SO long as economists are concerned with what is called
the Theory of Value, they have been accustomed to teach that prices are
governed by the conditions of supply and demand; and, in particular,
changes in marginal cost and the elasticity of short-period supply have
played a prominent part. But when they pass in volume II, or more often
in a separate treatise, to the Theory of Money and Prices, we hear no
more of these homely but intelligible concepts and move into a world
where prices are governed by the quantity of money, by its
income-velocity, by the velocity of circulation relatively to the volume
of transactions, by hoarding, by forced saving, by inflation and
deflation et hoc genus omne; and little or no attempt is made
to relate these vaguer phrases to our former notions of the elasticities
of supply and demand. If we reflect on what we are being taught and try
to rationalise it, in the simpler discussions it seems that the
elasticity of supply must have become zero and demand proportional to
the quantity of money; whilst in the more sophisticated we are lost in a
haze where nothing is clear and everything is possible. We have all of
us become used to finding ourselves sometimes on the one side of the
moon and sometimes on the other, without knowing what route or journey
connects them, related, apparently, after the fashion of our waking and
our dreaming lives.
Monday, January 4, 2016
Theory of Value
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