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Title: The More Things Change.... Author: Kevin Carson Date: April 5, 2006 Language: en Topics: capitalism, criticism, labor theory of value Source: Retrieved on 4th September 2021 from https://mutualist.blogspot.com/2006/04/more-things-change.html
The epigraph to my book is a quote from Bohm-Bawerkâs Capital and
Interest:
I have criticized the law of Labour Value with all the severity that a
doctrine so utterly false seemed to me to deserve. It may be that my
criticism also is open to many objections. But one thing at any rate
seems to me certain: earnest writers concerned to find out the truth
will not in future venture to content themselves with asserting the law
of value as has been hitherto done.
In future any one who thinks that he can maintain this law will first of
all be obliged to supply what his predecessors have omitted--a proof
that can be taken seriously. Not quotations from authorities; not
protesting and dogmatising phrases; but a proof that earnestly and
conscientiously goes into the essence of the matter. On such a basis no
one will be more ready and willing to continue the discussion than
myself.
He criticized Rodbertus in particular for being âcontent on almost every
occasion to assert... in the tone of an axiom,â the proposition that
labor creates exchange value--justifying it in every case by an appeal
to the authority of Smith and Ricardo.
I wrote my book as an attempt, in good faith, to meet Bohm-Bawerkâs
challenge. Now, in following libertarian discussions of my book since it
came out, Iâve had occasion to observe more than once that the shoe is
on the other foot.
Criticism of my book is a mixed bag. Some critical reviews, like those
of Robert Murphy and Roderick Long, have been quite thoughtful. Itâs
obvious, from looking at their reviews, that they read the book
carefully. Although they disagreed with many of the ideas in the book,
they were directly engaged with them and actually used their own
critical thought processes in responding to them.
But the majority of criticisms Iâve seen, especially of my attempt to
rehabilitate the labor theory of value in Part One, have the same
failings that Bohm-Bawerk observed a century ago in proponents of the
labor theory. As typical examples, take this comment from the Mises Blog
announcement of the symposium issue of JLS:
The economic value of a good or service is what someone thinks it is
(people often put different values on the the same object). This is true
BY DEFINITION (it is not a matter that needs to be âprovedâ).
The price a person offers for a good will be less than or equal to the
value they place upon it.
The âcost of productionâ (labour cost or other costs) does not determine
economic value â it has nothing to do with economic value.
If the costs of production are greater than the value that any potential
buyer places on a good that just means that the producer will either
have to sell at a loss or not sell at all.
Why waste a long article dealing with the labour theory of value?
One might as well write a careful refutation of the âfour elementsâ
(Earth, Fire, Water, Air) theory of the physical world.
--Paul Marks
Or this one:
Carson[âs] entire framework is built on a foundation disproven a long
time ago. The labor theory of value is obselete. Thereâs no ârecastingâ.
Heâs trying to fit a square peg into a round hole. Seriously, itâs time
to move on to realistic foundations, like, say, the subjective theory of
value. I canât believe people are actually debating stuff like this....
--Steve
Or this comment under Roderick Longâs post, also by Paul Marks:
The site appears to be developing an obsession with Dr [sic] Carson.
That the economic value of a good or service is a matter of what people
think it is (i.e. is not a matter of the cost of production) is true by
DEFINITION (it is not a matter of proving it).
Different people put different values on the same good â and the prices
they offer for it will be less than or equal to the value they place
upon it (unless they are offering a higher price as a way of giving the
seller money â as hidden charity).
If this is less than the cost of production (not just labour costs) the
seller has the choice of selling at a loss or not selling.
As for lending out money for people to build factories.
Lending (for any purpose) must be from real savings (i.e. income people
have chosen not to consume).
Trying to finance borrowing by printing money (or book keeping tricks)
in order to âreduce interest ratesâ, sets in motion a boom-bust cycle.
In short both the âlabour theory of valueâ and the credit expansion way
of getting rid of âmonopoly capitalistsâ are nonsense.
I know we are supposed to be polite on this site.
But, as I have written before, I am irritated (to put it mildly) that
people can earn a living [!] by writing nonsense and other people waste
time writing formal examinations of this nonsense.
Some of us do not have such an easy time in life. --Paul Marks
Many of the criticisms in the reviews of Walter Block and George Reisman
also fall into this category. As I wrote in my rejoinder article,
...Blockâs response to most of my criticisms of the Austrians amounts to
little more than talking past them, and reasserting some dictum of
Böhm-Bawerk or Mises that âeverybody knows,â without ever directly
addressing my counterarguments.
Such critics appeal to the authority of Bohm-Bawerk and Mises in the
same way a medieval scholastic might appeal to Aristotle: âBohm-Bawerk
said it, I believe it, that settles it.â Or as Keith Preston put it in
one of the comment threads,
Some of Blockâs other comments remind me of something a Bible-banger
might say: âItâs in the Word of Mises! I believe! Praise Rothbard!
