The Law
Frédéric Bastiat
1 pages, Paperback
ISBN: 0255365098
ISBN13:
Language: English
Publish: December 1, 2001
ClassicsEconomicsFranceGovernmentHistoryLawNonfictionPhilosophyPolitical SciencePolitics
Frederic Bastiat, who was born two hundred years ago, was a leader of the French laissez-faire tradition in the first half of the nineteenth century. He was influenced by Cobden’s Anti-Corn Law League and became a convinced free trader. Joseph Schumpeter described Bastiat as ‘the most brilliant economic journalist who ever lived’. In The Law , written in 1850, the year of his death, Bastiat recognises the central importance of the law and morality in a free society. He was concerned that government was using the ‘law’ to become too active a participant in the economy whilst devoting too little attention to protecting life and liberty. This Occasional Paper, which reprints an English translation of The Law , includes a new introduction by Professor Norman Barry of the University of Buckingham which places Bastiat’s views in their historical context and explains their continuing relevance today.