Zum Inhalt

Léon Walras, Economist and Liberal Socialist

Essays

  • 2025
  • Buch

Über dieses Buch

Dieses Buch bietet eine eingehende Untersuchung der Entstehung von Léon Walras "Werk und seiner Auswirkungen auf die Wirtschaftsgeschichte. Durch eine gründliche Untersuchung sowohl veröffentlichter als auch unveröffentlichter Schriften, Korrespondenzen und persönlicher Notizen enthüllt das Buch neue Einsichten in Walras "intellektuelle Entwicklung und sein allgemeines Konzept der Ökonomie. Es zeichnet die Entstehung seines theoretischen Rahmens nach, die Elemente seiner "politischen und sozialen Ökonomie" und seine Bestrebungen nach einem "liberalen und humanen wissenschaftlichen Sozialismus". Das Buch gliedert sich in fünf Teile: Teil I untersucht die Einflüsse, die Walras "Denken prägen, darunter seine Beziehung zu seinem Vater Auguste Walras und das intellektuelle Vermächtnis Jean-Baptiste Says. In diesem Abschnitt werden auch Walras "Ansichten über die Etappen der historischen Entwicklung diskutiert, wobei er die industriellen und kommerziellen Veränderungen seiner Zeit und sein Rahmenwerk zur Kategorisierung der Sozial- und Politikwissenschaften reflektiert. Teil II untersucht die Entwicklung von Walras "allgemeiner Gleichgewichtstheorie, die Rolle des freien Wettbewerbs innerhalb einer" reinen Ökonomie "und die Rezeption seiner Ideen in Italien und Frankreich. Es beleuchtet den historischen und intellektuellen Kontext, der seine theoretischen Innovationen umgibt. Teil III befasst sich mit Walras "Ansatz in der Lehre der Ökonomie, wobei der Schwerpunkt auf der Vermeidung intellektueller Starrheit liegt, insbesondere in Frankreich. Es untersucht seine Arbeit in der Sozial- und Angewandten Ökonomie in Lausanne und seine Bemühungen, akademische Ressourcen wie etwa den Erwerb von Bibliotheken zu gestalten, um diese Vision zu unterstützen. Teil IV kritisiert den französischen Liberalismus, analysiert Walras "Reaktionen auf Persönlichkeiten wie Louis Blanc und die Saint-Simonians und diskutiert seine redaktionelle Arbeit mit Le Travail, die für kooperative Ansätze eintrat. Teil V beleuchtet Walras "reformistische Ideen, darunter seine Vision einer Arbeitsmarktorganisation, die Rolle des Staates beim Landrückkauf als Ersatz für Steuern, die Regulierung öffentlicher Dienstleistungen und natürlicher Monopole und seine Ideen zur Demokratie, insbesondere seine Kampagne zur professionellen Interessenvertretung. Diese umfassende Analyse spricht Wissenschaftler und Studenten der Geschichte des ökonomischen Denkens und jeden an, der daran interessiert ist, die Entstehung und das Vermächtnis von Walras "Werk zu verstehen.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

  1. Frontmatter

  2. Paternal Legacy and Formation of the Field of Political and Social Economy

    1. Frontmatter

    2. Chapter 1. Auguste Walras as a Transmitter of Ideas: From Jean-Baptiste Say to Léon Walras

      Jean-Pierre Potier
      Abstract
      Auguste Walras’s role as an “initiator in political economy” has often been recalled by his son and both their blood and theoretical lineage has been the subject of discussion since the end of the xixth century.
    3. Chapter 2. From the Theory of Five Stages to the “Industrial and Commercial Regime”

      Jean-Pierre Potier
      Abstract
      In this chapter, we will examine how Léon Walras considers the progress of humanity, during the xixth century, towards the most advanced stage of economic history, which he calls the “industrial and commercial regime”. We will thus discover his ideas related to “modern industry” at this stage and examine his understanding of the industrial revolution, the role of machinery, and the relationship between science and industry.
    4. Chapter 3. Taxonomy of Sciences and Divisions of “Political and Social Economy”: An Attempt at Reconstruction

      Jean-Pierre Potier
      Abstract
      Throughout the xixth century, attempts to classify the sciences multiplied, particularly in France, a field of research that fascinated many thinkers. Léon Walras, for his part, remained interested in it throughout his life.
  3. Pure Economics and Its Reception

