Title: Lecture Two
1Lecture Two
- Economic Thought from Mercantilists to Adam Smith
2Recap
- Feudal ideology significantly anti-capitalist,
anti-financier. But - Merchants essential
- Exotic commodities from other lands
- Trade between different fiefs/kingdoms
- Finance essential
- Merchant activity
- Wars
- Merchants tolerated (but controlled, taxed)
- Usury laws circumvented
3Medieval fiction to circumvent anti-usury laws
Same religion
Lends at no interest
B fails to repay A
Insures A in case B fails to repay
Pays C interest rate for insurance
- Effectively, a different set of books to
disguise breaching the laws against usury
4Medieval Breakdown
- Feudal system imposed many imposts upon
merchants/tradesmen/moneylenders but social
change went against feudalism - Growth of specialist manufactures in towns the
guilds - Growth of specialist traders between nations the
Mercantilists - Revolt against religious strictures against
merchants/lending, church hypocrisy - Religious revolts beginnings of Protestantism
bound up with growth of merchants/financiers - A new ideology/analysis struggled for dominance
Mercantilism
5Mercantilism
- Justice out the window the aim is gain
- Buy cheap and sell dear sell lots and buy little
- suppose Pepper to be worth here two Shillings
the pound constantly, if then it be brought from
the Dutch at Amsterdam, the Merchant may give
there twenty pence the pound, and gain well by
the bargain but if he fetch this Pepper from the
East-Indies, he must not give above three pence
the pound at the most, which is a mighty
advantage Mun, OREF 18
6Mercantilism
- Focus is international trade, rather than
internal commerce - Nationalism essential promote nation by gain
from trade - Trade imbalance the object export more than
import - Self-sufficiency the domestic object
- Pro-commerce and finance, but many contradictions
- Promoted exports, restricted imports, no
attention to system of production. A trader,
rather than producer, perspective
7Mercantilism
- It is needful also not to charge the native
commodities with too great customes, lest by
indearing them to the strangers use, it hinder
their vent. And especially forraign wares brought
in to be transported again should be favoured,
for otherwise that manner of trading ... cannot
prosper nor subsist. But the Consumption of such
forraign wares in the Realm may be the more
charged, which will turn to the profit of the
kingdom in the Ballance of the Trade, and ...
enable the King to lay up the more Treasure
Mun OREF
8Mercantilism
- Leading intellect Petty (1623-1687)
- Strong advocate of quantitative analysis
- Considered production (unlike many Mercantilists)
- Had cost-based theory of value (rather than
utility-based) - Did not believe that economy would automatically
reach full employment (unlike later Smith, Say,
Ricardo) - Advocated public works to reduce unemployment
- Had concept of surplus, though no systematic
analysis - Regarded by Marx as father of political economy
(over 100 years before Smith)
9Mercantilism
- Foreign trade as the source of surplus
- No analysis of production
- In practice
- Added to feudal imposts on commerce
- Created government-sanctioned monopolies
- ostensibly to increase national wealth but
- often in practice enriched favoured individuals
- Point of criticism and departure for later
Physiocrats Classical Economists, with emphasis
upon laisser-faire, laisser-passer
10Pre-Classicals Conclusion
- Pre-classical economists views on free exchange
hampered by non-capitalist nature of production
during their epochs - Two concepts muddled
- That fairness in exchange meant commodities
should exchange on the basis of the effort they
embodied - That fairness in exchange should reflect the
buyers need for the product - Concept of surplus barely appreciated (except for
Petty) - First systematic analysis of production
undertaken by Physiocrats
11Early Classicism
- The Physiocrats
- Developed in pre-capitalist, agricultural France
- Smith, Ricardo, Malthus and Say
- Development dominated by capitalist, Industrial
Revolution England
12The Environment of Physiocracy
- Feudal system (like England) but
- All-powerful king (vs. Magna Carta)
- Feudal lords concentrated at Versailles absentee
landlords, no interest in farming - Taxes used to extract surplus for consumption by
lords/King - Rural sector dominated by small peasant-owner
farms (unlike rural estate England) - Few capitalist farmers, investment discouraged by
taxes many feudal/mercantilist imposts on trade
(like England) - Stagnant agriculture, vs England which had been
transformed into capitalist farming system
13Physiocracy
- Precursors Petty, Cantillon (see OREF)
- Founder Quesnay, doctor to Royal Court
- Underlying concepts of
- flows, as in blood in human body
- surplus
- Economy must produce a surplus for discretionary
consumption growth - Sought to promote capitalist farmers to increase
output and available surplus - First systematic analysis of economy
- Laid down in tabular form of flows from one
sector to another
14The Tableau Economique
15The Tableau Economique
Previous harvest
Rent to landlord
Landlord buys wheat and carriages
Farmer buys tools to grow wheat
Surplus product goes to landlord as rent
Process continues...
