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Mercantilism
1. Introduction to Mercantilism 
2. Historical Background of Mercantilism 
3. Main Points of Mercantilism 
4. Early Writers 
5. Mercantilist Thinkers 
6. Conclusion
1. Introduction to Mercantilism 
What is Mercantilism? 
 the theory that a country’s power depended 
mainly on its wealth to build strong navies and 
purchase vital trade goods.
What is Mercantilism? 
Mercantilism had no systematic, 
comprehensive, consistent treatise, no 
leader, common method, or theory. 
 Each “mercantilist" sought advantage 
for a specific, trade, merchant, joint-stock 
company or social group. 
 "Protectionism" is often seen as a 
primary characteristic of Mercantilism.
What is Mercantilism? 
 The primary objective of Mercantilism 
was to increase the power of the nation 
state. 
 One of the important aspects of national 
power or strength was wealth that was 
equated with specie. 
 The states that followed a policy of 
mercantilism tended to see trade, 
colonialism and conquest as the primary 
ways of increasing wealth.
Mercantilism
When? 
 16th – 18th C 
 In Poland: 17th C
Where? 
Western Europe, particularly England and 
France
2. Historical Background 
of Mercantilism 
 Generally, Mercantilism is associated with the 
rise of the “Nation state.” 
 Feudal institutions were weakened by the 
increasing use of money and a greater reliance 
on exchange within the economy. 
 The Protestant Reformation weakened the role 
of the church and consequently the civil role of 
the state was expanded 
 There was a rise of Humanism (the concern for 
well-being of humans in the short term).
 The decline of feudalism was influenced by changes in 
technology 
 “enclosure movement” and the commercialization of 
agriculture 
 Increasing use of money in the economy reduced the role 
of barter and reciprocity, people wanted to sell or work for 
money 
 nailed horse shoe, harness, stirrup, horse collar, heavy 
plough 
 three-field system [1 field winter crop, 1 field spring crop, 
third lying fallow] extended area peasant could farm by 
1/8, 50% increase in output 
 rise of mechanical power [water, wind] used in textile and 
mining 
 urbanization
 rise of markets and fairs 
 gunpowder 
 improvements in navigation, shipping, 
transport 
 moveable type, (standardization, mass 
production and marketing of books in a 
variety of languages) 
 mechanical clocks, mechanisms, 
instruments, Increased skills of craftsmen 
who made machines
The Decline of Feudalism and 
the Plague 
 The "Black Death" of 1346-61 
 restricted trade 
 reduction in population 
 Increased production of wool; need 
industry and commerce to process and sell 
wool and textiles. 
 strengthening of guilds leads to an 
emphasis on trade
Reduction in Population 
 Population of England fell by about 1.5 million 
(out of a population of 3.5 to 5 million in 1346). 
 Result was more money per person but also 
more animals, land and goods per person, prices 
fell. 
 Labour shortage pushed wages and earnings up.
 Less people with increased agricultural 
production (some problems with harvests and 
animals dying, but on average diets improved. 
 Labour became more mobile, masters on feudal 
estates had to "hire" labour. This led to the rise 
of "free" labour. If you couldn't hire workers, 
then you rent the land to others. Small farms 
with limited labour shifted to pasture and sheep 
rather than tilling the soil.
Medieval fiction to circumvent anti-usury laws 
Lends at no interest 
Insures A in case B fails to repay 
Pays C interest rate for insurance 
Pays A-C costs 
• Effectively, a 
“different set of books” 
to disguise breaching 
the laws against usury 
B fails to repay A
16 
Medieval Breakdown 
 Feudal system imposed many imposts upon 
merchants/tradesmen/moneylenders; but social 
change went against feudalism: 
 Growth of specialist manufactures in towns: the 
guilds 
 Growth of specialist traders between nations: the 
Mercantilists 
 Revolt against religious strictures against 
merchants/lending, church hypocrisy 
 Religious revolts: beginnings of Protestantism 
bound up with growth of merchants/financiers 
 A new ideology/analysis struggled for 
dominance: Mercantilism
1500s 
 Rise of the nation-state 
 John Calvin (1509-1564): Prosperity is 
Piety 
 Nicolo Machiavelli (1469-1527) and “The 
Prince” 
 Separates the church and the state 
 Denies mankind’s desire for freedom 
 Charity has no role for the individual
1500s and 1600s 
 Elizabethan Poor Law of 1601 
 Invention of printing with movable type gave rise to 
economic literature written by lay people 
 Thomas Wilson (1525-81) wrote Discourse on Usury 
(1572) 
 Charles Dumoulin (Latinized as Molinaeus) wrote 
Treatise on Contracts and Usury (1546) 
 Denied that interest was forbidden by divine law 
 Suggested public regulation of lending and interest 
 Influx of gold and silver from the New World
Main Points of Mercantilism 
 Economics as applied statecraft 
 Promotion of National wealth and power 
 Importance of trade surpluses 
 Trade surplus leads to a net gold inflow, and 
thereby to greater national wealth and power 
 Analogy between nations and households 
 Encourage domestic production and exports, 
discourage imports
3. Main Points of Mercantilism 
 Economics as statecraft not analysis 
 Tendency to see gold and “treasure” as 
constituting national wealth 
 Emphasis on balance of trade surpluses 
 Emphasis on maximizing productivity and 
output 
 Trade as a zero sum game 
 Role of government in encouraging domestic 
manufacturing and exports while minimizing 
imports 
 Link between money supply and prices
Two Ways to Increase 
a Nations Wealth 
 obtain as much gold and 
silver as possible 
 establish a favorable 
balance of trade, in which 
it sold more goods than in 
bought
Mercantilism Explained 
 colonies existed for the benefit of the 
Mother Country 
 Source of Raw materials = cheap 
 shipped to M. C. to be turned into finished 
goods 
 Finished good shipped to Colony = 
expensive 
 profit goes to M. C. 
