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This metaphor describes how individuals pursuing their own self-interest—such as a baker selling bread for profit—unintentionally benefit society by providing necessary goods and services at natural market prices.

He proposed that the real measure of a commodity's value is the amount of labor required to produce it, though this idea has since been heavily refined by later economists. The Five Books of the Treatise An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of

Smith opens with the famous example of a pin factory to show that breaking down production into specialized tasks dramatically increases efficiency and total output.

An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations , published in 1776 by Scottish philosopher , is considered the foundational text of modern economics. It shifted the global understanding of wealth from the hoarding of precious metals (mercantilism) to the total production of goods and services through labor, essentially pioneering the concept of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) . Core Economic Principles

Smith argued against government interference like tariffs or subsidies, believing that open competition and the voluntary exchange of goods lead to a self-regulating, thriving economy.


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The Wealth of Nations - An Inquiry Into the Nat...