Richard Cantillon, entrepreneur and economist

Bibliographic Information

Richard Cantillon, entrepreneur and economist

Antoin E. Murphy

Clarendon Press, 1986

  • : pbk

Available at  / 39 libraries

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Note

Some printings lack pagination: viii-xv

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

ISBN 9780198285359

Description

This is a study of Irish-born Richard Cantillon, eighteenth century banker and economist whose Essai sur la Nature du Commerce en General (1755), published twenty-one years after his death, remains a significant contribution to the development of monetary theory. Cantillon's life was an exciting story of involvement in high-level international banking, and speculation in foreign exchanges, commodities and stocks at the time of the South Sea Bubble. His death occurred in mysterious circumstances.
Volume

: pbk ISBN 9780198286820

Description

Richard Cantillon was an 18th century banker and economist whose "Essai sur la nature du commerce en general" (1755), published 21 years after his death, is still considered to be a significant contribution to the development of monetary theory. This biography discusses Cantillon's theories and shows how his career helps to explain the nature of Europe's first major stock exchange booms, the South Sea Bubble and the Mississippi System. It also shows how his theorizing as an economist meshed with his activities as a banker-entrepreneur to make him one of Europe's wealthiest men before his death in mysterious circumstances. The book should be of interest to historians and economists as well as to the general reader.

Table of Contents

  • Richard Cantillon's background and early career
  • Cantillon's debut as a banker in Paris, 1714-1717
  • John Law and Cantillon - the first Mississippi fortune
  • Bernard Cantillon's expedition to Louisiana, 1719
  • Lady Mary Herbert and Joseph Gage - two of the great speculators of the age
  • the Mississippi System
  • London and Amsterdam - the great crashes of 1720
  • the rich Mississippian and his wife Mary Anne
  • debt collection and its legal consequences
  • the strange accusations of Christopher Balfe
  • the writing and contents of the "Essai"
  • the demise of Richard Cantillon
  • the publication of the "Essai" in 1755.

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