The Italian Tradition
This may look odd. Italian economists don't usually figure very prominently
in histories of economic thought. Most people would probably only be able
to name the giants Vilfredo Pareto and
Piero Sraffa (both of whom were emigrants,
incidentally). But Italy has had a very old and distinctive heritage in
economics that is impossible to ignore.
This distinctiveness
emerged in the 18th Century, when Neapolitan economist, Ferdinando Galiani
(1751) "broke off" from the main streams of Enlightenment
economic thinking. He joined in the general reaction against Mercantilist
thought, but he did not follow the path of the French Physiocratic
and Scottish schools. Instead, Galiani initiated
the two avenues which formed the "Italian tradition" in economics: the serious analysis of
government as an economic entity and a
utility-based theory of natural value.
For Galiani,
the economy must be analyzed more juridically than pseudo-scientifically.
Government, he argued, is an important entity in any economy. It can, via its
laws and fiscal policies, influence the economy and society for good and
evil. Theories of the "natural state" without a State were, for
him, hopelessly abstract and dangerously naive. The policy conclusions of
the Physiocratic sect -- laissez-faire, laissez-passer -- were
a consequence of their having excluded the State by assumption.
This line of reasoning was closer to the French Neo-Colbertistes
and German Neo-Cameralists.
Galiani
also argued that the "cost" theories of value which the Physiocrats
embraced
were plain wrong. In his view, natural value arises from utility-based demand
interacting with the scarcity of supply -- an argument already anticipated by
another Italian, Bernardo Davanzati.
This idea was developed in parallel in
France by men like Abbé Condillac, Jacques Turgot
and others. By the time of the Marginalist
Revolution, the Italians were not caught by surprise and contributed
much to its early construction. Indeed, the bulk of the Lausanne
School came from Italy -- Vilfredo Pareto, Enrico Barone,
Giovanni Antonelli, Pasquale Boninsegni,
etc. Some economists, such as Henry Schultz, preferred to call it simply the "Italian School". The influential
Neoclassical economist Maffeo Pantaleoni,
the Italian "Marshallian", can be
considered part of this group.
The
economic theory of the State was a more distinctively Italian concern and passed
through several stages. In its earliest stage, it was explicitly utilitarian.
Cesar
Beccaria, and Pietro Verri
focused their analysis on the impact of the State and fiscal policy on the economy.
They viewed the state as an instrument to improve general
social welfare (whether by engaging or disengaging from the economy; reshaping its
laws and practices, etc.). The Italians found in the notion of utility - or
"happiness" -- a criteria by which to evaluate policy. Specifically,
they argued that social welfare was greatest when the society achieved the "greatest
happiness of the greatest number", which was to become the formula of utilitarian
social policy.
However, the utilitarian perspective still
held the state as a "benevolent despot". In the 19th Century,
beginning with the work of Francesco Ferrara, and
following through Antonio de Viti de Marco, Ugo Mazzola,
Luigi Einaudi and others (including, notably, Pareto,
Barone and Pantaleoni),
the State began being analyzed as
an economic entity itself. This involved examining the government
as both a "productive" agent (i.e. a producer of collective
goods -- which are also inputs into private production) as well as an
"optimizing" agent (i.e. a "revenue-maximizer"). They
were particularly keen on analyzing the impact of fiscal policy, notably
tax incidence, in this context. The Italian "fiscal science"
continued on its distinctive path through the second half of the 20th Century. Buchanan
credits the Italian fiscalists as the intellectual precursors to the "public
choice" school.
The third distinctive strain of Italian economics has
been the remarkable "Classical" Neo-Ricardian
counter-revolution initiated in 1960 by Piero Sraffa.
Although most of the early action was at Cambridge,
the Neo-Ricardian school took root in Italy as Sraffa's Italian students, such
as Pasinetti and Garegnani,
returned home. There it was not only tolerated but even attained a degree
of respectability that seemed impossible anywhere else.
Early Italian
Economists
- Giovanni Ceva, 1647-1734 -
(1),
(2),
(3), (4)
- De lineis rectis, 1678
- Opuscula mathematica, 1682
- Geometria motus, 1692
- De re nummaria, quoad fieri potuit geometrice tractata, ad
illustrissimos et excellentissimos dominos Praesidem Quaestoresque hujus
arciducalis Caesaraei Magistratus Mantuae, 1711
- Opus hydrostaticum, 1729
- Mantuan engineer and mathematician. Ceva is best known for his
1711 on monetary theory. In it, he promoted of the use of
mathematical methods and stripped-down "economic models" in
economic theory. Widely considered the first "mathematical
economist".
The Italian Enlightenment
and Utilitarians
- Antonio Genovesi
, 1712-1769 - (1),
(2),
(3), (4),
(5)
- Disciplinarum metaphysicarum elementa, 1743
- Elementa metaphysicae mathematicum in modum adornata, 1743-5
- Elementa logico-criticae, 1745
- Discorso sul vero fine delle lettere e delle scienze, 1753
- Meditazioni filosofiche su la religione e la morale, 1758
- Lezioni de commercio o sia d'economia civile, 1765.
