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Planning the French Canals: The “Becquey Plan” of 1820–1822
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 March 2009
Abstract
France's canal age was largely the outgrowth of the plan proposed by François Becquey, the state administrator who orchestrated a successful campaign to convince influential Frenchmen that a nationwide canal network was one of the essential tasks of their generation. As Becquey originally conceived his plan, canal building would directly contribute to economic growth and help foster a spirit of business enterprise. In the end he had to settle for a scheme under which the government paid a steep price to a handful of financial consortia for the right to assume all the risks and costs of building and operating the system itself.
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- Papers Presented at the Forty-Third Annual Meeting of the Economic History Association
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References
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36 For the Becquey-Legrand relationship see Beugnot, Becquey, pp. 271–72, 289–91.Google Scholar
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