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laissez faire |
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laissez faireTheory that the state should not intervene in economic affairs, except to break up a monopoly. The phrase originated with the Physiocrats, 18th-century French economists whose maxim was laissez faire et laissez passer (literally, ‘let go and let pass’ – that is, leave the individual alone and let commodities circulate freely). The degree to which intervention should take place is still one of the chief problems of economics. The Scottish economist Adam Smith justified the theory in The Wealth of Nations (1776). Before the 17th century, control by guilds, local authorities, or the state, of wages, prices, employment, and the training of workers, was taken for granted. As capitalist enterprises developed in the 16th and 17th centuries, entrepreneurs shook off the control of the guilds and local authorities. By the 18th century this process was complete. The reaction against laissez faire began in the mid-19th century and found expression in the factory acts and elsewhere. This reaction was inspired partly by humanitarian protests against the social conditions created by the Industrial Revolution and partly by the wish to counter popular unrest of the 1830s and 1840s by removing some of its causes.
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Everyone's superiors act according to national typecast - the English are particularly snotty about their Scottish underlings' behavior - and only the folks who coined the term laissez faire survive the brief peace relatively unscathed. Our laissez faire attitude toward effectively fighting this bug shows what we are doing now is not working, we have lost control, and our patients are dying as a result,' Professor West said. Ayn Rand's Objectivism, which includes an advocacy of laissez faire capitalism, is also nontheistic. |
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