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David Ricardo The First Economic Theorist

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Title: David Ricardo The First Economic Theorist


1
David RicardoThe First Economic Theorist
2
  • ? David Ricardo (1772-1823)
  • A stockbroker considered the first
    rigorous economic
  • theorists
  • Made major contributions building on
    Smiths ideas
  • Best known for theory of land rent and
    theory of comparative
  • advantage in international trade
  • Frequent correspondent with Thomas
    Malthus

3
  • ? Ricardos Theory of Land Rent The Assumptions
  • Land is divided into Farms of
    different soil qualities,
  • ranging from Best Farm to Worst
    Farm
  • Farms produce corn which is used to pay
    the next seasons
  • workers (the wages fund) or to
    provide seed for planting
  • (circulating capital) or to keep as
    rent
  • Corn can be sold at national price
    (farms are price-takers)
  • Capital and Labor work together in
    doses with fixed
  • proportions labor receives only a
    subsistence wage capital
  • earns a normal rate of profit
  • On each farm there are diminishing
    returns to increased
  • doses the average product (corn per
    dose) declines, so the
  • marginal product is less than average
    product and declines
  • even faster
  • Good farms will be cultivated first,
    then poorer farms. The
  • worst farm is the last to be
    cultivated

4
  • ? Ricardos Theory of Land Rent The Results
  • Each farm will add doses until the
    marginal product of a dose
  • equals the cost of a dosethe intensive
    margin
  • Rent on each farm is the excess of total
    product over total
  • cost of doses
  • The best farm will use the most doses,
    produce the most
  • corn, and receive the highest rent
  • The worst farm produces just enough corn
    to pay for doses
  • used it will produce the least corn and
    the landlord will
  • receive no rentthe extensive margin
  • Rent is not a necessary cost of
    productionit is the residual
  • between output and costs rent is
    price-determined, not price
  • determining
  • Land is required for production, but it is
    not afactor of
  • production, that is, not a required cost
    of producing

5
  • ? Ricardos Theory of Land Rent Policy
    Implications
  • Ricardo argued for an end to the Corn
    Laws (1804-1846),
  • which levied a stiff tariff on imported
    corn, because the Corn
  • laws raised the price of corn,
    benefiting landlords (who would
  • get increased rent) and harming
    manufacturers (who would
  • have to pay higher real wages and would
    suffer a fall in
  • profits).
  • A confiscatory tax on rent could be
    introduced without
  • affecting corn productionthe only
    effects would be on the
  • distribution of incomelandlords would
    lose and the public
  • would gain via increased revenues. On
    this same issue, see
  • Henry George and the Fabian Society
  • Note In Britain corn was a generic term for
    cereal grains. What we call corn was called maize.

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8
Ricardo on the Direction of Intl Trade
  • ? Ricardos On International Trade Comparative
    Advantage
  • Smith proposed that a country would
    produce and export
  • a good if it was produced at a lower
    cost than in another
  • country (Absolute Advantage)
  • Ricardo argued that this could only be
    a temporary
  • conditionsuppose a country could
    produce all goods at
  • least cost. This would mean that the
    second country
  • would export no goods, paying for
    imports with specie,
  • driving prices down in the second
    country and up in the first.
  • In the long run, imported goods must be
    paid for by
  • exported goods, so each country must
    have something to
  • export.

9
? The Classic Example of Comparative Advantage
England and France both produce
corn and wine. France produces 2 cases
of wine for each bushel of corn (so the
French corn price of wine is 0.50) England
produces 1 case of wine for each bushel
of wheat (so the English corn price of
wine is 1.0). Question Which Goods
Will Each Country Export to the
other?
10
Comparative Advantage and the Direction of Trade
Answer England specializes in corn and trades
with France for wine to (say) point e
France specializes in wine and trades with
England for corn to (say) point f
Eventually, world corn price of wine settles
between 0.5 and 1.0 Trade pattern
is determined by comparative advantage
Cases of Wine
E
E
F
Bushels of Corn
F
F
E
Analysis If France doesnt trade it must consume
along the line FF England will consume along
EE if it doesnt trade. Both
countries can improve their consumption
possibilities by specializing
in different products, then trading its surplus
France will specialize in wine and sell it to
England at Englands higher
priceconsuming along FF. England will
specialize in corn and sell it to
France at Frances higher price. The trade
pattern is determined by comparative advantage,
not by absolute advantage
11
  • ? General Gluts Ricardo vs. Malthus
  • Malthus argued that an economy could
    suffer protracted
  • periods of depressionperiods with
    excess capacity,
  • including high unemployment
  • Ricardo responded with Says Law
    Jean-Baptiste Say had
  • argued that general gluts were
    impossible because goods
  • trade for goods. By this he meant that
    the act of producing
  • 100 worth of goods was simultaneously
    an act of creating
  • 100 of income (wages and profits) to
    buy the goods.
  • Thus, Supply creates its own Demand.
  • Ricardo believed that what looked like a
    general glut was
  • simply a transitional period when
    resources were shifting
  • from declining industries to growing
    industries (buggy
  • whips to auto horns).

