The
theory of value is currently a contested subject. One issue is whether classical economics is a forerunner of
neoclassical economics or a school of thought that had a distinct theory of value, distribution, and growth. The period 1830–1875 is a timeframe of significant debate.
Karl Marx originally coined the term "classical economics" to refer to
Ricardian economics – the economics of David Ricardo and
James Mill and their
predecessors – but usage was subsequently extended to include the
followers of Ricardo.
Sraffians, who emphasize the
discontinuity thesis, see classical economics as extending from Petty's work in the 17th century to the break-up of the Ricardian system around 1830. The period between 1830 and the 1870s would then be dominated by "vulgar political economy", as Karl Marx characterized it. Sraffians argue that: the wages fund theory; Senior's
abstinence theory of interest, which puts the return to capital on the same level as returns to land and labour; the explanation of equilibrium prices by well-behaved supply and demand functions; and
Say's law, are not necessary or essential elements of the classical theory of value and distribution. Perhaps
Schumpeter's view that John Stuart Mill put forth a half-way house between classical and neoclassical economics is consistent with this view.
Georgists and other modern classical economists and historians such as
Michael Hudson argue that a major division between classical and neo-classical economics is the treatment or recognition of
economic rent. Most modern economists no longer recognize land/location as a factor of production, often claiming that rent is non-existent. Georgists and others argue that economic rent remains roughly a third of economic output. Sraffians generally see Marx as having rediscovered and restated the logic of classical economics, albeit for his own purposes. Others, such as Schumpeter, think of Marx as a follower of Ricardo. Even
Samuel Hollander has recently explained that there is a textual basis in the classical economists for Marx's reading, although he does argue that it is an extremely narrow set of texts. Another position is that neoclassical economics is essentially continuous with classical economics. To scholars promoting this view, there is no hard and fast line between classical and neoclassical economics. There may be shifts of emphasis, such as between the long run and the short run and between
supply and demand, but the neoclassical concepts are to be found confused or in embryo in classical economics. To these economists, there is only one theory of value and distribution.
Alfred Marshall is a well-known promoter of this view.
Samuel Hollander is probably its best current proponent. Still another position sees two threads simultaneously being developed in classical economics. In this view, neoclassical economics is a development of certain exoteric (popular) views in Adam Smith. Ricardo was a sport, developing certain esoteric (known by only the select) views in Adam Smith. This view can be found in W. Stanley Jevons, who referred to Ricardo as something like "that able, but wrong-headed man" who put economics on the "wrong track". One can also find this view in Maurice Dobb's
Theories of Value and Distribution Since Adam Smith: Ideology and Economic Theory (1973), as well as in Karl Marx's
Theories of Surplus Value. The above does not exhaust the possibilities. John Maynard Keynes thought of classical economics as starting with Ricardo and being ended by the publication of his own
General Theory of Employment Interest and Money. The defining criterion of classical economics, on this view, is
Say's law which is disputed by
Keynesian economics. Keynes was aware, though, that his usage of the term 'classical' was non-standard. see classical economics as of antiquarian interest. ==See also==