POLITICAL ECONOMY
172
It must be firmly grasped that any class
of employed agents in production has a
marginal worth which varies, other things
being equal, with its supply: the larger the
supply, in relation to given supplies of
other factors, the lower the marginal worth.
It is these marginal worths, or their equiva
lents, which tend to accrue to the agents
in production as their earnings ; and it is
vital to an understanding of the economic
functioning of a community to recognise that
in these payments the value of the things
produced is expressed. Workpeople have a
value to the employer because, in conjunc
tion with other agents, they create what has
a direct or indirect value to consumers.
Their value to the employer is in effect the
value of what is made transmitted through
the demand of the employer; and the value
of what is made may actually originate in
themselves, because it may be settled on the
one side by their own demand for goods.
Similarly the value of every other agent in
production is the transmitted value of what
it adds to production at the margin.
So we may lay it down in the rough that,
subject to reservations arising out of social
friction, the sum which each agent in pro
duction (apart from the employer, whose case