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About Polanyi's Great Transformation
Is there agreement that (a) markets of some sort go back at least to
the earliest written documents, and almost certainly much further and
(b) there has never been a system in which unregulated, perfectly
competitive, markets accounted for all economic activities? If so, we
have to be talking about what forces predominated in which societies at
which dates. It is not at all clear that this is a matter of fact. It
is a question about what sort of analysis we find most illuminating.
That may depend on the question we are asking. Does it really make any
sense to characterize all societies as either on side or the other of a
simple dividing line - market or embedded?
That said, can I bring a bit of the history of economic ideas into the
discussion (on the HES list!)? Hume and Smith would have agreed with
Polanyi, to a degree. They had a story in which increasing market
penetration and increasing availability of attractive things to buy
transformed incentives, led farmers and landlords to improve methods of
production in order to buy the luxuries which were becoming available,
and eventually brought down feudalism. They thought this process had
been essentially completed in Britain well before their own time. (They
also thought, if I understand them, that ancient Greece and Rome had
been previous examples of developed commercial societies, but that is
another story.)
Following Hume and Smith, I suggest that dark age Europe really was
relatively little affected by markets, but that by the later middle
ages (or earlier), customary rules and procedures, and production for
subsistence, were already being undermined by the market. The market
may not have dominated before (say) the sixteenth or seventeenth
century, but it was the main dynamic force. In terms of understanding,
a static view of the medieval economy would focus on custom, etc., but
a dynamic view would focus on the expanding market sector. I do
disagree with the idea that the market was consciously constructed
and imposed (unless that is meant to mean the-market-as-a-concept). The
market was consciously opposed and obstructed by feudal institutions
but (fortunately) they lost. See Hume on how commercial society fosters
science, arts, individual freedom, relative equality and the like, as
compared to feudalism.
References:
Hume, Essays and History of England
Smith, Wealth of Nations, book III, especially III.iv.4
A. Brewer, An eighteenth century view of economic development: Hume and
Steuart, European Journal of HET, 1997, 1-22.
Tony Brewer ([log in to unmask])
University of Bristol, Department of Economics
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