From: GERALD LEVY (gerald_a_levy@MSN.COM)
Date: Wed Nov 07 2007 - 21:32:59 EST
>This is platitudious. Subjective valuation is only relevant to how a person >spends their income on the commodities sold at the prices then prevailing. >The subjective estimate we make of the value of a good is based on our >experience of what it normally sells for, which is determined objectively. Hi Paul C: There are a # of problems with this conception, including: -- what a good "normally" sells for changes over the course of the trade cycle. -- what a good "normally" sells for is related to the form of competition in a market, e.g. is there product differentiation, monopoly power, etc? -- what is considered "normal" depends, in part, on (subjective) expectations. -- standards of what is considered to be "normal" vary spatially (and, as noted above, temporally). In solidarity, Jerry
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