The Neglect of
Bastiat's School by English-speaking Economists
By Joseph T.
Salerno Posted on
8/26/2006 [Subscribe at email services, tell others, or Digg
this story.]
Frédéric Bastiat was a member of the French liberal school, which
thoroughly dominated economics in France from the beginning of the
nineteenth century until the 1880s and continued to exert a strong
intellectual influence right up to the eve of World War One. He was
neither the school's founder, nor its most profound theorist, nor
even the most consistent defender of the laissez-faire
implications of its economic theories. He was however the most
gifted expositor of its politico-economic doctrines, and as such, is
the economist associated with this school whose name evokes greatest
recognition among contemporary Anglo-American economists. Thus I
refer to "Bastiat's school."
In an earlier article, I detailed the profound influence that the
French liberal school had on the development of nineteenth-century
economic theory not only in France and other Continental countries,
particularly Italy, Germany and Austria, but also in the United
States, Great Britain and Australia (Salerno
1988, pp. 113-56).
In this article, I also criticized the attempts of a number of
economists who were conversant with, if not sympathetic to, the
French liberal school, including Joseph Schumpeter, Karl Pribram,
and Peter Groenewegen, to explain its almost complete neglect by
Anglo-American economists and historians of thought after World War
One. Their explanations boiled down to three main claims. First, the
leaders of the school succeeding its founder J.-B. Say produced
brilliant expositions of received doctrine but were incapable of
either initiating or absorbing analytical innovations. Second, as a
result of its analytical sterility, the school failed to participate
in the development and dissemination of marginalist ideas during the
three decades of doctrinal ferment leading up to World War One.
Finally the school's intransigent and thoroughgoing opposition not
only to socialism but to almost any form of government intervention
into the economy led critics to dismiss the school as little more
than apologists for extreme laissez-faire liberalism. This
reinforced the image of liberal economists as mere expositors and
pamphleteers who were irrelevant to any account of the development
of pure economic theory in the nineteenth century.
As I argued in my earlier article, however, these earlier
explanations utterly failed to recognize and address the extent of
the French liberal school's influence on important economic
theorists throughout the nineteenth century, including eminent
Continental marginalists like Böhm-Bawerkian, Cassel, Wicksell, and
Pareto. I concluded my article by noting that once its contributions
to the development of economic theory are recognized,
"…then the attempt of Schumpeter and other scholars to explain
the Anglo-American neglect of the liberal school in terms of the
latter's analytical sterility or indifference immediately
founders. While an alternative explanation has not been provided,
considerable progress has been made by radically shifting the
focus of research from alleged analytical shortcomings of the
liberal school to the identification of the institutional factors
that have impeded recognition by (most) English — speaking
economists of the substantive theoretical content of liberal
economics (Salerno 1988, p. 143).
In the present paper, I pick up this research thread where I left
it in the earlier article. I argue that the Anglo-American tendency
to diminish or entirely disregard the liberal school school's
contributions to technical economic theory stemmed from peculiar
institutional developments accompanying the professionalization of
economics in France, Great Britain, and the United States.
Most significantly, the peculiar nonacademic milieu in which the
French liberal school flourished during the first three quarters of
the nineteenth century was revolutionized almost overnight by
radical institutional changes engineered by the French government in
the late 1870s. In one fell swoop, these changes ensconced a rival
school in newly created and highly prestigious university chairs
throughout France, professionalizing French economics and stripping
the mainly nonacademic liberal school of its unrivaled intellectual
authority. This engendered an intense and bitter doctrinal conflict
between the liberal school and the self-proclaimed "new school" led
by Charles Gide. Ironically, the latter school was not "new" at all
and never made any original contribution to economic theory. Rather,
it cobbled together an ad hoc blend of moderate German
historicism and British classicism that it used as a theoretical
weapon to attack the laissez-faire program of the liberal
economists and to defend, if not outright socialization of the means
of production, thoroughgoing governmental intervention into the
market economy.
The true nature of the controversy, however, was deliberately
misrepresented by adherents of the new school, especially Gide, in
their various books translated into English as well as in the
numerous survey articles, notes, book reviews and obituaries that
they published in English — language journals from the early 1880s
through the 1920s. In these publications the liberal school — or
"orthodox" or "optimist" school as it was derisively labeled in this
literature — was portrayed as a reactionary and ideological sect of
amateur pamphleteers and polemicists who were monomaniacally intent
upon suppressing socialism and protectionism and had little regard
for the development of technical economic theory. The new school, in
contrast, was characterized as a cosmopolitan grouping of value-free
theorists who were open to the new trends in economic theory
represented by marginalism, historicism, and mathematical
economics.
In Section 2 of the paper, I detail the relevant institutional
and doctrinal developments in France. Sections 3 and 4 describes the
institutional and doctrinal developments in Great Britain and the
United States respectively, that inclined Anglo-American economists
in this formative period of modern economics to accept at face value
the characterization of the liberal school propagated by its bitter
doctrinal rivals. Section 5 reviews the important English-language
publications of both new-school and liberal economists and shows how
they crucially influenced Anglo-American attitudes toward the
liberal school.
The Situation in France
Before 1878, the liberal school controlled what formal economic
instruction there was in France as well as the main organs for
propagating economic ideas to the public-at-large.[1]
Prior to 1878, there was no formal instruction in political
economy in the French university system. As they had been
reconstructed by Napoleon, French universities comprised only four
faculties: Law; Medicine; Science; and Letters. There did however
exist chairs of political economy outside the university system. The
first and most prestigious of these chairs was instituted in the
Collège de France in 1831 and was held successively by Say,
Pellegrino Rossi, Michel Chevalier, and the latter's son-in-law Paul
Leroy-Beaulieu, all members of the liberal school. The Collège de
France, however, was basically a ceremonial institution, consisting
of courses of lectures in various disciplines open to the public. It
had no regular student body or formal curriculum, held no
examinations and conferred no degrees. A chair in the history of
economic doctrines was later created at the Collège and was given to
Bastiat disciple Henri Baudrillart, who was succeeded in the
position by fellow liberal economist Émile Levasseur.
Chairs of political economy also existed in various technical and
professional schools. A Chair of Industrial Economics was instituted
in 1820 in the Conservatoire des Arts et Métiers, an industrial
school initiated during the French Revolution designed to
familiarize employers and workers with new techniques and
inventions.[2] The first holder of the chair was once again Say,
and he was succeeded by liberal economists Jerome Adolphe Blanqui
and, later on, Léon Wolowski (in a renamed Chair of Industrial
Legislation). Before he succeeded Say at the Conservatoire, Blanqui
held the chair at the École Supériere de Commerce where, upon his
departure, he was succeeded by his brother-in-law, the liberal
economist Joseph Garnier. Garnier later received concurrent
appointments to teach economics at the École des Ponts et Chaussées
and École Comerciale de l'Avenue Trudaine. Economic instruction at
all these institutions, however, tended to be of secondary
importance and oriented to practical concerns and, therefore, the
ideas and doctrines of the liberal school were disseminated mainly
through various nonacademic organizations and publications.
The intellectual hub of the liberal school was located in the
Institute de France, the most influential institution in
contemporary French intellectual life. The Institute comprised six
sections or "academies," including the French Academy of literary
fame. Political economy was a subsection of the Academy of Moral and
Political Sciences and consisted of eight members, who to the man
were adherents of the liberal school.
Scholarship in liberal economics was directly subsidized and
encouraged by the Institute through annual essay competitions that
bestowed on the winners not only munificent pecuniary awards but
also the prestigious title of Laureat de l'Institut.
Laureates were encouraged to further their scholarship by prize
money offered in regular essay competitions and by the eventual
prospect that a laureate who distinguished himself in these
competitions would be granted permission to "communicate" with the
members of the Institute. This communication involved an oral
presentation by the laureate at a meeting of the Moral and Political
Sciences section. The oral presentation was the indispensable first
step by which the laureate developed a candidacy for his ultimate
goal: admission to life membership in the Institute.
Needless to say, the total domination of the Moral and Political
Sciences Academy by liberal economists ensured that the laureates
and candidates were favorably disposed toward liberal doctrine. Thus
the honor and glory of one day occupying a seat among the
"Immortals" of the French Academy, sustained in the interim by a
semi-regular income from essay writing, was a powerful tool in the
recruitment and development of scholars in the liberal
tradition.
A number of other important institutions helped cultivate and
sustain the influence of the liberal school. There was the Société
d'Économie Politique, which was founded in 1842 and featured an
elected membership of almost exclusively liberal economists and
journalists. The liberal school also controlled the Journal des
Économistes. Founded in 1841, it was the world's first economics
journal and the only one in France until 1875. It was edited through
the First World War successively by three prominent liberal
economists: Garnier, Gustave de Molinari, and Yves Guyot. A layman's
review of economic issues from a liberal perspective, Économiste
Francaise, fashioned after the British periodical, The
Economist, began publication in 1873 under the long-time
editorship of the later liberal school's most renowned theorist,
Leroy-Beaulieu.
The Librairie Guillaumin was the largest publisher of economic
books in France during this period. It published liberal-oriented
works almost exclusively and also served as a training ground and
source of income for aspiring liberal economists by employing them
as editors. Although nominally operated by two sisters, it appears
that the financial affairs of the publishing house were controlled
by a silent partnership of leading liberal economists. One of the
most influential publications bearing the impress of Librairie
Guillaumin was the Dictionaire d'Économie Politique,
published in 1852-1853 under the editorship of two liberal
economists, Charles Coquelin and Garnier. The revised Nouveau
Dictionaire d'Économie Politique was issued by the same
publisher in 1890-1892, and one of its editors was Léon Say, the
grandson of J.-B. Say and a recognized liberal economist and
prominent financial statesman.
Despite its dominant institutional position in French economics,
the liberal school encountered widespread opposition to its
doctrines even at the height of its authority. Indeed, the school's
vocal and unswerving support of laissez-faire policies had
always evoked bitter antagonism from a broad spectrum of ideological
factions and special interest groups in French society. As Gide, a
contemporary observer who was hardly sympathetic to the liberal
school, noted: "Religious beliefs, revolutionary unrest, material
interests, philosophic speculations — all apparently combined to
work against [the liberal school]…. Since its birth, so to say, the
liberal school had been obliged to combat the conservatives of the
old regime, the socialists, and the protectionists" (Gide 1890, p.
629).
Yet such challenges to the school's authority for the most part
was confined to the economic policy sphere; in the realm of economic
theory the school's preeminence remained unquestioned until the late
1870s. In 1878 there occurred a reform in the French university
system that led directly to the usurpation of the school's
institutional ascendancy in economic instruction and research. The
momentous event was the establishment by the French government of a
chair of political economy in each of the Faculties of Law.
Liberal economists had long bewailed the dearth of economic
instruction in French universities. For example, in 1859, Chevalier
lamented that:
We know that France is of all the countries of Europe, or of
Christendom, that in which political economy is the least taught.
There are but two professorships: the one public, that of the
College of France, and the other restricted to a special class of
functionaries attached to the school of the Board of Works.
Everywhere else, whether in Europe or America, each university has
at least one chair of political economy; this will be found
equally in Russia and in England, in Prussia and in Spain. The
little kingdom of Portugal supports three professors of political
economy (Chevalier 1859, pp. 10-11 fn.).
Writing from a decidedly anti-liberal perspective, Leon Walras
also complained bitterly about the lack of opportunity for
economists in French academia: "[T]he scientific context as far as
political economy was concerned, was quite wretched. There were
[sic] little towards which to aspire, in the whole of France, there
were only three coveted professorships and eight seats as members of
the Academy, all these posts were firmly in the hands of the
orthodox school [i.e., liberal school]" (quoted in Alcouffe 1989, p.
