Jane Marcet is not writing for the working classes, but for
women and men of the educated classes of the nineteenth century.
She draws her principles and materials from the writings of the
great masters who have written about political economy,
particularly Adam Smith, Th omas Robert Malthus, Jean-Baptise Say,
Jean Charles Luonard de Sismondi, and David Ricardo.
Marcet consolidates the ideas of bankers as well as professional
political economists. She makes their ideas accessible, not only to
the young people she identifi es as her audience in the book's
preface, but also to the middle classes--political actors and
business people. She challenges the English classical school to
take seriously the ideas of continental economists by inserting
those ideas into a popular book.
Marcet maintains distance from some of the central tenets of
classical economics, but engages in conversation with its masters.
Sometimes she accepts criticism of their ideas, but at other times
she keeps her own counsel. The ideas of the masters will be
immediately identifi able to those for whom political economy is
not new, although a few of their more abstruse questions and
controversies have been omitted. When the soundness of a doctrine
appears well established, Marcet presents it conscientiously.
Evelyn L. Forget's well written introduction describes the life and
background of the author as well as the book's history, bringing
this timeless classic into the twenty- first century.
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