| >If you operate recursively until the first unit of capital and the first unit of technology you end up finding that all value is the product of land and labour. That's simply untrue. When a stock tanks, billions in value is lost. When a stock surges, billions can be gained. That sudden change is not the product of labor, nor the destuction of labor, but a capital multiplier from belief. Also, arguing that since the first of any process happened in some manner implies that everything later in the process is created the same way isn't true. >There are certainly a great many economists that agree with this definition A great many are Austrian school, and would argue things like this, but this is overall a tiny fraction, and none are among the world's top economists. Do you claim the majority or even more than a small fraction of economists would agree with this definition? >Actually, a famous economist gave a talk at Google Name? If what you're arguing for is the Labor Theory of Value [1], which it sounds like, it's widely and almost universally discredited. Every model macro model I can think of creates value in the manner I described above. Some intro examples [2] Here's another take hitting more modern economics [3]. The "land and labor" is an ancient and not very tenable argument from this modern viewpoint. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labor_theory_of_value [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macroeconomic_model [3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Factors_of_production |
But ultimately, that capital came solely from labour and natural resources. If you follow the chain of value, you invariantly end up at labour and nature, because those are the only two things that can actually create value from nothing else.
And no, this isn't the LTV. Read the comment carefully. Even if you admit that capital can create value, the capital still had to come from somewhere, and ultimately that somewhere is labour.