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"James C.W. Ahiakpor" <[log in to unmask]>
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Date:
Sun, 23 Feb 2014 22:18:35 -0800
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I'm not exactly sure what Tom wants to achieve with his latest on 
Wicksell.  He would be incorrect with the impression that it was 
Wicksell who put the cumulative process argument "on the map," hence 
deserving recognition for it.  I think a more plausible explanation for 
the incorrect attribution to Wicksell as the originator of the principle 
is the poor light into which classical economics was cast following the 
ascendancy of Keynesian economics.  Keynes made the classics look like 
those who never knew economic reality, and Keynes had a high regard for 
Wicksell.  So, people like Axel Leijonhufvud (1981) could wax on about 
the Wicksell connection regarding the (credit) theory of interest as if 
the classical theory had nothing valid about it. However, anyone who 
read the classics carefully, and in particular understood what they 
meant by "capital" in their theory of interest, could understand the 
liquidity effect, price-level effect, and expectations effect from from 
variations in the quantity of money from what they wrote.  Besides, 
Marshall even used the word "cumulative" in his explanation of the 
phenomenon. But who would pay much attention to Marshall if they 
believed Keynes's characterization of Marshall's exposition of the 
theory of interest to be "nonsensical" and "absurd"?   Here's Marshall's 
restatement from his 1887 version of the cumulative process at the Gold 
and Silver Commission:

"Looking at the special case of the effect of an increase in currency on 
the rate of discount in the western world, the cycle seems to be this. 
The new currency, or the increase of currency, goes, not to private 
persons, but to the banking centres; and, therefore, it increases the 
willingness of lenders to lend in the first instance, and lowers the 
rate of discount. But it afterwards raises prices. This latter movement 
is /cumulative/. ... Thus, a fall in the purchasing power of money 
tends, after a while, to raise the rate of discount and the rate of 
interest on long investments.  (Marshall 1923: 257; emphasis added.)

Another reason may be the view that central banks should be in charge of 
manipulating interest rates (even if as a means of regulation the price 
level), whereas the classical explanation of the cumulative process 
shows what naturally would happen overtime.  The natural rate is "some 
rate about which the market rate oscillates, and to which it always 
tends to return" (Mill /Works/, 3: 648).  In the age of Keynes, policy 
makers should take charge; the free market forces can't be relied upon 
to do any good for the economy.  After all, we've been through the Great 
Depression, haven't we?

However, historians serve the course of knowledge better when they can 
uncover misattributions and make the appropriate corrections rather than 
to chalk them up to Stigler's Law.  And when they encounter an incorrect 
attribution under the guise of Stigler's Law, historians should also 
speak up.  And example is Robert Barro's (1989) reference to Stigler's 
Law in his claim that David Ricardo had argued the public's 
capitalization of future tax liabilities owing to budget deficits, and 
which would nullify the Keynesian expected expansionary effect of budget 
deficits.  But Ricardo explicitly argued that people don't behave that 
way, and gave reasons why they won't.  James Buchanan's (1976) 
attribution of that (Barro's) view to Ricardo, subsequently endorsed by 
Gerald O'Driscoll (1977), should quickly and long have been shown to be 
in error.

As for Marshall's supply and demand diagram, it follows closely after 
J.S. Mill's restatement of the classical theory of value -- explanation 
of market prices.  And Mill was reformulating the theory of value from 
Smith, Malthus, and partly Ricardo.  I wouldn't want to follow Tom's 
treatment of Marshall's recognition for that diagram under Stigler's Law.

James Ahiakpor

Thomas Humphrey wrote:
> Re: Knut Wicksell and his cumulative process analysis. It occurs to me 
> that what economists call the "Wicksellian cumulative process" is a 
> perfect example of the operation of Stigler's Law of Eponymy according 
> to which "No scientific discovery is named for its original discoverer."
>
> For as James Ahiakpor and others have shown in these posts, 18th and 
> 19th century classical economists including Hume, Smith, Thornton, 
> Ricardo, Joplin, and others had assembled and put together elements of 
> the cumulative process model long before Wicksell did so in his 1898 
> Interest and Prices. Those classicals were the original discoverers of 
> the cumulative process analysis. Yet today we refer to the model as 
> the Wicksellian cumulative process rather than as the 
> Hume-Thornton-Ricardo-Joplin cumulative process.
>
> Why? Because it was Wicksell more than his classical predecessors who 
> made the model sing and who put it on the map. It was Wicksell's 
> formulation that was most instrumental in influencing economists to 
> accept the model as a valid depiction of the process of price-level 
> change. For that reason, Wicksell gets the honor of having the model 
> bear his name. Stigler's Law.
>
> The same thing happened with the ordinary microeconomic 
> demand-and-supply curve diagram, which today bears the label "the 
> Marshallian Cross" after Alfred Marshall. But it wasn't Marshall who 
> discovered the diagram. Rather A. A. Cournot was its original 
> discoverer in his 1838 Researches into the Mathematical Principles of 
> the Theory of Wealth. And after Cournot but before Marshall, at least 
> four economists including Karl Rau, Jules Dupuit, Hans von Mangoldt, 
> and Fleeming Jenkin presented the diagram, often in quite elaborate 
> and sophisticated forms. Yet today we honor Marshall, not his 
> forerunners, by naming the diagram after him.
>
> Why? Because it was Marshall who in his 1890 Principles of Economics 
> made the diagram sing and who put it on the map. It was his version 
> that caught the attention of the entire economics profession. 
> Stigler's Law again.


-- 
James C.W. Ahiakpor, Ph.D.
Professor
Department of Economics
California State University, East Bay
Hayward, CA 94542

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