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Politics & Power Quote by Friedrich List

"Industry entirely left to itself would soon fall to ruin, and a nation letting everything alone would commit suicide"

About this Quote

Left alone, the market doesn’t become “free”; it becomes fragile. List’s line is a blunt rejection of the soothing fantasy that industry naturally self-corrects toward national strength. He’s not warning against laziness so much as against a kind of ideological abdication: a state that treats economic life as weather instead of warfare.

The phrasing matters. “Left to itself” sounds benign, almost pastoral, but List pivots to “ruin” and “suicide,” words of collapse and self-harm. That escalation is the trick. He’s collapsing the distance between policy and fate, insisting that laissez-faire isn’t neutral governance but an active choice with mortal consequences. “Letting everything alone” is framed as negligence, not liberty.

Context does a lot of work here. Writing in an era when Britain’s industrial head start let it preach free trade from a position of dominance, List helped build the case for “infant industry” protection: tariffs, infrastructure, and state coordination to incubate manufacturing until it can compete. The subtext is geopolitical. Free trade, in this telling, is often a sermon delivered by the already wealthy to keep latecomers in their place - exporters of raw materials, importers of finished goods, permanently “developing.”

List’s nationalism is also explicit: he’s not optimizing for consumer prices this quarter; he’s optimizing for the capacity to produce, employ, and withstand shocks. The quote lands because it treats economic policy as statecraft. You can choose to manage industrial power, or you can pretend you’re above it and watch someone else manage you.

Quote Details

TopicBusiness
Source
Verified source: Outlines of American Political Economy (Twelve Letters) (Friedrich List, 1827)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Industry entirely left to itself, would soon fall to ruin, and a nation letting everything alone would commit suicide. (Letter VI, p. 87 (as cited in scholarly apparatus)). This wording is repeatedly attributed (with a specific internal locator) to List’s 1827 work commonly referred to as “Outlines of American Political Economy in Twelve Letters to Charles J. Ingersoll,” specifically Letter VI, p. 87, and is also cross-referenced as appearing later in List’s 1841 National System (often cited around p. 166 in English editions). However, in the web-accessible material I located, I could not directly open a scan of the 1827 primary text page itself to independently confirm the page/letter in a digitized facsimile; the best I could verify online is that multiple secondary-but-scholarly pages converge on the same precise locator (Letter VI, p.87) and reproduce the sentence verbatim. To reach ‘high’ confidence, you’d want to consult a digitized or physical copy of the 1827 letters and confirm the line on the stated page.
Other candidates (1)
Playing the Long Game (Laurie Fitzjohn-Sykes, 2015) compilation95.0%
... Industry entirely left to itself, would soon fall to ruin, and a nation letting everything alone would commit sui...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
List, Friedrich. (2026, February 20). Industry entirely left to itself would soon fall to ruin, and a nation letting everything alone would commit suicide. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/industry-entirely-left-to-itself-would-soon-fall-143860/

Chicago Style
List, Friedrich. "Industry entirely left to itself would soon fall to ruin, and a nation letting everything alone would commit suicide." FixQuotes. February 20, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/industry-entirely-left-to-itself-would-soon-fall-143860/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Industry entirely left to itself would soon fall to ruin, and a nation letting everything alone would commit suicide." FixQuotes, 20 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/industry-entirely-left-to-itself-would-soon-fall-143860/. Accessed 27 Mar. 2026.

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About the Author

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Friedrich List (August 6, 1789 - November 30, 1846) was a Economist from Germany.

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