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Francois quesnay biography cortall death

Quesnay himself did not publish until the age of sixty.

His son was the last of

His first work appeared only as encyclopedia articles in and This table was Quesnay's way of trying to understand and explain the causes of growth. Tableau defined three classes: landowners, farmers, and others, called "sterile" classes, who consumed everything they produced and left no surplus for the next period. Quesnay believed that only the agricultural sector could produce a surplus that could then be used to produce more the next year and, therefore, help growth.

Industry and manufacturing, thought Quesnay, were sterile. Interestingly, though, he did not reach this conclusion by consulting his table. Instead, Quesnay constructed the table to fit his belief. Indeed, he had to make his table inconsistent in order to fit his assumption that industry provided no surplus. Although Quesnay was wrong about the sterility of the manufacturing sector, he was right in ascribing France's poverty to mercantilism, which he called Colbertisme after Louis XV's finance minister, Colbert.

The French government had protected French manufacturers from foreign competition, thus raising the cost of machinery for farmers, and had also sold to wealthy citizens the power to tax farmers. These citizens had then used this power to the limit. Quesnay advocated reforming these laws by consolidating and reducing taxes, getting rid of tolls and other regulations that prevented trade within France, and generally freeing the economy from the government's stifling controls.

These reforms were much more sensible than his theorizing about the sterility of industry. As Mark Blaug writes, "It was only the effort to provide these reforms with a watertight theoretical argument that produced some of the forced reasoning and slightly absurd conclusions that invited ridicule even from contemporaries.