330)
In 1863, representatives of the liberal school petitioned the
government in the person of Victor Duruy, Napoleon III's Minister of
Public Instruction, to create chairs of political economy in each of
the law faculties in France. In response Duruy, who was a moderate
liberal reformer and sympathizer of the liberal school, instituted a
chair in the Law Faculty in Paris, but lacked the funds to found
chairs in all the law faculties of the French Empire. Moreover,
according to one of his biographers, Duruy considered this his most
important reform of legal education, because "it introduced an
academic discipline that would help inoculate young men against the
'dangerous utopian dreams' that had attracted so many in 1848"
(Horvath-Peterson 1984, p. 188).
Unfortunately for the liberal school, Duruy's assessment of the
ramifications of his reform could not have been farther from the
truth. For, as we shall see below, instead of "inoculating" the law
profession against the virus of socialism, the reform served to
spread the contagion of German historicism to the economics
profession and to undermine the very institutional foundations of
the liberal economic theory that had thus far operated as a bulwark
against socialism. Thus the liberal school which, in blatant
contradiction to its own politico-economic principles, had
campaigned long and hard for a State solution to a perceived
educational problem was hoisted with its own petard.
| "Instead of 'inoculating' the
law profession against the virus of socialism, the reform
served to spread the contagion of German historicism to the
economics profession." |
Duruy was dismissed from his office in 1869, but in March 1877
the government decreed that political economy be taught in each of
the thirteen law faculties in France and that all students be
obliged to take the course. When the implementation of this reform
had become imminent, the liberal school began to designate
candidates to man the newly created chairs. However, the school had
overlooked one important detail that proved to be its undoing:
University statutes dictated that any chair in a law faculty could
only be filled by an agrégé en droit. The degree of
aggregation de droit was the highest degree conferred by the
law faculty and it required two or three years of study beyond the
doctorate of law devoted exclusively to Roman and French law in
preparation for a series of competitive examinations (concours de
l'agrégation).
Not one of the liberal candidates was an agrégé and only
two or three were docteurs en droit, who, in rare instances,
were permitted to hold chairs in the law faculties. Consequently,
most of the new chairs were awarded to lawyers and jurists,
generally professors of administrative or commercial law completely
untrained in political economy. When it came to familiarizing
themselves with economics, these men were predisposed by their
training in the law to reject the methods, theories, and policies
espoused by the liberal school in favor of those advocated by the
German historical school.
The most prominent of these law faculty economists, Gide (1890,
p. 631), gave a frank and compelling explanation of this
predisposition:
Their legal studies, above all in Roman law, had familiarized
them with the German Romanist literature, and especially with the
historical school of jurisprudence of which Savigny was the most
famous representative. They were therefore naturally inclined to
consult the German economic literature and disposed to understand
and approve of the same historic method applied to economics….
[M]oreover … a young man who has studied law seriously for ten
years, is naturally led to magnify the offices of the lawmaker. He
will be little apt to accept the principle of the liberal school,
which maintains the fewer the laws the better, and that to have no
laws whatever were best of all. A lawyer will not be apt to relish
the doctrine of laissez faire. It is necessarily
antipathetic to his modes of thought. In all times and in all
countries, but perhaps more distinctly in the history of France
than elsewhere, the lawyers have been the natural supporters of
the government and even, in a certain sense, the founders of the
modern state…. The new professors of economics in the faculty of
law were thus drawn by their intellectual training and even by
their profession, into a path opposite that of the liberal
school.
Consequently, in the policy realm, although a few adhered to
liberal doctrine, "the majority of the economists in Faculties of
Law must be considered as 'interventionists,' to about the same
degree as the German professors who used to be called socialists of
the chair…." (Gide 1907, p. 201)
In sum, in one of the most remarkable episodes in doctrinal
history, an alternative school had sprung to life practically fully
grown, with its members securely lodged in prestigious university
chairs and equipped with a built-in and powerful constituency of
five to six thousand law students destined to occupy influential
positions in French government and society. The influence of the
school was later greatly magnified by the extension of the economics
curriculum from an annual course to a full-blown doctoral program on
a par with the existing doctorate of law.
Needless to say, almost from the first, relations between the
logical-deductivist and laissez-faire "Institute economists"
and the historicist and interventionist "Law Faculty economists"
were openly and acutely hostile. The first shot was fired by Paul
Cauwès, the economics professor in the prestigious Paris Law
Faculty. In his two volumes of lectures published in 1878-1880, he
denied the existence of natural laws in economics and propounded
Friedrich List's system of protectionism. The liberal school
responded to the challenge with vehement attacks on the work in the
Journal des Économistes and reportedly even tried to have its
author removed from his chair.
In 1883, Gide, who was to quickly become the internationally
recognized leader of and main spokesman for the heterodox group of
law faculty economists, published his Principes d'Économie
Politique, which was to go through more than twenty editions in
France.[3] While generally sympathetic to the German
historical school, which he dubbed the "realist" school, Gide was an
eclectic who also affirmed the legitimacy of the deductive method
and of the search for universally valid economic laws. In important
areas of policy, however, Gide diverged radically from the
prescriptions of the liberal school: he questioned the legitimacy of
private property in land, supported an income tax and looked forward
to the supercession of competition and the wage system by
"solidarism" or a system of cooperative production.[4] He went
on to found the Co-operative Society and the Society of Christian
Socialists. Needless to say, liberal economists were aghast at
Gide's politico-economic doctrines and activities and they succeeded
in denying him election to the Institute (Rist 1932, p. 337).
| "The liberal school which, in
blatant contradiction to its own politico-economic principles,
had campaigned long and hard for a State solution to a
perceived educational problem was hoisted with its own
petard." |
Gide struck back by proceeding to found a professional economics
journal in 1887, the Revue d'Économie Politique, which
included among its editors and contributors all the economists of
the law faculties. The journal was pointedly described by its
founder as "the organ of the professors of economics in the
Faculties of Law, with the avowed programme of reaction against the
doctrines of the optimist Liberal school, and the propagation of
foreign, especially German economic schools" (Gide 1907, p. 201).
Understandably, it was this event that "completed the rupture"
between the two schools.
To the new school, the founding of the Revue and the
unprecedented international call for papers that followed
represented "a work of hygienic cleansing; dusting energetically
moth-eaten economic furniture, opening wide the doors and windows to
freshen the musty atmosphere, and introducing a flood of sunshine
and pure air from the four corners of the world" (Gide 1890, p.
633). Not surprisingly, the liberal school interpreted the turn of
events much differently. From its perspective, the new journal was
an ill-considered and dilettantish endeavor to transplant German
historicist and Kathedersocialist ideas in an inhospitable
French intellectual environment. Writing in 1893, the German-born
Maurice Block, a naturalized French citizen and liberal authority on
German historicism, remarked caustically on the founding of the
Revue:
M. Gide and his colleagues … founded their own review, but they
had trouble in sustaining it, and called foreign economists to
their aid, especially German writers. Do they really imagine that
it will suffice to read from time to time a fragment of Schmoller,
of Brentano, or of others of that shade of thought, in order to
penetrate the spirit of men so different from themselves? Then I
pity them; they will labor in vain. (Block 1893, p.
28)
Block chided Gide in particular for dilettantism, referring to
the latter's lack of knowledge of German: "M. Gide speaks like a
Kathedersocialist; and yet one cannot know their doctrines
well, if he does not know the language, and the more so, because the
doctrines are constantly being modified" (Block 1893, pp.
24-25).
These heated polemics from Gide and Block exemplify the rancorous
relations that existed between the two schools from the founding of
the dissident journal up until World War I. While the liberal school
gave as good as it got polemically, its days as a force to be
reckoned with in French economics were numbered due to the radical
shift in institutional power to the law faculty economists. By 1907,
Gide (1907, p. 199) was able to boast, "The Law Faculties have
almost a monopoly of economic teaching…. [P]olitical economy or its
cognate studies [including finance, rural economy, and labor
legislation] are taught by about forty professors to about 8,000
students, all of them future barristers, magistrates, civil
servants, deputies, or professors."
The institutional dissolution of the French liberal school as a
result of the "professionalization" of economics in France itself is
only one of the components in a full explanation of why the school
came to suffer severe neglect at the hands of neoclassical
Anglo-American economists. The other elements of the explanation lie
in the doctrinal and institutional upheavals that took place in
British and American economics in the quarter of a century or so
subsequent to the marginalist revolution. Together these elements
led to a gross misinterpretation of the matters at issue between the
warring French schools by Anglophone economists.
The Situation in Great
Britain
By the late 1860s, the stifling Ricardian orthodoxy began to lose
its grip on British economics. As John Mahoney (1991, p. 8) summed
up the situation: "In the space of five years (1869-1874) economists
had to absorb Thornton's main attack on classical orthodoxy, Mill's
recantation of the wage-fund theory, new heights of invective from
the pen of Ruskin, the publication of Jevons' Theory of Political
Economy, the launching of Cliff Leslie's assault on deductive
economics and the deaths of Mill and Cairnes." Likewise, Hutchison
(1973, pp. 185-86) noted, "… in the space of a few years in the late
sixties and early seventies the Ricardo-Mill system of theory
underwent a remarkably sudden and rapid collapse of credibility and
confidence, considering how long and authoritative had been its
dominance in Britain."
During the classical era, prominent Ricardians such as J.R.
McCulloch and J.E. Cairnes had characterized the liberal school's
subjective-utility approach to value and price theory as
unscientific and even implied that its theoretical endeavors were
tainted by its desire to justify laissez-faire policy
conclusions (Salerno 1988, pp. 114-15). But the decay of Ricardian
economics and the ensuing twenty years or so of doctrinal ferment
did nothing to enhance appreciation for the contributions of the
liberal school in Great Britain, despite Jevons's heroic efforts to
rehabilitate the reputation of various liberal economists, including
Say and Bastiat, as important forerunners of the marginalist
revolution.[5]
There were two reasons for Jevons's failure in this regard.
First, Jevons's pure version of marginalism was never widely
accepted in Great Britain, and marginalist ideas only began to
achieve grudging and piecemeal acceptance with the publication of
Alfred Marshall's Principles of Economics in 1890. During the
interregnum between the collapse of classicism in the early 1870s
and the emergence of the Marshallian neoclassical orthodoxy, a
British historical movement emerged that was influenced by August
Comte and the German historical school and whose proponents were
highly critical of what they considered to be the exaggerated claims
of abstract economic theory.[6] Thus,
according to Lord Robbins (1970. p. 171), the Irish economist Cliffe
Leslie, one of the more prominent historicists of this period,
"viewed with great suspicion long trains of deductive reasoning.
There can be no doubt that this was typical of an important
tendency. Some of the liveliest minds of the time were beginning to
distrust theory of lose interest in it…."[7]
In fact what the historicists distrusted most about theory was
its claim to universal validity, a claim that was made with much
greater certainty and less reservation by the French liberal school
than by the British classical school. Thus, Mill, for example,
conceded that the validity of economic theorems or laws was only
hypothetical and dependent upon the concurrent operation of
"disturbing causes" and noneconomic motives. Bastiat (1964, p. 27),
in contrast, argued that economic laws were deducible from an
absolutely evident and indisputable fact of reality, namely, that
"self-interest is the mainspring of human nature. It must be
clearly understood that this word is used here to designate a
universal, incontestable fact, resulting from the nature of man, and
not an adverse judgment, as would be the word selfishness."
In other words, for Bastiat (1991, p. 43), the truth of economic
theory is derived from the truth of the self-evident proposition
that "The perpetual longing of personal interest is to quiet the
needs, or more generally the desires, through satisfaction."
According to Bastiat (1964, p. 174), then, economic law operated
inexorably and without respect to historical circumstances:
"Economic laws act in accordance with the same principle, whether
they apply to great masses of men, to two individuals, or even to an
isolated individual condemned by circumstances to live in
isolation."