 Pass laws forbidding colonies from 
producing their own goods 
Mercantilism = unfair or unbalanced trade
Triangular Trade 
 Europeans transported manufactured 
goods to the west coast of Africa
Triangular Trade 
 Traders then exchanged these goods for captured 
Africans who were then sold in the Americas
Triangular Trade 
Merchants then bought sugar, 
coffee, and tobacco in the 
West Indies and sailed back 
to Europe to sell these 
products.
Long Term Results 
 global trade routes shifted over time 
 the old silk routes declined 
West Asia and the Islamic world were displaced 
as the centralized location of global trade 
 the Atlantic and Pacific sea routes become the 
new focus of global trade
Theories of International Trade 
 It measures the wealth of nation by the 
size of its accumulated treasures i. e. 
gold & silver. 
 Focus is international trade, rather than 
internal commerce 
 Nationalism essential: promote nation by 
gain from trade 
 Trade imbalance the object: export more 
than import
Theories of International Trade 
 Wealth (Gold) can be accumulated by 
encouraging exports and discouraging imports. 
 This theory aims at creating trade surplus. 
 Limitations: 
 Accumulation of wealth takes place at the cost of 
another trading partner; a win-lose game & a zero-sum 
game for global wealth (international trade). 
 Supported only in short run. 
 Overlooks other resources such as its natural 
resources, manpower & its skill levels, capital, etc. 
 Used by colonial powers as a means of exploitation 
and not development.
Recap 
 Feudal ideology significantly anti-capitalist, 
anti-financier. But 
 Merchants essential 
 “Exotic” commodities from other lands 
 Trade between different fiefs/kingdoms 
 Finance essential 
Merchant activity 
Wars 
 Merchants tolerated (but controlled, taxed)
4. Early Writers 
 Niccolo’ Machiavelli (1469-1527) 
 Jean Bodin (1530-1596) 
 Antonio Serra (1580-1650)
Niccolo’ Machiavelli (1469-1527) 
 Author of The Prince, 1512 
 Machiavelli's work is associated with the rise of 
nation state 
 Morality was necessary as guide to private 
actions 
 Politics should be free from ethical or 
theological influence 
 general postulate about human nature, self-interest 
 empirical bent [Bacon sees Machiavelli as 
predecessor]
Jean Bodin (1530-1596) 
 Contributions to “quantity theory of 
money” 
 Accepted mercantilist position on 
balance of trade, but saw inflow of 
specie 
 believed in supreme power of the state 
and natural law
Antonio Serra (1580-1650) 
 Serra was one of the first writers who 
constructed a a systematic development 
of “Mercantilism.” In1613 he published, A 
Brief Treatise on the Causes which 
make Gold and SIlver abound in 
Kingdoms where there are no Mines 
 Agriculture and trade in manufactured 
goods most important source of wealth 
to a nation.
5. Mercantilist Thinkers 
 Josiah Child 
 Bernard Mandeville 
 David Hume 
 Von Hornick 
 Thomas Mun
Josiah Child 
 Josiah Child was a seventeenth-century 
mercantilist. 
 Essentially a defense contractor, Child 
wrote Circumstance on the Discourse on 
Trace, which he published anonymously. 
 His, while not iron-clad, suggested that 
Britain should lower interest rates since 
Holland had done so. 
