mercantilism
From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
|
Date: 2008
mercantilism , economic system of the major trading nations during the 16th, 17th, and 18th cent., based on the premise that national wealth and power were best served by increasing exports and collecting precious metals in return. It superseded the medieval feudal organization in Western Europe, especially in Holland, France, and England. The period 1500-1800 was one of religious and commercial wars, and large revenues were needed to maintain armies and pay the growing costs of civil government. Mercantilist nations were impressed by the fact that the precious metals, especially gold, were in universal demand as the ready means of obtaining other commodities; hence they tended to identify money with wealth. As the best means of acquiring bullion, foreign trade was favored above domestic trade, and manufacturing or processing, which provided the goods for foreign trade, was favored at the expense of the extractive industries (e.g., agriculture). State action, an essential feature of the mercantile system, was used to accomplish its purposes. Under a mercantilist policy a nation sought to sell more than it bought so as to accumulate bullion. Besides bullion, raw materials for domestic manufacturers were also sought, and duties were levied on the importation of such goods in order to provide revenue for the government. The state exercised much control over economic life, chiefly through corporations and trading companies. Production was carefully regulated with the object of securing goods of high quality and low cost, thus enabling the nation to hold its place in foreign markets. Treaties were made to obtain exclusive trading privileges, and the commerce of colonies was exploited for the benefit of the mother country. In England mercantilist policies were effective in creating a skilled industrial population and a large shipping industry. Through a series of Navigation Acts England finally destroyed the commerce of Holland, its chief rival. As the classical economists were later to point out, however, even a successful mercantilist policy was not likely to be beneficial, because it produced an oversupply of money and, with it, serious inflation. Mercantilist ideas did not decline until the coming of the Industrial Revolution and of laissez-faire . Henry VIII, Elizabeth I, and Oliver Cromwell conformed their policies to mercantilism. In France its chief exponent was Jean Baptiste Colbert .
Bibliography: See J. W. Horrocks, A Short History of Mercantilism (1925); D. C. Coleman, ed., Revisions in Mercantilism (1969); R. B. Ekelund, Jr., and R. D. Tollison, Mercantilists as a Rent-Seeking Society (1982); J. C. Miller, Way of Death: Merchant Capitalism and the Angolan Slave Trade (1988).
Author not available, MERCANTILISM.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
For permission to reuse this article, contact Copyright Clearance Center.
Related articles from HighBeam Research:
|
Freeing the market: by abandoning the regulations of mercantilism, England became an economic powerhouse. Both the industrialists and the great masses benefited.(History--Struggle For Freedom)
The New American; 8/11/2003; Hoar, William P.; 4271 words;
Mercantilism was the economic system that dominated Western Europe ... the byword of the day. Like contemporary Marxism, mercantilism held that there is an irreconcilable conflict of interests ... others ... . It was the essence of the teachings of Mercantilism ... . Colonies such as those Great Britain had in ...
|
|
Sick Economies: Drama, Mercantilism, and Disease in Shakespeare's England.(Book Review)
Shakespeare Studies; 1/1/2005; Rowe, Katherine; 1115 words;
Sick Economies: Drama, Mercantilism, and Disease in Shakespeare's ... early English economic thought, mercantilism, which has remained offstage during ... economic practice. Approaching mercantilism as an ongoing debate about the ...
|
|
Medieval economics revisited: protectionism grew out of mercantile economics 500 years ago. Although long discredited, ailing industries in the US and Europe are often rescued by mercantilism.(EBF HISTORY LESSON)
European Business Forum; 9/22/2004; Witzel, Morgen; 2417 words;
... feature of the economic philosophy known as mercantilism. The term 'mercantilism' is something of a misnomer, as it was coined ... mid-18th Century. The central features of mercantilism were: (1) the creation of a favourable balance ...
|
|
The Rise of Commercial Empires: England and The Netherlands in the Age of Mercantilism, 1650-1770
Business History Review; 10/1/2003; van Ittersum, Martine Julia; 1325 words;
... Commercial Empires: England and The Netherlands in the Age of Mercantilism, 1650-1770. By David Ormrod. Cambridge: Cambridge University ... Index, notes, bibliography, appendix, illustrations, maps, tables. Cloth, $75.00. ISBN 0-521-81926-1. Reviewed ... influence economic policy in either country? Was British ...
|
|
Mercantilism revisited: the dismal science.
The New Leader; 10/7/1985; Brockway, George P.; 1627 words;
... Braudel makes some observations about mercantilism, and they have given me furiously to ... slightest attention in school knows that mercantilism was a bad idea. It bled the colonies ... Maynard Keynes includes some Notes on Mercantilism ... He observes that a favorable balance ...
|
|
Goodbye, Free Trade; Hello, Mercantilism.(Next 2008; WORLD ECONOMICS)
Newsweek; 1/7/2008; Samuelson, Robert J.; 850 words;
... Chavez. Answer: they all reflect the new mercantilism. It's a significant and ominous development ... practiced until the mid- 19th century, mercantilism aimed to do just that. It was an economic ... which financed armies and navies. But mercantilism fell into disfavor as a way to promote ...
|
|
Did Europe's mercantilist empires pay? (effect of mercantilism on the economic growth of Western Europe)
History Today; 3/1/1996; O'Brien, Patrick; 5422 words;
... periodised into four phases: the long era of mercantilism, 1492-1846; the brief period of free ... which lasted down to the Great War; neo-mercantilism which marked the inter-war years; and ... Spanish hands. French, Dutch and English mercantilism was no different in driving for national ...
|
|
British mercantilism and crop controls in the tobacco colonies: a study of rent-seeking costs.
