A Tale of Two Scholarly Debates on Adam Smith
Adam Smith’s Argument for the Existence of an
Invisible~Hand
Claude Hillinger
(Emeritus
Professor of Economics, University of Munich)
Abstract ssrn.com/abstract=2174027
“No other phrase has been as widely and as
controversially used in the
discussion of capitalism and markets as the ‘invisible hand’, a metaphor that Adam Smith used
just once in each of his major works. There has been a debate as to whether Smith himself attached any
importance to this metaphor. I do not deal with this issued directly. Instead, I ask another question that
seems to me more relevant and interesting: Did Smith have
a logical argument, call it a ‘proof’ if you will, as to why actual economies would behave as suggested by the metaphor? I claim
that the answer is a clear ‘yes’. Smith
argued that the profit maximizing behavior of entrepreneurs leads them to
produce the output that has the highest valued that can be
attained with given resources. The value of the total output
is therefore a maximum also. This is precisely the condition that is also used
in the most elegant mathematical proof of the efficiency
of a competitive equilibrium. Comparing Smith’s argument
with the Walras/Pareto approach raises important questions of methodology.”
Available from Social Science Research Network HERE ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2168777
And my reply:
A Response to Claude Hillinger’s “Adam Smith’s
Argument For
the Existence of An ‘Invisible hand’”
Gavin Kennedy
(Emeritus Professor, Edinburgh Business School,
Edinburgh)
(Note: My paper awaits uploading at SSRN in a couple
of days: Copies available meanwhile from Lost Legacy on application via
Comments, or by email to usual address: gavinK9 AT gmail DOT com)
Abstract ssrn.com/abstract=2174027
“This paper discusses briefly Adam Smith metaphoric
use of the “invisible hand” chapter of Wealth Of Nations and shows his use of
the famous metaphor conforms to the proper role of
metaphors in English grammar, as he taught his
students. It also comments on the
role of self-interest in society.
Far from hinting verbally at the grand mathematical theories of “General
Equilibrium” or the “Pareto Theorem”, Smith’s assertion was confined to a
modest quantitative arithmetical change in “annual revenue and
employment”. It concludes with
comments on Claude Hillinger’s interesting, though ultimately flawed, version of
Adam Smith’s supposed argument for the existence of an “invisible hand”.
2 Comments:
Wasn't it sometime mid 19th century that we saw the metaphoric (or is meteoric) rise of Adam Smith's invisible hand?
Hi airth
Nice to hear from you again.
The first notable mention of the IH metaphor was in 1875 by F. W. Maitland, [1875] 2000. A Historical Sketch of Liberty and Equality. Indianapolis: Liberty Fund , a law professor at Cambridge. Then A. C. Pigou (Professor of Economics at Cambridge),, in 1920, in his "Economics of Welfare". This did not get going until 1930s with "History of Economic Doctrine" (1931), Oscar Lange, "Economics of Socialism" (1938), and then really got going, after Samuelson's "Economics, an introductory analysis (1948), with tens of thousands, then hundreds of thousands, of mentions to 2009. The rise from Samuelson was truly meteoric!
Gavin
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