19世纪法国自由主义经济学家与女性工作:工业化的阴暗面

Nineteenth-Century French Liberal Economists and Women's Work: The Dark Side of Industrialization

History of Political Economy · 2024
被引 0
人大 A-ABS 2

中文导读

重构了19世纪法国自由主义经济学家关于女性问题的辩论,揭示其乐观主义未延伸至女性状况,并分析他们解释女性困境时面临的挑战。

Abstract

Abstract This article reconstructs the debates on the woman question in which nineteenth-century French liberal economists participated: it aims at showing that their analysis contradicted their conviction that, in Bastiat's words, “men's interests, when left to themselves, tend to . . . work together for progress and the general good.” Indeed, French liberals are usually labeled optimistic: they denounced the pessimistic and fatalist character of the “English school of economics” based on Ricardo's rent theory and Malthus's law of population. On the contrary, they attempted to prove that economic development improved the situation of all, especially that of workers. However, their optimism did not extend to their analysis of the situation of women: most of them recognized that women were not benefiting from the general improvement in terms of wages, labor conditions, and social mobility. The article then shows that the reasons they gave to explain the bad situation of women present many challenges, linked respectively to the issue of state intervention and wage theory. Moreover, it is unlikely that the only solution they proposed for improving it, that is, the promotion of female education, could have worked.

世纪法国自由主义经济学家女性工作工业化阴暗面女性教育