Senior, Nassau William

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'''Nassau William Senior''' ([[September 26]], [[1790]] - [[June 4]], [[1864]]), [[England|English]] [[economist]], was born at Compton, [[Berkshire]], the eldest son of the Rev. JR Senior, vicar of Durnford, [[Wiltshire]].
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'''Nassau William Senior''' (September 26, 1790 – June 4, 1864), was an [[England|English]] [[economics|economist]] who occupied the first chair of [[political economy]] in England. He was one of the leading economists of the early nineteenth century, and was active in advising successive British governments with regard to economic policy. His work with various commissions investigating [[trade union]]s, [[strike]]s, and working conditions was influential, resulting in the establishment of the [[workhouse]] system and other reforms. In his academic work, Senior strove to make economics more practical, based in reality rather than hypothetical assumptions. He introduced the idea that accumulation of [[capital]] be considered part of the cost of production, and advanced the "abstinence" theory of [[profit]]. He was strong in his objections to a number of theories, such as the pessimistic [[Thomas Robert Malthus|Malthusian]] theory of population growth and made significant criticisms of [[David Ricardo|Ricardo]]'s theory of [[rent]]. In turn, many of the ideas he was associated with, such as the "wages-fund" theory, were rejected by later theorists. Nevertheless, he made significant contributions to economic theory which were part of the effort to understand how economic relationships operate in society, and thus bring about the establishment of fair policies to support both society as a whole and the individuals within it. 
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==Life==
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'''Nassau William Senior''' was born on September 26, 1790 in Compton, Berkshire, [[England]], the eldest son of the Reverend John Raven Senior, vicar of Durnford, Wiltshire, and Mary Duke, the daughter of the solicitor-general of [[Barbados]]. He was educated at Eton and Magdalen College, [[Oxford University|Oxford]]. At Oxford he was a private student of [[Richard Whately]], afterwards [[archbishop]] of Dublin, with whom he remained connected by ties of lifelong friendship. He obtained his Bachelor's degree in 1811, and qualified as a [[lawyer]] in 1819. In 1836, during the chancellorship of Lord Cottenham, he was appointed Master in Chancery.
 +
 
 +
Senior became interested in [[economics]] in the early stages of his career. He became the first Drummond professor of [[political economy]] at Oxford in 1825, occupying the chair until 1830, and again from 1847 to 1852. In 1830 he was requested by [[Prime Minister]] [[William Melbourne]] to inquire into the situation of [[strike]]s, to report on the impact of the Combination Acts (which made [[trade union]]s and [[collective bargaining]] illegal) and to suggest improvements. He was the author, together with [[Edwin Chadwick]], of the ''Poor Law Amendment Act'' of 1834, which led to the establishment of the [[workhouse]] system in England. His ''An Outline of the Science of Political Economy'' (1836) was an attempt to bring [[classical economics]] closer to scientific principles.
  
He was educated at [[Eton College|Eton]] and [[Magdalen College, Oxford]]; at the university he was a private pupil of [[Richard Whately]], afterwards [[archbishop of Dublin]], with whom he remained connected by ties of lifelong friendship. He took the degree of B.A. in [[1811]], was called to the bar in 1819, and in 1836, during the chancellorship of [[Lord Cottenham]], was appointed a master in chancery. On the foundation of the professorship of political economy at Oxford in [[1825]] Senior was elected to fill the chair, which he occupied till 1830, and again from 1847 to 1852. In 1830 he was requested by Lord Melbourne to inquire into the state of combinations and strikes, to report on the state of the law and to suggest improvements in it.
+
Senior was an advisor to successive British governments, advising them on important economic and political issues, including [[employment]] policy, [[trade]], [[wages]], working hours, and [[education]]. He played an important role especially as an advisor of the Whig Party. He was a member of the Poor Law Inquiry Commission of 1832, and of the Handloom Weavers Commission of 1837. The report of the latter, published in 1841, was drawn up by him, and he embodied in it the substance of the report he had prepared some years before on trade unionism and strikes. He was also one of the commissioners appointed in 1864 to inquire into popular education in England.  
  
