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Capital finally puts father of free market on a pedestal



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Published Date: 05 July 2008
HE HAS been long revered as one of Scotland's great thinkers, yet his supporters have complained for years about the lack of recognition in his native country.
Yesterday, Adam Smith's legacy as the founding father of modern economics and free-market capitalism was finally given due prominence in Scotland's capital city.

Before a 500-strong crowd, including tourists, academics and politicians, a striking
statue was unveiled in the heart of the Royal Mile. Among those in the crowd were the former Scottish secretary Michael Forsyth, Eric Milligan and Lesley Hinds, former lord provosts of Edinburgh, and Tory MSP David McLetchie.

The award-winning Scots sculptor Sandy Stoddart, who also created the David Hume monument further up the High Street, watched as Vernon Smith, a Nobel laureate economist, unveiled the statue before a piper marked the grand moment.

Mr Smith said: "I'm honoured to have played a part in ensuring that this great economist, philosopher and humanitarian continues to be known and revered the world over. This monument will attract people from all over the world."

The 10ft bronze of Smith in academic robes sits on a 10ft plinth. Beside him is a beehive, representing industry, and a ploughshare, representing agriculture.

Although born in Kirkcaldy, Fife, in 1723, Smith spent much of his life in Edinburgh, where in 1776 he published The Wealth of Nations, his pioneering manual on economic growth through market competition.

But his grave in the Canongate Kirkyard, just off the Royal Mile, lay unmarked from his death in 1790 until just two years ago, when campaigners raised the cash to pay for a tombstone.

The privately funded campaign for the world's first public memorial to Smith has been running for at least five years.

Dr Eamonn Butler, director of the Adam Smith Institute, who led the campaign, said: "This honour is long overdue. Adam Smith was the pioneer of what today we call economics. He championed the benefits of specialisation and free trade, creating the very idea of the modern market economy that dominates the free world today."

Councillor Tom Buchanan, Edinburgh's economic development leader, said: "The statue is an inspiring landmark and a fitting tribute to the father of economics, who remains one of the city's most illustrious sons."

Smith, who studied at Glasgow and Oxford Universities, was invited to lecture at Edinburgh University in 1748, when he became a friend of philosopher David Hume. In 1751, he became professor of logic at Glasgow University.

Survival based on optimistic outlook

WHAT would Adam Smith have said? It is hard to imagine him championing the 125 per cent loan-to-value mortgage, still less being a cheerleader for lending excess.

But what made him distinctive among economic philosophers was his optimism. Not from him doom-laden treatises about insoluble crises and the collapse of capitalism.

The lending excesses of recent years would have appalled, though not perhaps surprised him. But he would have been relatively upbeat, compared with today's hand-wringing, about the ultimate outcome: out of self-interest, the economy would rebalance to ensure its ultimate survival. And these survival instincts would be a surer and swifter path to recovery than heavy bouts of new regulation.

Smith was neither the total "minimal state" advocate that some have claimed, nor was he without an ethical sense. His key understanding, expressed in The Wealth of Nations, was that the free market, while appearing chaotic and unrestrained, is actually guided to produce the right amount and variety of goods by a so-called invisible hand.

He was a critic of antiquated government restrictions, which he thought hindered industrial expansion, and attacked most forms of government interference in the economy, including tariffs. But he also attacked monopolies and championed public education.

He deserves the biggest statue because he was that rarest of breeds: an eyes-wide-open but "happy" economist.





The full article contains 650 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 04 July 2008 10:33 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

W Smith,

Middle East 05/07/2008 06:12:16
Dare I say it.

Margaret Thatcher understood Adam Smith better than most of the Scottish idiots in Westminster and Holyrood.

Cheap air fares, thanks to her deregulation and privatisation programe, is a case in point.

If it was up to the Scottish Lefties you would be all flying on a nationalised British Airways paying around £350 for your 'cheapest' ticket to Spain listening to some propaganda that says at least BA 'belongs to the people'.

