Thursday, February 26, 2026

Balderdash In Teaching Of Labor Economics

Borjas (2016) seems to be a standard textbook in labor economics. It has the usual obsolete idea that labor markets would clear, as shown by supply and demand, under ideal conditions. Unemployment is to be explained by deviations from these ideal conditions. Why would a professor in such a backwoods place like Harvard be expected to know about results in capital theory from two-thirds of a century ago?

The last chapter, chapter 12, is on unemployment. It concludes with this summary:

  • Although the unemployment rate in the United States drifted upward between 1960 and 1990, the economic expansion of the 1990s reduced the unemployment rates substantially.
  • Even a well-functioning competitive economy experiences frictional unemployment because some workers will unavoidably be 'in between' jobs. Structural unemployment arises when there is an imbalance between the supply of workers and the demand for workers.
  • The steady-state rate of unemployment depends on the transition probabilities among employment, unemployment, and the nonmarket sector.
  • Although most spells of unemployment do not last very long, most weeks of unemployment can be attributed to workers who are in very long spells.
  • The asking wage makes the worker indifferent between continuing his search activities and accepting the job offer at hand. An increase in the benefits from search raises the asking wage and lengthens the duration of the unemployment spell; an increase in search costs reduces the asking wage and shortens the duration of the unemployment spell.
  • Unemployment insurance lengthens the duration of unemployment spells and increases the probability that workers are laid off temporarily.
  • The intertemporal substitution hypothesis argues that the huge shifts in labor supply observed over the business cycle may be the result of workers reallocating their time so as to purchase leisure when it is cheap (that is, during recessions).
  • The sectoral shifts hypothesis argues that structural unemployment arises because the skills of workers cannot be easily transferred across sectors. The skills of workers laid off from declining industries have to be retooled before they can find jobs in growing industries.
  • Efficiency wages arise when it is difficult to monitor workers' output. The above-market efficiency wage generates involuntary unemployment.
  • Implicit contract theory argues that workers prefer employment contracts under which incomes are relatively stable over the business cycle, even if such contracts imply reductions in hours of work during recessions.
  • A downward-sloping Phillips curve can exist only in the short run. In the long run, there is no trade-off between inflation and unemployment.
  • The combination of high unemployment insurance benefits, employment protection restrictions, and wage rigidity probably accounts for the high levels of unemployment observed in Europe in the 1980s and 1990s.

Borjas does note that the claim about European unemployment seems to be empirically untrue in that European institutions did not change much, and yet unemployment became lower. I suppose Borjas feels obligated to present theories of imperfections and rigidities that keep wages above the supposed market-clearing wage. Note some of these blame workers, who prefer leisure, would otherwise take advantage of information asymmetries by shirking, or obtain unemployment benefits. The science regerettably shows why we need to beat up on workers.

But, of course, this is pure ideology. Borjas teaches the obsolete theory that wages and employment would be successfully modeled in the long run by the intersection of well-behaved supply and demand curves. He probably does not know better.

Reference

George J. Borjas. 2016. Labor Economics. Seventh edition. McGraw Hill.

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Innovation Hurting Workers Or Capitalists

Figure 1: The Wage Frontier Is The Inner Envelope Of The Wage Curves For Feasible Techniques
1.0 Introduction

This post presents a solution to the homework problem 7.13 in Kurz & Salvadori (1995), Chapter 10. They assign credit for this problem to Antonio D'Agata. I extend it to include a negligible industrial commodity, as in my outline of a model with rent, multiple lands, and multiple agricultural commodities.

Two agricultural commodities, wheat and rye, are produced by the example economy. If only processes II and V existed, each commodity could only be produced on one type of land. With the given final demand and the given endowments of land, no land would be scarce and no landlords could obtain rent. Suppose innovations introduce new processes, III and IV, so that each commodity could be produced on each type of land. As a result, no long period exists in a range of the rate of profits towards its maximum, and landlords obtain rent at a lower rate of profits.

Nobody else, as far as I know, has considered the orders of efficiency and of rentability in a model with multiple agricultural commodities. Maybe I need to read further in Quadrio Curzio & Pellizzari's book.

2.0 Technology, Endowments, Final Demands, and Techniques

Table 1 shows the inputs and outputs for each process known to the managers of firms. Two types of land are available for producing the agricultural commodities, wheat and rye. Wheat is produced by two processes, each operating on a different type of land. The same is true for rye. Inputs and outputs are specified in physical terms. For example, the inputs for process II, per bushel wheat produced, are one person-year, the services of one acre of type 1 land, a tiny fraction of a ton iron, 3/10 bushels wheat, and 1/10 bushels rye. Each process exhibits constant returns to scale (CRS), up to the limits imposed by the endowments of the lands.

