The Lump-of-Capital Fallacy
Dean Baker gives me the courage, in his recent post on Pikkety, to reiterate a statement I’ve made some few times in the past:
Economists have no coherent or consistent idea of what they’re talking about when they use the word “capital.”
They lump together real capital — fixed, human, organizational, whatever — with “financial capital,” an oxymoron that confutes actual productive stuff with financial claims on that stuff.
Dean (emphasis mine):
This relates to the Cambridge controversies since the Cambridge U.K. people argued that the idea of an aggregate production function did not make sense. They pointed out that there was no way to aggregate different types of capital independent of the rate of return. The equilibirum price of any capital good depended on the rate of return. Therefore we can’t tell a simple story about how the rate of return will change as we get more capital, since we can’t even say what is more capital independent of the rate of return.
The takeaway from this, or at least my takeaway, is that we don’t have a theoretical construct that we can hope more or less approximates how the economy actually works. The theoretical construct doesn’t make sense. This means if we want to determine the rate of return to capital we should not be looking to elasticities of substitution, but rather the institutional and political factors that determine the rate of profit.
So it’s not just Steve Roth, internet econocrank, making this wild-eyed claim. You’ll find similar in Jamie Galbraith’s review of Pikkety. (His opening line? “What is capital?”), and I would suggest that every other review you’ve read wallows in the same quagmire of non- or multiple-definition.
As does Pikkety, unfortunately. He explicitly defines capital as being synonymous with wealth, which is a very tricky and messy conceptual proposition indeed. That does not obviate his work’s incredible value, but he should have called his book Wealth in the 21st Century.
“Capital” means, should mean, real, productive assets: real inputs to production that require real resources to produce, and that are consumed over time (through use, decay, obsolescence, and death). There’s the obvious “fixed capital” as tallied in the national accounts (broken out as structures, equipment (hardware), and software) and there’s all that other real capital that arguably constitute the great bulk of real capital, but that is so deucedly hard to measure — skills, knowledge, ideas, organizational structures and processes, human ability, etc. Then there’s all the tricky stuff that sits on the borderline between real assets and financial assets (thing which have exchange value but cannot be, are not, consumed): land, art and collectibles, etc.
“Financial capital” — all the financial assets out there, embodying all the “money” out there — is, roughly, all the outstanding claims on that real capital, or on the future production from that capital. Financial assets are not inputs to production (though they can be exchanged for such inputs), and they cannot be, are not, consumed.
The stock of financial assets can increase in several ways. 1. A sovereign currency issuer can deficit-spend. 2. A bank can print new money for lending ex nihilo (with the help of borrowers who want to monetize their real assets; think: student loans). 3. The market can decide that the real assets out there are worth more than the outstanding claims against them, and bid up financial-asset prices. Voila, more money, more financial assets, more so-called “financial capital.”
All of this points to the fundamental problem in economic thinking that Dean states so clearly: you can’t lump together, or really even measure, real capital in dollar terms. You certainly can’t just add together the value of real capital and the value of financial capital, which constitutes claims on that real capital. In navigating these complexities, seeking guidance from insolvency experts can provide invaluable insight into managing financial assets and liabilities effectively.
And: The outstanding value of financial assets/”capital” is not any kind of reliable representation of the value of outstanding real capital. It’s all over the map, depending on how much of that real capital has been monetized/indebted/financialized (via private and public debt and money issuances), and based on the current state of investors’ “animal spirits” — their beliefs about future returns to that financial capital.
A minor aside: The whole “reswitching” business in the Cambridge Capital Controversy is just a carefully explicated special case, or example, of the fundamental confusion that the U.K. gang pointed out (and that Samuelson admitted to): the value of capital is a function of its future returns, and future returns are a function of the value of capital. Economics is based on a circular definition.
Or in Dean’s words, “The theoretical concept doesn’t make sense.” (This is some significant relief to me, because after more a decade of really struggling to make it make sense to me, it still doesn’t make sense to me.)
I’ve made some efforts to sort out this confusion is previous posts, which you can find by wandering through Related Posts at the Asymptosis version of this post. I would be more than pleased if those more worthy than I were to take up this task, and deliver an adequately and convincingly theorized understanding of the relationship between real capital and “financial capital.”
Cross-posted at Asymptosis.
When your science’s singularity is that ONLY the efficiency of money matters to the exclusion of all the rest of life’s relationships as possibly being a variable within the equation, capital as an expression of finance makes perfect sense.
Such a singularity solves the messy problem of intension.
