[OPE-L:8589] Re: Re: long term centers of gravity?

From: rakeshb@stanford.edu
Date: Wed Mar 12 2003 - 14:29:49 EST


Ok Jerry responds to little of my post in his 8581: 


Quoting gerald_a_levy <gerald_a_levy@msn.com>:

> Re Rakesh's [8577]:
> 
> > As far as I can tell, neither Fred nor Gary has cited evidence 
from
> 
> > Marx against the TSS breaking of the input=output price 
> > assumption (Ernst, Carchedi, Freeman, Kliman).  
> 
> Fred is on sabbatical so it may be a while before he answers.  
As
> for your assertion above,  don't you remember  the posts by Fred
> on OPE-L  where he cited textual evidence from Marx's writings
> about what can cause a change in prices of production? 

Yes, I do. I pointed out then (and I think for the first time) that Marx 
takes this idea of two reasons for a change from PoP straight from 
the first chapter of Ricardo's Principles. Marx's language is 
remarkably similar to Ricardo's. While the changes in PoP from a 
change in the average rate of profit itself are only clear over the 
long term, changes in the PoP obtain due to a reduction in 
commodity value by way of ongoing techno-organizational change 
on "a daily basis" as Ricardo himself says. 

I find this textual evidence--to say nothing of the evidence from 
capitalist reality-- to be in strong support of TSS ideas about 
interperiodic, if not continuous, dynamic changes in prices of 
production.  


 In that
> discussion,  Fred cited evidence from Marx contra the  
> Kliman-McGlone treatment of PoP in their transformation article.
> Don't you remember what came to be called the "smoking gun 
> quotation" cited by Fred from Volume 3 about there being "only 
> two reasons" for a change of PoP (see 4908 from February, 
2001)?

Yes, and do not forget how Allin drew on the Keynesian idea of 
lagged adjustment to make sense of Andrew's ideas. 


By the way, I do not accept TSS ideas about the transformation 
problem because 1. I think Marx's problem is an inverse one and 
2. I do not accept their (and Fred's) ideas about how the value 
transferred from the used up means of production is determined. 

> 
> Fred's paper on "long-run center-of-gravity prices" (subtitle), it
> should 
> be recalled, is titled "Marx's Concept of Prices of Production"
> ( http://www.mtholyoke.edu/~fmoseley/lrcgpric.html ).  It does not
> address the question of whether input prices do or do not 
> equal output prices outside of *that* context in Marx (e.g. it does
> not
> examine the issue of  whether input prices are assumed to 
equal
> output
> prices at the level of concretion of  the proposed "special study 
on
> 
> competition" or at the level of concretion of  "world market and
> crises").

Yes but Fred does that say that Marx's prices of production have a 
long term equilibrium property which implies, contra Carchedi,  
that input prices should be equal to output prices. 


> or the "real world of capitalist dynamics".  Yet,  within the
> context
> of examining Marx's concept of PoP and whether input prices are
> assumed to equal output prices in that context, I think Fred does 
> indeed present much textual evidence in support of his
> interpretation.

Again the textual evidence only shows that Marx believed that 
market prices adjust in such a way that most sectors will have 
enjoyed no more or less than the average rate of profit over the 
long term.  

The textual evidence does not say that market prices are 
converging on or gravitating towards equilibrium unit values which 
are somehow stable over the long term. Or that the blueprint does 
not change over the long term (30, 40 periods of iterations?) 
needed for market prices to have finally converged on the  prices of 
production implied by that blueprint. Fred and Gary are trying to 
Marx a less dynamic thinker than Ricardo! 


> 
> But, I'm not going to speak further for Fred.  If he has the time
> and
> inclination, he can speak for himself.  And, of course, the same
> goes
> for Gary.
> 
> In solidarity, Jerry
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 


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