Table 1: Processes Comprising the Technology
InputsIndustries
IronWheatRye
IIIIIIIVV
Labora0,1 = 0.0001a0,2 = 1a0,3 = 3/2a0,4 = 1/10a0,5 = 1/2
Type 1 Land0c1,2 = 10c1,4 = 10
Type 2 Land00c2,3 = 50c2,5 = 2
Irona1,1 = 0.00001a1,2 = 0.00001a1,3 = 0.00001a1,4 = 0.00001a1,5 = 0.00001
Wheata2,1 = 0.00001a2,2 = 3/10a2,3 = 1/10a2,4 = 1/10a2,5 = 1/5
Ryea3,1 = 0.00001a3,2 = 1/10a3,3 = 3/10a3,4 = 1/5a3,5 = 1/10
OUPUTS1 ton iron1 bushel wheat1 bushel wheat1 bushel rye1 bushel rye

The specification of the problem is completed by defining the available endowments of land and the level and composition of final demand. Accordingly, assume 100 acres of each type of land are available. Suppose the required net output, also known as final demand, consists of 15 bushels wheat and 35 bushels rye.

Table 2 shows the available techniques for these parameters. Land is free for techniques Alpha, Beta, Gamma, and Delta. Techniques Epsilon, Zeta, Eta, and Theta pay extensive rent. Intensive rent is obtained by landlords for for Iota, Kappa, Lambda, Mu, and Nu. Under Nu, intensive rent is obtained on both types of land.

Table 2: Technique
NameProcessesType 1 LandType 2 Land
AlphaI, II, IVPartially FarmedFallow
BetaI, II, VPartially FarmedPartially Farmed
GammaI, III, IVPartially FarmedPartially Farmed
DeltaI, III, VFallowPartially Farmed
EpsilonI, II, III, IVPartially FarmedFully Farmed
ZetaI, II, IV, VPartially FarmedFully Farmed
EtaI, II, III, VFully FarmedPartially Farmed
ThetaI, III, IV, VFully FarmedPartially Farmed
IotaI, II, III, IVFully FarmedPartially Farmed
KappaI, II, IV, VFully FarmedPartially Farmed
LambdaI, II, III, VPartially FarmedFully Farmed
MuI, III, IV, VPartially FarmedFully Farmed
NuI, II, III, IV, VFully FarmedFully Farmed

Suppose only processes I, II, and V are known by managers of firms. Then only the Beta technique is available. Wheat is grown on type 1 land, and rye on type 2 land. The endowments of land provide an upper limit on the level of final demand that can be feasibly satisfied. The innovations that make processes III and IV available provide a choice of technique, including which grains should be grown on which lands. The limits to feasible final demands are increased.

3.0 Quantity Flows

Beta, Kappa, Lambda, and Nu are feasible for the given final demand. Figure 2 shows which techniques are feasible for final demand consisting of any combination of specified quantities of wheat and rye. One type of land is farmed under both Alpha and Delta, with wheat and rye each produced on that type. The maximum final demand for each of these techniques is a downward-sloping straight line. The outer limits for Beta and Gamma have segments where constraints for each type of land kick in.

Figure 2: Feasible Final Demands

Techniques in which extensive rent is paid extend the two techniques with non-scarce land in which both lands are farmed. Epsilon and Theta become feasible when Gamma is no longer feasible. They differ in which type of land, still non-scarce, becomes used to grow both wheat and rye. The other type of land is cultivated to the extent of its endowment. Eventually the non-scarce land, on which both wheat and rye are produced, becomes scarce Zeta and Eta have the same relationship to Beta.

The limits of the final demand for techniques which pay intensive rent also relate to the boundaries on final demand for the other techniques. The maximum final demand for Alpha is the minimum for Iota and Kappa. Iota and Kappa both grow wheat and rye on type 1 land, as in Alpha, but to the full extent of its endowment. They vary with whether non-scarce type 2 land is used to produce wheat or rye. In the same way, the maximum final demand for Delta is the minimum for Lambda and Mu. When the maximum final demand for Iota is the maximum for Gamma (the minimum for Theta), type 2 land is not a constraint. When the maximum for Iota is the maximum for Epsilon (the minimum for Nu), both types of land are constraints. The maximum final demand for Kappa relates to the maximum for Beta and for Zeta in the same way. Likewise, the maximum for Lambda relates to the maximum for Beta and Eta. Finally, the maximum Mu is either the maximum for Gamma or Theta.

