Four Introductory Lectures on Political Economy
                        
                     
                                                         
                
                    Four Introductory Lectures on Political Economy
                                            
                            By Nassau William Senior
                            
                                13 Mar, 2019                            
                            
                         
                                        
                                                                        Political Economy, as a separate branch of study, may be said to be about a century old. Many of the facts which are its subject-matter have indeed attracted human attention from the earliest times; many opinions, right or wrong, have been formed res
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                                                Political Economy, as a separate branch of study, may be said to be about a century old. Many of the facts which are its subject-matter have indeed attracted human attention from the earliest times; many opinions, right or wrong, have been formed respecting them, and many customs and laws, beneficial or injurious, have been the consequence: but it was not until nearly the middle of the last century, that any attempt was made to reduce those opinions into a system, or to ascertain the grounds on which they were founded, or even how far they were reconcilable with one another. To M. Quesnay belongs the honour of having first endeavoured to explain of what wealth consists, by what means it is produced, increased, and diminished, and according to what laws distributed; in other words, of having been the first teacher of Political Economy. In the course of his investigations, he found that in the pursuit of wealth all governments had not merely mistaken the straight road, but had frequently pursued a path leading directly away from it. He found that instead of endeavouring to attain a beneficial end by appropriate measures, they had been aiming at a useless result by means totally ineffectual. Until his time it had been supposed that wealth consists of gold and silver, and that the quantity of gold and silver in any given country is to be increased by encouraging the exportation and discouraging the importation of all other commodities, and by the perpetual interference of governments in the modes in which the labour of their subjects is exerted, and the objects to which it is directed. Less