The Cato Journal; 1/1/2003; Pecquet, Gary M.; 7208 words;
... that can be learned from the study of mercantilism and the colonial crop controls to help ... Tollison (1981) have analyzed British mercantilism as a rent-seeking society. (1) Protectionist ... favors, but they ignored the impact of mercantilism and the role of rent seeking in the colonies ... uncontested ...
|
|
The Rise of Commercial Empires: England and the Netherlands in the Age of Mercantilism, 1650-1770.(Book Review)
Canadian Journal of History; 4/1/2005; Davids, Karel; 1110 words;
The Rise of Commercial Empires: England and the Netherlands in the Age of Mercantilism, 1650-1770, by David Ormrod. Cambridge Studies in Modern Economic History. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2003. xvii, 400 ...
|
|
Mercantilism and the green energy debate
The Boston Globe; 3/3/2008; Edward N.Krapels; 713 words;
... undermined by the emergence of environmental mercantilism - actions by individual states to subsidize ... yet, we may not do it. Environmental mercantilism may stifle a rational, regional approach ... energy and environmental policies. This mercantilism risks putting into motion a modern ...
|
|
S. African president urges West to abandon neo-mercantilism, XINHUA
Xinhua (China); 6/10/2004; 369 words;
... www.xinhua.org JOHANNESBURG, June 10 (Xinhua) -- South African President Thabo Mbeki has urged the West to abandon neo-mercantilism, hoarding and protectionism . In an article carried on South African newspaper Thisday on Thursday, he said "in the public ...
|
|
From Mercantilism to The Wealth of Nations.(18th-century international trade)
World and I; 5/1/1999; Marshall, Michael; 4072 words;
... labeled, most notably by Adam Smith, mercantilism. This was the practice of imperial ... manufactures that came to be known as mercantilism began to emerge. The context in which ... by other means. Colbert and French Mercantilism Advocates of free trade in the late ...
|
|
UK seeks to end deadlock on trade; BUSINESS ANALYSIS White Paper attacks `macho mercantilism' and details plan to end farm subsidies for rich.(Business)
The Independent (London, England); 7/7/2004; Thornton, Philip; 1125 words;
... for European farmers and attacked the trend towards protectionism under the Bush administration. She condemned the macho mercantilism of countries that aimed solely to see what they could get out of a trade round and implicitly blamed the EU for the failure ...
|
|
Africans and the Industrial Revolution in England: A Study in International Trade and Economic Development/The Rise of Commercial Empires: England and the Netherlands in the Age of Mercantilism, 1650-1770
The Journal of Southern History; 5/1/2004; Marler, Scott P; 338 words;
... the broad outlines of Williams's thesis. In his The Rise of Commercial Empires: England and the Netherlands in the Age of Mercantilism, 1650-1770 (Cambridge and other cities: Cambridge University Press, 2003. Cambridge Studies in Modern Economic History. Pp ...
|
|
Two recent releases show how studies of the Atlantic World are again being enriched by insights from economic historians.(Book Notes)(Africans and the Industrial Revolution in England: A Study in International Trade and Economic Development)(The Rise of Commercial Empires: England and the Netherlands in the Age of Mercantilism, 1650-1770)(Book Review)
Journal of Southern History; 5/1/2004; Marler, Scott P.; 329 words;
... the broad outlines of Williams's thesis. In his The Rise of Commercial Empires: England and the Netherlands in the Age of Mercantilism, 1650-1770 (Cambridge and other cities: Cambridge University Press, 2003. Cambridge Studies in Modern Economic History. Pp ...
|
See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.
Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:
The money economy: mercantilism, classical economics and Keynes' general theory.(Special Invited Issue: Money, Trust, Speculation and Social Justice)(Part 2: Trust and Money)
The American Journal of Economics and Sociology; 10/1/1998; Steele, G.R.; 5157 words;
|
The merchant and Mr. Reagan: the case of a half-classical trade policy. (The Free Trade Debate).
The American Journal of Economics and Sociology; 7/1/2003; Karstensson, Lewis; 5412 words;
|
(book reviews)
The Historian; 3/22/1998; Baxter, Douglas Clark; 618 words;
|
(book review)
The Historian; 3/22/2000; Platt, Brian; 602 words;
|
Trading places.(Business & Economics)
The National Interest; 3/22/2005; Drucker, Peter F.; 3653 words;
|
Neomercantilism is there a case for tariffs?
National Review; 4/6/1984; Hawkins, William R. Galbraith, John Kenneth Friedman, Milton; 7917 words;
|
Manufacturing Revolution: The Intellectual Origins of Early American Industry.(Book Review)
The Historian; 6/22/2005; Cain, Louis P.; 600 words;
|
Now's the time to open Europe to U.S. products... says NATA's Ed Spievack.
Communications News; 10/1/1990; 354 words;
|
Eighteenth-Century American Utopianism: From the Potential to the Probable.(Critical Essay)
Utopian Studies; 3/22/2000; SEGAL, HOWARD P.; 4582 words;
|
Mercantilists and classicals: insights from doctrinal history.
Economic Quarterly; 3/22/1999; Humphrey, Thomas M.; 12785 words;
|
|
|