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单词 mercantilism
释义

mercantilism


mer·can·til·ism

M0224000 (mûr′kən-tē-lĭz′əm, -tĭ-)n.1. The theory and system of political economy prevailing in Europe after the decline of feudalism, based on national policies of accumulating bullion, establishing colonies and a merchant marine, and developing industry and mining to attain a favorable balance of trade.2. The practice, methods, or spirit of merchants; commercialism.
[mercantil(e) + -ism.]
mer′can·til·ist adj. & n.mer′can·til·is′tic adj.

mercantilism

(ˈmɜːkəntɪˌlɪzəm) n1. (Economics) economics Also called: mercantile system a theory prevalent in Europe during the 17th and 18th centuries asserting that the wealth of a nation depends on its possession of precious metals and therefore that the government of a nation must maximize the foreign trade surplus, and foster national commercial interests, a merchant marine, the establishment of colonies, etc2. (Commerce) a rare word for commercialism1 ˈmercanˌtilist n, adj ˌmercantiˈlistic adj

mer•can•til•ism

(ˈmɜr kən tɪˌlɪz əm, -ti-, -taɪ-)

n. 1. an economic and political policy, evolving with the modern nation-state, in which a government regulated the national economy with a view to the accumulation of gold and silver, esp. by achieving a balance of exports over imports. 2. mercantile practices or spirit; commercialism. [1870–75; < French] mer′can•til•ist, n., adj. mer`can•til•is′tic, adj.

mercantilism

a political and economic policy seeking to advance a state above others by accumulating large quantities of precious metals and by exporting in large quantity while importing in small. — mercantilist, n. — mercantilistic, adj.See also: Economics
Thesaurus
Noun1.mercantilism - an economic system (Europe in 18th century) to increase a nation's wealth by government regulation of all of the nation's commercial interestsmercantilism - an economic system (Europe in 18th century) to increase a nation's wealth by government regulation of all of the nation's commercial interestsmercantile systemmanaged economy - a non-market economy in which government intervention is important in allocating goods and resources and determining pricesEurope - the 2nd smallest continent (actually a vast peninsula of Eurasia); the British use `Europe' to refer to all of the continent except the British Isles
2.mercantilism - transactions (sales and purchases) having the objective of supplying commodities (goods and services)mercantilism - transactions (sales and purchases) having the objective of supplying commodities (goods and services)commerce, commercialismtrading - buying or selling securities or commoditiestrade - the commercial exchange (buying and selling on domestic or international markets) of goods and services; "Venice was an important center of trade with the East"; "they are accused of conspiring to constrain trade"e-commerce - commerce conducted electronically (as on the internet)interchange, exchange - reciprocal transfer of equivalent sums of money (especially the currencies of different countries); "he earns his living from the interchange of currency"initial offering, initial public offering, IPO - a corporation's first offer to sell stock to the publicbusiness enterprise, commercial enterprise, business - the activity of providing goods and services involving financial and commercial and industrial aspects; "computers are now widely used in business"shipping, transport, transportation - the commercial enterprise of moving goods and materialscarriage trade - trade from upper-class customerstransaction, dealing, dealings - the act of transacting within or between groups (as carrying on commercial activities); "no transactions are possible without him"; "he has always been honest is his dealings with me"importation, importing - the commercial activity of buying and bringing in goods from a foreign countryexporting, exportation - the commercial activity of selling and shipping goods to a foreign countrymarketing - the commercial processes involved in promoting and selling and distributing a product or service; "most companies have a manager in charge of marketing"distribution - the commercial activity of transporting and selling goods from a producer to a consumermarketing, merchandising, selling - the exchange of goods for an agreed sum of moneytraffic - buying and selling; especially illicit tradedefrayal, defrayment, payment - the act of paying moneyevasion, nonpayment - the deliberate act of failing to pay money; "his evasion of all his creditors"; "he was indicted for nonpayment"usance - the period of time permitted by commercial usage for the payment of a bill of exchange (especially a foreign bill of exchange)commercialise, commercialize, market - make commercial; "Some Amish people have commercialized their way of life"buy, purchase - obtain by purchase; acquire by means of a financial transaction; "The family purchased a new car"; "The conglomerate acquired a new company"; "She buys for the big department store"take - buy, select; "I'll take a pound of that sausage"get - purchase; "What did you get at the toy store?"clear - sell; "We cleared a lot of the old model cars"turn - get by buying and selling; "the company turned a good profit after a year"negociate - sell or discount; "negociate securities"sell - exchange or deliver for money or its equivalent; "He sold his house in January"; "She sells her body to survive and support her drug habit"sell short - sell securities or commodities or foreign currency that is not actually owned by the seller, who hopes to cover (buy back) the sold items at a lower price and thus to earn a profitremainder - sell cheaply as remainders; "The publisher remaindered the books"resell - sell (something) again after having bought itdeaccession - sell (art works) from a collection, especially in order to raise money for the purchase of other art works; "The museum deaccessioned several important works of this painter"fob off, foist off, palm off - sell as genuine, sell with the intention to deceiverealise, realize - convert into cash; of goods and propertyauction, auction off, auctioneer - sell at an auctionsell, trade, deal - do business; offer for sale as for one's livelihood; "She deals in gold"; "The brothers sell shoes"transact - conduct business; "transact with foreign governments"deal - sell; "deal hashish"retail - sell on the retail marketwholesale - sell in large quantitiesliquidize, sell out, sell up - get rid of all one's merchandisetrade in, trade - turn in as payment or part payment for a purchase; "trade in an old car for a new one"merchandise, trade - engage in the trade of; "he is merchandising telephone sets"traffic - trade or deal a commodity; "They trafficked with us for gold"arbitrage - practice arbitrage, as in the stock marketturn over - do business worth a certain amount of money; "The company turns over ten million dollars a year"
Translations
Merkantilismus

