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1991 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

The Ricardian Legacy

Author : Guglielmo Chiodi

Published in: Wicksell’s Monetary Theory

Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan UK

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One of the most recurrent features of Wicksell’s monetary theory cannot escape even the least careful reader: his ‘schizophrenia’ in treating the quantity theory of money, particularly the Ricardian monetary theory. As regards the former, in fact, he maintains on the one hand that ‘indeed, it is the only one which attempts in some degree to provide a rational explanation’ (Wicksell, 1898b, p. 50);

1

and that it is ‘the only specific theory of the value of money which has been propounded, and perhaps the only one which can make any claim to real scientific importance’ (1906, p. 141). On the other, Wicksell tones down those statements by saying ‘

under given conditions

the Quantity Theory is capable of being correct’ (1898b, p. 38); and it is ‘

theoretically

valid so long as the assumption of

ceteris paribus

’ holds (1898b, p. 42); and he goes so far as saying, at the same time, that it is based on ‘assumptions that unfortunately have little relation to practice, and in some respect none whatever’ (1898b, p. 41) and gives rise to ‘too many objections, as pointed out by later writers, to be accepted without modification’ (1898b, p. xxxiii). In addition:

That a large and a small quantity of money

can

serve the same purposes of turnover if commodity prices rise or fall proportionately to the quantity is one thing. It is another thing to show why such a change of price must always follow a change in the quantity of money and to describe what happens. (Wicksell, 1906, p. 160)

Metadata
Title
The Ricardian Legacy
Author
Guglielmo Chiodi
Copyright Year
1991
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan UK
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-12155-7_1