    1. Frontmatter

    2. Chapter 4. Genesis of a Masterpiece: The Theory of General Economic Equilibrium

      Jean-Pierre Potier
      Abstract
      After examining the taxonomy of sciences used by Léon Walras, it is necessary to consider the genesis of the general economic equilibrium theory, widely considered as his “masterpiece”.
    3. Chapter 5. The Conception of Free Competition in the Éléments D’Économie Politique Pure

      Jean-Pierre Potier
      Abstract
      Very often, contemporary economists equate the Walrasian “free competition” with “pure and perfect competition” as a market structure of the neo-classical canon. In this chapter, we will seek to show that for Walras, free competition is essentially a natural behaviour of rational and free individuals, having specific institutions that allow them to fully exercise these liberties.
    4. Chapter 6. An Early Reception of Pure Economics in Italy: The Correspondence with the “Lombard-Venetians”

      Jean-Pierre Potier
      Abstract
      “The correspondence of an author is always a valuable source of knowledge about his personality, the development of his work, and the society in which he lives and acts.” With these words, Henri Bartoli (1990, p. 1088) began a review of a collection prepared by Giovanni Busino, L’Italia di Vilfredo Pareto: Economia e società in un carteggio del 1879–1924.
    5. Chapter 7. The Reception of Pure Economics in France (1873–1926)

      Jean-Pierre Potier
      Abstract
      A few months before Léon Walras’s death, on 10 June 1909, a ceremony of his Jubilée cinquantenaire d’économiste took place at Lausanne University. On this occasion, a group of French economists paid homage to him at this university.
  4. Reforming the Teaching of Political Economy

    1. Frontmatter

    2. Chapter 8. From Criticism to the Reform Plan for the Teaching of Political Economy in France in the xixth Century

      Jean-Pierre Potier
      Abstract
      Walras thus explains the deplorable state of the teaching of economics by the deliberate behaviour of the dominant bourgeois class, which saw its fortune grow through the protection of the State and customs barriers. He distinguishes two stages in the attitude of this class. In the first phase, political economy has no place, then is barely tolerated; in the second phase, it becomes, on the contrary, a mere instrument in the hands of the bourgeois class, which controls all available chairs.
    3. Chapter 9. Teaching Social and Applied Economics in Lausanne

      Jean-Pierre Potier
      Abstract
      On 12 November 1870, Léon Walras was appointed as an associate (“extraordinaire”) professor of political economy to the Faculty of Law at the Academy of Lausanne. Although the appointment was initially for one year only, the following year (on 24 July 1871), he was promoted to full professor and officially installed in the chair by Louis Ruchonnet, on 20 October 1871.
    4. Chapter 10. Léon Walras and the Commission of the University Library of Lausanne: The Purchases of Books in Economics

      Jean-Pierre Potier
      Abstract
      Shortly after his arrival in Lausanne, one of Léon Walras's priorities was to check the resources of the University Library about books in economics necessary for his teaching, and then to draw up purchase lists. He explained this on 13 June 1871 to Félicité Guillaumin.
  5. Critique of “Orthodox” Liberalism and “Empirical” Socialism

    1. Frontmatter

    2. Chapter 11. Ideas and Men: Criticism of the French “Liberal School”

      Jean-Pierre Potier
      Abstract
      Throughout his life, Léon Walras fought against what he termed the "clique currently holding the concession for the exploitation of economics", a school that had managed to apply to economic science the formula "exploitation by monopoly under the mask of liberty". He refers here to the group of economists of the liberal school that was formed during the 1840s and largely dominated French economic thought until the end of the Second Empire. This group would benefit from greater tolerance from the political power after the signing of the free trade treaty between France and England (January 1860).
    3. Chapter 12. Criticism of “Empirical Socialism”: the Cases of Louis Blanc and the Saint-Simonians

      Jean-Pierre Potier
      Abstract
      Throughout his career, Léon Walras had numerous opportunities, while presenting the facets of his own “liberal socialism”, to refute the ideas of the socialists of his time. To refer to these authors, he uses the generic term “empirical socialism”. What typology of currents will he apply in his writings? He always uses an evaluation scale from best to worst. Indeed, he begins with socialists who exhibit “a certain science and a certain critical strength” (“Exposition et conciliation des doctrines sociales”, 1872c, vol. XIII, p. 281), here referring to Saint-Simon and his school, as well as Charles Fourier and his disciple Victor Considérant, the Fourierist school being, according to him, clearly inferior to the first (Cours d’économie sociale, vol. XII, p. 267).
    4. Chapter 13. Léon Walras, Paul Voituron and Constant Leirens at the Editorial Team of Le Travail: the Polemics on Cooperation (1866–1867)

