An Analysis of Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations
An Analysis of Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations
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Sign in or Sign up!- Release Date: 15/07/2017
- Barcode: 9781912127085
- Genre: Society & Culture
- Sub-Genre: Politics & Government

An Analysis of Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations
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200 years after it was written, Adam Smith published The Wealth of Nations is still debated by governments internationally. Smith argued that ‘mercantilism’—the theory that the national economy exists solely to strengthen the government, thus the government should regulate the economy—was wrong. Adam Smith’s 1776 Inquiry into The Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations – more often known simply as The Wealth of Nations – is one of the most important books in modern intellectual history. Considered one of the fundamental works of classical economics, it is also a prime example of the enduring power of good reasoning, and the ability of reasoning to drive critical thinking forward. Adam Smith was attempting to answer two complex questions: where does a nation’s wealth come from, and what can governments do to increase it most efficiently? At the time, perhaps the most widely accepted theory, mercantilism, argued that a nation’s wealth was literally the amount of gold and silver it held in reserve. Smith, meanwhile, weighed the evidence and came to a different conclusion: a nation’s wealth, he argued, lay in its ability to encourage economic activity, largely without government interference. Underlying this radical redefinition was the revolutionary concept that powered Smith’s reasoning and which continues to exert a vast influence on economic thought: the idea that markets are self-regulating. Pitting his arguments against those of his predecessors, Smith carefully and persuasively reasoned out a strong case for free markets that reshaped government economic policies in the 19th-century and continues to shape global prosperity today.
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