The World
An Economics Exhibit

The World's Wealth
  • The Economic Consequences of the Peace (by )
  • Life of Adam Smith (by )
  • Sumerian Tablets from Umma in the John R... (by )
  • Records from Erech, Time of Nabonidus (5... (by )
  • Oeconomicus (by )
  • The Wealth of Nations (by )
  • Principles of Economics : Volume 1 (by )
  • Capital : A Critique of Political Econom... (by )
  • The Industrial Revolution (by )
  • Dealing with Spatial Dimensions of Inequ... (by )
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The World's Wealth:  An Economics Exhibit

This virtual exhibit offers significant insight into the money, economic theories and political influence on economies.  The historical economic discoveries and records of common men and great economists alike have been preserved in a treasure trove of works and documents in the World’s Wealth Exhibit.  A focused exploration into historical documents within our Collection will give readers a sound foundation for understanding of government, society and finance processes.


Ancient Economics
Ancient Economics
According to the World Heritage Encyclopedia, the discipline of Economics "focuses on the behavior and interactions of economic agents and how economies work."  Traditionally, the study of economics is the study of the way individuals and societies best use limited resources to satisfy their wants and needs both at the macro and micro levels  (“Economics,” World Heritage Encyclopedia).  Throughout history, mankind has approached the processes that govern the production, distribution and consumption of resources with a variety of methods...some more in agreement with our current perception of morality than others.

Records from Erech, Time of Nabonidus (555-538 B.C.), Volume 6 by Raymond P. Dougherty documents the experiences of agricultural slaves in Babylon during the reign of the last Neo-Babylonian king, Nabonidus.  They lived  long, cruel days under the scorching sun; ploughing, sowing, reaping and threshing (
Records from Erech, Time of Nabonidus (555-538 B.C.), Volume 6, Raymond Philip Dougherty).  In addition, they were sold.  The book, Sumerian Tablets from Umma in the John Rylands Library, Manchester, describes when a sale occurred, a receipt of purchase would be drawn up on a small clay tablet for your former owner (The Sumerian Tablets from Umma, Charles Lees Bedale).  This clay receipt would have represented some of the first records of monetary exchange in the history of mankind (“Economics,” World Heritage Encyclopedia).

The most treasured discoveries made by the greatest minds in the history of economic thought are rendered somewhat lifeless beside a record of the daily suffering endured by a common slave hand in Babylon (Records from Erech, Time of Nabonidus (555-538 B.C.), Volume 6, Raymond Philip Dougherty).  It is this connection to documents and records, detailing humanity’s cruelty in some cases, which makes so relevant the importance of fair economic law and practice today.

Measurement
Measurement
Immoral economic practices are often a product of trying to address the problem of resource scarcity in a society (“Economics,” World Heritage Encyclopedia). The problem of scarcity is addressed at length by 18th-century Scottish economist and philosopher Adam Smith, whose most famous work, The Wealth of Nations, is often referred to as the bible of capitalism ("Adam Smith," World Heritage Encyclopedia).

Smith believed that when an individual pursues his or her self-interest, they indirectly promote the good of society and solve many of the problems associated with scarcity (The Wealth of Nations, Adam Smith).  Smith contended that self-interested competition in the free market would tend to benefit society as a whole by keeping prices low, while still building in an incentive for a wide variety of goods and services ("Adam Smith," World Heritage Encyclopedia).

Before Smith wrote the book, world economic theory measured a country’s wealth by its store of gold, silver and other precious metals. Smith argued that a nation’s wealth should not be judged thus but rather by the total of its production and commerce - what we know today as gross domestic product (The Wealth of Nations, Adam Smith).

It took Smith nine long years to write the book, which is believed to be the first work dedicated to the study of political economics ("The Wealth of Nations" World Heritage Encyclopedia).  Life of Adam Smith describes Smith was on his deathbed, regretting that he hadn’t accomplished more (Life of Adam Smith, John Rae).   Even so, his philosophies and contributions to economic thought have often been credited, such as in The Industrial Revolution by Charles Austin Beard, for forging the path to prosperity that characterized the western world in the 19th-Century.
Today
Today
Alfred Marshall, a British economist born in 1842, learned from many of Smith’s discoveries and yet disagreed with Smith on several points. Specifically he argued that man should be equally as important as money and that there must be an emphasis on human welfare, instead of just wealth.  Marshall saw that the duty of economics was to improve material conditions, but believed that such improvement would only occur in partnership with social and political forces (“Alfred Marshall,” World Heritage Encyclopedia).

Marshall’s greatest success was an economic text called The Principles of Economics, Volume 1.  This work sought to reconcile the classical and modern theories of value to create a decisive and comprehensive tool for economic instruction ("The Principles of Economics," World Heritage Encyclopedia).  Much of the success of Marshall’s teaching and The Principles of Economics book was derived from his effective use of diagrams such as his supply and demand graph (The Principles of Economics, Alfred Marshall).  His models and graphs gave later economists more effective means from which to learn and teach and are still utilized in educational settings today.  Perhaps more importantly, Marshall’s brief references to the social and cultural relations in the industrial districts of England were used as a starting point for late twentieth century work in economic geography ("Alfred Marshall," World Heritage Encyclopedia).  Another book in our collection titled, Dealing with Spatial Dimensions of Inequality in Indonesia: Towards a Social Accord notes that today, surveys and other statistical analysis help us to identify uneven or insufficient resource distribution within a given geographical area or people group and make adjustments accordingly (Dealing with Spatial Dimensions of Inequality in Indonesia: Towards a Social Accord, Iyanatul Islam).