Furthermore, on economic policy, the British historicists, who
were in general favorably disposed toward government intervention in
the domestic market as well as in foreign trade, once again would
have found Mill's views much more palatable than Bastiat's.[8]
Whereas Mill upheld the principle of laissez-faire "not as a natural
law, but as a working rule conforming to experience and expedience
and as flexible as these" (Spiegel 1991, p. 392), Bastiat (1964, p.
239) maintained that all legislation and governmental actions in the
economic sphere that went beyond the strict enforcement of property
rights "make of the law an instrument of plunder for the benefit of
individuals or classes." For Bastiat, in short, the
political-economic alternative to la properté was la
spoliation.
Given its potential use as the instrument of legalized plunder,
Bastiat (1991, pp. 40-41) argued that the State had to be kept
within rigid and narrowly circumscribed bounds:
The State will always act through means of force, imposing its
services, and determining the services people must pay in return
under the form of taxes. The problem then boils down to this: What
sorts of things do men have a right to impose on their fellow men
by resorting to force? I have no right to compel anybody whatever
to be religious, charitable, learned, or industrious. But I have a
right to compel him to be just…. Precisely because governmental
action implies resorting to force such actions must be essentially
limited to maintaining order, security, and
justice.
The subsequent decline of historicism and the belated acceptance
of marginalist ideas in Great Britain, however, still did not afford
the subjective-value liberal school a sympathetic hearing among
British economists. The reason is that the grand synthesis of
marginalist and classical economics promulgated by Marshall served
to minimize the subjective value-element that Menger and the
Austrians had brought to marginalism and at the same time to restore
the tarnished reputation of Ricardian economics. What Hutchinson
(1973, p. 185) calls the "somewhat confused interregnum" involving
the Jevonian and historicist uprisings of the 1870s and 188s was
followed by "a sort of pious counterrevolutionary restoration" of
classical concepts and terminology which was "undertaken by
Marshall."[9] By the time marginalism of the watered-down
Marshallian variety began to take hold among British economists, the
staunchly anti-Ricardian Jevons already had passed from the scene
leaving no Jevonian school to speak of aside from Philip Wicksteed,
who labored in nonacademic obscurity.[10]
Another anti-classical economist and subjective-value theorist of
note, who wrote prolifically during the pre-Marshallian interregnum,
was Henry Dunning MacLeod. MacLeod (1896, p. 135) was heavily
influenced by Bastiat and Bastiat's American disciple, Arthur Latham
Perry, describing the former as "the brightest genius who ever
adorned the science of economics." Unfortunately, despite his
proto-marginalist insights and perceptive criticisms of classical
economics, McLeod's highly polemical style, lack of an academic
position, and failure to recognize Jevons as a kindred spirit —
despite Jevons's recognition of their affinity — combined to cause
contemporary British economists to ignore his contributions (Salerno
1988, pp. 129-32; Maloney 1991, pp. 120-32).
| "What the historicists
distrusted most about theory was its claim to universal
validity, a claim that was made with much greater certainty
and less reservation by the French liberal school than by the
British classical school." |
The dismissive and parochial attitude of Ricardo and the later
classical masters such as McCulloch and Cairnes toward the French
liberal school, therefore, became one of the important doctrinal
currents feeding British neoclassicism (Salerno 1988, pp. 114-16).
Cairnes's view of the matter, as summed up by S.G. Checkland (quoted
in Hutchison 1973, p. 177, fn. 1) reflected the general British
classical attitude: "Cairnes had no doubt that political economy was
essentially an English business, and that contemporary French and
German ideas were scarcely worthy of notice." Marshall himself
avowed that the French and German economists, although they had not
countenanced the doctrine of a fixed wages-fund, "on the whole … had
not done nearly so much good work as the English" (quoted in
Hutchinson 1973, p. 179-180 fn. 3).
Marshall also dismissively characterized Bastiat as "a lucid
writer but not a profound thinker" and denigrated the laissez-faire
implications of Bastiat's welfare analysis as "the extravagant
doctrine that the natural organization of society under the
influence of competition is the best not only that can be
practically effected, but even that can be theoretically conceived"
(Marshall 1977, p. 631, fn. 1).[11] This
haughtily dismissive attitude of the Ricardian school toward the
liberal school was thus embedded in the Marshallian doctrinal
orthodoxy that quickly came to dominate the professional training of
British economists after 1890.
The Situation in the United
States
The atmosphere would appear to have been more conducive to the
appreciation of French liberal economics by the American economics
profession after the marginalist revolution. After all, Ricardian
ideas never gained a firm foothold in the United States to begin
with and the views of Jefferson and the Jeffersonian and Jacksonian
political economists were molded by the writings of Say and the
French Ideologue and liberal Destutt de Tracy. Moreover the
Bastiat-inspired American catallactic tradition led by Amasa Walker
and Arthur Latham Perry emerged as the predominant doctrinal trend
after the Civil War and dominated the textbook and popular
literature and the teaching of college economics in the United
States during much of the Gilded Age. The textbook of Walker (1969;
1875), first published in 1866, went through eight editions, and
four more in a student's edition, while Perry's treatise (Perry
1883), also initially published in 1866, went through twenty two
editions by 1891 and in 1876 was ranked third behind Smith's
Wealth of Nations and Mill's Principles on a list of
best selling books on political economy. In 1877, Perry (1877, p. 6)
brought out a primer on the subject whose "more special aim was to
become a text-book for high schools, academies and colleges" and was
in its fifth edition in 1891.[12] In
1873, a handbook on economics written especially for workmen by the
French novelist and liberal Edmund About (1873) was translated into
English under the imprint of a major publishing house and apparently
achieved wide circulation judging by the ready availability of the
original edition in used bookstores today.
Despite its formative and sustained influence on American
economic thinking through the first three quarters of the nineteenth
century, the French liberal school confronted potent forces
militating against later recognition of its scientific merit. First
and foremost was the fact that economics did not become a
professionalized discipline in the United States until the early
1870s when economics was divorced from moral philosophy and
independent chairs of political economy were established at Harvard
and Yale (in 1871 and 1872 respectively). Charles F. Dunbar was
appointed to the Harvard chair and Francis A. Walker, the son of
Amasa, won the appointment at Yale (Ross, p. 77). Also, in 1872,
William Graham Sumner was appointed professor of political and
social science at Yale and proceeded to devote a substantial part of
his writing and teaching to political economy. As the number of
academic specialists in economics grew in the United States, earlier
American writers on political economy were increasingly shunned as
amateurs and dilettantes. This condescending attitude was summed up
in the words of the early marginalist Frank A. Fetter (quoted in
Bell 1953, pp. 503-504) who wrote: "In political economy they were
all self-trained amateurs, who, as it were, happened to wander into
the field."
This factor was compounded by the belated development of a
Ricardo-Mill school in the United States after the Civil War, which
attempted to revitalize classical economic theory while adapting it
to the American situation by incorporating into it elements of
moderate German historicism. This doctrinal movement was initiated
by Dunbar, who as noted above, held the first professorship of
political economy at Harvard. Dunbar (1876) introduced his program
in his article on "Economic Science in America, 1776-1876,"
published in the influential North American Review in 1876.
In the very first paragraph of the article, Dunbar (1876, p. 124)
proclaimed his allegiance to the British classical school,
writing:
[T]he economist finds the foundations of the science, as it
stands today, laid deep and solid for the first time by Adam
Smith; the great men who have since carried forward the work have
declared themselves his followers, and in developing and extending
the science have kept to the lines of discussion which he laid
down with such vigor and insight a century ago.
Dunbar (1876, p. 124) went on to reveal his historicist leaning
by maintaining that, despite England's priority in the development
of economic science, "the centre of interest in economic discussion
… is now, probably, in Germany."
Dunbar's attitude toward Bastiat was reflected in his rehearsing
of Henry Carey's baseless charge of plagiarism against Bastiat,
albeit in more genteel form: "Bastiat not only borrowed Carey's law
of value and presented it in a brilliant paraphrase, but seems to
show Carey's influence throughout his eager search for harmonies in
the economic world" (1876, p. 138). Regarding earlier American
economists, Dunbar (1876, p. 131) began by comparing the French
liberal Jefferson unfavorably to the British mercantilist Alexander
Hamilton "in his mastery of the subject" of political economy.
Dunbar (1876, p. 136) also derided the treatises of Walker and Perry
as "manuals" meriting "but little attention as statements of
original thought." In contrast, Francis Wayland's textbook, which
was first published in 1837, but which was still being widely used
in college classrooms during the Gilded Age, comes in for restrained
praise by Dunbar (1876, p. 135) as "the only treatise of the
[pre-Civil War] period which can fairly be said to have survived to
our day; and this, it must be admitted, owes whatever value it has
to its manner of presenting for easy comprehension some of the
leading English doctrines." In assessing the American contribution
to political economy in the century since Smith's Wealth of Nations,
Dunbar (p. 137, 140) thus concluded:
no recognized contribution to the development of the science
can be pointed out in any way comparable to those made by the
French writers [i.e., the Physiocrats], or to those which the
Germans are now making…. The general result then to which, as we
believe, a sober examination of the case must lead any candid
inquirer, is, that the United States have, thus far, done nothing
toward developing the theory of political economy….
Ten years later, and one year after the formation of the American
Economic Association by a group of younger and more radical
German-trained American economists, Dunbar (1886) published an
article on the growing historical movement in economics entitled,
"The Reaction in Political Economy." He argued that this historicist
reaction against the excesses of abstract theorizing in British
classical economics was healthy and represented a natural
development of economic science in the direction of greater realism.
Wrote Dunbar (1886, pp. 26-27):
The new movement, then, on the whole, although represented by
impassioned advocates as a revolution which is to sweep the ground
clear and give the world a new political economy, is, in fact, a
development of the existing science, under the influence of a
strong reaction against tendencies which had prematurely checked
its advance… . It is to be said, too, that such a movement as the
present need not be regarded with a jealous eye, by those of us
who still believe that the method of Ricardo and Mill is the best
and even the only sure method, for threading the way through the
mazes of conflicting motives which underlie economic
phenomena.
This attempted synthesis of moderate historicism with Ricardian
classicism was also promoted by the other two occupants of America's
first chairs in political economy, William G. Sumner and Francis A.
Walker. Sumner's interest in economics was first piqued by reading
Harriet Martineau's popular Ricardian primer, Illustrations of
Political Economy and "his views on that subject were strictly
of the orthodox variety" (Fine 1976, p. 80).[13] As a
teacher, Sumner adhered to "the methodology laid down by the last
great classical economist, John E. Cairnes" (Dorfman 1969, p. 67).
