SHOE Archives

Societies for the History of Economics

SHOE@YORKU.CA

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
Date:
Fri Mar 31 17:18:50 2006
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (303 lines)
------------ EH.NET BOOK REVIEW --------------  
Published by EH.NET (September 2005)  
  
Timothy Davis, _Ricardo's Macroeconomics: Money, Trade Cycles, and   
Growth_. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005. xii + 316 pp.   
$75 (hardcover), ISBN: 0-521-84474-6.  
  
Reviewed for EH.NET by James C.W. Ahiakpor, Department of Economics,   
California State University, East Bay.  
  
  
I very much looked forward to reading this book. I expected to find   
another fresh contribution to the reinterpretation of David Ricardo's   
macro-monetary analysis in contrast with much of what one reads of   
him in the modern literature, based mainly on misrepresentations of   
his work by John Maynard Keynes and Joseph Schumpeter. I came away   
more disappointed than pleased with Timothy Davis's work. On one   
hand, Davis reaffirms some earlier reinterpretations of Ricardo's   
work, following mostly Sam Hollander, reinterpretations Davis calls   
"the new view" (p. 29). On the other hand, Davis does not appear to   
go much beyond these earlier reinterpretations. Indeed, some of his   
arguments and analysis might properly be described as retrogressions   
or a diminution in the quality of Ricardo's macro-monetary analysis   
-- a diminution because Davis takes some steps backward from some   
recent advances in the literature on Ricardo's macroeconomics,   
particularly on the law of markets. Davis also misses several   
opportunities to assist advancement in modern macroeconomic analysis   
from Ricardo's work.  
  
The book contains eight chapters. The first lays out the background   
to David Ricardo's emergence into economic writings, mainly on the   
issues of money, credit, taxation, trade, and the causes of economic   
growth and recessions. Significant among the motivating factors for   
Ricardo were the Napoleonic wars, the inflations and recessions   
associated with the cessation of these conflicts, the suspension of   
convertibility of the pound into specie and subsequent resumption,   
Ricardo's study of Adam Smith's _Wealth of Nations_ and his   
disagreements with parts of Smith's arguments, particularly Smith's   
theory of value and views on bounties. The six subsequent chapters   
provide numerous textual evidence to support the theoretical   
summaries contained in chapter 1.  
  
Thus, chapters 2 and 3 describe events during the business cycles of   
1815 to 1818 and 1818 to 1825, respectively. These show that,   
contrary to some perceptions, the British economy was not mired in a   
decade-long depression following the Napoleonic wars. Chapter four   
documents Ricardo's familiarity with economic events from his   
pamphlets, letters and speeches in Parliament, based on his   
experience as a professional stock jobber and a loan contractor, and   
having known the relevant sources of financial data. The main point   
here is to counter the prevalent notion of Ricardo as someone who was   
uninformed about economic events and built models purely from   
deductive reasoning. Chapter five, devoted to Ricardo's analysis of   
postwar events, mainly contrasts Ricardo's views with those of Robert   
Malthus. Ricardo comes out as clearly having views more consistent   
with the facts about the British economy's adjustments through   
recessions and recoveries. Chapter six attempts an analysis of   
Ricardo's views on the law of markets, while chapter seven is devoted   
to Ricardo's monetary analysis. The concluding eighth chapter   
summarizes some of these arguments again and draws some parallels   
between Ricardo's views on the resumption of convertibility of the   
pound and the gold standard in the early 1820s and Keynes's views on   
Britain's return to the gold standard in 1925. There is also an   
impressive set of appendices covering 64 pages, including financial,   
price, and trade data. Analysts, besides Keynes, whose   
interpretations of Ricardo Davis rebuts in the book are Joseph   
Schumpeter, Mark Blaug, Frank Fetter, T.W. Hutchison, Piero Sraffa,   
D.P O'Brien, Lionel Robbins, B.A. Corry, William Coleman, Terry   
Peach, and to some minor extent, George Stigler and Jacob Viner.   
Indeed, Davis also takes some dissenting positions from those of Sam   
Hollander, e.g., pp. 142, 147-48. So why wouldn't I rate the book as   
a major contribution to the advancement of scholarship on Ricardo's   
macroeconomics?  
  
