The Economics Book

(Barry) #1

62


F


renchman Anne-Robert-
Jacques Turgot (p.65) was
one of a small group of
thinkers known as the physiocrats,
who believed that national wealth
was created from agriculture.
Turgot’s twin interests in tax and
the output of land led him to develop
a theory that explains how the
output of each extra worker changes
as successive workers are added to
the production process. A fellow
physiocrat, Guerneau de Saint-

Péravy, had said that for each extra
worker on the land, the amount of
additional output is constant; in
other words each extra worker adds
the same to production as the last.
But in 1767, Turgot pointed out that
unprepared soil produces very little
when sowed. If the soil is plowed
once, output increases; plowed
twice, it might quadruple. Eventually,
however, the extra work begins to
increase output less and less, until
additional workers add nothing
further to production, because the
fertility of the soil is exhausted.

The role of technology
Turgot’s idea is that adding more of
a variable factor (workers) to a fixed
factor (land) will lead to the last
worker adding less to output than
the first. This has become known
as “diminishing marginal returns,”
and it is one of the most important
pillars of modern economic theory.
It explains not only why it costs
more to produce more, but also why
countries struggle to get richer if
their population expands without
improvements in technology. ■

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Markets and firms

KEY THINKER
Anne-Robert-Jacques
Turgot (1727–81)

BEFORE
1759 French economist
François Quesnay publishes
Economic Table—a model that
demonstrates the physiocrats’
economic theories.

1760s French physiocrat
Guerneau de Saint-Péravy’s
essay on the principles of
taxation argues that the ratio
of outputs to inputs is fixed.

AFTER
1871 Austrian Carl Menger
argues in Principles of
Economics that price is
determined at the margin.

1956 In A Contribution to the
Theory of Economic Growth,
US economist Robert Solow
applies the idea of diminishing
marginal returns to the growth
prospects of countries.

THE LAST WORKER


ADDS LESS TO


OUTPUT THAN


THE FIRST


DIMINISHING RETURNS


The earth’s fertility
resembles a spring that is
being pressed downward...
the effect of additional weights
will gradually diminish.
A R J Turgot

See also: The circular flow of the economy 40–45 ■ Demographics and
economics 68–69 ■ Economic growth theories 224–25
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