mercantilism


mercantilism

(mûr`kəntĭlĭzəm), economic system of the major trading nations during the 16th, 17th, and 18th cent., based on the premise that national wealth and power were best served by increasing exports and collecting precious metals in return. It superseded the medieval feudal organization in Western Europe, especially in Holland, France, and England. The period 1500–1800 was one of religious and commercial wars, and large revenues were needed to maintain armies and pay the growing costs of civil government. Mercantilist nations were impressed by the fact that the precious metals, especially gold, were in universal demand as the ready means of obtaining other commodities; hence they tended to identify money with wealth. As the best means of acquiring bullion, foreign trade was favored above domestic trade, and manufacturing or processing, which provided the goods for foreign trade, was favored at the expense of the extractive industries (e.g., agriculture). State action, an essential feature of the mercantile system, was used to accomplish its purposes. Under a mercantilist policy a nation sought to sell more than it bought so as to accumulate bullion. Besides bullion, raw materials for domestic manufacturers were also sought, and duties were levied on the importation of such goods in order to provide revenue for the government. The state exercised much control over economic life, chiefly through corporations and trading companies. Production was carefully regulated with the object of securing goods of high quality and low cost, thus enabling the nation to hold its place in foreign markets. Treaties were made to obtain exclusive trading privileges, and the commerce of colonies was exploited for the benefit of the mother country. In England mercantilist policies were effective in creating a skilled industrial population and a large shipping industry. Through a series of Navigation ActsNavigation Acts,
in English history, name given to certain parliamentary legislation, more properly called the British Acts of Trade. The acts were an outgrowth of mercantilism, and followed principles laid down by Tudor and early Stuart trade regulations.
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 England finally destroyed the commerce of Holland, its chief rival. As the classical economists were later to point out, however, even a successful mercantilist policy was not likely to be beneficial, because it produced an oversupply of money and, with it, serious inflation. Mercantilist ideas did not decline until the coming of the Industrial RevolutionIndustrial Revolution,
term usually applied to the social and economic changes that mark the transition from a stable agricultural and commercial society to a modern industrial society relying on complex machinery rather than tools.
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 and of laissez-fairelaissez-faire
[Fr.,=leave alone], in economics and politics, doctrine that an economic system functions best when there is no interference by government. It is based on the belief that the natural economic order tends, when undisturbed by artificial stimulus or regulation, to
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. Henry VIII, Elizabeth I, and Oliver Cromwell conformed their policies to mercantilism. In France its chief exponent was Jean Baptiste ColbertColbert, Jean Baptiste
, 1619–83, French statesman. The son of a draper, he was trained in business and was hired by Cardinal Mazarin to look after his financial affairs.
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.

Bibliography

See J. W. Horrocks, A Short History of Mercantilism (1925); D. C. Coleman, ed., Revisions in Mercantilism (1969); R. B. Ekelund, Jr., and R. D. Tollison, Mercantilists as a Rent-Seeking Society (1982); J. C. Miller, Way of Death: Merchant Capitalism and the Angolan Slave Trade (1988).

mercantilism

the economic doctrine of state power and the merchant class in the 16th and 17th centuries, in which foreign trade that gave rise to a trade surplus in bullion was regarded as the main indicator of national wealth. Under this doctrine, trade was controlled by state power. In the 19th century, the doctrine was overturned by the arguments of CLASSICAL ECONOMISTS, and replaced by the doctrine of free trade and LAISSEZ-FAIRE, although ‘protectionism’ and state intervention in the economy have often re-emerged as rival doctrines.

Mercantilism

 

(1) The first school of bourgeois political economy; an attempt to provide a theoretical explanation of and rationalization for the economic policy favored by the merchants.

(2) The economic policies of the early capitalist period, which were characterized by state intervention in the economy.

Early mercantilism (from the last third of the 15th century to the mid-16th) was characterized by Marx as a monetary system (K. Marx and F. Engels, Soch. , 2nd ed., vol. 24, p. 71). Its proponents were W. Stafford in England and De Santis and G. Scaruffi in Italy. The main element of early mercantilism was the theory of the money balance, which provided the rationale for the policy aimed at increasing monetary wealth by purely legislative means. In order to keep money in a country, its export was forbidden, and all sums earned by foreigners from sales in a country had to be spent on domestic goods.