First, most of the interpretations rebutted are rather old, before   
the 1970s, and are mainly reaffirmations of Sam Hollander's earlier   
work. It is curious, for example, that Davis does not refer to   
Blaug's editions of _Economic Theory in Retrospect_, but only to his   
1958 views on Ricardo. Second, in several cases the textual evidence   
cited is not the most suitable to the case at hand, particularly on   
the law of markets and on machinery and unemployment. Third, numerous   
pieces of textual evidence are cited without carefully laying out the   
theories they are supposed to validate. One easily can get lost   
wondering what the relevant macroeconomics is supposed to be, if one   
does not already know. For example, several of the quotations cry out   
for identification with Ricardo's and Malthus's employment of the   
classical forced-saving principle (in the reverse), e.g., pp. 136,   
140, 160n, a concept Davis hardly mentions. That identification would   
have been a helpful counter to the view gaining currency with some   
writers that the forced-saving doctrine is mainly an Austrian   
analytical concept. Fourth, Davis repeats the sterile debate over   
whether Say's Law might be interpreted as an identity or an equality   
proposition. This in spite of the fact the identity version would be   
meaningful only for a barter economy, a point Davis recognizes (p.   
162). And since the classics dealt with a monetary economy, that   
discussion seems unworthy of the ink and paper spent on it; the point   
is made in a chapter in Kates (2003), a book to which Davis also   
contributed.  
  
Fifth, and what is most disappointing, Davis accuses Ricardo of   
having failed to employ the law of markets consistently, and having   
adopted the equality version which "allows for a temporary glut of   
all commodities" (p. 162). He later quotes Ricardo's (4: 344) own   
statement, insisting that "there may ... be a glut of 2 or of 10   
commodities but ... there cannot be a glut of all" (p. 173), but   
offers no reconciliation of the apparent inconsistency with his   
interpretation. In fact, as J.S. Mill explains, money is included   
among the commodities, and this is why there cannot be a glut of all   
commodities at the same time (also mentioned in Kates (2003, p.   
113)). It is also from such understanding that we easily can make   
sense of Ricardo's declaration to Malthus: "Men err in productions,   
there is no deficiency of demand" (which Davis quotes on p. 147).   
Earlier, Davis (pp. 41-42) argues that Ricardo's macroeconomics   
"suffers because it does not integrate his insight that aggregate   
demand might, in theory, be deficient and that, in practice, the   
hoarding of cash sometimes occurs." But Ricardo (1: 358-59; 5:   
199-200, cited on pages 156-57), for example, does employ hoarding by   
the public and the Bank to explain the occurrence of economic   
distress. Davis (p. 182) also quotes Ricardo as making the same point   
about hoarding.  
  
Sixth, in the chapter on the law of markets, Davis repeats the claim   
that the so-called "Treasury view" of fiscal policy, attributed to   
Ricardo, assumes Say's identity and full employment: "he assumed full   
employment with no underlying analysis ... [he] assumed away the   
underlying problem [of wage and price adjustments] and then concluded   
that no remedy [to unemployment in a recession] was required" (p.   
162; also p. 182). But Ricardo's argument is simply that whatever a   
government spends out of tax revenues or borrowed funds must be at   
the expense of private sector spending (see Ricardo's statements   
quoted on pp 166 and 168). Ricardo's use of the term "capital" to   
refer to the funds transferred from the private sector to government   
may have confused many readers who follow Keynes and B�hm-Bawerk in   
interpreting "capital" to mean only capital goods, and thus conclude   
that Ricardo did not recognize the existence of excess productive   
capacity in recessions. But the problem with that confusion of   
"capital" with capital goods in the modern literature has been   
publicized since 1990. Thus, Davis could have made a greater effort   
to find consistency in Ricardo's (1: 265) recognition that, in   
economic distress, "much fixed capital is unemployed, perhaps wholly   
lost, and labourers are without full employment" (quoted on p. 182),   
with Ricardo's views on fiscal policy rather than to accept that he   
assumed full employment. That "Hollander (1979, 515) also concedes   
that Ricardo adhered to a full employment model" (p. 166) is no good   
reason for repeating the claim now. Besides, of what use is any   
macroeconomic theory for understanding economic recessions if it is   
founded on the assumption of full employment, a point Keynes (1936)   
successfully used to discredit classical economics? Of course, Keynes   
had no valid basis for that attribution to the classics, as has been   
pointed out since 1995 and mentioned in Kates (2003).  
  