4.0 Price Systems

A system of equations for prices is associated with each technique. The going rate of profits is made in each process operated in the technique. I assume wages are paid out of the surplus product at the end of the period required to operate a technique. Rent is also paid on scarce land at the end of the period. A final equation sets the price of the numeraire to unity.

The variables defined by the price system consist of the rate of profits; the wage; the prices of iron, wheat, and rye; and the rents per acre of the two types of land. They are defined up to a degree of freedom. As usual, I take the dependence of the wage on the rate of profits as expressing that degree of freedom. Figure 1, at the top of this post, plots the wage curves for the four feasible technques. Figures 3 plots the rent curves.

Figure 3: Rent Curves

5.0 The Choice of Technique

For a technique to be cost-minimizing at a given rate of profits, the following must be true:

  • It must be feasible.
  • No price of a commodity, wage, or rent of a type of land can be negative.
  • Extra profits cannot be obtained, at the prices associated with the technique, by operating a process not in the technique.

Extra profits are obtained if the difference between revenues and costs for a process, with the going rate of profits charged on advances for capital goods, is positive. Accordingly, I check whether a technique is cost-minimizing by plotting the difference between revenues and costs, for each process, with the prices of that technique.

Process IV pays extra profits throughout the range of the rate of profits in which the price system for Beta has positive orices and a positive wage (Figure 4). Gamma results from replacing the rye-producing process in Beta with process IV. Zeta and Kappa result from producing rye of both types of land. Gamma would be cost-minimizing at a rate of profits greater than approximately 65 percent if it were feasible. But only Kappa, out of Gamma, Zeta, and Kappa, is feasible. Above a rate of profits of approximately 100 percents, processes III and IV both obtain extra profits under Beta. So Beta is not cost-minimizing at any rate of profits.

Figure 4: Extra Profits at Beta Prices

At Kappa prices, process III obtains extra profits at a rate of profits above approximately 18.17 percent. Kappa is cost-minimizing only for rates a profits below this switch point.

Process IV obtains extra profits at Lambda prices for the entire range at which the rent on type 2 land is non-negative for the Lambda price system. Lambda is never cost-minimizing.

All processes are operated under the Nu technique. So extra profits cannot be obtained. But the rent on type 2 land is positive under Nu only when the rate of profits is greater than 18.7 percent. Thus, Nu is not cost-minimizing for a low rate of profits.

The maximum rate of profits for Nu is approximately 153.8 percent. The maximum for Beta is approximately 167.9 percent. Between these limits, Beta is feasible. The wage and the prices of the three produced commodities are positive in the price system for Beta. Both lands are free. Nevertheless, Beta is not cost-minimizing, and a long period position does not exist.

6.0 The Orders of Efficiency and Rentability

The wage curve for the Alpha technique lies on the outer envelope curve, for small rates of profits. The second wage curve, up to a rate of profits of approximately 65 percent, is Gamma's. After that rate of profits, up to the maximum, the wage curve for Gamma is the outermost. These wage curves are not shown in Figure 1.

Only type 1 land is farmed under Alpha. Both types are farmed in Gamma. As final demand expands for a low rate of profits, first type 1 land is cultivated and then both types are farmed. For a larger rate of profits, both types are initially cultivated together. Thus, the order of efficiency varies from type 1, 2 lands to an order in which they are tied (Table 3).

The order from high rent to low rent lands is type 1, 2, whether Kappa or Nu is cost-minimizing. Under Kappa, type 2 land is not scarce and is free. The orders of efficiency and rentability match for low rates of profits, up to a rate of profits in the range in which Nu is cost-minimizing. They differ for higher rates of profits insofar as the order of rentability is not tied.

Table 3: The Choice of Technique
Rate of Profits (Percent)TechniqueOrder of EfficiencyOrder of Rentability
MinimumMaximum
018.2KappaType 1, 2Type 1, 2
18.265.1Nu
65.1153.8Type 1 and Type 2 tied

Suppose you take the order of efficiency as showing which lands, at a given rate of profits, contribute most to production. Since the order of rentability can differ from the order of efficiency, prices in competitive markets do not necessarily reward you for the contributions of the factors of production that you own. This conclusion is aside from the doctrine of Henry George.

This example is extremely restricted, when it comes to examining the orders of efficiency. The posibility of ties in the order of efficiency is a new possibility raised by the existence of multiple agricultural commodities. (I suppose you could look for different techniques having identical wage curves in a model of extensive rent and one agricultural comodity.)

