The Economics Book

(Barry) #1

22


M


any people know what it
is like to be exploited or
“ripped off” by a vendor,
such as when buying overpriced
ice-creams at a tourist venue. Yet
according to prevailing economic
theory, there is no such thing as a
rip-off. The price of anything is
simply the market price—the price

people are prepared to pay. For
market economists there is no
moral dimension to price at all—
pricing is simply an automatic
function of supply and demand.
Merchants who appear to be
overcharging are simply pushing
the price to its limits. If they push
their price further than people are

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Society and the economy

KEY THINKER
Thomas Aquinas (1225 –74)

BEFORE
C. 350 BCE In Politics, Aristotle
says that all goods must be
measured in value by one
thing—“need.”

529–534 CE Roman courts
protect landowners from being
forced to sell land below the
just price, at “great loss.”

AFTER
1544 The Spanish economist
Luis Saravia de la Calle argues
that price must be set by
“common estimation” founded
on quality and abundance.

1890 Alfred Marshall proposes
that prices are automatically
set by supply and demand.

1920 Ludwig von Mises
argues that socialism cannot
work because prices are the
only way to establish need.

WHAT IS A


JUST PRICE?


MARKETS AND MORALITY


The market needs goods.

What is a just price?


Traders will only supply
goods if there is a
reward (a profit).

But there is a moral
dimension too. To avoid prices
being “unjust”...

... profit should
not be excessive,
because avarice
is a sin.

... no deception
can be involved in
setting the value
of the goods.

... the buyer must
freely accept
the price.
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