      Jean-Pierre Potier
      Abstract
      During the liberal phase of the Second Empire, Léon Walras became involved in the cooperative movement in Paris, which was then booming and was encouraged by Napoléon III. Initially, he participated with his friend Louis La Cour de la Pijardière in an attempt to establish a credit association called the Banque du Travail. He then joined the project launched by Léon Say to establish the Caisse d’escompte des associations populaires de consommation, de production et de crédit. From April 1865, he served as the appointed administrator of this Caisse. Furthermore, on 5 December 1864, he obtained from the Minister of Public Instruction and Worship, Victor Duruy, the authorisation to deliver three public lectures at the “Cercle des sociétés savantes” on the theory and practice of popular credit, production, and consumption associations.
  6. Social Reforms for the Implementation of a Liberal Socialism

    1. Frontmatter

    2. Chapter 14. Organisation of the Labour Market, Labour Legislation, and Social Insurance

      Jean-Pierre Potier
      Abstract
      At the end of his life, in the speech delivered for his fiftieth anniversary as an economist at the University of Lausanne, Léon Walras remarked: First, it is clear that wage determination by means of strikes and lock-outs, i.e., ultimately, by throwing stones against gunshots, is a barbarian behaviour. But it is also clear that for the purpose of replacing it by the determination of prices of various kinds of work with the mechanism of outbidding and underbidding (enchères et rabais), mathematical pure economics would be absolutely necessary (1909c, vol. VII, p. 510).
    3. Chapter 15. Towards the Repurchase of Land by the State and the Abolition of Taxes

      Jean-Pierre Potier
      Abstract
      Among some contemporary philosophers, sociologists, and political scientists, the theme of hybrid forms between liberalism and socialism is always fascinating. Several research attempts to trace back the sources of ideas related to social liberalism and liberal socialism were made from the xixth to the xxth century. We will focus on Léon Walras’s specific case.
    4. Chapter 16. Public Services and Natural Monopolies: What Role for the State?

      Jean-Pierre Potier
      Abstract
      For Léon Walras, the question of the “principle” of free competition, its applications, and its “exceptions” falls within the sphere of applied economics. He never claimed to have systematically clarified the areas where free competition should be the rule and the areas where it could not function. In a manuscript, he states on this subject.
    5. Chapter 17. Towards a Political Reform? Universal Suffrage and Professional Representation of Interests

      Jean-Pierre Potier
      Abstract
      Of the four questions of “social science”, Léon Walras claims to have tried to outline the industry and property problems, leaving to other researchers the task of constructing the theories of family and of government, the latter referring to a science of politics, of rational government. But for him, the transition from the ideal to the real, the realisation of the Social Ideal falls within the realm of practice and politics. The scientist does not have to concern himself with it. Politicians must take charge of economic and social reforms, such as the “economic restoration of the State”, which cannot be imposed authoritatively and must be implemented gradually, slowly, and patiently.
  7. Backmatter

Titel
Léon Walras, Economist and Liberal Socialist
Verfasst von
Jean-Pierre Potier
Copyright-Jahr
2025
Electronic ISBN
978-3-032-04670-3
Print ISBN
978-3-032-04669-7
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-032-04670-3

Die PDF-Dateien dieses Buches wurden gemäß dem PDF/UA-1-Standard erstellt, um die Barrierefreiheit zu verbessern. Dazu gehören Bildschirmlesegeräte, beschriebene nicht-textuelle Inhalte (Bilder, Grafiken), Lesezeichen für eine einfache Navigation, tastaturfreundliche Links und Formulare sowie durchsuchbarer und auswählbarer Text. Wir sind uns der Bedeutung von Barrierefreiheit bewusst und freuen uns über Anfragen zur Barrierefreiheit unserer Produkte. Bei Fragen oder Bedarf an Barrierefreiheit kontaktieren Sie uns bitte unter accessibilitysupport@springernature.com.

    Bildnachweise
    Salesforce.com Germany GmbH/© Salesforce.com Germany GmbH, IDW Verlag GmbH/© IDW Verlag GmbH, Diebold Nixdorf/© Diebold Nixdorf, Ratiodata SE/© Ratiodata SE, msg for banking ag/© msg for banking ag, C.H. Beck oHG/© C.H. Beck oHG, OneTrust GmbH/© OneTrust GmbH, Governikus GmbH & Co. KG/© Governikus GmbH & Co. KG, Horn & Company GmbH/© Horn & Company GmbH, EURO Kartensysteme GmbH/© EURO Kartensysteme GmbH, Jabatix S.A./© Jabatix S.A., Doxee AT GmbH/© Doxee AT GmbH