He was a member of the Poor Law Inquiry Commission of 1832, and of the Handloom Weavers Commission of 1837; the report of the latter, published in 1841, was drawn up by him, and he embodied in it the substance of the report he had prepared some years before on combinations and strikes. He was also one of the commissioners appointed in 1864 to inquire into popular education in England. In the later years of his life, during his visits to foreign countries, he studied with much care the political and social phenomena they exhibited. Several volumes of his journals have been published, which contain much interesting matter on these topics, though the author probably rated too highly the value of this sort of social study. Senior was for many years a frequent contributor to the ''Edinburgh Quarterly'', ''London'' and ''North British'' Reviews, dealing in their pages with literary as well as with economic and political subjects. He died at [[Kensington]] on the 4th of June 1864.
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Senior lost his position as professor of political economy at King's College, London, because of his support of the Catholic Church of [[Ireland]].  
  
His writings on economic theory consisted of an article in the ''Encyclopaedia Metropolitana'', afterwards separately published as ''An Outline of the Science of Political Economy'' (1836), and his lectures delivered at Oxford. Of the latter the following were printed:
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In the later years of his career, he traveled to foreign countries to study the political and social phenomena they exhibited. Several volumes of his journals have been published, among others ''Journal Kept in Turkey and Greece'' (1859) and ''Conversations and Journals in Egypt and Malta'' (1882).  
*''An Introductory Lecture'' (1827)
 
*''Two Lectures on Population'', with a correspondence between the author and [[Thomas Malthus|Malthus]] (1831)
 
*''Three Lectures on the Transmission of the Precious Metals from Country to Country, and the Mercantile Theory of Wealth'' (1828)
 
*''Three Lectures on the Cost of obtaining Money and on some Effects of Private and Government Paper Money'' (1830)
 
*''Three Lectures on Wages and on the Effects of Absenteeism, Machinery and War, with a Preface on the Causes and Remedies of the Present Disturbances'' (1830, 2nd ed. 1831)
 
*''A Lecture on the Production of Wealth'' (1847)
 
*''Four Introductory Lectures on Political Economy'' (1852).
 
Several of his lectures were translated into French by M. Arrivabne under the title of ''Principes Fondamentaux d'Economie Politique'' (1835).
 
  
Senior also wrote on administrative and social questions:
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Senior was for many years a frequent contributor to the ''Edinburgh Quarterly'', ''London Review'', and ''North British Review'', dealing in their pages with literary as well as with economic and political subjects.  
*''A Letter to Lord Howick on a Legal Provision for the Irish Poor, Commutation of Tithes and a Provision for the Irish Roman Catholic Clergy'' (1831, 3rd ed., 1832, with a preface containing suggestions as to the measures to be adopted in the present emergency)
 
*''Statement of the Provision for the Poor and of the Condition of the Laboring Classes in a considerable portion of America and Europe, being the Preface to the Foreign Communications in the Appendix to the Poor Law Report'' (1835)
 
*''On National Property, and on the Prospects of the Present Administration and of their Successors'' (anon.; 1835)
 
*''Letters on the Factory Act, as it affects the Cotton Manufacture'' (1837)
 
*''Suggestions on Popular Education'' (1861)
 
*''American Slavery'' (in part a reprint from the ''Edinburgh Review'', 1862)
 
*''An Address on Education delivered to the Social Science Association'' (1863)
 
His contributions to the reviews were collected in volumes entitled ''Essays on Fiction'' (1864); ''Biographical Sketches'' (1865, chiefly of noted lawyers); and ''Historical and Philosophical Essays'' (1865).
 
  
In [[1859]] appeared his ''Journal kept in Turkey and Greece in the Autumn of 1857 and the Beginning of 1858''; and the following were edited after his death by his daughter:
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He died in Kensington, London, on June 4, 1864, at the age of 74.
*''Journals, Conversations and Essays relating to Ireland'' (1868)
 
*''Journals kept in France and Italy from 1848 to 1852, with a Sketch of the Revolution of 1848'' (1871)
 
*''Conversations with [[Louis Adolphe Thiers|Thiers]], [[François Pierre Guillaume Guizot|Guizot]] and other Distinguished Persons during the [[Second Empire]]'' (1878)
 
*''Conversations with Distinguished Persons during the Second Empire, from 1860 to 1863'' (1880)
 
*''Conversations and Journals in Egypt and Malta'' (1882)
 
*also in 1872 ''Correspondence and Conversations with Alexis de Tocqueville from 1834 to 1859''.
 