Nonetheless, having trained at Göttingen in philology, he was
favorably influenced by the German historical school and "believed
that economics had made good progress as a deductive science, but
henceforth must adopt the surer if slower method of induction" (Ross
1991, p. 80). Finally, Sumner (1924; [1881] 1992) conceived the
Malthusian law of population in conjunction with the Ricardian law
of rent as the driving force of social and economic evolution.[14]
Walker, it is true, helped prepare his father Amasa's
liberal-oriented treatise on political economy for publication in
1866 and was also personally influenced by his father's friend and
fellow Bastiat disciple Arthur Latham Perry. It is also true that
the younger Walker's later writings on political economy reveal that
he absorbed a good deal of French liberal doctrine from these
formative influences (Salerno 1988, pp. 138-140). Nonetheless,
Walker emerged in the 1880s as one of the most influential advocates
of the movement to breathe new life into Ricardian classicism by
integrating it with moderate historicism.
| "The grand synthesis of
marginalist and classical economics promulgated by Marshall
served to minimize the subjective value-element that Menger
and the Austrians had brought to
marginalism." |
For example, in 1883, Walker published Land and Its Rent a
large part of which involves a vigorous defense of the Ricardian
rent theory against its critics. Indeed, in the book's Preface,
Walker (1883, p. 5) averred that with respect to the theory of rent
he himself was "a Ricardian of the Ricardians, holding that the
great thinker who has given his name to the economic doctrine of
rent left little for those who should follow him to do; and that any
wide departure from the lines laid down by him can only result in
confusion and error." Moreover, two of the three critics that Walker
chose to rebut were French liberal economists, namely, Bastiat and
Leroy-Beaulieu, the leading theorist of the contemporary liberal
school. Bastiat, in particular, came in for extremely harsh and
sweeping criticism. Thus Walker (1883, p. v) also announced in the
Preface that "it seems full time that the plain truth regarding
Bastiat's theory of value, whether as applied to land or to
commercial products, should be spoken out on this side of the water,
as it was long ago, in England, by Professor Cairnes…. [A]s a
constructive economist [Bastiat] made a dead failure, while his
views regarding the land are especially erroneous." Later in his
tract, Walker (1883, pp. 60-61) sarcastically referred to "Bastiat's
views on Value and Land, on each of which the witty, subtile [sic],
eloquent Frenchman was about as far wrong as it is possible for an
eloquent, subtile [sic] and witty Frenchman to be." Walker (1883, p.
68) also declared "the utter incompetence of this brilliant
pamphleteer to deal with questions relating to land and its
rent."
In his treatise Political Economy, first published in
1883, Walker (1888, p. 1) began by bluntly stating the classical
definition of political economy as "the name of that body of
knowledge which relates to wealth."[15]
Walker went on to identify two schools of political economy, which
he called the "English school" and the "German school" respectively,
while completely ignoring the French liberal school whose doctrines
he had been steeped in. According to Walker (1888, pp. 11-12) the
difference between economists of the English and German schools was
attributable to disagreement about "the proper extent of the
premises" that the economist must begin with in elaborating the
causes influencing the production and distribution of wealth.
Whereas the English economist begins with "a few certain facts of
human nature, of human society, and of the physical constitution of
the earth," for the German economist "all human history becomes his
domain" because "nothing that importantly influences the production
and distribution of wealth can be neglected by the economist."
Walker contended, however, that the methods of the two schools are
complementary and must be used in tandem to yield a fully developed
science of political economy. As Walker (1888, pp. 16-17) put
it:
The mutual contempt entertained by the two schools is not
justified by a large view of the progress of economics in the
past, or by a consideration of the history of other social
sciences. Political Economy should begin with the Ricardian
method. A few simple assumptions being made, the processes of the
production, exchange and distribution of wealth should be traced
out and be brought together into a complete system, which may be
called pure Political Economy, or arbitrary Political Economy, or,
a priori Political Economy, or by the name of its greatest
teacher, Ricardian Political Economy. Such a scheme should
constitute the skeleton of all economic reasoning; but upon this
ghastly frame-work should be imposed the flesh and blood of an
actual, vital Political Economy, which takes account of men or
societies as they are, with all their sympathies, apathies, and
antipathies; with every organ developed as in life; every nerve of
motion or of sensibility in full play.[16]
More succinctly, Walker (quoted in Dorfman 1969, p. 107) wrote,
"The [historicist] economists of Germany, Italy, Belgium, and France
are doing the work which Adam Smith began, in his spirit but with
larger opportunities and a wider and ever-widening view."
Sumner, Dunbar, and Walker through their teaching, writing, and
professional and editorial activities exercised a predominant
influence on the development of American economic theory throughout
the last quarter of the nineteenth century. Walker was the leading
American economic theorist during this period and the first to gain
an international reputation. His general treatise quickly became the
most widely used text in the basic college economics course and
remained so until the turn of the century (Newton 1968, p. 12). It
even challenged Henry Fawcett's Manual of Political Economy
as the leading text in the classrooms of Oxford University in the
1880s (Mitchell 1969, p. 226, fn. 16). His treatise on Money,
published in 1878, "along with W. Stanley Jevons's Money and the
Mechanism of Exchange, became the standard works on money in the
English speaking world for at least the next quarter of a century"
(Newton 1968, p. 11).
Walker also served as the President of the American Statistical
Association from 1883 to 1897 and the first President of the
American Economic Association from 1885 to 1892 (Newton 1968, p.
13).
Dunbar founded the department of political economy at Harvard,
was the founding editor of the Quarterly Journal of
Economics, and his book on The Theory and History of
Banking "was influential in England as well as in the United
States" (Mitchell 1969, pp. 227, 229). Not only was Sumner one of
the most renowned American social theorists of the Gilded Age, he
was also an outstanding teacher and, in the estimate of historian
Harry Elmer Barnes (quoted in Fine 1976, p. 80), "probably the most
inspiring and popular teacher that Yale University or American
social science has produced."
Perhaps the greatest influence of this first generation of
professional economists in shaping theoretical developments in
American economics, however, was through their teaching. For they
reared up a brilliant second generation of American theorists who
leavened their synthesis of classical and historical economics with
a dash of marginalism and it was this alternative and peculiarly
American brand of neoclassicism that was to dominate textbooks into
the 1930s. These "younger traditionalists," as they were called by
Joseph Dorfman, included most prominently, Frank W. Taussig, Arthur
T. Hadley, and J. Laurence Laughlin, and "all three were perhaps
among the greatest builders in America of a new foundation for
further economic study" (Dorfman 1969, p. 258). After taking their
advanced degrees from Dunbar at Harvard and Sumner at Yale
respectively, Taussig and Hadley both traveled to Germany for
postgraduate training (Dorfman 1969, pp. 258, 264). Laughlin
received a doctorate in history under Henry Adams at Harvard, but
soon became an instructor in economics under Dunbar there.
| "Ricardian ideas never gained a
firm foothold in the United States to begin with and the views
of Jefferson and the Jeffersonian and Jacksonian political
economists were molded by the writings of Say and the French
Ideologue and liberal Destutt de
Tracy." |
Hadley was an eminent economist in the quarter of a century
leading up to the First World War. In 1896 he wrote Economics: An
Account of the Relations between Private Property and Public
Welfare (Hadley 1896), which succeeded Walker's as the most
widely used economics textbook in American colleges (Dorfman 1969,
p. 259). Three years later, he became President of Yale University.
Hadley intended his textbook as an updating of Mill's Principles
of Political Economics to include both the Darwinian idea of
natural selection as the force driving the development of
socioeconomic ideas and institutions and the theory of marginal
utility as an explanation of the individual's pursuit of his
interests under given ideas and institutions. Nonetheless, with
respect to the latter he believed that "those economists
[particularly the Austrian school] who were devoting their energies
to analyzing and developing the intricacies of the marginal utility
theory were engaged in useless or irrelevant activities" (Dorfman
1969, p. 259). Moreover, the classical concept of the long-run
"normal price" played a central role in Hadley's exposition of price
theory (Hadley 1896, pp. 64-96). Hadley (1896, pp. 23-25) also
maintained that the deductive and historical schools offered
complementary rather than antagonistic methods for investigating
complex economic reality. Finally, Hadley (1896, p. 12), while
sympathetic to economic individualism, took the British classical
view that "laissez faire, laissez passer" is "only a
practical maxim of political wisdom, subject to all limitations
which experience may afford." He therefore was led to criticize
Bastiat as an example of the type of "individualist" who "is prone
to assume that private property would necessarily be managed in the
public interest, and is in danger of treating the increase of such
property as a good in itself, instead of a means to the public good"
(Hadley 1896, p. 15). Hadley (1896, p. 15) also marginalized Bastiat
as "the brilliant French economist … whose 'economic harmonies' are
sometimes as overstrained as the 'economic antinomies' of socialists
like Proudhon."
Taussig, the second of the triad of founders of American
neoclassicism, was enormously influential as a writer, teacher, and
editor. He edited the Quarterly Journal of Economics from
1896 to 1935 and he taught at Harvard where his Ph.D. students
included James W. Angell, Jacob Viner, and Frank D. Graham.
Doctrinally he was described by Dorfman (1969, p. 265) as "first and
last a follower of the classical tradition of Ricardo and John
Stuart Mill." Taussig even rated Marshall's Principles of
Economics inferior to Mill's book for pedagogical purposes and
continued to use the latter in his classes (Dorfman 1969, p. 265).
In an attempt to modernize Mill, Taussig published his own
Principles of Economics in 1911, which was a two-volume
treatise that attained widespread success in both the United States
and England. In Taussig's book, just as in Hadley's text, the theory
of marginal utility is introduced merely as a means of clarifying
the relationship between utility, demand, and market price in a
basically classical framework whose analytical focal point is the
long-run price (Taussig 1911, 1: pp. 120- 58). As Schumpeter (1969,
p. 220) points out, "Like Marshall, whose path was different but
fundamentally parallel, he did not take kindly to the utility
analysis — only still less so." However, despite his close adherence
to the British classical theoretical tradition, Taussig was very
sympathetic to the German historical school. Thus he wrote that "I
am not a follower through thick and thin of the German [historical]
school, but there is much truth in the qualifications which they
suggest to accepted economic principles" (Taussig quoted in Dorfman
1969, p. 265). He also spearheaded efforts to have German and
British historicist works published in the United States and
favorably reviewed the major treatise of Gustav Schmoller, the
leader of the "younger," and more radical, German historical school
(Dorfman 1969, pp. xxxvi-xxxvii, n. 10).
Laughlin was the founder and first head of the University of
Chicago's economics department and the founding editor of the
Journal of Political Economy, which he continued to edit
until 1933. Dorfman (1969, p. 271) has described him as "the most
dogmatically classical" of the three founders of American
neoclassicism. He was a follower of Mill and edited a popular
abridgement of Mill's treatise for American audiences, but
considered the later classical John E. Cairnes as the soundest
theoretical guide. Accordingly, he had no use for marginal utility
theory and believed that its proponents were "primarily engaged in
metaphysical nonsense" (Dorfman 1969, p. 272). Needless to say, the
theory received no treatment in Laughlin's primer on economics,
Elements of Political Economy (Laughlin 1896), which was
published in 1887 and widely used in both colleges and high schools.
Although Laughlin displayed an unremitting hostility to the Austrian
school, he saw no obstacle to a rapprochement between the research
methods of the classical and moderate historical schools. He
expounded on this topic in the lead article of the first issue of
The Journal of Political Economy, concluding that "it has
become apparent that in reality there is not so much divergence of
opinion as at first appeared regarding the two methods of
investigation under examination" (Laughlin 1892, p. 8).
A second trend of thought developed in the United States during
this crucial period which, although opposed to the dominant American
classical school had even less use for French liberal economics.[17] The leaders of this movement included Richard T.
Ely, E.R.A. Seligman, Simon N. Patten, Henry Carter Adams, John
Bates Clark, and Edmund J. James, all of whom had received their
graduate training in German universities during the 1870s and early
1880s under historicists like Adolph Wagner and Johannes Conrad.
Upon their return to the United States, these young economists
styled themselves a "new school" and challenged the prevailing
classical orthodoxy. However they were also disposed to dismiss the
older American political economists, who were steeped in the French
liberal tradition, because the new economists had imbibed the
historicist, interventionist and socialist biases of their German
professors against "abstract speculative economics" and
laissez-faire policies.
