fbpx
Wikipedia

John Ramsay McCulloch

John Ramsay McCulloch (1 March 1789 – 11 November 1864) was a Scottish economist, author and editor, widely regarded as the leader of the Ricardian school of economists after the death of David Ricardo in 1823. He was appointed the first professor of political economy at University College London in 1828. He wrote extensively on economic policy, and was a pioneer in the collection, statistical analysis and publication of economic data.

John Ramsay McCulloch
John Ramsay McCulloch by Daniel Macnee
Born(1789-03-01)1 March 1789
Whithorn, Wigtownshire, Scotland, Kingdom of Great Britain
Died11 November 1864(1864-11-11) (aged 75)
NationalityScottish
Academic career
FieldPolitical economy
School or
tradition
Classical economics
InfluencesAdam Smith, David Ricardo

McCulloch was a co-founder, and one of the first editors, of The Scotsman newspaper, and worked on the Edinburgh Review. He edited the 1828 edition of The Wealth of Nations.[1]

Career edit

McCulloch attended the University of Edinburgh, but did not graduate.[2]

McCulloch collected the early literature of political economy, and wrote on the scope and method of economics and the history of economic thought.[3][4] After his death his library was purchased by Lord Overstone and eventually presented to the University of Reading. He was a participant in the Political Economy Club, London, founded by James Mill[5] and a circle of friends in 1821 for an ongoing discussion of the fundamental principles of political economy.

McCulloch's works include a textbook, Principles of Political Economy (Edinburgh 1825). He worked on subsequent editions until his death. This book contains a memorable discussion of the origins of profit or interest in the case of a cask of new wine.

"Suppose that a cask of new wine, which cost £50, is put into a cellar, and that, at the end of twelve months, it is worth £55, the question is: Should the £5 of additional value, given to the wine, be considered as a compensation for the time the £50 worth of capital has been locked up, or should it be considered as the value of additional labour actually laid out in the wine?"

This question is still used in discussions of the labour theory of value and related issues. McCulloch used it to illustrate that "time cannot of itself produce effect; it merely affords space for really efficient causes to operate, and it is therefore clear it can have nothing to do with value." Reflecting on discussions in the Political Economy Club, Ricardo had privately expressed his famous opinion about the "non-existence of any measure of absolute value."[6]

McCulloch was an opponent of Robert Malthus, in response to Malthus's Definitions in Political Economy (1827) wherein Malthus criticized several contemporary economists, including Jean-Baptiste Say, James Mill, and McCulloch, for what he considered sloppiness in selection of, attachment of meaning to, and usage of their technical terms.[7] In March 1827 McCulloch made a cutting reply on the front page of his Edinburgh newspaper, The Scotsman, [8] implying that Malthus wanted to dictate terms and theories to other economists. McCulloch clearly felt his ox gored, and his review of Definitions is largely a bitter defence of his own Principles of Political Economy,[9] and his counter-attack "does little credit to his reputation", being largely "personal derogation" of Malthus.[10] The purpose of Malthus's Definitions was terminological clarity, and Malthus discussed appropriate terms, their definitions, and their use by himself and his contemporaries. This motivation of Malthus's work was disregarded by McCulloch, who responded that there was nothing to be gained "by carping at definitions, and quibbling about the meaning to be attached to" words. Given that statement, it is not surprising that McCulloch's review failed to address the rules of chapter 1 and did not discuss the definitions of chapter 10; he also barely mentioned Malthus's critiques of other writers.[7]

McCulloch died in 1864, and is buried in Brompton Cemetery, London.

Criticism edit

McCulloch's theoretical work received harsh criticism from Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk in the latter's History and Critique of Interest Theories (1884).

"But probably no member of the English school has been so unhappy in his treatment of the subject or done the theory of interest such a disservice as McCulloch,"

wrote Böhm-Bawerk.

"He hovers about the fringes of a number of divergent opinions. He penetrates just far enough into each to become involved in glaring self-contradictions, but he does not expand any one of them sufficiently to form a theory that even approaches consistency."

The labour theory of value is an exception, in that McCulloch seems more insistent about it than about any of the contradictory hypotheses he entertained, Böhm-Bawerk conceded, but the form of that theory McCulloch endorsed was "the most absurd that could possibly occur to a serious thinker."

On the subject of the wine cask, Böhm-Bawerk wrote that there was an "enormous difference between what he was supposed to prove and what he did prove." Although such examples may prove that the mere passage of time is not enough of a change to produce an increase of value, that hardly helps the labour theory of value. The physical changes in the wine are produced by the microbes involved in the fermentation process, and the change in exchange value involves the public's subjective preference for wine over grape juice, and old wine over new.

