The Wealth of Nations, Book 4


Read by Stephen Escalera

(4.7 stars; 86 reviews)

An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations is the magnum opus of the Scottish economist Adam Smith, published on March 9, 1776 during the Scottish Enlightenment. It is a clearly written account of political economy at the dawn of the Industrial Revolution, and is widely considered to be the first modern work in the field of economics. (from Wikipedia) (10 hr 46 min)

Chapters

Intro & Ch. 1, Of the Principle of the Commercial or Mercantile System 30:27 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch.1 continued 27:52 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch.2, Of Restraints Upon Importation from Foreign Countries... 25:23 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 2 continued 25:22 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 3, Of the Extraordinary Restraints Upon the Importation... 38:26 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 3, continued 25:57 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 4, Of Drawbacks 13:21 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 5, Of Bounties 23:35 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 5, continued 21:53 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 5, continued 30:52 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 5, continued 19:47 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 6, Of Treaties of Commerce 29:08 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 7, Of Colonies: Part 1 - Of the Motives for Establishing New Colonies 22:45 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 7, continued: Part 2 - Causes of Prosperity of New Colonies 32:33 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 7, Part 2, continued 32:32 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 7, continued: Part 3 - Of the Advantages which Europe Has Derived... 35:21 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 7, Part 3, continued 38:22 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 7, Part 3, continued 25:34 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 7, Part 3, continued 28:37 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 8, Conclusion of the Mercantile System 24:47 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 8, continued 27:41 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 9, Of the Agricultural Systems... 31:21 Read by Stephen Escalera
Ch. 9, continued 34:43 Read by Stephen Escalera

Reviews


(5 stars)

well read by this reader, very clear. This is a book for a student of economics and details many fundamentals. It surprises me how many Economists have "cherry picked" small passages and missed many important concepts, extrapolating the concept of a free market never envisaged by Adam Smith.

A great book, but better to start at volume 1


(5 stars)

An excellent read of a fascinating book. Kudos to the reader for keeping five volumes of economic theory interesting. Topical, given the dependence politicians of the Right seem to place on the text.

Educational


(5 stars)

This book of Smith's is particularly insightful in regards to historical events at the time. As always a good, clear reading, though it can be a little void of dynamics, which considering the content is not surprising.

Outstanding Reading


(5 stars)

Brilliant book by a brilliant mind. Read by a person who carried the authors passion for the topic.

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(5 stars)