  
Senior's tracts on practical politics, though the theses they supported were sometimes questionable, were ably written and are still worth reading, but cannot be said to be of much permanent interest. But his name continues to hold an honorable, though secondary, place in the history of political economy.
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==Work==
  
Senior regards political economy as a purely deductive science, all the truths of which are inferences from four elementary propositions. It is, in his opinion, wrongly supposed by [[John Stuart Mill|JS Mill]] and others to on a hypothetic science founded, that is to say, on postulates not corresponding with social realities. The premises from which it sets out are, according to him, not assumptions but facts. It concerns itself, however, with wealth only, and can therefore give no practical counsel as to political action: it can only suggest considerations which the politician should keep in view as elements in the study of the questions with which he has to deal. The conception of economics as altogether deductive is certainly erroneous, and puts the science from the outset on a false path. But deduction has a real, though limited, sphere within it. Hence, though the chief difficulties of the subject are not of a logical kind, yet accurate nomenclature, strict definition and rigorous reasoning are of great importance. To these Senior gave special attention, and, notwithstanding occasional pedantries, with very useful results.
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In his major work, ''An Outline of the Science of Political Economy'' (1836), Senior attempted to make [[economics]] more scientific and more practical. He criticized [[John Stuart Mill]] and others who, in his opinion, saw economics as a hypothetical science, based on postulates not corresponding with social realities. Senior believed that [[political economy]] is purely a deductive science, all the truths of which are inferences from social reality. Thus, according to him, the premises from which it sets out are not assumptions but facts.  
  
In several instances he improved the forms in which accepted doctrines were habitually stated. He also did excellent service by pointing out the arbitrary novelties—and frequent inconsistencies of terminology which deface [[David Ricardo|Ricardo]]'s principal works, for example, his use of value in the sense of cost of production, and of high and low wages in the sense of a certain proportion of the product as distinguished from an absolute amount, and his peculiar employment of the epithets fixed and circulating as applied to capital. He shows, too, that in numerous instances the premises assumed by Ricardo are false. Thus he cites the assertions that rent depends on the difference of fertility of the different portions of land in cultivation; that the laborer always receives precisely the necessaries, or what custom leads him to consider the necessaries, of life; that, as wealth and population advance, agricultural labor becomes less and less proportionately productive; and that therefore the share of the produce taken by the landlord and the laborer must constantly increase, whilst that taken by the capitalist must constantly diminish; and he denies the truth of all these propositions.
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Political economy at that time, however, concerned itself only with wealth, and could therefore offer no practical counsel to politicians. It only suggested considerations that politicians should keep in mind in addressing issues, without offering any solutions. Therefore, political economy was impractical and limited.  
  
Besides adopting some terms, such as that of natural agents, from [[Jean-Baptiste Say|Say]], Senior introduced the word abstinence which, though obviously not free from objection, is for some purposes useful to express the conduct of the capitalist which is remunerated by interest; but in defining cost of production as the sum of labor and abstinence necessary to production he does not seem to see that an amount of labor and an amount of abstinence are disparate, and do not admit of reduction to a common quantitative standard. He added some important considerations to what had been said by [[Adam Smith]] on the division of labor. He distinguishes usefully between the rate of wages and the price of labor. But in seeking to determine the law of wages he falls into the error of assuming a determinate [[wage-fund]], and states as an economic truth what is only an identical proposition in arithmetic.
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In several instances Senior improved the forms in which accepted doctrines were habitually stated. He also did excellent service by pointing out the arbitrary novelties, and frequent inconsistencies of terminology which were to be found in [[David Ricardo|Ricardo]]'s principal works. For example, Senior objected to Ricardo’s use of [[value]] in relation to the [[cost]] of production, and of high and low [[wages]] in correlation with a certain proportion of the product as distinguished from an absolute amount, as well as criticizing his peculiar employment of the epithets "fixed" and "circulating" as applied to [[capital]]. Senior also revealed that in numerous instances the premises assumed by Ricardo were false.  
  