Resource scarcity remains a problem for the common man in the 21st-Century but we are privileged access to the wisdom of the greatest minds who have come before us and to the authentic stories of men and women who have lived lives as full of struggle and hardship as our own.
Works Cited
"Adam Smith."  World Heritage Encyclopedia.  WorldLibrary.org.  Web.  2014.  

"Alfred Marshall." World Heritage Encyclopedia. WorldLibrary.org.  Web.  2014.  

Bedale, Charles Lees.  Sumerian Tablets from Umma in the John Rylands Library, Manchester.  Manchester:  The University Press, 1915. 

Dougherty, Raymond Philip.  Records from Erech, Time of Nabonidus (555-538 B.C.).  Volume 6.  New Haven:  Yale University Press, 1920.

Economics.”  World Heritage Encyclopedia.  WorldLibrary.org.  Web.  2014.  

Islam, Iyanatul.  Dealing with Spatial Dimensions of Inequality in Indonesia: Towards a Social Accord.  The World Bank, 2003. 

Marshall, Alfred.  Principles of Economics.  Volume 1.  London:  Macmillan Publishers, 1890. 

Rae, John.  Life of Adam Smith.  London:  Macmillan Publishers, Ltd., 1895. 

Smith, Adam.  The Wealth of Nations.  London:  Methuen, 1904. 
Economics Collections
Economics Collections
It has been said that money makes the world go 'round. It's certainly clear that the men and women behind the world's wealth both drive society forward and at times cause it to regress. 

The World’s Wealth Exhibit shelves thousands of relevant digital works from collections all over the world including:

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Top 100 books on Economics


  • On Liberty (by )
  • Socialism, Utopian and Scientific (by )
  • The Poverty of Philosophy (by )
  • The Traffic in Women (by )
  • The Development of Socialism from Utopia... (by )
  • Anthem (by )
  • The Theory of Moral Sentiments (by )
  • The Servile State (by )
  • A Treatise on Political Economy : Or the... (by )
  • Cecil Rhodes; The Man and His Work (by )
  • Classless Capitalism (by )
  • Common Sense (by )
  • Progress and Poverty; an Inquiry Into th... (by )
  • What Is Property (by )
  • Poverty and Its Vicious Circles (by )
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Department of Commerce Collection


  • International Trade Administration Us an... (by )
  • Births : Final Data for 2002 (by )
  • U.S. Department of Commerce Fy 2000 Annu... (by )
  • Section XVIII Optical, Photographic, Cin... (by )
  • Alliance for Telecommunications Industry... (by )
  • Total U.S. Exports (Origin of Movement) ... (by )
  • Annual Industry Accounts Revised Estimat... (by )
  • Trade in Goods and Services (Graph Chart... (by )
  • Doc Application for Transit Benefit (by )
  • Total U.S. Exports (Origin of Movement) ... (by )
  • Total U.S. Exports (Origin of Movement) ... (by )
  • Before the Subcommittee on Technology Co... (by )
  • United States Department of Commerce New... (by )
  • Patent and Trademark Office Ptos Year 20... (by )
  • Trade in Goods and Services (Graph Chart... (by )
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Export and Trade Collection


  • Draft Working Papers Iraq Status (by )
  • Ask the Tic (by )
  • Part III Department of Commerce 
  • The Advocacy Centers Mission (by )
  • Iraq Weekly Status Report (by )
  • Export America (by )
  • Working Papers Iraq Weekly Status (Publi... (by )
  • Draft Working Papers Iraq Status (by )
  • Export America (by )
  • Department of Commerce International Tra... (by )
  • Working Papers Iraq Status (by )
  • Welcome to Your Digital Edition of Comme... (by )
  • Draft Working Papers Iraq Status (by )
  • Draft Working Papers Iraq Status (by )
  • Uncle Sam Lends a Financial Hand (by )
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Federal Trade Commission


  • Order Certifying Intel's Motion to Seek ... (by )
  • 16 Cfr Part 453 (by )
  • United States District Court District of... (by )
  • Title: Public Workshop on Consumer Priva... (by )
  • Federal Trade Commission (by )
  • United States of America Federal Trade C... (by )
  • I Am a Consumer and Writing to Comment o... (by )
  • To the Federal Trade Commission: As a Mu... 
  • Federal Trade Commission (by )
  • Re: Generic Drug Study - Ftc File No. V0... (by )
  • Realty Si Management Co., L.L.C. (by )
  • Re: Identity Theft Rule, Matter No. R4 1... (by )
  • Re: Can-Spam Act Rulemaking, Project No.... (by )
  • Antitrust Issues in Defining the Product... (by )
  • Analyzing Competition Policy Globally 
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Small Business Administration Collection


  • Low Documentation Smaller Business Loans... (by )
  • Financing for the Small Business (by )
  • Disaster Loan Program : Subpart an Overv... (by )
  • Management Issues for the Growing Busine... (by )
  • Sba U.S. Small Business Administration t... (by )
  • Business Plan for the Small Construction... (by )
  • Borrower's Guide 2Nd Edition Fy1996 (by )
  • The Business Plan for the Home-Based Bus... (by )
  • The Facts about Score Counselors to Amer... (by )
  • The Business Plan Road Map to Success Wo... (by )
  • Program for Investment in Micro-Entrepre... (by )
  • Child Day-Care Services (by )
  • Small Business Administration Pt. 108 (by )
  • Standards of Conduct and Employee Restri... (by )
  • Pro-Net the Web Site for Buyers and Sell... (by )
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