The Political Element in Theories of American Economic Development, from the Founding to the Closing of the Frontier
Abstract
Since its founding, especially before the late-19th c. closing of its frontier, the <br /><br />
United States has been a laboratory for the creation and application of theories <br />
<br />
of economic development. The premise has been that a new nation with <br />
<br />
abundant land and separation from the institutions and antagonisms of Europe <br />
<br />
will develop differently. Economic thinkers including Jefferson, Hamilton, <br />
<br />
Mathew and Henry Carey, Cardozo, and Henry George shared the premise but <br />
<br />
were inspired differently by it. The differences are attributable to the influences <br />
<br />
of contemporary political causes and to the thinkers’ notions of the roles of <br />
<br />
ideology and ingenuity in economic development.