Whilst entertaining such an exaggerated estimate of the services of Malthus that he extravagantly pronounces him as a benefactor of mankind on a level with Adam Smith, he yet shows that he modified his opinions on population considerably in the course of his career, regards his statements of the doctrine with which his name is associated as vague and ambiguous, and asserts that, in the absence of disturbing causes, subsistence may be expected to increase in a greater ratio than population. It is urged by HXC Penn, and must, we think, be admitted, that by his isolation of economics from morals, and his assumption of the desire of wealth as the sole motive-force in the economic domain, Senior, in common with most of the other followers of Smith, tended to set up egoism as the legitimate ruler and guide of practical life. It is no sufficient answer to this charge that he makes formal reserve in favor of higher ends. From the scientific side [[Thomas Edward Cliffe Leslie|Cliffe Leslie]] has abundantly proved the unsubstantial nature of the abstraction implied in the phrase desire of wealth, and the inadequacy of such a principle for the explanation of economic phenomena.
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Senior introduced the word “abstinence” into economic theory. His abstinence theory of [[profit]] describes the process of obtaining a reward for not spending one’s accumulated capital. He thus believed that the saving and accumulation of capital must be considered a part of the cost of production.
 +
 
 +
He also opposed [[Thomas Robert Malthus]], leading the revolt among classical economists against his theory of population growth. Senior argued that the growth of population, combined with the rising [[standard of living|standards of living]], would be able to support growth of the economy, contrary to what Malthusians claimed.
 +
 
 +
Senior also made important contributions to the theory of [[rent]], and improved the theory of the distribution of precious metals. He also drew a relationship between productivity and price levels. His theory that the last hour of work was the most productive hour, when profits are made, was later used to oppose the reduction of working hours in the manufacturing [[industry]].
 +
 
 +
Senior added some important considerations to what had been said by [[Adam Smith]] on the [[division of labor]]. He drew an important distinction between the rate of wages and the price of [[labor]]. Senior was also one of the developers of the ill-fated "wages-fund" doctrine, which was later harshly attacked by [[Francis Amasa Walker]].
 +
 
 +
==Legacy==
 +
 
 +
William Nassau Senior was the first professor of [[political economy]] at [[Oxford University]], occupying the first such chair in [[England]]. Through his work he made significant contributions to the theories of [[rent]], [[population]], [[money]], and [[international trade]]. He never became as influential as [[Adam Smith]], [[Thomas Robert Malthus]], or [[David Ricardo]], but his work advanced and developed their theories.
 +
 
 +
Senior’s [[supply]] scheme of utility-based demand and the [[cost]] of production can be regarded as an important forerunner of the [[marginal utility|Marginalist Revolution]].
 +
 