Works edit

 
Early English Tracts on Commerce, edited by McCulloch, 1856 (1954 ed.)
  • An Essay on a Reduction of the Interest of the National Debt, 1816.
  • "On Ricardo's Principles of Political Economy and Taxation", 1818, Edinburgh Review
  • "Taxation and the Corn Laws", 1820, Edinburgh Review
  • "The Opinions of Messrs. Say, Sismondi and Malthus, on Effects of Machinery and Accumulation", 1821, Edinburgh Review
  • "On Combination Laws, Restraints on Emigration, &c.", 1824, Edinburgh Review
  • "Political Economy", 1824, Encyclopædia Britannica.
  • "French Law of Succession", 1824, Edinburgh Review.
  • McCulloch (1824). A Discourse of the Rise, Progress, Peculiar Objects, and Importance, of Political Economy: containing an Outline of a Course of Lectures on the Principles and Doctrines of that Science. Edinburgh, London, Liverpool: Archibald Constable & Co, Hurst, Robinson & Co, G. & J. Robinson. OCLC 309905804.[11][12] 2nd ed. 1825. OCLC 7391021[13]
  • The Principles of Political Economy, with a sketch of the rise and progress of the science. 1825.[14]
  • An Essay on the Circumstances which Determine the Rate of Wages and the Condition of the Working Classes, 1826.
  • "On Commercial Revulsions", 1826, Edinburgh Review
  • "Abolition of the Corn Laws", 1826, Edinburgh Review
  • "On Poor Laws", 1828, Edinburgh Review
  • "Rise, Progress, Present State, and Prospects of the British Cotton Manufacture", 1827, Edinburgh Review.
  • "Introduction" to An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith, (ed. J.R. McCulloch), 1828.
  • "Jones on the Theory of Rent", Edinburgh Review, 1831.
  • Principles, Practice and History of Commerce, 1831.
  • "Chalmers on Political Economy", 1832, Edinburgh Review.
  • A Dictionary, Practical, Theoretical and Historical of Commerce and Commercial Navigation, 1832.
  • A Descriptive and Statistical Account of the British Empire, exhibiting its extent, physical capacities, population, industry, and civil and religious institutions. 2 volumes, 1837
  • Statements Illustrative of the Policy and Probable Consequence of the Proposed Repeal of the Existing Corn Law, 1841.
  • The Literature of Political Economy, 1845.
  • The Works of David Ricardo, Esq. with a notice of the life and writings of the author (ed. J.R. McCulloch), 1846.
  • A Treatise on the Succession to Property Vacant by Death, 1848.
  • A Treatise on Metallic and Paper Money and Banks, 1858
  • Treatises and Essays, 1859.
  • A Treatise on the Principles and Practical Influence of Taxation and the Funding System, 1863.

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "John Ramsay McCulloch". Gazetteer for Scotland. Retrieved 13 May 2010.
  2. ^ Goring, Rosemary, ed. (1992). Chambers Scottish Biographical Dictionary. Edinburgh: Chambers.
  3. ^ McCulloch1824.
  4. ^ J. R. McCulloch, Early English Tracts on Commerce. London: Political Economy Club (1856); Cambridge [Eng.] University Press, 1954.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 April 2008. Retrieved 4 April 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  6. ^ Ricardo to Malthus, 15 August 1823. Quoted by Halevy, The Growth of Philosophic Radicalism, Beacon Press, (1955) p. 352.
  7. ^ a b Malthus, Thomas Robert (2016). Definitions in Political Economy. McLean: Berkeley Bridge Press. ISBN 978-1-945208-01-0.
  8. ^ McCulloch, John Ramsay (10 March 1827). "A Review of Definitions in Political Economy by the Rev. T. R. Malthus". The Scotsman: 1.
  9. ^ McCulloch, John Ramsay (1825). The Principles of Political Economy. Edinburgh: William & Charles Tait.
  10. ^ Morton Paglin's "Introduction" to: Malthus, Thomas Robert (1986). Definitions in Political Economy. Fairfield, New Jersey: Augustus M. Kelley. p. xiii.
  11. ^ Discourse 1824: pdf at McMaster
  12. ^ Discourse 1824 at the Internet Archive
  13. ^ Discourse 2nd. ed. 1825 at the Internet Archive; id. at the Internet Archive
  14. ^ The Principles of Political Economy (1825) in Google books

Sources edit

  • Denis P. O'Brien, J. R. McCulloch, A Study in Classical Economics, George Allen & Unwin (1970). ISBN 0-04-330158-4.
  • Collected works of J R McCulloch, with introductions by Denis O'Brien. 8 volumes. Routledge/Thoemmes Press (1995). ISBN 978-0415113526.

