Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The Capitalist Entrepreneur In Eighteenth-Century Economic Literature

View through CrossRef
Although the capitalist entrepreneur played a significant role in the early classical explanation of capital markets and economic development, mainstream opinion in the history of economic thought merely holds that eighteenth-century economists failed to distinguish the entrepreneurial function from that of supplying financial capital. Accordingly, one considers the conception of the capitalist entrepreneur an erroneous view—characterized by the confusion between profits and interest—that Jean-Baptiste Say corrected at the turn of the century (Schumpeter 1954, p. 555; Koolman 1971, p. 276). Moreover, this conception has been mainly ascribed to British authors (Perroux 1929, p. 1665; Cole 1942, pp. 120–1; Hoselitz 1951, p. 212; Blaug 1985, pp. 459–60), a claim which certainly goes back to Say's opinion that:The English do not have a word to render entrepreneur d'Industrie, which has prevented them from distinguishing, among industrial operations, the service provided by the capital from the service provided by one who uses this capital through his ability and talent. Hence…the obscurity in the demonstrations where they [the English] try to go back to the source of profits (Say 1803, pp. 74–75, n. 1; see also p. 357, n. 1).
Title: The Capitalist Entrepreneur In Eighteenth-Century Economic Literature
Description:
Although the capitalist entrepreneur played a significant role in the early classical explanation of capital markets and economic development, mainstream opinion in the history of economic thought merely holds that eighteenth-century economists failed to distinguish the entrepreneurial function from that of supplying financial capital.
Accordingly, one considers the conception of the capitalist entrepreneur an erroneous view—characterized by the confusion between profits and interest—that Jean-Baptiste Say corrected at the turn of the century (Schumpeter 1954, p.
555; Koolman 1971, p.
276).
Moreover, this conception has been mainly ascribed to British authors (Perroux 1929, p.
1665; Cole 1942, pp.
120–1; Hoselitz 1951, p.
212; Blaug 1985, pp.
459–60), a claim which certainly goes back to Say's opinion that:The English do not have a word to render entrepreneur d'Industrie, which has prevented them from distinguishing, among industrial operations, the service provided by the capital from the service provided by one who uses this capital through his ability and talent.
Hence…the obscurity in the demonstrations where they [the English] try to go back to the source of profits (Say 1803, pp.
74–75, n.
1; see also p.
357, n.
1).

Related Results

Maailmakirjanduse mõõtmisest meil ja mujal / Conceptualizations of World Literature in Estonia and Elsewhere
Maailmakirjanduse mõõtmisest meil ja mujal / Conceptualizations of World Literature in Estonia and Elsewhere
Teesid: Artikkel käsitleb maailmakirjanduse mõiste mahu ja sisu muutumist alates selle esilekerkimisest 19. sajandi algupoolel kuni tänapäeva käsitlusviisideni ja dilemmadeni, mill...
Economic Man as Model Man: Ideal Types, Idealization and Caricatures
Economic Man as Model Man: Ideal Types, Idealization and Caricatures
Economics revolves around a central character: “economic man.” As historians, we are all familiar with various episodes in the history of this character, and we appreciate his ever...
Kinship and gendered economic conduct in matrilineal Offinso, Ghana
Kinship and gendered economic conduct in matrilineal Offinso, Ghana
AbstractFor many decades, anthropologists have debated the question of matriliny, with some expressing concerns about its prospects of survival in a modern economy of private prope...
The ghosts of progress: Contradictory materialities of the capitalist Golden Age
The ghosts of progress: Contradictory materialities of the capitalist Golden Age
This theoretical contribution will examine the process of displacement of the constitutive contradictions of advanced capitalist societies from interior to exterior during the post...
THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY AS A MUSIC-HISTORICAL PERIOD?
THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY AS A MUSIC-HISTORICAL PERIOD?
Period concepts and periodizations are constructions, or readings, and hence always subject to reinterpretation. Many recent scholars have privileged institutional and reception hi...
The Glove as Fetish Object in Eighteenth-Century Fiction and Culture
The Glove as Fetish Object in Eighteenth-Century Fiction and Culture
This essay focuses on eighteenth-century women’s gloving practices and representations of women’s gloves in the period. Through close readings of the gloving scenes in William Hoga...
Resonance of Existentialism on Pandemic literature: An Introspection of Pandemic Literature of the Past
Resonance of Existentialism on Pandemic literature: An Introspection of Pandemic Literature of the Past
Literature has always been impacted by the abject state of thought of humans existing in a particular time and era. A sense of meaning, or forging an explanation evinced within lit...
Strategic evaluation of economic feasibility of mountain tourist region development: Case study of Stara Planina
Strategic evaluation of economic feasibility of mountain tourist region development: Case study of Stara Planina
This paper covers theoretical, methodological and practical discoveries and evaluation of the economic aspects of development and planning of the mountain tourist regions. Th...

Back to Top