 +
==Publications==
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* Senior, William N. 1835. ''Statement of the Provision for the Poor and of the Condition of the Laboring Classes in a Considerable Portion of America and Europe, being the Preface to the Foreign Communications in the Appendix to the Poor Law Report.'' Poor Law Commisioners.
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* Senior, William N. 1837. ''Letters on the Factory Act, as it affects the cotton manufacture: Addressed, in the spring of 1837, to the Right Honourable the President of the Board of Trade.'' Poor Law Commissioners.
 +
* Senior, William N. 1965. (original 1831). [http://socserv2.socsci.mcmaster.ca/~econ/ugcm/3ll3/senior/ ''Three Lectures on the Rate of Wages'']. Augustus M. Kelley Pubs. ISBN 067800126X
 +
* Senior, William N. 1972. (original 1865). ''Biographical sketches.'' Books for Libraries Press. ISBN 0836928245
 +
* Senior, William N. 1976. (original 1831). ''Two Lectures on Population: Delivered Before the University of Oxford.'' Ayer Co. Pub. ISBN 0405079966
 +
* Senior, William N. 1977. (original 1859). ''A Journal Kept in Turkey and Greece in the Autumn of 1857 and the Beginning of 1858.'' Arno Press. ISBN 0405097204
 +
* Senior, William N. 1990. (original 1836). [http://www.econlib.org/library/Senior/snP1.html ''Political Economy'']. Thoemmes Continuum. ISBN 1843714272
 +
* Senior, William N. 2001. (original 1882). ''Conversations and Journals in Egypt and Malta'' (2 vols.). Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 1402193262
 +
* Senior, William N. 2002. (original 1836). ''An Outline of the Science of Political Economy.'' University Press of the Pacific. ISBN 1410203859
 +
* Senior, William N. 2002. (original 1871). [http://www.hti.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=genpub;idno=ABT9701.0002.001 ''Journals Kept in France and Italy from 1848 to 1852: With a sketch of the revolution of 1848'']. Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 1421233525
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* Senior, William N. 2002. ''Selected Writings on Economics 1827-1852.'' University Press of the Pacific. ISBN 141020264X
 +
* Senior, William N. 2002. (original 1830). ''The Cost of Obtaining Money and on Some Effects of Private and Government Paper Money.'' University Press of the Pacific. ISBN 1410201910
 +
* Senior, William N. 2003. ''Population and the Poor Laws.'' Thoemmes Continuum. ISBN 1843714299
 +
* Senior, William N. 2003. (original 1828). ''Transmission of the Precious Metals from Country to Country, and the Mercantile Theory of Wealth.'' University Press of the Pacific. ISBN 1410209520
 +
* Senior, William N. 2004. (original 1861). ''Education.'' Thoemmes Continuum. ISBN 1843714329
 +
* Senior, William N. 2004. (original 1829). ''Three Lectures on the Value of Money.'' University Press of the Pacific. ISBN 141021320X
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
  
 +
* Bowley, Marian. 1968. (original 1937).  ''Nassau Senior and Classical Economics.'' Octagon Books. ISBN 0374908745
 +
* Hayek, F.A., Bartley W.W., & Kresge, S. 1991. ''The Trend of Economic Thinking: Essays on Political Economists and Economic History.'' University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226320677
 +
* Levy, Samuel L. 1970. (original 1943). ''Nassau W. Senior, 1790-1864: Critical Essayist, Classical Economist and Adviser of Governments.'' A. M. Kelley. ISBN 0678056765
 +
* Niehans, Jürg. 1994. ''A History of Economic Theory: Classic Contributions, 1720-1980.'' The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0801849764
 +
* Thweatt, William O., ed. 1899. ''Classical Political Economy: A Survey of Recent Literature.'' Springer. ISBN 0898382297
 +
 +
==External links==
 +
All links retrieved November 10, 2022.
 +
 +
* [http://www.mises.org/mmmp/mmmp8.asp ''Money, Method, and the Market Process''] - Ludwig von Mises’s article on Senior's views on monetary problems
  
  
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{{Classical economists}}
 
{{Credit1|Nassau_William_Senior|61376490|}}
 
{{Credit1|Nassau_William_Senior|61376490|}}

Latest revision as of 01:26, 11 November 2022


Nws5.jpg

Nassau William Senior (September 26, 1790 – June 4, 1864), was an English economist who occupied the first chair of political economy in England. He was one of the leading economists of the early nineteenth century, and was active in advising successive British governments with regard to economic policy. His work with various commissions investigating trade unions, strikes, and working conditions was influential, resulting in the establishment of the workhouse system and other reforms. In his academic work, Senior strove to make economics more practical, based in reality rather than hypothetical assumptions. He introduced the idea that accumulation of capital be considered part of the cost of production, and advanced the "abstinence" theory of profit. He was strong in his objections to a number of theories, such as the pessimistic Malthusian theory of population growth and made significant criticisms of Ricardo's theory of rent. In turn, many of the ideas he was associated with, such as the "wages-fund" theory, were rejected by later theorists. Nevertheless, he made significant contributions to economic theory which were part of the effort to understand how economic relationships operate in society, and thus bring about the establishment of fair policies to support both society as a whole and the individuals within it.

