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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: SAR-SCY |
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SAY, [JEAN BAPTISTE] LEON (1826-1896) , French statesman and economist, was born in Paris on the 6th of June 1826. The family was a most remarkable one. His grandfather JEAN BAPTISTE SAY (q.v.) was a well-known economist. His brother Louis AUGvsTE SAY (1774-1840), director of a sugar refinery at Nantes, wrote several books against his theories. His son HORACE EMILE SAY (1794-1860), the father of Leon 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.Leon Say thus inherited zeal for economic studies, of which he gave proof by publishing at the age of twenty-two a brief Hisloire de la caisse d'escompte. 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 debats, 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
Thiers
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 quitted his post to assume, in December 1872, the ministry of financea remarkable tribute to his abilities from Thiers
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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 the 3oth of April 188o 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 the 25th of May, 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. Say's influence over the rising generation grew less ; his " academic Liberalism " was regarded as old-fashioned ; Socialism
message of December 1877. He was for many years the most prominent member of the Academic des Sciences Morales et Politiques, and in 1886 succeeded to Edmond About's seat in the Academic Francaise. 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 ofLes Finandes de la France sous la troisieme republigue (1898-1901). See Georges Michel, Leon Say (Paris, 1899); Georges Picot, Leon Say, notice historique (Paris, 1901), with a bibliography. End of Article: SAY, [JEAN BAPTISTE] LEON (1826-1896) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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