Brad, the problem I have with trying to find sources concerns the
question itself. Perhaps there are some people who hold the view you
describe, but they have not been on my list of people to consult for
information about the shift to neoclassical economics.
First, I do not think that economists -- or should I say the best
economists -- ever held a strict labor theory of value. The theory of
value in classical economics was contradictory or, more charitably,
multi-faceted. No one in their right mind could deny the contribution of
enterprise, or entrepreneurship, to the value of the product. Nor could
one deny the contribution of what we today call human capital. Given
this, the only way that one could consistently hold a labor theory of
value was to maintain that production activity by human beings is the
source of all value. But to maintain this, one would have had to define
labor so broadly that it would have no applications to policy. Besides
this, there was always the problem of explaining the value of things
exchanged in markets that either had not been produced (items acquired
through luck or chance) or that had been produced so long ago (e.g.
works of art old gold, old diamonds, and old water) that the connection
between the labor that caused them to be produced and their current
market value could not be established to a rational mind.
Second, I wonder about the legitimacy of linking the labor theory to a
production theory. The perplexing question to a modern economist is how
some of the great minds in HOT could have held a production theory. (One
must assume that to the modern mind, the labor theory was an
aberration.) The answer, I believe, lies with the beliefs of economists
about who they were serving. They did not conceive of themselves as
serving the interest of the "common man" which, in neoclassical
economics, means the consumer. Many searched with futility for a natural
law, or set of laws, to explain value.
Third, and in conjunction with the second point, the consumption theory
of value developed as a counter to the production theory. It is no
coincidence, I suspect, that this development corresponded to the
expansion of democracy and the gradual demise of rule by kings. The
question arose: "In whose interest should economic policy be made?" And
"whose interest is served by capitalism?" The producers, whoever they
are taken to be, or the consumers?
Practically all of the major founders of the subjective theory of value
mentioned their efforts to combat socialism and/or Marxism, which in the
mind of the populace was based on the labor theory of value. It was only
long after the introduction of the subjective theory of value that some
economists began to think of the possibility that, by causing the goods
that consumers want to be produced, socialism might serve the interests
of the "consumer" (Oscar Lange). Walras, Menger and Clark were concerned
with socialism and, as I recall but am not certain, so was Jevons. Each
of these independently invented models of an economic system in which
consumer utility is the source of all value.
Was subjective value (or marginal utility) theory a shift from the labor
theory? Only, it seems to me, if we put all of the classical economists
in the socialist or Marxist camp. Who subscribes to this view?
With respect,
Pat Gunning
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