In the Spring of 2009, I decided to have a blog and this,
below, was one of the very early efforts, which possibly shows, “The Mercantile
System – Back To The Future”. But in all
the debate now about the EU, I can only do a tinkered repeat job to add as a
passing comment.
Quote:
In the turmoil of the 1970's a few people were arguing for a
"Fortress Britain ",
outside the EU, paying its own way, and accepting the level of austerity and
restrictions that might be needed. As
most of those were well over to the Left, with some a little too close to the
Soviets, this was not a thesis that gained much support.
Moreover, we all wanted our goodies, and the price of houses
was going up. The notion of "Free Trade" was still thought to be
basic to progress. Of course, it had never been entirely free, for the Brit's
it had largely meant embroilment in an overstretched Empire to keep business
going and the City happy.
Also, these were happy days when we thought resources were
infinite, money was infinite, and happiness meant cranking up the GDP as fast
as we could. Climate? Food supply shortages? Fuel supply exhaustion? Degradation of the environment? All hocus pocus.
But there was a time when men believed that money was
finite, riches were finite, and that food supply was finite. There had been more than enough famines and
shortages in Europe in the memories of many
people to assume that world was a generous place.
It wasn't, it was mean, and a nation needed to protect what
it had, protect its farmers and food, and command its own trade in its own way
and in its own shipping.
So the essence of economics was the Mercantile System
whereby the State managed and controlled the external trade to ensure it was
able to access the bullion, always the bullion, and the other goods it needed
to survive.
Having done that, and established a world lead, then it
seemed that with the world in its grasp, Free Trade would be a good thing.
But was it? American watchmakers, German chemists, French
motor engineers, a variety of bulk food producing nations, all demonstrated
even in the late 19th Century that there was a price to pay for British
industry and agriculture.
With new sources of gold, new products, growing populations,
and apparently unlimited land to be found so we went on. The trouble was that others had the same
ideas and we had two world wars as a sort of self correcting mechanism.
Following that we tried to run a Sterling Area on the basis
of a weakened economy, no Empire and steering investment according to the
political notions at the time, inevitably these being adrift of realities.
That crashed so we finished up in the EU, an organisation
alleged to be free trading, but in fact a closed trade area in many respects,
so we went for broke in financial services to pay for all the goodies.
So we went broke, now where do we go with Europe
mostly broke as well? Telling the USA to free up their trade when they face an
EU that is anything but free, a China with its own ideas, an India ditto, a
Russia ditto, and others scrambling to protect themselves, what is America
going to do?
Back in Britain ,
where we lately sold off much of our gold at the bottom of the market, perhaps
it is time to start building our own ships again.
Unquote.
Back to Mercantilism?
"Back to Mercantilism?"
ReplyDeleteWell it's an idea and something we used to do well enough.