Showing posts with label Physiocrats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Physiocrats. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

Nature — How to retool our concept of value – Mariana Mazzucato


Must-read in full. It's short and to the point.

The meaning of "value" is one of the most pertinent questions in economics and political economy. Michael Hudson has been emphasizing this for some time, as have Marxists and Marxian. Consideration of value of other than as price revealed in competitive markets is ruled out in conventional economics by methodological assumptions.
What we value and how we value it is one of the most contested, misunderstood and important ideas in economics. Economist Mariana Mazzucato’s comprehensive The Value of Everything explores how ideas about what value is, where it comes from and how it should be distributed have changed in the past 400 years, and why value matters now more than ever. Mazzucato emphasizes the need to reopen debate to make economies more productive, equitable and sustainable. The 2008 financial crisis was just a taste of looming problems — climate disruption, massive biodiversity and ecosystem-services decline, even the possible collapse of Western civilization — unless we learn to value what really matters.
Early economists focused on the production of value from land (François Quesnay and the ‘physiocrats’), labour (Adam Smith to Karl Marx) and capital. In this view, value determines price (Four decades ago, I described this in terms of embodied energy: see R. Costanza Science 210, 1219–1224; 1980). By contrast, the current mainstream ‘marginalist’ concept bases value on market exchanges: price, as revealed by the interaction of supply and demand in markets, determines value, and the only things that have value are those that fetch a price.
This has major implications for ideas about the distinction between value creation and value extraction, the nature of unearned income (‘rent’) and how value should be distributed....
Nature
How to retool our concept of value — Mariana Mazzucato
Robert Costanza

Sunday, March 15, 2015

Feudalism, Fascism, Libertarianism and Economics — Book Announcement


"Eric Zuesse has written a provocative and challenging volume, though in my opinion he sometimes goes too far in his criticisms and claims. This book proposes two new postulates to replace existing ones that are at the foundation of microeconomic theory. It cites the existing body of empirical findings in economics as being the reasons for them, and it presents a strong empirical case for each of its two new postulates as being true and the one that it is replacing as being false. I regard his book as the work of a serious, committed scholar whose views deserve to be taken seriously."
— Geoffrey Harcourt
Published 9 Mar 2015 by WEA Books, 288 pages, $10.00 
This book is available to download in PDF, EPUB (for iPad etc.) and MOBI (for Kindle etc.)
From the WEA Books page:
The WEA is pleased to announce the launch of WEA Books.
All our e-books are priced at $10.00. But if you join the WEA and pay a voluntary annual membership fee of $25, $50 or $150 you will, in the year following payment, be entitled to 3, 7, or 22 free e-books.
Most books are available to download in PDF, EPUB (iPad) and MOBI (Kindle) formats.
Real-World Economics Review Blog
Feudalism, Fascism, Libertarianism and Economics by Eric Zuesse
Editor

Friday, July 19, 2013

Daniel Little — Marx and the physiocrats

Gehrke and Kurz provide a highly detailed survey of the times and sources through which Marx studied the physiocrats, and the comments and questions that he raised in his working notebooks. They present the results of this analysis in two useful appendices to the article. In the primary text they focus on the most important question: to what extent, and in what specific ways, was Marx influenced by the physiocrats' system?
A lot, it seems.

Understanding Society
Marx and the physiocrats
Daniel Little | Chancellor, University of Michigan at Dearborn