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capitalism also called free market economy , or free enterprise economy

Main

economic system, dominant in the Western world since the breakup of feudalism, in which most of the means of production are privately owned and production is guided and income distributed largely through the operation of markets. A brief treatment of capitalism follows. For full treatment, see economic systems: Market systems. Although the continuous development of capitalism as a system dates only from the 16th century, antecedents of capitalist institutions existed in the ancient world, and flourishing pockets of capitalism were present during the later European Middle Ages. The development of capitalism was spearheaded by the growth of the English cloth industry during the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries. The feature of this development that distinguished capitalism from previous systems was the use of the excess of production over consumption to enlarge productive capacity rather than to invest in economically unproductive enterprises, such as pyramids and cathedrals. This characteristic was encouraged by several historical events. In the ethic encouraged by the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century, traditional disdain for acquisitive effort was diminished, while hard work and frugality were given a stronger religious sanction. Economic inequality was justified on the grounds that the wealthy were also the virtuous. Another contributing factor was the increase in Europes supply of precious metals and the resulting inflation in prices. Wages did not rise as fast as prices in this period, and the main beneficiaries of the inflation were the capitalists. The early capitalists (1500 1750) also enjoyed the benefits of the rise of strong national states during the mercantilist era. The policies of national power followed by these states succeeded in providing the basic social conditions, such as uniform monetary systems and legal codes, necessary for economic development and eventually made possible the shift from public to private initiative.

Beginning in the 18th century in England, the focus of capitalist development shifted from commerce to industry. The steady capital accumulation of the

preceding centuries was invested in the practical application of technical knowledge during the Industrial Revolution. The ideology of classical capitalism was expressed in Adam Smiths Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1776), which recommended leaving economic decisions to the free play of self-regulating market forces. After the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars had swept the remnants of feudalism into oblivion, Smiths policies were increasingly put into practice. The policies of 19th-century political liberalism included free trade, sound money (the gold standard), balanced budgets, and minimum levels of poor relief. World War I marked a turning point in the development of capitalism. After the war, international markets shrank, the gold standard was abandoned in favour of managed national currencies, banking hegemony passed from Europe to the United States, and trade barriers multiplied. The Great Depression of the 1930s brought the policy of laissez-faire (noninterference by the state in economic matters) to an end in most countries and for a time cast doubt on the capitalist system as a whole. The performance of capitalism since World War II in the United States, the United Kingdom, West Germany, and Japan, however, has given evidence of its continued vitality.

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Assorted References

major treatment ( in economic systems: Market systems )

development

Argentina under Videla ( in Videla, Jorge Rafal ) early modern Europe ( in Europe, history of: Economy and society; in Europe, history of: Landlords and peasants ) 18th century Europe ( in Europe, history of: Innovation and development ) Latin America ( in Latin America, history of: Capitalism and social transitions ) mercantilism ( in mercantilism ) modern society ( in modernization: The West and the world ) Netherlands, The ( in Low Countries, history of: Economic structure ) Russia ( in Russia: Economy; in Russia: Economic and social development ) South America ( in South America: The economy ) Sweden ( in Sweden: Principal reforms ) urban culture ( in urban culture: Urban cultures since the capitalist world system )

economic system

business cycles ( in economic growth: Role of the entrepreneur ) market ( in economics: The unintended effects of markets )

labour

alienation ( in alienation ) trade unions ( in organized labour: Origins in Britain; in organized labour: Origins of craft unionism ) work and employment ( in work; in industrial relations: The United States )

religion

comparative studies ( in religion, study of: Comparative studies ) John Paul II ( in John Paul II: First year of travels ) Protestant ethic ( in Europe, history of: Political and cultural influences on the economy ) Roman Catholicism ( in Roman Catholicism: Economic views and practice )

theorists

Hayek ( in Hayek, F.A.: The critique of socialism and the defense of classical liberal institutions ) Lenin ( in Lenin, Vladimir Ilich: Formation of a revolutionary party ) Marx ( in Kapital, Das ) Smith ( in classical economics; in Smith, Adam: The Wealth of Nations ) Weber ( in Weber, Max )

theory

anarchism ( in anarchism: Revolutionary syndicalism ) Chinese criminology ( in crime: Theories of causation ) communism ( in communism: Critique of capitalism; in economic planning: The nature of economic planning ) criminology ( in criminology: Sociological theories ) economics ( in price system: The basic functions of economic systems ) imperialism ( in colonialism, Western: Historiographical debate ) land reform ( in land reform: Political and social objectives ) liberalism ( in liberalism: Problems of free-market economies ) libertarianism ( in libertarianism: Free markets ) Marxism ( in Marxism: Historical materialism; in Marxism: Marxism in the West; in political philosophy: Anarchism and utopianism ) 19th-century social science ( in social science: Economics ) philosophical anthropology ( in philosophical anthropology: The 19th century ) social class ( in social class ) social democracy ( in social democracy ) socialism ( in socialism ) war finance ( in defense economics: Settling on a standard ) warfare ( in war: Socialist analyses )

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capitalism

capitalism

This topic is discussed at the following external Web sites. World Civilizations - The European Enlightment Glossary

Citations
MLA Style: "capitalism." Encyclopdia Britannica. 2008. Encyclopdia Britannica Online. 18 Sep. 2008 <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/93927/capitalism>. APA Style: capitalism. (2008). In Encyclopdia Britannica. Retrieved September 18, 2008, from Encyclopdia Britannica Online: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/93927/capitalism

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