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by stale2002
2060 days ago
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> Anyways, can you define "serious academic" in a way that doesn't make this sentence tautological? Sure. Basically the entire field of modern day economics does not take the labor theory of value, in the way that Marx means it. In terms of an actual description of how economies work, almost all real life, professional, economists do not take Marxian "economics" seriously. > to give more nuanced analyses It is not a matter of something being "nuanced" or not. It is instead that the vast majority of modern day economists do not take Marxian economics seriously at all. |
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Yeah but that's true for EVERY theory of value contemporaneous to Marx.
Saying "economics reject the LTV" is in my mind a bit like saying that physicists reject Newtonian mechanics. It's both true but also severely under-estimates the significant influence of Newton on modern physics.
>> to give more nuanced analyses
> It is not a matter of something being "nuanced" or not. It is instead that the vast majority of modern day economists do not take Marxian economics seriously at all.
I gave one specific example: management schools still draw from labor theories of value to explain competitive pressure and price discovery in the service sector. There are hundreds of other examples like this.