A Plan of the English Commerce is a rare piece of economic history covering the crucial period at the outset of the first Industrial Revolution and the early wave of globalization. Unlike other chroniclers of British economic development, Defoe was contemporary to and often had first-hand experience of important events. His account therefore offers an extraordinary vantage point, free from the distorting lens of modern theoretical explanations. An account rich in anecdotes and penetrating observations, Defoes work emphasizes neglected aspects of the world economy at the time, such as the interplay between industrial policy and international trade. Defoe argues that, under the Tudors, British industry developed under a heavily protected regime. Contrary to widespread belief, export controls, infant-industry subsidies, government-sponsored industrial espionage and aggressive technology transfer were routine. A Plan of the English Commerce is principal among Daniel Defoes works dealing with economic matters and remains of interest not only to economic historians but also to scholars concerned with economic development, international trade and industrial policy. This New Edition has been typeset with modern techniques and contains a newly compiled Index of important topics. Aiming for visual clarity and the minimization of redundancy, the New Edition drops the largely arbitrary italicization of words and applies a modern formatting style to the rudimentary tables found in the original. It has been painstakingly proofread to ensure that it is free from errors and that the content is faithful to the original, down to the unusually long chapter headings.
PART I.
Chap. I. Of Trade in General
Chap. II. Of the Trade of England in particular
Chap. III. Of the first Rise, Growth, and Encrease of the commerce of England
Chap. IV. Of the Encrease of the English Commerce from the Time of Queen Elizabeth breaking with the Spaniards
Chap. V. Of the Present State of the English commerce, especially that Part of it which relates to the Woollen Manufacture; the Prodigy of its Magnitude, some Enquiry into bow it may be called Great, and what Magnitude really is
Chap. VI. Of the Magnitude of the British Commerce, as it respects the Consumption of Foreign Goods imported from Abroad as well as of our own Product and Manufactures at Home
Chap. VII. Of the Magnitude of our Trade, as it relates to our other Exportations, and particularly what we call Re-exportation, or exporting by Certificate, including the Exports of Goods first imported from our own Colonies and Factories Abroad
PART II.
Chap. I. A solid Enquiry into that important Question, Whether our Trade in general, and our Woollen Manufacture in particular, are sunk and declined, or not?
Chap. II. An Enquiry whether the Exportation of our other Goods, the Growth, or Manufactures of England, or Home Consumption of them is decreased or declined.
PART III.
Chap. I. Of the Improvement of the English in Trade, upon the Inventions of other Nations, and the Encrease of our Commerce upon those Improvements, in which we have beaten out the said Inventors from their own Trade; likewise of the several Imporvements of our own Product, and of our own Invention, by all which our Trade is greatly encreased.
Chap. II. A Proposal for rooting out those Nests of Pyrates and Rovers, the Turks and Moors of Tunis, Tripoli, Algier, and Sallee, who have for so many Ages infested the Mediterranean Seas, and the Coasts of Spain and Portugal, to the infinite Loss and Discouragement of all the trading Nations of Europe. With a Scheme for the Improvement of Trade, by restoring and establishing the ancient Commerce on the North and North West Coast of Africa
Chap. III. A Proposal fothe Improvement and Encrase of commerce upon the Western Coast of Africa, the coast of Guinea, from Sierra Leon, vulgarly call'd Seraloon, to the Coast and Gulpb of Benin.
Chap. IV. A Proposal for an Encrease and Improvement of the British Commerce on the East Coast of Africa
Chap. V. A Proposal for turning the whole Trade for Naval Stores, Timber, Deals, &c. from the East Country, and from Norway and Sweden, to our own Colonies, and yet without putting the Government of England to the dead Charge of Bounty-Money on that Importation