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Adam Smith and the Origins of American Enterprise: How America's Industrial Success was Forged by the Timely Ideas of a Brilliant Scots Economist
 
 
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Adam Smith and the Origins of American Enterprise: How America's Industrial Success was Forged by the Timely Ideas of a Brilliant Scots Economist [Hardcover]

Roy C. Smith (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

December 1, 2002
Adam Smith was a Scottish professor of moral philosophy. He published his classic The Wealth of Nations in 1776, the year the American Revolution began. Smith became widely known for his ideas of free markets, laissez-faire commerce, and the "invisible hand." Yet English politicians, landed gentry, and the nobility paid little attention and enacted none of Smith's suggested reforms.

The American colonies, however, began their existence as an independent nation in 1781 with no money, no industry, no banks, and deep in debt. The Founding Fathers-particularly Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and Benjamin Franklin-turned to the ideas of Adam Smith to create and jump-start an economic system for America with both immediate and long-sustained results.

This little-known but vital part of U.S. history is now revealed in Roy C. Smith's highly readable new book.

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Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover

"It is no coincidence what[so]ever that the nation with the most successful economy the world has known was born the very same year that Adam Smith published the greatest of all economic books, The Wealth of Nations. Roy C. Smith shows, clearly and informatively, how Smithian economics and American politics and entrepreneurship intertwined to produce that wonder called the American economy."
--John Steele Gordon, author of The Great Game and The Business of America: Tales from the Marketplace

"This is the most readable, informative, and genuinely exciting adventure in economic history that I have recently encountered."
--James M. Hester, former president of New York University

"Adam Smith's new economic ideas of 1776 appeared just in time to have maximal impact on the thinking of America's founding fathers...In this engaging economic and intellectual history, Roy Smith recounts how the United States became the most opulent of countries by putting into practice what the great Scottish economist preached."
--Richard Sylla, president of the American Association of Economic Historians
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

About the Author

Roy C. Smith, an Annapolis graduate, was an investment banker at Goldman Sachs for twenty years and has been a professor of entrepreneurship and finance at New York University's Stern School for the past fourteen years. He is the author of several books, including The Global Bankers, The Money Wars, and The Wealth Creators. He lives in Montclair, New Jersey.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Truman Talley Books; First Edition edition (December 1, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312285523
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312285524
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.6 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,072,255 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Straight-forward, center-right review, July 20, 2007
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Roy C. Smith offers a readable, straight-forward, right-of-center review of the famous economist, Adam Smith. The book introduces Smith's thoughts in basic detail, and spends a great deal of time putting Smith in the context of the American revolution, which of course is when "The Wealth of Nations" was published, in 1776. At times the history seems to drown-out the thems of Adam Smith's contribution, but by the conclusion the author ties up his thesis that Adam Smith's thought had a pervasive and substantial impact on the Founding Fathers, and upon the way Americans have done busness since then. A good read for introductory or undergraduate readers. Author's focus remains on Smith and American context. Little mention of John Maynard Keynes is made, and no discusion of Marx or socialism as a competing alternative. This did not detract from book, as plenty of other books and articles speak to those subjects.
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6 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The title of the book is correct but not much else, November 24, 2007
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Michael Emmett Brady "mandmbrady" (Bellflower, California ,United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
R Smith is certainly correct that Hamilton,Washington,Madison,Franklin,etc.,had either read the Wealth of Nations(WN,1776) or were familiar with its point of view.Of course,these individuals formed the Federalists.They were the real thing as far as genuine conservatism is concerned.They were opposed by the Anti Federalsts(Mason,Randolph,Henry,Paine,Jefferson,etc.)who took their cue from the work of J B Say.These individuals are not conservatives.They are libertarians.It is this group that believed in laissez faire,opposed all tariffs,opposed a uniform currency,opposed the creation of a central bank to control the problematic behavior of private commercial banks,opposed the creation of a strong federal government,opposed giving the federal government the power to tax,etc.R Smith has obviously not read the Wealth of Nations in its entirety because the real Adam Smith favored overall progressive taxes,supported both revenue and retaliatory tariffs,supported extensive public goods and works spending by a democratically elected government(as opposed to the " Government" tyranny of George III.R Smith badly misrepresents Smith's views here),had a very clear understanding of free market failure,externalities and spillover effects,the need to prevent any bank loans from going to projectors(J M Keynes's rentiers and speculators),prodigals,and imprudent risk takers,the need to fix the rate of interest in the long run permanently at a low level a little bit above the prime rate,the skewing of loans to the sober middle class entrepreneurs who would use the loans to create productive jobs and not leveraged buyouts ,dot com frauds,and subprime scams, and the importance of making sure that all individuals had an education and religious instruction that would be provided free of charge by the state if they were unable to pay for such education themselves.There is no substantial discussion of any of these Smithian topics anywhere in R Smith's book.R Smith appears to believe that Adam Smith was a libertarian.Nothing could be further from the truth.The interested reader is encouraged to read pp.280-340,especially Smith's summary on pp.339-340,434-439,681-690,716-768,and 794-795 of the Modern Library(Cannan)edition of the WN to discover the real Adam Smith.You will not find him in this book.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Sad, May 23, 2011
Adam Smith and the Origins of American Enterprise: How the Founding Fathers Turned to a Great Economist's Writings and Created the American Economy has the longest and most promising title relative to its meager contents of the book I have read. It paints a broad-stroke economic history of America from colonial days to the twentieth century and comments periodically on the consistency between Smith's vision and America's successful execution of an economic and political system based on the principle of individual freedom. Mistakes - Adam Smith succeeded his professor at the University of Glasgow (it was Thomas Craigie who did so) and Benjamin Franklin was aware of Smith (they knew each other and it thought Franklin saw chapter drafts of the Wealth of Nations) - makes the reader wonder about other factual declarations in the book. More significantly, the author does not appear to have referred directly to either the Wealth of Nations or the writings of the founding fathers in his research. I was looking for and did not find what our founding fathers actually said about Smith's revolutionary ideas.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In 1718, a twenty-four-year-old Frenchman named Francois Marie Arouet was released from the Bastille, where he had been imprisoned for a year because of satirical ramarks critical of the French monarchy and its harsh system of social justice. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
mercantile system
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Adam Smith, New York, United States, The Wealth of Nations, North America, New England, Benjamin Franklin, Industrial Revolution, Alexander Hamilton, Civil War, French Revolution, Continental Congress, George Washington, Great Britain, Thomas Jefferson, Declaration of Independence, John Adams, American Revolution, Articles of Confederation, Constitutional Convention, Robert Morris, William Pitt, David Hume, Louisiana Purchase, North Carolina
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