The French Liberal School

The "French Liberal School" is how we shall term the 19th Century
French economists which followed the tradition, both in politics and economics,
set by the theorist Jean-Baptiste Say. In
economics, this meant pursuing a loose sort of Classical
School economics while maintaining a prominent role for utility and
demand. They also eschewed most of the Classicals' pessimistic stories
about the iron law of wages, the inexorable rise of rents, the wage-profit
trade-off, unemployment by mechanization, general gluts, etc., preferring
instead to emphasize the happier "harmonies" between the classes and
the infallibility of a self-regulating system of markets. Politically,
that meant upholding a radical laissez-faire line. In sum, they can be considered the French counterparts
of the British "Manchester School" with a
dash of better theory and a good deal of optimism. Karl Marx
would later deride them as the "vulgar" economists.
French liberalism can trace its roots to the Enlightenment
philosophers and economists, notably the Physiocrats, Turgot
and Condillac. After the French
Revolution of 1789, a group of philosophers and economists tried to re-launch
the liberal spirit of the Enlightenment in a republican France that was still
suspicious of any intellectual relics of the Ancien regime. These
were known as the the idéologues.
Leading the fray was Destutt de
Tracy and Jean-Baptiste Say. The
journal La Décade philosophique was their principal organ.
The rise of the imperial regime of Napoleon Bonaparte, who sought to create a
"war economy" buffeted by protectionism and regulation, led to the
suppression of the idéologues. However, after 1815, the restored
Bourbon rulers showered the remnants of the liberals with honors and dignities,
initiating the long tradition of deep intimacy between liberals and the
establishment. However, many liberals (such as Charles Dunoyer
and Charles Comte) were discontented with the absolutist
tendencies of the Bourbons and supported the 1830 July Revolution. Their
liberals' greatest competitors were Sismondi
and the French socialists. The amorphous
doctrines of Saint-Simon hovered
between the two camps.
Around the mid-19th Century, the French liberal banner was carried by a group
of academic and writers which we shall refer to as the journalistes
(they were also known as the laissez-faire ultras or the Paris Group).
The central figures in this movement include Michel Chevalier,
Jean-Gustave Courcelle-Seneuil and Gustave de
Molinari. Their advocacy of laissez-faire economic policy was
even more extreme than their Anglo-Saxon
counterparts and their influence on government policy was unmatched anywhere
else. Only in the battle for the hearts and minds of
the French population did their socialist rivals register any success, but even that quickly waned after the debacle of
1848 and the formation of the Second Empire under Napoleon III. . It was during this time that popular laissez-faire
satirist Frédéric Bastiat had his greatest hits.
In order to ensure that economics of any other persuasion could not take root
in France, the orthodox liberals exercised an iron grip over the economics profession. In
1842, they founded the Société d'Économie Politique and the
highly-influential Journal des économistes. They also controlled
the publishing house of Guillaumin, which produced Coquelin's famous Dictionnaire
d'économie politique (1852), restating economic debates from a liberal
slant.
Throughout the Second Empire, most positions in French universities were filled by orthodox liberals.
The prestigious research perch at the Collège de
France remained in their hands from its creation in 1831 until the next century
-- passing from J.B. Say to Rossi
to Chevalier to Leroy-Beaulieu.
They also controlled the economics section of the all-powerful Institut de
France, the academy of sciences that looms over so much of French intellectual
life.
We should also note that already by the 1830s, the French Liberal School had
jettisoned serious economic theory. Most of the journalistes
focused on the art of economic policy, allowing a loose sort
"supply-and-demand" logic to guide their thinking without adhering to any specific
foundations. Serious economic theory -- especially of the
mathematical kind -- was pursued by lone figures such as Augustin Cournot
and Auguste Walras and engineers like
Jules Dupuit. But the liberal school could not tolerate this on methodological
grounds. Their
concerted assault on Cournot and Walras (père and fils) crushed
these men and drove their works into the underground. The engineers
were
spared only because they were safely sheltered by the grandes écoles, the only
academic institutions not controlled by the orthodox liberals.
The liberals' fall from grace came slowly after 1878, when chairs in political economy
were established in law faculties throughout France.
These were filled mostly by members of the French
Historical School. Thereafter, France veered in an empirical direction
in its economics and a corporatist direction in its policy
proposals. The Journal des economistes's monopoly was broken
in 1887 by the considerably more pluralist
Revue d'économie politique.
The Philosophes: Liberals of the French Enlightenment
- Anne-Robert Jacques Turgot,
1727-1781
- Marie Jean Antoine Nicolas de Caritat, Marquis de Condorcet, 1743-1794.
The Idéologues: Republican
Liberals
-
Jean-Baptiste Say,
1767-1832.
Restoration Liberals
-
François-Charles-Louis Comte,
1782-1837 - (1),
(2)
- De l'impossibilité d'établir un gouvernement consitutionnel sous
un chef militaire, 1815
- Des garanties offertes aux capitaux et autres genres de propriétés par les procédés de chambres législatives,
1826
- Histoire de la garde nationale de Paris, 1827
- Traité de législation, 1827
- Traité de la Propriété,
1834
- Son-in-law of Say, Anti-Bourbon
liberal journalist, founder and editor of Le Censeur with Charles
Dunoyer.
