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:
Daniele Besomi <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Societies for the History of Economics <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 9 Dec 2009 15:43:38 -0500
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (92 lines)
The discussion now starts to become tricky. As 
new names are added, the problem of understanding 
what exactly these people were saying, and what 
therefore was their role in the formulation of 
the principle, becomes more and more difficult.

Tentatively I would say that they were all trying 
to explain the same observed fact, that is, that 
the fluctuations of investment are far larger 
than fluctuations of consumption. But premises, 
approaches and solutions were not exactly the 
same. One nowadays, with the benefit of 
historical hindsight,  thinks of the acceleration 
principle roughly as follows: starting from the 
premise that, given the technique and the degree 
of utilization of capital, the ratio of capital 
to consumption is constant, net investment is 
undertaken only to face an increased demand for 
consumption goods. (I hope this answers Pat's request).

But if we look at what these people wrote, we 
note that: Bickerdike was focusing not on capital 
but on durable goods —two overlapping but not 
identical categories. Bouniatian clearly laid out 
the premise, but stopped short of concluding that 
investment depends on the rate of change of 
demand: like Hobson & Mummery, he was content 
with claiming that net investment stops when 
consumption stops increasing. Clark was instead 
adamant on this, and indeed suggested the word 
'acceleration' for the 'derived demand' having in 
mind the mechanical analogy. Carver reasoned in 
terms of values rather than quantity, which Clark 
assumed out at the outset. Harrod changed his 
mind on the meaning of the whole thing (but 
claiming continuity) between 1936 and 1939, so 
that we have two different versions in his book 
and in his article. Mummery and Hobson reach the 
conclusion that the increase of consumption 
involves a far larger investment, but do not lay 
out the premise in terms of capital/consumption 
ratio, and do not express it in terms of rate of 
change.  As well as Carver and Bouniatian, but 
not as clearly, they explained that the further 
back one climbs in the ladder of  more 
'roundabout' production (Bouniatian explicitly 
referred to the austrian tradition), the more the 
problem is amplified, while Clark assumed that 
away by imagining a one-good economy. The 
conditions (at the very minimum, a constant 
technique and degree of utilization of capital: 
see Manne RES 1945 for more) were not always 
expounded, and some of our writers were 
criticised for that (Harrod by Keynes and 
Bouniatian by Hawtrey, for instance). The nature 
of the relation was also conceived differently. 
Clark and Harrod treated it as a simple piece of 
arithmetics (Harrod called it "the Relation"), 
while other writers did not think of it in 
arithmetical terms at all (Hobson's figures are 
purely illustrative). The implication also are 
very different: Aftalion and (less clearly) 
Bouniatian relied on the lag of response of 
investment with respect to consumption to explain 
the cycle, while Harrod vehemently denied that 
the lag has anything to do with it; and whether 
and how the acceleration principle supplies an 
investment function is another debatable point. 
And, of course, the critics had a number of 
points, in particular Frisch (see the debate with 
Clark in 1931) and Tinbergen (Economics 1938), 
which apply to some but no to all the writers mentioned here.

The list, of course, is far from complete. A 
history of the acceleration principle, then, is 
still to be written. Accordingly, also an agreed 
definition is still wanting. Perhaps one would 
need to inquire beginning from the history of the 
premise, as the suggestion that the ratio of 
capital to consumption has something to do with 
panics was around before Hobson (for instance 
Hayley 1879, although he sometimes writes 
'capital' and other times 'investment': his 
writings are interesting in this connection 
whatever the case, because either he anticipates 
the accelerator or denies it ante litteram).

I hope someone will inquire the matter in depth. 
Also because other names would deserve a mention --Pigou's, for example.

Daniele Besomi

ATOM RSS1 RSS2