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Fri Mar 31 17:18:20 2006 |
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----------------- HES POSTING -----------------
A good question, Chas. However, most professors do not teach about Smith's
concept of capital. About Smith, they mainly teach about the division of
labor (pin-maker) and the invisible hand (baker, butcher, brewer). They
also occasionally teach that money is not wealth. The first two of these
ideas are profound and easily understood. They appear again in the writings
of numerous other economists down through the ages, including J. S. Mill
(simple and complex coordination -- or is it cooperation, I forget) and
Ronald Coase (organization through the firm vs. organization through the
market), albeit with different twists. Whether students come to appreciate
them fully may depend more on the teacher than on the ideas themselves,
since the textbooks seldom describe the context in which the ideas were
invented or their significance at different times in the history of
economic thought.
Pat Gunning
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