Life

Nassau William Senior was born on September 26, 1790 in Compton, Berkshire, England, the eldest son of the Reverend John Raven Senior, vicar of Durnford, Wiltshire, and Mary Duke, the daughter of the solicitor-general of Barbados. He was educated at Eton and Magdalen College, Oxford. At Oxford he was a private student of Richard Whately, afterwards archbishop of Dublin, with whom he remained connected by ties of lifelong friendship. He obtained his Bachelor's degree in 1811, and qualified as a lawyer in 1819. In 1836, during the chancellorship of Lord Cottenham, he was appointed Master in Chancery.

Senior became interested in economics in the early stages of his career. He became the first Drummond professor of political economy at Oxford in 1825, occupying the chair until 1830, and again from 1847 to 1852. In 1830 he was requested by Prime Minister William Melbourne to inquire into the situation of strikes, to report on the impact of the Combination Acts (which made trade unions and collective bargaining illegal) and to suggest improvements. He was the author, together with Edwin Chadwick, of the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834, which led to the establishment of the workhouse system in England. His An Outline of the Science of Political Economy (1836) was an attempt to bring classical economics closer to scientific principles.

Senior was an advisor to successive British governments, advising them on important economic and political issues, including employment policy, trade, wages, working hours, and education. He played an important role especially as an advisor of the Whig Party. He was a member of the Poor Law Inquiry Commission of 1832, and of the Handloom Weavers Commission of 1837. The report of the latter, published in 1841, was drawn up by him, and he embodied in it the substance of the report he had prepared some years before on trade unionism and strikes. He was also one of the commissioners appointed in 1864 to inquire into popular education in England.

Senior lost his position as professor of political economy at King's College, London, because of his support of the Catholic Church of Ireland.

In the later years of his career, he traveled to foreign countries to study the political and social phenomena they exhibited. Several volumes of his journals have been published, among others Journal Kept in Turkey and Greece (1859) and Conversations and Journals in Egypt and Malta (1882).

Senior was for many years a frequent contributor to the Edinburgh Quarterly, London Review, and North British Review, dealing in their pages with literary as well as with economic and political subjects.

He died in Kensington, London, on June 4, 1864, at the age of 74.

Work

In his major work, An Outline of the Science of Political Economy (1836), Senior attempted to make economics more scientific and more practical. He criticized John Stuart Mill and others who, in his opinion, saw economics as a hypothetical science, based on postulates not corresponding with social realities. Senior believed that political economy is purely a deductive science, all the truths of which are inferences from social reality. Thus, according to him, the premises from which it sets out are not assumptions but facts.

Political economy at that time, however, concerned itself only with wealth, and could therefore offer no practical counsel to politicians. It only suggested considerations that politicians should keep in mind in addressing issues, without offering any solutions. Therefore, political economy was impractical and limited.

In several instances Senior improved the forms in which accepted doctrines were habitually stated. He also did excellent service by pointing out the arbitrary novelties, and frequent inconsistencies of terminology which were to be found in Ricardo's principal works. For example, Senior objected to Ricardo’s use of value in relation to the cost of production, and of high and low wages in correlation with a certain proportion of the product as distinguished from an absolute amount, as well as criticizing his peculiar employment of the epithets "fixed" and "circulating" as applied to capital. Senior also revealed that in numerous instances the premises assumed by Ricardo were false.

Senior introduced the word “abstinence” into economic theory. His abstinence theory of profit describes the process of obtaining a reward for not spending one’s accumulated capital. He thus believed that the saving and accumulation of capital must be considered a part of the cost of production.

He also opposed Thomas Robert Malthus, leading the revolt among classical economists against his theory of population growth. Senior argued that the growth of population, combined with the rising standards of living, would be able to support growth of the economy, contrary to what Malthusians claimed.

