------------ EH.NET BOOK REVIEW --------------
Published by EH.NET (October 2008)
Istvan Hont, _Jealousy of Trade: International Competition and the
Nation-State in Historical Perspective_. Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press, 2005. xviii + 541 pp. $50 (hardcover), ISBN:
0-674-01038-8.
Reviewed for EH.NET by Stephen Meardon, Department of Economics, Bowdoin
College.
?Why do we need,? asks Istvan Hont in his introduction, ?to rediscover
repeatedly? what was already understood about Adam Smith by his first
biographer over two centuries ago? Smith was no doctrinaire liberal and
?simplistic quasi-Physiocrat? -- as Dugald Stewart knew then and plenty
of readers have found since. As Herbert Stein once put it in a _Wall
Street Journal_ op-ed, Smith ?did not wear the Adam Smith necktie.?[1]
At the 2007 meetings of the History of Economics Society, where Hont won
the award for best book in the field, one of its most eminent
practitioners, Warren Samuels, posed nearly the same question. Samuels,
though, was referring not to Hont?s book but instead to an older one by
Donald Winch: _Adam Smith?s Politics: An Essay in Historiographic
Revision_ (Cambridge, 1978). The Society had just named Winch a
Distinguished Fellow, in no small part for his manner of rediscovering
the same thing three decades ago. Samuels was one of the panelists in
an honorary session. ?How many times will people keep making this
point?? he asked the audience ebulliently, more in the tone of an
exclamation.
Samuels surely intended it as a tribute, but it was an awkward one.
Unless he meant that the point is common knowledge only because Winch,
at long last, revealed it -- which Dugald Stewart, among others, would
not allow -- his question implied that among Winch?s book?s many virtues
one could not count originality of its punchline. And if the question
was awkward when Samuels applied it to Winch, whose book appeared over a
quarter century ago, then Hont would seem to be courting some risk by
inviting us to apply it to him, too.
Like Winch?s admirable book, after all, Hont?s is a record of
rediscovery that does not challenge the basic image of its subject (or
subjects) -- at least not the image that appears in the standard
scholarly references, if not fashion accessories. Thus Smith appears as
one who saw extraordinarily keenly the ?blemishes? (as H. W. Spiegel put
it) of an incipient capitalist society at the same time that he
systematized its defense. The image is accurate, Winch showed that this
image is accurate, given the perspective from which it was drawn -- and
yet the perspective is anachronous. It sublimates Smith?s political
philosophy; it reflects later generations? preoccupations with ?the
strength and autonomy of a socio-economic realm [that] variously
threatens, limits, or deflects the realm of the political,? and posits
Smith as master of the first.[2] Smith?s own preoccupations were
different. One may understand them better by revisiting the political
dialogues in which he participated. The reward is a more thorough
acquaintance with a personage whom one recognized all along.
There lies Winch?s answer to the sticky ?Why again?? question. It is
worth keeping in mind while considering Hont?s.
Hont?s answer is bound to be at least a little different: the subject
matter of _Jealousy of Trade_ overlaps that of Winch?s book but also
extends well beyond it. One could fairly say the subject matter
sprawls. Smith is front and center but is not given top billing. That
honor is reserved for a theme: ?the intersection of politics and the
economy? in the eighteenth century, ?the constitutive moment of modern
politics? (p. 10).
The book?s title is borrowed from an essay by Hume, who despaired of the
new penchant for carrying old international rivalries into the arena of
trade. Smith, Hume, and their contemporaries, writes Hont, ?wanted to
explain how the conflation of the logics of war and trade arose in the
seventeenth century and why it was so difficulty to exorcise them
afterward? (p. 8). But the book ventures far afield from the conflation
of war and trade per se. It embraces a lengthy introduction plus
chapters grouped in three different sections, titled ?Natural Liberty
and Global Competition,? ?Paradoxes of Reform and Transition,? and
?Commercial Nation State.? The first includes consideration of theories
of man?s innate sociability and its relation to commerce; how changes in
the pattern of trade fomented jealousy of trade in Britain and Europe;
and the Scottish Enlightenment?s ?rich country?poor country? debate
about the international distribution of the gains from trade. The
second section includes explorations of Hume?s aversion to public debt,
which he believed fostered military adventurism; the centrality of
Smith?s critique of Physiocracy to his science of the legislator; and
(in this instance in co-authorship with Michael Ignatieff) the demands
of ?justice? with respect to redistribution in Smith?s system. The
third section investigates the deeper roots of the idea of nationalism
and ?nation-state? that grew out of the French Revolution. All of the
chapters were published elsewhere, mainly in edited volumes, between
1983 and 1994.