With that:
“Financial assets are not inputs to production (though they can be exchanged for such inputs), and they cannot be, are not, consumed.”
I’ve noted in the past that banks are not necessary for economic activity to take place. I’ve noted that we need to put bank/finance back in it’s proper position…that is secondary and not primary to production.
But, mostly what is important about your statement is the last phrase: they cannot be, are not, consumed.
Thus is the source of the atrocity our Supremes have set us to with their considerations of money as an equal, not even a virtual of a human. Though in their rulings they have promoted this virtual reality based on the mistake of “capital” being money. But, money doesn’t die. This requires an understanding that a business is no more than a claim on the production of real capital also.
Steve:
Capital = Anything non human.
I have been trying to unravel this topic for years. Some of the elements I’ve teased out ( but not quantified yet, alas) can be found here: http://tea-analysis.blogspot.com
My TEA Analysis has nothing to do with the Tea Party, but stands for time, energy (or effort) and attention. These are the cornerstones of individual human value, and are the things other humans try to mobilize, whether towards their own or the common good.
Thus, “capital” consists not of things, but of the control of goods and services, which control almost always consists of your own effort or the mobilized efforts of others.
I may own a necklace, but it came into being through the efforts of others, it came to me through my own efforts (working for the cash, or perhaps stealing it,) and it remains mine either because I am a roughneck who can defend it, or because socially commissioned defenders like police, military, lawyers etc have been persuaded, hired, or in some way mobilized, to do so.
As cornered economists always say, “It’s complex.” But this complexity is based on the solid reality of human energies and the strategies that direct them.
Noni
@Run:
Would that include the Pacific Ocean?
@Noni:
I get where you’re coming from, and I’ll think more about your approach, but right off I don’t find it useful when I try to think, in an accounting sense about what constitutes financial wealth, and its relationship to ownership of/control of/claims on of real assets.
Steve:
If you had a business, could you fish without the ocean? It is more than just a boat and Labor. My concept may be too broad?
By the way, I am with Bruce, great post.
Steve
you get no argument from me that economists don’t make sense.
but given that no one knows what capital is, why can’t we let the people who use the word mean whatever they want it to mean… as long as they make it clear.. consistently clear in what they are trying to say.
i suppose… haven’t read him.. Picketty means something like “not labor.”
@coberly: “i suppose… haven’t read him.. Picketty means something like “not labor.””
No, what he means is financial wealth. Financial wealth. He says explicitly that he’s using them synonymously.
The amount of wealth is obviously related to the amount of capital. A rich country will have more of both. And a person with lots of wealth will have control of, claims on, more capital. But beyond that it is a very, very rough and complicated relation.
You say: “Capital” means, should mean, real, productive assets
Energy supply. If that’s what it comes down to Joe Soap is screwed. No way around it.
Steve
thanks for the reply. i would say that if Picketty said he meant “financial wealth” and that fits his analysis there doesn’t seem much point faulting him for not using “capital” to mean what the economists can’t seem to agree it means, if anything.
in my own slipshod dictionary “not labor” comes pretty close to meaning the same as “financial wealth” but if I ever write a treatise where i feel forced to use the word “capital” i will try to make very sure everyone knows exactly what i mean and why.
Steve, Great Post.
At long last I think I am finally getting what you are arguing in large.
If I can just grok what Ed is saying maybe I will get somewhere.
BTW I am taking Freshman Macro next Fall along with a (long neglected) Calculus course. So maybe this Old Dog might even teach the Instructor some New Tricks. Or at least Play Hell with the Principles intro.
I think Piketty summarizes his definition of capital as being equivalent to what is commonly called “net worth” – i.e. all assets minus all liabilities. Assets would include both real and financial assets.
I’m with Coberly – Piketty uses a definition that is both intuitively understood by the common man and that suits the purpose for his studies. The fact that economists will forever debate the “correct” definition , one that pertains to some mythical production function , is beside the point of Piketty’s exposition.
The Koch Bros. are worth about $100 billion between them. I’d guess that’s very close to $100 billion more in net worth ( Piketty’s “capital” ) than that of everyone who reads this post – combined. That’s what Piketty is driving at , and that’s what’s most important. Economists quibbling over definitions is a mere distraction , and it’s often purposeful. Complicate the discussion enough , and people will lose interest.
The right has nothing to fear in Piketty. The left will nitpick away at him until his message is overwhelmed by the volume of criticisms. That’s just how we roll , I guess , but to me it seems a crummy strategy for achieving progressive change.
and yes, maybe the Pacific Ocean
should count as “capital”
as we will find after we have destroyed it’s productive capacity.