Amen!â
They smugly assert that the subjectivists or marginalists âdisprovedâ
the labor theory of value, with only the vaguest idea either what labor
and cost of production theories of value actually entail, or exactly
where the subjectivists differ from them. They repeat second-hand
criticisms of the labor theory borrowed from Austrian polemicists, while
showing little evidence of having actually read either Ricardo and Marx
or the Austrians. They repeat, as devastating criticisms of cost of
production theories, strawman arguments about mud pies, sunk costs, and
irreproducible goods, totally unawarene that the classical political
economists and the Marxists specifically addressed all those issues and
that the labor theory of value was intended to apply only to the
equilibrium price of reproducible goods.
Worst of all, they discuss the LTV as though it made embodied labor the
basis of some intrinsic value in a good. In fact, the LTV and other
production cost theories of value simply assert that the price of
reproducible goods gravitates toward a ânormalâ equilibrium value
determined by cost of production (which is nowhere directly refuted by
the subjectivists, since their claim to have replaced cost with utility
as the basis of value is based on a very specialized and artificial
understanding of those terms, and not on their meanings in ordinary
usage).
In other words, such critics resort to âquotations from authoritiesâ and
âdogmatising phrases.â Like James Taggart, their minds are so clouded by
what âeverybody knowsâ that theyâve lost the ability to think.
A couple of commenters (both of whom have my humble thanks) took Marks
to task for his lame comments on the labor theory. In the comment thread
to Longâs post, Joshua Holmes wrote:
Marks, you need to read Carsonâs book before you talk any more about
what you think the labour theory of value is. Hell, you need to read the
blog post to which youâre responding. Prof. Long says:
Carson defends the labor theory of value, but in a subjectivized form,
holding that the price of a good tends to correspond to the subjective
disutility of the labor needed to produce it... (emphasis his)
And Geoffrey Allan Plauche cited
the argument Mill made that full understanding of oneâs own position
canât be had without confrontation with the differing views of
others...complacency, dogmatism, and rote memorization are the likely
results otherwise.
Hmmm.... Like the kind Bohm-Bawerk referred to above, maybe? In other
words, Marks, read the damn material before you comment on what it says!
Unless actually knowing what the hell youâre talking about before you
shoot your mouth off is one of those âluxuriesâ that you canât afford.
Marks, incidentally, also felt qualified to ârefuteâ my views on
interest, although itâs patently obvious he didnât actually read my
remarks on that subject, either:
As for banking â as is pointed out by Dr Reisman (and, as he reminds us,
by many other people over the last few centuries). One can not lend out
money that one has not got (without creating a boom-bust cycle).
âI want to build a factory, but I have not get the money and no one will
give me an interest free loanâ.
Dr Carsonâs âmonopoly profits of the capitalistâ.
Do we really need a formal article to show that Dr Carson is in error?
Have the population become so brain-dead that they can not see that
âunless everone gets interest free loans whenever they want to build a
factory, factory owners are getting moneopoly profitsâ is nonsense?
Letâs see.... 1) The first section of my rejoinder, on the Rothbard
article, specifically denies the claim that mutual banking is an
inflationary scheme. In fact, the mutualist argument against banking
entry barriers directly parallels Rothbardâs argument against such entry
barriers in the life insurance industry. 2) A mutual bank that issues
notes against a memberâs property isnât âlendingâ money any more than a
commercial bank that makes a secured loan under the present system. The
only difference is that, under the present system, the stateâs entry
barriers enable the capitalist bank to charge a monopoly price for the
service. 3) The objection isnât that âno one will give me an interest
free loan,â but that the state restricts competition in the supply of
credit and thus makes it artificially scarce and expensive. âI never
actually read anything Dr Carson wrote--but I did stay in a Holiday Inn
Express once!â
The comment threads under the two posts at Mises Blog are worth reading
for other reasons. Several people, including Richard Garner, have some
kind words to say about Yours Truly. And Keith Preston ably jumps into
the ring over the historical nature of state capitalism, and the
neo-fascist nature of the present economy. In particular, âPersonâ got
all exercised over my suggestion that state subsidies to transportation
might (surprise, surprise, surprise!) promote consumption of
transportation services at above Pareto-optimal or free market levels.
As I understand Personâs argument (if you can call it that), 1) bigness
is inherently more efficient, 2) cheap transportation makes bigness
possible, and therefore 3) saying that a free market would have less
transportation consumption and less centralization is tantamount to
saying weâd be worse off under a free market. Now, it seems to me that
if the spurious âefficienciesâ of large size and centralization only
appear when part of the total cost package is shifted or concealed,
weâre not really âbetter offâ now. Weâd be better off, and more
efficient, if all the costs showed up on the ledger. But Keithâs
attempts at reasoning with this fellow availed little. Are you really
surprised?
Thereâs one area in which I have to stand up in defense of my critics.
Keith Preston objects to Robert Murphyâs focus on Part One of the book,
on value theory, at the expense of Part Two (on the historical
development of state capitalism). I have to say, in Murphyâs defense,
that I originally intended Part One as the theoretical core, and Part
Two as a historical application of those principles. So the material on
value theory is really the heart of the book. Thatâs not to say the
historical material canât be read by itself, if economics puts you to
sleep. But value theory is what I had in mind when I set out to research
the book, and the historical material was taken up almost as an
afterthought.