7.0 Conclusion

The example shows how innovations create complications in the analysis of long run positions. In the example, innovations lead to the possibility of a class of landlords to come into existence. I doubt this happened like this anywhere. For a certain range of the rate of profits, a long period position no longer exists.

Kurz and Salvadori (1995) have additional numeric examples with multiple agricultural commodities. I should be able to create more. I am interested in examples with the reswitching of the order of fertility, as well as examples in which techniques with extensive and intensive rent are simultaneously feasible.

Monday, February 16, 2026

An Algorithm Trace For The Truncation Of Fixed Capital

1.0 Introduction

This post revisits my example of the recurrence of truncation without reswitching. In this example, the choice of technique consists of deciding on the economic life of a machine in each industry. I present an application of an algorithm to find the cost-minimizing technique, given the rate of profits. The algorithm needs more elaboration. A trace of the algorithm is a dynamic path through the space of techniques.

2.0 Technology and Techniques

I repeat the parameters that define the example in this section.

Tables 1 and 2 show the inputs and outputs for each process known to the managers of firms. For example, the inputs for the first process, at a unit level of operation, consist of 1/10 person-years, 1/16 bushels corn, and one new machine. The outputs, available after a year, are two new machines and one machine a year older.

Table 1: Inputs for The Technology
InputIndustry
MachineCorn
IIIIIIIV
Labor1/10843/401
Corn1/163/201/853/200
New Machines1010
One-Year Old Machines (1st type)0100
One-Year Old Machines (2nd type)0001

Table 2: Outputs for The Technology
OutputIndustry
MachineCorn
IIIIIIIV
Corn00114/25
New Machines25/200
One-Year Old Machines (1st type)1000
One-Year Old Machines (2nd type)0010

With this specification of the technology, the economic life of the machine must be chosen in each industry. Table 3 lists the available techniques. The machine is truncated in both industries in the Alpha technique. The machine is operated for its full physical life in both industries in the Delta technique. In Beta and Gamma, the machine is truncated in one industry and operated for its full physical life in the other.

Table 3: Specification of Techniques
TechniqueProcessesNotes
AlphaI, IIIMachines truncated in both industries.
BetaI, II, IIIMachines truncated in machine-production.
GammaI, III, IVMachines operated at full physical life in both industries.
DeltaI, II, III, IVMachines truncated in corn-production.

3.0 An Algorithm for Fixed Capital

I now present a hand-waving, incomplete specification of an algorithm for the choice of technique. This algorithm is supposed to apply when the choice of technique consists exclusively of the choice of the economic life of a machine in various industries.

  1. Solve price system, given the rate of profits, for each technique.
  2. Identify technique in which machines are operated for two years (longest in example).
    • Beta and DELTA in the machine industry
    • Gamma and DELTA in the corn industry
  3. Find price of old machine in each industry. If it is negative, truncate to longest time in which it is first negative.
  4. If a machine is truncated in any industry, repeat previous step.
  5. For COST-MINIMIZING technique, prices of old machines are non-negative in all industries.

4.0 Traces

Which order should industries be considered? This is one way the above specification is incomplete. Maybe I should say this is a non-deterministic algorithm. Anyways, Table 4 shows the application of this algorithm starting with the first industry in the example.

Table 4: The Algorithm, Starting with the Machine Industry
Calculate the price of an old machine in the machine industry with Delta prices.
Price negative for 0 ≤ r < 71.2 percentPrice positive for 71.2 percent < rRδ
Truncate to GammaKeep Delta
Calculate the price of an old machine in the corn industry with Gamma prices.Calculate the price of an old machine in the corn industry with Delta prices.
Price negative for 0 ≤ r < 70.2 percentPrice positive for 70.2 < r < 71.2 percentPrice positive for 71.2 < r < 87.5 percentPrice negative for 87.5 percent < r < Rδ
Truncate to AlphaKeep GammaKeep DeltaTruncate to Beta
Calculate the price of an old machine in the machine industry with Beta prices.Calculate the price of an old machine in the machine industry with Beta prices.
Price negative for 0 ≤ r < 70.2 percentPrice positive for 87.5 < rRδ
Keep AlphaKeep Beta

Perhaps the termination criterion for the algorithm should include that a longer economic life of machines has been considered in each industry. In the range of profits in which Alpha is cost-minimizing, I consider extending the economic life of the machine in the corn industry, for the start of the last three rows. These steps extend the algorithm in section 3. Are these steps necessary? When I find a negative price for an old machine in such an extension, can I stop? Or should I, in other examples, continue consider extensions up to the physical life of the machine? I know that truncation can jump from three years, for example, to one year.

