Mastering the Market: The State and the Grain Trade in Northern France, 1700-1860

Judith A. Miller (Emory University, Atlanta)

Mastering the Market: The State and the Grain Trade in Northern France, 1700-1860
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Published
18 October 2007
Pages
356
ISBN
9780521628891

Mastering the Market: The State and the Grain Trade in Northern France, 1700-1860

Judith A. Miller (Emory University, Atlanta)

The grain trade, a crucial sector of the French economy, caused enormous concern throughout the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Bread was the staple of French diets, so harvest shortfalls triggered unrest. The royal government had only the most scattershot and ineffective means to draw foodstuffs into restless cities. Successive regimes developed strategies to dominate the baking trades, influence prices along vital supply lines, and amass emergency stocks of grain that could meet months-long demand. As free trade ideologies developed, French administrators at both the national and local levels sought to reconcile these ideologies with the perceived need to control the market. They created increasingly hidden, and effective, means to shape the grain trade. Thus, the French state played an instrumental role in establishing a viable form of free trade.

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