The new school reached the zenith of its influence in 1885 when,
enlisting the support of Francis A. Walker, it founded the American
Economic Association at Saratoga, New York. The AEA's original
statement of principles explicitly invoked the principles of German
historicism, and Sumner was deliberately not invited to join. As a
result Dunbar and the younger classicists, Taussig, Laughlin, and
Hadley refused to join. Doctrinal controversy between the two sides
raged during the mid-1880s, but a rapprochement was soon achieved
and, in 1887, there began a slow influx of classical economists into
the organization.
| "As the number of academic
specialists in economics grew in the United States, earlier
American writers on political economy were increasingly
shunned as amateurs and
dilettantes." |
The new school's influence, however, soon started to wane. In
1886, Clark, the most intellectually astute member of the group,
began to question the methodological assumptions and socialist
policy prescriptions of German historicism and, by the early 1890s,
he had completely immersed himself in the task of formulating an
abstract and systematic theory of the market economy based on the
concept of marginal utility. Other moderate members of the school,
such as Seligman, followed suit and, in 1888, the AEA's exclusionist
statement of principles was dropped. The abandonment of historicist
principles also became evident in the textbook literature. Thus, for
example, in a popular elementary text published in 1888, new-school
economist E. Benjamin Andrews employed "the traditional Mill
sequence of production, distribution" and, while recommending the
works of marginalist, historicist, and classical writers, "implied
that they all fitted easily within a grand tradition" (Goodwin 1973,
p. 296). By 1892, the classical school established firm control of
the AEA when Ely, the prime mover behind the new school and its most
radical member, was forced to resign as secretary of the
association. Even Ely, however, whose Outlines of Economics
was the most widely used textbook in college classrooms for forty
years after its initial publication in 1893 appears to have
eventually accommodated himself to the emerging neoclassical
synthesis. Despite four early chapters dealing with the economic
evolution of society and the economic development of the United
States, the book's two core chapters on "Value and Price" drew
heavily on Mill, Taussig, and Marshall (Ely et. al 1928, pp.
143-79).
It should be noted that marginalist ideas appear to have played a
very small role in the American neoclassical synthesis before World
War One. In particular, there was no recognition that the theory of
subjective value and the concept of marginal utility offered a
radically new starting point for elaborating a comprehensive system
of economic analysis. Schumpeter (1965, p. 242), for example,
remarked that in the 1890s in the Unites States, "the new
theoretical organon was easily disposed of as 'marginalism' or
'neoclassicism,' and the dry-as-dust textbook — more or less shaped
on the Millian model — triumphed to drive more active minds into
'institutionalist' revolt." More recently, Goodwin (1973, p. 295)
has drawn attention to "the second phase in the transfer of
marginalism to North America" between the 1870s and 1900. According
to Goodwin (1973, pp. 295-96): "This period witnessed an attempt by
economists trained in classical political economy to absorb marginal
ideas within the corpus of their thought without making fundamental
modifications in their own practices, without acknowledging
revolutionary content in the new ideas and without proclaiming the
need to follow the paths of inquiry which the marginalists pointed
out."
The neoclassical movement that emerged at the end of the
nineteenth century in the United States thus had coalesced from
doctrinal trends that embodied a distinct antipathy to the methods
and doctrines of the French liberal school. Both the historicist new
school and the recrudescent Ricardo-Mill school rejected as
unscientific and amateurish the American tradition of political
economy that had developed in the first three-quarters of the
nineteenth century and whose primary influences were Say, Destutt de
Tracy, and Bastiat. But the neoclassical school did not achieve
total dominance in American economic theory until the 1920s.
Beginning in 1890 or so, there grew up a thriving alternative
theoretical movement based on the pure subjective-value marginalism
of the Austrian school. This movement, initiated by Clark, developed
into what was called the American psychological school under the
leadership of Frank Fetter and Herbert J. Davenport. It
fundamentally rejected both German historical and British classical
economics, as well as the contemporary American and Marshallian
variations on classical economics. Not coincidentally, American
marginalists enthusiastically embraced the liberal subjective-value
tradition in earlier American political economy as the theoretical
forerunner of marginalist economics. Jevons, Böhm-Bawerk, and other
European marginalists likewise had held the French liberal
economists in high esteem (Salerno 1988, pp. 120-21, 124-25).
Fetter, the leading American Mengerian before the First World
War, advanced a devastating refutation of the claim originated by
Dunbar that the American economic literature was marked by
"sterility." He argued that Dunbar was unacquainted with many, if
not most, of the original works he commented on and, "as a
representative of the classical school," even for those he had
actually read, Dunbar "was not qualified to render a just estimate
of the theories in question" (Fetter 1921, p. vii). The main reason
for the neglect of the earlier American liberal tradition, Fetter
(1921, p. ix) contended, was the pernicious influence of Mill's
work: "But after J.S. Mill had won for Ricardian economics its
predominating place in American thought, that system, with all its
unrecognized limitations of time, place, and logic, became the
standard of economic science with which any independent thought upon
our peculiar problems was measured and found wanting." Moreover,
according to Fetter (1921, p. xii), from the 1870s, the English
classical system "was taking its dominating place in American
collegiate instruction. There it continued for half a century — and
still in some measure continues [in 1921] — to exert its benumbing
effects upon American economic thought." Fetter (1977, p. 123)
bemoaned the fact that even the young anticlassical economists "who
in the seventies and early eighties brought a new spirit into
American economic studies, did not develop the indigenous
traditions, but unfortunately neglected them and turned to Germany
for the new sources of their inspiration." Moreover, these
German-trained economists did not challenge the classical orthodoxy
in a meaningful way because "in most cases, their historical
training was hardly more than a veneer over the groundwork of their
Ricardian opinions earlier acquired at home" (Fetter 1921, p. x).
Even the maverick Francis A. Walker who rejected certain aspects of
classical distribution theory "did not develop his father Amasa's
more original American treatment" which was based on Bastiat (Fetter
1977, p. 123). Fetter (1921, p. xi) went as far as to claim that for
the theoretical contributions of the earlier American economic
literature to be fully comprehended and appreciated required "as
instruments of analysis, certain concepts and terms found in the
recent psychological [i.e., marginalist] economics."
| Harvard's first economics
professor compared the French liberal Jefferson unfavorably to
the British mercantilist Alexander Hamilton "in his mastery of
the subject" of political economy. |
A deep appreciation for the theoretical acumen of writers in the
French liberal tradition can also be found in Davenport's works. For
example, Davenport (1964, pp. 116, 118) wrote in 1907, "Say's
doctrine of rent also reads like some chapter out of the latest of
modern thought"; he also commented with regard to the same topic,
"Verily Say was a modern of the moderns." In his classroom text,
Outlines Of Economic Theory published in 1896, Davenport
(1968, pp. 10-12, 26, 33-34, 59-60, 155-56, 170, 185-87) provided
three pages of end-of-chapter quotations from Bastiat, three from
fellow French liberal Courcelle-Seneuil, and none from either
Ricardo or Mill. Finally, one of the earliest formulations of the
concept of opportunity cost in the Anglo-American literature
appeared in an article by Davenport (1894, pp. 567-568). Davenport
(1894, p. 564) explicitly derived this formula from the liberal
Courcelle-Seneuil's statement of the economic problem.
John R. Turner (1921, p. xv), a PhD student of Fetter, wrote a
monograph rehabilitating the non-Ricardian distribution theories of
early American theorists that he hoped "may serve to reveal their
merit to public attention." Countering the Ricardian smear that the
American proponents of liberal economics were amateurish
pamphleteers biased toward laissez-faire and unacquainted
with technical economic theory, Turner (1921, p. 179) lauded Perry,
the leader of the Bastiat school in the United States, as an
open-minded man" and "without prejudice" as well as "one of the best
equipped economists that has appeared on this side of the
Atlantic."
Unfortunately for the reputation of the French liberal school,
Fetter and Davenport stopped contributing to economic theory by the
early 1920s and, for various reasons, never inspired a second
generation of theorists to follow in their footsteps.[18] By
the mid-1920s, the pure Austro-marginalist tradition had begun to
fade from the scene in the United States and the classical view of
Bastiat and the liberal school, embodied in the American variant of
neoclassical orthodoxy, became the unchallenged view among
professional economists in the United States.
The Representation of the French
Liberal School in the English-Language Literature
As noted, the doctrinal ferment and professionalization that
transformed American and British economics during the last quarter
of the nineteenth century coincided with a newfound cosmopolitanism
among economists in both countries. The ongoing neoclassical
reconstruction of economic theory that sought to incorporate
historicist and marginalist insights was widely viewed as an
international enterprise. Anglo-American economists were eager to
keep abreast of the latest scientific developments and innovations
emanating from the Continent, where the German historical and
Austrian schools represented the cutting edge of the new movement.
Since many Anglophone economists lacked fluency in foreign
languages,[19] this necessitated the translation of important
foreign books as well as the publication in professional journals of
survey articles and other communications by Continental economists
reporting on current developments in their respective countries.
In France, the publicity generated by the bitter struggle of the
historicist-oriented new school against the reigning liberal
orthodoxy caused Gide and the Law Faculty economists to be embraced
by their Anglo-American counterparts as enlightened allies in the
international crusade to renew economic theory. Additionally, as
members of a newly professionalized discipline, American economists
were understandably wont to give a more sympathetic hearing to the
occupants of prestigious Law School chairs than to their mainly
nonacademic opponents. It was therefore the English-language
publications of the new school — and, especially, its leader Gide —
that exercised the preponderant influence on Anglo-American
economists in the thirty-five years or so leading up to the First
World War. Naturally, it was an extremely distorted and unflattering
view of the liberal school that was propagated by these publications
and that came to be accepted by Anglophone economists in this
crucially formative period of modern economics. Moreover the tone
and content of the few contributions of the besieged liberal school
that did find their way into print in the United States and Great
Britain during this period succeeded, in many cases, only in
reinforcing the caricature of the school deliberately fostered by
its rivals.
A good idea of how Anglo-American attitudes toward the liberal
school were molded by the ongoing doctrinal and institutional
conflict in France (and to some extent, in Italy also) can be
obtained from a survey of the more important works of Continental
economists that appeared in English between the 1870s and 1920s,
particularly where these works contain references to or accounts of
the struggle.
An early work that exercised a particularly heavy influence on
Anglo-American opinion of Continental economics in general was the
Italian Luigi Cossa's An Introduction to the Study of Political
Economy (1893). Originally published in Italian in 1876 and
first translated into English in 1880, it is, despite its title,
actually an original treatise on the development of economic
doctrine in Europe and the United States.[20] This
work was brought to the attention of English-speaking economists by
Jevons (1970, p. 66), who recommended it highly in the Preface to
the second edition of his own Theory of Political Economy
published in 1879. Jevons later contributed a Preface to the
original English translation of Cossa's work in 1880. A new English
translation of the revised and enlarged Italian edition (1892) of
the book appeared in 1893.
| Hadley also marginalized
Bastiat as "the brilliant French economist … whose 'economic
harmonies' are sometimes as overstrained as the 'economic
antinomies' of socialists like
Proudhon." |
Cossa himself was one of the leaders of the revival of scientific
economics in Italy in the nineteenth century and was "the first
modern Italian economist to win wide international recognition"
(Haney 1949, p. 834). He did so as the leader of an eclectic
movement among Italian economists who attempted to blend selected
doctrines of the older German historical school with British
classical economics (Haney 1949, pp. 839-40). Cossa had studied
under the founder of the German historical movement, Wilhelm
Roscher, whom he referred to as "one of the most illustrious
economists of the century" (Cossa 1893, p. 412).[21] In
Cossa's estimation, Roscher's "substantial and undeniable claim to
unqualified praise" was attributable not to his explication and
application of the historical method but to the "light and
leadership given in those of his works where the deepest and most
exceptional erudition does not prevent him from being quite in touch
with those theories of the classical school, which he not only
understands but substantially accepts" (Cossa 1893, p. 413).