Table 5 shows the application of the algorithm starting with the second industry in the example. These two tables illustrate that it does not matter which industry is considered first. I suppose this algorithm, like Christian Bidard's market algorithm, could be distributed across industries, with steps being executed in parallel. I think that if somebody was going to elaborate on this claim, they should consider a specification of market algorithms in a language designed for parallel processing, such as Tony Hoare's Communicating Sequential Processes.

Table 5: The Algorithm, Starting with the Corn Industry
Calculate the price of an old machine in the corn industry with Delta prices.
Price positive for 0 ≤ r < 87.5 percentPrice negative for 87.5 percent < rRδ
Keep DeltaTruncate to Beta
Calculate the price of an old machine in the machine industry with Delta prices.Calculate the price of an old machine in the machine industry with Beta prices.
Price negative for 0 ≤ r < 71.2 percentPrice positive for 71.2 < r < 87.5 percentPrice positive for 87.5 < rRδ
Truncate to GammaKeep DeltaKeep Beta
Calculate the price of an old machine in the machine industry with Gamma prices.
Price negative for 0 ≤ r < 70.2 percentPrice positive for 70.2 < r < 71.2 percent
Truncate to AlphaKeep Gamma
Calculate the price of an old machine in the machine industry with Beta prices.
Price negative for 0 ≤ r < 70.2 percent
Keep Alpha

5.0 Conclusion

How should the algorithm be modified for a rate of profits towards the maximum? Can a proof be found that the convergence of the algorithm does not depend on the order in which industries are considered? Once a machine is truncated, is it true, the extension of the economic life a machine need never be considered in any industry?

Thursday, February 12, 2026

Socialism Works in Kerala, India

Socialists and communists have been elected in many places, for significant periods of time. And those places did not necessarily turn into dysopian tyrannies. Often, they did not get further than social democratic policies, improving the lives of most citizens. If I were a member of some of those polities, I would almost certainly have disagreements with details of some policy or other. This post is about one of those places that I do not know much about.

Kerala is a state in India. Currently, the governing party in Kerala is a coalition, the Left Democratic Front (LDF). The Communist Party of India (Marxist) (CPI(M)) is the dominant party. Communists have traded off governing with another coalition, the United Democratic Front, since Kerala's founding, in 1957. They have democratic elections.

The UDF is dominated by the Congress party, which governed India for a long time. I recollect Indira Gandhi, for example. I have no idea how the current national government, headed by Narendra Modi and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), impacts Kerala. My impression is that the BJP raises the question of what is fascism? (By the way, I do not necessarily understand the political positions of some of these newspapers I link to.)

Compared to the rest of India, Kerala has a high Human Development Index (HDI), high literacy, high life expectancy, low poverty rates. For some reason, I have the impression that it has a well-established Information Technology industry.

Monday, February 09, 2026

Bourgeois Propaganda In The Teaching Of Economics

Economists, following a long-exploded, nonsensical theory, have a concept, the 'natural rate of unemployment':

"At any moment of time, there is some level of unemployment which has the property that it is consistent with equilibrium in the structure of real wage rates. At that level of unemployment, real wage rates are tending on the average to rise at a 'normal' secular rate.... A higher level of unemployment is an indication that there is an excess supply of labor that will produce downward pressure on real wage rates. The 'natural rate of unemployment,' in other words, is the level that would be ground out by the Walrasian system of general equilibrium equations, provided there is embedded in them the actual structural characteristics of the labor and commodity markets..." – Milton Friedman (1968), quoted in James K. Galbraith, Time to Ditch the NAIRU

This definition has a number of fatal problems. First, Walras' long run model is overdetermined and inconsistent. An equilibrium cannot be defined with a given endowment of a basket of capital goods, supply matching demand in every market, and the rate of profits (also known as interest) attaining equality in the production of all goods. So that model cannot provide a consistent definition of the natural rate of unemployment.

Second, mayhaps Friedman means to refer to the neo-Walrasian model of intertemporal equilibrium. But that does not work either. Labor services at each point of time are different commodities in that model. You can talk about a time series for unemployment, maybe, but not a natural rate in that model.

Third, empirical evidence shows that the labor market does not work like Friedman imagines. I turn to natural experiments on minimum wages. Andrajit Dube has a number of studies, with co-authors. Dube, Lester, and Reich (2010) is one. Firms do not tend to hire less labor services at higher wages, given the variation found in these experiments. At the macroeconomic level, estimates of the natural rate or of the NAIRU tend to fluctuate, following the actual trend in unemployment. In addition to the previously cited Galbratih article, I also cite Antonella Stirati’s recent Godley-Tobin lecture.

