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Teutocapitalism
Teutocapitalism
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A01=Philipp Robinson Rossner
academies
Author_Philipp Robinson Rossner
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Cameralism
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capital formation
capitalism
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common good
competition
contextual economics
developmental state
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Eucken
forthcoming
freedom
Friedrich List
German political economy
global trade
Gluckseligkeit (public happiness)
Historical School of Economics
import substitution
industrial policy
infrastructure
institutional economics
knowledge economy
manufacturing
market order
market regulation
Martin Luther
mining
modern capitalism
monetary theory
neoliberalism
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Polanyi
primitive accumulation
productivity
profit
public finance
Reformation
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silver economy
taxation
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Teutocapitalism
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Thirty Years' War
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von Justi
von Seckendorff
Werner Sombart
Product details
- ISBN 9781509571758
- Publication Date: 20 Nov 2026
- Publisher: Polity Press
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Paperback
From Adam Smith's defence of the power of self-interest to modern liberal defences of free trade, we typically associate the intellectual basis of capitalism and markets with Anglo-American thinkers. In doing so we neglect a powerful alternative tradition of German origin: teutocapitalism.
In this brilliant work of intellectual reconstruction, Philipp Robinson Rössner looks at some of the classic questions of economic theory – how do countries grow rich? why do some nations develop whilst others remain poor? how do markets work? – through this unfamiliar – but powerful – lens. He shows how the 'teutocapitalists', with their distinctive emphasis on the morally, culturally and historically embedded nature of economic institutions, the importance of broad measures of public happiness, and a more production-focussed and pragmatic approach to economic statecraft, formulated an enduringly valuable alternative to British, American and French perspectives on economics.
Rössner demonstrates how this tradition and its ideas represent a rich historical tool for deepening our contemporary economic understanding. No-one interested in economic history or modern debates about economic policy can afford to miss this highly original new book.
In this brilliant work of intellectual reconstruction, Philipp Robinson Rössner looks at some of the classic questions of economic theory – how do countries grow rich? why do some nations develop whilst others remain poor? how do markets work? – through this unfamiliar – but powerful – lens. He shows how the 'teutocapitalists', with their distinctive emphasis on the morally, culturally and historically embedded nature of economic institutions, the importance of broad measures of public happiness, and a more production-focussed and pragmatic approach to economic statecraft, formulated an enduringly valuable alternative to British, American and French perspectives on economics.
Rössner demonstrates how this tradition and its ideas represent a rich historical tool for deepening our contemporary economic understanding. No-one interested in economic history or modern debates about economic policy can afford to miss this highly original new book.
Philipp Robinson Rössner is Professor of Early Modern History at the University of Manchester, UK. The first historian ever elected into the 'Young Academy' of the Sächsische Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Leipzig (Saxon Academy of Sciences), he teaches mostly on Victorian Britain but has published widely on early modern Germany as well as Scottish economic history, and the intellectual history of capitalism in the longue durée.
Teutocapitalism
€22.99
