Price
:For people whose family name is Price see Price (disambiguation).
Austrian theory
The last objection is also sometimes interpreted as the Paradox of Value, which was observed by classical economists. Adam Smith described what is now called the *Diamond-Water Paradox*. Namely, diamonds command a higher price than water, yet water is essential for life, while diamonds are merely ornamentation. One solution offered to this paradox is through the theory of marginal utility proposed by Carl Menger, the father of the Austrian school of economics.
Related Topics:
Paradox of Value - Classical economists - Adam Smith - Marginal utility - Carl Menger - Austrian school
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As William Barber put it, human volition, the human subject, was "brought to the centre of the stage" by marginalist economics, as a bargaining tool. Neoclassical economists sought to clarify choices open to producers and consumers in market situations, and thus "fears that cleavages in the economic structure might be unbridgeable could be
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suppressed".
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Without denying the applicability of the Austrian theory of value as subjective only, within certain contexts of price behaviour, the Polish economist Oskar Lange felt it was necessary to attempt a serious integration of the insights of classical political economy with neo-classical economics. This would then result in a much more realistic theory of price and of real behaviour in response to prices. Marginalist theory lacked anything like a theory of the social framework of real market functioning, and criticism sparked off by the capital controversy initiated by Piero Sraffa revealed that most of the foundational tenets of the marginalist theory of value either reduced to tautologies, or that the theory was true only if counterfactual conditions applied.
Related Topics:
Oskar Lange - Capital controversy - Piero Sraffa
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One insight often ignored in the debates about price theory is something that businessmen are keenly aware of: in different markets, prices may not function according to the same principles except in some very abstract (and therefore not very useful) sense. From the classical political economists to Michal Kalecki it was known that prices for industrial goods behaved differently from prices for agricultural goods, but this idea could be extended further to other broad classes of goods and services.
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~ Table of Content ~
| ► | Introduction |
| ► | Conventional definition |
| ► | Marxian price theory |
| ► | Austrian theory |
| ► | References |
| ► | See also |
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