Fourth, the theoretical untenability of explaining wages by demand and supply, as understood in marginal economics, was demonstrated more than half a century ago. Pierangelo Garegnani (1970) is one good exposition.

If economics were a science, students would not have been taught about either the so-called natural rate of unemployment or the NAIRU, for decades. At least, if they were taught so, maybe in a history of thought class, they would also be taught, at least, some of these objections.

I now turn to a web site that purports to provide a tutorial for the student. I find very little about these theoretical and empirical objections in this page. But I do find this:

"To reduce the natural rate of unemployment, we need to implement supply-side policies, such as ...

  • ... Making labour markets more flexible, e.g. reducing minimum wages and trade unions.
  • Easier to hire and fire workers."

Sometimes the rulers are quite explicit. In 1997, Alan Greenspan extols "heightened job insecurity":

"Atypical restraint on compensation increases has been evident for a few years now and appears to be mainly the consequence of greater worker insecurity. -- Alan Greenspan

So we get right wing political conclusions taught with obsolete theory, as if this were like accepted science, like physics.

Friday, February 06, 2026

A Numerical Example Of Reswitching In A Model With Extensive Rent

Figure 1: Wage Curves for Epsilon and Theta
1.0 Introduction

This post presents a numerical example of reswitching. In this example, satisfying requirements for use necessitates farming some type of land to its full extent. That type varies with the rate of profits. Rent is paid on the scarce quality of land.

Two switch points exist in the example. Which type of land is scarce varies at the switch points. Around one switch point, the technique adopted at a higher wage requires less labor, across the entire economy, to produce the required net output. Around the other switch point, the technique adopted at at a higher wage requires more labor. It is a mistake to insist that wages and employment are determined, in the long run, at the intersection of well-behaved supply and demand curves in the labor market.

I do not know of any numeric example elsewhere of reswitching in a model with rent. The possibility of such, however, would not be a surprise to many developers of the theory. Perhaps I have missed something from Schefold or Quadrio Curzio. This example is part of a larger example I have presented earlier.

2.0 Technology, Endowments, Final Demand, and Techniques

Technology consists of three constant-returns-to-scale (CRS) processes (Table 1). Each process is specified by inputs of labor (person-years), services of a type of land (acres), iron (tons), and corn (bushels). This specification also includes the output (ton iron or bushel corn) of each process when operated at a unit level. No land is used in producing the industrial commodity, that is, iron. One process is available to operate on each of the two types of land. Each of these process produces the agricultural commodity, that is, corn. The scale for producing corn is limited by endowments of land.

Table 1: The Coefficients of Production
InputIndustry
IronCorn
IIIIII
Labora0,1 = 1a0,2 = 9/10a0,3 = 3/5
Type 1 Landc1,1 = 0c1,2 = 1c1,3 = 0
Type 2 Landc2,1 = 0c2,2 = 0c2,3 = 49/50
Irona1,1 = 9/20a1,2 = 1/40a1,3 = 3/2000
Corna2,1 = 2a2,2 = 1/10a2,3 = 9/20

I assume that endowments consist of 100 acres of each type of land. Required net output, also known as final demand, consists entirely of corn, and the required net output is taken as the numeraire. For the example, final demand is assumed to be 125 bushels of corn. At least some of both types of land must be farmed to produced the final demand. (For this property to hold, final demand must be between approximately 80.91 and 136.5 bushels corn.)

The processes defined by the technology can be combined in four techniques (Table 2). In the Alpha and Beta techniques, only one process is operated to produce corn. No land is scarce, and capitalists do not pay rent to landlords. In Epsilon and and Theta, two processes are operated to produce corn. One type of land is fully farmed, and landlords obtain rent on that type of land.

Table 2: Techniques of Production
TechniqueProcessesLand
Type 1Type 2
AlphaI, IIPartially farmedFallow
BetaI, IIIFallowPartially farmed
EpsilonI, II, IIIPartially farmedFully Farmed
ThetaI, II, IIIFully FarmedPartially farmed

3.0 Quantity Flows

Which techniques are feasible varies with required net output. This variation does not arise in models with just circulating capital and no scarce land. Any level and composition of net output can be produced in those models. Also, I want to consider the variation in labor and capital-intensity with the technique. For both these reasons, I need to consider quantity flows.

Table 3 presents quantity flows for a particular level at which the first two processes are operated. The third process is operated at a level of zero. As with the other examples in this section, the total inputs of iron across all processes are replaced by the output of iron produced by the first process. Some corn is left over, as a surplus, after the inputs of corn are replaced by the output of corn from the second process. The table depicts a vertical integration, in which the total input of labor produces the surplus output of corn.

