Everything about L On Say totally explained
Jean-Baptiste Léon Say (
June 6,
1826 -
April 21,
1896), French statesman and economist, was born in
Paris.
The family was a most remarkable one. His grandfather
Jean-Baptiste Say was a well-known economist. His brother Louis Auguste Say (1774-1840), director of a sugar refinery at Nantes, wrote several books against his theories. His son Horace Émile Say (1794-1860), the father of Léon Say, was educated at
Geneva, and had travelled in
America before establishing himself in business in Paris, where he became president of the Chamber of Commerce in 1848. His careful investigations into the condition of industry at Paris gained for him a seat in the Academy of political and moral sciences, 1857.
Léon Say thus inherited zeal for economic studies, of which he gave proof by publishing at the age of twenty-two a brief
Histoire de la caisse descompte. He was at first destined for the
law, next entered a bank, and finally obtained a post in the administration of the
Chemin de fer du Nord. Meanwhile he became a regular contributor to the
Journal des débats, where he established his reputation by a series of brilliant attacks on the financial administration of the prefect of the Seine,
Haussmann.
He displayed talent for interesting popular audiences in economic questions. His sympathies, like those of his grandfather, were with the British school of economists; he was, indeed, the hereditary defender of
free-trade principles in France. He had, moreover, an intimate acquaintance with the English language and institutions, and translated into French
Goschen's
Theory of Foreign Exchanges.
He was one of the pioneers of the co-operative movement in France. Elected to the Assembly of 1871 by the departments of Seine and
Seine-et-Oise, he adopted the former, and took his seat among the Moderate Liberals, to whose principles he adhered throughout his life. He was immediately chosen as reporter of the commission on the state of the national finances, and in this capacity prepared two elaborate statements.
Thiers, though opposing their publication on grounds of public expediency, was much struck by the ability displayed in them, and on
June 5 appointed Say prefect of the Seine.
The fall of the empire, the
siege of Paris, and the
Commune had reduced the administration of the capital to chaos, and the task of reconstruction severely tried the new prefect's power of organization. This was, however, a gift with which he was pre-eminently endowed; and he only quit his post to assume, in December 1872, the ministry of finance--a remarkable tribute to his abilities from Thiers, who himself held strongly protectionist views.
In all other respects Say regarded himself as the disciple of Thiers, who, in his last public utterance, designated Say as one of the younger men who would carry on his work. He fell from office with Thiers on
May 24,
1873, and was elected president of the Left Centre group, as whose candidate he unsuccessfully contested the presidency of the Chamber with
Buffet. In spite of their divergence of views, he consented, at the urgent request of President MacMahon, to take office in March 1875 in the Buffet Cabinet; but the reactionary policy of the premier led to a dispute between him and Say both in the press and in the constituencies, and brought about Buffet's resignation.
Say continued to hold the ministry of finance under Dufaure and
Jules Simon, and again in the
Dufaure ministry of December 1877, and its successor, the Waddington ministry, till December 1879. During this long period, in which he was practically the autocratic ruler of the French finances, he'd first to complete the payment of the war indemnity--an operation which, thanks largely to his consummate knowledge of foreign exchanges, was effected long before the prescribed time. It was at a conference held between Say,
Gambetta and
M. de Freycinet in 1878 that the great scheme of public works introduced by the latter was adopted.
Say's general financial policy was to ameliorate the incidence of
taxation. As a pendant to his free-trade principles, he believed that the surest way of enriching the country, and therefore the Treasury, was to remove all restrictions on internal commerce. He accordingly reduced the rate of postage, repealed the duties on many articles of prime utility, such as paper, and fought strongly, though unsuccessfully, against the system of
octrois.
On
April 30,
1880 he accepted the post of ambassador in
London for the purpose of negotiating a commercial treaty between France and England, but the presidency of the Senate falling vacant, he was elected to it on
May 25, having meanwhile secured a preliminary understanding, the most important feature of which was a reduction of the duty on the cheaper class of
French wines.
In January
1882 he became minister of finance in the Freycinet Cabinet, which was defeated in the following July on the
Egyptian question. Says influence over the rising generation grew less; his academic Liberalism was regarded as old-fashioned; Socialism, which he never ceased to attack, obtained even greater power, and free-trade was discarded in favor of
M. Méline's policy of protection, against which Say vainly organized the Ligue contre le
renchrissement du pain. He had, however, a large share in the successful opposition to the
income tax, which he considered likely to discourage individual effort and thrift.
In
1889 he quit the Senate to enter the Chamber as member for
Pau, in the belief that his efforts for
Liberalism were more urgently needed in the popular Assembly. Throughout his career he was indefatigable both as a writer and as a lecturer on economics, and in both capacities exerted a far wider influence than in parliament.
Special mention must be made of his work, as editor and contributor, on the
Dictionnaire des finances and
Nouveau Dictionnaire d'économie politique. His style was easy and lucid, and he was often employed in drawing up important official documents, such as the famous presidential message of December 1877. He was for many years the most prominent member of the Académie des Sciences Morales et Politiques, and in 1886 succeeded to
Edmond About's seat in the
Académie française. He died in Paris on the 21st of April 1896. A selection of his most important writings and speeches has since been published in four volumes under the title of
Les Finances de la France sous la troisime république (1898 1901).
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