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FREE ESSAY ON LAISSEZ-FAIRE

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Laissez Faire Leadership
A look at the laissez faire leadership style in the contemporary organization. -- 750 words; APA

Urban Development
This paper discusses that the development of the city has been a combination of both laissez-faire and planned forces. -- 2,330 words; MLA

Management Styles
Analysis of autocratic, democratic, laissez-faire, and situational styles of leadership. -- 2,650 words;

"Wealth of Nations"
Discussion of Adam Smith's concept of laissez faire economics. -- 650 words;

The Era of Slavery
A comparison of "Slavery: A Problem in American Institutional and Intellectual Life" by Stanley M. Elkins and "Ordeal By Fire: The Civil War and Reconstruction" by James M. McPherson. -- 1,395 words; APA

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LAISSEZ-FAIRE

Explaining a Concept: Concept of the Invisible Hand in a Laissez-faire economy
"By preferring the support of domestic to that of foreign industry, he intends only his
own security; and by directing that industry in such a manner as its produce may be of
the greatest value, he intends only his own gain, and he is in this, as in many other
cases, led by an invisible hand to promote an end which was no part of it." Adam Smith,
Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations 1776.
What business does a government have in commerce and trade? Why would a government want
to interfere between two countries benefiting from each other by trade? What right does
the government have in two individuals wanting each other's products or services?
According to some, commerce and trade should be permitted to operate free of controls of
any kind; there should be no tariffs or other barriers. This is where the term
laissez-faire is introduced. It's direct translation in French, "leave alone to do", is
self-explanatory.
A strong believer in this type of economics is Adam Smith, both a philosopher and an
economist. Born on 1723 in Kirkcaldy, Fife, he studied at Oxford, and became a professor
of logic at Glasgow (1751), but took up the chair of moral philosophy the following year.
In 1776, he moved to London, where he published An Inquiry into the Nature 
and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1776), the first major work of political economy.
This examined in detail the consequences of economic freedom, such as division of labor,
the function of markets, and the international implications of a laissez-faire economy.
Adam Smith is most remembered today for his explanation of our market system. A majority
of people saw confusion when they observed economic activity in England during the middle
of the 18th century. They saw everyone doing whatever they pleased and deemed necessary.
Businesses produced whatever they wanted to make. Consumers purchased whatever they
wanted to buy. No one told anyone what had to be bought and what had to be sold
especially the government. And yet, somehow, businesses seemed to be providing the goods
and services that consumers wanted and needed. Some might have called it luck; Adam Smith
called it an "invisible hand". And today, it is considered the laissez-faire economy.
The "invisible hand" is a term for the unseen process of co-ordination which ensures
consistency of individual plans in a decentralized market economy (Pearce, 220). Adam
Smith introduced this phrase in his book, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the
Wealth of Nations (Book 
IV, Chap. II), who stressed the role that the "invisible hand" played in attaining a
harmony of interests.
Imagine this "invisible hand" suspended above everyone. This "invisible hand" encourages
businesspeople to pursue profits and it pushes consumers to buy goods and services. And
at the same time, that "invisible hand" discourages government from directing the
economic activity. This "invisible hand" that Adam Smith refers to as a guiding force was
the people and their attitudes.
It all started with profit-seeking individuals. Using self-interest to feed their drive,
people started businesses. When a business would become successful, others would notice
and enter into the same field. As a direct result, growing consumer demand was satisfied
while competition controlled rising prices.
As demand grew, businesses were established in which workers shared tasks. This is called
division of labor, in which one worker handled the first stage, another the second, and a
third finished the product. The result was mass production, more efficiency, and lower
costs. Mass production meant that people no longer had to grow there 
own food and remain on the farm; there would be enough to supply a large workforce.
Paying all those laborers resulted in an army of consumers with money to spend.
Adam Smith argued that an individual acting purely out of self-interest, would be a
progressive force for the maximization of the total wealth of a nation. The role of the
government should be permissive, creating a legal defensive setup sufficient to allow
individual action. Interference with the free working of this natural order will reduce
the growth of wealth and misdirect resources. Though Smith argued for laissez-faire, he
recognized the need for minimal government intervention. For example, a tariff for infant
industries and for the three functions of the state- security, justice and certain public
works (Pearce, 397).
Our economic system today seems to lean toward another philosophy called Keynesian
economics. Keynesian economics is based on a belief that the economy can possibly fall
into a recession and not be able to pick itself up. The solution is, without the aid of
the government; an economy will stay in the "trough" and will never reach the "peak".
Though laissez-faire has not been a very popular belief since the mid-19th century, we as
a people are able to do business independently. For "he intends his own security" and
"…intends his own gain." 
Bibliography
Pearce, David W. The MIT Dictionary of Modern Economics. Cambridge, Massachusetts. The
Macmillan Press. 1992.
Smith, Adam. An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of The Wealth of Nations. New York,
New York. The Modern Library. 1776.


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