- La logica per li giovinetti, 1766
- Diocesina: ossia filosofia del giusto e dell'onesto, 1776
- Professor of ethics and philosophy at the
University of Naples, and, from 1754, in "commerce and civil
economics", arguably the first academic chair in economics in
Europe. Genovesi has been regarded as the leader of the "Neapolitan"
branch of the Enlightenment. His 1765
lectures on
economics effectively lays out the Italian tradition -- combining a
utility-based theory of value, utilitarian ethics and permitting a role for the State in
economic analysis. Genovesi introduced a mathematical formula
where value was equal to demand divided by the volume of consumable
goods. Highly influential upon Galiani.
- Giammaria Ortes,
1713-1790. - (1),
(2)
- Calcolo de' piaceri e de' dolore della vita umana, 1754
- Calcolo sopra il valore delle opinioni umane, 1756
- Calcolo sopra i giuochi della bassetta e del faraone, 1757
- Lezioni de commercio o sia d'economia civile, 1765.
- Economia nazionale, 1774.
- Riflessioni sugli oggetti apprensibili, sui costumi e sulle cognizioni
umane, per rapporto alle lingue, 1775
- Reflessioni sulla populazione per rapporto all' economia nazionale,
1790
- Venetian friar and anticipator of Robert Malthus,
both in his theory of population and in the theory of underconsumption.
Deeply pessimistic about the possibility of improvement of material
well-being. An early utilitarian, Ortes
defined "pleasure" merely as the diminution of
"pain".
- Giuseppe Palmieri,
Marchese di Martignano, 1721-1794. - (1)
- Riflessioni sulla pubblica felicità relativeament al regno di
Napoli, 1787.
- Pensieri economici, 1789
- Della ricchezza nazionale, 1792
- Disciple of Genovesi and one of a band of consultant administrators to the Kingdom
of Naples during the Enlightenment.
- Count Pietro Verri,
1728-1797
- Cesare Bonesana Marchese di Beccaria, 1738-1794.
The Lausanne School Italians
-
Umberto Ricci, 1879-1946.
The Italian Fiscalist School
- Francesco Ferrara, 1810-1900.
- (1), (2)
- Editor, Biblioteca dell' Economisti, 1850-70
- Esame Storico-critico di Economisti e Dottrine Economiche, 1889-92.
- Lezione di economia politica,
- Opere Complete, 1955.
- Sicilian economist, professor at Turin, politician and briefly Italian Minister of Finance. Although his
background was in the Italian utilitarian tradition,
Ferrara was an ardent believer in laissez-faire "economic
harmonies" in the Manchester School
sense (and an early
free banking proponent) His distinctive theory of value is
sometimes considered to be an important proto-Neoclassical
contribution. His main work was in public finance, specifically
the analysis of the
interrelationship between State fiscal policy and social interest in a manner that
anticipates that of Maffeo Pantaleoni and the
modern Public Choice school.
- Antonio de Viti de Marco, 1858-1943 - (2),
(3)
- Moneta e prezzi, 1885.
- First Principles of Public Finance, 1888.
- "La pressione tributaria dell' imposta e del prestito", GdE,
1893
- One of the main Italian fiscalists. Credited with developing the
"Ricardian equivalence"
theory of public debt.
- Ugo Mazzola, 1863-1899.
- L'Assicurazione degli Operai Nella Scienza e Nella Legislazione
Germanica, 1885.
- Dati Scientifici Della Finanza Pubblica, 1890
- L'Impostat Progressiva in Economia Pura Sociale, 1895
- La Colonizzazione Interna in Prussia, 1900.
- Proponent of the view of the State as "firm", providing
services and charging for them through taxes. Was among the first the
identify the phenomenon of "public goods" and the associated
problems of private provision and the role for public provision.
- Luigi Einaudi, 1874-1961.
- Studi Sugli Effetti Delle Imposte, 1902.
- La Terra e l'imposta, 1924.
- "Contributo alla ricerca dell' ottime imposta", 1929, Annali
di Economia
- Principi di Scienza della Finanza, 1932
- "Il cosidetto principio della imposta produttivista", La
Riforma Sociale, 1933
- Saggi sul risparmio e l'imposta, 1941
- Problemi Economicic della Federazione Europea, 1945.
- Lezioni di Politica Sociale, 1949.
- A classically-trained economist, editor of La
riforma sociale, and ardent advocate of laissez-faire.
His major works were on public finance in the tradition of
Ferrara. He was also an accomplished economic
historian. Later
became a prominent Italian statesman (he was President of Italy from 1948 to
1955).
Italian Neo-Ricardians
Other Distinctive Italians
- Marco Fanno, 1878-1965
- L'Espansione commercial e coloniale degli stati moderni, 1906
- Le Banche et il mercato monetario, 1912
- I transferimenti anomrali dei capitali e le crisi, 1935
- Introduzione allo studio della teoria economica del corporativismo,
1935.
- Principii di scienzia economica
- Padua business cycle theorist. Credited with the independent
development of the "accelerator" principle of investment.
- Gustavo Del Vecchio, 1883-1972
- La theorie dello sconte, 1914
- Ricerche sopra la teoria generale della moneta, 1932
- Vecchie e nove teorie economiche, 1933.
- Progressi della teoria economica, 1934
- Lezione di economia politica e la teoria del reddito, 1950
- Introduzione alla finanzia, 1950
- Capitale e interesse, 1956.
- Bologna economist. Developed theory of money along Walras's
lines.
Resources on the Italian Tradition