MERCANTILIST
MERCANTILIST
MERCANTILIST
An Outline
R. Larry Reynolds
Boise State University
IV Representative Mercantilists
A. Thomas Mun (1571-1641)
• successful businessman, a director of East India Trading Company
• “A Discourse of Trade from England into the East Indies,” (1621), “England's Treasure
by Foraign Trade, or our Foraign Trade is the Rule of our Treasure,” (written about
1628, published 1664)
• Defined doctrine of “favorable balance of trade.”
• Argued favorable balance of trade was only means of increasing the wealth of England
• England’s waste lands should be cultivated (no importation of food)
• money to be exported if greater could be earned sum earned (in East India Trading
Company’s interest)
• OK to export bullion because if not, prices would rise and reduce exports, 16th century
Spain as example
• Trade “amongst ourselves will not enrich the commonwealth”
B. Gerard de Malynes (1586-1641)
• Master of the Mint (a position later held by Sir Isaac Newton in 1699), and Merchant
• Pamphlets
“A Treatise on the Canker of England’s Commonwealth,” (1601),
“The Maintenance of Free Trade,” (1622),
“The Centre of the Circle of Commerce,” (1623),
“Lex Mercatoria,” (1622)
• Favored exchange control [“bullionist]
• Opposed “usury”
• Just as a family will suffer a decline in wealth if purchases exceed income, so will a
commonwealth
• Terms of trade, the relationship between prices of imports and exports
Banks could manipulate exchange rates for their own gain, prohibit export
of bullion, need for control on exchange dealings of private financiers
• more money would increase prices and stimulate business
• regulation of quality of goods was necessary
C. Jean Baptiste Colbert (1619-1683)
• French – architect of “Colbertism” in France
• French Minister of Finance under Louis XIV
• “Bullionist,” opposed exportation of bullion
• Four professions of importance to the nation,
agriculture, trade, army and navy
• saw colonies as markets and supplier of raw materials
• “fixed sum game” one nation gains only at expense of another
• Commerce was “continual and bitter war”
• Wanted to facilitate internal trade, uniform weights and measures, opposed tolls on
internal trade, mandatory labour on roads
• never hesitated to use power of state
• Favored large population [father of 10 exempt from taxes], low wages, child labour
• contempt for business
• Monks, lawyers officials were “unproductive”
C. Sir William Petty (1623-1687)