Seventh, Davis interprets Ricardo as having argued the position of   
discretionary monetary policy (chapter 7). This in spite of Ricardo's   
prescription of convertibility as a means of restraining excessive   
paper money creation, or under a purely paper money system, the Bank   
of England having the prime duty of keeping the price level from   
varying -- that is, observing a price-level stability rule. Indeed,   
it would appear that Ricardo's aversion to a central bank's ability   
to vary the price level and thus distort the distribution of incomes,   
through the mechanism of forced-saving, led to his not prescribing   
the responsibility of lender of last resort function to the Bank. The   
pursuit of price-level stability assures that a central bank would   
expand its notes in periods of excessive demand for money during   
panics, the very condition under which the lender of last resort   
function is typically urged in modern macroeconomic analysis.   
Besides, Ricardo (esp. 1: 363-64; 3: 91-92) well understood that   
capitals -- investment funds -- are supplied by savings, not the   
quantity of money a central bank creates. Variations in market rates   
of interest reflect the relative demands and supplies of such   
capitals or savings. Thus, it properly is not the business of a   
central bank to attempt to manipulate market rates of interest.  
  
Instead, Davis claims that Ricardo did not advocate the lender of   
last resort function for the Bank of England because that function   
already had been undertaken by the Exchequer (pp. 20, 209, 221). One   
would think that a person of Ricardo's brilliance, which the book   
also seeks to illustrate, would have argued that function for the   
Bank if he thought it was proper. It also seems strange that Davis   
sees nothing wrong with a suggestion attributed to Thornton, namely,   
that "the Bank might amass a hoard [of gold] sufficient to fund an   
external drain for up to two years" (p. 212), as a viable, let alone   
sensible, monetary policy. From where does the Bank, a private   
corporation, find the means to engage in such a loss making   
proposition? It would, it seems to me, also be unwise even for a   
state corporation to do the same. But Davis holds the suggestion to   
be "vastly superior" to Ricardo's position.  
  
Davis attempts to play up his perceived analytical superiority of   
Ricardo's over Smith's in the book, which I think leads to some   
incorrect claims. One is that Smith assumed that "profits are   
exogenously fixed" (p. 25), only to be contradicted with a quote from   
Smith (p. 26n) as well as Smith's argument that profit rates are   
reduced by the competition of capitals (p. 35). He also quotes Smith   
as arguing that "The increase of stock, which raises wages, tends to   
lower profit" (p. 170), the same inverse wage-profit relation   
famously attributed to Ricardo. Ricardo indeed took a great deal of   
his macro-monetary analysis from Smith, besides David Hume. J.-B. Say   
also drew on Smith's _Wealth of Nations_ in formulating the law of   
markets. Yet Davis accuses Smith of having failed to understand that   
increases in investment would lead to increased incomes and the   
demand for goods and services over time (pp. 35, 183), whereas   
Ricardo understood that process as part of Say's Law. Ricardo did   
criticize Smith's views on bounties, but conceded Smith's main point   
that bounties misallocate capitals and raise the price level   
(Ricardo, 1: 316); see also Davis's quotations of Ricardo, pp.   
128-30. Ricardo employed a slightly different process to arrive at   
that conclusion, particularly that the importation of money in return   
for the exported corn raises the price level. But in Davis's account,   
Smith was simply prone to committing the "fallacy of composition,"   
and thus was wrong in his conclusion (p. 35; see also pp. 171, 183).   
In the process of denigrating Smith's analysis, Davis misses a good   
chance to draw a useful lesson for modern policy analysis from the   
corn bounties debate, namely, that subsidizing exports in order to   
encourage their domestic production does not promote overall   
efficient economic growth and well-being. Davis's apparently low   
regard for Smith's macroeconomic analysis also shows in his   
questioning whether Smith accepted Hume's price-specie flow mechanism   
(p. 8). But a careful or perhaps a sympathetic reading of Smith,   
which Davis quotes (p. 8n), and the rest of Smith's chapter on money,   
would indicate that he did follow Hume's monetary analysis.  
  
