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This intellectual biography aims to present a new approach to John Law (1671-1729), one that shows him as a significant economic theorist with a vision.
List of contents
- 1: Introduction
- 2: Law's Writing and his Critics
- 3: Law's Background
- 4: Duelling Beaux
- 5: The 'Gambling' Banker
- 6: Metamorphosis: John Law the Economist
- 7: The Edinburgh Environment in 1705
- 8: Money and Trade
- 9: The Conceptualization of the System
- 10: France 1714-1715
- 11: The Establishment of the General Bank
- 12: The Establishment of the Company of the West
- 13: The Slow Development of the System
- 14: The Rise and Rise of the Mississippi Company, 1719
- 15: A Specie-less France, 1720
- 16: The Lull before the Storm
- 17: The Measures of 21 May 1720
- 18: Law the Improviser
- 19: Requiem for the Banknote
- 20: The Possibility of a Recall to France
- 21: Death in Venice
- Notes
- Bibliography
About the author
Antoin E. Murphy was a Professor of Economics at Trinity College Dublin, University of Dublin. He was a visiting scholar at the Center for International Affairs at Harvard, the Institut d'Etude Demographiques in Paris, the Hoover Institution and the Department of Economics at Stanford University. His special interests are in macroeconomics, monetary economics, and the history of monetary thought. He was one of the joint managing editors of the European History of Economic Thought.
Summary
John Law (1671-1729) left a remarkable legacy of economic concepts from a time when economic conceptualization was very much at an embryonic stage. Yet he is best known—and generally dismissed—today as a rake, duellist, and gambler. This intellectual biography offers a new approach to Law, one that shows him to have been a significant economic theorist with a vision that he attempted to implement as policy in early-eighteenth-century Europe.
Law's style, marked by a clarity and use of modern terminology, stands out starkly against the turgid prose of many of his contemporaries. His vision of a monetary and financial system was certainly one of a later age, for Law believed in an economy of banknotes and credit where specie had no role to play. Ultimately Law failed as a policy-maker, in part because of the entrenchment of the financiers and their aristocratic backers and in part because of theoretical flaws in his vision. His struggle for power took place against the background of Europe's first major stock boom and collapse. The collapse of the Mississippi System, which he had conceived, and the South Sea Bubble led to a lasting impression of Law as a failure. It is this impression that Antoin Murphy seeks to dispel.
Additional text
Adds usefully to the study of Law ... a rational sympathetic treatment of Law's efforts to convert the French financial system from specie to paper notes ... One of this book's many virtues is a careful analysis of the documents brought together by Paul Harsin in the three volumes of what he called Law's Oeuvres completes ... The result of this critical scholarship is an impressive documentation ... this is a fine addition to the subject as a whole and deserves to be widely read.