塞尔维亚人口理论的起源

Q3 Social Sciences
B. Mijatovic
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章包含了关于塞尔维亚理论人口统计学的第一部作品的记述,这是由海德堡的哲学博士、第一位被广泛认可的塞尔维亚经济学家科斯塔·库基奇(Kosta Cukic)于1862年写的。他在《国家经济》教材的第二卷中讨论了这个问题,书名是《经济政策》。在经济学教科书中写人口问题是当时欧洲的一种普遍做法。虽然他写的是一本教科书,但他的作品并不是对普遍接受的理论的复述,而是对当代科学中尚未解决的问题的批判性讨论。因此,他的作品可以被认为是完全意义上的原创。在理论意义上,库基奇依赖于马尔萨斯,但在许多问题上也提供了明显不同的观点。他接受了马尔萨斯?S的立场是食物的数量是人口增长的限制因素,自然生育率很高是由于人的原因?强烈的性欲。但也有重要的区别:在库基奇?在马尔萨斯的理论框架中,工资铁律并不适用,也就是说,正如马尔萨斯所说,工资并不总是追求存在的最低限度。库基克还认为,资本影响生育率,因为它影响可用资源的数量。库基奇不像马尔萨斯那样悲观,相反,他观察到当时欧洲人口显著增长,但没有出现大规模饥荒和瘟疫。我们可以看到,库基奇对马尔萨斯和他的理论做了很多论述。这是可以理解的,因为马尔萨斯是杰出的理论家,在那几十年里,他的工作集中在人口问题上,因此,对于任何打算写人口问题的人来说,根据他的理论和与他的讨论来决定是不可避免的。库基奇还讨论了人口政策以及当时政府可以利用的人口政策方面:移民,移民和婚姻。他的观点的基础在各个方面都是强有力的和一贯的自由主义。库基奇主张扩大个人自由,比如关于婚姻的自由决策,自由移民到这个国家和从这个国家移民出去。在一些地方,他会设定最低的技术条件。?个人自由…政治意识的理想是当代的吗?因此,他声称“公民不只是实现政府目的的手段”。,但恰恰相反,是政府?美国有责任促进和支持公民追求特殊幸福和普遍幸福的愿望。是在重复约翰·洛克吗?他认为国家是为了公民而存在,而不是公民为了国家而存在。库基奇属于19世纪中期一个广泛的作家圈子,他们从根本上拒绝马尔萨斯?一方面,经济学家声称,技术进步和深化劳动分工将导致经济进步,从而永远推迟马尔萨斯所担心的生存危机;另一方是人口学家,他们相信工人会控制他们的生育率,以在比马尔萨斯认为的更大程度上保持生活水平。到19世纪末,西方国家生育率的下降为支持后者提供了强有力的证据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The inception of demographic theory in Serbia
This text contains an account of the first work on theoretical demography in Serbia, which was written in 1862 by Kosta Cukic, a doctor of philosophy from Heidelberg and the first widely recognised Serbian economist. He dealt with this topic in the second volume of his State Economy textbook, the title of which was Economic Policy. Writing about population problems in economic textbooks was a common European practice at that time. Although he wrote for a textbook, his work was not a retelling of generally accepted theories, but a critical discussion of issues that had not been resolved in contemporary science. Therefore, his work can be considered original in the full sense of the word. In the theoretical sense, Cukic relied on Malthus, but also provided significantly different perspectives on many issues. He accepted Malthus?s position that the amount of food is a limiting factor in population growth and that natural fertility is very high due to people?s strong sexual drive. But there were also important differences: in Cukic?s theoretical framework, the iron law of wages does not apply, i.e. wages do not always strive for the existential minimum, as Malthus argued. Cukic also argues that capital affects fertility, since it affects the amount of available resources. Cukic was not a pessimist like Malthus, and instead observed a significant population growth in Europe at the time, without mass famine and pestilence. As we can see, Cukic dealt a lot with Malthus and his theory. This is understandable considering that Malthus was the preeminent theoretician whose work focused on the population problem in those decades, and therefore determination according to his theory and discussion with him was inevitable for anyone who intended to write about population problems. Cukic also dealt with population policy and those aspects of it that were available to the governments of the time: immigration, emigration, and marriage. The basis of his views was strong and consistent liberalism in every respect. Cukic advocated for expanding personal freedoms, such as free decision-making about marriage, and free immigration to the country and emigration from it. In some places he would set minimum technical conditions. ?Personal freedom... is the ideal of the political consciousness of the present time?. Accordingly, he claimed that ?citizens are not just means for governmental purposes?, but on the contrary, it is the government?s duty to ?facilitate and support the aspirations of citizens to particular and general happiness?, thus repeating John Locke?s idea that the state exists for the sake of citizens, and not citizens for the sake of the state. Cukic belonged to a wide circle of authors in the mid-19th century who fundamentally rejected Malthus?s theory: on the one hand, economists who claimed that technological progress and a deepened division of labour would lead to economic progress that would forever postpone the existential crisis that Malthus feared; and on the other, demographers who believed that workers would control their fertility to preserve living standards to a greater extent than Malthus thought possible. Towards the end of the 19th century, the decline of fertility in Western countries provided strong evidence in favour of the latter.
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来源期刊
Stanovnistvo
Stanovnistvo Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
0.60
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0.00%
发文量
7
审稿时长
15 weeks
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