http://econospeak.blogspot.com/2014/06/you-dont-say.html


Karl Marx could hardly bring himself to utter the name of J. B. Say without
affixing to it some contemptuous description or sarcastic remark:

"Say’s earth-shaking discovery…"

"…adopted by Ricardo from the tedious Say (and to which we shall return
when we discuss that miserable individual)…"

"…his authority, Say, is playing a trick on him here... "

"…we shall criticise Say’s theories later, when we deal with this humbug
 himself."

"The constant recurrence of crises has in fact reduced the rigmarole of Say and
others to a phraseology which is now only used in times of prosperity but
is cast aside in times of crises."

"This is the childish babble of a Say…"

"Say, who tries to hide his dull superficiality by repeating in absolute
general phrases Smith’s inconsistencies and blunders…"

"Storch says of this trash of Say’s…

"After Garnier appeared the inane Jean-Baptiste Say’s *Traité d’économie
politique*."

"This is his kind of originality, his kind of productivity and way of
making discoveries, And with his customary logic, he refutes himself again
…"

"Say replies with his characteristic profundity…"

"…the absurdity of J. B. Say, who pretends to account…"

"…as it does to J. B. Say in the vulgarisation of Adam Smith."

"The result he arrives at, is precisely that proposition of Ricardo that he
aimed at disproving. After this mighty effort of thought, he triumphantly
apostrophises Malthus…"

"A disciple of Ricardo, in reply to the insipid nonsense uttered by J. B.
Say…"

Curiously, in "The compensation theory, with regard to the workers
displaced by machinery," Section 6, Chapter 15, Volume 1 of *Capital*, Marx
performed the ultimate insult by snubbing Say, *almost* entirely. The first
sentence includes "James Mill, MacCulloch, Torrens, Senior and John Stuart
Mill" among those bourgeois political economists claiming that machinery
sets free enough capital to reabsorb the workers displaced by it. Say is
relegated to a footnote citing the anonymous pamphlet in which the author
refutes "the insipid nonsense uttered by J. B. Say" by pointing out:

Where division of labour is well developed, the skill of the labourer is
available only in that particular branch in which it has been acquired; he
himself is a sort of machine. It does not therefore help matters one jot,
to repeat in parrot fashion, that things have a tendency to find their
level. On looking around us we cannot but see, that they are unable to find
their level for a long time; and that when they do find it, the level is
always lower than at the commencement of the process.

Thus, the anonymous author of *An Inquiry into Those Principles Respecting
the Nature of Demand, and the Necessity of Consumption, Lately Advocated by
Mr. Malthus
<http://ecologicalheadstand.blogspot.com/2014/06/an-inquiry-into-those-principles.html>,*
neatly
summed up in a paragraph the rebuttal to the so-called compensation theory.
This succinct reply makes a mystery of Marx's exclusion of Say from his
listing, at the start of the section, of bourgeois political economists.


The mystery is solved in Chapter 20 of *Theories of Surplus Value*,
"Disintegration
of the Ricardian School
<https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1863/theories-surplus-value/ch20.htm>,"
where Marx discussed the pamphlet he described as "one of the best of the
polemical works of the decade." "What the author writes about Say is very
true," Marx observed. Following a quotation from the pamphlet about the
hazard arising from the difference in timing between consumption by workers
and their production, Marx exclaimed that this was, "indeed the secret
basis of glut." Several paragraphs later, Marx concluded:

Over-production, the credit system, etc., are means by which capitalist
production seeks to break through its own barriers and to produce over and
above its own limits. Capitalist production, on the one hand, has this
driving force; on the other hand, it only tolerates production commensurate
with the profitable employment of existing capital.


-- 
Cheers,

Tom Walker (Sandwichman)
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