Encyclopedia of american business history part 10

laissez-faire A French term meaning “allow to do,” it was transformed into an economic theory stating that business should be allowed to operate with as little government interference as possible. In economics, laissez-faire generally has been taken to mean hands off and to be the direct opposite of mercantilism | L laissez-faire A French term meaning allow to do it was transformed into an economic theory stating that business should be allowed to operate with as little government interference as possible. In economics laissez-faire generally has been taken to mean hands off and to be the direct opposite of mercantilism which suggested strong government interference in the private sector in the 18th and 19th centuries. Laissez-faire succeeded mercantilism in the 19th century as the economies of the United States and Europe began to industrialize. Its best known exponents were from the British classical school led by economist Adam Smith who maintained that humans are most productive when they are motivated by unfettered economic self-interest free of outside control. Competition flourishes when government influence is minimal and a full array of goods and services will follow subject only to the demands of the market. The doctrine became very popular in the United States especially during the period of rapid industrialization in the 19th century. Business developed at a much faster pace than government s ability to keep pace with it and the term became a synonym for a government s generally lax industrial policy But even during periods when laissez-faire economics appeared to be working some protectionist government policies still intervened such as the tariffs imposed against imports. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries the policies of progressivism began to attack the lenient attitude of government toward business. The administration of William McKinley was the last in which a hands-off policy toward business was evident until the 1920s when Republicans controlled the White House and Congress. But stronger antitrust policies that began with the administration of Theodore Roosevelt the founding of the Federal Reserve and the regulations passed during the NEW DEAL all signaled a less permissive atmosphere for business than was the case in the 19th century. similarly .

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