自然力量至关重要:评西蒙·N·帕顿对约翰·B·克拉克分配理论的批判

Natural forces matter: A note on Simon N. Patten's critique of John B. Clark's theory of distribution

Ecological Economics · 2025
被引 2
ABS 3

中文导读

分析了帕顿对克拉克边际生产力分配理论的批判,指出其忽视环境因素在决定市场价值中的作用,并区分了劳动与劳动力,认为自然力量产生超出边际成本的社会收益。

Abstract

This note analyses Simon N. Patten's criticism of John B. Clark's marginal productivity theory of distribution for its neglect (among other things) of the role of environmental factors in determining economic value in markets. Whereas Clark's theory centered on the distribution between labor and capital income, with land earnings understood as a sub-part of interest, Patten intended to retain the classics' notion of rent as unearned income. In his early writings he saw rent stemming from returns based on monopolistic control over markets or privilege, but writing in 1902, shortly after the publication of Clark's Distribution of Wealth , he introduced a distinction between labor and labor force. By labor Patten meant a number of days' work performed by human beings, while by labor force he referred to any “mode of motion” that makes capital productive, including environmental assets and services. These natural forces, which come into play with an increase in capital, produce an excess above marginal cost—a “social gain” which is transferred from the community to the capitalist/rentier, clashing with Clark's idea of a just economic reward based on the assumption that each factor earns its marginal product.

经济学分配理论边际生产力环境因素