Just as an aside, can anybody answer a question for me:

Why are so many Marxist economists named Michael?  Michael Perelman, Michael 
Yates, Michael Heinrich, Michael Krätke, Michael Lebowitz, Mike Beggs.

Is it a first name that predestines a child towards pursuing a career in 
heterodox economics?

But in all seriousness, I want to address a point made by Mike Ballard (yet 
another Michael!):

Quote:
"That Marx was able to develop his critique of political-economy as he learned 
more about how the complexities of the system operated historically and were 
developing as he was alive. 
Obviously, Marx didn't repudiate the labour theory of value."

It should be noted that Marx's "labour theory of value" is **not** the "labour 
theory of value" of the classical economists.

What is key is Marx's historically situating the commodity form of human labor 
as specific to the capitalist mode of production.

The generalization of the commodity form necessitates the universal equivalent, 
money, in order to make concrete acts of labor
commensurable with one another.  This is the key to Marx's category of 
"abstract labor".

Michael Heinrich, borrowing a term from Hans-Georg Backhaus, uses the term 
"monetary theory of value" to distinguish between Marx's
value theory and that of Smith and Ricardo. 

This was also key to Marx's polemic with Proudhon: Proudhon wanted to abolish 
money while retaining commodities.  Marx pointed out that
commodities require money in order to be exchanged.  Socially necessary labor 
time cannot be measured with a stop watch; it has to be 
measured ex post facto in exchange by the amount of money it brings in.
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