Given Cossa's strong sympathies for both the German historical
and British classical schools, it was only natural that he should
take a strongly negative view of their liberal opponents. Cossa's
antipathy for the liberal school was reinforced by the fact that the
growth of his eclectic new school in Italy was vehemently opposed by
the established Italian liberal school under the leadership of
Bastiat's preeminent Italian follower, Francesco Ferrara. According
to Cossa (1893, p. 494), Ferrara, in his earlier writings, had
"exalted" the French economists J.-B. Say, Charles Dunoyer, and
Michel Chevalier, while he had "denied" Ricardo's merits and
"belittled" Mill's. However, the real rift between the schools was
created in the 1870s when Ferrara harshly attacked the importation
of historicist ideas into Italy, charging those Italian economists
responsible, including Cossa, with the crimes of "Germanism" and
"liberticide" (Cossa 1893, pp. 505-506).[22]
In examining the development of political economy in France,
Cossa noted a growing tendency to ignore the teachings of the
science on the part of the public. He cited as one of the factors
contributing to this condition "the uncompromising optimism of the
official school, with its individualism that knows no limits." He
lamented that, under the domination of the liberal school, "French
economic science has … departed from sound English scientific
traditions…. It has no use for Malthus, none for Ricardo…. It
accepts laissez faire, not as the rule of art that it is, but
as a rational principle. Thus has science been transformed into an
interested guardian of the economic status quo" (Cossa 1893,
p. 368). For similar reasons, the leading contemporary French
liberal economist, Leroy-Beaulieu, stood indicted by Cossa (1893, p.
382) as a "partisan of economic quietism."
Cossa (1893, p. 370) went further and divided the liberal school
into "classical" and "optimist" branches. The former comprised those
French economists, including Say, Rossi, Garnier, Courcelle-Seneuil,
and Block, "who have departed but little, if at all, from methods
current in England…." Cossa (1893, p. 373-75, 395) affirmed that the
works of these economists had scientific merit and, in some cases,
lavished high praise on them. In contrast, what Cossa called "the
optimist line of argument" was first enunciated by Dunoyer and
widely propagated by Bastiat. Its later adherents among French
economists included Molinari, Leroy-Beaulieu, Levasseur, Frédéric
Passy, and Baudrillart. While Cossa (1893, p.376) admitted that the
optimists were "by no means in open hostility" to the classical
branch of the liberal school he nowhere rigorously stated the
scientific basis for distinguishing between the two subgroups.
Actually, this lack of terminological clarity apparently served
Cossa's rhetorical purposes as "the optimist school" became an
elastic and consummate term of derision in his lexicon. For example,
in criticizing the younger historical school of Schmoller, (Cossa
1893, pp. 419-20) concluded that the school "…stands plainly
convicted of a narrowness of view which is not less flagrant than
that of the French optimistic school but only in the opposite
extreme." In defense of the old historical school, Cossa declared:
"Roscher and Knies were not capable of the grotesque confusion
between Bastiat and Ricardo, which has led latter-day Germans of the
new historical school to see no difference between the typical
English views and those of optimism and individualism."
Thus today's long-standing and widely accepted characterization
of the French liberal school as promoting unscientifically
"optimistic" economic theories and policies arose out of a polemical
canard that was perpetrated by one of its early opponents. This was
almost immediately challenged and debunked by liberal economists on
both sides of the putative divide, but to no avail. In 1893, the
"disguised classical" Block (1893, pp. 3-4) noted the fact that
"some German and Italian writers, the one echoing the other, have
occasionally divided the school and distinguished in its ranks an
'optimistic school.'" He dismissed the reasoning behind this
portrayal as "mere caviling" and did not "give serious consideration
to the name." While he believed that "the term 'classical' is fairly
suitable" to designate the entire school, he concluded that he
"prefers" and "advocates" the term "liberal."
Similarly, the supposed "optimist" Leroy-Beaulieu (1910, p. xxii,
fn. 1) rejected suggestions that he belonged to the classical school
("l'École économique classique"), which he considered to be that of
Ricardo, Malthus, and Stuart Mill. He also denied the aptness of the
designations "orthodox school," "optimist school," and
"logical-deductive school" to describe his views on economics
(Leroy-Beaulieu 1910, p. 83). Speaking on behalf of the Institute
economists, he emphatically proclaimed: "We protest against such
appellations as 'Orthodox School' and 'Classical School.' We claim
only the honor of calling ourselves 'the Liberal School'"
(Leroy-Beaulieu quoted in Gide 1907, p.193, fn. 1). Leroy-Beaulieu's
fellow "optimist" Levasseur (1900, p. xvii) likewise classed himself
with the liberal school, regarding as "unfortunate" labels such as
"classical" and "orthodox."
The Belgian Emile de Laveleye's primer on economics was
translated into English in 1884 as The Elements of Political
Economy and featured both an Introduction and supplementary
chapter by Frank Taussig (1884, pp. xi-xviii, 275-88). Although
himself not a law faculty economist, Laveleye was one of the
earliest exponents of the historicist and Kathedersozialist
ideas writing in French and therefore was an influential forerunner
of the French new school.[23]
| The founder of the University
of Chicago's economics department had no use for marginal
utility theory and believed that its proponents were
"primarily engaged in metaphysical nonsense."
|
In his Introduction, Taussig (1884, p. xiii) portrayed Laveleye
as a "moderate" whose "economic views are in strong sympathy with
those who declare themselves to have broken loose from what may be
called the classic system…. At the same time, he by no means goes as
far as those writers, chiefly German, who declare that the classic
system is entirely superseded. His position is rather that of the
more moderate German writers who protest against the hard and fast
lines of Ricardo's system which has been common with some of his
followers…." Taussig (1884, p. xiv) also referred to the school of
which Laveleye was a representative as the "moderate school," adding
that Laveleye, "like most German writers, and unlike most French
writers, is not a decided adherent of the laissez faire
principle." Although Taussig (1884, p. xvii) did express
reservations about Laveleye's treatment of several points of theory
and policy, he concluded that, "In the main, the principles laid
down are those accepted by all economists of weight," recommending
the book as "especially valuable for those who wish to obtain an
elementary knowledge of political economy." Given Taussig's position
as an emerging leader of the neoclassical synthesis in American
economics, his favorable Introduction served as a scientific
imprimatur on the book and on the burgeoning French new
school.
A French textbook that even more powerfully shaped Anglo-American
attitudes toward the liberal school was Charles Gide's Principes
d'Économie Politique. J.B. Clark, still somewhat under the
influence of the German historical school, drew attention to the
work in a review of the second French edition in 1889. Clark (1889,
p. 548) lavished unreserved praise on the book, characterizing it as
"a comprehensive expression of that liberal movement in French
economic thought" that led to the founding of the dissident new
school journal, Revue d'Économie Politique. Pointing out a
kinship between Gide's and Jevons's theories of value and the
"affiliation" of Gide's theory of production with Böhm-Bawerk's
theory, Clark (1889, p. 549) declared that Gide "shows a kinship
with progressive minds in Europe and in America in his entire
treatment of capital, exchange and distribution." The review ended
with an emphasis on the moderate and non-dogmatic approach of the
work: "The treatise as a whole will be especially welcomed by those
readers who feel that truth cannot lie at the extremes of doctrinal
controversy…." (Clark 1889, p. 549).
The third French edition of Gide's book was translated into
English as Principles of Political Economy in 1891. The
translation was introduced by the influential British doctrinal
scholar James Bonar (1900, p. iii) who lauded Gide's "emphasis on
the need of impartiality and freedom from prejudice." The American
Introduction was written by Clark (1900, p. vii), who saw the
translation as marking "the re-establishment of an intellectual
commerce [between France and the United States] that has been partly
under an embargo" due to the "orthodoxy of many French economists"
and the contrary tendency among American economists to "enlist under
new school or historical standards." Clark (1900, p. vii) also
remarked upon the "progressive spirit" of the treatise as well as
"its appreciative attitude toward the older schools of thought,"
summarizing the merits of the book in the following terms: "It
carefully retains the best fruits of early work; the 'new departure'
that it represents is one that does not break with the past. Its
conspicuous quality is a wisdom that is not often combined with so
much brilliancy."
This recommendation of the book by an economist of Clark's
stature can hardly have failed to endow Gide's treatise with a
weighty authority among American readers. And indeed Gide's work
went on to enjoy great success, according to Schumpeter (1968, p.
843, fn. 6) becoming "one of the most successful textbooks of the
period." So popular was the work in Great Britain and the United
States that two later French editions of the book were newly
translated into English in 1905 and again in 1924 (Gide 1905; Gide
1924).
The popularity of Gide's book ensured that its bitingly negative
portrayal of the "orthodox" economists of the French liberal school
would be accepted at face value. In explaining his supposed "excess
of impartiality," Gide (1900, p. vi) asserted that it is the means
by which he sought to break with a "tradition which was beginning to
assume the shape of a law." This alleged "law" prescribed that
treatises on political economy published in France present their
subject "in only one light, — the point of view of the 'Liberal'
school." In the text itself, Gide (1900, p. 16) devoted a section to
the liberal school in which he alleged that liberal economists deny,
"with some hauteur," that they constitute a school and "claim
to represent the science itself." Gide (1900, p. 16) summed up the
"very simple" doctrine of the liberal school as follows:
Human societies are governed by natural laws which we could
not alter one jot, even if we wished, since they are not of our
own making. Moreover, we have not the least interest in modifying
them, even if we could; for they are good, or, at any rate, the
best possible. [Emphases are in the original]
| The American Economic
Association's original statement of principles explicitly
invoked the principles of German
historicism. |
Without any attempt to acquaint the reader with the substantial
body of liberal economic theory that underlay the first part of this
claim,[24] Gide (1900, p. 18) proceeded to declare that
"The most serious complaint that can be made against this body of
teaching is a very marked tendency to optimism, which appears
to be inspired far less by a truly scientific spirit than by a
desire to justify the existing order of things." In the 1905 English
edition of the book, Gide (1905, p. 12) linked the liberal school
with J.-B. Say, whose Treatise on Political Economy he
dismissed for lacking "depth of thought." Also, in this edition,
Gide (1905, p. 23 fn. 1) extended the liberal school to include
non-Gallic economists such as Ferrara and F.A. Walker. He also
identified J.R. McCulloch, Nassau Senior, and Cairnes "as belonging
to the liberal school, except that they are not quite so optimistic
as the French liberals, but even more dogmatic." By strategically
misrepresenting the liberal school in this way, Gide was able to
trivialize the school as an inconsequential offshoot of the British
classical school whose economic theory was tainted with a streak of
unscientific optimism and was little more than a shallow apology for
preconceived laissez-faire doctrines. Moreover, since Gide
nowhere actually gives an account of liberal economic theory, the
reader is unable to challenge his evaluation.
Even more damaging to the reputation of the French liberal school
in Anglophone countries was the history of thought textbook
co-authored by Gide and his fellow Law Faculty economist Charles
Rist. The work was first published in French in 1909 and the second
French edition of 1913 was translated into English in 1915 as A
History of Economic Doctrines: From the Time of the Physiocrats to
the Present Day (Gide and Rist 1948). An enormously popular
college textbook in the United States, the seventh French edition
appeared in 1947 and a second English edition, including newly
translated material from the sixth and seventh French editions, was
brought out in 1948. The book was used in some American universities
as late as the 1960s.[25]
In this work, Gide and Rist continued and elaborated upon the
deliberate distortion of the doctrinal relationship between the
French liberal and British classical schools initially contrived by
Gide in his treatise. Completely ignoring the roots of Bastiat and
the later liberal school in the divergent Cantillon-Turgot-Say
tradition, they claimed that British and French economists were
originally united in their adherence to the teachings of Ricardo,
Malthus, and Say. This doctrinal unity was supposedly shattered by
the growing, post-Ricardian criticism of classical economics by
socialist and other dissident writers in Great Britain and France.