 His self-interested recommendations did 
not have much economic foundation.
Jean-Baptiste Colbert 
 Jean-Baptiste Colbert was the French 
minister of finance from 1661 until 1683. 
 Mercantilist considerations led Colbert to 
advocate war as an instrument of economic 
policy. 
 He regulated the minute details of industry. 
 He wanted to increase work, exports, and 
child labor. 
 This extreme government control still lives in 
France today.
Bernard Mandeville 
 Bernard Mandeville, a social satirist, 
wrote the The Fable of the Bees. 
 This satire preached the themes of hard 
work and the beneficial social 
consequences of private self-interest 
behaviour. 
 It linked avaricious behaviour to 
increased trade.
David Hume 
 David Hume questioned 
mercantilist assumptions 
in his essays. 
 He denied that money and 
gold were equivalent to 
wealth. Instead, they had 
merely instrumental value.
David Hume 
 He thought that accumulating precious 
metals would result in higher prices. 
 Hume believed that imports as well as 
exports were beneficial. 
 He suggested that trade was not 
equivalent to warfare, since both to the 
parties to the transaction benefit.
Von Hornick 
 Von Hornick: Austria Over All, If Only 
She Will (1684) 
 Some Mercantilist Programs: 
- Full use of all land and natural 
resources for domestic industry 
- Large working population 
- Finish raw materials at home, as 
finished goods have a higher value 
- Discouragement of imports, and no 
imports where domestic supply is 
available 
- Imports be confined to raw materials 
to be finished at home
Von Hornick 
- Prohibition of all bullion exports (bullionist 
position) 
- Necessary imports be obtained in 
exchange for domestic goods, not gold 
or silver 
- Sell surplus manufactures to 
foreigners, if possible for gold and silver 
 Hornick is very influential in Austria
Thomas Mun 
 Thomas Mun: England’s Treasure by Foreign 
Trade (1664) 
 Mercantilist Programs 
- Importance of trade and the social position of 
the merchant 
-Bring all unused land into production 
- Fully utilize natural resources including 
fisheries 
- Reduce consumption of imports, particularly 
luxuries 
- Export goods with inelastic demand—can 
charge higher prices
Thomas Mun 
- Customs duties on imports to be 
consumed domestically 
-Export in own ships 
-Encourage distant trade 
- make England a trans-shipment point 
- Export of bullion permitted, if for 
purposes of trade (non-bullionist 
position) 
- “Make the most we can of our own”
44 
Mercantilism: Conclusion 
 Foreign trade as the source of surplus 
 No analysis of production 
 In practice 
 Added to feudal imposts on commerce 
 Created government-sanctioned monopolies 
 ostensibly to increase national wealth; but 
 often in practice enriched favoured individuals 
 Point of criticism and departure for later 
Physiocrats & Classical Economists, with 
emphasis upon “laisser-faire, laisser-passer”

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Mercantilism By Mubashar

  • 2. 1. Introduction to Mercantilism 2. Historical Background of Mercantilism 3. Main Points of Mercantilism 4. Early Writers 5. Mercantilist Thinkers 6. Conclusion
  • 3. 1. Introduction to Mercantilism What is Mercantilism?  the theory that a country’s power depended mainly on its wealth to build strong navies and purchase vital trade goods.
  • 4. What is Mercantilism? Mercantilism had no systematic, comprehensive, consistent treatise, no leader, common method, or theory.  Each “mercantilist" sought advantage for a specific, trade, merchant, joint-stock company or social group.  "Protectionism" is often seen as a primary characteristic of Mercantilism.
  • 5. What is Mercantilism?  The primary objective of Mercantilism was to increase the power of the nation state.  One of the important aspects of national power or strength was wealth that was equated with specie.  The states that followed a policy of mercantilism tended to see trade, colonialism and conquest as the primary ways of increasing wealth.
  • 7. When?  16th – 18th C  In Poland: 17th C
  • 8. Where? Western Europe, particularly England and France
  • 9. 2. Historical Background of Mercantilism  Generally, Mercantilism is associated with the rise of the “Nation state.”  Feudal institutions were weakened by the increasing use of money and a greater reliance on exchange within the economy.  The Protestant Reformation weakened the role of the church and consequently the civil role of the state was expanded  There was a rise of Humanism (the concern for well-being of humans in the short term).
