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Essentials of Economics abriefsurveyofprinciplesandpolicies by faustino ballvé Translated from the Spanish and Edited by ARTHURGODDARD d. van nostrand company, inc. princeton, new jersey toronto london newyork D. VANNOSTRANDCOMPANY,INC. 120 Alexander St., Princeton, New Jersey (Principal office) 24West40Street, New York 18, New York D. Van Nostrand Company(Canada),Ltd. 358, Kensington High Street, London, W.14, England D. Van Nostrand CompanyLtd. 25Hollinger Road, Toronto 16, Canada c Copyright, 1963 by WILLIAMVOLKERFUND Published simultaneously in Canada by D. Van Nostrand Company(Canada),Ltd. No reproduction in any form of this book, in whole or in part (except for brief quotation in critical articles or reviews), may be made without written authorization from the publishers. 1st edition, Mexico, 1956—10,000 copies 2ndedition, Mexico, 1961—5,000 copies 3rd edition, Mexico, 1961—5,000 copies French translation, Paris, Sélif, 1957 Spanish editions in Buenos Aires and Guatemala andinpreparation in Colombia Translations in preparation in Germany, Brazil, andJapan printed in the united states of america Foreword Faustino Ballvé was one of those rare scholars who instinctively avoidthepitfallsofspecialization;whohavethegiftofintegrating the divisions of learning simply, yet without oversimplification. This was the talent that gave the leaders of the Renaissance their stature. Of Professor Ballvé it could be said, as in the characteri- zation that gives a contemporary play about Sir Thomas More its title, that he was indeed “a Man for All Seasons.” Like Erasmus before him, Professor Ballvé spoke not for any narrow, nationalistic culture, but for the spirit of Western Civiliza- tion as a whole. Born in Barcelona, in 1887, he trained first as a lawyer, took his doctorate in Madrid, and then proceeded for fur- ther study first to Berlin and then to London. It was in England that, with a seasoned juristic background, he first specialized in the study of economics. The practitioners of that science, whether of the left or the right, have done all too much to justify the adjective “dismal” that was applied to it in Ballvé’s youth. The more credit to him for bringing to the subject not only the clarity and precision of a first-class legal mind, but also the spiritual warmth of a political idealist. While still in his ’teens the young Ballvé had edited a republi- can paper, and in the stormy thirties, as the clouds of civil war closed over Spain, he was elected a deputy of that party. But there was no place for this true liberal when the struggle degen- erated into a power contest between Fascism and Communism. Leaving his native land forever, Ballvé went first to France and v
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