Income = Expenditures "Every dollar spent is income to somebody else"
= (C - T) + I + G + NX
C=consume consumer goods
I= invest; financial assets
T= taxes
G= gov't purchases (ex, pay teachers, build bridges)
N= french wine? (trade)
*macro-multiplier story*: pay more at grocery store, all richer, right?
well, is someone going to pay Rizzo more when he buys more macaroni? No? Bummer.
French Physiocrats: How did we get this process?
- Source of wealth = agriculture
- Simply, without food we would die
- Farmers feed family, produce surplus they can sell and rest of family can work!
- new horse? machine? son sent to workshop to "tinker"
- farmer becomes even MORE productive
- unjust to not allow farmer to keep food
- Source of wealth linked to production
Mercantilists did not agree. Real source of wealth was:
1)Amnt of gold in teasury
2)Wealth / finances of the king
3)Positive balance of trade
-Trade is zero-sum, wealth was fixed; money is wealth
--> one nation rich by trading with another, which makes that other country poorer
--> more gold = able to execute war; everyone recognizes gold as worth something
-King should control trade; supposed to push positive balance
(2 policy implications)
Restrict Imports <---- ----> Promote exports
ex. you want French wine; you give away $ & the king does not benefit, France gets the moolah.
(not a problem if $ stays in the country)
-Trade can't be free; individ. would seek private interest that is not in harmony with social interest (social interest is to have gold)
Scottish Moral Philosohers
-People are compassionate, generous
-Good economics about more than prudence
-->private choice & social virtue not mutually exclusive
Hume = smarty pants VS. Hutchinson = moral absolutest
1)Moral values themselves are social constructions 2) virtuous activity yields pleasure
Hume : businessman; 1752 read = modern approach to econ.
Hume wrote about jealousy of trade:
1) Competition (merc. thought compet. = destroy)
Amer. work force learned from Japanese production; changed entire process
3) Division of Labor
-everything worth..the same?
-$ is neutral, we can about goods & services
- mo' money, --> higher prices
no money --> lower prices => mercantilists only looks at 1/2 of equations
--> prices across borders will naturally adjust
Last thought: what if every country tried same policy? Who has authority to intervene in trade?
-People are compassionate, generous
-Good economics about more than prudence
-->private choice & social virtue not mutually exclusive
Hume = smarty pants VS. Hutchinson = moral absolutest
1)Moral values themselves are social constructions 2) virtuous activity yields pleasure
Hume : businessman; 1752 read = modern approach to econ.
- Unlike physiocrats, econ. not a social concept (wait.._
- --->rejected mercantile doctrine, rej. source of wealth was agriculture
- ==> Commerce = source of economic growth
- specie flow mechanism; we can't eat coins, can't wear them, can't live in
- ex: before king wanted a loan, spends his $, goes into circulation, prices of goods go up
- -> let's say prices are cheaper in France, as ppl start recognizing the price change, prices in Fra.increase and prices in Eng decr.
- workings of prices is fine
- mercan. wrong about dynamics
Hume wrote about jealousy of trade:
1) Competition (merc. thought compet. = destroy)
- Actually --> innovation, efficiency, improvement
- Ex: Kodak didn't switch to digital, Amer. cars vs. Japanese enviro friendly models, east/west German cars
Amer. work force learned from Japanese production; changed entire process
3) Division of Labor
- Imagine producing only for your small town vs. producing for the world
- ex: Kodak employed over 60,000, sold to mass market. Dumb to buy big machinery if only sell a little
- machines for lots; Dumb to buy big machinery if only sell a little
- Large amnt of goods, ppl divide up labor --. ppl richer, we have more
-everything worth..the same?
-$ is neutral, we can about goods & services
- mo' money, --> higher prices
no money --> lower prices => mercantilists only looks at 1/2 of equations
--> prices across borders will naturally adjust
Last thought: what if every country tried same policy? Who has authority to intervene in trade?
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