Adam Anderson (economist)
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Adam Anderson (1692 or 1693 – 10 January 1765) was a Scottish economist.


Biography

He was a clerk for forty years or more in South Sea House, the headquarters of the
South Sea Company The South Sea Company (officially The Governor and Company of the merchants of Great Britain, trading to the South Seas and other parts of America, and for the encouragement of the Fishery) was a British joint-stock company founded in Ja ...
; at his death at Clerkenwell in 1765, he had risen to chief clerk for the Stock and New Annuities of the South Sea Company. His life's work, commonly known as Anderson's ''History of Commerce'', was published shortly before his death. The long, actual title is ''An Historical and Chronological Deduction of the Origin of Commerce from the Earliest Accounts to the Present Time''. The title page goes on to say: "Containing, an History of the great Commercial Interests of the British Empire. To which is prefixed, an Introduction, Exhibiting a View of the Ancient and Modern State of Europe; of the Importance of Our Colonies; and of the Commerce, Shipping, Manufactures, Fisheries, &c. of Great Britain and Ireland: and their Influence on the Landed Interest. With an Appendix, containing the Modern Politico-Commercial Geography of the several Countries of Europe." The work was reissued with a somewhat shorter title in four folio volumes in 1787. The freemason
James Anderson James Anderson may refer to: Arts *James Anderson (American actor) (1921–1969), American actor *James Anderson (author) (1936–2007), British mystery writer *James Anderson (English actor) (born 1980), British actor * James Anderson (filmmaker) ...
may have been his brother.


References


Further reading

*


External links

*''Historical and Chronological Deduction of the Origin of Commerce'' (1787):
volume one

volume two

volume three

volume four
Scottish economists 1765 deaths 1690s births 18th-century British economists Historians of the British Empire 18th-century Scottish historians Economic historians Scottish emigrants to the Thirteen Colonies {{UK-economist-stub