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Political economy

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Political economy originally was the term for studying production, buying and selling, and their relations with law, custom, and government. Political economy originated in moral philosophy (e.g. Adam Smith was Chairman of Moral Philosophy at the University of Glasgow[1]), it developed in the 18th century as the study of the economies of states — polities, hence political economy.

In contradiction to the theory of the Physiocrats, wherein land was the source of all wealth, some political economists proposed the labour theory of value (introduced by John Locke, developed by Adam Smith, and later by Karl Marx), according to which labour is the true source of value. Many political economists also noted the accelerating development of technology, whose role in economic and social relations was important (Joseph Schumpeter).

In late nineteenth century, the term "political economy" was generally replaced by the term economics, used by those seeking to place the study of economy upon mathematical and axiomatic bases, rather than the structural relationships of production and consumption (cf. marginalism, Alfred Marshall).

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History of the term

Originally, political economy meant the study of the conditions under which production was organized in the nation-states of the newly-born capitalist system.[citation needed] It first was used in England in the eighteenth century, in replacing the earlier approach of the (French) physiocrats; Adam Smith, David Ricardo and Karl Marx were the principal exponents of political economy. In 1805, Thomas Malthus became England's first professor of political economy, at the East India Company College, Haileybury, Hertfordshire. The world's first professorship in political economy was established in 1763 at the University of Vienna, Austria; Joseph von Sonnenfels was the first tenured professor.

In the United States, political economy first was taught at the College of William and Mary, in 1784; Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations was a required textbook.[1] Glasgow University, where Smith was chairman of Logic and Moral Philosophy, changed the name of its Department of Political Economy to the Department of Economics (ostensibly to avoid confusing prospective undergraduates) in academic year 1997-1998, leaving the Class of 1998 as the last to be graduated with a Scottish master of arts degree in Political Economy.

Current approaches to political economy

Contemporarily, political economy refers to different, but related, approaches to studying economic and political behaviours, ranging from the combining of economics with other fields, to the using of different, fundamental assumptions that challenge orthodox economic assumptions:

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