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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Is Food Self-Sufficiency Conducive to Long-Term Growth? An Assessment of Malthus (1803) on the International Corn Trade.

Rodolfo SignorinoNeri Salvadori

subject

Malthus Smith growth international trade structural change.Economics and EconometricsHistoryMalthusLong term growth060106 history of social sciencesbusiness.industrygrowth05 social sciencesinternational tradeSmith06 humanities and the artsInternational economicsThomas Robert Malthus International corn trade Structural change Food protectionism Developmentstructural changeSettore SECS-P/04 - Storia Del Pensiero Economico0502 economics and businessDevelopment economicsEconomics0601 history and archaeology050207 economicsbusinessSettore SECS-P/01 - Economia PoliticaSelf-sufficiency

description

In this article, we have reconstructed Malthus’s views on growth and international corn trade in the second edition of his An Essay on the Principle of Population (1803) and shown their theoretical consistency with Malthus’s food self-sufficiency policy proposal advanced in Grounds of an Opinion on the Policy of Restricting the Importation of Foreign Corn ([1815] 1986b), the protectionist pamphlet that elicited Ricardo’s vehement reaction in “Essay on Profits.” Malthus’s (1803) main thesis was that the contemporary British unbalanced growth pattern was not viable. In order to avoid premature stagnation, he thought that Great Britain should both follow a pattern of balanced growth and pursue a policy of food self-sufficiency. To achieve such a goal, the British Parliament should provide adequate protection to British agriculture against foreign competition. We have shown how Malthus (1803) made recourse to three arguments to support his food self-sufficiency policy proposal, the large country argument, the national security argument, and the (international trade-induced) structural change argument. For each argument, we have exposed the implicit or ad hoc assumptions underlying Malthus’s chain of reasoning, and we have hinted at James Mill’s and David Ricardo’s rejections of Malthus’s arguments. Moreover, we have analyzed Malthus’s sources of theoretical inspiration, the French physiocrats and Adam Smith. In particular, we have shown how Malthus echoed a few theoretical arguments present in the Wealth of Nations that were in tune with his physiocratic leanings and consonant with his analysis of the long-term expediency of a food self-sufficiency policy.

10.1215/00182702-3777182http://hdl.handle.net/11568/842325