  • 10.  The decline of feudalism was influenced by changes in technology  “enclosure movement” and the commercialization of agriculture  Increasing use of money in the economy reduced the role of barter and reciprocity, people wanted to sell or work for money  nailed horse shoe, harness, stirrup, horse collar, heavy plough  three-field system [1 field winter crop, 1 field spring crop, third lying fallow] extended area peasant could farm by 1/8, 50% increase in output  rise of mechanical power [water, wind] used in textile and mining  urbanization
  • 11.  rise of markets and fairs  gunpowder  improvements in navigation, shipping, transport  moveable type, (standardization, mass production and marketing of books in a variety of languages)  mechanical clocks, mechanisms, instruments, Increased skills of craftsmen who made machines
  • 12. The Decline of Feudalism and the Plague  The "Black Death" of 1346-61  restricted trade  reduction in population  Increased production of wool; need industry and commerce to process and sell wool and textiles.  strengthening of guilds leads to an emphasis on trade
  • 13. Reduction in Population  Population of England fell by about 1.5 million (out of a population of 3.5 to 5 million in 1346).  Result was more money per person but also more animals, land and goods per person, prices fell.  Labour shortage pushed wages and earnings up.
  • 14.  Less people with increased agricultural production (some problems with harvests and animals dying, but on average diets improved.  Labour became more mobile, masters on feudal estates had to "hire" labour. This led to the rise of "free" labour. If you couldn't hire workers, then you rent the land to others. Small farms with limited labour shifted to pasture and sheep rather than tilling the soil.
  • 15. Medieval fiction to circumvent anti-usury laws Lends at no interest Insures A in case B fails to repay Pays C interest rate for insurance Pays A-C costs • Effectively, a “different set of books” to disguise breaching the laws against usury B fails to repay A
  • 16. 16 Medieval Breakdown  Feudal system imposed many imposts upon merchants/tradesmen/moneylenders; but social change went against feudalism:  Growth of specialist manufactures in towns: the guilds  Growth of specialist traders between nations: the Mercantilists  Revolt against religious strictures against merchants/lending, church hypocrisy  Religious revolts: beginnings of Protestantism bound up with growth of merchants/financiers  A new ideology/analysis struggled for dominance: Mercantilism
  • 17. 1500s  Rise of the nation-state  John Calvin (1509-1564): Prosperity is Piety  Nicolo Machiavelli (1469-1527) and “The Prince”  Separates the church and the state  Denies mankind’s desire for freedom  Charity has no role for the individual
  • 18. 1500s and 1600s  Elizabethan Poor Law of 1601  Invention of printing with movable type gave rise to economic literature written by lay people  Thomas Wilson (1525-81) wrote Discourse on Usury (1572)  Charles Dumoulin (Latinized as Molinaeus) wrote Treatise on Contracts and Usury (1546)  Denied that interest was forbidden by divine law  Suggested public regulation of lending and interest  Influx of gold and silver from the New World
  • 19. Main Points of Mercantilism  Economics as applied statecraft  Promotion of National wealth and power  Importance of trade surpluses  Trade surplus leads to a net gold inflow, and thereby to greater national wealth and power  Analogy between nations and households  Encourage domestic production and exports, discourage imports
  • 20. 3. Main Points of Mercantilism  Economics as statecraft not analysis  Tendency to see gold and “treasure” as constituting national wealth  Emphasis on balance of trade surpluses  Emphasis on maximizing productivity and output  Trade as a zero sum game  Role of government in encouraging domestic manufacturing and exports while minimizing imports  Link between money supply and prices
  • 21. Two Ways to Increase a Nations Wealth  obtain as much gold and silver as possible  establish a favorable balance of trade, in which it sold more goods than in bought
  • 22. Mercantilism Explained  colonies existed for the benefit of the Mother Country  Source of Raw materials = cheap  shipped to M. C. to be turned into finished goods  Finished good shipped to Colony = expensive  profit goes to M. C.  Pass laws forbidding colonies from producing their own goods Mercantilism = unfair or unbalanced trade
  • 23. Triangular Trade  Europeans transported manufactured goods to the west coast of Africa
  • 24. Triangular Trade  Traders then exchanged these goods for captured Africans who were then sold in the Americas
  • 25. Triangular Trade Merchants then bought sugar, coffee, and tobacco in the West Indies and sailed back to Europe to sell these products.
  • 26. Long Term Results  global trade routes shifted over time  the old silk routes declined West Asia and the Islamic world were displaced as the centralized location of global trade  the Atlantic and Pacific sea routes become the new focus of global trade
  • 27. Theories of International Trade  It measures the wealth of nation by the size of its accumulated treasures i. e. gold & silver.  Focus is international trade, rather than internal commerce  Nationalism essential: promote nation by gain from trade  Trade imbalance the object: export more than import
  • 28. Theories of International Trade  Wealth (Gold) can be accumulated by encouraging exports and discouraging imports.  This theory aims at creating trade surplus.  Limitations:  Accumulation of wealth takes place at the cost of another trading partner; a win-lose game & a zero-sum game for global wealth (international trade).  Supported only in short run.  Overlooks other resources such as its natural resources, manpower & its skill levels, capital, etc.  Used by colonial powers as a means of exploitation and not development.
