西斯蒙第是工业化的“斯密式”批评者吗?

Was Sismondi a “Smithian” Critic of Industrialization?

History of Political Economy · 2020
被引 1
人大 A-ABS 2

中文导读

重新审视西斯蒙第的经济著作,特别是他对工业化的批评,强调其自称受亚当·斯密影响,并论证其理论根植于不断演变的“新斯密主义”。

Abstract

The article recasts the economic writings of Jean Charles Léonard Simonde de Sismondi, and his critique of industrialization in particular, in light of Sismondi’s self-proclaimed indebtedness to Adam Smith. Sismondi’s economic thought was shaped by his opposition to Napoleon’s protectionist economic policies and took the form of a critique of monopolies made in the name of the common good. After Waterloo and the collapse of the empire, Sismondi developed a critique of the British school of political economy and its corresponding model of economic development through the generalization of wage labor, mechanization, and large-scale farming. In his last years, during the early 1830s, Sismondi took aim at “industrialism” itself, a term which for him grouped together all those contemporary economic theories asserting that society should be organized by and for production exclusively. However, throughout his career as an economist, in developing these opinions Sismondi claimed to be faithful to Adam Smith’s understanding of what political economy should be. This article seeks to demonstrate that Sismondi’s theoretical production was deeply rooted in his evolving “neo-Smithianism.”

西斯蒙第亚当·斯密工业化批判新斯密主义