Senior also made important contributions to the theory of rent, and improved the theory of the distribution of precious metals. He also drew a relationship between productivity and price levels. His theory that the last hour of work was the most productive hour, when profits are made, was later used to oppose the reduction of working hours in the manufacturing industry.

Senior added some important considerations to what had been said by Adam Smith on the division of labor. He drew an important distinction between the rate of wages and the price of labor. Senior was also one of the developers of the ill-fated "wages-fund" doctrine, which was later harshly attacked by Francis Amasa Walker.

Legacy

William Nassau Senior was the first professor of political economy at Oxford University, occupying the first such chair in England. Through his work he made significant contributions to the theories of rent, population, money, and international trade. He never became as influential as Adam Smith, Thomas Robert Malthus, or David Ricardo, but his work advanced and developed their theories.

Senior’s supply scheme of utility-based demand and the cost of production can be regarded as an important forerunner of the Marginalist Revolution.

Publications

  • Senior, William N. 1835. Statement of the Provision for the Poor and of the Condition of the Laboring Classes in a Considerable Portion of America and Europe, being the Preface to the Foreign Communications in the Appendix to the Poor Law Report. Poor Law Commisioners.
  • Senior, William N. 1837. Letters on the Factory Act, as it affects the cotton manufacture: Addressed, in the spring of 1837, to the Right Honourable the President of the Board of Trade. Poor Law Commissioners.
  • Senior, William N. 1965. (original 1831). Three Lectures on the Rate of Wages. Augustus M. Kelley Pubs. ISBN 067800126X
  • Senior, William N. 1972. (original 1865). Biographical sketches. Books for Libraries Press. ISBN 0836928245
  • Senior, William N. 1976. (original 1831). Two Lectures on Population: Delivered Before the University of Oxford. Ayer Co. Pub. ISBN 0405079966
  • Senior, William N. 1977. (original 1859). A Journal Kept in Turkey and Greece in the Autumn of 1857 and the Beginning of 1858. Arno Press. ISBN 0405097204
  • Senior, William N. 1990. (original 1836). Political Economy. Thoemmes Continuum. ISBN 1843714272
  • Senior, William N. 2001. (original 1882). Conversations and Journals in Egypt and Malta (2 vols.). Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 1402193262
  • Senior, William N. 2002. (original 1836). An Outline of the Science of Political Economy. University Press of the Pacific. ISBN 1410203859
  • Senior, William N. 2002. (original 1871). Journals Kept in France and Italy from 1848 to 1852: With a sketch of the revolution of 1848. Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 1421233525
  • Senior, William N. 2002. Selected Writings on Economics 1827-1852. University Press of the Pacific. ISBN 141020264X
  • Senior, William N. 2002. (original 1830). The Cost of Obtaining Money and on Some Effects of Private and Government Paper Money. University Press of the Pacific. ISBN 1410201910
  • Senior, William N. 2003. Population and the Poor Laws. Thoemmes Continuum. ISBN 1843714299
  • Senior, William N. 2003. (original 1828). Transmission of the Precious Metals from Country to Country, and the Mercantile Theory of Wealth. University Press of the Pacific. ISBN 1410209520
  • Senior, William N. 2004. (original 1861). Education. Thoemmes Continuum. ISBN 1843714329
  • Senior, William N. 2004. (original 1829). Three Lectures on the Value of Money. University Press of the Pacific. ISBN 141021320X

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Bowley, Marian. 1968. (original 1937). Nassau Senior and Classical Economics. Octagon Books. ISBN 0374908745
  • Hayek, F.A., Bartley W.W., & Kresge, S. 1991. The Trend of Economic Thinking: Essays on Political Economists and Economic History. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226320677
  • Levy, Samuel L. 1970. (original 1943). Nassau W. Senior, 1790-1864: Critical Essayist, Classical Economist and Adviser of Governments. A. M. Kelley. ISBN 0678056765
  • Niehans, Jürg. 1994. A History of Economic Theory: Classic Contributions, 1720-1980. The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0801849764
  • Thweatt, William O., ed. 1899. Classical Political Economy: A Survey of Recent Literature. Springer. ISBN 0898382297

External links

All links retrieved November 10, 2022.


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