Artisans buy wheat
Recoups initial surplus
16The Tableau Economique
17Basic Features of Physiocracy
- Focus on production trade as component of
production - Key aspect of production the generation of a net
surplus (produit net) - Agriculture the only source of surplus farmers
the productive class - Manufacturing simply transforms agricultural
surplus into different forms workers the
sterile class - Feudal lords/clerics sustained by share of
surplus the proprietor class - Outputs of manufactures needed to generate rural
net product interdependence (multiplier,
input-output concepts)
18Basic Propositions of Physiocracy
- Agriculture only source of new value
- Land pre-dates man
- For man to survive, food must exist first
- Therefore land is the source of value
- Agriculture generates a surplus
- 1 unit of output requires lt 1 unit of input
- Sew 1 kilo of wheat as seed, get 10 kilos of
wheat as crop - Manufacturing simply converts form
- 1 unit of input, 1 unit of output (but in
different form) - Surplus key to wealth Wealth can be increased if
gap between inputs and output in agriculture can
be increased.
19Input-Output
- Example
- System 1 with 100 hectares of land
- 1 hectare land 7/10 bushels wheat 1/10 kilo
steel produces 1 bushel wheat - 0 hectare land 1/10 bushel wheat 9/10 kilo
steel produces 1 kilo steel - 70 wheat 10 steel -gt 100 wheat
- 10 wheat 90 steel -gt 100 steel
- Net output 20 bushels wheat, 0 kilos steel
20Input-Output
- System 2 with 100 hectares of land
- 1 hectare land 6/10 bushels wheat 1/10 kilo
steel produces 1 bushel wheat - 0 hectare land 1/10 bushel wheat 9/10 kilo
steel produces 1 kilo steel - 60 wheat 10 steel -gt 100 wheat
- 10 wheat 90 steel -gt 100 steel
- Net output 30 bushels wheat, 0 kilos steel
- Benefits of improved technology
- 16 reduction in necessary inputs
- 50 increase in net product
21Physiocratic Policy
- Net produit of contemporary France limited by
- Small landholdings, absentee landlords, primitive
techniques - Heavy arbitrary feudal taxation
- Mercantilist restrictions on trade in rural
produce - Physiocrats
- favoured commercial farmers,
- single tax on land rent
- High corn price, free movement of rural goods,
no manufacturing monopolies - Object to encourage improved techniques in
agriculture, hence higher surplus
22Strengths Weaknesses of Physiocracy
- In many ways far ahead of their time
- Concept of surplus
- Input-output concepts
- Major advance over previous economists
- Lost until modern times (except for Marx)
- Aggregate level of output depended on
re-investment of net surplus an
investment-driven perspective - Contraction of net surplus means contraction of
economy an aggregate-demand perspective - Belief that agriculture only source of surplus
- Development of input-output analysis hobbled by
views on value - Politically unpalatable advice meant early
downfall
23From Physiocracy to Adam Smith
- Focus upon domestic production (unlike
Mercantilists international trade focus) - Cost of production explanation for prices
- Search for the source of value
- Physiocrats nomination land
- Smith labour, and division of labour for its
increase - Beginnings of emphasis upon freedom of commerce
(unlike Mercantilists government monopolies,
duties on imports, etc.) - Input-output aspects lost (until Marx)
- Concern for aggregate demand lost to Says Law
(except for Malthus, Marx)
241776 The Wealth of Nations
- Writing less than 10 years after Watt devised his
steam engine (1769) year first Watt engine
installed (1776)
Agriculture already capitalist via enclosure
movement Crops for sale rather than consumption
on feudal estate Serfs evicted from land class of
landless labourers no rights to land (like
serfs), no assets (like guildsmen) must work for
a living wage labour Industry becoming
capitalist factories, labourers displacing
guilds, craftsmen
251776 The Wealth of Nations
- Domestic production now much more important than
foreign trade - Focus foremost on production, rather than
exchange - Early stage of capitalist development causes
confusion - Role of machinery not yet pervasive
- Class structure capitalist, but not yet clear
26Basic Propositions
- Labour, not land, is the primary source of value
- The annual labour of every nation is the fund
which originally supplies it with all the
necessaries and conveniences of life OREF
(Differs with Physiocrats) - Increase in value from specialisation division
of labour economies of scale essential part of
his analysis - Acknowledges role of machinery
- This great increase of the quantity of work ...