External links edit

  •   Media related to John Ramsay McCulloch at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Quotations related to John Ramsay McCulloch at Wikiquote
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 26 February 2009)
  • 1902 Encyclopædia Britannica: John Ramsay McCulloch

john, ramsay, mcculloch, other, people, named, john, mcculloch, john, mcculloch, disambiguation, march, 1789, november, 1864, scottish, economist, author, editor, widely, regarded, leader, ricardian, school, economists, after, death, david, ricardo, 1823, appo. For other people named John McCulloch see John McCulloch disambiguation John Ramsay McCulloch 1 March 1789 11 November 1864 was a Scottish economist author and editor widely regarded as the leader of the Ricardian school of economists after the death of David Ricardo in 1823 He was appointed the first professor of political economy at University College London in 1828 He wrote extensively on economic policy and was a pioneer in the collection statistical analysis and publication of economic data John Ramsay McCullochJohn Ramsay McCulloch by Daniel MacneeBorn 1789 03 01 1 March 1789Whithorn Wigtownshire Scotland Kingdom of Great BritainDied11 November 1864 1864 11 11 aged 75 London England United Kingdom of Great Britain and IrelandNationalityScottishAcademic careerFieldPolitical economySchool ortraditionClassical economicsInfluencesAdam Smith David RicardoMcCulloch was a co founder and one of the first editors of The Scotsman newspaper and worked on the Edinburgh Review He edited the 1828 edition of The Wealth of Nations 1 Contents 1 Career 2 Criticism 3 Works 4 References 4 1 Notes 4 2 Sources 5 External linksCareer editMcCulloch attended the University of Edinburgh but did not graduate 2 McCulloch collected the early literature of political economy and wrote on the scope and method of economics and the history of economic thought 3 4 After his death his library was purchased by Lord Overstone and eventually presented to the University of Reading He was a participant in the Political Economy Club London founded by James Mill 5 and a circle of friends in 1821 for an ongoing discussion of the fundamental principles of political economy McCulloch s works include a textbook Principles of Political Economy Edinburgh 1825 He worked on subsequent editions until his death This book contains a memorable discussion of the origins of profit or interest in the case of a cask of new wine Suppose that a cask of new wine which cost 50 is put into a cellar and that at the end of twelve months it is worth 55 the question is Should the 5 of additional value given to the wine be considered as a compensation for the time the 50 worth of capital has been locked up or should it be considered as the value of additional labour actually laid out in the wine This question is still used in discussions of the labour theory of value and related issues McCulloch used it to illustrate that time cannot of itself produce effect it merely affords space for really efficient causes to operate and it is therefore clear it can have nothing to do with value Reflecting on discussions in the Political Economy Club Ricardo had privately expressed his famous opinion about the non existence of any measure of absolute value 6 McCulloch was an opponent of Robert Malthus in response to Malthus s Definitions in Political Economy 1827 wherein Malthus criticized several contemporary economists including Jean Baptiste Say James Mill and McCulloch for what he considered sloppiness in selection of attachment of meaning to and usage of their technical terms 7 In March 1827 McCulloch made a cutting reply on the front page of his Edinburgh newspaper The Scotsman 8 implying that Malthus wanted to dictate terms and theories to other economists McCulloch clearly felt his ox gored and his review of Definitions is largely a bitter defence of his own Principles of Political Economy 9 and his counter attack does little credit to his reputation being largely personal derogation of Malthus 10 The purpose of Malthus s Definitions was terminological clarity and Malthus discussed appropriate terms their definitions and their use by himself and his contemporaries This motivation of Malthus s work was disregarded by McCulloch who responded that there was nothing to be gained by carping at definitions and quibbling about the meaning to be attached to words Given that statement it is not surprising that McCulloch s review failed to address the rules of chapter 1 and did not discuss the definitions of chapter 10 he also barely mentioned Malthus s critiques of other writers 7 McCulloch died in 1864 and is buried in Brompton Cemetery London Criticism editMcCulloch s theoretical work received harsh criticism from Eugen von Bohm Bawerk in the latter s History and Critique of Interest Theories 1884 But probably no member of the English school has been so unhappy in his treatment of the subject or done the theory of interest such a disservice as McCulloch wrote Bohm Bawerk He hovers about the fringes of a number of divergent opinions He penetrates just far enough into each to become involved in glaring self contradictions but he does not expand any one of them sufficiently to form a theory that