  • 29. Recap  Feudal ideology significantly anti-capitalist, anti-financier. But  Merchants essential  “Exotic” commodities from other lands  Trade between different fiefs/kingdoms  Finance essential Merchant activity Wars  Merchants tolerated (but controlled, taxed)
  • 30. 4. Early Writers  Niccolo’ Machiavelli (1469-1527)  Jean Bodin (1530-1596)  Antonio Serra (1580-1650)
  • 31. Niccolo’ Machiavelli (1469-1527)  Author of The Prince, 1512  Machiavelli's work is associated with the rise of nation state  Morality was necessary as guide to private actions  Politics should be free from ethical or theological influence  general postulate about human nature, self-interest  empirical bent [Bacon sees Machiavelli as predecessor]
  • 32. Jean Bodin (1530-1596)  Contributions to “quantity theory of money”  Accepted mercantilist position on balance of trade, but saw inflow of specie  believed in supreme power of the state and natural law
  • 33. Antonio Serra (1580-1650)  Serra was one of the first writers who constructed a a systematic development of “Mercantilism.” In1613 he published, A Brief Treatise on the Causes which make Gold and SIlver abound in Kingdoms where there are no Mines  Agriculture and trade in manufactured goods most important source of wealth to a nation.
  • 34. 5. Mercantilist Thinkers  Josiah Child  Bernard Mandeville  David Hume  Von Hornick  Thomas Mun
  • 35. Josiah Child  Josiah Child was a seventeenth-century mercantilist.  Essentially a defense contractor, Child wrote Circumstance on the Discourse on Trace, which he published anonymously.  His, while not iron-clad, suggested that Britain should lower interest rates since Holland had done so.  His self-interested recommendations did not have much economic foundation.
  • 36. Jean-Baptiste Colbert  Jean-Baptiste Colbert was the French minister of finance from 1661 until 1683.  Mercantilist considerations led Colbert to advocate war as an instrument of economic policy.  He regulated the minute details of industry.  He wanted to increase work, exports, and child labor.  This extreme government control still lives in France today.
  • 37. Bernard Mandeville  Bernard Mandeville, a social satirist, wrote the The Fable of the Bees.  This satire preached the themes of hard work and the beneficial social consequences of private self-interest behaviour.  It linked avaricious behaviour to increased trade.
  • 38. David Hume  David Hume questioned mercantilist assumptions in his essays.  He denied that money and gold were equivalent to wealth. Instead, they had merely instrumental value.
  • 39. David Hume  He thought that accumulating precious metals would result in higher prices.  Hume believed that imports as well as exports were beneficial.  He suggested that trade was not equivalent to warfare, since both to the parties to the transaction benefit.
  • 40. Von Hornick  Von Hornick: Austria Over All, If Only She Will (1684)  Some Mercantilist Programs: - Full use of all land and natural resources for domestic industry - Large working population - Finish raw materials at home, as finished goods have a higher value - Discouragement of imports, and no imports where domestic supply is available - Imports be confined to raw materials to be finished at home
  • 41. Von Hornick - Prohibition of all bullion exports (bullionist position) - Necessary imports be obtained in exchange for domestic goods, not gold or silver - Sell surplus manufactures to foreigners, if possible for gold and silver  Hornick is very influential in Austria
  • 42. Thomas Mun  Thomas Mun: England’s Treasure by Foreign Trade (1664)  Mercantilist Programs - Importance of trade and the social position of the merchant -Bring all unused land into production - Fully utilize natural resources including fisheries - Reduce consumption of imports, particularly luxuries - Export goods with inelastic demand—can charge higher prices
  • 43. Thomas Mun - Customs duties on imports to be consumed domestically -Export in own ships -Encourage distant trade - make England a trans-shipment point - Export of bullion permitted, if for purposes of trade (non-bullionist position) - “Make the most we can of our own”
  • 44. 44 Mercantilism: Conclusion  Foreign trade as the source of surplus  No analysis of production  In practice  Added to feudal imposts on commerce  Created government-sanctioned monopolies  ostensibly to increase national wealth; but  often in practice enriched favoured individuals  Point of criticism and departure for later Physiocrats & Classical Economists, with emphasis upon “laisser-faire, laisser-passer”