is owing to the increase in the dexterity in
every particular workman the saving of time
which is commonly lost in passing from one
species of work to another ... the invention of
a great number of machines which facilitate and
abridge labour, and enable one man to do the work
of many. OREF
27Basic Propositions
- But subsumes this too under division of labour
- (T)he invention of all those machines ... seems
to have been originally owing to the division of
labour. Men are much more likely to discover
easier and readier methods of attaining any
object, when the whole attention of their minds
is directed towards that single object OREF - Clarifies ancient dispute over role of utility in
determining value/price - The word VALUE ... has two different meanings,
... the utility of some particular object, and
... the power of purchasing other goods... The
one may be called value in use, the other,
value in exchange. OREF
28Source of Value
- No role for value in use in determining price
- Commences with the diamond/water paradox
- Water has great value in use, but very low
price - Diamonds have little utility, but very high
price - The things which have the greatest value in use
have frequently little or no value in exchange
and, on the contrary, those which have the
greatest value in exchange have frequently little
or no value in use. Nothing is more useful than
water but it will purchase scarce anything
scarce anything can be had in exchange for it. A
diamond, on the contrary, has scarce any value in
use but a very great quantity of other goods may
frequently be had in exchange for it. OREF 85
29Source of Value
- Resolution of paradox
- Price reflects relative difficulty of
manufacture - Abundant water involves little effort
- Scarce diamonds take much effort
- Labour, therefore, is the real measure of the
exchangeable value of all commodities. OREF - Effort determines value perspective The real
price of everything, ..., is the toil and trouble
of acquiring it OREF - Price reflects labour embodied in commodity If
among a nation of hunters.., it usually costs
twice the labour to kill a beaver which it does
to kill a deer, one beaver should naturally
exchange for or be worth two deer. OREF
30Value and Price Problems
- What about capital?
- As soon as stock has accumulated in the hands of
particular persons, some of them will naturally
employ it in setting to work industrious people,
..., in order to make a profit by the sale of
what their labour adds to the value of the
materials something must be given for the
profits of the undertaker of the work who hazards
his stock in this adventure. OREF 90 - So two determinants of price?
- The value which the workmen add to the
materials, therefore, resolves itself ... into
two parts, of which the one pays their wages, the
other the profits of their employer upon the
whole stock of materials and wages which he
advanced. OREF 90
31Value and Price Problems
- What about land?
- As soon as the land of any country has all
become private property, the landlords, like all
other men, love to reap where they never sowed,
and demand a rent even for its natural produce...
(A)ll the natural fruits of the earth, which,
when land was in common, cost the labourer only
the trouble of gathering them, come, ..., to have
an additional price fixed upon them. He must then
pay for the licence to gather them and must give
up to the landlord a portion of what his labour
either collects or produces. ... (T)he price of
this portion, constitutes the rent of land, and
in the price of the greater part of commodities
makes a third component part. OREF 91 - Adding up theory of costs/price
32Value and Price Problems
- What measure of labour?
- Labour embodied?
- Hours of labour a commodity contains
- 40 hours to make a chair
- embodies 1 working week
- but price includes profit, rent, as well as wage
- Labor commanded?
- Hours of labour a commodity can buy
- Chair costs workers 2 weeks wages
- Commands 80 hours of labour
- What is labour? Not only his labouring
servants, but his labouring cattle, are
productive labourers.
33Smiths Scorecard
- Gained (w.r.t. Physiocrats)
- Appreciation of labor/industrialisation
- Notions of capital, profit, rent
- Perceptive cynicism re landlords, merchants
- (?) Labour as source of value
- Lost
- Analysis of flows, input-output
- Notion of surplus
- Role of investment
- Analytic rigour
- Macroeconomic concerns investment, aggregate
demand, employment - Next week Smiths successors Ricardo Marx