thumbs: A critical dissertation on the nature, measures and causes of value

GU 
ON THE VALUE 
the paradoxes into which he falls, has not 
failed to drive this doctrine of the value of la- 
bour to an extravagant result. “ Wages,” says 
he, “are at a high real value, when it requires 
much labour to produce wages; and at a low 
real value, when it requires little labour to 
produce wages: and it is perfectly consistent 
with the high real value—that the labourer 
should be almost starving; and perfectly con- 
sistent with the low real value—that the la- 
bourer should be living in great ease and com- 
fort *.” 
Well might the author’s friend Philoebus 
exclaim at this extraordinary passage, “ this 
may be true: but you must allow, that it 
sounds extravagant.” 
Let us examine it by the test before given: 
let us ask, value in what? If the labourer is 
starving, in relation to what is his labour of 
high value? In relation to corn? If so, he 
would obtain a large quantity of corn in ex- 
London Magazine for May 1824, p. 557.
	        
Waiting...

Note to user

Dear user,

In response to current developments in the web technology used by the Goobi viewer, the software no longer supports your browser.

Please use one of the following browsers to display this page correctly.

Thank you.