Late mercantilism developed in the second half of the 16th century and reached its peak in the 17th century. Its chief theoreticians were T. Mun (England), A. Serra (Italy), and A. Montchrétien (France). Characteristic of late mercantilist policy was the favorable balance of trade, which was to be attained by the export of finished products and promoted by intermediary trade, in connection with which the export of money was permitted. Associated with intermediary trade is the mercantilist principle of buying cheaply in one country in order to sell more dearly in another.

Under mercantilist policy, the development of industry (especially manufacturing) was encouraged in order to increase the production of goods for export. Active protectionism was characteristic of mercantilist policy, as was support for the expansion of merchant capital—in particular, encouragement of the formation of monopolistic trading companies. Navigation and navies were developed and colonies seized. To finance all these measures, taxes were sharply increased.

The mercantilists focused on circulation and did not investigate the internal laws of the emerging capitalist production. They regarded political economy as the science of the balance of trade. Early mercantilists equated wealth with gold and silver as specie. Later theorists conceived of it as the surplus of products remaining after the needs of the country had been met—a surplus that could be transformed into money on the foreign market. Because money was scarce, the early mercantilists assigned it a limited function as a means of accumulation. Later mercantilists, however, also considered it a means of circulation. At the same time, in defending intermediary trade, the later mercantilists treated money essentially as capital. They recognized that money is a commodity, but like all of Marx’ predecessors, they were unable to solve the main problem of how and why commodities become money. The early mercantilists were the forefathers of the nominalist theory of money, and the later mercantilists, of the qualitative theory. Both theories contradict the mercantilist thesis that money is wealth. Because they regarded unequal exchange in foreign trade as the chief source of profit, the later mercantilists declared that the only productive labor was that which took place in industries whose products, when exported, brought into the country more money than they had cost to manufacture.

With the development of capitalism, the basic concepts of mercantilism ceased to correspond to changing economic conditions. Mercantilism gave way to classical bourgeois political economy, which provided the theoretical basis for free enterprise.

REFERENCES

Marx, K., and F. Engels. Soch. , 2nd ed., vol. 26, part 1, pp. 9, 11, 20, 34-35, 134-36, 155-57, 161-62, 277, 390.
Lenin, V. I. Poln. sobr. soch. , vol. 3, pp. 377-83.
Merkantilizm. Leningrad, 1935. [A collection.]
Itoriia ekonomicheskoi mysli, part 1. Moscow, 1961.
Mordukhovich, L. M. Ocherki istorii ekonomicheskikh uchenii. Moscow, 1957.
Mordukhovich, L. M. Glavnye etapy istorii ekonomicheskikh uchenii, part 1. Moscow, 1970.
Heckscher, E. Mercantilism, vols. 1-2. London, 1955.
Kellenbenz, H. Der Merkantilismus und die soziale Mobilitdt in Europa. Wiesbaden, 1965.
Kellenbenz, H. “Probleme der Merkantilismusforschung.”In XII Congres International des Sciences Historiques: Rapports 4. Vienna, 1965.
LegalSeeMercantile

mercantilism


mercantilism

a set of economic ideas and policies that became established in England during the 17th century, accompanying the rise of commercial capitalism. The mercantilists stressed the importance of trade and commerce as the source of the nation's wealth, and advocated policies to increase a nation's wealth and power by encouraging exports and discouraging imports in order to allow the country to amass quantities of GOLD. These protectionist ideas (see PROTECTIONISM) were criticized by later classical economists like Adam SMITH.

mercantilism


  • noun

Synonyms for mercantilism

noun an economic system (Europe in 18th century) to increase a nation's wealth by government regulation of all of the nation's commercial interests

Synonyms

  • mercantile system

Related Words

  • managed economy
  • Europe

noun transactions (sales and purchases) having the objective of supplying commodities (goods and services)

Synonyms

  • commerce
  • commercialism

Related Words

  • trading
  • trade
  • e-commerce
  • interchange
  • exchange
  • initial offering
  • initial public offering
  • IPO
  • business enterprise
  • commercial enterprise
  • business
  • shipping
  • transport
  • transportation
  • carriage trade
  • transaction
  • dealing
  • dealings
  • importation
  • importing
  • exporting
  • exportation
  • marketing
  • distribution
  • merchandising
  • selling
  • traffic
  • defrayal
  • defrayment
  • payment
  • evasion
  • nonpayment
  • usance
  • commercialise
  • commercialize
  • market
  • buy
  • purchase
  • take
  • get
  • clear
  • turn
  • negociate
  • sell
  • sell short
  • remainder
  • resell
  • deaccession
  • fob off
  • foist off
  • palm off
  • realise
  • realize
  • auction
  • auction off
  • auctioneer
  • deal
  • transact
  • retail
  • wholesale
  • liquidize
  • sell out
  • sell up
  • trade in
  • merchandise
  • arbitrage
  • turn over
  • broker
  • trust
  • pick up
  • barter away
  • buy in
  • stock up
  • stock
  • shop
  • browse
  • comparison-shop
  • antique
  • smuggle
  • import
  • export
  • hock
  • pawn
  • soak
  • impulse-buy
  • franchise
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