Some other minor points: (1) By not keeping clearly in mind the   
classical distinction between "capital" as funds from capital goods,   
Davis (p. 128) gives a distorted interpretation of Ricardo's (1: 395)   
explanation that "every rise of wages will have a tendency to   
determine the saved capital [funds] in a greater proportion than   
before to the employment of machinery. Machinery and labour are in   
constant competition, and the former can frequently not be employed   
until labour rises." This was not a question of Ricardo having   
"recognized the theoretical possibility that _capital_ might displace   
labor; but as a practical matter he associated a high stock of   
physical capital with a high demand for labor" (p. 128; italics   
added). Ricardo (1: 388, 395) also appears to be more illustrative of   
Ricardo's view on machinery and unemployment than 1: 390, which Davis   
quotes (p. 21) to make the point. (2) Davis does not explicitly   
recognize that Ricardo employed the forced-saving mechanism -- the   
lagged adjustment of wage rates behind changes in the price level,   
which leads to increased employment when prices are rising and   
increased unemployment when prices are falling -- as in Ricardo   
(9:20), "We know from experience that the money price of labour never   
falls till many workmen have been for some time out of work" (cited   
on p. 140n). But by asserting that Ricardo recognized that wages and   
prices are flexible (pp. 40, 127), Davis appears to land Ricardo in   
the midst of Keynes's mythical group of classical economists who did   
not recognize that wages typically are rigid in the short run. (3)   
Since Keynes's time, modern macroeconomists have tended to associate   
investment with only the purchase of capital or producers' goods.   
Thus, by characterizing Malthus's concerns with "oversaving" as his   
having been concerned over "excessive investment" or "the production   
of capital goods" (pp. 176-81), Davis likely gives the wrong   
impression of Malthus's argument. Increased saving in the quotations   
cited refers to the diversion of funds from the employment of   
"unproductive" laborers, such as service workers, to more employment   
of "productive" laborers, including those in manufacturing or   
agriculture.  
  
I think it would help to encourage modern economists to appreciate   
the value of reading the classics if historians of economic thought   
drew useful lessons in terms of theoretical analysis and appropriate   
policy formulation from the classical literature. Otherwise, dwelling   
upon their disagreements may rather give the impression that the   
history of economic thought is mostly about "the wrong ideas of dead   
men," and the time spent reading that literature is little more than   
a "depraved form of entertainment." Much, indeed, still can be   
learned from the work of David Ricardo by macroeconomists and   
monetary analysts. Davis's book shows, for example, the importance to   
Ricardo of employing relevant data to evaluate economic arguments. In   
the absence of national income accounts data, Ricardo relied upon tax   
revenues as well as Bank of England financial records to gauge the   
economy's performance in the early nineteenth century. That lesson   
alone perhaps makes the book worth reading. My criticisms mostly have   
been occasioned by Davis's failure to make much more of the material   
at hand to inform modern macro-monetary analysis and his failure to   
have utilized more recent materials relevant to his study. Perhaps I   
might have been less disappointed with the book, had it been titled,   
"The Historical Foundations of Ricardo's Macroeconomics."  
  
  
James C. W. Ahiakpor is Professor of Economics, California State   
University, East Bay, Hayward, CA. He is the author of "Ricardo on   
Money: The Operational Significance of the Non-Neutrality of Money in   
the Short Run," _History of Political Economy_ 17 (Spring), 1985:   
17-30; "Say's Law: Keynes's Success with its Misrepresentation," in   
Steven Kates, editor, _Two Hundred Years of Say's Law_, Cheltenham,   
UK: Edward Elgar, 2003:107-32; _Classical Macroeconomics: Some Modern   
Variations and Distortions_, London and New York: Routledge, 2003;   
and editor of _Keynes and the Classics Reconsidered_, Boston: Kluwer   
Academic Publishers, 1998.  
  
Copyright (c) 2005 by EH.Net. All rights reserved. This work may be   
copied for non-profit educational uses if proper credit is given to   
the author and the list. For other permission, please contact the   
EH.Net Administrator ([log in to unmask]; Telephone: 513-529-2229).   
Published by EH.Net (September 2005). All EH.Net reviews are archived   
at http://www.eh.net/BookReview.  
  
-------------- FOOTER TO EH.NET BOOK REVIEW  --------------  
EH.Net-Review mailing list  
[log in to unmask]  
http://eh.net/mailman/listinfo/eh.net-review  
  
 

ATOM RSS1 RSS2