It is in reference to the fifth and sixth chapters, on Smith?s
understanding of Physiocracy and of justice, that Hont poses the ?Why
again?? question. (He claims (p. 111) to refer to the seventh chapter,
but this appears to be a minor error.) His answer is two-fold. First,
and echoing Winch, by drawing out painstakingly the intellectual and
political context in which Smith wrote, we may ?look at the dilemmas
Smith himself faced.? Second, having taken a look, we will find that
?they are often identical with our own predicament today? (p. 111).
If the second part of the answer signaled accurately an important
purpose of several chapters, then it would mark a signal difference
between Winch?s book and Hont?s. To Winch, after all, reacquaintance
with Smith on Smith?s terms was purpose enough. But the second part of
the answer misleads. The purpose of drawing parallels with the present
day, although avowed repeatedly in the introduction -- in one instance
Hont professes to write with ?eyes firmly fixed on the challenges of
today? (p. 5) -- is not only unmet, it is mostly untried.
The book is better for the omission. Because Hont?s eyes are actually
fixed firmly on Smith?s moment (specifically, on an astonishing quantity
of literature and archival evidence generated from it), we do indeed
learn, in superb detail, about the dilemmas Smith and his contemporaries
faced -- and in those dilemmas, the forgotten origins or purposes of
otherwise familiar ideas. The instances are too various to distill to a
paragraph or two, but an example is in order. In chapter 5, ?Adam Smith
and the Political Economy of the ?Unnatural and Retrograde? Order,? Hont
tells the story of Smith?s dispute with the Physiocrats over the proper
way to reintroduce the ?system of natural liberty? where it had been
upended by Colbertism. Colbert had established in France an ?unnatural?
economic order that promoted manufactures at the expense of agriculture;
the ?four-stages theory? of history was the prop Smith used in common
with Quesnay and his followers to debate the proper way to return to the
natural order. But it was only a prop; the theory showed how
manufacturing naturally followed agriculture, but not (or at least not
obviously) how to return to the agricultural stage of society after
Colbert?s deviation. The Physiocrats saw in the four-stages theory the
need for an immediate and determined reorientation of the French economy
toward agriculture. Smith saw in it a gap that could be filled
adequately only by the political deliberation and gradual actions of
?future statesmen and legislators? (quoted on p. 383). Thus Hont
arrives, from one of several angles, at an insight into the intersection
of politics and economics in the late eighteenth century. To Adam Smith,
?the politics of natural liberty had to build on the existing unnatural
order and the actual liberty it produced? (p. 375).
Insights like this are good enough; one need not believe that Smith?s
predicament was identical to our own to be motivated to read it. But
while the inflated claims of the book?s purpose are unnecessary, one can
also guess the reason for their presence.
Hont allows from the outset that ?Jealousy of Trade is not a monograph,?
but adds immediately that its chapters ?are closely connected by their
subject matter and argumentative purpose? (p. 5). ?Closely? is a
stretch, as the previous sketch of the contents of sections and chapters
ought to show. The claim of a present-day purpose seems a half-hearted,
because unexecuted, effort to unify the book?s disparate parts. A more
earnest but equally regrettable effort is embodied in the one hundred
and fifty-six page introduction. At that length, why not keep writing
and complete the missing monograph?
Jealousy of Trade is a compilation of glittering historical scholarship
that creaks from the strain of the contrivances for compiling it. Its
value lies in bringing much-deserved attention to a number of essays
that otherwise would not have received it. That is value enough for an
edited volume -- but this volume declares greater aspirations. As ever,
the peril of greater aspirations is greater disappointment. Few will
want to read this book front to back. Those with a general interest in
the subject will benefit from reading the introduction and identifying a
chapter or two for more careful perusal. Specialists will be pleased to
have at hand, in convenient form, a set of extraordinary essays for
selective reexamination.
Notes:
1. Herbert Stein. 1994. ?Remembering Adam Smith.? _Wall Street Journal_,
April 6, p. A14.
2. Donald Winch. 1978. _Adam Smith?s Politics: An Essay in
Historiographic Revision_. Cambridge University Press, p. 23.
Stephen Meardon is author of ?Postbellum Protection and Commissioner
Wells?s Conversion to Free Trade,? _History of Political Economy_
(Winter, 2007) and ?From Religious Revivals to Tariff Rancor: Preaching
Free Trade and Protection during the Second American Party System,?
_History of Political Economy_ (forthcoming in supplement, 2008).
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