to determine how new wealth was generated
- via the application of natural resources and labor. These writers
- applied the current scientific discoveries like that of Harvey
- and the circulation of blood (as Quesnay in France did) to the
- question of how does circulation function in an economy - or
- Sir William Petty wrote works like "The Political Anatomy of Ireland"
- applying the lessons from anatomy to analyzing the economy of Ireland.
-
- Sadly this scientific foundation seems to be lost in today's
- writings on economics. Thus current economics seems to be detached
- from the history of its origins and development and thus incapable
- of helping shed any light on current economic problems.
-
- But the current economic troubles in much of the world require
- a return to scientific categories and terms, in order to have
- a way to shedding some light on how to move forward. I propose
- that those who have found that the current economic solutions
- being proposed are no longer adequate to meet the needs of an
- advancing society take seriously to look back to the history
- of political economy and build on the insights and foundations
- from the past toward determining how to shed light on the way forward.
-
- ronda
- >
- ronda@umcc.ais.org
-
-
-
- --
- Ronda Hauben Amateur Computerist Newsletter
- P.O. Box 4344 other email addr:ae547@yfn.ysu.edu
- Dearborn, MI 48126
- >
-
- --
- Ronda Hauben Amateur Computerist Newsletter
- P.O. Box 4344 other email addr:ae547@yfn.ysu.edu
- Dearborn, MI 48126
-