Thanks to Thatcher's de-regulation of public transport and utilities, she effectively became mid-wife to the large Scottish companies like Scottish and Southern, Scottish Power, Stagecoach, First Group ets.

THESE COMPANIES WOULD NEVER EXIST UNDER MARXISM.

So its left to the London based Adam Smith Institute to put Adam Smith back on Scotland's historical map.

BTW
Ireland understand Adam Smith better than the Scots.

Adam Smith was against high taxation and Ireland, with its lower corporation tax, has created an economic boom leaving Scotland looking to the limestone rabbits foot (Stone of Destiny) for inspiration.

Well done Ireland.
2

Yok Finney,

Ross-shire 05/07/2008 06:53:12
Thatcher sold herself well as a brazen hussy, but in reality she increased taxation. Her madcap economics could go no other way. As I run a business, I'd prefer to pay a fair price for the necessary utilities. I'd have them renationalised tout de suite. I prefer to pay for engineering and engineers than for CEOs salaries and bonuses and all this bllx of globalisation.
3

The Batboy,

05/07/2008 07:31:25
#1. Thatcher's understanding of economics through the works of Adam Smith were both lazy and myopic. She saw what she wanted to see. Her deregulation was done in a way that enriched several people and deprived thousands of other.

And when was Scotland (or the UK for that matter) ever Marxist? Labour were never allowed to go that far in their policies.
4

KampungHighlander,

Jakarta 05/07/2008 08:29:46
#1

Scotland could emulate Irelands economic success but first it would require Indepenence or at the very least fiscal autonomy.
5

W Smith,

Middle East 05/07/2008 08:29:48
#3
Brian Wilson and John Reid were marxists and they were tolerated in the Scottish labour Party.

George Galloway is still at least PRETENDING TO BE A MARXIST - thats when he's not buying property in London and Portugal.

#2
Under Marxism you have no business running a business. How come you don't get it?

The fact that the SNP tolerate ocmmunists within its ranks suggest they are just as financially stupid as the Scottish Labour Party.

The man responsible for India's economic boom, Manmohan Singh, now Prime Minister, is an expert economist and fan of Maggies!

India and China have followed Thatchers lead in privatisation and deregulation against the wishes of the die hard communists and socialists.

I rest my case.

BTW
Back to the limestone rabbits foot (Stone of Destiny) for the rather slow on the uptake Natioanlists!
6

Mikey,

05/07/2008 08:49:31
And the de-regulation from the EU had nothing to do with it? Spare me the Thatcherite nonsense!

Marxists in Labore party? Don't make me laugh! The problem with you Mr Smith is that you believe that anyone who doesn't grip the fasces is a marxist! Grow up!
7

W Smith,

Middle East 05/07/2008 08:50:40
"When people talk about deradicalisation, the last thing you want to do is SAY YOU MUST BE AGAINST TERRORISM".

The SNP's Osama Saeed.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/2008/07/05/do0501.xml

This has nothing to do with the article but illustrates what the anti-Thathcer SNP tolerate within their own party while demanding perfection from the Tories, USA, the English, etc.
8

W Smith,

Middle East 05/07/2008 08:58:03
The silence from economist Alex Salmond on this statue dedicated to Adam Smith's contribution to economics is deafening.

At least Brian Soutar and Tom Farmer should have been at the this ceremony seeing that they have done well out of the 'free market'.

9

Boyne Bhoy,

Drogheda 05/07/2008 10:13:36
Hopefully the statue, gravestone etc will encourage study, understanding and reflection on Smith's political economy. The hijacking of this Scottish giants by the intellectual pygmies and wannabees has irritated me since I studied in the Adam Smith Building in Glasgow during the excesses of Thatchers misrule-she truly was the dismal scientist.
10

Beth Boyle,

NY 05/07/2008 16:56:58
Adam Smith really is not known to Americans as much as he should be. I hope this is the beginning of more awareness of his brilliant intellect and the influence he has had in the UK and the USA.

 

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