50 ECONOMIC ESSAYS IN HONOR OF JOHN BATES CLARK
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Of these six groups of questions, one is in its very nature
static—the search for “natural” levels of prices, etc. Two are
in their very nature dynamic—the study of “whence” and
“whither,” and that of departures from the “natural” levels
of things. These three between them constitute the more impar-
tially descriptive section of the inquiry. The other three groups
of questions are evaluative—the relation of economic quantities
to utility and to human welfare, the theory of national efficiency
and the justification of the underlying institutions. The more
one considers these questions, the more is one convinced that in
this realm dynamic considerations are paramount; until one may
even doubt whether the questions have workable meaning apart
from dynamic change. But the question of utility and welfare
has received a static answer in the marginal utility theory; and
the static economics colors the view of the other two questions,
as we shall see.
With Smith and Ricardo there was a loose and uncertain con-
nection between the law of the natural level of price, on the one
hand, and the three evaluative problems, on the other. Price did
not measure utility; and while wages-cost was thought to be an
approximate measure of labor’s sacrifices of production, even this
idea did not stand the scrutiny which led to Mill’s statement that
the hardest work is often the poorest paid, and to Cairnes’ theory
of non-competing groups. Ricardo specifically separated “value”
from “riches,” or the abundance of goods. So long as the search
for “natural levels” of price and of the shares of distribution is in
a rudimentary stage, and its premises not fully realised or
expressed, it remains simply one out of a number of major prob-
lems, each of which is dealt with in such terms as appear appro-
priate. The static character of the one problem does not neces-
sarily govern the treatment of the others. The comparative inde-
pendence of the theory of value and the theories of welfare and of
efficiency is a striking feature of the early classical economics.
The early theory of institutions was static in a slightly differ-
ent sense. They were taken for granted as natural, and even
after Bentham dethroned this view, private property and con-
tract were looked at as “unit characters,” so to speak: things
with fixed characteristics, which might be wholly kept or wholly
discarded in favor of public ownership or communism, and which
were to be justified or condemned in toto. An evolutionary view,