The levels of operation in Table 3 are set such that type 1 land is totally farmed. This combination of flows can be viewed as an extreme case of Alpha, in which no land receives a rent. It is the highest level at which Alpha can be operated, with a surplus output of only corn. For any increase in net output, the third process must also be operated, and type 1 land receives a rent. So these quantity flows can also be viewed as the lowest level at which Theta is operated.

Table 3: Alpha and Theta Quantity Flows at an Extreme
InputIndustry
IronCorn
IIIIII
Labora0,1q1 = 50/11a0,2q2 = 90a0,3q3 = 0
Type 1 Landc1,1q1 = 0c1,2q2 = 100c1,3q3 = 0
Type 2 Landc2,1q1 = 0c2,2q2 = 0c2,3q3 = 0
Irona1,1q1 = 45/22a1,2q2 = 5/2a1,3q3 = 0
Corna2,1q1 = 100/11a2,2q2 = 10a2,3q3 = 0
OUTPUTq1 = 50/11q2 = 100q3 = 0

Table 4 shows another set of levels at which the three processes can be operated. In this case, type 2 land is totally farmed and obtains a rent. Type 1 land is also farmed, but not completely. Net output in this case, for the Epsilon technique, is the same amount of corn as in the previous example.

Table 4: Epsilon Quantity Flows for the Same Net Ouput
InputIndustry
IronCorn
IIIIII
Labora0,1q1 = 81650/47971a0,2q2 = 122940/4361a0,3q3 = 3000/49
Type 1 Landc1,1q1 = 0c1,2q2 = 136600/4361c1,3q3 = 0
Type 2 Landc2,1q1 = 0c2,2q2 = 0c2,3q3 = 100
Irona1,1q1 = 73485/95942a1,2q2 = 3415/4361a1,3q3 = 15/98
Corna2,1q1 = 163300/47971a2,2q2 = 13660/4361a2,3q3 = 2250/49
OUTPUTq1 = 81650/47971q2 = 136600/4361q3 = 5000/49

Table 5 shows quantity flows for producing the largest possible surplus product of corn. More can only be produced with the discovery of more land or technical innovation that reduces at least some coefficients of production. Both types of land are fully farmed to the extent of their endowments.

Table 5: Epsilon and Theta Quantity Flows at an Extreme
InputIndustry
IronCorn
IIIIII
Labora0,1q1 = 2600/539a0,2q2 = 90a0,3q3 = 3000/49
Type 1 Landc1,1q1 = 0c1,2q2 = 100c1,3q3 = 0
Type 2 Landc2,1q1 = 0c2,2q2 = 0c2,3q3 = 100
Irona1,1q1 = 1170/539a1,2q2 = 5/2a1,3q3 = 15/98
Corna2,1q1 = 5200/539a2,2q2 = 10a2,3q3 = 2250/49
OUTPUTq1 = 2600/539q2 = 100q3 = 5000/49

Table 6 summarizes results from the above tables. The same net output is produced, by the Epsilon and Theta techniques, in the first two rows. The same is true of the last two rows. This excursion into the analysis of quantity flows demonstrates the range of required net output, when it consists solely of corn, in which rent is paid in all feasible techniques. Theta is more labor-intensive within this range. (At the upper limit, quantity flows for Epsilon and Theta are identical.)

Table 6: Summary of Quantity Flows
TechniqueNet Output (Bushels)Labor (Person-Yrs.)Labor Intensity (Person-Yrs. per Bushel)
Epsilon890/11 ≈ 80.914370990/47971 ≈ 91.1437099/388129 ≈ 1.13
Theta890/11 ≈ 80.911040/11 ≈ 94.55104/89 ≈ 1.17
Epsilon73560/539 ≈ 136.584110/539 ≈ 156.08411/735 ≈ 1.14
Theta73560/539 ≈ 136.584110/539 ≈ 156.08411/735 ≈ 1.14

4.0 Prices of Production

A system of equations is available for the prices of production defined by each technique. For an example, I specify the price system for Epsilon. The going rate of profits is made in operating the first process:

(a1,1 p1 + a2,1 p2)(1 + r) + w a0,1 = p1

In this equation, p1 is the price of iron, p2 is the price of corn, w is the wage, and r is the rate of profits. The going rate of profits is also made in operating the second process:

(a1,2 p1 + a2,2 p2)(1 + r) + w a0,2 = p2

Type 1 land is not scarce under Epsilon and receives no rent. Thus, rent does not appear in the above equation. The going rate of profits is also obtained in operating the third process:

(a1,3 p1 + a2,3 p2)(1 + r) + rho2 c2,3 + w a0,3 = p2

Type 2 land receives a rent, and rho2 denotes rent-per-acre on type 2 land. Finally, the numeraire has a price of unity:

p2 d2 = 1

In this equation, d2 denotes the amount of corn in required net output in the example, that is, 125 bushels.

