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Bastiat and the French School of Laissez-Faire

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Bastiat and the French School of Laissez-Faire
Author(s)Liggio, Leonard
AbstractFrederic Bastiat came on to the economic scene in 1844 and died in 1850. He filled the pages with his analyses of economic relations and the effects of government plunder, regulation and transfers. He fulfilled the first character of a scientist, he was undeterred. Before his writings he had had a quarter century of study of economics. He immersed himself in the major economic writings of the discipline. The French economists, Cantillon, Quesnay, Turgot, Dupont, Condorcet, Condillac, Say, Destutt de Tracy, some of them precursors of Adam Smith, had been the leaders in the science of economics. The two leading disciples of Say, Charles Dunoyer and Charles Comte, had edited the major Liberal periodical, le T3-Censeur europeen, from which Bastiat drew his thinking. Bastiat, like Say and Destutt de Tracy, was translated and published in the United States. Bastiat has had his greatest impact during the second half of the twentieth century on American public opinion.
IssueNo2003
Pages495-506
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceJournal des Economistes et des Etudes Humaines
VolumeNo11
PubDateJune-September2003
ISBN_ISSN1145-6396
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