Contributions to Political Economy Advance Access originally published online on July 25, 2006
Contributions to Political Economy 2006 25(1):35-48; doi:10.1093/cpe/bzl004
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THE MAN FROM THE MOON: SRAFFA'S UPSIDE-DOWN APPROACH TO THE THEORY OF VALUE
Università di Trieste
By the end of 1927, Sraffa, not yet in his thirties, showed Keynes a system of three linear and homogeneous equations to determine prices in an economy without surplus. We now know that these "first equations" were to be the starting point for his future (1960) book. Considered as such, this elementary system can hardly be considered as particularly impressive. Indeed, it could be viewed as a rather trivial set of accounting identities. Keynes's reaction is therefore surprising: "It is very interesting and originalhe wrote to his wife Lydiabut I wonder if his class will understand it when he lectures". In the present paper, it is suggested that Keynes's enthusiastic approval of the equations relied on their being the outcome of a totally new theoretical approach to the problem of value. With the aid of the Sraffa Papers, preserved in the Wren Library, this approach is shown to be a most unusual one, so unusual as to be hardly intelligible and acceptable even for the "advanced" students for which Sraffa's lectures were intended. Moreover, if we adopt this new approach, a remarkable consequence becomes evident. This is that the vexed question of variable or constant returns becomes irrelevantas Sraffa always maintained.
The St[andard] Syst[em] provides tangible evidence of the rate of profits as a non-price phenomenon.
A Dividend could be declared before knowing what is the price of the company's product.