The above four equations determine five variables. Thus, the solution has one degree of freedom. I take the wage as a function of the rate of profits in the solution. That is, the wage curve showing a trade-off betwen the proportion of the net output paid to labor and the rate of profits depicts this degree of freedom. Prices, including the rent on type 2 land, are also functions of the rate of profits.

The first two equations in the price system also apply for the price system for Alpha. Along with the equation specifying the numeraire, they provide the 'solving subsystem' for Alpha and Epsilon. The wage curves for Alpha and Epsilon are identical. The third equation in the price system for Epsilon can be solved for rent, given the solution for Epsilon's solving subsystem.

5.0 Choice of Technique

For the given required net output, the Alpha and Beta techniques are not feasible. Epsilon and Theta are feasible. Figure 1, at the top of this post, graphs wage curves, from the price systems for the techniques. Alpha and Epsilon have the same wage curves. Likewise, Beta and Theta have the same wage curves. The wage frontier for the cost-minimizing technique, is, in this example, formed from the inner envelope of wage curves. Rent on scarce land must be non-negative for the technique that is cost-minimizing at a given rate of profits.

Epsilon is cost-minimizing at extreme ranges of the rate of profits. Theta is cost-minimizing in the middle. So this example is indeed one of reswitching. Two switch points exist for this reswitching example. A switch point is labeled as 'perverse' only because phenomena around that switch point contradict obsolete marginalist concepts. Figure 2 shows rent curves. Landlords obtain rent on type 2 land when Epsilon is cost-minimizing and on type 1 land when Theta is cost-minimizing.

Figure 2: Rent Curves for Epsilon and Theta

The analysis of the choice of technique allows you to plot the wage against the labor demanded by firms, given the specified level of net output (Figure 3). This plot may be interpreted as an economy-wide demand curve for labor. Switch points correspond to the horizontal segments on this graph. The ‘perverse’ switch point can be viewed as a step function approximation to an upward-sloping labor demand curve, if you insist on pretending that wages and employment are determined by supply and demand in competitive markets.

Figure 3: Employment as a Function of the Wage

You can also plot the value of advanced capital goods against the rate of profits. These capital goods consist of iron and corn in the example. The plot in Figure 4 can be interpreted as a demand curve for capital. Switch points correspond to the horizontal segments on this graph too. The value of capital goods varies between switch points because of price Wicksell effects. Prices of production generally vary with the rate of profits, given the technique. The 'perverse' switch point here too can be seen as a step function for an upward-sloping demand curve.

Figure 4: The Value of Capital as a Function of the Rate of Profits

6.0 Conclusion

The choice of technique is trivial in this example. Other than at switch points, the cost-minimizing technique:

  • Is feasible. The technique can be used to produce the given final demand.
  • Pays a positive rent in the solution to the price system for the technique.

Because of the simple structure of the example, only one technique satisfies these conditions, except at switch points, at any given rate of profits less than the maximum.

Reswitching and capital-reversing are compatible with models of land-like, scarce natural resources. Why do so many economists teach theoretically and empirically unfounded models with factor prices determined by interaction of well-behaved supply and demand curves?

References
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  • Christian Bidard. 2014. The Ricardian rent theory: an overview. Centro Sraffa working paper 8.
  • Christian Bidard. 2018. Ricardo and Ricardians on the order of cultivation. Journal of the History of Economic Thought. 40(3): 389-399.
  • A. D'Agata. 1983. The existence and unicity of cost-minimizing systems in intensive rent theory. Metroeconomica.
  • Heinz D. Kurz & Neri Salvadori. 1995. Theory of Production: A Long-Period Analysis.
  • Alberto Quadrio Curzio. 1980. Rent, income distribution, and orders of efficiency and rentability. In Essays on the Theory of Joint Production (ed. by L. L. Pasinetti).
  • Alberto Quadrio Curzio & Fausta Pellizzari. 1999. Rent, Resources, Technology.
  • Bertram Schefold. 1989. Mr. Sraffa on Joint Production and Other Essays.
  • Piero Sraffa. 1960. Production of Commodities by Means of Commodities. Chapter XI.
  • Robert L. Vienneau. 2022. Reswitching in a model of extensive rent. Bulletin of Political Economy 16(2): 133-146.

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