12
  • ? Why Might Gluts Occur?
  • One proposed source of gluts was excess
    saving Instead
  • of spending the income received from
    producing goods,
  • workers and capitalists could save
    (abstain from
  • consuming)
  • Saving (consumers abstaining from
    consumption)
  • could generate offsetting demand only if
    it led to investing
  • (business capital expenditures).
  • In the early 19th century almost all
    saving was by
  • businesses in the form of retained
    earnings that were
  • intended to buy investment goods. So
    there was a strong
  • link between saving and investment
  • The subsequent development of financial
    institutions
  • weakened the saving-investment link,
    making general gluts
  • more likely

13
  • ? Gold Exports and Note Depreciation in the
    Napoleonic Wars
  • England ran large international deficits
    to buy war goods,
  • borrowing heavily to finance the wars.
    Poor wheat harvests
  • compounded the deficit by raising
    imports of foodstuffs.
  • The demand for foreign exchange increased
    sharply, leading
  • to a price of gold, at the gold export
    point. Gold began
  • flowing out of the Exchequer.
  • To prevent the loss of gold, the
    Exchequer and the Bank of
  • England suspended convertibility of
    notes into gold. As a
  • consequence, the price of gold (in
    notes) rose to a premium
  • above the mint parity stated in
    language of the day, notes
  • depreciated.
  • The reason for the note depreciation was
    hotly debated in
  • The Bullionist Controversy, in which
    Ricardo played an
  • important role.

14
  • ? The Bullionist Controversy
  • Ricardo argued that the premium on notes
    was due to the
  • suspension of convertibility the Bank of
    England had
  • weakened the currency, thereby inducing
    inflation in the note
  • price of gold and other goods. This
    became known as The
  • Currency School.
  • The Bank of England responded that it
    could not cause
  • inflation because it adhered to the
    real bills doctrine,
  • creating notes by discounting real
    bills (self-liquidating
  • commercial notes created by trade). This
    became known as
  • The Banking School.
  • Who was right? Ricardo had the upper hand
    because the real
  • bills doctrine was a fallacy see Adam
    Smith

15
  • ? Ricardos Invariable Measure of Value
  • Ricardos Invariable Measure of Value was
    designed to serve
  • two goals
  • ? Provide a price index to compute
    real national output
  • ? Determine the source of variation in
    relative prices
  • Ricardo proposed using the commodity with
    average capital
  • and labor per unit produced, and with
    average durability of
  • capital. Its price (average cost of
    production) would be the
  • average of all prices, against which both
    relative prices and
  • the price level could be measured
  • Ricardo arbitrarily chose gold as the
    average commodity, so
  • the price of gold was his price index
  • ? By dividing the value of national
    product in pounds sterling
  • by the sterling price of gold the
    real value of national
  • could be calculated
  • ? If the price of a good is rising
    (falling) relative to gold, the
  • cost of producing that good is rising
    (falling) relative to all goods

16
? Ricardos View of the Dynamics of Economic
Growth As an economy grows its labor
and capital both grow As labor
increases, the demand for food (corn) rises,
the price of corn increases relative
to the price of manufactured goods
(cloth) As the price of corn rises,
less fertile land is brought into
production, and total land rent increases
The increasing price of corn relative to cloth
raises wage rates relative to the
price of cloth and the profit rate
declines In summary, as an economy
grows the share of output going to
rent increases, the profit rate on capital falls,
and the real wage rate rises
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