Rae: a journalist out of his depth
Explores John Rae's (1845-1915) critique of Henry George's economic theory in Progress and Poverty (1954 edition). Rae, best known for his biography of Adam Smith, was a successful British author & journalist. His popular book, Contemporary Socialism (1908 [1884]) criticized the centra...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The American journal of economics and sociology 2003-11, Vol.62 (5 (Supp 1)), p.199-210 |
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description | Explores John Rae's (1845-1915) critique of Henry George's economic theory in Progress and Poverty (1954 edition). Rae, best known for his biography of Adam Smith, was a successful British author & journalist. His popular book, Contemporary Socialism (1908 [1884]) criticized the centralist & anarchist forms of social democracy. One chapter is devoted to a critique of George, whose ideas he erroneously assigned to being closely allied with socialism. This fact, alone, points out Rae's weakness as a theorist. Rae attacked George's reasoning in respect to population theory, the wages-fund theory, & the concept of economic rent. He also critiqued his opposition to the Malthusian population theory & its relationship to diminishing returns & his interpretation of Ricardian rent theory. While Rae's strong criticism of George refers to his rejection of the wage-fund theory, this is actually one of George's soundest analytical accomplishments. Rae's criticisms are also surprising since, as a leading expert of Adam Smith, he should have recognized George's incorporation of Adam's conceptual foundations in his own economic analysis. L. A. Hoffman |
doi_str_mv | 10.1111/j.0002-9246.2003.00260.x |
format | Article |
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Rae, best known for his biography of Adam Smith, was a successful British author & journalist. His popular book, Contemporary Socialism (1908 [1884]) criticized the centralist & anarchist forms of social democracy. One chapter is devoted to a critique of George, whose ideas he erroneously assigned to being closely allied with socialism. This fact, alone, points out Rae's weakness as a theorist. Rae attacked George's reasoning in respect to population theory, the wages-fund theory, & the concept of economic rent. He also critiqued his opposition to the Malthusian population theory & its relationship to diminishing returns & his interpretation of Ricardian rent theory. While Rae's strong criticism of George refers to his rejection of the wage-fund theory, this is actually one of George's soundest analytical accomplishments. 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source | Jstor Complete Legacy; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete |
subjects | Economic Theories Economic theory Economics George, Henry History of economic thought Industrialization Land Ownership Malthus, Thomas Robert Poverty Poverty alleviation Private property Property Tax Rae, John Rents Smith, Adam Socialism Sociology Taxation Wages |
title | Rae: a journalist out of his depth |
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