Shifting Capital: Mercantilism and the Economics of the Act of Union of 1707
Autor Aida Ramosen Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 dec 2019
Utilizing contemporary evidence from the English and Scottish ministers involved, this book explores alternative arguments regarding the Union, from before 1707 and in early Scottish political economy, thus highlighting the differing economic and political views that have persisted between England and Scotland for centuries. With twenty-first century discontent leading to the Scottish independence referendum and arguments that persist in the wake of the Brexit decision, Ramos produces timely research that investigates ideas of protectionism that feed into mercantilist economic thought.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9783030403645
ISBN-10: 3030403645
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.2 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2018
Editura: Springer
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland
ISBN-10: 3030403645
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.2 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2018
Editura: Springer
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland
Cuprins
Chapter
1: Introduction.
Chapter
2: The
Political
and
Economic
Contest
and
Context:
Scotland
and
England
Before
the
Union.
Chapter
3: Beyond
Trade:
Mercantilist
Ideas
of
Dependency,
Value,
and
Transmutation
and
Justification
of
Union.
Chapter
4: Trick
or
Treaty:
The
Negotiation
and
Articles
of
Union
in
the
Context
of
Mercantilist
Ideas.
Chapter
5: Balancing
Act:
The
Equivalent,
Political
Arithmetic,
and
Mercantilist
Structural
Violence.
Chapter
6: Shifting
Capital.
Chapter
7: Unintended
Consequences:
Scottish
Political
Economy
as
a
Reaction
to
Mercantilism.
Notă biografică
Aida
Ramos is
Associate
Professor
of
Economics
at
the
University
of
Dallas,
Texas,
USA.
She
earned
her
PhD
in
economics
at
the
University
of
Notre
Dame,
USA. Her
research
interests
are
in
the
history
of
Scottish
and
Irish
economic
thought.
Textul de pe ultima copertă
When
the
Act
of
Union
was
passed
in
1707,
Scottish
parliament
was
dissolved
and
the
nation’s
capital
became
London.
While
the
general
public
balked
at
the
perceived
unfairness
of
the
treaty,
the
majority
of
Scottish
ministers
seemed
satisfied
with
its
terms.
This
book
offers
an
explanation
of
how
that
outcome
came
about.
By
examining
the
influence
of
a
particular
strain
of
mercantilist
thought,
Ramos
demonstrates
how
the
negotiations
preceding
the
passage
of
the
Act
of
Union
were
shaped
by
ideas
of
value,
wealth,
trade
and
power,
and,
accordingly,
how
the
model
of
positive
balance
was
used
to
justify
the
necessity
of
the
Act.
Utilizing contemporary evidence from the English and Scottish ministers involved, this book explores alternative arguments regarding the Union, from before 1707 and in early Scottish political economy, thus highlighting the differing economic and political views that have persisted between England and Scotland for centuries. With twenty-first century discontent leading to the Scottish independence referendum and arguments that persist in the wake of the Brexit decision, Ramos produces timely research that investigates ideas of protectionism that feed into mercantilist economic thought.
Aida Ramos is Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Dallas, Texas, USA. She earned her PhD in economics at the University of Notre Dame, France. Her research interests are in the history of Scottish and Irish economic thought.
Utilizing contemporary evidence from the English and Scottish ministers involved, this book explores alternative arguments regarding the Union, from before 1707 and in early Scottish political economy, thus highlighting the differing economic and political views that have persisted between England and Scotland for centuries. With twenty-first century discontent leading to the Scottish independence referendum and arguments that persist in the wake of the Brexit decision, Ramos produces timely research that investigates ideas of protectionism that feed into mercantilist economic thought.
Aida Ramos is Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Dallas, Texas, USA. She earned her PhD in economics at the University of Notre Dame, France. Her research interests are in the history of Scottish and Irish economic thought.
Caracteristici
Explores
mercantilism
as
a
proto-Big
Push
theory
Analyses the alliance between state and commercial finance
Presents England's history of interaction with Scotland to the point of unification
Reviews the economic troubles of Scotland
Examines the economic consequences of the Union
Analyses the alliance between state and commercial finance
Presents England's history of interaction with Scotland to the point of unification
Reviews the economic troubles of Scotland
Examines the economic consequences of the Union