96
It is worth adding that the concluding sentences of the quotation suggest that Ricardo was
overlooking the possible changes in the marginal efficiency of capital according to the amount
invested. But this again can be interpreted as another example of his greater internal consistency
compared with his successors. For if the quantity of employment and the psychological propensities
of the community are taken as given, there is in fact only one possible
rate of accumulation of
capital and, consequently, only one possible value for the marginal efficiency of capital. Ricardo
offers us the supreme intellectual achievement, unattainable by weaker spirits, of adopting a
hypothetical world remote from experience as though it were the world of experience and then
living in it consistently. With most of his successors common sense cannot help breaking in—with
injury to their logical consistency.
III
A peculiar theory of the rate of interest has been propounded by Professor von Mises and adopted
from him by Professor Hayek and also, I think, by Professor Robbins; namely, that changes in the
rate of interest can be identified with changes in the relative price levels of
consumption-goods and
capital-goods It is not clear how this conclusion is reached. But the argument seems to run as
follows. By a somewhat drastic simplification the marginal efficiency of capital is taken as
measured by the ratio of the supply price of new consumers' goods to the supply price of new
producers' goods. This is then identified with the rate of interest. The fact is called to notice that a
fall in the rate of interest is favourable to investment.
Ergo
, a fall in the ratio of the price of
consumers' goods to the price of producer's goods is favourable to investment.
By this means a link is established between tncreased saving by an individual and increased
aggregate investment. For it is common gound that increased individual
saving will cause a fall in
the price of consumers' goods, and, quite possibly, a greater fall than in the price of producers'
goods; hence, according to the above reasoning, it means a reduction in the rate of interest which
will stimulate investment. But, of course, a lowering of the marginal efficiency of particular capital
assets, and hence a lowering of the schedule of the marginal efficiency of capital in general, has
exactly the opposite effect to what the above argument assumes. For investment is stimulated either
by a
raising
of the schedule of the
marginal efficiency or by a
lowering
of the rate of interest. As a
result of confusing the marginal efficiency of capital with the rate of interest, Professor von Mises
and his disciples have got their conclusions exactly the wrong way round. A good example of a
confusion along these lines is given by the following passage by Professor Alvin Hansen: 'It has
been suggested by some economists that the net effect of reduced spending will be a lower price
level of consumers' goods than would otherwise have been the case, and that, in consequence, the
stimulus to investment in fixed capital would thereby tend to be minimised. This view is, however,
incorrect and is based on a confusion of the effect on capital formation of (i) higher or lower prices
of consumers' goods, and (2) a change in the rate of interest. It is true that in
consequence of the
decreased spending and increased saving, consumers' prices would be low relative to the prices of
producers' goods. But this, in effect, means a lower rate of interest, and a lower rate of interest
stimulates an expansion of capital investment in fields which at higher rates would be unprofitable.'
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