In the face of this ferocious criticism, British economics regrouped
behind J.S. Mill and critically reassessed their science, while the
French school "with Bastiat as its chief, struggled against all
innovation, and reaffirmed its faith in the 'natural order' and
laissez-faire" (Gide and Rist 1948, p. 329). It was the
influence of Bastiat that allegedly seduced French economists into
"defending the optimistic doctrines which they so easily mistook for
the science itself" (Gide and Rist 1948, pp. 330-31).
According to Gide and Rist (1948, pp. 361-62 fn. 3), moreover,
the "optimistic" school soon abandoned the task of scientific
investigation and developed a propensity to use economic discourse
to rationalize the ethical postulate that "social interest is simply
the sum of the individual interests, all of which converge in a
harmonious whole." Members of the British classical school, in
contrast, "have remained faithful to the principles enunciated by
the earlier masters of economic science. An attempt has been made to
improve, to develop, and even to correct the older theories, but no
attempt has been made to change their essential aspects.
Individualistic and liberal by tradition, this school has never been
optimistic. It … simply confines itself to pure science."
Unlike Cossa, Gide and Rist do not draw a spurious distinction
between French liberal economists on the basis of classical versus
optimistic orientation. Indeed, they imply that members of the
liberal school are without exception "admirers of Bastiat" and
"optimists" and, as such, "second-grade disciples" of the British
classical school (Gide and Rist 1948, p. 439). This view
conveniently allows Gide and Rist (1948, pp. 329-54) to restrict
their coverage of liberal economic theory to a lengthy review and
critique of Bastiat's system and to dispense with any treatment of
the significant liberal theoretical developments after 1850. Thus
later contributors to liberal theory, such as Michel Chevaliez,
Cherbuliez, Courcelle-Seneuil, and Block are disingenuously grouped
with Cairnes and given brief notice in a short section entitled
"Mill's Successors" (Gide and Rist 1948, pp. 378-80).
The later liberal school is again alluded to in a discussion of
the critics of "hedonistic" doctrines. Here, the liberal economists,
particularly Leroy-Beaulieu, are portrayed as rigidly opposed to
both mathematical and marginalist economics. Blame is also laid at
the feet of the liberal school for the fact that Walras was "forced
to leave France to find in foreign lands a more congenial
environment for the promulgation of his ideas…." (Gide and Rist
1948, pp. 506-508).
The book by Gide and Rist was not the only French work on
doctrinal history to help mold Anglo-American perceptions of the
liberal school. During this period, in fact, there appeared a rich
crop of treatises on economic thought published by French authors,
which, although never translated, were considered authoritative and
were consulted by British and American doctrinal researchers. These
included books by A. Espinas (1892), J. Rambaud (1898), M. Dubois
(1903), R. Gonnard (1921), Gaetan Pirou 1925, and G. H. Bousquet
(1927).[26] There was an institutional factor operating to
ensure that the authors of these books were almost all law faculty
economists and therefore were inclined to present a strongly
antipathetic view of the liberal school. This was the circumstance
that every Faculty of Law contained a chair and a course devoted
exclusively to the history of economic doctrine, while, as late as
1907, France still lacked a university-level course in pure
economics (Gide and Rist 1948, p. 7). The result, as Gide (1907, p.
203) notes was that, in the universities, "the courses of historical
doctrines are among those most eagerly taken up by the young
professors, and most keenly relished by students. And the latter
select the subject for their doctor's theses mainly from this
historical field."
The liberal school also had a number of works translated into
English during this period but they were mainly either polemical
works in Bastiat's vein attacking socialism or protectionism, such
as Guyot's Socialistic Fallacies (Guyot 1910b) and
Economic Prejudices (Guyot 1910a); monographs on applied
topics like Levasseur's highly acclaimed The American Workman
(Levasseur 1900); or politico-economic studies including
Leroy-Beaulieu's The Modern State in Relation to Society and the
Individual (Leroy-Beaulieu 1892) and Collectivism: A Study of
Some of the Leading Social Questions of the Day (Leroy-Beaulieu
1908). The few English-language translations dealing with pure
economic theory from a liberal point of view were outdated primers
intended for popular audiences and written by lesser liberal
theoreticians or journalists. These works tended to reinforce the
stereotype of the liberal school as analytically shallow and rigidly
resistant to change that was deliberately promoted by Gide and the
new school.
| "The neoclassical movement in
the United States had coalesced from doctrinal trends that
embodied a distinct antipathy to the methods and doctrines of
the French liberal school." |
One of the earliest liberal works on general economics to be
translated into English was a Handbook on Social Economy: Or, the
Worker's ABC written by the French novelist Edmund About (1873)
and published in 1873. It was originally written sometime before
1870 to instruct Parisian workmen contemplating the formation of
trade unions in the laws of economics. About was a skilled writer
and gave an excellent popular exposition of the economic doctrines
of the liberal school with an emphasis on Say and Bastiat, but
understandably the book is hardly characterized by analytical
profundity. Another liberal primer, Elements of Political
Economy, authored by Émile Levasseur (1905) appeared in English
in 1905. Levasseur was a distinguished applied economist and
statistician who was known to English-speaking economists for his
study of The American Workman published five years earlier.
Although temperate and scholarly in tone, the work was addressed to
a popular audience. Moreover, despite the fact that parts of the
work were rewritten by the author expressly for the translation, it
had been first published in French in 1867 (Cossa 1893, p. 383).
Thus what little systematic theory there was in the book harked back
to Say and Bastiat, and almost no notice was given to
postmarginalist developments in the science. Even Levasseur's theory
of wage determination emphasizing the importance of the productivity
of labor, which was a pathbreaking achievement when he first
advanced it in the 1870s, appeared hopelessly outmoded in light of
the contemporary emergence of the marginal productivity theory of
factor pricing.
The only full-blown treatise on general economics from a liberal
viewpoint that was translated into English was Principles of
Social Economy by Yves Guyot (1892), which was originally
published in English in 1884. Guyot was more an activist, political
reformer and pamphleteer than he was an academician and scholar. He
held no academic position and was the only prominent liberal
economist who remained outside of the Institute. He had a successful
political career that included membership on the Paris Municipal
Council, service in the French Chamber of Deputies and a three-year
stint as
Minister of Public Works. His devotion to the
laissez-faire doctrine in both economic and social affairs
was breathtakingly radical and thoroughgoing, a fact which made him
especially anathema to his new school opponents and the favored
target of their anti-liberal barbs. His obituarist in the
Economic Journal was none other than Charles Gide (1928, p.
333) who could not resist cheap sarcasm in describing Guyot's
radical liberalism:
He fought against every form of State intervention, such as
compulsory vaccination, the regulation of prostitution, the
prohibition of alcohol, the limitation in the number of drinking
houses, the closing of gambling places, penalties against the
adulteration of foods or against speculation. He was the foremost
lieutenant of Josephine Butler in her heroic campaign in France
[against anti-prostitution laws], and even paid by six months in
prison for the violence of his attacks against the Paris
police.
The arguments which interventionists are wont to advance did
not move him in the least, even when they were in support of
morals. Yes, indeed! Rather drunkenness, prostitution, ruin under
the regime of liberty, than temperance, virtue, sobriety,
respectability under the regime of State regulation. As for
morals, he would not admit that they could exist except as the
natural product of liberty.
As a free-trade activist and political reformer, Guyot was more
interested in expounding basic economic principles and demonstrating
their immediate application to current policy issues than in
elaborating and refining the latest developments in pure theory.
There is therefore evident in his treatise a pronounced tendency to
ignore or belittle contemporary developments in methodology and
value theory. For instance, Guyot (1892, pp. 1-5) began his treatise
by strongly endorsing the methodology of Say and then followed this
by nearly four pages of uninterrupted quotation from the latter's
work. Concluding that Say had "answered beforehand some of the
questions lately raised in England and Germany," Guyot (1892, pp.
5-9) went on to attack the British historicists and the older and
younger German historical school including its representatives —
especially Laveleye — in France and Belgium. In the area of value
theory, the concept of marginal utility and the Austrians was not
mentioned, although Jevons and Walras are briefly noticed in
connection with "a vain attempt to substitute in economic science
the mathematical for the inductive method [i.e., the method of Say]"
(Guyot 1892, p. 6). Guyot (1892, pp. 19-20) concisely expressed his
general attitude toward contemporary innovations in economic theory
in the following words:
It must also be confessed that since the great works of Adam
Smith and J.B. Say, there has been a pause in political economy.
Far be it from me to deny the value of a number of excellent works
that have been written in France and in England; but they have
been too often but paraphrases or commentaries on the works of the
masters. They lose themselves in subtle refinements, and have thus
fallen into an economic conventionalism, instead of acquiring
fresh vigor by observation.
In the Preface to the English Edition of his treatise, in the
midst of an impassioned plea for free trade and for laissez-faire
policies in general, Guyot (1892, p. x) took a polemical swipe at
the emerging French new school for its interventionist orientation,
declaring: "Ever since Political Economy has been taught by the
faculties of law we have been witnessing the evolution of new forms
of Colbertism. Once they despised political economy altogether; now
many of its teachers, imbued with prepossessions from the old Roman
and French legists regarding the omnipotence of law, adopt the
doctrines of the Catheder-Socialisten." In the text itself,
Guyot (1892, p. 13) asserted without explanation that, "In France
the lectures on political economy given in the Faculties of Law are,
for the most part, utterly inadequate."
As a leading personality of the liberal school, Guyot's sweeping
rejection of contemporary innovations in methodology and value
theory combined with his polemics in favor of unrestrained
laissez-faire economic policy must naturally have reinforced
the caricature of the French school that was disseminated by Gide
and his followers in their English-language publications. This image
of an entrenched and monolithic orthodoxy reflexively opposed to all
scientific advancement played well to academic economists in the
United States and Great Britain whose newfound professional status
fostered a self- consciously scientific and progressive attitude.
Seen in this light — and without background knowledge of the bitter
struggle for institutional and doctrinal supremacy raging in France
— Guyot's scornful references to the law faculty economists appeared
to identify Gide's dissident school as the besieged vanguard of
scientific progress in France.
| "Today's long-standing and
widely accepted characterization of the French liberal school
as promoting unscientifically 'optimistic' economic theories
and policies arose out of a polemical canard that was
perpetrated by one of its early
opponents." |
In fact, it was Gide's school that, despite its politically
established institutional dominance, was destined to fade into
complete obscurity because of its analytical sterility. If we
examine Gide's celebrated textbook, we hardly find cutting-edge, let
alone pathbreaking, economic theory. What we get is an eclectic and
very pedestrian brew of historical and classical economics spiced
with a pinch of marginal utility theory and Marshallian
supply-and-demand analysis. Even those sympathetic to Gide's project
could not help but notice the strong classical orientation of his
economic theory. Cossa, Gide's contemporary and leader of the
Italian new school, wrote that Gide is "…far nearer the company of
the classical school than he would readily believe," and Cossa
ranked Gide's book along with that of the liberal Cherbuliez as the
best textbook and treatise of the time, respectively. James Bonar
(1900, p. iv), the author of the Introduction to the first English
edition of Gide's book, pointed out that Gide's position "is
substantially that of the … 'Classical School'…. [A]nd the
theoretical work of the Classical School is in great part the
foundation of his own new building." In his obituary for Gide, his
co-author Rist admitted that Gide had not developed a viable
theoretical synthesis that would survive his death, arguing that the
value of Gide's treatise "lay less in the originality of its
economic doctrine than the open-mindedness with which it welcomed
new methods and ideas…. The death of Gide closes a chapter in the
history of economic and social thought in France." In matters of
pure theory, Rist had early on become an "ardent promoter of the
mathematical method" as practiced by the Lausanne school
(Suranyi-Unger 1931, pp. 129, 191). Near the end of his life, Gide
(1926, p. 870) himself had implicitly conceded the theoretical
dead-end that his school had arrived at when he wrote regarding the
economic journal he founded, Revue d'Économie Politique:
"Pure theory finds little space in it — not from prejudice, but from
lack of contributors."