even approaches consistency The labour theory of value is an exception in that McCulloch seems more insistent about it than about any of the contradictory hypotheses he entertained Bohm Bawerk conceded but the form of that theory McCulloch endorsed was the most absurd that could possibly occur to a serious thinker On the subject of the wine cask Bohm Bawerk wrote that there was an enormous difference between what he was supposed to prove and what he did prove Although such examples may prove that the mere passage of time is not enough of a change to produce an increase of value that hardly helps the labour theory of value The physical changes in the wine are produced by the microbes involved in the fermentation process and the change in exchange value involves the public s subjective preference for wine over grape juice and old wine over new Works edit nbsp Early English Tracts on Commerce edited by McCulloch 1856 1954 ed An Essay on a Reduction of the Interest of the National Debt 1816 On Ricardo s Principles of Political Economy and Taxation 1818 Edinburgh Review Taxation and the Corn Laws 1820 Edinburgh Review The Opinions of Messrs Say Sismondi and Malthus on Effects of Machinery and Accumulation 1821 Edinburgh Review On Combination Laws Restraints on Emigration amp c 1824 Edinburgh Review Political Economy 1824 Encyclopaedia Britannica French Law of Succession 1824 Edinburgh Review McCulloch 1824 A Discourse of the Rise Progress Peculiar Objects and Importance of Political Economy containing an Outline of a Course of Lectures on the Principles and Doctrines of that Science Edinburgh London Liverpool Archibald Constable amp Co Hurst Robinson amp Co G amp J Robinson OCLC 309905804 11 12 2nd ed 1825 OCLC 7391021 13 The Principles of Political Economy with a sketch of the rise and progress of the science 1825 14 An Essay on the Circumstances which Determine the Rate of Wages and the Condition of the Working Classes 1826 On Commercial Revulsions 1826 Edinburgh Review Abolition of the Corn Laws 1826 Edinburgh Review On Poor Laws 1828 Edinburgh Review Rise Progress Present State and Prospects of the British Cotton Manufacture 1827 Edinburgh Review Introduction to An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith ed J R McCulloch 1828 Jones on the Theory of Rent Edinburgh Review 1831 Principles Practice and History of Commerce 1831 Chalmers on Political Economy 1832 Edinburgh Review A Dictionary Practical Theoretical and Historical of Commerce and Commercial Navigation 1832 A Descriptive and Statistical Account of the British Empire exhibiting its extent physical capacities population industry and civil and religious institutions 2 volumes 1837 Statements Illustrative of the Policy and Probable Consequence of the Proposed Repeal of the Existing Corn Law 1841 The Literature of Political Economy 1845 The Works of David Ricardo Esq with a notice of the life and writings of the author ed J R McCulloch 1846 A Treatise on the Succession to Property Vacant by Death 1848 A Treatise on Metallic and Paper Money and Banks 1858 Treatises and Essays 1859 A Treatise on the Principles and Practical Influence of Taxation and the Funding System 1863 References editNotes edit John Ramsay McCulloch Gazetteer for Scotland Retrieved 13 May 2010 Goring Rosemary ed 1992 Chambers Scottish Biographical Dictionary Edinburgh Chambers McCulloch1824 J R McCulloch Early English Tracts on Commerce London Political Economy Club 1856 Cambridge Eng University Press 1954 James Mill 1773 1836 New School Archived from the original on 3 April 2008 Retrieved 4 April 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Ricardo to Malthus 15 August 1823 Quoted by Halevy The Growth of Philosophic Radicalism Beacon Press 1955 p 352 a b Malthus Thomas Robert 2016 Definitions in Political Economy McLean Berkeley Bridge Press ISBN 978 1 945208 01 0 McCulloch John Ramsay 10 March 1827 A Review of Definitions in Political Economy by the Rev T R Malthus The Scotsman 1 McCulloch John Ramsay 1825 The Principles of Political Economy Edinburgh William amp Charles Tait Morton Paglin s Introduction to Malthus Thomas Robert 1986 Definitions in Political Economy Fairfield New Jersey Augustus M Kelley p xiii Discourse 1824 pdf at McMaster Discourse 1824 at the Internet Archive Discourse 2nd ed 1825 at the Internet Archive id at the Internet Archive The Principles of Political Economy 1825 in Google books Sources edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about John Ramsay McCulloch Denis P O Brien J R McCulloch A Study in Classical Economics George Allen amp Unwin 1970 ISBN 0 04 330158 4 Collected works of J R McCulloch with introductions by Denis O Brien 8 volumes Routledge Thoemmes Press 1995 ISBN 978 0415113526 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to John Ramsay McCulloch nbsp Media related to John Ramsay McCulloch at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Quotations related to John Ramsay McCulloch at Wikiquote New School John Ramsay McCulloch at the Wayback Machine archived 26 February 2009 1902 Encyclopaedia Britannica John Ramsay McCulloch Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Ramsay McCulloch amp oldid 1182171987, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.