Everything about Josiah Child totally explained
Sir Josiah Child, 1st Baronet (
1630 –
June 22,
1699),
English merchant,
economist and governor of the
East India Company, was born in
London, the second son of Richard Child, a London merchant of old family.
After serving his apprenticeship in the business, to which he succeeded, he started on his own account at
Portsmouth, as victualler to the navy under the
Commonwealth, when about twenty-five. He amassed a comfortable fortune, and became a considerable stock-holder in the East India Company, his interest in
India being accentuated by the fact that his brother
John Child was making his career there. (Please see the note at the bottom, about this relationship.)
He was returned to
Parliament in
1659 for
Petersfield; and in later years sat for
Dartmouth (
1673-
1678) and for
Ludlow (
1685-
1687). He was made
Baronet, of Wanstead in the County of Essex, in
1678. His advocacy, both by speech and by pen, under the
pseudonym Philopatris, of the East India Company's claims to political power, as well as to the right of restricting competition with its trade, brought him to the notice of the shareholders, and he became a director in
1677, and, subsequently, deputy-governor and governor.
In this latter capacity he was for a considerable time virtually the sole ruler of the company, and directed its policy as if it were his own private business. He and his brother have been credited with the change from unarmed to armed traffic; but the actual renunciation of the Roe doctrine of unarmed traffic by the company was resolved upon in January
1686, under Governor Sir Joseph Ash, when Child was temporarily out of office.
Child made several important contributions to the literature of economics; especially
Brief Observations concerning Trade and the Interest of Money (
1668), and
A New Discourse of Trade (
1668 and
1690). He was a moderate in those days of the mercantile system, and has sometimes been regarded as a sort of pioneer in the development of the
free-trade doctrines of the
18th century. Though Child considered himself a proponent of the competitive market, he simultaneously argued for a government-controlled interest rate and restricted trade among the colonies which would benefit England. He made various proposals for improving British trade by following
Dutch example, and advocated a low rate of interest as the
causa causans of all the other causes of the riches of the Dutch people. This low
rate of interest he thought should be created and maintained by public authority.
Child, whilst adhering to the doctrine of the
balance of trade, observed that a people can't always sell to foreigners without ever buying from them, and denied that the export of the
precious metals was necessarily detrimental. He had the
mercantilist partiality for a numerous population, and became prominent with a new scheme for the relief and employment of the poor; it's noteworthy also that he advocated the reservation by the mother country of the sole right of trade with her colonies. Sir Josiah Child's eldest son, Richard, was created Viscount Castlemain in
1718 and
Earl Tylney in
1731.
See also
Macaulay,
History of England, vol. iv.; R Grant,
Sketch of the History of the East India Company (
1813); D Macpherson,
Annals of Commerce (
1805); B Willson,
Ledger and Sword (
1903).
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