Now, it was certainly true, as Gide and others claimed, that the
liberal school vigorously opposed and bitterly denounced the
contemporary historicist and mathematical trends in economics.
Indeed, the most prominent of the later liberal theorists,
Leroy-Beaulieu (quoted in Mai 1975, p. 136), characterized the use
of the mathematical method in economics as "pure delusion and a
hollow mockery" that "has no scientific foundation and is of no
practical use." But the leading Austrian theorists, Menger and
Böhm-Bawerk, who were on the cutting edge of the marginalist
revolution, also expressed grave misgivings regarding the deployment
of the historical and mathematical methods for pure theoretical
research.
Indeed, the French liberal economists enthusiastically embraced
Mengerian subjective-value marginalism and considered it the natural
culmination of the scarcity-and-utility approach to price theory
initiated by Say. Thus Block (1893, p. 5) pointed to Bastiat's
"eternal law" that man expends efforts to obtain means that directly
or indirectly satisfies his wants and noted that "this law in its
development becomes the law of 'final degree of utility' of Jevons
or the 'marginal utility' of Carl Menger." Block (1893, p. 30) also
argued that the law of supply-and-demand operating through the
effects of scarcity and abundance has found its "complete
explanation in the final or marginal utility (Grenznutzen) of
the Austrians." Leroy-Beaulieu (1910, pp. 15-94), in his four-volume
treatise, first published in 1895, devoted two chapters totaling
almost eighty pages to elaborating the contributions of Jevons and
Menger and assimilating them to the liberal scarcity-and-utility
tradition. In Italy the liberal economist Augusto Graziani emerged
in the 1890s as "one of the most distinguished representatives of
the theory of marginal utility as expounded by Menger and
Böhm-Bawerk" (Suranyi-Unger 1931, p. 148). Like the French liberals,
Graziani perceptively embraced marginal utility as a means of
completing Say's supply-and-demand theory of price, holding that
"all new viewpoints can only serve to perfect this fundamental
doctrine" (Suranyi-Unger 1931, p. 185). He also applied the concept
in elaborating his own original theories of production and
distribution. The Austrian-trained doctrinal scholar Suranyi-Unger
(1931, p. 148) thus ranked Graziani's theoretical system as "the
most important system in modern Italian economic theory" after
Pareto's.
Moreover, unlike Gide's school, whose doctrinal influence died
out abruptly with the death of its founder in the late 1920s, the
influence of the Franco-Italian liberal school survived the Second
World War. Thus Louis Baudin (1947), who went on to become an active
member of the Mont Pelerin Society, published a lengthy treatise
attempting to integrate value theory and monetary theory.[27] The
second edition of the work, published in 1947, was very favorably
reviewed in the American Economic Review, with the reviewer
concluding that "Professor Baudin's book represents a prodigious
effort of research, reading, and reflection; and is an admirably
balanced work in the best French tradition" (M. A. Kriz 1947, p.
981).
In Italy, Luigi Einaudi was perhaps the most famous descendant of
the liberal school. Einaudi wrote thirty books on economics and was
a founding member of the Mont Pelerin Society. After the Second
World War, he served as governor of the Bank of Italy and then
President of Italy.[28]
Constantino Bresciani-Turroni also emerged out of the Italian
liberal tradition. In 1931, he wrote what today is acknowledged as
the standard work on the German hyperinflation (Bresciani-Turroni
1968).[29] He also contributed two influential articles on
the theory of saving in relation to Austrian business cycle theory
(Bresciani-Turroni 1936) and these impressed Schumpeter (1968, p.
1018) as "brilliant papers." After the war he became a founding
member of the Mont Pelerin Society and received appointments as
director of the International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development and as minister of foreign trade.
Conclusion
It is clear, then, that the image of Bastiat's school that has
been handed down in the Anglo-American doctrinal literature is one
that has been deliberately distorted by its doctrinal enemies and is
in desperate need of extensive revision. The liberal school was
neither analytically sterile nor did it attempt to impede the spread
of marginalism although, like Menger and the Austrian school, it did
intransigently oppose historical and mathematical economics. The
wholesale neglect of the school's theoretical contributions by
modern Anglophone economists is primarily attributable to the
peculiar conjunction of circumstances attending the
professionalization of economic science in France, Great Britain and
the United States in the last quarter of the nineteenth century.
Joseph Salerno is a senior fellow
at the Mises Institute, professor of economics at Pace University,
and editor of the Quarterly Journal of
Austrian Economics. He has been interviewed in the in the Austrian
Economics Newsletter and on Mises.org.
Send him mail. Comment on
the blog.
This article was originally published in 2001 as "The Neglect of
Bastiat's School by English-Speaking Economists: A Puzzle Resolved."
Journal des économistes et des études humaines 11 (2/3):
451–95.
Notes
[1] This section is based on the following works:
Alcouffe 1989; Block 1893; Gide 1890; Gide 1898; Gide 1907; Gide
1926; Rowe 1892. Biographical information on most of the economists
mentioned in this section can be found in the wonderful little
dictionary by Ludwig Mai (1975).
[2] This was actually the first Chair in Political
Economy instituted in France, but its designation "Industrial
Economy" was substituted to appease government officials who "were
made uneasy, as Napoleon had been, by the very words 'political
economy.' The word 'political' seemed to imply that persons outside
the government, claiming superior knowledge, might try to tell the
government what to do, or object publicly to its policies, or enter
into such party politics as now existed." (Say 1997, p. 117)
[3] It should be noted that Gide himself had had no
formal training in economics upon assuming the newly created
political economy chair in the law faculty at Montpellier in 1877.
His only exposure to the discipline up to that point had come from
his reading of the complete set of Bastiat's works given to him by
his uncle upon the completion of his final law degree (Howey 1989,
p. 187).
[4] On Gide's doctrine of solidarism and cooperative
production see Gide and Rist 1948, pp. 545-70 and Gide 1922.
[5] On Jevons's efforts at rehabilitation, see Salerno
1988, pp. 124-25.
[6] In contrast to the historical movement in Germany,
British historicism comprised a loose grouping of diverse thinkers
rather than a self-conscious school of thought. The most influential
members of the first generation of British historicists included
Thomas E. Cliffe Leslie (1827-1882), John Kells Ingram (1823-1907),
Walter Bagehot (1826-1877), and J.E. Thorold Rogers (1823-1890). The
second generation comprised William Cunningham (1849-1919), Arnold
Toynbee (1852-1883), and W.J. Ashley (1860- 1927). For accounts of
this movement and the views of its individual members, see: Mahoney
1991, pp. 91-119; Spiegel 1991, pp. 395-409; and Haney 1949, pp.
523-36.
[7] Also, Pedro Schwartz (1972, p. 1) writes that
"…marginalism was not accepted in the English-speaking world in the
1870s, but only after the publication of Marshall's treatise in
1890. In the last third of the nineteenth century economists were
not interested in abstract discussions of the theory of value; the
centre of the stage was not occupied by marginalists but by the
followers of the German historical school, with their rejection of
an abstract approach to the social sciences and their inductive,
practical concept of economics.
[8] On the sharp contrast between the British classical
and French liberal schools in their approaches to evaluating
economic policy, see Lionel Robbins, The Theory of Economic
Policy in English Political Economy (London: Macmillan & Co,
Ltd, 1953), pp. 34-67.
[9] Frank Fetter (1920, p. 723) writes similarly of
Marshall, "he defends, while he slightly and regretfully amends, the
value theory, the fundamental concepts, and the general economic
theory of distribution left by Ricardo and Mill. He retains, with a
certain clannishness, the heritage of orthodox economic doctrine,
despite some consciousness of its inconsistencies. In his thought
the difference between old Ricardianism and neo-Ricardianism is not
one of radical change but one of grudging verbal amendment of errors
exposed by critics from other schools."
[10] As Stigler (1949 pp. 38-39) pointed out in 1941:
"Philip Wicksteed is probably the least known of the leading English
economists of the last generation and this was equally true in his
own time…. Wicksteed constitutes in a certain sense, the Jevonian
'school.' He and William Smart … were the only important English
economists of the period between 1870 and the World War who
explicitly abandoned the classical tradition. This is an additional
reason for Wicksteed's comparative obscurity."
[11] Oddly, Marshall (1977, p. 77, fn. 1) hailed the
treatise of William E. Hearn, the Australian subjective value
theorist and follower of Bastiat, as "at once simple and profound,"
although he did subtly downplay the significance of the work
praising it as "an admirable example of the way in which detailed
analysis may be applied to afford a training of a very high order
for the young."
[12] For an overview of the American catallactic
tradition, see Salerno 1988, pp. 132-43.
[13] Ross (1991, p. 85) says of Sumner: "He early
accepted classical economic doctrine in the simplistic form
presented by Harriet Martineau and never doubted its logic."
[14] Recently it was said of Sumner ([1909] 1992, p.
393) that Malthusianism "was a bedrock of his thought." Ross (1991,
p. 85) characterizes Sumner's sociology as "an extrapolation of the
historical vision imbedded in classical economics." Sumner's theory
of social evolution with its grounding on the laws of classical
economics is outlined in Ross 1991, pp. 86-88; and Fine 1976, pp.
81-91.
[15] This objectivist definition was a retreat from
the praxeological definition of the political economy given by Perry
(1891, p. 61): the "Science of Selling and Buying."
[16] On Walker's tortured attempt to come to terms
with the historicist critique of classical economics, see Ross 1991,
pp. 80-85.
[17] This paragraph and the next draw on the following
sources: Seligman 1967; Coats 1960; Fine 1976, pp. 199-251; and Ross
191, pp. 98-122.
[18] For a brief explanation of the decline of the
pure Austro-marginalist tradition in the United States, see Salerno
1999, p. 47, 52.
[19] This was presumably especially the case with
French because no graduate degrees were awarded in France and,
relative to Germany, fewer American economists pursued postgraduate
study in there (Parrish 1967, pp. 13-16).
[20] See Schumpeter 1968, p. 856, n. 3 on the
originality and international influence of this book.
[21] Haney (1949, p. 834) states that Cossa calls
Roscher his "revered master" but does not provide the source of the
quotation.
[22] For more details about the ensuing controversy in
Italy between the two schools from economists associated with the
new school: see Rabbeno 1891; Loria 1891; Loria 1900; and Loria
1926.
[23] On Laveleye see: Cossa 1893, pp. 394-95;
Schumpeter 1968; Pribram 1983, p. 223.
[24] The second part of the "doctrine" is not
proclaimed by any liberal economist except perhaps Bastiat in some
of his polemical flourishes. Even Guyot (1892, p. 19), acknowledged
as one of the most unyielding proponents of laissez faire
among the liberal economists — and far more so than Bastiat —
criticized Bastiat's lapses from value-free science in making such a
claim and referred to him as "a disciple of Pangloss."
[25] On the book's popularity, see Schumpeter 1968, p.
843; Samuelson 1970, pp. 283-85; and Roll 1953, p. 11.
[26] See the references to these authors and their
books in Schumpeter 1968); Haney 1949; and Roll 1953.
[27] On Baudin as one of the younger "French
Liberalists" see Haney 1949, p. 850; on Baudin's activities with the
Mont Pelerin Society, see the references in Hartwell 1995.
[28] On Einaudi, see Haney 1949, p. 839; Mai 1975, p.
78; and the references in Hartwell 1995.
[29] On Bresciani-Turroni, see Mai 1975, p. 34; Haney
1949, pp. 842-43; and the references in Hartwell 1975. You can receive the Mises Daily Article in your
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