AbstractsEconomics

The apostle of capitalism : The Economist from 1843-1863

by Carla Jeanine Fehr




Institution: University of Saskatchewan
Department:
Year: 2010
Keywords: free trade; industrial agriculture; 19th century Britain; international development; birth of capitalism; The Economist newspaper
Record ID: 1847306
Full text PDF: http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-09142009-142412


Abstract

For over 160 years, The Economist newspaper has been one of the most influential, sophisticated, and effective proponents of capitalism. It has consistently championed and conveyed a form of ‘humanitarian political economy’ to its weekly, global audience of professionals and business and government leaders. The Economist began in 1843 to campaign for free trade in agriculture and to advocate for the emerging regime of capitalism in Britain. Its primary concern during its first two decades centered on agricultural change. This thesis examines those first two decades, from 1843-1863, and The Economist’s focus on ‘improvement’, or capitalist development, in the English countryside. The Economist was a staunch advocate for increased urbanization, private property, and ‘high agriculture’ – a modern system of agriculture that involved scientific techniques, free trade, large landholdings, and significant amounts of capital. It vehemently opposed any attempts to alleviate rural poverty using measures it felt were inconsistent with the principles of political economy and argued rural labourers would be better off if they were forced to sell their labour and submit to the discipline of the market. The Economist repeatedly portrayed this process of capitalist development as beneficial for all and as a natural occurrence, brought about through the free working of the market. Its account contributed to the prominent idea of the ‘success’ of British agriculture in the 19th century; an idea that has had profound effects on subsequent notions of development. This thesis uses Marxist and Foucauldian concepts to demonstrate that the process of capitalist development in the countryside was not brought about through market forces. Extensive and often oppressive government intervention was needed to dispossess people from the land and to force them into waged labour. Though much of this dispossession had occurred by the 19th century, The Economist performed a crucial role in advocating for policies that cemented capitalist relations of production. The Economist’s most important function was to spread belief in capitalism by making its inequality and poverty more palatable.