- Horace Émile Say,
1794-1860
- Pelegrino Rossi,
1787-1848 - (1), (2)
- Traité de droit pénal, 1829
- Cours d'économie politique, Vol.
1, Vol.
2, Vol.
3, Vol.
4, 1840-54.
- Italian-born Swiss legal scholar, statesman and liberal economist. In
1832, Succeeded J.B. Say at Collège
de France. Left in 1845 to become Ambassador to Rome and later
Prime Minister of the Papal States. Assassinated by Roman
republicans.
The Journalistes: Enthroned Liberals
of the Second Empire
- Claude Frédéric Bastiat,
1801-1850.
-
Jean-Gustave Courcelle-Seneuil, 1813-92. - (1),
(2)
- Lettres a Edouard
- Le Credit et le Banque, 1840
- Traité théorique et pratique des opérations de banque, 1853
- Traité théorique et pratique d'entreprises industrielles,
comerciales et agricoles, 1854
- Examen Comparativo de la Tarifa y Legislación Aduanera de Chile,
1856
- Traité théoretique et pratique d'économie politique, 1858
- La Banque libre, 1867
- Protection et libre-échange,
1879
- La Societé Moderne, 1892
- Parisian lawyer, businessman, politician, journalist and free trade
economist. He was an editor of the influential Journal des économistes.
His most prominent theoretical tract was his 1858 Traité,
heavily influenced by Say, although
his handbooks on banking (1853) and management (1854) were more
successful. He was for a time a professor at the University of Chile and
consultant to the Chilean government. He helped implement a
free-banking regime in Chile in 1860, which would last for the next
half-century.
- Joseph Clement Garnier,
1813-1881- (1)
- Cours déconomie industrielle, 1836-39, Vol.
1, Vol.
2, Vol.
3
- Éléments d'économie politique, 1845
- Éléments de statistique
- Sur
lassociation, léconomie politique et la misère, 1846
- Richard Cobden, les liguers de la ligue, 1846
- Congrès
des amis de la paix universelle réuni à Paris en 1849 , 1850
- De principe de la population, 1857
- Éléments de finances, 1858 (1862 ed. titled Traite de
finances)
- Dictionnaire
politique, 1860
- "Notice
sur M. Guillaumin, fondateur du Journal des économistes", 1865
- Premières notions
d'économie politique sociale ou industrielle, 1875 (4th ed.)
- Traité d'économie politique sociale ou industrielle,
1875 (rev. version of 1845)
- Note bibliographique sur les travaux et les publications de M. Joseph Garnier
- Maurice Block, 1816-1901.
- Dictionnaire de l'administration française, Vol.
1, Vol.
2, 1877
- Les progrès de la science économique depuis Adam Smith : révision des doctrines économiques
(Vol.
1, Vol.
2), 1890.
- Yves Guyot, 1843-1928. - (1)
- Nos préjugés politiques,
1872
- L'organisation municipale de Paris et de Londres, 1883
- Le
boulangisme, 1888
- La tyrannie socialiste, 1893
- Les principes de 89 et le socialisme,
1894
- Les préjugés socialistes. 1895
- La propriété, origine et évolution. Thèse communiste par Paul
Lafargue. Réfutation par Yves Guyot, 1895.
- La comédie socialiste, 1897
- L'affaire
Dreyfus, 1899
- Editor, Dictionnaire du commerce de l'industrie et de la banque,
Vol.
1, Vol.
2, with A. Raffalovich, 1901
- Les conflits du travail et leur solution, 1903
- Sophismes socialistes et faits économiques, 1908
- La crise américaine : ses effets et ses causes, 1908
- Le commerce et les
commerçants, 1909
- L'industrie et les industriels,
1914
- Paul Leroy-Beaulieu,
1843-1916. - (1)
- L'état moral et intellectual des classes ouvrieres, 1868
- Le
travail des femmes au XIVe siècle, 1873
- Traité de la science des finances, Vol.
1, Vol.
2, 1877 - review
- Essai
sur la répartition de richesses, 1881
- De la colonisation chez les peuples modernes,
1882
- Le
collectivisme: examen critique du nouveau socialisme, 1884
- L'état moderne et ses fonctions, 1889
- Traité théoretique et pratique d'économie politique, 1895.
- La
question de la population, 1913 - review
- Son-in-law of Michael Chevalier
and successor to his chair at the Collège de France. Founder of the Economiste
français. Leroy-Beaulieu is best known for his "organic"
theory of the State, Disputed Ricardian theory of rent.
Other Continental Liberals
-
Karl Heinrich Rau, 1792-1870.
- Eugen Karl Dühring
, 1833-1921.
- Carey's Umwalzung der Volkswirtschaftslehre und Socialwissenschaft, 1865.
- Capital and Labor, 1865.
- Kritische Grundlegung der Volkswirtschaftslehre, 1866.
- Critical History of Economics and Socialism, 1871.
- Die Judenfrage als Frage der Rassenschadlichkeit fur Existenz, Sitte und Kultur der
Volker, 1881.
