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    Nehemiah Grew and England's Economic Development: The Means of a Most Ample Increase of the Wealth and Strength of England, 1706-7

    Nehemiah Grew and England's Economic Development by Hoppit, Julian;

    The Means of a Most Ample Increase of the Wealth and Strength of England, 1706-7

    Series: Records of Social and Economic History; 47;

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    Estimated delivery time: In stock at the publisher, but not at Prospero's office. Delivery time approx. 3-5 weeks.
    Not in stock at Prospero.

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP Oxford
    • Date of Publication 21 June 2012

    • ISBN 9780197264959
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages180 pages
    • Size 241x164x17 mm
    • Weight 440 g
    • Language English
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    Short description:

    The book is a scholarly edition of a manuscript written in about 1706 which has not previously been published. The main text considers England's economic potential, and puts forward ways in which that potential could be maximized.

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    Long description:

    This edition publishes for the first time a little-known work on improving England's economy, written around 1706 and presented to Queen Anne on the eve of the parliamentary Union of England and Scotland. As such it contributed to a growing body of writing about managing the economy in Britain. That the work has often been overlooked is partly because its author, Nehemiah Grew, is best known as a botanist and as a medic. But his distinctive voice and decided views warrant wider appreciation. In part his unusual contribution to economic literature arose from his involvement in the early Royal Society, founded in 1660, informing as it did his view of England's material potential and how it might best be exploited. But he was also suspicious of people's motivations and was certain that the state had to regulate lives to a significant degree if society was to be as productive as possible. If Grew's religious beliefs were important here, it is also clear that he had read amongst contemporary writings on economic matters. Certainly, his work ranges widely, from natural resources to human capital, agriculture to industry, internal trade to overseas commerce. Sir William Petty was an especially important influence upon him, though he eschewed Petty's methodological emphasis upon 'political arithmetic'. Indeed, Grew's assumptions and conclusions prove very questionable when their statistical implications are worked through. Nonetheless, the work reminds us of the importance of blind alleys and false dawns in the history of early 'political economy'.

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