
The Pie: An Economics Podcast Liberalism and the Great Enrichment: Why Ideas, Not Capital, Made the Modern World
Nov 18, 2025
Deirdre McCloskey, an esteemed economist and author of the Bourgeois Trilogy, delves into how the 'equality of permission' revolutionized global income from $2 to $50 per day. She champions the 'bourgeois deal' that celebrates individual creativity and critiques modern economics for oversimplifying human nature. McCloskey contrasts the innovation paths of England and France, advocates for 'humanomics' to incorporate ethics and rhetoric, and discusses the potential of India’s liberalization while warning against statist solutions that stifle growth.
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Equality Of Permission Sparked Growth
- The Great Enrichment arose from 18th-century liberalism giving people "equality of permission," not from capital accumulation.
- Freeing ordinary people to innovate unleashed sustained growth that capital or schooling alone can't explain.
Innovism Beats Capitalism As Explanation
- "Capitalism" misleads by implying capital accumulation caused modern prosperity when all societies accumulate capital.
- Instead, McCloskey argues innovism: new ideas from liberated individuals drive growth.
License Raj To Liberation In India
- China and India grew rapidly after relaxing top-down state controls that blocked entrepreneurship.
- McCloskey predicts India will become a major creative economy as people gain the freedom to start businesses.