- Blind German economist and renaissance man. An espouser of laissez-faire
optimism in explaining the harmonies of the classes. Like Carey,
Dühring was heavily influence by List and combined
external protectionism with internal free enterprise. Unfortunately, his work is
overshadowed by his legacy as a promoter of Anti-Semitic theories -- e.g.
Dühring (1881) deplored Christianity for introducing Jewish "febrility" into the Aryan
mind. At any rate, Dühring's fame may ultimately rest on his being the target of the
polemical 1878 tract by Friedrich Engels, Anti-Dühring.
Resources on the French Liberal School
- "Review
of Louis B. Say's Political Economy", 1823, NAR
- Dictionnaire de l'économie politique (Volume
1, Volume
2 ) of Charles Coquelin, 1852.
- Nouveau dictionnaire d'économie politique (Volume1,
Volume
2, Suppl.)
by Léon Say and Joseph Chailley, 1900
- Bulletin de la Société d'économie politique
1888-1915, archived at Gallica
- Economie politique ou Principes de la science des richesses
by Joseph Droz, 1829
- Etudes d'économie politique et de statistique
by Michel Raymond Wolowski, 1848
- Les économistes, les socialistes et le christianisme
by Charles Périn, 1849
- Les doctrines économiques depuis un siècle
by Charles Périn, 1880
- Traité d'économie
sociale ou L'économie politique coordonnée au point de vue du progrès
by M. Auguste Ott, 1851
- Mélanges d'économie politique et de finances, Vol. 1, Vol.
2 by Léon Faucher, 1856
- Curiosités de l'économie politique
by Louis Louvet, 1861
- Les économistes appréciés ou Nécessité de la protection : Cobden, Michel Chevalier, Carey, Du
Mesnil-Marigny by P.-O. Protin, 1862
- Les finances et la politique : de l'influence des institutions politiques et de la législation financière sur
la fortune publique by Casimir Périer, 1863
- Economie politique populaire
by Henri Baudrillart, 1869
- Recherches sur les causes de l'indigence,
by Ambroise Clément, 1846.
- Des Nouvelles idées de réforme industrielle et en particulier du projet d'organisation du travail de M.
Louis Blanc by Ambroise Clément, 1848.
- Système de crédit hypothécaire,
by Ambroise Clément, 1848
- Le Bon Sens dans les doctrines morales et politiques, ou Application de la méthode expérimentale à la
philosophie, à la morale, à l'économie politique et à la
politique, Vol. 1, Vol.
2, by Ambroise Clément, 1878
- Les conditions du bonheur et de la force pour les peuples et les individus
by Adolphe Coste, 1879
- Hygiène sociale contre le paupérisme,
by Adolphe Coste, 1882.
- Le problème monétaire et la distribution de la richesse
by Théodore Mannequin, 1879
- Nouvel exposé d'économie politique et de physiologie sociale
by Adolphe Coste, 1889
- Histoire et doctrines économiques de l'Angleterre, Vol.
1, Vol.
2 by W. J. Ashley, 1900 French transl.
- Les divers courants de l'économie politique:
L'Economie libérale at Gallica.
- "The Neglect
of the French Liberal School in Anglo-Saxon Economics: A Critique of
Received Explanations", by Joseph T. Salerno, 1988, Review of
Austrian Econ
- "The
Social Analysis of Three Early 19th century French liberals: Say, Comte, and Dunoyer"
by Mark Weinburg, 1978, JLS
- "Comment
on the French Liberal School" by Joseph T. Salerno, 1978, JLS
- "Richard Cantillon and the French Economists: Distinctive French
Contributions to J.B. Say", by Leonard P. Liggio, 1983, JLS
- "The Influence of Cantillon's Essai on the Methodology of
J.B. Say: A Comment on Liggio" by Joseph T. Salerno, 1983, JLS
- "Class Analysis, Slavery and the Industrial Theory of History in French Liberal Thought, 1814-1830: The Radical Liberalism of Charles Comte and Charles Dunoyer"
by David Hart
- "La contribution des auteurs français du 19ème siècle à la controverses sur les valeurs et conflits culturels"
by Ralph Raico
- "Les libéraux français du 19ème siècle: une oeuvre injustement oubliée"
by Ralph Raico
- "The
19th Century French Radical Liberal Tradition: Jean-Baptiste Say, Charles
Comte, Charles Dunoyer and Gustave de Molinari" by David Hart
- French
Liberal Economists and the Dictionnaire de l'economie politique
by David Hart
- Centre de Recherche en Théorie Economique
Jean-Baptiste Say at Université Paris Dauphine
- History
of the Collège de France
- "La libre concurrence bancaire en France (1796-1803)"
by Philippe Nataf
- Ouvrages hostiles au socialisme et autres militantismes sociaux,
19th C. bibliography by Marc Angenot
- Une histoire des théories du
management en France de 1800 à 1940 by Bernard Girard
- "La modernité de la pensée libérale"
by Alain Madelin
- French
Liberalism -- Online Articles (mostly from Journal of Libertarian
Studies)
- French Libertarian Website by
Patrick Madrolle
- German Neoliberalismus.com