Count
Stefano Jacini (1827-1891) was an
Italian statesman and
economist.
Born at
Casalbuttano, he was descended from an old and wealthy
Lombard family. He studied in
Switzerland, at
Milan, and in
German universities. During the period of the Austrian restoration in
Lombardy (1849-1859) he devoted himself to literary and economic studies. For his work on
La Proprietà fondiaria in Lombardia (Milan, 1856) he received a prize from the Milanese
Società d'incoraggiamento di scienze e lettere and was made a member of the
Istituto Lombardo. In another work,
Sulle condizioni economiche della Valtellina (Milan, 1858, translated into English by W. E. Gladstone), he exposed the evils of Austrian rule, and he drew up a report on the general conditions of
Lombardy and
Venetia for
Cavour.
He was
minister of Public Works under Cavour in 1860-1861, in 1864 under
La Marmora, and down to 1867 under
Bettino Ricasoli. In 1866 he presented a bill favoring Italy's participation in the construction of the
St. Gotthard Tunnel. He was instrumental in bringing about the alliance with
Prussia for the
war of 1866 against Austria, and in the organization of the Italian railways. From 1881 to 1886 he was president of the commission to inquire into the agricultural conditions of Italy, and edited the voluminous report on the subject. He was created senator in 1870, and given the title of count in 1880. He died in 1891.
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