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    Per·rin, Jean Baptiste
    /ˈperən/
    • 1. (1870–1942), French physical chemist. He provided the definitive proof of the existence of atoms, proved that cathode rays are negatively charged, and investigated Brownian motion. Nobel Prize for Physics (1926).

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  2. Jean-Baptiste Say. Jean-Baptiste Say (French: [ʒɑ̃batist sɛ]; 5 January 1767 – 15 November 1832) was a liberal French economist and businessman who argued in favor of competition, free trade and lifting restraints on business. He is best known for Say's law —also known as the law of markets—which he popularized, although scholars ...

    • Early Life and Education
    • Notable Accomplishments
    • Published Works
    • Legacy
    • Personal Life
    • The Bottom Line

    Jean-Baptiste Say, also known as J.B. Say, was born on Jan. 5, 1767, in Lyon, France. He went to school in Lyon before moving to London to study business. Say returned to France in 1787 and lived in Paris with his family. He found work as a secretary in a Paris-based insurance company run by Etienne Claviere, a politician and financier of the Frenc...

    Say was heavily influenced by Adam Smith and the economic theories he laid out in his 1776 book Wealth of Nations. He was a big proponent of Smith’s free market theories, promoting his laissez-faire philosophies and helping to popularize them in France through his academic work and teaching. Say also expressed the belief that a falling price level ...

    Jean-Baptiste Say wrote about money and banking and shared his views of taxation as burdensome. He's best known for his book titled A Treatise on Political Economy, which was published in 1803. In addition to his famous Treatise, his other published works include the two-volume Complete Course in Practical Political Economy, which was publishedin 1...

    Say's Law of Markets lives on in modern neoclassical economicmodels which argue that if prices are flexible enough for all markets to clear, then the economy will tend toward stability. While it implies that the economy is in a sense self-regulating so that production is ultimately the source of demand, the law has been misinterpreted and frequentl...

    Jean-Baptiste Say spent some time in the French military, where he served in a volunteer battalion. In 1793, he married Julie Gourdel-Deloches. This allowed him to avoid mandatory conscription in the military. The couple had two children, Horace Emile Say and Adrienne Say. Say's wife died in 1830; Say died on Nov. 15, 1832. He is buried in Père Lac...

    Jean-Baptiste Say was a French classical liberal economist who left a lasting mark on the world with his academic and professional pursuits. Say, who once worked under Napoleon, was moved by the work of Adam Smith, who is considered the father of modern economics. Say taught political economy in France until his death and also wrote several books. ...

  3. Jan 2, 2001 · Say’s Life (1767-1832) Jean-Baptiste Say ZOOM Picture of Jean-Baptiste Say courtesy of The Warren J. Samuels Portrait Collection at Duke University. Jean-Baptiste Say was born in Lyons on January 5, 1767 and died in Paris on November 15, 1832. Say was the leading French political economist in the first third of the 19th century. […]

  4. supply and demand. J.-B. Say (born January 5, 1767, Lyon, France—died November 15, 1832, Paris) was a French economist, best known for his law of markets, which postulates that supply creates its own demand. After completing his education, Say worked briefly for an insurance company and then as a journalist. In 1794 he became an editor of a ...

  5. Jean-Baptiste Say. 1767-1832. F rench economist J. B. Say is most commonly identified with Say’s Law, which states that supply creates its own demand. Over the years Say’s Law has been embroiled in two kinds of controversy—the first over its authorship, the second over what it means and, given each meaning, whether it is true.

  6. Apr 26, 2024 · Say's Law of Markets was developed by the French classical economist and journalist, Jean-Baptiste Say. Say was influential because his theories addressed how a society creates wealth and the ...

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  8. Jean-Baptiste Say was born in Lyons on January 5, 1767 and died in Paris on November 15, 1832. Say was the leading French political economist in the first third of the 19th century. Before becoming an academic political economist quite late in life, Say had worked at a broad range of occupations including an ap...

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