Saturday, December 8, 2018

Murray Rothbard's Greatest Contribution to Capital Theory Was to Unify Jevon's Approach and Hayek's Approach

The shortcoming of Jevons’s presentation is that he did not include in his trapezoids detailed factor payments. He only analyzed interest payments in the investment process. The shortcoming of Hayek’s presentation is that his trapezoids are focused on the distinction between capital goods and original means of production, while interest payments are omitted. Rothbard’s greatest contribution to capital theory was to unify both approaches and place them in the context of the marginal-pricing process. A table developed by him decomposes all spending into the earnings of all the factors of production, intermediate and original ones, by including interest alongside labor and land. We have no reason to exclude any of them, especially if we want to construct a complete micro- and macroeconomic framework of the economy.

Rothbard’s Trapezoid

--Mateusz Machaj, Money, Interest, and the Structure of Production: Resolving Some Puzzles in the Theory of Capital, Capitalist Thought: Studies in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics (Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2017), 52.


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